Seit 2020 Professor, Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg, Freiburg, Deutschland
2016-2020 Associate Professor, Salk Institute für Biologische Studien La Jolla, USA
2010-2016 Assistant Professor, Salk Institute für Biologische Studien, La Jolla, USA
200-2009 Postdoctoral Research, Labor von Mark M. Davis, Stanford University, Stanford, USA
1997-2001 Ph.D. in Biochemie, Labor von Ian M. Kerr, Cancer Research UK and University College, London, UK
1991-1997 Biochemie Studium (Diplom), Freie Universität Berlin, Germany and Cancer Research UK London, UK
Ausgewählte Publikationen
Katz Z.B., Novotná L., Blount A., Lillemeier B.F. (2017). A cycle of kinase activation and release at the T-cell receptor amplifies and disperses antigenic stimuli. Nature Immunology Jan;18(1):86-95.
Hu Y.S., Cang H., Lillemeier B.F. (2016). Superresolution imaging reveals nanometer- and micrometer-scale spatial distributions of T-cell receptors in lymph nodes. Proceedings National Academy of Sciences USA. Jun 28;113(26):7201-6.
Klammt C., Novotná L., Li D.T., Wolf M., Blount A., Zhang K., Fitchett J.R., Lillemeier B.F. (2015). T cell receptor dwell times control the kinase activity of Zap70. Nature Immunology Sep;16(9):961-9.
Lillemeier B.F., Mörtelmaier M.A., Forstner M.B., Huppa J.B., Groves J.T., Davis M.M. (2010). TCR and LAT are expressed on separate protein islands onT cell membranes and concatenate during activation. Nature Immunology. 11(1):90-96.
Lillemeier B.F., Pfeiffer J.R., Surviladze Z., Wilson B.S., Davis M.M. (2006). Plasma membrane-associated proteins are clustered into islands attached to the cytoskeleton. Proceedings National Academy of Sciences USA. 103(50):18992-7.