Sean
You're famous for building the ER18s and for showing – once and for all – that painting speaker cabinets glossy black is NOT easier than veneering.
I'm certainly impressed by James Fisher, although I didn't know about him. He was the chairman of the Tulane Med School Pharmacology Dept. for nearly 30 years! At a top notch place like Tulane, that's really something. Did he recently pass away? If so, condolences, he certainly deserves the recognition.
Erythropoietin is a famous molecule itself. It's a small protein that acts as a hormone. It signals the bone marrow to make red blood cells. It's made by the kidneys, and that's how it was discovered, if I remember all this correctly. People with chronic kidney disease who need dialysis to live would become anemic (low red blood cell count) and require frequent blood transfusions. Erythropoietin, called Epo, fixed that problem, saving lots of lives.
Erythropoietin was one of the first, if not the very first, human protein to be made by recombinant genetic methods and become an approved drug. It became a big money maker for the drug company that made it (Amgen, I believe). In the 1980s, there was a prolonged fight (involving hundreds of lawyers, money, guns, and rusty razorblades) among several drug company over who had the rights to Epo.
Epo became the performance-enhancing drug-of-choice among athletes who did long distance or endurance races. It probably still is used for that today.
No one in my family is famous. I'm certainly not. That's why I hang around here. It's easy to fake being important on an internet forum
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