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Penn Researcher Receives First Annual Prize for
Scientific Contributions to Women’s Health
from the Society for Women’s Health Research
(Philadelphia, PA) - Marisa Bartolomei, PhD,
Associate Professor of Cell and Developmental Biology at the University
of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, was awarded the first annual
Society for Women’s Health Research Medtronic Prize for Scientific
Contributions to Women’s Health. She was recognized for her work
in the field of sex differences research and women’s health. Bartolomei
received a $75,000 award and trophy at the Society for Women's Health
Research’s annual gala dinner held in Washington, DC on Monday,
May 8, 2006.
“It’s an honor to be chosen by a society that has done so
much to promote women’s health,” says Bartolomei. “Being
able to increase awareness that there are gender-specific issues in health-for
me, being a part of that effort is what this award is all about.”
The Society established the award to recognize a women scientist or engineer
for her contributions to women’s health and encourage women to work
on issues uniquely related to women’s health. To be considered,
each nominee must be in the middle of her career, devote a significant
part of her work to women’s health research, and serve as a role
model and mentor for both colleagues and students.
Using mouse models, Bartolomei has found that individual chromosomes have
chemical memory of whether they came from the mother or father. Further,
she established that this memory can be erased - with negative consequences
- early in the embryonic stage by environmental factors. These findings
lay the groundwork for future research, which can target disease and developmental
problems related to erased chromosomal memories.
In animal models, she has studied how assisted reproduction techniques
such as IVF and ICSI can lead to genomic imprinting disorders, which affect
how different genes are expressed. Her ideas are being applied to the
study of maternal and fetal health. Bartolomei also studies a phenomenon
called X inactivation, how a given X chromosome is activated or inactivated
in an embryo. Understanding this process will also shed light on the genetics
of X-chromosome-related diseases.
“All of my lab’s areas of investigation impinge on gender-based
research,” notes Bartolomei.
In addition to research, Bartolomei is dedicated to graduate and medical
education, having trained numerous pre- and postdoctoral students, clinicians,
and other health care professionals. She received her PhD in biochemistry,
cellular, and molecular biology from Johns Hopkins University and was
a postdoctoral fellow at Princeton University. Bartolomei came to the
University of Pennsylvania in 1993.
The Society for Women’s Health Research is the nation’s only
non-profit organization whose mission is to improve the health of all
women through research, education, and advocacy and is based in Washington,
DC.
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medical school) and the University of Pennsylvania Health System.
Penn's School of Medicine is ranked #2 in the nation for receipt
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Report's most recent ranking of top research-oriented medical schools.
Supporting 1,400 fulltime faculty and 700 students, the School of Medicine
is recognized worldwide for its superior education and training of the
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The University of Pennsylvania Health System includes three hospitals
[Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, which is consistently ranked
one of the nation's few "Honor Roll" hospitals by U.S.News &
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