Christopher Mason
Brian Burke
Brian joined Horizon in 2012 during which time he has led various functions including Sales, Business Development and Product Management. Much of his career has been focused in driving both the NGS and gene editing revolutions, most notably in the fields of diagnostics and bioprocessing. In 2018 he was promoted to the Global Head of Strategy and now leads Horizon’s Corporate Development efforts including strategy development and M&A.
Bruno Cluzel
Bruno Cluzel is Executive Director, International Operations, Diagnostics Customer Care for Zoetis. In this role, he is responsible to define guidelines for customer and technical support services delivered in the markets; deliver elevated technical support and instrument repair; provide guidance to the Diagnostic Application Specialists in-market technical support; and develop and help deliver training curriculum, materials and sessions.
Bruno has extensive experience working within the animal health care sector. Through his career, Bruno has held various roles working across a number of different functions and regions.
With a passion for animal health, Bruno holds a diploma of Veterinary Medicine and started his career as a Practitioner specialized in Production Animal with a focus on Avian Medicine. After 15 years in this role, he joined Merial where he had different roles across Europe Africa and Middle East: technical, marketing and business lead. He joined Pfizer Animal Health in 2011 to help entering the Diagnostics. In his current role, he is building Customer Care capabilities as Zoetis expands around the Globe.
Dr. Julie Horvath
Dr. Julie Horvath is a comparative evolutionary genomicist interested in understanding the evolutionary forces that have shaped primate genomes and that cause human disease. Genetic and genomic comparisons between humans and our closest relatives, the primates, are crucial for understanding our own evolution and unique characteristics. The foundation of Dr. Horvaths research is based on species relationships, or phylogenies, which she first established for lemurs, and more recently, for all primates. These species relationships are applied to many of her research questions. Several examples of Horvaths research investigate the connection between genotype (DNA sequence) and phenotype (traits and characteristics) that make flora and fauna unique.