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Danesh Moazed is a Professor of the Department of Cell Biology at Harvard Medical School and an investigator at Howard Hughes Medical Institute. [1] He is known for unveiling the mechanism of the RNAi-mediated heterochromatin establishment. His lab currently works on chromatin biology and epigenetic inheritance. [2] [3]
Timothy John Mitchison FRS is a cell biologist and systems biologist and Hasib Sabbagh Professor of Systems Biology at Harvard Medical School in the United States. [6] [7] [8] He is known for his discovery, with Marc Kirschner, of dynamic instability in microtubules, [9] [10] for studies of the mechanism of cell division, and for contributions to chemical biology.
Ting Wu, 1984, professor of genetics at Harvard Medical School; F. Eugene Yates, 1950, physiologist and a professor of medicine and medical engineering at University of California Los Angeles; King-Wai Yau, 1975, professor of neuroscience at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine; Junying Yuan, 1989, professor of cell biology at Harvard ...
In 1960, Purves received a Bachelor of Arts degree from Yale University and in 1964, a doctoral degree from Harvard Medical School. [citation needed] Purves took a postdoctoral fellowship in the Department of Neurobiology at Harvard University from 1968 to 1971 and in the Department of Biophysics, University College London, from 1971 to 1973.
In 1978 he was made professor at the University of California, San Francisco. In 1993, he moved to Harvard Medical School, where he served as the chair of the new Department of Cell Biology for a decade. He became the founding chair of the HMS Department of Systems Biology in 2003. He was named the John Franklin Enders University Professor in ...
Amy J. Wagers is the Forst Family Professor of Stem Cell and Regenerative Biology at Harvard University [1] and Harvard Medical School, an investigator in islet cell and regenerative biology at the Joslin Diabetes Center, and principal faculty of the Harvard Stem Cell Institute. [2]
Evans joined the faculty at Duke University in 2021. [6] [7] Evans uses cell biology to understand how cells deal with malfunctioning mitochondria in neurons, a process known as mitophagy. [8] Patients with Parkinson's disease typically show mutations on two proteins, PINK1 and Parkin.
She took a position as a Professor in the Department of Cell Biology at Harvard Medical School in 1997, and served as the Chair of the department from 2003 to 2014. Brugge has redirected her most recent research efforts because, in her own words, "we were kind of lured into areas that were pretty far from cancer, so I really wanted to go back ...