Education
Nusse received his Bachelor of Science in biology and his Doctor of Philosophy from the University of Amsterdam.
Nusse received his Bachelor of Science in biology and his Doctor of Philosophy from the University of Amsterdam.
His research was seminal in the discovery of Wnt signaling, a family of pleiotropic regulators involved in development and disease. Nusse did a postdoctoral fellowship under the guidance of Harold Varmus at the University of California, San Francisco. In 1982, Nusse and Varmus discovered the Wnt1 gene.
After his postdoctural fellowship, Nusse joined the Netherlands Cancer Institute expanding on the earlier work on the Wnt pathway and identifying the pathway in fruit flies.
In 1990, he joined the department of Developmental Biology at Stanford University. His lab is currently focused on the role of Wnt in stem cell development and tissue repair.
Professor Nusse received the Peter Debye Prize from the University of Maastricht in 2000. He is a member of the United States. National Academy of Sciences, European Molecular Biology Organization, and the Royal Dutch Academy of Sciences since 1997. He is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
National Academy of Sciences.