• Date and time: Friday 25 April 2025, 1pm to 2pm
  • Location: SLB/118, Lecture Theatre, Spring Lane Building, Campus West, University of York (Map)
  • Audience: Open to alumni, staff, students (postgraduate researchers, taught postgraduates, undergraduates)
  • Admission: Free admission, booking not required

Event details

Sir Paul Nurse, Director of the Francis Crick Institute, presents a special guest edition of the YBRI Friday Biomedical Science Seminars. Come along to this seminar taking place in the Spring Lane Building, room SLB/118, to hear Paul's insights into Eukaryotic Cell Cycle Control. Join us afterwards in the atrium of the Spring Lane Building for refreshments and networking.

About the speaker

Sir Paul Nurse OM CH FRS

Director, Francis Crick Institute

Paul Nurse is a geneticist and cell biologist who works on how the eukaryotic cell cycle is controlled. His major work has been on the cyclin dependent protein kinases and how they regulate cell reproduction. He is Director of the Francis Crick Institute in London, Chancellor of the University of Bristol, and has served as President of the Royal Society, Chief Executive of Cancer Research UK and President of Rockefeller University. He shared the 2001 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine and has received the Albert Lasker Award, the Gairdner Award, the Louis Jeantet Prize and the Royal Society's Royal and Copley Medals. He was knighted in 1999 made a Companion of Honour and awarded the Order of Merit in 2022 for services to science and medicine in the UK and abroad, received the Legion d'honneur in 2003 from France, and the Order of the Rising Sun in 2018 from Japan. He served for 15 years on the UK Council of Science and Technology, advising the Prime Minister and Cabinet, and was a Chief Scientific Advisor for the European Union.  In 2020 he wrote “What is Life” which has been published in 22 countries. Paul flies gliders and vintage aeroplanes and has been a qualified bush pilot. He also likes the theatre, hill-walking, going to museums and art galleries, and running very slowly.

Venue details

  • Wheelchair accessible
  • Hearing loop