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G. Gilbert Ashwell, M.D., was a pioneer in the field of glycobiology and is best known as the co-discoverer of the asialoglycoprotein receptor in the liver, sometimes referred to as the Ashwell receptor. He began his career at the NIH in 1950 in what was then called the Institute of Arthritis and Metabolic Diseases. He was elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 1979 and received the prestigious Canada Gairdner Award in 1982. Dr. Ashwell retired from NIH in 1997 but continued to work in his laboratory until shortly before his death.

The Office of NIH History and Stetten Museum has gathered the following resources concerning Dr. Ashwell:

Gil Ashwell's Own Reflections
Interview with journal Nature, 2008 (PDF, 127 kB)

NIH Publications
Brief profile in newsletter NIH Record, 1991 (PDF, 24 mB)
Profile after Institute Scholar Appointment in NIH Record, 1984 (PDF, 22 mB)

Journal Publications
Tribute by John Hanover in Glycobiology, 2015 (PDF, 117 kB) 
Obituary by Toshisuke Kawasaki in Glycoconjugate Journal, 2014 (PDF, 116 kB) 
Tribute by Michael Gottesman et al. in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2014 (PDF, 638 kB)
• Biographical introduction to Ashwell’s article by Nicole Kresge et al., 2006: http://www.nasonline.org/publications/biographical-memoirs/memoir-pdfs/ashwell-gilbert.pdf

Non-Journal Publications
Biographical memoir by John Hanover and William Jakoby for National Academy of Sciences, 2015 (PDF, 155 kB) 
Obituary in Washington Post, 2014 (PDF, 85 kB) 
Obituary in Columbia Medicine magazine, 2014 (PDF, 4.6 mB)

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photo of G. Gilbert Ashwell
G. Gilbert Ashwell (Credit: NIH)

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National Institutes of Health