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The CrickConnect team are delighted to be able to invite community members to join us for the institute's regular Crick Lecture.
Crick Lectures provide a broad insight into biomedical research from leading scientists. Not to be missed, the one-hour lectures are the event of the week for the Crick community to come together. The lectures aim to be accessible to scientists across different disciplines, while also offering something for the specialist.
There is also an opportunity to catch up with colleagues and friends over refreshments after Crick Lectures from 17:00. If you are able to join us in person at the Crick please let us know at connect@crick.ac.uk so we can arrange access.
Jean-Paul Vincent obtained his first degree in engineering and applied physics from the University of Louvain, Belgium.
He was then awarded a Fulbright fellowship for postgraduate studies in Biophysics at the University of California Berkeley (MA and PhD). His thesis showed that the dorso-ventral axis of frog embryos is specified by the subcortical rotation in the egg.
From Berkeley, Jean-Paul moved to the University of California, San Francisco for postdoctoral training with Patrick O'Farrell (as a Damon Runyon Fellow). There, in collaboration with Tim Mitchison, he devised the first cell lineage tracer based on caged dye technology.
In 1993, he started his own research group at the Medical Research Council (MRC) Laboratory of Molecular Biology in Cambridge (UK) where he further developed his interests in epithelial patterning.
He moved to the MRC National Institute for Medical Research in 1997.There, he started to investigate how intracellular trafficking and other processes modulate the activity of Wingless, an important signalling molecule. He subsequently initiated a parallel area of research aimed at identifying the signals that trigger apoptosis in response to epithelial disruption or cell fate mis-specification.
The lab moved to the Francis Crick Institute in 2015.
Jean-Paul is a member of British Society for Developmental Biology, the British Society for Cell Biology and the British Genetics Society. He was elected to EMBO in 2006 and was recently awarded the Waddington medal of the British Society for Developmental Biology. He is a fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences (FMedSci) and the Royal Society (FRS). He sits on various review panels and scientific advisory committees.
He co-founded VastOX, now Summit Therapeutics
Senior Group Leader and Assistant Research Director Sonia Gandhi gives this week's lecture.
If you'd like to attend in person please let us know at connect@crick.ac.uk