Organization:Research Institute of Molecular Pathology

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Research Institute of Molecular Pathology (IMP)
Entrance-area.jpg
Established1985
Research type
  • Basic (non-clinical)
  • Life sciences
Field of research
Director
Jan-Michael Peters (science); Harald Isemann (administration)
Faculty15
Staff270
AddressCampus-Vienna-Biocenter 1, 1030 Vienna, Austria
LocationVienna, Austria
Websitewww.imp.ac.at

The Research Institute of Molecular Pathology (IMP) is a biomedical research center, which conducts curiosity-driven basic research in the molecular life sciences.

The IMP is located at the Vienna Biocenter in Vienna, Austria. The institute employs around 270 people from 40 countries, of which over 200 are scientists.[1] The working language at the IMP is English. The IMP was established in 1985 and is funded by the pharmaceutical company Boehringer Ingelheim and research grants.[2]

Research

Laboratory at the IMP. Up to three research groups share a lab to support communication and exchange.

IMP comprises 15 independent research groups performing basic biological research across the following areas:[3]

Publications, awards and honours

Scientists at the IMP publish 60 to 90 papers in international peer-review journals per year: between 1985 and 2021, more than 2,200 research papers were published. 93 patents were filed based on discoveries made at the institute since 1985. IMP faculty was awarded 17 ERC Grants since the establishment of this grant scheme in 2007; about two thirds of the IMP faculty were ERC grantees by 2018.[4] Five IMP faculty members received Wittgenstein Awards since 1996. About one third of the faculty are elected members of EMBO.[5] In 2017, Kim Nasmyth received the Breakthrough Prize in life sciences for work on cohesin that he had done at the IMP.[6] One year later, his former IMP PhD student Angelika Amon was awarded the same prize.[7]

Facilities

IMP maintains a suite of in-house facilities, maintained in cooperation with IMBA, that provide support and scientific services to the scientists at IMP.[8] In addition, the four research institutes of the Vienna Biocenter maintain a number of shared services jointly called "Vienna BioCenter Core Facilities" (VBCF). The services offered are available to all Vienna BioCenter scientists including IMP staff.[9]

History

The establishment of the IMP was a joint venture by Boehringer Ingelheim and Genentech and initiated in 1985. Under the directorship of Max Birnstiel, the first institute building was opened in 1988.[citation needed]

In 1992, three institutes of the faculties of science and medicine of the University of Vienna moved into a nearby building, today's Max Perutz Labs. This created the basis for referring to the area as the "Vienna Biocenter".[citation needed]

In 1993, Boehringer Ingelheim took over the IMP shares of Genentech. Following Max Birnstiel's retirement in 1997, Kim Nasmyth became scientific director.

In 2006, two institutes of the Austrian Academy of Sciences were opened in the vicinity of the IMP: the Institute of Molecular Biotechnology (IMBA) and the Gregor Mendel Institute (GMI). The three institutes cooperate closely by maintaining shared facilities. In the same year, Barry Dickson became the IMP's scientific director.

Since 2013, Jan-Michael Peters is scientific director of the IMP. In late 2016, the IMP moved into its new building, which was formally opened on 1 March 2017.[5]

PhD program

The "Vienna BioCenter PhD Program" is an international PhD training program carried out jointly by the four Vienna Biocenter research institutes. Acceptance into the program is competitive and based on a formal selection procedure. There are two selections each year, deadlines are April 30 and November 15. Participation in the program is a condition for doing a PhD at the IMP.[10]

Building

Research Institute of Molecular Pathology (IMP), outside view.

The current IMP building at Campus-Vienna-Biocenter 1 was opened in 2017. It comprises 15,000 square meters of gross floor space and 8,000 square meters of net area, spread over eight levels.[citation needed]

The building contains 3,000 square meters for laboratories and 2,000 square meters for offices; its lecture hall seats up to 280 people. The buildings has six seminar rooms and technical facilities. Some facilities such as cafeteria, but also scientific services, are open to staff from other Vienna Biocenter entities and the IMP building is connected to the neighboring Institute of Molecular Biotechnology building through a bridge.[citation needed]

Split-level architecture blending different floors and functions of the new IMP building.

Several features of the building refer to biological research: the facade features stripes should resemble DNA bands as seen in gel electrophoresis; the central elevator's glass covers are coated with dichroic foils which are also used in filters for light microscopy. The project costs of 52 million Euros were born by the IMP's main sponsor Boehringer Ingelheim.[11]

Scientific Advisory Board

In order to maintain a high standard of research, the IMP employs a process of continuous review and feedback. The Scientific Advisory Board (SAB), consisting of distinguished scientists, meets once a year and discusses the quality, significance, and main focus of research conducted at the IMP. The SAB is chaired by Dirk Schübeler of Friedrich Miescher Institute. Its other members are Adrian Bird (University of Edinburgh); Michael Hausser (University College London); Norbert Kraut (Boehringer Ingelheim); Ruth Lehmann (New York University); Ruslan Medzhitov (Yale School of Medicine/HHMI); Eva Nogales (University of California, Berkeley).[12]

Funding

The operating budget of the IMP is provided largely by Boehringer Ingelheim. Support comes from grants awarded to individual scientists and projects by national and international funding agencies such as the Austrian Science Fund (FWF), Austrian Industrial Research Promotion Fund (FFG), the Vienna Science and Technology Fund (WWTF), Zentrum für Innovation und Technologie (ZIT), the City of Vienna, the Austrian federal government, the Human Frontier Science Program (HFSP), and the European Union (EU).[citation needed]

Notable people

Group leaders and research areas

  • Francisco Balzarotti: Advanced light microscopy and biophysics
  • Meinrad Busslinger: Stem cell commitment in haematopoiesis
  • Tim Clausen: molecular mechanisms of protein quality control
  • Andrea Pauli: molecular mechanisms of fertilization
  • Jan-Michael Peters: mitosis and chromosome biology
  • Alexander Stark: systems biology of regulatory motifs and networks – towards understanding gene expression from the DNA sequence
  • Elly Tanaka: molecular mechanisms of vertebrate regeneration

Alumni

  • Angelika Amon, master student/PhD student, 1989-1993
  • Denise Barlow, group leader, 1988-1996
  • Hartmut Beug, senior scientist 1988-2010
  • Adrian Bird, senior scientist 1987-1990
  • Max Birnstiel, managing director 1989-1996
  • Barry Dickson, group leader 1998-2002; managing director 2006-2012
  • Thomas Jenuwein, group leader/senior scientist 1993-2008
  • David Keays: microtubules and magnetoreception
  • Kim Nasmyth, senior scientist/managing director 1989-2003
  • Giulio Superti-Furga, PhD student 1988-1990
  • Frank Uhlmann, postdoc 1997-2000
  • Erwin Wagner, senior scientist/deputy director 1988-2008
  • Martin Zenke, group leader 1988-1995

References

External links