Ikue Mori (scientist)Ikue Mori is a Japanese scientist.[1] She is known for her work on molecular, cellular and neural circuit analyses of thermotaxis behavior in C. elegans.[2] She is Director[3] of Neuroscience Institute[4] and Professor of Molecular Neurobiology[5] of the Graduate School of Science in Nagoya University, Japan. In 2013, she became the first woman to receive Tokizane Award,[6] the most prestigious neuroscience award in Japan, and in 2017, was awarded Medal of Honor with Purple Ribbon. Early life and educationBorn in Tokyo (July 8, 1957), she lived in Shizuoka prefecture during her early childhood and spent her life from elementary school to high school in Kanagawa prefecture. She graduated from Ochanomizu University, Japan, in 1980 with a B.S. in Biology. While she was a M.S. student majoring in population genetics using Drosophila melanogaster in Ochanomizu University, she studied theoretical biology and evolution in University of Sussex, UK, under the supervision of Brian Charlesworth as a visiting student, supported by Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of Japan. From April to August in 1983, she was supervised by Kunitada Shimotohno to learn molecular Biology at National Cancer Research Center, Japan.[7] In September 1983, she joined Biology and Biomedical Science Program in Washington University in St. Louis, where she studied genetics in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans under the supervision of Robert Waterston.[7] Career and researchAfter receiving her PhD, she was appointed as assistant professor in Kyushu University, Japan, where she started to work on thermotaxis in C. elegans, aiming to clarify molecular, neural and circuit mechanisms underlying learning, memory and decision-making. Since 1998, she established her lab in Nagoya University, Japan, where she was first appointed as associate professor, and Full Professor in 2004. She established Neuroscience Institute,[4] Graduate School of Science in Nagoya University in 2017, and has been acting as the first Director. She is attempting to understand how a behavior is generated and executed using C. elegans as a model by the application of system-level and interdisciplinary approaches. Ikue Mori is Program Officer of the Interstellar Initiative, which is an international mentorship program for early career investigators organized by Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development (AMED).[8] Notable papers
Awards and honors1982–1983, Scholarship for studying abroad, Ministry of Education, Culture and Sports, Science and Technology of Japan 1990–1991, Nissan Science Foundation Research fellowship, Brain Science Foundation 1996, The Genetics Society of Japan Scientific Promotion Prize 1996–1999, Researcher of PRESTO, Japan Science and Technology Agency 2006, Saruhashi Prize 2006, Inoue Prize for Science 2013, Tokizane Award[9] 2013, The Kihara Prize 2016, Chunichi Cultural Award 2017, Medal of Honor with Purple Ribbon 2023, Toray Science and Technology Prize References
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