The American Heart Association (AHA) has named UT Southwestern cardiology fellow Glynnis A. Garry, M.D., winner of its prestigious Louis N. and Arnold M. Katz Basic Research Prize for 2020.
One of the AHA’s oldest and most respected awards, the “Katz Prize” recognizes research involving biochemical, cellular, molecular, and genetic studies in basic cardiovascular science and is intended to encourage new investigators to continue research careers that will impact the field.
Part of the award’s esteem is that it has, in fact, augured future renown in cardiovascular research among its long list of recipients. Notably on that list is Dr. Garry’s father, Daniel J. Garry, M.D., Ph.D., who won the award 23 years ago, when he likewise was a cardiology fellow at UT Southwestern. Today, he is a Professor of Medicine and cardiologist specializing in advanced heart failure and cardiac transplantation at the University of Minnesota’s Lillehei Heart Institute, where his lab focuses on the molecular mechanisms of cardiac development and regeneration.
Dr. Glynnis Garry’s win is reportedly the first time in AHA history that two generations of the same family have received this distinguished award – and it is certainly the first time in UT Southwestern’s history.
Presented Nov. 15 during the 93rd annual AHA Scientific Sessions – this year, for the first time, a “fully virtual” event – the 2020 Katz Prize highlighted Dr. Garry’s manuscript titled “The histone reader PHF7 cooperates with the SWI/SNF complex at cardiac super enhancers to promote direct cardiac reprogramming.”
Dr. Garry’s groundbreaking research, performed in the lab of Eric Olson, Ph.D., Professor and founding Chair of the UTSW Department of Molecular Biology, investigates how the protein PHF7, an epigenetic factor, can be used to reprogram adult cardiac fibroblasts into a myocyte fate – an important step toward the ultimate goal of remuscularization of the injured heart.
“This is research that will be of great utility to the cardiac field,” says Dr. Olson, himself the winner of the 1999 AHA Basic Research Prize. “I have known Glynnis as her scientific mentor for the past six years. I have watched her grow rapidly in her knowledge of and dedication to deeply mechanistic science while maintaining focus on clinically relevant cardiovascular problems. Importantly, she is highly effective at distilling and communicating her science through both writing and oral presentation. She has not only earned respect from her colleagues in my laboratory but has shown real leadership qualities and become a central figure in our group. In short, Glynnis Garry is the complete package.”