Ralf Jauch: A German Scientist Whose Roots Are in China

来源 :CHINA TODAY | 被引量 : 0次 | 上传用户:baslove
下载到本地 , 更方便阅读
声明 : 本文档内容版权归属内容提供方 , 如果您对本文有版权争议 , 可与客服联系进行内容授权或下架
论文部分内容阅读
  RALF Jauch, a German scientist from Jena, a city in the state of Thuringia, now lives in China as a full-time research fellow with the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) at the Guangzhou Institute of Biomedicine and Health. Jauch’s main research interests lie in genomics, stem cell biology and structural biology. In 2014 he enrolled in the “100 Talents Program” at CAS. Jauch’s connection with China can be traced back to his childhood: his father served as deputy mayor of Jena and was committed to promoting cooperation between Guangzhou and Jena.
  Adventure in China
  Jauch first came to China in 2012 with his father, as part of an exchange program delegation. They visited Beijing, Guangzhou and Hong Kong. “The visit gave me the chance to learn more about China, a giant country full of vigor,” Jauch said. Despite having lived in Singapore for seven years and having traveled a lot in Southeast Asia, Jauch had not discovered much about China.
  Jauch found that the area around the Pearl River Delta in China was quite similar to Singapore, particularly in terms of climate, infrastructure, and business environment. Jauch was impressed by the Pearl River Delta’s growing potential for business –an environment with abundant capital and an inclusive culture – so Jauch decided that Guangzhou and Hong Kong would be the best places to look for jobs in the field of scientific research.
  In 2013, Jauch finally made the decision to join Guangzhou Institute of Biomedicine and Health(GIBH) after declining offers from Sweden, Canada and South Korea. He formed an international research team of 12 members including doctoral candidates, technicians and post-doctoral researchers, 60 percent of whom had experience of working or studying overseas.
  “The decision was prompted by my adventurous nature and desire to learn something new,”Jauch said. He confessed that he came to Guangzhou with the hope of finding a unique way to facilitate his development in the science field.
  “The research work at the GIBH is quite familiar to me, and also tallies with my personal interest. There is complete infrastructure and ample funding in place, and the scientists from Western countries among its faculty have already carried out fruitful research work. All these factors combined made me decide to work here,” Jauch said.
  Fruitful Results
  Jauch got his bachelor’s degree in biology from Friedrich Schiller University, Jena, and his doctorate in molecular and structural biology from the Max Planck Institute. Jauch also has experience in the areas of genomics, stem cell biology, and computational biology.   “Gene banks can help us decode genomes,” Jauch explained, talking about his work. “Life processes like embryonic development, human evolution, and genetic disease are actually manifestations of when and where genes play or stop playing their roles and influence each other. Our goal is to decode these processes. We pay particular attention to key proteins that we term ‘transcription factors’, which can decode these processes. I think if we can better understand these processes we would be able to produce some cells, which then can be used in biopharming.”
  Jauch and his team have achieved a lot in the four years since he joined the GIBH. They garnered Larysa Pevny Award for Excellence in SOX Research in 2014. They won financial support for a surface project from the National Natural Science Foundation of China; they received funding for an international cooperation project from the Ministry of Science and Technology; and they got financing for a provincial support project from Guangdong Province – a total of RMB 7 million.
  Jauch has published 50 research papers which he has either authored or co-authored, many of which have appeared in world-renowned academic periodicals including Nature, Stem Cell, Nucleic Acid Res and EMBO. His work on multi-potential stem cells’ early differentiation theory has been widely recognized in the academic world.
  Jauch is very busy with the responsibilities inherent in leading a research team. Hand in hand with good ideas and exciting projects come certain logistics worries, such as funding, cooperation partners and facility access.
  Even with all these attention-demanding issues though, Jauch is dedicated to the personal management of his team. “Jauch has devoted much time to team building. In the weekly meeting of our research team, every member takes turns reporting on their progress. Given that our team members come from different countries including Germany and India, our working language is English, which gives our team an international atmosphere,” one of Jauch’s team members told China Today.
  A Bridge for China-Germany Academic Exchanges
  According to Jauch, human creativity brings vitality to science, and scientists should be cautious of received opinions and also maximize existing resources and technologies worldwide. “All the countries dominant in the world’s science and technology are testament to this,” Jauch said.
  Jauch is devoted to promoting academic exchanges between China and Germany, in particular cooperation and exchanges between Germany’s top academic organization, the Max Planck Society and the GIBH. On several occasions he invited experts from the Max Planck Society to attend seminars in Guangzhou. As a result of Jauch’s hard work, the Max Planck Society and the Guangzhou Institute established a joint research center for regenerative biology and medicine.   Over the past four years, Jauch has invited six German postgraduate students to carry out research work at his laboratory for their graduation thesis projects. He has also helped Chinese students go and study in Germany. “All these exchanges have helped us generate new ideas and have been a lot of fun for participants,” Jauch said.
  “Studies on stem cells and genes have not only brought people new concepts and technology, but have had a huge impact on biopharmaceuticals and all of society,” Jauch said. “I hope my team can better understand the gene control process and make progress in lab-growing cells and organs. I hope our research work can help with applications of this field, in line with ethics, for example, producing specific cells via man-made transcription factors in test tubes,” he added.
  As a German scientist with his roots firmly in China, Jauch holds that the burgeoning economy of Asia presents plenty of opportunities for German scientists. He believes Germany should attach more importance to their exchanges with Asia, in particular China – this trend of increased exchange with China is developing worldwide and looks to be of great significance.
其他文献
TAI chi is a unique Chinese cultural sym- bol, often portrayed on-screen as a supreme form of self-defense. In real life, however, it is a traditional form of physical exercise, which is becoming incr
期刊
MOUNT Fanjing National Nature Reserve is located in the northeastern part of Tongren City in the Province of Guizhou. With a total area of 43,411 hectares and 96.5 percent forest coverage, this nature
期刊
ON April 20, 2017 the Long March-7 Y2 carrier rocket successfully launched Tianzhou-1, China’s first cargo spacecraft, from Wenchang Space Launch Center on the southern island province of Hainan. Thre
期刊
THE Board of Governors of the New Development Bank (NDB), composed of the Ministers of Finance of the BRICS, recently approved the General Strategy of the Bank for 2017-2021.  Over the next five years
期刊
HE is the sole Chinese ever to win the A.M. Turing Award, regarded as the Nobel Prize of Computing. He has also been elected a fellow of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences, a fellow of the American
期刊
DTMB (Digital Terrestrial Multimedia Broadcast) has set a mandatory national standard for Chinese digital television. Yang Zhixing was the first to take charge of developing this standard. At the end
期刊
ON June 1, 2017 U.S. President Donald Trump announced at the Rose Garden that the U.S. would be “getting out” of the Paris Agreement. The decision was unanimously denounced. UN Secretary-General Anton
期刊
THE 2017 L’Oreal-UNESCO Award for Wom- en in Science ceremony took place on March 23 in Paris. The award is presented every year to five women, one from each region– Africa and the Arab States, Asia-P
期刊
By EVANDRO MENEZES de CARVALHO  THE ninth BRICS Summit to be held in Xia- men, China, will take place in a different international and domestic context than that of earlier years, when BRICS nations m
期刊
A thrush flies into Zhenru Temple at dawn and rests in a ginkgo tree. This ancient temple that is over 700 years old began construction in the Jiading period (1208-1224) of the Song Dynasty and was co
期刊