Denis Duboule

Denis Duboule

professor Denis Duboule after a conference on 16 November 2009 in Lausanne.
Born 1955
Geneva
Citizenship Swiss and French
Fields Development biology
Institutions EPFL, University of Geneva
Known for Work on Hox genes
Notable awards Louis-Jeantet Prize for Medicine (1998), Grand Prix Charles-Leopold Mayer (2004)

Denis Duboule (born in Geneva in 1955[1]) is a Swiss-French biologist. He has notably worked on the Hox genes involved in development of limbs.[2]

Biography

Duboule obtained a PhD from University of Geneva in 1984.

After questioning Karl Illmensee's claims of having cloned a mouse, Duboule departed to work as a postdoc at the University of Strasbourg, with Pierre Chambon. In 1988, he was made a group leader at the European Molecular Biology Laboratory.

In 1992, he obtained a tenure at Geneva University. From 1997, he has headed the Department of Zoology and Animal Biology.[2] Since 2001, he has also supervised the Frontiers in Genetics NCCR, and since 2006, he has chaired as a full professor at the EPFL.[3]

Honours

Notes and references

  1. ^ Denis Duboule, EPFL
  2. ^ a b Denis Duboule, The Scientist
  3. ^ a b c Denis Duboule, uni-goettingen.de