Education
Anne Brunet received her Bachelor of Science in Biology, summa cum laude in 1992 from Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris, France. She immediately began a Doctor of Philosophy in the lab of Doctor 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 Doctor Michael East. Greenberg"s laboratory.
She has been a professor at Stanford since 2004.
Career
Born on November 8th) is a full professor of genetics and the co-director of the Paul F. Glenn Laboratories for the Biology of Aging at Stanford University. Her lab studies mechanisms of aging and longevity. According to her lab website, Anne Brunet is from Bellegarde sur Valserine, France, uses red wine as an anti-aging strategy, and plays the violin.
Anne Brunet received her Bachelor of Science in Biology, summa cum laude in 1992 from Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris, France.
Anne Brunet"s lab works on discovering lifespan-regulating genes and their interactions with the environment. Next, she studies how conserved "pro-longevity genes" (eg FOXO transcription factors) regulate longevity in mammals, the regenerative potential of stem cells, and the nervous system.
She uses mammalian tissue culture and C. elegans as model systems to study longevity pathways, dietary restriction, and epigenetic (chromatin-state) regulation of longevity by the environment. In addition, she is developing the extremely short-lived African killifish North. furzeri as a new vertebrate model for aging.