

News
- Mark Estelle of Indiana University Awarded Kumho International Science Prize
Contact:
Brian Hyps 301-251-0560, ext. 114 bhyps@aspb.org
January 24, 2006
For Immediate Release
Mark Estelle of Indiana University Awarded Kumho International Science Prize
ROCKVILLE, MD - Indiana University Professor Mark Estelle has been awarded
the 2006 Kumho International Science Prize by the Kumho Cultural Foundation
of Seoul, Korea and its chairman, Sam Koo Park. The awards process was administered
on behalf of the Kumho Cultural Foundation by the American Society of Plant
Biologists.
After considering a number of possible awardees, each responsible for major
discoveries in plant science, the ASPB selection committee chose Dr. Estelle
for elucidating the mechanism of action of auxin, an essential regulator of
plant growth and development. These studies recently culminated in the identification
of the auxin receptor by Estelle's group and by Ottoline Leyser at the University
of York. There had been exhaustive, multi-year searches by laboratories across
the globe for this elusive finding.
Upon being notified that Dr. Estelle had won the award, ASPB President Michael
Thomashow said "This is wonderful news about Mark. He is a superb scientist
who has made seminal contributions to our understanding of hormone signaling.
He is highly deserving of the prestigious Kumho International Science Prize."
Dr. Estelle commented, "I am very grateful and honored to be selected
to receive the Kumho award. It is a tremendous endorsement of the work we are
doing here at Indiana University."
The award ceremony will take place at the Kumho Art Gallery/Kumho Art Hall
in Seoul, South Korea June 23, 2006. A $30,000 prize is included with the award,
along with Dr. Estelle's round-trip travel to the award ceremony. Dr. Estelle
will also speak on his research during the ASPB awards symposium at the Society's
annual meeting in Chicago in 2007.
The year 2006 is the first year in which ASPB administered the award selection
for the Kumho Cultural Foundation. The selection was previously done by the
International Society of Plant Molecular Biologists. Dr. Roger Hangarter, ASPB
Immediate Past President, notified Dr. Estelle of the award selection. Prior
recipients of the award include Ingo Potrykus (2000), the Arabidopsis team of
Chris Somerville et al. (2001), Dr. David Baulcombe of the UK (2002), Dr. Xing-Wang
Deng of the US and China (2003), Dr. Joanne Chory of the US (2004), and Dr.
Steven Tanksley of the US (2005).
Founded in 1924, ASPB is a science society of nearly 6,000 plant scientists
from the United States and more than 50 other nations. ASPB publishes two of
the world's leading plant science journals, Plant
Physiology and The Plant Cell.
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January 24, 2006 NR06-100