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Nabila Bouatia-Naji

Inserm Research Director

TEAM LEADER : GENETICS TO UNDERSAND THE PHYSIOPATHOLOGY OF ARTERIAL DISEASES

Mail : nabila.bouatia-naji@inserm.fr

PHONE :+33 1 53 98 79 95

 

SCIENTIFIC TOPICS

  • Genetics & Heredity
  • Molecular Biology & Genetics
  • Cardiac & Cardiovascular system
  • Arterial disease
  • Women’s cardiovascular health
  • Statistical genetics
  • Computational biology

ITMO

  • Circulation, métabolisme et nutrition
  • Génétique, génomique et bioinformatique

Academic position

  • 2019-now: Team director: “Genetics to understand physiopathology of arterial disease”, PARCC-Inserm, Paris, France
  • 2017-2023: ERC starting Team Director, PARCC-Inserm, Paris, France
  • 2011-2017: Senior Research associate (CR1) and group leader PARCC-Inserm, Paris, France
  • 2009-2011: Research associate (CR2) INSERM at CNRS-Institut Pasteur Lille, France
  • 2007-2009: Postdoctoral position, Inserm-Hopital Robert Debré, Paris, France
  • 2006-2007: Postdoctoral position, Medical Research Council, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom

Participation to scientific committees

  • 2022-now: Associate Editor at Circulation: Genomic and Precision Medicine
  • 2022-now: Steering committee, “Institut santé des femmes”, Université Paris Cité
  • 2021-now: Board director, Science for Africa Foundation (SFA), Pan African funding agency, Nairobi, Kenya
  • 2021-now: Steering committee “Institut des sciences cardiovasculaires”, Université Paris Cité
  • 2020-2022: AHA Scientific Programming Committee
  • 2018-2020:  Chair of the Early Career Committee, AHA Genomic & Precision medicine council
  • 2017-2020: Board of Directors, Femmes & Sciences, non-profit association for science careers promotion among girls
  • 2010-2017: Steering committee of MAGIC: meta-analysis of glucose and insulin traits investigators consortium

Awards

  • 2023:  Investigator of the year: “Corazon de Mujer” action to honour women in cardiology research, Spain
  • 2021: FHU Premice Young Investigator collaboration award (France-Japan).
  • 2018: Elected fellow of the African Academy of Sciences, Pretoria, South Africa.
  • 2017: European Research Council (ERC) Starting Grant
  • 2016: Young Investigator Award, International Conference of Human Genetics, Kyoto, Japan
  • 2014: Finalist of the AHA Functional Genomics and Translational Biology Young Investigator Award, Chicago, USA
  • 2013: Young Investigator Chair (ANR Jeune chercheure), PARCC-Inserm, Paris France
  • 2009: Main achievement of the year in biology Award, Academie des Sciences, Institut de France, Paris, France

Education

  • 2011: HDR Human Genetics, Faculty of Medicine, Lille University, France
  • 2001-2006: PhD – Human Genetics (Obesity), Faculty of Medicine, Lille University, France
  • 2004-2005: Post-graduate degree – Biostatistics in epidemiology, Faculty of Medicine, Lille University, France
  • 1999-2001: DEA (Master Degree) – Molecular genetics, Faculty of Science, Lille University, France

Biosketch

Nabila Bouatia-Naji investigated the genetics of several cardiometabolic traits at the beginning of her career when she made seminal discoveries about the genetic determinants of fasting glucose, childhood obesity and type 2 diabetes, including a pioneering genetic study that linked for the first time the control of circadian rhythm and the genetic risk of type 2 diabetes. On 2011, she moved her research toward the field of genetics of cardiovascular disease, when she joined the INSERM-PARCC. She initially worked on the genetics of mitral valve prolapse, as a member of a Leducq Network, a transatlantic network of Excellence about this important valvulopathy and provided seminal work on its genetic and molecular basis.

Nabila Bouatia-Naji current efforts are focused on the study of the genetics of atypical vascular diseases with high prevalence in women, mainly for fibromusuclar dysplasia and spontaneous coronary artery dissection (SCAD). Her multidisciplinary team includes statistical geneticists, molecular biologists and clinicians uses cutting-edge statistical genetics and functional genomics methods applied in high through-put cell models. In the last decade, she established the genetic models for these diseases and identified their first genetic causes that she is currently following up and modelling using high throughput iPS derived vascular cells. She authored over 90 publications and is a recognized researcher in the genetics of women specific cardiovascular disease. She is an active advocate for more leadership opportunities for women in health sciences, and generally in STEM.