Roel Nusse
Roeland "Roel" Nusse | |
---|---|
Born | (1950-06-09) 9 June 1950 (age 74) Amsterdam |
Alma mater | University of Amsterdam, University of California, San Francisco |
Scientific career | |
Institutions | Stanford University |
Academic advisors | Harold Varmus |
Roeland "Roel" Nusse (born 9 June 1950, Amsterdam) is a professor at Stanford University and an investigator at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.[1] His research was seminal in the discovery of Wnt signaling, a family of pleiotropic regulators involved in development and disease.[2]
Research
Nusse received his BSc in biology and his PhD from the University of Amsterdam. Nusse did a postdoctoral fellowship under the guidance of Harold Varmus at the University of California, San Francisco. In 1982, Nusse and Varmus discovered the Wnt1 gene.[3]
After his postdoctoral fellowship, Nusse joined the Netherlands Cancer Institute expanding on the earlier work on the Wnt pathway and identifying the pathway in fruit flies. In 1990, he joined the department of Developmental Biology at Stanford University. His lab is currently focused on the role of Wnt in stem cell development and tissue repair.
Awards
Nusse received the Peter Debye Prize from the University of Maastricht in 2000. He is a member of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences, European Molecular Biology Organization, and the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences (since 1997).[4] He is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.[1] He won a Breakthrough Prize in 2017.[5] In 2020 he received the Canada Gairdner International Award.[6]
References
- ^ a b "Roel Nusse". HHMI. Retrieved 6 September 2013.
- ^ Nusse, Roel; Varmus, Harold (22 May 2012). "Three decades of Wnts: a personal perspective on how a scientific field developed". The EMBO Journal. 31 (12): 2670–2684. doi:10.1038/emboj.2012.146. PMC 3380217. PMID 22617420.
- ^ Nusse, R; Varmus, HE (November 1982). "Many tumors induced by the mouse mammary tumor virus contain a provirus integrated in the same region of the host genome". Cell. 31 (1): 99–109. doi:10.1016/0092-8674(82)90409-3. PMID 6297757. S2CID 46024617.
- ^ "Roel Nusse". Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences. Archived from the original on 17 July 2015.
- ^ "5 top scientists win Breakthrough Prizes in star-studded event". 5 December 2016.
- ^ "Gairdner Awards 2020 Laureates". Retrieved 14 December 2021.
External links
- Roeland Nusse Lab at Stanford University
- v
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- Simon Donaldson, Maxim Kontsevich, Jacob Lurie, Terence Tao and Richard Taylor (2015)
- Ian Agol (2016)
- Jean Bourgain (2017)
- Christopher Hacon, James McKernan (2018)
- Vincent Lafforgue (2019)
- Alex Eskin (2020)
- Martin Hairer (2021)
- Takuro Mochizuki (2022)
- Daniel A. Spielman (2023)
- Simon Brendle (2024)
physics
- Nima Arkani-Hamed, Alan Guth, Alexei Kitaev, Maxim Kontsevich, Andrei Linde, Juan Maldacena, Nathan Seiberg, Ashoke Sen, Edward Witten (2012)
- Special: Stephen Hawking, Peter Jenni, Fabiola Gianotti (ATLAS), Michel Della Negra, Tejinder Virdee, Guido Tonelli, Joseph Incandela (CMS) and Lyn Evans (LHC) (2013)
- Alexander Polyakov (2013)
- Michael Green and John Henry Schwarz (2014)
- Saul Perlmutter and members of the Supernova Cosmology Project; Brian Schmidt, Adam Riess and members of the High-Z Supernova Team (2015)
- Special: Ronald Drever, Kip Thorne, Rainer Weiss and contributors to LIGO project (2016)
- Yifang Wang, Kam-Biu Luk and the Daya Bay team, Atsuto Suzuki and the KamLAND team, Kōichirō Nishikawa and the K2K / T2K team, Arthur B. McDonald and the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory team, Takaaki Kajita and Yōichirō Suzuki and the Super-Kamiokande team (2016)
- Joseph Polchinski, Andrew Strominger, Cumrun Vafa (2017)
- Charles L. Bennett, Gary Hinshaw, Norman Jarosik, Lyman Page Jr., David Spergel (2018)
- Special: Jocelyn Bell Burnell (2018)
- Charles Kane and Eugene Mele (2019)
- Special: Sergio Ferrara, Daniel Z. Freedman, Peter van Nieuwenhuizen (2019)
- The Event Horizon Telescope Collaboration (2020)
- Eric Adelberger, Jens H. Gundlach and Blayne Heckel (2021)
- Special: Steven Weinberg (2021)
- Hidetoshi Katori and Jun Ye (2022)
- Charles H. Bennett, Gilles Brassard, David Deutsch, Peter W. Shor (2023)
- John Cardy and Alexander Zamolodchikov (2024)
- Cornelia Bargmann, David Botstein, Lewis C. Cantley, Hans Clevers, Titia de Lange, Napoleone Ferrara, Eric Lander, Charles Sawyers, Robert Weinberg, Shinya Yamanaka and Bert Vogelstein (2013)
- James P. Allison, Mahlon DeLong, Michael N. Hall, Robert S. Langer, Richard P. Lifton and Alexander Varshavsky (2014)
- Alim Louis Benabid, Charles David Allis, Victor Ambros, Gary Ruvkun, Jennifer Doudna and Emmanuelle Charpentier (2015)
- Edward Boyden, Karl Deisseroth, John Hardy, Helen Hobbs and Svante Pääbo (2016)
- Stephen J. Elledge, Harry F. Noller, Roeland Nusse, Yoshinori Ohsumi, Huda Zoghbi (2017)
- Joanne Chory, Peter Walter, Kazutoshi Mori, Kim Nasmyth, Don W. Cleveland (2018)
- C. Frank Bennett and Adrian R. Krainer, Angelika Amon, Xiaowei Zhuang, Zhijian Chen (2019)
- Jeffrey M. Friedman, Franz-Ulrich Hartl, Arthur L. Horwich, David Julius, Virginia Man-Yee Lee (2020)
- David Baker, Catherine Dulac, Dennis Lo, Richard J. Youle [de] (2021)
- Jeffery W. Kelly, Katalin Karikó, Drew Weissman, Shankar Balasubramanian, David Klenerman and Pascal Mayer (2022)
- Clifford P. Brangwynne, Anthony A. Hyman, Demis Hassabis, John Jumper, Emmanuel Mignot, Masashi Yanagisawa (2023)
- Carl June, Michel Sadelain, Sabine Hadida, Paul Negulescu, Fredrick Van Goor, Thomas Gasser, Ellen Sidransky and Andrew Singleton (2024)