|
St. Louis (April 2, 2003) - Divergence, Inc. Founder, President, and Chief
Scientific Officer James McCarter, M.D., Ph.D. was acknowledged today with the Innovation Award
from the Academy of Science of St. Louis. The award "recognizes a scientist under age 40 for
superior accomplishment in a branch of science", according to the Academy and was granted to Dr.
McCarter "for developing powerful gene-based strategies to treat infections by parasitic nematodes
and co-founding the Young Scientist Program".
The Academy of Science of St. Louis, founded in 1856, is dedicated to improving scientific literacy
in the St. Louis region. It began awarding its Innovation Prize in 1995. Co-Recipient of the award
this year was Phyllis Hanson, M.D., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Cell Biology and Physiology at
Washington University School of Medicine.
Dr. McCarter is an expert in the application of genomics to parasitic disease, leading both industry
and academic initiatives to attack diseases of humans, animals, and plants caused by invading nematode
worms. He founded Divergence in 1998. Dr. McCarter is also a Research Instructor at Washington
University School of Medicine's Genome Sequencing Center (GSC) in St. Louis, where he continues work
he initiated in 1998 as the Merck Fellow of the Helen Hay Whitney Foundation. At the GSC, Dr. McCarter
has led the world's largest effort devoted to the sequencing of genes from parasitic nematodes,
generating over 200,000 sequences with funding from the National Institutes of Health and the National
Science Foundation. Dr. McCarter completed his medical and doctoral training at Washington University,
receiving the Victor Hamburger Prize in developmental biology. Previously, he graduated magna cum laude
from Princeton University, receiving the Cannon Award in biology. Dr. McCarter is a member of the 2002
class of Henry Crown Fellows of the Aspen Institute and a 2002 selection for the St. Louis Business
Journal's 40-Under-40 list of business leaders. He founded the Young Scientist Program, Washington
University's largest science outreach project, in 1991.
Divergence is a research and development company dedicated to the discovery of effective and ecologically
sound strategies for the control of parasites and other pests. The company's initial focus is on parasitic
nematodes, one of the world's major pest groups. Nematodes are roundworms that cause billions of dollars
in damage annually to numerous crops, including soybeans, corn, and cotton, as well as most fruits and
vegetables. Nematodes also cause widespread disease in animals, including infections such as heartworm in
dogs and cats and intestinal worms in livestock. Nematode-induced human diseases include elephantiasis and
African river blindness.
Visit St. Louis
Commerce Magazine to read related article, or
download PDF article.
For more information on Divergence, visit www.divergence.com.
|