Description du projet
Une formation doctorale pour de futurs paléoanthropologues
Pour les scientifiques étudiant l’histoire ancienne et le patrimoine, la paléoprotéomique constitue la technologie la plus prometteuse pour analyser des ensembles de protéines issus d’objets et de tissus ayant bien plus de 0,7 million d’années. Elle permet la reconstruction de matériaux grâce à des molécules survivantes et l’identification d’espèces à partir de fragments d’articles non identifiables sur le plan morphologique. Toutefois, ce domaine a besoin de spécialistes très formés, dotés d’une expérience interdisciplinaire en chimie analytique, bio-informatique, paléontologie et archéologie. Le projet PUSHH, financé par l’UE, fournit une formation doctorale, interdisciplinaire et axée sur la recherche pour paléoanthropologues, paléontologues et archéologues qui deviendront de futurs experts réputés dans l’analyse de protéines anciennes issues de matériaux archéologiques, paléontologiques et paléoanthropologiques. Ils promouvront ensuite les activités de recherche et de développement, élaboreront des objectifs, développeront des applications et transmettront des compétences liées à la recherche.
Objectif
PUSHH will provide international, intersectoral and interdisciplinary doctoral training to prepare the next generation of palaeoanthropologists, palaeontologists and archaeologists to push knowledge on human biological and cultural evolution forward by using palaeoproteomics.
Ancient DNA (aDNA) sequencing revolutionised our knowledge on evolution, migration and admixture of archaic and anatomically modern humans. However, no aDNA older than 0.7 million years has been retrieved yet. Ancient proteins instead survive much longer than aDNA, enabling molecular-based phylogeny beyond the limits of aDNA degradation. They can also be recovered from cultural heritage objects, helping to understand how they were made. Presently though, there are very few specialists that have been trained to analyse ancient proteins, in stark contrast to the study of aDNA. The growing demand of information provided by palaeoproteomics will require highly qualified specialists with a multidisciplinary background in analytical chemistry, bioinformatics, palaeoanthropology, palaeontology and archaeology and PUSHH will build that competence.
The PUSHH network aims at:
(i) forming, through research-based training, the professional profiles behind tomorrow’s state-of-the-art analysis of ancient proteins from palaeoanthropological, palaeontological and archaeological materials,
(ii) consolidating existing constructive interaction across disciplines to focus different expertise and backgrounds into the common aim of advancing palaeoanthropology and archaeology,
(iii) stimulating the development of an application-oriented mindset for direct or indirect exploitation of PUSHH R&D activities, through the right set of specific research-related and transferable skills.
As a key PUSHH feature, the unique contribution provided by each participating institution will be integrated in a strong partnership to achieve valuable complementary research-specific and widely transferrable professional competence.
Champ scientifique
- natural scienceschemical sciencesanalytical chemistry
- natural sciencesbiological sciencesbiological morphologycomparative morphology
- natural sciencesbiological sciencesgeneticsDNA
- natural sciencesbiological sciencesbiochemistrybiomoleculesproteins
- natural sciencesearth and related environmental sciencespalaeontology
Mots‑clés
Programme(s)
Régime de financement
MSCA-ITN - Marie Skłodowska-Curie Innovative Training Networks (ITN)Coordinateur
1165 Kobenhavn
Danemark