Piers Nash

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Piers David Nash
Piers Nash
Born
Exeter, England
NationalityUK, Canada, US
Alma materUniversity of Alberta
University of Guelph
Booth School of Business
Known forCellular signal transduction
Scientific career
FieldsBiochemistry, cell biology
InstitutionsUniversity of Chicago
Doctoral advisorGrant McFadden

Piers David Nash is an entrepreneur, cancer biology professor, data evangelist, writer and technology futurist. He was the founder of Sympatic, and the son of academic Roger Nash.

Early life and education[edit]

Born in Exeter, England, and grew up in Sudbury, Ontario, Canada. In high school he competed in the Canada-Wide Science Fair in five successive years (1983–87), winning awards[1] on each occasion and becoming one of the most highly awarded science fair participants in the history of the fair. In recognition of this he was selected to represent Canada as one of two youth delegates to the 1985 Nobel Prize lectures and ceremony in Stockholm, Sweden as part of the Stockholm International Youth Science Seminar[2] and was awarded the International Youth Year Ontario Gold Medal. He received a BSc with honours in biochemistry from the University of Guelph, and the Chemical Institute of Canada prize for the top of class and President's Scholarship.[3] He received a PhD in 1999 from the University of Alberta working in the laboratory of Dr. Grant McFadden investigating poxviral immunomodulatory proteins. His doctoral thesis focused on the enzymology and biological properties of the Myxoma virus encoded serine proteinase inhibitor (serpin), SERP-1.[4] He completed postdoctoral research with Anthony Pawson at the Samuel Lunenfeld Research Institute of Mount Sinai Hospital and the University of Toronto from June 1999 to December 2003.[5] In 2014, Nash received an MBA with a concentration in finance awarded with high honors from the University of Chicago Booth School of Business.[6] From 2014 to 2017, Nash was Director of the Center for Data-Intensive Science at the University of Chicago that was building and managing the National Cancer Institute Genomic Data Commons with Robert Lee Grossman.[7]

Career[edit]

Nash is the founder and CEO of Sympatic Inc[8] which is developing Cloud SaaS to power ethical data sharing for applications such as Artificial Intelligence. Nash has authored three patents on advanced multi-party rule-based secure cloud run-time environments that allow rule-based multi-party access or code access to data (link to patents). Sympatic holds trademarks for VirtualVault® and Ethical Data Sharing® based on Nash's work. Nash is Founder & General Manager of Nash Strategy & Innovation.[9] He advises Fortune 500 technology companies and startups in the genomics, healthcare, data science and data storage fields. He serves on the Advisory Boards of technology and innovation companies. Nash was Managing Director at Health2047,[10] the innovation enterprise of the American Medical Association from 2017-2018. He was founding strategy manager and Director of business and research development for the University of Chicago's Center for Data Intensive Science which developed the National Cancer Institute Genomic Data Commons. He was a professor in the Ben May Department for Cancer Research and a Scientist of the Comprehensive Cancer Center at the University of Chicago from 2004–2012 and a fellow of the Institute for Genomics and Systems Biology[11] from 2006–2012. As a scientist, he investigates protein–protein interactions involved in signal transduction, and the molecular mechanisms by which cells respond to external cues. His work at the University of Chicago focused on understanding the SH2 domain at a systems level and investigating the role of ubiquitination in controlling endocytosis and modulating signal transduction. Earlier work focused on the emergent properties of complex systems such as ultrasensitivity (all-or-none switches) at critical junctures in the cell cycle.[citation needed]

ResearchGate reports 54 peer-reviewed published works in a wide range of fields, including signal transduction, cell biology, molecular evolution, cell cycle, cognition and memory, meteorology, and pedagogy.[12]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ "Archival report of Canadian Meteorological and Oceanographic Society award to Piers Nash at CWSF 1984 in Halifax, Nova Scotia" (PDF). cmosarchives.ca.
  2. ^ University of Guelph (1987). At Guelph, Vol. 31, No. 26 to 32, 1987. Communications & Public Affairs University of Guelph. University of Guelph.
  3. ^ University of Guelph (1987). At Guelph, Vol. 31, No. 26 to 32, 1987. Communications & Public Affairs University of Guelph. University of Guelph.
  4. ^ Nash, Piers David (2000). Studies on the myxoma virus anti-inflammatory serpin, SERP-1. OCLC 1006676848.[page needed][non-primary source needed]
  5. ^ "(Nash P[Author]) AND (Pawson T[Author]) - Search Results - PubMed". PubMed. Retrieved 13 February 2024.
  6. ^ "Alumni Event Details". The University of Chicago Booth School of Business. Retrieved 13 February 2024.
  7. ^ University of Guelph (1987). At Guelph, Vol. 31, No. 26 to 32, 1987. Communications & Public Affairs University of Guelph. University of Guelph.
  8. ^ "Ethical data sharing". www.sympatic.com. Retrieved 13 February 2024.
  9. ^ "Home". Archived from the original on 20 August 2019. Retrieved 20 August 2019.
  10. ^ "AMA sinks $27M in Health2047 to ramp up development of new clinical tools". 2 May 2018.
  11. ^ "Institute for Genomics and Systems Biology". www.igsb.org. Archived from the original on 21 January 2013.
  12. ^ "Piers Nash Profile". www.researchgate.net.

External links[edit]