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HR1147 |
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LRB095 20703 GRL 49109 r |
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| HOUSE RESOLUTION
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| WHEREAS, The members of the Illinois House of |
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| Representatives are pleased to congratulate Dr. Graeme Bell on |
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| the occasion of his 60th birthday; and
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| WHEREAS, Dr. Graeme Bell was born in Canada; he earned his |
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| bachelor's degree in zoology from the University of Calgary in |
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| Canada in 1968 and his master's degree in biology from the |
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| University of Calgary in 1971; he earned his Ph.D. in |
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| Biochemistry at the University of California in San Francisco |
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| (UCSF) in 1977, working with Professor William J. Rutter; and
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| WHEREAS, After an extremely successful career in industry |
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| as a scientific founder of Chiron, Dr. Graeme Bell moved to an |
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| academic position at the University of Chicago, successfully |
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| demonstrating that investigators can make the transition from |
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| industry to academia; currently serving as the Louis Block |
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| Distinguished Service Professor of the Departments of Medicine |
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| and Human Genetics and as Director of the National Institutes |
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| of Health-funded Diabetes Research and Training Center at the |
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| University of Chicago, he has a strong record in training |
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| fellows from around the world, many of whom now occupy |
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| important leadership positions in the diabetes community in |
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| North America, Europe, and Asia; and |
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HR1147 |
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LRB095 20703 GRL 49109 r |
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| WHEREAS, Dr. Graeme Bell's scientific career has coincided |
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| with a pioneering period in the development and application of |
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| the techniques of molecular biology to complex human genetic |
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| disease; in the midst of this period, he has established |
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| himself as one of the key outstanding international leaders of |
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| the field, utilizing powerful new technologies in the |
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| elucidation of a number of landmark discoveries; his career has |
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| been particularly notable for the fields he has created along |
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| the way in his search for genes underlying diabetes mellitus, |
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| establishing himself as a world leader in the study of the |
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| genetics of the most common forms of diabetes; and
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| WHEREAS, Early in his illustrious career, Dr. Graeme Bell |
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| documented the phosphorylation of RNA polymerases and was the |
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| first to clone the full-length cDNA and the chromosomal gene |
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| encoding human insulin, discoveries which opened the way for |
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| the production of human insulin and its large-scale use in |
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| patients with diabetes mellitus; and |
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| WHEREAS, Dr. Graeme Bell was the first person to isolate |
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| and characterize the gene encoding the human insulin receptor |
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| precursor and to identify functionally important alternative |
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| splicing of this gene in certain tissues; he also played a key |
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| role in initially characterizing the many important genes, |
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| including the family of mammalian glucose transporters, |
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| several somatostatin receptors in the pancreatic islet, gut, |
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HR1147 |
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LRB095 20703 GRL 49109 r |
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| and central nervous system, an inositol trisphosphate receptor |
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| (IP3R3) that plays an important role in regulation of |
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| intracellular calcium in many cell types, and several opioid |
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| receptors in the central nervous system; and
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| WHEREAS, Dr. Graeme Bell has continued to make landmark |
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| contributions to the understanding of the genetic basis of |
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| diabetes; his most significant discoveries in this area have |
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| put him at the forefront in elucidating genes causing |
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| monogenetic forms of diabetes, especially maturity onset |
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| diabetes of the young (MODY); his observations regarding MODY's |
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| links to the glucokinase gene have stimulated a large number of |
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| clinical and physiological studies from investigators |
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| throughout the world, confirming the long postulated role of |
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| glucokinase as the "glucose sensor" of the beta cell that |
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| governs insulin secretion in response to glucose; these |
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| discoveries have also expanded the knowledge of the structure |
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| and function of hexokinases in a general context; and |
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| WHEREAS, Dr. Graeme Bell has recently been at the center of |
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| a collaboration involving neonatal diabetes genes; working |
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| with Pal Njolstad in 2001, he described the first genetic |
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| etiology of neonatal diabetes in isolation when they showed |
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| homozygous mutations in the glucokinase gene, resulting in |
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| severe neonatal diabetes from birth; working with Philipson and |
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| Cox, he established a referral center for children diagnosed in |
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HR1147 |
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LRB095 20703 GRL 49109 r |
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| infancy to allow diagnostic testing for known causes and also |
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| to define new genes for monogenic diabetes, which has led to |
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| the identification of over a dozen patients with KCNJ11 |
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| mutations in the United States and their treatment, changing |
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| from moderate control on insulin injections to excellent |
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| control on sulfonylurea tablets; and
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| WHEREAS, Dr. Graeme Bell has also been at the forefront in |
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| advancing our understanding of the genetic basis of the common |
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| polygenic forms of type 1 and type 2 diabetes, having found |
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| numerous connections between genetic patterns and |
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| susceptibility to these forms of the disease; and |
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| WHEREAS, Dr. Graeme Bell has developed a fine reputation |
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| among his colleagues for his exemplary conduct as a scientist; |
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| he is particularly well known for his generosity in sharing |
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| reagents and scientific expertise with investigators all over |
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| the world; his willingness to share reagents and information |
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| prior to publication with other investigators, even from |
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| competing laboratories, has been extremely important in |
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| allowing the research of diabetes to continue moving forward; |
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| he is often sought by the NIH, Wellcome Trust, Medical Research |
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| Council, and premier scientific journals as a reviewer for |
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| applications and papers submitted to those agencies; and
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| WHEREAS, Dr. Graeme Bell has demonstrated an exceptional |
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LRB095 20703 GRL 49109 r |
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| level of productivity, having produced over 380 peer-reviewed |
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| publications; as a testament to the enormous impact of his |
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| work, his papers have been cited over 42,000 times, with 114 |
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| papers having been cited over 100 times; and
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| WHEREAS, In recognition of his seminal contributions to the |
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| understanding of the molecular and genetic basis of glucose |
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| transport, Dr. Graeme Bell was the recipient of the Outstanding |
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| Scientific Achievement Award of the American Diabetes |
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| Association (Lilly Award) in 1990; and
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| WHEREAS, Dr. Graeme Bell's stellar scientific career has |
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| led to seminal contributions to multiple aspects of diabetes |
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| research over the past 25 years; his scientific |
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| accomplishments, coupled with his collegiality and his |
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| exemplary role in the training of colleagues and students, make |
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| him an exceptional scientific resource for the State of |
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| Illinois; and |
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| WHEREAS, Dr. Graeme Bell will celebrate his 60th birthday |
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| on April 15, 2008; therefore, be it
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| RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE |
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| NINETY-FIFTH GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we |
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| congratulate one of the foremost diabetes scientists, Dr. |
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| Graeme Bell, on the occasion of his 60th birthday and wish him |