David Alsteens Receives 2019 Heinrich Emanuel Merck Award for Analytical Science

04 SEP 2019 | DARMSTADT, GERMANY

  • Belgian chemist wins prestigious science award worth € 15,000
  • Recognition of young researchers who develop new methods in chemical analysis

Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany, a leading science and technology company, presented Professor David Alsteens (33), Catholic University of Louvain (UCLovain), Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium with the 2019 Heinrich Emanuel Merck Award for Analytical Science. The award ceremony took place during the analytical conference Euroanalysis at Istanbul University in Turkey.

“With his groundbreaking investigations revealing the molecular mechanisms established by viruses to hijack the cellular barrier and enter the cell, David Alsteens joins a prominent group of innovative Heinrich Emanuel Merck Award winners,” said Klaus Griesar, head of Science Relations at Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany. “Perhaps in the future, his research could be used to develop a new tool to quantify the effects of molecules that interfere with the entry of viruses, and thus support the development of new drugs against viral infections.”

Alsteens has made a mark internationally through his work on the nanomechanics of living systems (published here in “Nature Nanotechnology”). He has conducted groundbreaking research on nanomechanical mapping of the first binding steps of a virus to animal cells using a combination of atomic force microscopy (AFM) with confocal microscopy. Alsteens has described his inventions in one granted patent and in a second filed patent.

The winner is currently Research Associate at the Fund for Scientific Research and Professor at the Faculty of Bioscience Engineering at UCLouvain. He completed his Ph.D. thesis in nanobiotechnology at the Institute of Condensed Matter and Nanosciences of the UCLouvain in 2011and spent two years at ETH Zurich in Basel, Switzerland, as a post-doc.

The cell plasma membrane is a highly complex interface between the cell’s interior, the cytoplasm, and the extracellular environment. It serves as a barrier as well as a versatile and essential signaling interface. Within this context, probing how ligands (peptides, drugs or viruses) interact with native membrane receptors in physiologically relevant conditions is of fundamental interest in many disciplines of biology, including cell biology, molecular biology, structural biology, biochemistry, and biophysics.

To address the question of how receptors in the cell wall interact with biomolecules (for example on the surface of a virus) Alsteens introduced the use of force-distance curve-based AFM, a technique to simultaneously image mammalian cells and quantify their dynamic binding properties to specific ligands. In addition, he recently combined the methodology with confocal microscopy to simultaneously monitor the cellular characteristics, for example cell state, distribution of cell surface receptors.

Alsteens’ breakthrough was to simultaneously record the energy landscape of ligand-binding to specific receptors with high-resolution AFM imaging of cell surface in native conditions.

Since 1988, the Heinrich Emanuel Merck Award for Analytical Science has been recognizing scientists under the age of 45 whose work focuses on new methods in chemical analysis and the development thereof in applications aimed at improving the quality of human life, for example in fields such as life sciences, environmental protection and biosciences.

Apart from the award presented today, Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany, recognizes science and scientists with many other awards. The latest addition to this is the Future Insight Prize, which was awarded for the first time this year in July 2019. Further research awards from Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany, include, among others, the Emanuel Merck Lectureship as well as Global Grants for Medical Education, the Emerging Biotech Grant Program, and the Displaying Futures Award.

Heinrich Emanuel Merck Award

Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany, began granting the Heinrich Emanuel Merck Award in 1988 to mark the centennial of the first standardization of analytical methods by Dr. Karl Krauch, a Merck KgaA, Darmstadt, Germany, chemist. This list of the prizewinners documents the significance of the prize in the analytical sciences community, which has often laid the groundwork for important discoveries.

Former winners of the Heinrich Emanuel Merck Award are:

NameYearInstitution, Country
Prof. Francesco Ricci2017University of Rome, Italy
Prof. Petra Dittrich2015ETH-Zürich, Switzerland
Prof. Aaron Wheeler2012University of Toronto, Canada
Prof. Luisa Torsi2010University of Bari, Italy
Dr. Alexander MakarovProf. Shuming Nie20072007Thermo Fisher Scientific, GermanyEmory University, Atlanta, USA
Prof. Yoshinobu Baba2004University of Tokushima, Japan
Prof. Jonathan V. Sweedler2002University of Illinois, USA
Prof. Norman Dovichi2000University of Alberta, Canada
Prof. Renato Zenobi1998ETH-Zürich, Switzerland
Prof. D. Jed HarrisonProf. Andreas Manz19961996University of Alberta, CanadaImperial College London, United Kingdom
Prof. Aviv Amirav1993University of Tel Aviv, Israel
Dr. Brian A. BidlingmeyerProf. Reinhard Niessner19901990Millipore Corporation, USA
Technical University München, Germany
Prof. Mastaka HiraideProf. Otto S. Wolfbeis19881988University of Nagoya, JapanUniversity of Graz, Austria

Heinrich Emanuel Merck (1794-1855)

Heinrich Emanuel Merck was a direct descendant of Merck’s founder Friedrich Jacob Merck, who had received a privilege for a pharmacy—later known as Engel-Apotheke—in Darmstadt in 1668. Heinrich Emanuel Merck was occupied with research, which was unusual at the time. His teachers included the Erfurt pharmacist and reformer of the pharmaceutical field, Johann Bartholomaeus Trommsdorff, and the chemical analyst Martin Heinrich Klaproth, as well as the phytochemist Sigismund Friedrich Hermbstaedt. The latter two both lectured at the university in Berlin.

In 1816, Heinrich Emanuel Merck took over his father‘s pharmacy in Darmstadt, which his family had owned since 1668. Soon afterwards, Merck began working intensively on a new field of analytical chemistry at his lab in the pharmacy: alkaloids. His experiments to isolate and characterize the known alkaloids led to the start of bulk production in 1827, which enjoyed immediate success. In his „Cabinet of pharmaceutical and chemical innovations“, Merck presented 16 alkaloids for scientific experiments to his fellow experts and doctors. Heinrich Emanuel Merck was well known among his customers for the purity of the alkaloids he sold.

In the year 1888 Dr. Carl Krauch (1853-1934), chief analytical chemist at Merck published the first analytical standard work, a narrow book titled “Testing chemical reagents for purity”. In the same year, Merck announced that from now on, only reagents would be introduced to the market that complied with Krauch’s purity criteria described in this book. This was the birth-hour of the reagents of guaranteed purity, and at the same time it was the beginning of modern thinking in analytical chemistry.

Caption: from left to right: Klaus Griesar (Science Relations, Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany), David Alsteens (Heinrich Emanuel Merck Award for Analytical Science 2019), Renato Zenobi (Chairman of the Jury, ETH Zurich)

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