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CUMCs Axel and Former Postdoc Share Nobel Prize
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Richard Axel and Linda Buck
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The work of Axel and Buck has provided understanding on how the nose is able to distinguish more than 10,000 distinct smells. The researchers discovered more than 1,000 different genes that encode olfactory receptors in the nose, believed to be the largest gene family in the human genome.
This honor represents the long efforts of the many faculty, students, and fellows who have worked within our laboratories at Columbia University Medical Center, said Axel. I have received enormous support over the years, beginning with the scholarship I received to attend Columbia College.
Axel is University Professor, Columbia University; Investigator, Howard Hughes Medical Institute at the College of Physicians & Surgeons; Investigator, Kavli Institute for Brain Science at Columbia; and member of the CUMCs Center for Neurobiology and Behavior. He has been at CUMC his entire career.
Axel and Buck join 70 Columbians whose work has been recognized by the Nobel Foundation, including 19 in the category of physiology or medicine. Their experiments represent the highest form of creativity, scientific discipline, and scholarship, said David Hirsh, Columbias executive vice president for research. This is science at its most beautiful.
Visit www.cumc.columbia.edu/news/in-vivo for more information.
Photos credit Buck: Dan Lamont