Jeremy England, PhD

2003 Hertz Fellow
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Jeremy England is senior director in artificial intelligence at GlaxoSmithKline, principle research scientist at Georgia Tech, and the former Thomas D. and Virginia W. Cabot career development associate professor of physics at MIT.

Jeremy received an AB summa cum laude in biochemical sciences from Harvard in 2003 for his thesis on the statistical mechanics of protein design. Upon earning a Rhodes Scholarship to St. John’s College, Oxford, Jeremy spent the following two years at the Rudolf Peierls Centre for Theoretical Physics studying the effects of stochastic noise on morphogen gradient patterning in embryonic development. Subsequently, as a Hertz Fellow at Stanford University, and also partly at Israel’s Weizmann Institute of Science, he completed his doctorate in physics carrying out theoretical and computational studies of protein folding in vivo and in vitro.

From 2009-2011, Jeremy was a fellow at Princeton’s Lewis-Sigler Institute for Integrative Genomics. While there, he developed a new theoretical framework for describing the sequence-dependence of conformational change in globular protein domains.

Graduate Studies

Stanford University
Physics, Biophysics
Theory and Simulation of Explicit Solvent Effects on Protein Folding in vitro and in vivo

Undergraduate Studies

Harvard University

Awards

2021, Irwin Oppenheim Award, American Physical Society
2018, Forbes “30 Under 30: Science”, Forbes
2003, Rhodes Scholar, Rhodes Trust