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Roger Guillemin
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Roger Charles Louis Guillemin (; January 11, 1924 – February 21, 2024) was a French-American neuroscientist. He received the National Medal of Science in 1976, and the Nobel Prize for Medicine in 1977 for his work on , sharing the prize that year with and Rosalyn Sussman Yalow.


Biography
Guillemin was born in , France. After secondary studies at the Lycée Carnot in Dijon, he began his medical studies at the University of Dijon in 1943. He completed his medical studies at the University of Lyon and received MD degree in 1949. He worked as a doctor in a small village in Burgundy, and went to , Quebec, Canada, to work with at the Institute of Experimental Medicine and Surgery at the Université de Montréal where he received a Ph.D. in 1953. In 1965, he became a naturalized citizen of the United States.

In 1954, Guillemin observed that did not produce hormones unless hypothalamic cells were present, supporting the theory that the hypothalamus controls the pituitary through hormones, dubbed releasing factors. Guillemin moved to Baylor College of Medicine in to develop this finding. Andrzej V. Schally, known in the US as , joined him in 1957. Their partnership dissolved after five years due to lack of progress and personal conflicts; Schally moved to the Veterans Affairs Hospital in New Orleans.

Both scientists then worked independently, processing large quantities of hypothalami—Guillemin used over two million sheep hypothalami, while Schally used pig brains—funded by the U.S. government. These release factors are present in an extremely low amounts in the hypothalamus, and it was hard to detect them using the instrumentation available at that time. Their rivalry intensified, particularly regarding scientific credit. In 1969, as government funding was about to be cut off, from Guillemin's team made a breakthrough, identifying the thyrotropin-releasing factor (TRF), which controls the . This achievement secured continued funding and led to the identification of another releasing factor, FRF, which controls reproductive systems. Guillemin and Schally discovered the structures of Thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) and Gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) in separate laboratories. They were awarded the 1977 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for this discovery.

In 1970 he joined the Salk Institute in , where he was the head of the Laboratories for Neuroendocrinology until retirement in 1989. Here, he discovered , and was "among the first" to isolate . Guillemin protege, Wylie Vale Jr., established his own laboratory at Salk in 1977; their attempts of finding releasing factors was described as "yet another furious rivalry"; Vale's lab was first to purify and sequence the CRF.

In 2007, Guillemin was an interim president of the Salk Institute.

Guillemin signed along with other Nobel Prize winners a petition requesting a delegation of the Committee on the Rights of the Children of the to visit a Tibetan child who had been under house arrest in China since 1995, namely Gedhun Choekyi Nyima, recognized as the 11th by the 14th , Tenzin Gyatso.

Guillemin on January 11, 2024, and died in San Diego, California the following month, on February 21. He was married to Lucienne Jeanne Billard for 69 years, until her death in 2021 at the age of 100. They had five daughters and a son.


Awards and honors
  • National Academy of Sciences, 1974
  • Canada Gairdner International Award, 1974
  • Albert Lasker Award for Basic Medical Research, 1975
  • , 1976
  • in Medical Sciences, 1976
  • National Medal of Science, 1976
  • American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 1977
  • Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, 1977


Further reading


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