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Inserm Announces the Recipients of its 2012 Prizes

The 2012 Inserm prizes for medical research will be awarded at a ceremony at the Collège de France on Monday 3 December 2012. This year, the grand prize will be awarded to Philippe Sansonetti in the presence of Marisol Touraine, France’s Minister of Social Affairs and Health, Geneviève Fioraso, France’s Minister of Higher Education and Research, and Professor André Syrota, Chairman and CEO of Inserm. The grand prize is awarded each year to honour a member of the scientific research community whose work has contributed to advancing knowledge of human physiology, therapeutics and health in general.

  • Inserm Grand Prize – Philippe Sansonetti 

© Vincent Capman/Paris Match/Inserm 

The recipient of the 2012 Grand Prize is Professor Philippe Sansonetti, the director of the Microbial Colonisation and Invasion of Mucosa unit (Inserm Unit 786) at the Institut Pasteur in Paris, in recognition of his research on microbial infection.

Prof. Sansonetti was the first to update the genetic bases in bacteria, particularly in Shigella, which causes dysentery, and which he studied the entire sequence of steps that are required for infection.

Prof. Sansonetti coordinates, along with Pascale Cossart, the Integrative Biology of Emerging Infectious Diseases laboratory of excellence. 

A portrait of Prof. Sansonetti appears in the No. 11 issue of Science & Santé, (pp. 12‑13)

A detailed biography is available on the Collège de France’s website

  • ŸInternational Prize – Ingrid Grummt 

The recipient of Inserm’s International Prize is Professor Ingrid Grummt of the German Cancer Research Centre of Heidelberg in recognition of her epigenetics research on the molecular mechanisms that regulate gene expression.

  • ŸHonour Prize – Jean-Paul Soulillou 

The recipient of Inserm’s Honour Prize is Professor Jean-Paul Soulillou, who heads Inserm’s Lymphocyte Regulation and Tolerance team at the Centre for Transplantation and Immunology Research (Inserm Unit 1064) in Nantes, France, in recognition of his work on transplant tolerance.

Prof. Soulillou is notably behind the development of a “smart” antibody that is widely used to prevent transplant rejection and his research interests include the development of highly effective immunosuppressants.

  • ŸResearch Prizes – Sophie Ugolini and Jessica Zucman-Rossi 

The Research Prizes are awarded to:

– Sophie Ugolini, an Inserm research director at the Marseille-Luminy Immunology Centre, for her work on the function of natural killer cells (NK cells).

– Jessica Zucman-Rossi, director of the Functional Genomics of Solid Tumours unit in Paris (Inserm Unit 674), for her work on the identification and understanding of the role of gene interactions in human tumours, particularly the Ewing family of tumours.

  • ŸInnovation Prize – Alain de Cesare and Marc Lopez 

The Innovation Prizes are awarded to two engineers in recognition of their support in guiding research:

 – Alain de Cesare, an Inserm research engineer at the Functional Imaging Laboratory (Inserm Unit 678) in Paris and a designer of medical imaging analysis software.

– Marc Lopez, an Inserm research engineer at the Marseille Oncology Research Centre (Inserm Unit 1068) who identified the cellular adhesion molecules known as nectins.

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Amazing Science*, a “pulp” and science exhibition

Amazing Science*, a “pulp” and science exhibition

In a nod to the Sci-Fi culture of 1930’s American magazines, the Amazing Science exhibition brought to you by Inserm and CEA takes you on an exploratory journey into uncharted territory, on the frontiers of pulp culture, science fiction and scientific research.

Presented for the first time at the 2012 Nantes Utopiales, this new exhibition invites you to delve into the mysteries of life, matter and the universe. The Amazing Science exhibition has set itself a dual challenge: to promote discovery and understanding through enjoyment and to encourage explanation and learning through transformation.

Reinventing Amazing Stories

With the Amazing Science exhibition, Inserm and CEA continue to follow the adventurous trail blazed by Amazing Stories, the American sci-fi magazine first published in 1926. Back then, Hugo Gernsback’s publication regaled its readers with “scientific romances” complete with shock graphics, bright colours, striking typography and mysterious perspectives.

Opening on 7 November 2012, the Amazing Science exhibition will breathe fresh life into those old magazine covers – 20th Century science fiction reinvented by the 21st Century science. Claude Ecken, science fiction writer, comic script writer, literary critic, broadcaster and public reader†, will join in this revival of “science romances” with a series of short science fiction stories taking visitors on a 26-picture literary journey.

* Science-Fiction

Science and pulp culture

As Maison d’Ailleurs Director Marc Atallah reminds us, “the term ‘pulp’ (or ‘pulp magazine’) refers to the cheap publications printed on poor quality paper in the United States during the first half of the 20th Century.” The exhibition revives the “pulp” look through a blend of scientific research, creative writing and popular culture. From the infinitely small to the infinitely large, the most advanced areas of science are now the realm of unexpected encounters with the real and the imaginary worlds. Each of the exhibition panels features scientific visuals based on a specific research area.

“The Amazing Science exhibition aims to explore scientific research by breaking – through a set of new cultural codes – with science’s occasionally inaccessible image, and by reaching out to the popular imagination,” says Claire Lissalde, project leader and head of the Inserm audiovisual unit.

Inserm to inaugurate an innovative museum on 7 November 2012 

The “Amazing Science” exhibition[1] (‘pulp’ and science), co-produced by Inserm and CEA, gives a nod to Sci-Fi culture and marks the creation of an innovative digital device: an entirely virtual museum.

This virtual museum, located in a space vessel modeled in 3D, will present the entire content of the “Amazing Science” exhibition, taking visitors on a fun, immersive and interactive journey.

Visitors will be able to access the rooms of this special museum from their PCs, touch tablets, or smartphones. They will be able to admire the images, read and listen to texts and multimedia content. References to classic Sci-Fi films will be dotted around the various rooms.

Before the museum opens its doors, discover this virtual world by watching the trailer.

Presented for the first time during the 2012 edition of the Utopiales de Nantes, “Amazing Science” unravels the mysteries of living things, matter and the universe for the general public. This museum means visitors can see the exhibition at any time, with unlimited access!

To make science a truly cultural object, the museum will open new rooms over the next months.

It will be possible to visit the entire virtual museum at the following address as of 7 November 2012: www.musee.inserm.fr


[1]Amazing science: surprising, unprecedented, astounding, unbelievable, stunning, splendid, fascinating science…

Amazing Science, an exhibition designed and produced by the Inserm and CEA communications departments

Project Manager, Claire Lissalde, Head of the Audiovisual Unit at Inserm.

Coordination for CEA, Florence Klotz

Based on an original idea by Eric Dehausse, Inserm iconographer

Proofreading by Maryse Cournut of Inserm

Short stories by Claude Ecken,

Art Direction Alexander Cheyrou

Science Editor Charles Muller

Mission Caladan (Editions Le Pommier 2010) Au réveil il était midi (L’Atalante 2012) Femtopetas (Forthcoming from Bélial)

Pulp illustrations from the Agence Martienne and the Maison d’Ailleurs collections.

Science photos from the Inserm Serimedis *image bank and the CEA Photo Library.

* Serimedis is an Inserm image bank open to the public and accessible online at: www.serimedis.fr. The catalogue contains over 14,000 photographs and 1,500 videos.

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