Photo available in the Archive Image Gallery or direct download High Res Image, Electronic Media Mail
Dennis Steindler, executive director of the Evelyn F. and
William L. McKnight Brain Institute of the University of Florida, was honored
for his contributions to neuroscience at a ceremony with officials from the
Catholic University in Rome, the university's teaching hospital — the Gemelli
University Polyclinic — and the Italian government.
Steindler received the Atena Onlus Foundation Award on June
4 in Rome for
his research in adult stem cell biology and regenerative medicine.
Sharing the award were Dr. Gianfranco Rossi, a pioneering
neurophysiologist who founded the neurosurgery program at the Catholic University
in 1969; and professor Rita Levi Montalcini, who received the Nobel Prize in
Physiology and Medicine for her discoveries and work involving brain growth
factors.
"The secret of the enormous advances in treating brain
diseases is the alliance of biologists and neurosurgeons," Steindler said while
accepting the award. "Biologists are excited by discoveries regarding stem
cells and the possibility to regenerate brain tissue, but there is always the
vital need for clinicians to come to the aid of patients. These must be
complementary efforts."
Steindler was nominated for the award by professor Julius
Maira, M.D., the director and chairman of the neurosurgery institute at the Catholic University and Gemelli University
Polyclinic. The hospital is widely known for treating Pope John Paul II's
medical conditions from 1981 to 2005.
"I expect that all the strands that we are following will
lead to results soon in the fields of malignant brain tumors, intracranial
aneurysms, neural stem cells and reconstructive surgery," Maira said.
Former Italian ministers of health Livia Turkish and
Girolamo Sirchia attended the ceremony, as did Monsignor Achille Silvestrini
and Monsignor Vincenzo Paglia, both bishops in Italian dioceses.
"It is humbling to
receive the award and an honor to share it with such gifted and respected
investigators," Steindler said. "This award really belongs to the gifted
collaborators I have in my laboratory and in the McKnight Brain Institute, for
helping to discover the important roles for adult stem cells in both
neurological repair and brain tumorigenesis."
Steindler began studying brain development while in graduate
school at the University
of California San Francisco,
investigating abnormal brain circuitry arrangements that arise spontaneously in
neurological mutant mice. He went on to learn how to develop transplantation
and functional brain repair approaches while at the Max Planck Institute for
Biophysical Chemistry in Gottingen, Germany, at Michigan
State University
and at the University
of Tennessee.
Along with leading UF's McKnight Brain Institute, Steindler currently
co-directs the Regeneration Project — a multi-institutional effort to enhance
the human body's natural restorative processes — and serves on the advisory
boards of the California Institute of Regenerative Medicine and the Michael J.
Fox Foundation for Parkinson's Research.