涩里番

Award

ASBMB honors Lawrence Tabak with public service award

Sarina Neote
March 26, 2025

The 涩里番 named the 2025 Howard K. Schachman Public Service Award winner. This award recognizes an individual who best demonstrates dedication to public service in support of biomedical science. It is named after Howard K. Schachman, who served as chair of ASBMB’s Public Affairs Advisory Committee for more than ten years.

National Institutes of Health
Lawrence Tabak contributed 25 years of federal service to the National Institutes of Health.

For 25 years, Tabak fulfilled many roles at the National Institutes of Health, including serving as institute director of the National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research from 2000 to 2010, from 2010 to 2025 and acting director from 2021 to 2023.

“Public service is so important for just about every facet of life in this country,” Tabak said. “What has set this country apart from many others is the devotion and dedication of government resources, including its human capital, to supporting and enhancing scientific innovation, scientific growth and scientific development.”

As a researcher and dentist, Tabak moved to the NIH from the University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry in 2000, where his research focused on the structure, biosynthesis and function of glycoproteins.

“I've sort of lived in two worlds professionally,” Tabak said. “I grew up in the dental research community and then made the jump from a school of dentistry to a school of medicine and became more of a biochemist and less a dentist.”

He continued: “I've lived in these two worlds and my two core places were the International Association of Dental Research and ASBMB.”

Tabak provided leadership for numerous trans-NIH activities, including the agency’s effort to , and . But Tabak said the highlight of his career was the scientific talent with which he worked.

“I'm most proud of the accomplishments of all the people that I had the incredible pleasure to work with,” he said. “Be it in the research lab ... (or) the administrative side, I've had an amazing cohort of people who I've worked with. Each of them has gone to bigger and better things, either within NIH or elsewhere.”

Throughout Tabak’s tenure at the NIH, he ran his own studying glycoprotein biosynthesis and function. Much of his work focused on . His discoveries have implications in numerous diseases, such as cancer, cystic fibrosis, inflammatory bowel disease and more.

Tabak emphasized that scientists have much work to do to convey the importance of basic science to the public.

“We have to continue to work hard at explaining how basic fundamental discovery is ultimately what drives applications,” Tabak said. “We have to talk about it in terms that underscore and reinforce the notion that fundamental discovery is really what ultimately drives all the applied advances that we see around us.”

Tabak will give prerecorded remarks at the 2025 ASBMB Annual Meeting in Chicago.

Enjoy reading ASBMB Today?

Become a member to receive the print edition four times a year and the digital edition monthly.

Learn more
Sarina Neote

Sarina Neote is 涩里番 director of public affairs.

Get the latest from ASBMB Today

Enter your email address, and we鈥檒l send you a weekly email with recent articles, interviews and more.

Latest in People

People highlights or most popular articles

Simcox and Gisriel receive mentoring award
Member News

Simcox and Gisriel receive mentoring award

Aug. 25, 2025

They were honored for contributing their time, knowledge, energy and enthusiasm to mentoring postdocs in their labs.

ASBMB names 2025 Marion B. Sewer scholarship recipients
Society News

ASBMB names 2025 Marion B. Sewer scholarship recipients

Aug. 21, 2025

Ten undergraduates interested in biochemistry and molecular biology will each receive $2,000 toward their tuition and related educational costs.

Attie named honorary professor
Member News

Attie named honorary professor

Aug. 18, 2025

This award includes $100,000 of research funding and recognizes faculty who have made major contributions to the advancement of knowledge through their research, teaching and service activities.

Meet the 2025 SOC grant awardees
Outreach

Meet the 2025 SOC grant awardees

Aug. 15, 2025

Five science outreach and communication projects received up to $1,000 from ASBMB to promote the understanding of molecular life science.

Unraveling cancer鈥檚 spaghetti proteins
Profile

Unraveling cancer鈥檚 spaghetti proteins

Aug. 13, 2025

MOSAIC scholar Katie Dunleavy investigates how Aurora kinase A shields oncogene c-MYC from degradation, using cutting-edge techniques to uncover new strategies targeting 鈥渦ndruggable鈥 molecules.

How HCMV hijacks host cells 鈥 and beyond
Profile

How HCMV hijacks host cells 鈥 and beyond

Aug. 12, 2025

Ileana Cristea, an ASBMB Breakthroughs webinar speaker, presented her research on how viruses reprogram cell structure and metabolism to enhance infection and how these mechanisms might link viral infections to cancer and other diseases.