Dr. Cynthia Kenyon PhD
Main Research Focus
Cynthia
Kenyon graduated valedictorian in chemistry and biochemistry from the
University of Georgia in 1976. She received her PhD from MIT in 1981,
where, in Graham Walker’s laboratory, she was the first to look for genes on
the basis of their expression profiles, discovering that DNA damaging agents
activate a battery of DNA repair genes in E. coli. She then did
postdoctoral studies with Nobel laureate Sydney Brenner at the MRC Laboratory
of Molecular Biology in Cambridge, UK, studying the development of C.
elegans. Since 1986 she has been at the University of California, San
Francisco, where she was the Herbert Boyer Distinguished Professor of
Biochemistry and Biophysics and is now an American Cancer Society
Professor. In 1993, Kenyon and colleagues’ discovery that a single-gene
mutation could double the lifespan of C. elegans sparked an intensive
study of the molecular biology of aging. These findings have now led to the
discovery that an evolutionarily conserved hormone signaling system controls
aging in other organisms as well, including mammals. Dr. Kenyon has received
many honors and awards for her findings. She is a member of the US
National Academy of Sciences, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and
the Institute of Medicine and she is a past president of the Genetics Society
of America. She is now the director of the Hillblom Center for the
Biology of Aging at UCSF.
