2023 Warren Alpert Prize Honors Pioneer in Computational Biology

Scientist’s vision transformed the way researchers analyze data, access biomedical information

A scientist looks at computer screen showing a DNA sequence

Image: janiecbros/iStock/Getty Images


At a glance:

  • Scientist David J. Lipman conceptualized and designed some of the most important computational tools and systems used today for analyzing biomolecular sequences, DNA, RNA, and proteins.
  • Lipman developed computational tools, databases, and infrastructure that transformed the way biomolecular information is analyzed and accessed freely around the globe.
  • The Warren Alpert Foundation Prize honors work that has improved the understanding, prevention, and treatment of disease.

The 2023 Warren Alpert Foundation Prize has been awarded to scientist David J. Lipman for his visionary work in the conception, design, and implementation of computational tools, databases, and infrastructure that transformed the way biological information is analyzed and accessed freely and rapidly around the world.

Get more HMS news here

The $500,000 award is bestowed by The Warren Alpert Foundation in recognition of work that has improved the understanding, prevention, treatment, or cure of human disease. The prize is administered by Harvard Medical School.

Lipman will be honored at a scientific symposium on Oct. 11, 2023, hosted by HMS. For further information, visit The Warren Alpert Foundation Prize symposium website.

Lipman, who is currently a senior science adviser for bioinformatics and genomics for the Food and Drug Administration, is receiving the award for work he did in the 1980s and 1990s prior to and after becoming the founding director of the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI), a position he held until 2017.

Lipman led the development of a powerful computational program called BLAST for the analysis and comparison of newly identified DNA and protein sequences against all known DNA and protein sequences. The tool transformed researchers’ ability to access and interpret DNA, RNA, and protein sequence data and propelled the fields of computational biology and molecular biology. While at the NCBI, Lipman also conceptualized and then oversaw the design and implementation of PubMed, the web-based database for biomedical literature used daily by millions of scientists, physicians, students, teachers, and the public. Today, NCBI houses multiple biotechnology databases and resources that, over the years, have reshaped biology, medicine, and other fields of science.