|

2006 Lemelson-MIT Lifetime Achievement Award Winner
Dr. Sidney Pestka is known as the "father of interferon"
for his groundbreaking work developing antiviral treatments for chronic
hepatitis B and C, multiple sclerosis and cancers. For his tremendous
contributions to the biotechnology, chromatography and pharmaceutical
industries, and for improving the health of those suffering many serious
diseases, he has been named the 2006 winner of the $100,000 Lemelson-MIT
Lifetime Achievement Award.
Pestka was born in Poland in 1936 and moved with his family to
the United States at a very young age. As a boy, he began inventing
instinctively. "It was stimulating to see chemicals change
the color of fluids, to construct crystal radios, and to make caramel
from sugar—however, my mother’s pots and pans were never
the same afterward. It seemed that I constantly thought about new
ideas to implement. As a teenager I developed an electronic security
key and many other devices, but I did not know about patents at
that time."
His parents played a significant role in developing his inquisitive
mind. His mother taught him mathematics at a young age, and his
father inspired him with his hobby— building bicycles from
basic components.
After graduating from medical school, he was an intern in medicine
and pediatrics. Afterwards, he worked at the National Institutes
of Health (NIH) in the laboratory of Dr. Marshall W. Nirenberg (1968
Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine), where he was part of the
team working on the genetic code, protein synthesis and ribosome
function.
In 1966, Pestka moved to the NIH’s National Cancer Institute
to concentrate his research on protein synthesis. Three years later,
he left the NIH to go to the Roche Institute of Molecular Biology
in Nutley, New Jersey, where he focused on defining how antibiotics
work, how proteins are synthesized and, later, how to purify, produce
and develop interferons for therapeutic indications. At the Institute,
he was the first to purify interferon alpha and beta; to develop
reverse phase high-performance liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC) for
protein purification; to genetically engineer interferons; and to
manufacture interferons for human therapy.
Today, Pestka is chairman of the Department of Molecular Genetics,
Microbiology and Immunology at UMDNJ-Robert Wood Johnson Medical
School. He is also the chief scientific officer at Pestka Biomedical
Laboratories (PBL), which he founded in 1990 to manufacture interferon
products, investigate anti-viral compounds, and look for new ways
to treat cancers. Pestka’s research is currently focused on
interferons and cytokines; receptors and signal transduction; immunotherapy
of cancer; and prevention, treatment and control of cancers and
viral diseases.
Pestka graduated summa cum laude with a B.A. in chemistry from
Princeton University (1957) and received his medical degree from
the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine (1961). He also
holds an honorary doctorate in science from Rider University (1987)
and has played an important role in the International Society for
Interferon and Cytokine Research, where he served as secretary (1989-1993,
1996-2005), vice president (1992-1993) and president (1994-1995).
Pestka holds 270 U.S. and foreign patents. Many of the inventions
described in these patents have broad applications in the biotechnology
and pharmaceutical industries. He has published more than 400 papers
and edited five books related to protein biosynthesis and interferons—several
of which are classics and are frequently cited. Pestka received
a number of honors and awards including the Mayer Lecturer in the
Life Sciences at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1986.
He was awarded the 2001 National Medal of Technology—the highest
national honor for technological achievement—by President
George W. Bush. He received the Warren Alpert Foundation Prize from
Harvard University in 2004.
Web Links:
PBL Biomedical and PBL Therapeutics
UMDNJ-Robert
Wood Johnson Medical School
|