Brigid Hogan Scientist

Brigid L. M. Hogan FRS is a British developmental biologist noted for her contributions to stem cell research and transgenic technology and techniques. She is the George Barth Geller Professor of Research in Molecular Biology and Chair of the Department of Cell Biology at Duke University, as well as the director of the Duke Stem Cell Program.Hogan earned her PhD in Biochemistry at the University of Cambridge and did postdoctoral work in the Department of Biology at MIT. She was the head of the Laboratory of Molecular Embryology at the National Institute for Medical Research in London, and later Hortense B. Ingram Professor in the Department of Cell Biology and the founding director of the Stem Cell and Organogenesis Program at Vanderbilt University.Her work on transgenic mice has led her to teach the Molecular Embryology of the Mouse course at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory and edit the first two editions of Manipulating the Mouse Embryo: A Laboratory Manual, considered the "Bible" of mammalian embryo manipulation techniques.She has served as President of the American Society for Developmental Biology and the American Society for Cell Biology. She was the fourth scientist from Vanderbilt University Medical Center to be elected to the American Association for the Advancement of Science. She has been a member of the National Advisory Council of the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, Co-Chair for Science of the 1994 NIH Human Embryo Research Panel and a member of the 2001/2002 National Academies Panel on Scientific and Medical Aspects of Human Cloning. She was awarded the sixth International Society for Transgenic Technologies Prize in 2008 for “outstanding contributions to the field of transgene technologies”. She delivered a 2011 Martin Rodbell Lecture, hosted by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences.

Personal facts

Birth place
England , London
Nationality
United Kingdom
Residence
Durham North Carolina
Education
University of Cambridge
Known for
Developmental biology
Stem cell

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