BIO5’s Victor Hruby Elected as a Fellow of the National Academy of Inventors

Election to NAI Fellow status is a high professional distinction granted to academic inventors who have demonstrated a prolific spirit of innovation in creating or facilitating outstanding inventions that have made a tangible impact on quality of life, economic development and the welfare of society.

Victor Hruby, Regents Professor Emeritus in the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry at the College of Science and the College of Medicine – Tucson (photo by Paul Tumarkin, TechLaunch Arizona)

Victor Hruby, Regents Professor Emeritus in the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry at the College of Science and the College of Medicine – Tucson, will be honored during the NAI Fellows Induction Ceremony on April 10 in Phoenix.

Hruby is a world leader in peptide research, focusing primarily on the chemistry, conformation-biological activity relationships and molecular mechanisms of information transduction and of biological functions associated with peptide hormones and neurotransmitters and their receptors that modulate health, disease and human behavior.

A member of the BIO5 Institute, Hruby is dedicated to answering challenging research questions and then translating those discoveries to the public via intellectual property protection and commercial pathways. He holds more than 50 issued patents and has licensed a total of 86 including pending patents. Intellectual property he has developed has been licensed to Selectide Corporation, which he co-founded and is now part of Sanofi Aventis; Melanotan Corporation (now Clinuvel Pharmaceuticals): and three startups. Additionally, his work was instrumental in the commercialization of α-melanotropin compounds, which have been used worldwide to discover novel compounds related to obesity/anorexia, cardiovascular activities, immune response, pain, temperature control, learning and sexual function.

“This is a great honor for an academic inventor. It reflects the tremendous talent and accomplishment of the undergraduate, graduate and postdoctoral students who have been members of my research group over the years,” Hruby said. “I have collaborated with many other professors and their students worldwide as well as here at the U of A in many areas of science and medicine who have provided unparalleled breadth and depth to our research and inventions. I am truly blessed to collaborate and work with all of these people from around the world.”

Hua and Hruby join a growing list of UArizona inventors who have been named NAI Fellows, including Roger AngelHarrison BarrettNasser PeyghambarianMarvin SlepianJames C. WyantGholam PeymanFrederic Zenhausern and Thomas Koch.

The 2019 fellows represent 135 research universities and governmental and nonprofit research institutes worldwide and collectively hold more than 3,500 issued U.S. patents. With the election of the 2019 class, there are now 1,228 NAI Fellows worldwide, representing more than 250 prestigious universities and governmental and nonprofit research institutes. Collectively, the Fellows hold more than 41,500 issued U.S. patents, which have generated over 11,000 licensed technologies and companies, and created more than 36 million jobs. In addition, over $1.6 trillion in revenue has been generated based on NAI Fellow discoveries.


Source: https://uanews.arizona.edu/story/two-faculty-inventors-named-nai-fellows

Posted in AZBio News.