Professor Carol L. PrivesFRS is the Da Costa Professor of Biological Sciences at Columbia University.[1]
She is known for her work in the characterisation of p53, an important tumor suppressor protein frequently mutated in cancer.
Education
Prives was educated in Canada, received her BSc and PhD[2] in 1966[3] from McGill University, undertaking research in the lab of Juda Hirsch Quastel.[4] She pursued postdoctoral fellowships at Albert Einstein College of Medicine and the Weizmann Institute under the mentorship of Professor Michel Revel. after which she became a faculty member at the Weizmann Institute.[1] She received an honorary Doctor of Sciences degree from McGill University, her alma mater, on 29 May 2014 for her contributions to the understanding of p53.[5]
Research and career
In 1995, she was appointed as the Da Costa Professor of Biology at Columbia University.[3] She was the chair of the Department of Biological Sciences from 2000 to 2004.[6]
Her early interest in the SV40 DNA tumour virus as a model for eukaryotic gene expression and oncogenic transformation led her to the study of p53.[7] Since the late 1980s, her lab has focused on the p53 tumour suppressor gene, one of the most frequently mutated in human cancers.
^Phone: 514 398-6751, Contact Information Contact: Julie Fortier Organization: Media Relations Office Email: julie c fortiermcgill ca Office. "14 individuals to receive honorary degree from McGill". Newsroom. Retrieved 2020-08-16. {{cite web}}: |first= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)