Welcoming Prof. David Rubinsztein to TAU's Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences
Introducing our new affiliated faculty member
We are proud to welcome Prof. David Rubinsztein as an affiliated faculty member at the Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences Tel Aviv University
Prof. Rubinsztein is a leader in the field of autophagy, particularly in the context of neurodegenerative diseases. His laboratory discovered that this pathway plays an important role in degrading many of the intracytoplasmic, aggregate-prone, proteins causing neurodegenerative diseases, like Huntington’s disease, Parkinson’s disease and various dementias. He pioneered the strategy of autophagy upregulation as a possible therapeutic approach in various neurodegenerative diseases and identified drugs and novel pathways that may be exploited for this objective. He has made key contributions to illuminating the relevance of autophagy defects as a disease mechanism and to the basic cell biology of this important catabolic process.
Prof. Rubinsztein is currently deputy director of the Cambridge Institute for Medical Research and Academic Lead of the Alzheimer’s Research UK Cambridge Drug Discovery Institute. He was elected as a Fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences (2004), Professor of Molecular Neurogenetics (University of Cambridge, personal chair (2005)), and as an EMBO member (2011). He was awarded the Graham Bull Prize for Clinical Science (Royal College of Physicians, 2007), the 2017 Thudichum Medal (Biochemical Society) and the Roger de Spoelberch Prize for outstanding contributions to neuroscience. For a decade, David has been ranked as one of the most highly cited researchers in Europe. One of our faculty members, Dr. Avraham Ashkenazi, performed a post-doc in Rubinsztein’s lab. A current PhD student at the School of Medicine will be going to Rubinsztein’s lab for a post-doc with a prestigious EMBO fellowship.