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Friedrich Miescher Laboratory

The staff members of the Friedrich Miescher Laboratory
Young minds – innovative ideas

The Friedrich Miescher Laboratory (FML) was founded in 1969 to offer highly qualified junior scientists in the area of biology an opportunity to establish independent research groups and pursue their own line of research within a five-year period. The laboratory still serves this purpose today. It is home to five Independent Junior Research Groups of the Max Planck Society. The groups share equipment and jointly manage the organization of the laboratory. These special conditions and the close interaction between the groups make for a very active and lively research atmosphere. The FML is represented by a Managing Director, currently Christiane Nüsslein-Volhard, who also supervises the administration of the laboratory.

There is no specification as to which kind of biological research should be conducted at the FML, and the focus of research changes with the appointment of each new group leader. In the past, research interests have included developmental biology, neurobiology, cell biology and many other areas of modern biology.

The Friedrich Miescher Laboratory is located on the Max Planck Campus in Tübingen, next door to the Max Planck Institutes for Developmental Biology and Biological Cybernetics, allowing close scientific interaction. Scientific exchange between the institutes is furthermore aided by the joint organization of a seminar series with speakers from all over the world, as well as common internal seminars, and the common use of the Max Planck House, with the library, a cafeteria, and the guest house.
 
Wolfram Antonin
Wolfram Antonin wants to know how genetic information is re-enclosed by the nuclear envelope at the end of cell division.
Opens external link in new windowAntonin Lab (Nuclear envelope dynamics)



Silke Hauf
Silke Hauf wants to understand how the genetic information is reliably distributed to the daughter cells when cells divide.
Opens external link in new windowHauf Lab (Chromosome Segregation)



Michael Hothorn. Photo: J. Abendroth/MPI for Developmental Biology
Michael Hothorn investigates the details of signaling pathways in plants from signal perception at the cell surface to the transduction of this signal to the cell's interior.
Hothorn Lab (Structural Plant Biology)
Felicity Jones. Foto: J. Abendroth/MPI for Developmental Biology
Felicity Jones aims to understand what happens in the genome when a new species evolves.
Opens external link in new windowJones Lab (Molecular Mechanisms of Adaptation and Speciation)
Frank Chan. Photo: J. Abendroth/MPI for Developmental Biology
Frank Chan wants to explore the mechanistic underpinnings of the genome during adaptation to a changing environment.
Opens external link in new windowChan Lab (Adaptive Genome Dynamics)