Professor Judith Campisi
Judith Campisi,
Ph.D. is Professor, Buck Institute for Research on Aging and
Senior Scientist, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.
Judy has received international recognition for her contributions to
understanding why age is the largest single risk factor for developing a
panoply of diseases, ranging from neurodegeneration to cancer. Her
highly acclaimed research integrates the genetic, environmental, and
evolutionary forces that result in aging and age-related diseases, and
identifies pathways that can be modified to mitigate basic aging
processes.
Judy also makes significant contributions to understanding why
aging is the largest single risk factor for developing cancer. She is
widely recognized for her work on senescent cells — older cells
that
have stopped dividing — and their influence on aging and cancer.
Senescence occurs when cells experience certain types of stress,
especially stress that can damage the genome. The senescence response
helps prevent cancer by blocking damaged cells from multiplying. But
there is a trade off — the lingering senescent cells may also
cause harm
to the body. The Campisi lab found evidence that senescent cells can
disrupt normal tissue functions and, ironically, drive the progression
of cancer over time. Senescent cells also promote inflammation, which
is a common feature of all major age-related diseases.
She is
collaborating with many other research groups at the Buck Institute to
examine other suspected influences of senescent cells on other diseases
of aging. Her research is shedding light on anti-cancer genes, DNA
repair mechanisms that promote longevity, molecular pathways that
protect cells against stress, and stem cells and their role in aging and
age-related disease.
Judy earned her Ph.D. in Biochemistry from the State University New
York at Stony Brook and completed postdoctoral training at the Harvard
Medical School. As an assistant professor at the Boston University
Medical School, she became interested in the control of cellular
senescence and its role in tumor suppression and aging. She joined the
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory as a Senior Scientist in 1991. She
established a second laboratory at the Buck Institute in 2002. At both
institutions, she established a broad program to understand various
aspects of aging, with an emphasis on the interface between cancer and
aging.
Her papers include:
Cellular senescence: when bad things
happen to good cells,
Senescent fibroblasts promote epithelial cell growth and
tumorigenesis:
A link between cancer and aging,
Oxygen sensitivity severely limits the replicative lifespan
of murine fibroblasts,
Cellular senescence as a tumor-suppressor mechanism,
Reversal of human cellular senescence: roles of the p53 and p16
pathways, and
Repression of c-fos Transcription and an Altered
Genetic Program in Senescent Human Fibroblasts.
The Campisi laboratory has made several pioneering
discoveries
in these areas, and her research continues to challenge and alter
existing paradigms. In recognition of the quality of her research and
leadership in the field, she has received numerous awards, including two
MERIT awards from the US National Institute on Aging, and awards from
the AlliedSignal Corporation, Gerontological Society of America,
American Federation for Aging Research, and, most recently, the
Longevity prize from the IPSEN Foundation. She currently serves on
numerous national and international editorial and advisory
boards including as co-Editor-in-Chief of
Aging.
Watch
Judith Campisi:
The Double-Edged Sword of Cellular Senescence,
Interview with Judith Campisi, Ph.D.,
Futures in Biotech 74: Cancer and Aging: Rival Demons with Dr. Judith
Campisi, and
The Flourishing Affliction of Old Age.
Read
15th Longevity Prize of La Fondation Ipsen:
Professor Judith Campisi is Awarded in Recognition of the Outstanding
Work She Has Been Carrying in the Domain of Longevity, Senescence and
Cancer.