Research director at the Institute Mondor of Biomedical Research

Oliver Bischof

Oliver Bischof

Oliver Bischof received his Ph.D. in biochemistry at the Free University Berlin, Germany, in 1995. Subsequently, he joined the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratories, King’s College London, and Pasteur Institute as a postdoctoral trainee from 1996-2004 before obtaining a permanent researcher position at CNRS. 

He is currently a research director at the “Institute Mondor of Biomedical Research (IMRB).” His work focuses on the role of cellular senescence in aging and age-related pathologies.

Publications of Oliver Bischof

Martínez-ZamudioRI, RouxPF, FreitasJANLF, RobinsonL, DoréG, SunB, Belenki D, Milanovic M, Herbig U, Schmitt CA, Gil J, and Bischof O (2020). AP-1 Imprints a Reversible Transcriptional Program of Senescent Cells. Nature Cell Biology 22(7):842-855. doi: 10.1038/s41556-020-0529-5. IF 20.

Seehawer M, Heinzmann F, D’Artista P,Harbig J, Roux PF, HönickeL, Dang H, Klotz S, Robinson L, Dore G, Rozenblum N, Kang TW, Chawla R, Buch T, Vucur M, Roth M, ZuberJ, Lüdde T, Sipos B, Longerich T, Heikenwälder M, Wang XW, Bischof O, and Zender L (2018). Necroptosis microenvironment determines lineage commitment in liver cancer. Nature, 562(7725):69-75. 562(7725):69-75. doi: 10.1038/s41586-018-
0519-y. IF 42,8.

Benhamed M, Herbig U. Dejean A. and Bischof O (2012). Senescence is an Endogenous Trigger for MicroRNA-Mediated Transcriptional Gene Silencing in Human Cells. Nat. Cell Biol. 14(3): 266-75. doi: 10.1038/ncb2443. IF 20.

 

SERIE of Oliver Bischof

Ageing, Longevity and Senescence Biology
Ageing, Longevity and Senescence Biology

Better understand the many pathophysiological mechanisms that are linked to aeging afin de bien promouvoir la santé.

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