Lydia Villa-Komaroff

American molecular biologist
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External Websites
Also known as: Lydia Villa
Quick Facts
Original name:
Lydia Villa
Born:
August 7, 1947, Las Vegas, New Mexico, U.S. (age 77)
Also Known As:
Lydia Villa
Subjects Of Study:
insulin

Lydia Villa-Komaroff (born August 7, 1947, Las Vegas, New Mexico, U.S.) is an American molecular biologist whose research led to the discovery that bacteria could be engineered to produce insulin, a hormone that plays a critical role in regulating glucose levels in the blood. Villa-Komaroff’s breakthrough ultimately improved the production and availability of insulin used for the treatment of diabetes mellitus, a condition in which the body is unable to maintain healthy blood glucose levels.

Early life and education

Lydia Villa was the first of six children in her family. She was born to parents who had immigrated to the United States from Mexico during the Mexican Revolution. At a young age, inspired by several of her family members, she developed an interest in science.

In 1965, after graduating from high school, Villa enrolled at the University of Washington in Seattle with the intention of studying chemistry. However, the intensity of the school’s chemistry courses and a comment from her adviser that women did not belong in chemistry swayed her to change her major; she eventually decided on biology. Midway through her undergraduate studies, she transferred to Goucher College in Maryland to be near her future husband, Anthony Komaroff, who had taken a job in Washington, D.C. In 1970 the two married, and she graduated from Goucher with a bachelor’s degree in biology.

Graduate and postgraduate studies

Villa-Komaroff subsequently attended the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Cambridge as a doctoral student, focusing her studies on molecular and cellular biology. Her research at MIT centered on understanding the role of RNA and protein production in poliovirus, the cause of polio. Among her Ph.D. advisers was American virologist David Baltimore, who was a winner of the 1975 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine.

In 1973, while still a graduate student at MIT, Villa-Komaroff, sensing the prevalence of racial inequities in scientific communities, helped found the Society for the Advancement of Chicanos/Hispanics and Native Americans in Science (SACNAS). In 1975, upon completing work for a Ph.D., she became the third Mexican American woman in U.S. history to earn a doctorate in a scientific field.

For postdoctoral studies, Villa-Komaroff initially went to Harvard University in Cambridge. However, in 1976, after Cambridge placed a temporary ban on genetic engineering, she moved to Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory in New York. She experienced significant failures in her research there but was soon able to return to her original postdoctoral position at Harvard, after the ban on genetic engineering research was lifted. There she joined the laboratory of American molecular biologist Walter Gilbert, who in 1980 won a share of the Nobel Prize for Chemistry. Under Gilbert’s guidance, Villa-Komaroff carried out her landmark research on insulin-producing bacteria, which was published in 1978. By 2017 most artificial insulin produced worldwide was relying on the method that Villa-Komaroff had developed.

Following her postdoctoral work, Villa-Komaroff became an assistant professor at the University of Massachusetts Medical School. She later accepted a faculty position at Children’s Hospital, Boston, a teaching hospital for Harvard Medical School. Throughout her career, her research leveraged recombinant DNA techniques to investigate the biomechanics of insulin production as well as the role of growth factors in human development.

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Later career

In 2005 Villa-Komaroff became the chief scientific officer (CSO) of the biotechnology company Cytonome and became chief executive officer the following year while continuing to serve as CSO. She worked exclusively as CSO from 2009 to 2014 before changing her involvement with the company to that of board member. She also served on the advisory boards of several biotechnology and medical organizations and held administrative roles.

Villa-Komaroff received various honors and awards throughout her career, several of which recognized her achievements as a Hispanic scientist. In 2021 she received the SACNAS Presidential Service Award for her commitment to the organization.

Anna Dubey