Abstract

Ascientist whose work with the blood coagulation system led to effective treatments for people with hemophilia is the recipient of the ninth annual Bristol-Myers Squibb Award for Distinguished Achievement in Cardiovascular/Metabolic Research. Earl W. Davie, PhD, professor of biochemistry at the University of Washington in Seattle, received the award May 12, 1999, at a dinner in New York, NY. The prize carries with it a $50 000 award and a silver medallion. In research that spanned more than 4 decades, Dr Davie hypothesized, elucidated, and defined the blood clotting system. His work began as a graduate student, when he showed that the digestive pancreatic protein trypsinogen was converted into an active enzyme called trypsin when a single peptide bond was cleaved. This study served as a model for the coagulation process proposed by Davie and his collaborator, Dr Oscar Ratnoff. As a young researcher at Case Western University in Cleveland, Ohio, Dr Davie studied the blood of people with …

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