Anne Brunet

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AwardsNOMIS Distinguished Scientist and Scholar Award (2023)[1]
FieldsGenetics, aging
Anne Brunet
Born
Alma materEcole Normale Supérieure, BS and University of Nice, PhD
AwardsNOMIS Distinguished Scientist and Scholar Award (2023)[1]
Scientific career
FieldsGenetics, aging
InstitutionsStanford University School of Medicine
Doctoral advisorDacques Pouysségur
Websiteweb.stanford.edu/group/brunet/index.html

Anne Brunet (born on November 8)[2] is a French geneticist who is the Michele and Timothy Barakett Endowed Professor and the co-director of the Paul F. Glenn Laboratories for the Biology of Aging at Stanford University School of Medicine. Her lab studies mechanisms of aging and longevity.[3]

Brunet is from Bellegarde sur Valserine, France, uses red wine as an anti-aging strategy, and plays piano and violin.[2]

Education

Brunet received her BS in biology in 1992 from Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris, France. She immediately began a PhD in the lab of Jacques Pouysségur at the University of Nice, France, which she completed in 1997. Between 1998 and 2003, she did her postdoctoral work at Harvard Medical School in Michael E. Greenberg's laboratory. She has been a professor at Stanford since 2004.[4] She is a member of the editorial board for Genes & Development.[5]

Research

References

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