“I am extremely grateful for the intellectual support from my colleagues in the department and for the financial support from Harvard University that helped get my lab started 8 years ago,” said Denic. “But most of all, this award is a testament to how bright and hard-working members of my lab have been during this time.”
In their announcement, the ASCB award committee noted two significant contributions Denic has made to the fields of membrane protein biogenesis and autophagy—a vesicular transport process that captures unwanted intracellular structures and targets them to the cell’s recycling compartment. Notably, he discerned the journey tail-anchored proteins make from the ribosome to insertion in the endoplasmic reticulum—which he and colleagues dubbed the guided entry of tail-anchored proteins (GET) pathway—and discovered that certain autophagy targets signal they are ready to be recycled by activating the enzyme responsible for initiating vesicle formation.