
For Immediate Release
Yvonne M. Psaila
Director of Marketing & Communications
Keystone Symposia on Molecular and Cellular Biology
(970) 262-2676
Dr. David Woodland
to Become Chief Scientific Officer of Keystone Symposia
SILVERTHORNE,
CO – July 26, 2011 – Keystone Symposia on Molecular and Cellular Biology is very
pleased to announce the appointment of Dr. David L. Woodland as Chief
Scientific Officer of the nonprofit, life science organization. He replaces Dr.
Andrew D. Robertson, who is leaving Keystone Symposia after five-and-a-half distinguished
years as Chief Scientific Officer to become Scientific
Coordinator for the EMBL (European Molecular Biology Laboratory) International Center for Advanced Training (EICAT) in Heidelberg,
Germany. Woodland is expected to relocate to Colorado and begin his new appointment
by November 1, 2011.
An
internationally recognized lung researcher, immunologist and virologist, Dr. Woodland
is currently the President and Director of the Trudeau Institute, a nonprofit,
biomedical research institute located in Saranac Lake, New York. In this
position, which he has held since 2008, he oversees a staff of more than 100
researchers and administrators and a budget of $17 million.
Dr. Woodland is also Editor-in-Chief of
the journal Viral Immunology and an
adjunct professor at SUNY-Albany/New York State Department of Health, the
University of Vermont College of Medicine and the Center for Immunology and
Microbiology at Albany Medical College. In addition, he is on the Editorial
Board of the journal Biology Direct
and the European Journal of Immunology.
A member of the American Association of Immunologists, he has published close
to 200 research articles and reviewed many others during the course
of his career.
A native of the United Kingdom, Dr.
Woodland is no stranger to Colorado. After receiving his Bachelor’s degree from
the University of Bath in England and then a doctoral degree for studies at the
Max Planck Institute for Immunobiology in Freiburg, Germany, he embarked on a
postdoctoral fellowship at National Jewish Center in Denver for four years. He was
then on the research staff of St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital in Memphis,
Tennessee for nine years before joining the Trudeau Institute in 1999. While at
St. Jude’s, Dr. Woodland taught as an adjunct professor at the University of
Tennessee, Memphis.
He is also no stranger to Keystone
Symposia, having organized two Keystone Symposia scientific conferences and
presented at numerous others. Earlier this year, he was the lead scientific
organizer for a Keystone Symposia conference in Vancouver, British Columbia on
“Immunity in the Respiratory Tract: Challenges of the Lung Environment.”
Dr. Woodland said of his appointment
and move, “I am thrilled to be joining a highly respected organization that
plays such a pivotal role in life science research and advancement. The position as Keystone Symposia’s Chief
Scientific Officer will enable me to assume a broader scientific perspective
than one often can as a specialized researcher, or as the head of a research
institute. In particular, I look forward to the impact I can have on scientific
communication and training that are central to Keystone Symposia’s mission. Personally,
I am fond of the Colorado Rocky Mountains, an area similar in many ways to the
Adirondacks of New York, and I am eager to become an active part of the Summit
County, Colorado community.”
Added James W. Aiken, Ph.D., Keystone
Symposia’s Chief Executive Officer, “While we will miss Andy Robertson and his
many contributions, particularly in launching our diversity initiatives, we are
excited that David Woodland will be joining Keystone Symposia. He is an eminent
scientist with a track record of significant achievement and global experience
in the life sciences. We look forward to welcoming him to Summit County.”
Dr. Woodland is married to Dr. Marcy Blackman,
another noted scientific researcher who will be relocating with him to
Colorado, along with their family
About Keystone
Symposia on Molecular and Cellular Biology
Keystone
Symposia on Molecular and Cellular Biology, a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization,
has been conducting open, international scientific conferences since 1972 and
has been headquartered in Silverthorne, Colorado since 1990, when the
organization left the University of California at Los Angeles. Annually,
Keystone Symposia holds more than 50 conferences involving 13,000 to 14,000
scientists, postdoctoral fellows and students from around the world. Keystone
Symposia also provides mentoring and support for young investigators in the
life sciences through its scholarships and the Keystone Symposia Fellows
Program.
Keystone
Symposia will be celebrating its 40th anniversary in 2012.
More
information on Keystone Symposia can be found at www.keystonesymposia.org.
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