Education
Doctor Emmanuel Mignot completed his Science Doctorate in Molecular Pharmacology at the Université Pierre and Marie Curie and went to medical school at Necker-Enfants Malades, Université René Descartes, with subspecialisation in Psychiatry.
Career
Doctor Mignot is an authority on sleep research and medicine, and is mostly known for his work on narcolepsy. He is the Craig Reynolds Professor of Sleep Medicine at Stanford Medical School, Stanford University. Doctor Mignot is a former student of École Normale Supérieure (Ulm).
Following a postdoctoral fellowship at the Stanford Sleep Center, Mignot believed that understanding narcolepsy could lead to breakthrough in new understanding of sleep.
He was appointed Assistant Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Stanford University in 1993, Professor in 2001 and Director of the Center for Sleep Sciences and Medicine in 2011, succeeding William C. Dement. Trained as a pharmacologist, he first deciphered the mode of action of modafinil, amphetamines, and antidepressants on narcolepsy symptoms, work that was done in close collaboration with Doctor Seiji Nishino.
Starting in 1990, he isolated the gene causing canine narcolepsy in doberman and labrador dogs. The autoimmune destruction of hypocretin (orexin) neurons in the hypothalamus was later shown by Han and Mignot to be at least partially precipitated by influenza A infections, notably the H1N1 2009 pandemic strain, complementing findings made in Northern Europe following the H1N1 Pandemrix vaccination campaign.
Doctor Mignot identified genetic factors predisposing to human narcolepsy, such as human leukocyte antigen Human Leucocyte Antigens DQB1*06:02 and other genes and isolated the gene causing the methylopathy Autosomal Dominant Cerebelar Ataxia, Deafness and Narcolepsy (ADCA-DN), DNMT1.
Membership
He is an elected member of the Association of American Physicians and of the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences. Doctor Mignot is an active member of several professional and governmental organizations.