Marie A. Brunet Biochemistry Department University of Sherbrooke Biography Publications Institution JoVE Articles Marie A. Brunet Marie A Brunet is a Post-Doctoral Fellow in the Biochemistry Department, University of Sherbrooke, Canada. She completed her Veterinary Medicine Doctorate at the National Veterinary School of Alfort (ENVA), Paris, France; and her Ph.D. from the University of Cambridge, UK.During her training, Dr. Brunet became passionate about the genomic and proteomic complexities in Eukaryotes as they pertain to Health and Diseases. As a Ph.D. student (2011-2015), she looked at protein evolution to gather functional and structural insights, with a focus on the P2X7 receptor. Since graduating, she is a post-doctoral fellow in Dr. Xavier Roucou lab, where she explores the limits of current genome annotations and its consequences for our vision of the proteome and the aetiology of pathologies. She works with multidisciplinary teams and keep a focus on neurodegenerative diseases and cancer.Dr. Brunet received a National Silver Medal for her veterinary medicine thesis (2012) and a Gates Cambridge scholarship (2011-2015) for her Ph.D. Publications OpenProt: a More Comprehensive Guide to Explore Eukaryotic Coding Potential and Proteomes Nucleic Acids Research. Jan, 2019 | Pubmed ID: 30299502 Recognition of the Polycistronic Nature of Human Genes is Critical to Understanding the Genotype-phenotype Relationship Genome Research. 05, 2018 | Pubmed ID: 29626081 ניתוחים פרוטאומיקס מבוססי ספקטרומטר מסה משימוש במסד הנתונים OpenProt לחשוף את הרומן חלבונים מתורגם ממסגרות קאנונית קריאה פתוחה Marie A. Brunet1,2, Xavier Roucou1,2 1Department of Biochemistry, Université de Sherbrooke, 2PROTEO, Quebec Network for Research on Protein Function, Structure, and Engineering JoVE 59589 Génétique
ניתוחים פרוטאומיקס מבוססי ספקטרומטר מסה משימוש במסד הנתונים OpenProt לחשוף את הרומן חלבונים מתורגם ממסגרות קאנונית קריאה פתוחה Marie A. Brunet1,2, Xavier Roucou1,2 1Department of Biochemistry, Université de Sherbrooke, 2PROTEO, Quebec Network for Research on Protein Function, Structure, and Engineering JoVE 59589 Génétique