Thirty-seventh Annual C.R. Stephen Lecture
“G Protein Coupled Receptors: Challenges and New Approaches to Drug Discovery”
Wednesday, April 16 | 4-5 p.m. CDT
Eric P. Newman Education Center (EPNEC) Auditorium (in person only)
Featured Speaker
Brian Kobilka, MD
Hélène Irwin Fagan Chair of Cardiology
Professor, Molecular & Cellular Physiology
Stanford University School of Medicine
Stanford, CA
Brian Kobilka, MD, received Bachelor of Science Degrees in Biology and Chemistry from the University of Minnesota, Duluth in 1977. He graduated from Yale University School of Medicine in 1981, and completed residency training in Internal Medicine at WashU Medicine in 1984. From 1984-1989 he was a postdoctoral fellow in the laboratory of Robert Lefkowitz at Duke University.
While in the Lefkowitz lab, he and his colleagues cloned the gene that encodes the receptor for the hormone adrenaline. They found that the receptor was similar to rhodopsin, the light-sensing receptor. It was later discovered that there is an entire family of receptors that look and act in similar ways. These receptors are known as G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs); they are responsible for the body’s response to the majority of hormones and neurotransmitters.
In 1989, he joined the faculty of Medicine and Molecular and Cellular Physiology at Stanford University. Research in the Kobilka lab focuses on the structure and mechanism of action of GPCRs. They apply a spectrum of biochemical, biophysical and structural approaches to understand GPCR signaling at the molecular level. He is a member of the National Academy of Sciences, the National Academy of Medicine, and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. In 2012, Brian Kobilka was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry, along with Robert Lefkowitz, for his work in determining the structure of a GPCR in inactive and G protein-coupled states.
The C.R. Stephen Lecture series, sponsored by the Department of Anesthesiology, honors the first chair of the Department of Anesthesiology at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, C. Ronald Stephen, MD, FFARCS.