"Woman in Science" Prof Mary Collins

Date

2015年5月13日 (水) 13:00 14:00

Location

C209

Description

Abstract:

This will be a personal reflection on a career in bioscience. Topics to be covered include how to choose a job, why do administration, how to marry a Nobel Laureate, the problem with children and does being a woman make a difference? The opportunity to present this talk in Japan will make the Q&A with the audience particularly interes

About the Speaker:

Mary Collins studied Biochemistry at Cambridge University then moved to London to work with Enrique Rozengurt on cell signalling at the Imperial Cancer Research Fund for her PhD. Collins worked as a post-doctoral fellow on molecular immunology with Av Mitchison at University College London, then worked with Richard Mulligan at the Whitehead Institute, MIT, during the early days of retroviral vector development. She continued working with these vectors when she started her own research team at the Institute of Cancer Research in London in 1987. Together with Robin Weiss and Yasuhiro Takeuchi, the Collins group initiated a programme of viral vector development for gene therapy. They solved problems of vector inactivation by human complement, vector safety and vector production from stable producer cell lines. Collins moved to UCL as Professor of Immunology in 1997. From 2005 to 2015 she was Director of the MRC Centre for Medical Molecular Virology. After heading the Division of Infection and Immunity at UCL for 10 years, Collins was Dean of the Faculty of Life Sciences at UCL from 2009 until 2014. In September 2014 Collins took up a secondment at the National Institute for Biological Standards and Control to head a new Division of Advanced Therapies, their remit is to facilitate the deployment of safe and effective gene therapy, stem cell therapy and engineered tissue.
http://www.nibsc.org/about_us/staff_profiles/professor_mary_collins.aspx

Sponsor or Contact: 
President's Office
All-OIST Category: 

Subscribe to the OIST Calendar: Right-click to download, then open in your calendar application.