Lance Liotta
{{short description|American biologist}}
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| name = Lance Liotta
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| birth_date = {{birth date and age|1947|07|12}}
| birth_place = Cleveland, Ohio{{Cite web |url=https://www.aacc.org/Community/Awards/Hall-of-Fame/Bios/L-to-S/Lance-A-Liotta.aspx |title=Lance A. Liotta |website=American Association for Clinical Chemistry |access-date=2019-12-24}}
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| fields = Biology
| workplaces = George Mason University
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| education = Hiram College
Case Western Reserve University
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| thesis_title = System dynamics of the hematogenous metastatic process from an implanted tumor
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| thesis_year = 1974
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| known_for = Autocrine motility factor
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| awards = National Lectureship Award from the American Association for Clinical Chemistry (1987)
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Lance A. Liotta (born July 12, 1947){{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=VIgp_uI0y7QC&pg=RA3-PA48 |title=NIH Almanac |last=Information |first=National Institutes of Health (U S. ) Division of Public |publisher=U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare, Public Health Service, National Institutes of Health |year=1998 |pages=48 |language=en}} is the co-director and co-founder of the Center for Applied Proteomics and Molecular Medicine (CAPMM) at George Mason University.{{Cite web |url=https://capmm.gmu.edu/capmm-team |title=CAPMM Team |website=Center for Applied Proteomics and Molecular Medicine |access-date=2019-12-24}} His research team was the first to propose the existence of the autocrine motility factor. In 1985, he received the Rhoads Award (since renamed the Award for Outstanding Achievement in Cancer Research) from the American Association for Cancer Research. In 1987, he received the National Lectureship Award from the American Association for Clinical Chemistry. His other awards include the Warner-Lambert Parke Davis Award and the Surgeon General's Medallion.
The House of Representatives oversight subcommittee in 2004 provided evidence that Lance A. Liotta, then a researcher at the National Cancer Institute, had continued to receive thousands of dollars in compensation from a business arrangement through May, 2004, despite his testimony under oath the previous month that he had suspended the collaboration months before.{{Cite news |last=Weiss |first=Rick |date=2004-06-23 |title=NIH Scientists Broke Rules, Panel Says |language=en-US |newspaper=The Washington Post |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/2004/06/23/nih-scientists-broke-rules-panel-says/e4511c9d-b740-4111-9fd8-8ebe61296111/ |access-date=2023-05-03 |issn=0190-8286}}
References
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Category:20th-century American biologists
Category:21st-century American biologists
Category:Case Western Reserve University alumni
Category:George Mason University faculty
Category:Scientists from Cleveland
Category:National Institutes of Health people
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