ENGLISH

检测到您当前使用浏览器版本过于老旧,会导致无法正常浏览网站;请您使用电脑里的其他浏览器如:360、QQ、搜狗浏览器的极速模式浏览,或者使用谷歌、火狐等浏览器。

下载Firefox

跃进系列学术讲座——Understanding Health and Longevity:Insights from Metabolic Signals

日期: 2024-10-30 访问数:

报告题目:Understanding Health and Longevity: Insights from Metabolic Signals

报告人:   Dr. Meng Wang

报告时间2024114日(周一) 10:15-11:15

报告地点:跃进楼一楼学术报告厅

邀请人   韩家淮教授、俞勇副教授

【报告人简介】Dr. Meng Wang is currently a Senior Group Leader at HHMI Janelia Research Campus. Dr. Wang joined the faculty of Baylor College of Medicine in 2010. Before moving to Janelia in 2022, she was an HHMI Investigator, a Professor and the Robert C. Fyfe Endowed Chair on Aging at Baylor College of Medicine (BCM), as well as a co-director of the BCM Genetics and Genomics Graduate Program. Dr. Wang’s research focuses on the molecular mechanisms governing somatic aging, reproductive senescence, and lipid metabolism, and their sophisticated interrelationship, through harnessing the power of functional genomics, metabolomics, chemical engineering and optical biophysics. Her group uncovered the first lysosome-to-nucleus retrograde lipid messenger pathway, provided new regulatory mechanisms of reproductive longevity, and demonstrated a novel mode of signaling communication between bacteria and mitochondria in regulating host’s lipid metabolism and longevity. Technological developments in Dr. Wang’s laboratory have provided brand new ways to visualize and track lipid molecules as a function of time and space in living cells and organisms. She is the recipient of NIH Director’s Pioneer Award, Peter O’Donnell Award, HHMI Faculty Scholar Award, ASCB Gibco Emerging Leader Prize, ASCB Early Career Life Scientist Award, and Glenn Award for Research in Biological Mechanisms of Aging. She is an elected fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and the American Society for Cell Biology.


上一篇:伟德BETVlCTOR1946学术讲座--Impacts of Invasive Earthworms on Forest Soil Microbial Communities and Functioning

下一篇:跃进系列学术讲座——Gut-liver axis calibrates intestinal stem cell fitness