News Release

2020 Warren Alpert Prize recognizes seminal discoveries in metabolism

Trio of researchers elucidated the role of gut hormones, enabling the design of treatments for diabetes, obesity, short bowel syndrome

Grant and Award Announcement

Harvard Medical School

2020 Warren Alpert Award winners

image: From left: Award winners Daniel Drucker, Joel Habener, Jens Juul Holst view more 

Credit: Harvard Medical School

The 2020 Warren Alpert Foundation Prize has been awarded to a trio of researchers for seminal discoveries about the function of key intestinal hormones, their effects on metabolism and the subsequent design of treatments for type 2 diabetes, obesity and short bowel syndrome.

The 2020 Warren Alpert Foundation Prize recipients are:

  • Daniel Drucker, senior scientist at the Lunenfeld-Tanenbaum Research Institute of Mount Sinai Hospital in Toronto, Canada, and professor of medicine at the University of Toronto
  • Joel Habener, professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School and director of the Laboratory of Molecular Endocrinology at Massachusetts General Hospital
  • Jens Juul Holst, professor of biomedical sciences at the University of Copenhagen, Denmark

The understanding of the complex hormonal symphony underlying the regulation of metabolism and gastrointestinal function flows from the work of many scientists. However, it is the seminal discoveries of Holst, Habener and Drucker that propelled the field forward and enabled the design of several new classes of disease-altering treatments.

The three award-winners identified a family of glucagon-like peptides in the 1970s and 1980s and since then have led the field of metabolism research, with studies that went from bedside observations to the lab bench and back to the clinic.

The work of the three award recipients has unraveled some of the more confounding mysteries of the so-called "incretin" axis--a hormonal signaling pathway that emanates from the gut to regulate the ebbs and flows of blood sugar in response to feeding and can affect the function of all organs throughout the body.

The scientists' work--spanning research in cells, animals and humans--culminated in the development of at least three classes of new medications that have profoundly changed the treatment of type 2 diabetes, a disease that affects more than 30 million people in the United States and nearly 500 million people worldwide. One class of treatments informed by the scientists' work can also be used to correct absorption problems in people with short-bowel syndrome and other conditions marked by intestinal insufficiency. All these therapies have become mainstays in the care of people with metabolic and gastrointestinal diseases.

"The Warren Alpert Foundation has a storied record of recognizing transformative scientific achievements, and the elegant discoveries made by this year's award winners are no exception," said George Q. Daley, dean of Harvard Medical School. "Their work is a striking illustration of bedside-to-bench-to-bedside innovation, demonstrating how observations in patients can spark new fundamental insights in the lab and, in turn, catalyze the development of new treatments."

The award, $500,000 to be shared among the recipients, is given by the Warren Alpert Foundation in recognition of work that has improved the understanding, prevention, treatment or cure of human disease. The prize is administered by Harvard Medical School.

This year's honorees will be recognized at a virtual symposium on Oct. 1 hosted by Harvard Medical School. For further information, visit the Warren Alpert Foundation Prize symposium website at https://warrenalpert.org/symposium

The Warren Alpert Foundation Prize recognizes the work of scientists throughout the world. Including the 2020 prize, the foundation has awarded nearly $5.5 million to 72 scientists. Since the award's inception in 1987, 10 honorees have gone on to receive Nobel prizes.

"The discoveries made by Jens Juul Holst, Joel Habener and Daniel Drucker have reshaped the field of endocrinology and changed the treatment of metabolic and gastrointestinal diseases" said Joseph Martin, director and chairman of the board of the Warren Alpert Foundation and former dean of Harvard Medical School. "Their work powerfully embodies the spirit of the award."

New clues into a complicated plot

Two key hormones--glucagon and insulin--work in tandem to maintain healthy sugar levels in the body. When sugar levels drop, glucagon rises and causes the liver to release glucose into the bloodstream, providing energy to critical tissues of the body, especially the brain. When sugar levels rise, insulin levels increase to temper these effects of glucagon and reduce excess sugar levels in the blood by transporting circulating sugar into tissues and organs.

But if glucagon and insulin are the yin and yang of sugar homeostasis, there are other important players that powerfully modulate the levels of these hormones. Among the most critical characters in this cast are hormones known as glucagon-like peptides.

Holst, Habener and Drucker identified these hormones and went on to elucidate their biology and their physiologic function. Taking their work to the next level, these three researchers also played critical roles in the design and testing of therapies informed by their initial discoveries.

In the 1970s, as a young surgical resident in Denmark, Holst was intrigued by the observation that many of his patients who had undergone surgery for intestinal ulcers would experience spikes in insulin and a subsequent drop in blood sugar after a meal. Holst had already been interested in the role that the gut played in producing molecules that could regulate sugar levels and how the intestines might interact with the pancreas, the chief site of digestive enzymes and insulin and glucagon production. His observations in intestinal-surgery patients provided another tell-tale clue that there may be other players regulating blood glucose homeostasis aside from glucagon and insulin. Holst eventually identified a molecule in human blood that he called entero-glucagon, a specific form of glucagon coming from the gut that is related to yet somewhat different from glucagon coming from the pancreas.

Around the same time, Habener, a young investigator studying diabetes and metabolism, became interested in how glucagon and somatostatin, another hormone made in the pancreas which can inhibit release of insulin and glucagon, were made in the cells of the pancreas. Both glucagon and somatostatin are small peptides made by pancreatic cells known as islets of Langerhans. Some of these cells are also the site of insulin production. Using then-nascent recombinant DNA technology, Habener used pancreatic islets from monkfish to demonstrate that glucagon and somatostatin were encoded in the pancreatic cells as larger, precursor hormones. In the process, Habener observed that proglucagon also contained the amino acid sequences for two similar, but previously unknown, hormones. Further studies in mammals demonstrated the presence of these two new hormones related to glucagon--hence they were named glucagon-like peptides-1 and -2 or GLP-1 and GLP-2 for short. This basic biology work provided the fundamental underpinnings of the clinical and physiologic observations made by Holst and many more that followed.

Subsequent work by Holst, Habener and eventually Drucker, who in the mid-1980s joined Habener's lab as a fellow, further defined the biology and action of these hormones. Their work demonstrated that GLP-1 is released into the blood from gut cells in response to food intake where it then acts to enhance the release of insulin from the beta cells of the pancreas, as well as suppress glucagon and slow stomach emptying.

These findings suggested that augmenting the activity of GLP-1 could be an important therapeutic target--one that could be exploited to correct the relatively low insulin output seen in type 2 diabetes, where tissues are insulin resistant and sugar-fueling glucagon levels are too high and the levels of sugar-removing insulin too low to overcome this resistance. In an early proof-of-principle experiment, Holst and colleagues performed intravenous and subcutaneous infusions of GLP-1 in patients with type 2 diabetes. As predicted, the treatment lowered glucagon levels, boosted insulin and stabilized blood sugar.

Drucker then went on to further define the role of GLP-2, a close relative of GLP-1 that is also produced in response to food ingestion. This work demonstrated that the principal role of GLP-2 is to maintain growth and function of the intestinal cells responsible for food absorption.

From the lab to the clinic

The focus of the initial work was the action of GLP-1 on the beta cells of the pancreas to enhance insulin secretion, but subsequent work led by Drucker elucidated the effects of GLP-1 in multiple additional organs and systems, including the brain, gut, heart, blood vessels and the immune system.

GLP-1 therapies have been effective in the treatment of type 2 diabetes and, more recently, have emerged as an effective treatment of obesity through actions in the brain to reduce appetite. GLP-1 drugs have also recently shown cardio-protective effects in people with diabetes, a critical consideration in a population that has elevated cardiovascular risk as a result their disease. Research by Drucker has defined the cardiovascular biology of GLP-1 and demonstrated that GLP-1 may exercise a heart-protective effect in people with type 2 diabetes. The development of these therapies promises to transform the treatment of people with diabetes who have a history of cardiovascular illness.

In the 1990s, Drucker performed critical work to elucidate the function of GLP-2 and became the first scientist to identify its role as an intestinal growth factor, a chemical that regulates intestinal cell growth and proliferation and enhances absorption of nutrients. The findings precipitated the development of therapies to correct various intestinal dysfunctions stemming from short bowel syndrome. One of these therapies has reduced the need for using gastric feeding tubes to provide nutrition in children and adults with the condition.

One feature of GLP-1 is its short half-life--an observation that captured the attention of all three investigators. Holst identified an enzyme called DPP-4 as the culprit responsible for the breakdown of GLP-1 and, as it turned out later, of GLP-2. Holst along with many contributions from Drucker laid the foundation for the development of drug therapies that inhibit the action of the DPP-4 enzyme, allowing naturally produced GLP-1 and GLP-2 to linger longer, enhancing their salutary effects. Currently, DPP-4 inhibitor drugs, often used in combination with metformin and other medications, are a staple of diabetes treatment.

From the winners

"The Alpert award is wonderful, prestigious international recognition of the work over several decades of my laboratory, including trainees and research staff, together with key contributions from my co-awardees. It is a great honor to be recognized for the bench-to-bedside science that we and colleagues have worked so hard to translate into new therapies for human metabolic disease."
--Daniel Drucker

"I am deeply honored to share the prestigious Warren Alpert Foundation Prize with my two esteemed colleagues on behalf of the many creative and industrious postdoctoral fellows, trainees and students who worked on the GLP-1 project over many years. It is indeed a tremendous pleasure to see that the inspiration and perspiration expended by these coworkers has resulted in a useful treatment for the control of type 2 diabetes mellitus"
--Joel Habener

"I am extremely happy to be awarded this prestigious prize and in such astonishing company. I am also surprised because I never thought about being rewarded. I just did the work because it was fun and exciting. What has been the most rewarding is the knowledge that so many people around the globe are able to control their diabetes with the GLP-1 agonists and the DPP-4 inhibitors developed on the basis of our work."
--Jens Juul Holst

Past winners

The 2019 Warren Alpert Foundation Prize went to Edward Boyden, Karl Deisseroth, Peter Hegemann and Gero Miesenböck for pioneering work in the field of optogenetics, a rapidly growing discipline that uses a revolutionary approach harnessing light and genetic modification to control the activity of cells in the brain.

Other past recipients of the Warren Alpert Prize include:

Francis Collins, Paul Negulescu, Bonnie Ramsey, Lap-Chee Tsui and Michael Welsh for discoveries in cystic fibrosis.

James Allison, Lieping Chen, Gordon Freeman, Tasuku Honjo and Arlene Sharpe for discoveries into cancer's ability to evade immune surveillance that led to the development of a class of cancer immunotherapies. Allison and Honjo shared the 2018 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.

Rodolphe Barrangou, Emmanuelle Charpentier, Jennifer Doudna, Philippe Horvath and Virginijus Siksnys for CRISPR-related discoveries.

Tu Youyou, who went on to receive the 2015 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine with two others, and Ruth and Victor Nussenzweig for their pioneering discoveries in the chemistry and parasitology of malaria and the translation of that work into the development of drug therapies and an antimalarial vaccine.

Oleh Hornykiewicz, Roger Nicoll, and Solomon Snyder for research into neurotransmission and neurodegeneration.

Alain Carpentier and Robert Langer for innovations in bioengineering.

Harald zur Hausen and Lutz Gissmann for work on the human papillomavirus (HPV) and its role in cervical cancer. Zur Hausen and others were honored with the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 2008.

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The Warren Alpert Foundation

Each year the Warren Alpert Foundation receives between 30 and 50 nominations from scientific leaders worldwide. Prize recipients are selected by the foundation's scientific advisory board, which is composed of distinguished biomedical scientists and chaired by the dean of Harvard Medical School. Warren Alpert (1920-2007), a native of Chelsea, Mass., established the prize in 1987 after reading about the development of a vaccine for hepatitis B. The inaugural recipient of the award was Kenneth Murray of the University of Edinburgh, who designed the hepatitis B vaccine. To award subsequent prizes, Alpert asked Daniel Tosteson (1925-2009), then dean of Harvard Medical School, to convene a panel of experts to identify scientists from around the world whose research had a direct impact on the treatment of disease.

About Harvard Medical School

Harvard Medical School has more than 11,000 faculty working in the 11 basic and social science departments comprising the Blavatnik Institute and at the 15 Harvard-affiliated teaching hospitals and research institutes: Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston Children's Hospital, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Cambridge Health Alliance, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute, Hebrew SeniorLife, Joslin Diabetes Center, Judge Baker Children's Center, Massachusetts Eye and Ear/Schepens Eye Research Institute, Massachusetts General Hospital, McLean Hospital, Mount Auburn Hospital, Spaulding Rehabilitation Network and VA Boston Healthcare System.


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