Nature Microbiology editor, Heidi Burdett, caught up with Professor Neil Gow at #Microbio16 to ask him the tough questions, in our first ever Micro-Interview
Micro-Interview #1
Professor Neil Gow, Chair in Microbiology at the University of Aberdeen and President of the Microbiology Society
Published
Andrew Jermy
Consultant, Germinate
Consultant, Germinate
Andrew gained his PhD in Molecular Biology from the University of Manchester, UK, studying fungal protein trafficking and secretion. He was subsequently a microbiology editor at Nature for more than a decade, joining Nature Reviews Microbiology in 2008 as an Associate Editor after a brief stint as locum editor on Nature Cell Biology. Over the following 4.5 years Andrew developed a passion for the field, commissioning Reviews and writing on all aspects of microbiology. He also took a keen interest in developing new approaches to communicate with the microbiology community. In January 2013 Andrew joined the Nature team as Senior Editor, handling primary manuscripts from across the field and championing microbiology in Nature’s pages and beyond. Andrew left Nature in April 2015 to become the Chief Editor for the launch of Nature Microbiology. Having helped to establish Nature Microbiology as one of the premier journals in the microbiology publishing landscape, and in search of a better work-life balance, in January 2019 he left Nature to become Chief Publishing Officer (and tea boy) for the family GCSE and A-Level educational resources business established by his wife over the preceding three years.
Share this post
Choose a social network to share with, or copy the shortened URL to share elsewhere

microbiologycommunity.nature.com
Micro-Interview #1
Professor Neil Gow, Chair in Microbiology at the University of Aberdeen and President of the Microbiology Society
This is a representation of how your post may appear on social media. The actual post will vary between social networks
Please sign in or register for FREE
If you are a registered user on Nature Portfolio Microbiology Community, please sign in