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Tetrahedron Symposium Speaker Biography
Stephen Neidle
Professor Stephen Neidle was educated at Imperial College London, where he graduated in chemistry and then proceeded to do a PhD on crystallographic studies of natural products and antibiotics. After a period as an ICI Fellow, he joined the Biophysics Department at King’s College, which initiated his interest in nucleic acid structural studies. He was appointed as one of the first Cancer Research Campaign Career Development Awardees, becoming a Life Fellow on moving to the Institute of Cancer Research.
He was appointed to the Chair of Biophysics at the Institute of Cancer Research in 1990, where he was Academic Dean from 1997-2002. He moved to the new Chair of Chemical Biology at the School of Pharmacy in 2002, where he also directs the Cancer Research UK Biomolecular Structure Group. He was the first Chairman of the Chemical Biology Forum of the Royal Society of Chemistry, and continues to be involved in developing the interface between chemistry and the life sciences. He is also Director of the newly-established Centre for Cancer Medicines at the School.
Stephen Neidle’s interests are primarily in nucleic acid structure and recognition by small molecules, and in exploiting this information for the rational design of new anticancer agents. In recent years this has emphasised two principal classes of molecules: G-quadruplexes and duplex DNA. He was involved in pioneering the concept of the selective targeting of telomeric DNA with small molecules that stabilise G-quadruplex formation at the telomere, and which inhibit the action of the enzyme telomerase, which is up-regulated in the majority of human cancers. More recently this work has led him and his Group to the design of a new class of anticancer molecules, Telomere Targeting Agents. He has published over 350 papers and reviews, and has edited a number of books on nucleic acids and drug-DNA interactions, including the Oxford Handbook of Nucleic Acid Structure. He has also written a new textbook, “Principles of Nucleic Acid Structure”.
Stephen Neidle has received a number of awards for his work on drug–nucleic acid recognition and drug design, including the 2000 prize of the Biological and Medicinal Chemistry Sector of the Royal Society of Chemistry, and its 2002 Interdisciplinary Award. He was the 2004 Paul Ehrlich Lecturer of the French Societé de Chimie Thérapeutique, and was awarded the 2004 Aventis Prize in Medicinal Chemistry.
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| Previous Events |
2007 Berlin
2006 Kyoto
2005 Bordeaux
2004 New York
2003 Oxford
2002 Shanghai
1997 Munich
1995 Kyoto
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