News Release

Twenty-seven scientists become EMBO Young Investigators

Grant and Award Announcement

EMBO

3 December 2024 – EMBO announces the selection of 27 life scientists as the newest members of the EMBO Young Investigator Programme. The programme supports young group leaders in Europe and beyond. The new young investigators will start in January, be active members of the programme for four years, and become part of an international network of nearly 800 current and former EMBO Young Investigators, Installation Grantees and Global Investigators. They carry out research across a wide range of life sciences topics from cell and computational biology to immunology and neuroscience.

"EMBO welcomes the new young investigators, a group of exceptional scientists who represent innovation and excellence in their fields. The multidisciplinary EMBO Young Investigator Network that they will join generates many opportunities for forming connections. We are delighted to support this next generation of scientific leaders and the collaborations they will form,” says EMBO Director Fiona Watt.

Networking opportunities for EMBO Young Investigators and their lab members are central to the programme. The young investigators, who receive an award of 15,000 euros, also benefit from training in laboratory leadership and responsible conduct of research, access to core facilities at EMBL in Heidelberg, Germany, and mentoring by EMBO Members. They can apply for additional grants, for example for organizing or travelling to conferences.

Of the 27 new EMBO Young Investigators, 14 are female (52%) and 13 are male (48%). They are based in 10 member states of the EMBC, the intergovernmental organization that funds the EMBO Programmes, and Japan. In total, the programme received 207 eligible applications, and the success rate was 13%. In the framework of the memorandum of cooperation between EMBO and the Japan Science and Technology Agency (JST), scientists funded by certain programmes of JST were eligible apply to the EMBO Young Investigator Programme for the first time in 2024.

The next deadline for applications is 1 April 2025. More information about the programme, including eligibility criteria and the application process, is available online.

 

New EMBO Young Investigators

Name

Research project

Affiliation

Location

Ilary Allodi

Understanding the role of neural circuit dysfunctions in ALS-FTD pathophysiology

University of St Andrews

St Andrews, UK

Benedetta Artegiani

Enlightening brain and liver biology and disease with novel human-based models

Princess Máxima Center for Pediatric Oncology

Utrecht, NL

Thibaut Brunet

Evolutionary origin of animal morphogenesis

Institut Pasteur

Paris, FR

Johan Decelle

Structural and metabolic connection in planktonic cell-cell symbioses

Université Grenoble Alpes

Grenoble, FR

Gautam Dey

Evolutionary cell biology of mitosis and nuclear remodelling

EMBL Heidelberg

Heidelberg, DE

Basil Greber

Structure and function of DNA repair assemblies and cyclin-dependent kinases

The Institute of Cancer Research

London, UK

Itamar Harel

Experimental biology of vertebrate aging and age-related diseases

The Alexander Silberman Institute of Life Sciences

Jerusalem, IL

Katharina Höfer

Bacterial epitranscriptomics

Max Planck Institute for Terrestrial Microbiology

Marburg, DE

Momoko Ikeuchi

Self-organization of plant cells during organ regeneration

Nara Institute of Science and Technology

Nara, JP

Claudia Keller Valsecchi

Gene dosage and sex differences

Institute of Molecular Biology

Mainz, DE

Charlotte Kirchhelle

From edge to organ: how plants shape organs

National Research Institute for Agriculture, Food and Environment

Lyon, FR

Eva Kummer

Mitochondrial genome maintenance and gene expression

University of Copenhagen

Copenhagen, DK

Felix Leroy

Neuronal circuits supporting cognition and social interactions in the mouse

Instituto de Neurociencias

San Juan de Alicante, ES

Gabriel Neurohr

Cell size and crowding homeostasis

ETH Zurich

Zurich, CH

Mor Nitzan

Representation, inference and design of multicellular systems

Hebrew University

Jerusalem, IL

Sylvie Noordermeer

DNA double-strand break repair pathways in health and disease

Leiden University Medical Center

Leiden, NL

Tomáš Pluskal

Decoding the chemical universe of plants

Institute of Organic Chemistry and Biochemistry

Prague, CZ

Lucia Prieto-Godino

Mechanisms of neural circuit evolution: from molecules to networks

The Francis Crick Institute

London, UK

Julia Qüesta

Epigenetic mechanisms underlying plant developmental transitions

Centre for Research in Agricultural Genomics

Barcelona, ES

Johannes Rebelein

Microbial metalloenzymes: characterizing and engineering microbial nitrogenases

Max Planck Institute for Terrestrial Microbiology

Marburg, DE

Erdinc Sezgin

Restoring immune fitness through biophysical manipulations

Karolinska Institutet

Solna, SE

Marta Shahbazi Alonso

Mechanisms of self-organization in the early mammalian embryo

MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology

Cambridge, UK

Ralph Stadhouders

Molecular mechanisms underlying lymphocyte memory and dysfunction

Erasmus University Medical Center

Rotterdam, NL

Teresa Thurston

Host pathogen interactions and innate immune signaling

University of Oxford

Oxford, UK

Agnes Toth-Petroczy

Protein plasticity and evolution

Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics

Dresden, DE

Florian Wilfling

Deciphering autophagosome assembly and cargo selection using correlative cryo-ET

Max Planck Institute of Biophysics

Frankfurt, DE

Simone Zaccaria

Investigating metastatic cancer evolution at single-cell whole-genome resolution

University College London

London, UK

 


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