Zena obtained a BA in Mathematics at Magdalene College, University of Cambridge, in 2004, and an MSc in Statistics at Stanford University in 2007. She went on to do an MRes and PhD in Mathematical Biology at UCL, studying the  the evolution of sexual differentiation. 

In 2014 she received an EPSRC Doctoral Prize Fellowship to study the role of cell-cell signaling in development and evolution. During this time she worked closely with experimental collaborators to study the role of Notch signaling in spatiotemporal pattern formation in the Drosophila notum and zebrafish spinal cord. 

She then moved at the University of Geneva and the Max Planck Institute for the Physics of Complex Systems in Dresden as an HFSP Long Term Fellow. As a postdoctoral fellow  Zena studied morphogen gradient formation, and the machineries that allow morphogen gradients to scale to size during developmental growth. 

She will join the Francis Crick institute as a group leader in 2021, where her group will  study growth and patterning in development and evolution through the lens of physics and mathematics. Zena  holds a joint appointment at the Department of Physics and Astronomy at the University College London.
 

Qualifications and history

2007
University of Cambridge, UK
BA in Mathematics
2009
Stanford University, USA
MSc in Statistics
2010
UCL, UK
MRes in Modelling Biological Complexity
2014
UCL, UK
PhD in Mathematical Biology
2014
UCL, UK
EPSRC Fellow
2016
University of Geneva, Switzerland and MPI-PKS, Germany
HFSP Fellow
2021
Francis Crick Institute, UK
Group Leader