Alejandro Zaffaroni
Alejandro Zaffaroni | |
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Born |
Montevideo, Uruguay | February 27, 1923
Died |
March 1, 2014 91) Atherton, California, United States | (aged
Nationality | Uruguayan |
Alma mater |
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Thesis | The Application of Paper Partition Chromatography to Steroid Analysis (1950) |
Spouse | Lida Zaffaroni |
Alejandro Zaffaroni (February 27, 1923 – March 1, 2014) was a serial entrepreneur who was responsible for founding several successful biotechnology companies in Silicon Valley.[1][2][3]
Education
Born in 1923 in Montevideo, Uruguay, Zaffaroni received his Bachelor of Science degree from the University of the Republic in 1945, and his Ph.D. in biochemistry from the University of Rochester in 1949.[4]
Career
Zaffaroni joined Syntex, then a small chemical company in Mexico, as a biochemist in 1951.[5] He participated in turning Syntex into a major multinational pharmaceutical company, moving it to Palo Alto, California. He was appointed president of the U.S. subsidiary in 1962.
In 1968, he founded Alza, a portmanteau of his name, to develop medical treatments through controlled drug delivery. He modeled new delivery systems after the processes discovered in endocrinology – where glands deliver very small amounts of hormones but have a tremendous effect –.[6]
Alza's first controlled drug delivery product was used to treat glaucoma. Other products that incorporated Zaffaroni's drug delivery technologies include Glucotrol, for non insulin-dependent diabetes; Duragesic, for management of severe chronic pain; NicoDerm CQ, for smoking cessation; and Transderm-Scop, to prevent nausea and vomiting associated with motion sickness.[7]
In 1980, Zaffaroni established DNAX, a developer of macromolecular products that combines the technologies of genetic engineering and immunobiology.[8]
In 1988 he co-founded Affymax, specializing in combinatorial chemistry to reduce the cost and time of identifying new medicines.
In 1991 he founded Affymetrix, specializing in using genetics for developing new medicine. He was also involved in the creation of Perlegen Sciences, an Affymetrix spin-off which works on finding genetic causes of disease.
In 1994, he founded Symyx Technologies, a company dedicated to utilizing combinatorial chemistry technologies.
Other companies he founded include Maxygen (1997), a developer of technologies that improve the development of proteins and genetic elements, and SurroMed, focusing on the development of technologies for surrogate disease markers. In 2000, he founded Alexza Pharmaceuticals, a company working on rapid onset of action drug delivery technologies.
He died at his home at Atherton, California on March 1, 2014. He was 91.[9]
Awards and honors
In 1995, Zaffaroni received the National Medal of Technology from President Bill Clinton for his contributions to the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industries. In 2004, he was one of the recipients of the Winthrop–Sears Medal from the Chemical Heritage Foundation and The Chemists’ Club, with George Rosenkranz. In 2005 he received the Bower Award for Business Leadership from the Franklin Institute for his creation of new biochemical processes and drug delivery technologies. In 2005 he was awarded the Gregory Pincus Award from the Worcester Foundation. In 2006, he received the Biotechnology Heritage Award.[10][11]
References
- ↑ Shaw, Jane E. (2014). "Alejandro Zaffaroni (1923–2014) Bioentrepreneur who revolutionized drug delivery and screening". Nature 508 (7495): 187. doi:10.1038/508187a.
- ↑ Alejandro Zaffaroni's publications indexed by the Scopus bibliographic database, a service provided by Elsevier.
- ↑ Zaffaroni, A; Burton, R. B. (1951). "Identification of corticosteroids of beef adrenal extract by paper chromatography". The Journal of Biological Chemistry 193 (2): 749–67. PMID 14907764.
- ↑ Inventor of the Week: Alejandro Zaffaroni
- ↑ Biotechnology Hall of Fame
- ↑ The Revolutionaries: Alejandro Zaffaroni
- ↑ ALZA: Commercial Products
- ↑ Palo Alto to be home of expanded biopharma research effort
- ↑ Alejandro Zaffaroni, longtime friend of Stanford, deceased at 91
- ↑ "Past Winners of the Biotechnology Heritage Award". Chemical Heritage Foundation. Retrieved 5 February 2014.
- ↑ Gussman, Neil (9 April 2006). "Alejandro Zaffaroni Receives 2006 Biotechnology Heritage Award". BIO. Retrieved 5 February 2014.
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