Why Shape Matters: How Cells Build Our Bodies, Ewa Paluch

źródło: Copernicus

 

Polish-French-British biophysicist Prof. Ewa Paluch from the University of Cambridge studies cell shape—what determines it and what role changes in cell movement play in the body, which sometimes leads to disease. In her lecture, she will demonstrate how combining physics, chemistry, and biology allows us to understand the architecture of cells and tissues, how this knowledge translates into medicine, and how combining concepts from different fields helps answer key questions in science.

Ewa Paluch is the 19th Professor of Anatomy at Cambridge, and the first woman to hold this Chair in its 300-year history. She has received a number of awards, including the Hooke Medal from the British Society for Cell Biology in 2017 and the Blavatnik Award for Young Scientists in the UK in 2019. She became Fellow of Trinity College Cambridge, and was elected EMBO member in 2018. Ewa’s lab combines biology and physics to investigate how our cells control their shapes in health and disease. Ewa Paluch’s research has significantly contributed to our understanding of how cells work and the functions they perform, earning her widespread recognition in the scientific community.

Ewa Paluch was born in Kraków and moved to Paris in the mid-1980’s as a child. She graduated in Physics from the Ecole Normale Supérieure in Lyon in 2001, and did a PhD in Biophysics at the Curie Institute in Paris between 2001 to 2005. She started her research group in 2006 at the Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics in Dresden, as a joint appointment with the International Institute of Molecular and Cell Biology in Warsaw. In 2013, she was appointed Professor of Cell Biophysics at the Medical Research Council Laboratory for Molecular Cell Biology, University College London (UCL). From 2014 to 2018, she also headed the new UCL Institute for the Physics of Living Systems, which promotes collaborations between physicists and biologists at UCL. In 2018 Ewa was elected Chair of Anatomy at the University of Cambridge.

Na kanale Copernicus popularyzujemy naukę. Wyjaśniamy obowiązujące teorie, czytamy nowe publikacje, przedstawiamy historyczny kontekst odkryć naukowych. Kanał związany jest z Centrum Kopernika Badań Interdyscyplinarnych Uniwersytetu Jagiellońskiego. Centrum powstało w 2008 r. z inicjatywy Michała Hellera, laureata Nagrody Templetona; od 2014 r. współorganizuje Copernicus Festival. Jeśli doceniasz sposób, w jaki popularyzujemy naukę, możesz nas wesprzeć. Dobrowolne darowizny można wpłacać na konto Fundacji Centrum Kopernika: 92 1090 2053 0000 0001 2289 4260 z dopiskiem "na działalność statutową fundacji". https://www.copernicuscenter.edu.pl/fundacja

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