
Coup for Norwich Science
19th July 2006
Contact: Vicky Just, email victoria.just@bbsrc.ac.uk
Norwich Bioscience Institutes Press Office: 01603 255111
Norwich is celebrating the appointment of one of the US’s top plant
pathologists to work at the Sainsbury Laboratory (SL) in the Norwich
Research Park. Professor Sophien Kamoun, originally from Tunisia, is
a world expert in the fungus-like plant pathogen that causes potato
late blight, the disease that was responsible for the Irish potato famine.
Recruiting Sophien from Ohio State University is not only a fantastic
coup for the Sainsbury Laboratory, but will undoubtedly strengthen the
international scientific excellence of the Norwich Research Park.
Sophien has an outstanding career history, having worked in Paris,
the University of California, Wageningen University (the Netherlands)
and most recently Ohio State University. The Norwich Research Park will
also be welcoming his partner and Ohio State University faculty Saskia
Hogenhout who will be starting a senior fellowship at the John Innes
Centre (JIC) to study insect-transmitted plant diseases.
"Sophien will be a wonderful colleague at the SL. He is a leader
in the research community that studies the potato late blight pathogen,
Phytophthora infestans, and also other Phytophthora diseases” says Jonathan
Jones, head of the Sainsbury Lab, “I am absolutely delighted that we
at the SL and JIC have been able to attract Sophien and his partner
Saskia back to Europe from the US. With Sophien's recruitment, the UK
will have unparalleled expertise in studying oomycetes, a unique and
fascinating class of plant pathogen that also causes downy mildews and
white rusts".
Sophien is expected to start moving his lab from the US in January
2007 and is excited by the prospect of moving to Norwich to work at
the Sainsbury Laboratory. “I am thrilled about joining the Sainsbury
Laboratory, which has a longstanding tradition as a hub for cutting
edge plant research. My objective is to build on and contribute to this
tradition.” He says, “I feel the timing is perfect. The availability
of multiple genome sequences for Phytophthora and related species enables
us to explore new research questions in ways that were unthinkable just
a few years ago. I am also very much looking forward to strengthening
my current collaborations with European colleagues as well as developing
new ones.”
Chris Lamb, director of JIC also welcomed the news, “I am delighted
that we have again competed internationally to bring to Norwich two
outstanding young investigators working on exciting scientific problems
of great potential significance to sustainability.”
Kamoun’s appointment is part of the planned growth of the Sainsbury
Laboratory research portfolio which aims to recruit a further two Project
Leaders to do research into new areas of plant biology based on plant-pathogen
interactions. The institute was recently awarded a 5-year funding package
of £17M by the Gatsby Charitable Foundation as part of its continued
support for the laboratory.
Notes for Editors
The Sainsbury Laboratory
The Sainsbury Laboratory (SL) is located at the John Innes Centre
in Norwich, and accommodates approximately 95 scientists. This research
institution is a charity dedicated to making fundamental discoveries
about plants and how they interact with microbes and viruses. SL staff
members are employed jointly by the University of East Anglia (UEA)
and by the SL. The SL favours daring, long-term research over work that
could be equally well carried out elsewhere. The institute is funded
through the Gatsby Charitable Foundation and from competitive grants
from the EU and BBSRC. www.tsl.ac.uk
Gatsby Charitable Foundation
The Gatsby Charitable Foundation awards grants for charitable activity
in a number of areas including scientific research, economic renewal
and the arts. In the area of plant science it aims to develop basic
research in fundamental processes of plant growth and development and
molecular plant pathology, to encourage young researchers in this field
in the UK and to support improved introduction to the world of plants
within school science teaching. www.gatsby.org.uk
BBSRC
The Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC)
is the UK's principal public funder of basic and strategic research
across the biosciences. It is funded primarily by the Science Budget
through the Government's Office of Science and Innovation. BBSRC invests
over £350M pa in a wide range of research that makes a significant contribution
to the quality of life for UK citizens and supports advances in the
agriculture, food, chemical, healthcare and pharmaceutical sectors.
www.bbsrc.ac.uk.