| My research interests
lie in exploring several of the fundamental questions of developmental biology.
For example, how do cells adopt and maintain a specific identity? What is the
molecular basis of pattern formation? How is a series of morphological movements
coordinated to produce a properly formed terminal structure? I use as
my experimental organism the cellular slime mold Dictyostelium discoideum,
a simple eukaryote that spans the unicellular/multicellular divide. In spite of
the relative simplicity of its developmental program, Dictyostelium has
proved to be a powerful model system for developmental biology. Not only do its
cells carry out many of the same processes as our own; they also do so via similar
mechanisms. Recently, my research has focused on the molecular genetic
characterization of the developmental mutant fbxA (F-Box
A). The FbxA protein plays a role in establishing and maintaining the correct
prespore: prestalk ratio during development. Sequence analysis suggests
that FbxA is a member of a family of proteins that target proteins for degradation
via the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway. My students and I are currently studying
another protein involved in pattern formation, FbiA (FbxA-interacting
protein), that we believe is a target of FbxA-mediated degradation. |  |