UW-Madison's Amasino Wins Alexander Von Humboldt Award
Article originally published in October, 1999
MADISON - Richard M. Amasino, a plant molecular biologist in the Department
of Biochemistry at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, has been named the
recipient of the 1999 Alexander von Humboldt Award. Amasino will receive
the award at a ceremony Oct. 27 in Madison, Wis.
Amasino is being recognized for his studies of processes that
regulate flowering time in plants and the mechanisms that control
senescence, the process by which leaves age and drop from plants. Those
findings help explain how plants regulate important activities; they have
far-reaching implications for agriculture.
The Alexander von Humboldt Award is one of the most prestigious
awards for agricultural research in the United States. Named in honor of
the 19th-century German naturalist and geographer, the award is presented
each year to an individual considered to have made the most significant
contribution to agriculture in the previous five years.
Amasino and his colleagues recently identified a key gene that
determines whether plants behave as annuals or biennials. Annuals produce
flowers their first summer; biennials, such as cabbage, carrots, onions and
beets, produce flowers the summer after they've been exposed to prolonged
cold.
Amasino and his group also created a gene that blocks senescence.
They demonstrated that plants with that gene produced more plant tissue and
seeds than control plants. Scientists at universities and companies around
the world are following up on the discovery, which has the potential to
improve agricultural crops, such as alfalfa, corn, soybean and vegetables,
as well as ornamental plants and cut flowers.
Amasino has been on the UW-Madison faculty since 1985, and has
received other honors including a Shaw Scholar Award and a Presidential
Young Investigator Award.
Dr. Alfred Toepfer, an internationally known grain merchant from
Hamburg, Germany, established the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation in New
York City in 1969. Under Toepfer's leadership, the foundation's board of
trustees established the Alexander von Humboldt Award in 1974. The award
includes a $15,000 cash prize, a medallion, a certificate, and a $5,000
scholarship for a student to study agriculture in Germany.
Amasino is the third professor from the UW-Madison College of
Agricultural and Life Sciences to receive the award since its inception in
1975. Neal First, an animal scientist, received the award in 1987 and
Winston Brill, a former professor of bacteriology, received the award in
1979.
***
Writer: George Gallepp
Contact:Richard Amasino (608) 262-4704, amasino@biochem.wisc.edu
|