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University congratulates alumna Professor Elizabeth Blackburn

6 Oct 2009

University of Melbourne Dean of Science Professor Robert Saint has congratulated alumna Professor Elizabeth Blackburn after she became the first Australian woman to be awarded a Nobel Prize.

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Professor Blackburn, who is now at the University of California at San Francisco, graduated from the University of Melbourne with a Bachelor of Science degree and a Master of Science in the then Biochemistry Department and has gone on to be a leader in the study of telomeres, the protective sections of DNA at the ends of chromosomes. These short sections of DNA are required to maintain the normal structure of chromosomes.

Professor Saint said the impact of Professor Blackburn’s work was far-reaching and has broad implications for human health.

“We are delighted that Professor Blackburn has been awarded the Nobel Prize. Professor Blackburn’s research has contributed fundamentally to our understanding of chromosome structure through the discovery of the nature of telomeres and of the enzyme, telomerase, which maintains them,” he said.

“Telomeres play crucial roles in normal cellular growth and ageing and telomere function impacts on human diseases such as cancer.

“Professor Blackburn showed great foresight in choosing to study a single-celled pond-dwelling organism in order to crack the telomere problem. She then used this information to understand how human telomeres work. It is a wonderful example of basic research leading to a major breakthrough.”

Professor Saint said Professor Blackburn showed enormous courage and leadership in opposing the politicization of science, while she was a member of the US President’s Council on Biological Ethics.

“She is a University of Melbourne graduate of whom we can be tremendously proud,” he said.

Professor Blackburn, and her mother Marcia, a doctor, were both residents of Janet Clarke Hall at the University of Melbourne, Australia’s first university college to admit women.

Professor Blackburn was a scholarship student at JCH for three years from 1966 while studying for her BSc. Those in College at the time describe her as balanced, fun, and adventurous. She played the piano, enjoyed camping and was keenly interested in people.

In 2006, she won two prestigious international awards, the Lasker Prize for Medical Research and the Gruber Prize for Genetics. The citation for the Gruber Prize not only heralded her research, but also her science advocacy. Blackburn also was elected a Fellow of Janet Clarke Hall in 2006.

Professor Blackburn was awarded the Nobel Prize along with colleagues Carol Greider, from Johns Hopkins University's school of medicine, and Jack Szostak from Harvard University for their discovery of "how chromosomes are protected by telomeres and the enzyme telomerase".

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