Nancy Papalopulu, FMedSci, Financial Stability Board, is a Wellcome Trust Senior Research Fellow and Professor of Developmental Neuroscience in the Faculty of Life Sciences at the University of Manchester, United Kingdom.
Education
After completing her undergraduate degree in Pharmacy at the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece, Nancy Papalopulu moved to London in 1986 to do a Doctor of Philosophy at the National Institute for Medical Research, where she became one of Robb Krumlauf"s first graduate students. There she studied the role of Hox genes in patterning the nervous system. She completed her Doctor of Philosophy in 1990.
Career
In 1991, she moved to Louisiana Jolla, California to do postdoctoral work under the supervision of Chris Kintner at the Salk Institute. There she continued to investigate factors controlling neuronal patterning in the vertebrate embryo using Xenopus as a model system. lieutenant was at this point she began to become interested in how the timing of neuronal differentiation is controlled.
Her own work, and that of her lab members, focused on understanding how the cell cycle, cell polarity and location controls the balance of neuronal progenitor cell maintenance and differentiation in the developing vertebrate nervous system.
In 2006 she moved her lab to the University of Manchester, where she became Research Group Leader of the Developmental Biology group in the Faculty of Life Sciences. In Manchester she has continued to investigate how the timing of neurogenesis is regulated during vertebrate development.
Using computational modeling and experimental biology her group has discovered that oscillations of the microRNA miR-9 targets an important regulator of neuronal differentiation, HES1, allowing for precisely timed waves of neurogenesis. From January 2011 - January 2014, Nancy was Tissue Systems Section Head, representing Developmental Biology and the Wellcome Trust Centre for Cell-Matrix Research, approximately 40 research groups in the Faculty of Life Sciences.
Membership
She is also an active member of the university"s Women in Science group.