Nationality Swiss Name Erich Nigg | Fields Cell biology | |
![]() | ||
Institutions ETH Zurich, University of California, San Diego, Swiss Institute for Experimental Cancer Research, University of Geneva Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry, Biozentrum University of Basel |
MENDEL LECTURES / Erich A. Nigg / Cell Cycle Control of Chromosome Segregation / 12.10.2017
Erich Nigg is a Swiss cell biologist and Director of the Biozentrum, University of Basel.
Contents
- MENDEL LECTURES Erich A Nigg Cell Cycle Control of Chromosome Segregation 12102017
- Life
- Work
- Awards Honors
- References
Life
Erich Nigg received his PhD in 1980 from the ETH Zürich (Biochemistry). Subsequently he carried out research at the University of California in San Diego, the ETH Zürich and the Swiss Institute for Experimental Cancer Research (ISREC). From 1995 he was Professor of Molecular Biology at the University of Geneva before he was appointed, in 1999, to a Directorship at the Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry in Martinsried, Germany. Since 2009 Erich Nigg is Professor of Cell Biology and Director of the Biozentrum at the University of Basel, Switzerland.
Work
After early work on biological membranes, the structure of the cell nucleus and mechanisms of intracellular signal transduction, Erich Nigg’s research focused on the cell cycle. His studies contribute to our understanding of the segregation of human chromosomes during cell division, the regulation of mitosis, as well as the structure and function of human centrosomes. This work is relevant to understanding diseases, because mitotic errors contribute to the genetic instability of cancer cells and centrosome abnormalities are known to cause disease (brain diseases and ciliopathies).