Emr receives lifetime achievement award for ESCRT work
, a professor at Cornell University, got a lifetime achievement award in May during the 91Ó°¿â and Molecular Biology’s meeting on ESCRT biology in Madison, Wisconsin.
Endosomal sorting complexes required for transport, or ESCRTs, are sets of proteins that enable vesicles to bud out from, rather than into, the cytoplasm. They are required for formation of vesicles within endosomes, some types of viral envelope budding and release, and the final steps of cell division.

"Scott is generally acknowledged as the 'father' of our field, having discovered many of the ESCRT factors in yeast and defining their subcomplexes and different functions," meeting co-organizer Wes Sundquist of the University of Utah told 91Ó°¿âToday. Over the years, Emr's lab has identified more than a dozen ESCRT proteins in yeast and illuminated their roles in decoding lipid phosphorylation patterns, sorting cargo and bending membranes into new shapes.
Emr has been carrying out his research for four decades as a professor at the Caltech, the University of California, San Diego, and most recently Cornell’s Weill Institute for Cell & Molecular Biology, where he served as director.
He won last year's Shaw Prize in Life Science and Medicine and the ASBMB's Avanti Award in Lipids in 2007 and is an elected member of the National Academy of Sciences, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Academy of Microbiology.
He’s been a member of the 91Ó°¿âsince 1991.

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