Not one but two University of Virginia School of Medicine discoveries are being featured in the STAT health news site’s annual bracket tournament of 2021’s biggest biomedical advances. It’s the fourth year in a row that a UVA Health discovery has been recognized as one of the year’s most significant.
UVA earned two of only 64 slots in this year’s “STAT Madness,” which is like the scientific version of the NCAA basketball tournament. Voting, which began Tuesday, is open to the public.
Winners advance until a final victor is determined, and supporters can vote again for their favorites in each round.
UVA’s contenders come from Dr. Maria Luisa S. Sequeira-Lopez and her collaborator Dr. Ariel Gomez, and from Christine and Bernard Thisse, both Ph.D.s.
Sequeira-Lopez and Gomez discovered the missing link in our bodies’ blood pressure controls – natural barometers called “baroreceptors” in kidney cells – that scientists had been seeking for more than 60 years. The finding could lead to new treatments for high blood pressure.

