The Havel Lecture
The Havel lecture honors an outstanding scientist whose work has a significant impact on lipid biology research. The following is how the organizers collected nominations and chose the 2023 Deuel conference Havel lecturer:
- The organizers collect nominations from 2022 Deuel conference attendees and board members.
- From the nominations submitted, the organizers select seven of the nominees to present to the board for ranked voting.
- The top voter is selected. If two-to-three candidates are very close, a run-off ranking may be performed.
Past Havel lectures

2023
- Jay Horton
Lipogenesis in nonalcoholic fatty liver disease

2022
- Murielle M. Véniant
Targeting dual mechanisms for treating obesity

2020
- Jennifer Lippincott-Schwartz
Dynamics of membrane trafficking, sorting and compartmentalization within eukaryotic cells

2019
- Jake Lusis
The power of natural variation: Sex differences and mitochondrial functions

2018
- Michael Czech
Crosstalk between fat metabolism and neuronal signaling

2017
- Peter Tontonoz
Transcriptional control of lipid metabolism in physiology and disease

2016
- Sir Stephen O'Rahilly
Obesity and insulin resistance; lessons from human genetics

2015
- Thomas Sudhof
Brown & Goldstein-inspired science off field: Lipid membrane fusion at the synapse

2014
- Rudolf Zechner
Lipolysis — more than just the breakdown of fat

2013
- Rick Lifton
From human genetics to validated therapeutic targets

2012
- Gokhan Hotamisligil
Inflammation, endoplasmic reticulum stress and lipids: Emerging networks regulating metabolism

2011
- Christopher K. Glass
Oxysterol regulation of macrophage gene expression

2010
- David J. Mangelsdorf
Nuclear receptor control of lipid metabolism

2009
- Stephen G. Young
Adventures in lipid metabolism

2008
- Helen H. Hobbs
Going to extrames to identify genetic variations contributing to cardiovascular risk

2007
- Ronald Evans
PPARdelta and the Marathon Mouse: Running around physiolog

2006
- David Russell
The enzymes of cholesterol breakdown

2005
- Johann Deisenhofer
Structure of the LDL receptor

2004
- Jeffrey M. Friedman
Oxysterol regulation of macrophage gene expression

2003
- Bruce Spiegelman
Transcriptional control of energy and glucose metabolism


2002
- Michael S. Brown and Joseph L. Goldstein
SREBPs: Master regulators of lipid metabolism

The Havel Lecture was named after Dr. Richard J. Havel (1925–2016), a pioneer in the fields of lipid metabolism, plasma lipoprotein metabolism and cardiovascular disease. Havel, who everyone knew as “Dick,” was frequently called “Mr. Lipoprotein USA” because of his groundbreaking work in characterizing distinct classes of lipoproteins and unraveling mechanisms underlying plasma lipoprotein metabolism. As a clinical associate with at the National Institutes of Health (1953–1956), Dick published landmark papers on plasma lipoprotein metabolism. One of those papers, “,” published in The Journal of Clinical Investigation in 1955, is one of the most frequently cited papers in biomedical research. In another landmark paper, Dick described lipoprotein lipase deficiency as a cause of familial chylomicronemia; that paper was the first description of an inherited disorder of plasma lipoprotein metabolism.
Dick published over 300 manuscripts. The quality of his publications is reflected by his election to the National Academy of Sciences in 1983, the Institute of Medicine in 1989, and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1992. He received many other honors, including the Bristol-Myers Squibb Award for Distinguished Achievement in Nutrition Research and the Distinguished Achievement Award from the American Heart Association’s Council on Arteriosclerosis.
Dick was one of the founders of the Journal of Lipid Research and served as chair of the JLR Advisory Board for many years. From 1973 to 1992, he served as director of UCSF’s Cardiovascular Research Institute, where he trained numerous postdoctoral researchers and mentored junior faculty in biomedical research. Many of Dick’s trainees went on to become outstanding investigators and teachers.
For many years, Dick organized the Deuel Conference on Lipids, which held its first meeting in the mid-1950s. Dick attended the Deuel Conference every year and continued to attend the meeting for more than 20 years after his retirement from UCSF. Dick typically sat in the front row, often rocking forward in his seat, listening intently, and taking notes on each presentation. He asked penetrating questions and was invariably constructive. As a tribute to Dick’s leadership and his extraordinary record of discovery in lipid metabolism, the Deuel Conference on Lipids instituted an annual Richard J. Havel lectureship. The inaugural Havel lecture was delivered by Drs. Michael Brown and Joseph Goldstein (1995 Nobel laureates in Medicine or Physiology) on March 6, 2002. Since then, the Havel Lecture has been the centerpiece of the Deuel Conference on Lipids.