| 11 Mai 2013
HEIDELBERG, 8 May 2013 – EMBO today announced Thijn Brummelkamp of the Netherlands Cancer  Institute (NKI) in Amsterdam as the winner of the 2013 EMBO Gold Medal.  The award acknowledges his outstanding work to accelerate the genetic  analysis of human disease.
 
 In 2002, Brummelkamp developed an inexpensive method to permanently  inactivate large numbers of genes by the use of RNA interference. This  breakthrough involved the development of a new short hairpin RNA vector  system (pSUPER) that directs the synthesis of small interfering RNAs in  mammalian cells. The method is used today in many laboratories  throughout the world and allows researchers to collect detailed  information on the function and roles of the many human genes involved  in diseases like cancer. The paper by Brummelkamp and colleagues in  Science that describes the method has been cited more than 3500 times  according to Thomson Reuters Web of Knowledge.
 
 Brummelkamp and his research group also investigate how viruses and  bacteria make their way into mammalian cells. The development of haploid  genetic screens in Brummelkamp’s laboratory has permitted the  identification of some of the proteins required for the entry of  pathogens into mammalian cells. This method was recently used to  demonstrate that the entry of the Ebola virus into human cells requires a  protein involved in the transport of cholesterol. This type of work  helps to identify new drug targets and is opening up novel approaches  and strategies for the treatment of different viral and bacterial  diseases.
 
 “I am delighted and honoured to receive such a prestigious award and  extremely grateful that I have been able to work with many fantastic  scientists in stimulating environments over the years,” the prizewinner  said upon hearing the news.
 
 “Thijn Brummelkamp belongs to a rare breed of scientists that can  influence a field of research not once but repeatedly,” commented Anton  Berns, former director of research at the NKI. “He is expected to make  many additional landmark contributions to molecular biology in the years  to come,” stated EMBO Member Piet Borst from the NKI in his nomination  letter.
 
 In 2005, Brummelkamp was selected as one of the top innovators under  the age of 35 in the United States by MIT Technology Review magazine.  The achievements of the 37-year-old scientist have been recognized by  several awards (see Career stages).
 
 Thijn Brummelkamp will receive the EMBO Gold Medal and an award of  10,000 Euros on 22 September 2013 at The EMBO Meeting in Amsterdam where  he will also give a lecture about his research.
 
 Career stages
 
 Thijn Brummelkamp received his PhD (cum laude) from Utrecht University  in 2003 for his work at the Netherlands Cancer Institute (NKI). He did  not pursue formal postdoctoral training but immediately accepted a  position to establish his own research programme as a Whitehead Fellow  at the prestigious Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research,  Massachusetts, Cambridge, United States. In 2011, he moved his  laboratory to the NKI. He also holds an appointment as Adjunct Principal  Investigator with the CeMM Research Center for Molecular Medicine of  the Austrian Academy of Sciences.
 
 Thijn Brummelkamp received the Antoni van Leeuwenhoek Award in 2003,  the 2004 NVBMB Award from the Dutch Association for Biochemistry and  Molecular Biology, and the Kimmel Scholar Award in 2006.
 
 About EMBO
 
 EMBO is an organization of more than 1500 leading researchers that  promotes excellence in the life sciences. The major goals of the  organization are to support talented researchers at all stages of their  careers, stimulate the exchange of scientific information, and help  build a European research environment where scientists can achieve their  best work.