About Christine

About Christine

Research Interests

  • Systems biology, e.g. post-transcriptional regulation
  • Protein and genome evolution
  • Large-scale quantitative shotgun proteomics

Link to research publications

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/myncbi/1J_Xgvc-U-D5w/bibliography/40556229/public/?sort=date&direction=ascending.

Career

Major awards and fellowships

  • Robert J. Cotter New Investigator Award (2017)
  • HUPO Young Investigator Award (2009)
  • Human Frontier Science Long-term fellowship (2005-2008)
  • DAAD Post-doctoral fellowship (declined)
  • Boehringer-Ingelheim Fonds Pre-doctoral fellowship (2001-2004)
  • DAAD Post-graduate fellowship (2000)
  • Fellow of the German National Merit Foundation (1998-2000)

Non-work stuff

I like to read, sing, run, mountain-bike, swim, ski, and inline-skate — not simultaneously of course. I like the outdoors. I like movies and theater and good food. I paint and I own gerbils.

PhD genealogy

Pursuing your PhD with Christine links you to Sir Isaac Newton, in 18 easy steps, via quite a few illustrious people! Thanks to Mark Gerstein for assembling this data! 

Tree of Fame:

1. Christine Vogel     

2. Cyrus Chothia    

3. Peter Pauling     1931-2003

4. John Kendrew     1917-1997

5. Max Perutz     1914-2002

6. John Desmond Bernal     1901-1971

7. William Henry Bragg     1862-1942

8. J. J. Thompson     1856-1940

    – – – I Lord Rayleigh     1842-1919

9. Edward Routh     1831-1907

10. William Hopkins 1793-1866

    – – -Augustus De Morgan    1806-1871

11. Adam Sedgwich     1785-1873

    – – – William Whewell     1794-1866

    – – – John Hudson     1773-1843

12. Thomas Jones     1756-1807

    – – – John Cranke     1746-1816

13. Thomas Postlethwaite     1731-1798

14. Stephen Whisson     1718-1783

15. Walter Taylor    1700-1744

16. Robert Smith    1689-1768

17. Roger Cotes     1682-1716

18. Isaac Newton    1643-1727

Isaac Barrow     1630-1677

James Duport     1606-1679