Jordi Folch-Pi Memorial Award for 1993
Dr. Brian Popko

Dr. Brian Popko
Dr. Brian Popko was the winner of the 1993 Jordi-Folch-Pi Memorial Award. Dr. Popko obtained his Ph.D. from the University of Miami School of Medicine where he studied retroviruses that cause mammary gland cancers in mice. He then traveled to the California Institute of Technology where he received postdoctoral training under the direction of Dr. Leroy Hood, a leading molecular geneticist. At Caltech, he participated in a study that was the first to cure a neurological mutation in mice using molecular techniques. Dr. Popko spent a sabbatical year at the Institute for Molecular Biology and Biotechnology in Crete, Greece studying developmental neuroscience and still retains collaborative ties with investigators at the Institute.
With a long-standing interest in disorders of the nervous system, Dr. Popko's work has centered on glial cells of the nervous system. A multitude of neurological disorders are caused by abnormalities in the interactions between neurons and glia. Dr. Popko takes a molecular genetic approach in his effort to better understand these disorders. In particular, in his studies he has manipulated the mouse genome to gain insight into the roles that genetics play in various neuropathies.
Dr. Popko also has a keen interest in the role that the immune response plays in the etiology and pathogenesis of neurological disorders. His interests are centered on the cytokines of the immune system, which are important players, both as deleterious and beneficial agents, in peripheral neuropathies. Dr. Popko has been recurring participant in the “Pathogenesis of Neuroimmunological Diseases” course offered bi-annually by the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole Massachusetts.
Dr. Popko is the editor of the book "Mouse Models in the Study of Genetic Neurological Disorders." In addition receiving the Folch-pi award he is a recipient of a Neuroscience Research Fellowship from the Alfred P. Sloan organization.
Presently, Dr. Popko is the Jack Miller Professor in Neurological Sciences and Director of the Jack Miller Center for Peripheral Neuropathy. He joined the University of Chicago on January 1, 2002, after more than 13 years on the faculty in the Neuroscience Center at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Read the National Acadamy of Sciences' biographical memoir of Jordi Folch-Pi by Marjorie B. Lees and Alfred Pope.
Updated 8/27/2007 SL