Shi Yigong

Shi Yigong
Born (1967-05-05) May 5, 1967
Zhengzhou, Henan, China
Nationality Chinese
US (formerly)
Fields Programmed cell death (apoptosis)
Membrane protein
Alma mater Tsinghua University (B.S.)
Johns Hopkins University (PhD)
This is a Chinese name; the family name is Shi.

Shi Yigong (Chinese: 施一公; born May 1967) is a famous Chinese biophysicist in the field of protein X-ray crystallography. Right now he is a university professor at Tsinghua University and serves as vise president of Tsinghua University. He is also the founding president of West Lake University in Hanzhou, China.

Career

Shi Yigong received his bachelor's degree from Tsinghua University. In 1995 when receiving his PhD degree in Biophysics from Johns Hopkins University, he has determined the crystal structure of several critical apoptotic proteins, including apaf-1, DIAP1, and the BIR3 domain of XIAP. He was the Warner-Lambert/Parke-Davis Professor in the department of Molecular Biology at Princeton University. In June 2008, he was selected as a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator.[1] However, he rejected the award upon resigning his position at Princeton University in order to pursue his career at Tsinghua University, becoming the dean of the School of Life Sciences there.[2] In 2003, he was appointed a Chair Professor of Tsinghua's Department of Biological Sciences and Biotechnology. He was appointed Vice Director of Tsinghua's Institute of Biomedicine and Vice Dean of Tsinghua's Department of Biological Sciences and Biotechnology in 2007. He was appointed Dean of Tsinghua's School of Life Sciences (replacing the Department of Biological Sciences and Biotechnology) in 2009. He was elected as a foreign member of National Academy of Science, USA, a foreign member of American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and a member of Chinese Academy of Sciences in 2013.

Shi renounced U.S. citizenship in 2011.[3][4]

Awards

References

External links

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