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The Cambridge Institute for Medical Research (CIMR) is an interdisciplinary research institute within the University of Cambridge School of Clinical Medicine. [1] CIMR is on the Cambridge Biomedical Campus, in the Keith Peters Building, a dedicated research building that it shares with the Medical Research Council Mitochondrial Biology Unit.
It is located at the Addenbrooke’s Hospital / Cambridge Biomedical Campus site in Cambridge, England. The unit is concerned with the study of the mitochondrion , as this organelle has a varied and critical role in many aspects of eukaryotic metabolism and is implicated in many metabolic, degenerative, and age-related human diseases.
The JDRF/Wellcome Trust Diabetes and Inflammation Laboratory (JDRF/WT DIL), centred in the Cambridge Institute for Medical Research, is a multi-disciplinary research programme within the department of Medical Genetics at the University of Cambridge.
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The Institute is based in the Hutchinson Building on the Cambridge Biomedical Campus, close to partners like the Cancer Research UK Cambridge Institute, Wellcome-MRC Stem Cell Institute and newly ...
Cambridge Institute for Medical Research; Wellcome Trust–MRC Institute of Metabolic Science; Institute of Public Health; School of the Humanities and Social Sciences
2013 Deputy Director of Cambridge Institute for Medical Research, University of Cambridge; 2014 Thomson Reuters Highly Cited Researcher for 2014 in the categories Biology and Biochemistry and Molecular Biology and Genetics [30] 2015 Thomson Reuters Highly Cited Researcher for 2015 in the categories Biology and Biochemistry [30]
In 2019 the research building housing the Cambridge Institute for Medical Research and the MRC Mitochondrial Biology Unit (the former MRC-Wellcome Trust Building) was renamed the Keith Peters Building.The Board Room at the Francis Crick Institute and a ward in the Renal Unit at Hammersmith Hospital are also named after him.