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Johns Hopkins Nobel Prize Award Winners Dr. Greider stands at a podium in front of an audience.
 

The Nobel Prize bestows international recognition for outstanding contributions to the fields of chemistry, physics, physiology or medicine, literature, and peace. By pushing the boundaries of discovery, innovation, translation and dissemination, several of our distinguished faculty members have been recipients of this prestigious award. 

 

Johns Hopkins and the Nobel Prize

29 Nobel laureates affiliated with Johns Hopkins

16 Nobel Prizes in physiology or medicine

3 Nobel prizes in chemistry

4 Nobel laureates currently at Johns Hopkins

 
 

Meet the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine Nobel Laureates

Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine

  • Gregg Semenza, M.D., Ph.D.

    C. Michael Armstrong Professor of Genetic Medicine, Pediatrics, Oncology, Medicine, Radiation Oncology and Biological Chemistry
    Director of the Vascular Program at the Johns Hopkins Institute for Cell Engineering


    Dr. Semenza was awarded the 2019 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. He shares the award with William G. Kaelin, Jr., M.D. of the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Peter J. Ratcliffe of Oxford University. The Academy recognized him for his ground-breaking discovery in the laboratory of hypoxia inducible factor 1 or HIF-1, which helps cells cope with low oxygen levels. The discovery has far-reaching implications in understanding low oxygen health conditions such as coronary artery disease and tumor growth.
    Dr. Semenza works on research in the lab.
  • Carol Greider, Ph.D.

    University Professor
    Professor of Molecular Biology and Genetics


    Dr. Greider, one of the world’s pioneering researchers on the structure of chromosome ends known as telomeres, was awarded the 2009 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. Her improbable discovery of telomerase – a remarkable enzyme that restores telomeres and protects them from damage – catalyzed an explosion of scientific studies which, to this day, probe connections between telomerase and telomeres to human cancer and diseases of aging.
    Dr. Greider working in the lab.

Nobel Prize in Chemistry

Peter Agre, M.D.

Bloomberg Distinguished Professor
Director of the Johns Hopkins Malaria Research Institute


Dr. Agre received the 2003 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for discovery of the aquaporin water channels. Referred to as the "plumbing system of cells," aquaporins facilitate the movement of water across cell membranes [rapid osmosis]. Aquaporins are responsible for generation all biological fluids - cerebrospinal fluid, aqueous humor, tears, sweat, saliva, and concentration of urine. Aquaporins are also involved in plant biology and infectious diseases.
Peter Agre in the lab.
 

More About Johns Hopkins Nobel Prize Winners

Our Nobel winners include recipients of the prize in Medicine, Physics, Chemistry, Economics, Physiology, and two Nobel Peace Prize honorees. Learn more about the Nobel Prize winners across The Johns Hopkins University.

 

In Their Words (Slideshow)

     
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