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Lynn M. Bedard

Assistant Professor of Biology
Contact Information: |
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Degree: |
Ph.D. Microbiology (University of Virginia) |
Area of Specialty: |
Microbiology and Molecular Biology |
Courses taught: |
BIO 215 Cells and Genes, BIO 250 Microbiology, BIO315 Molecular Biology, First Year Seminar on DNA testing and criminal justive |
Research Interest: |
Chromatin assembly in yeast |
Research projects: |
"Analysis of High Copy Suppressors of a Histone H4 mutant" ,"Investigating the role of HIF1 in histone protein import" ,"Localization of karyopherin proteins in yeast cells" "Localization of chromatin assembly factors in histone H4 mutant cells" |
Grants & Publications: |
Glowczewski, L, J Watorborg, JG Berman. (2004) Yeast Chromatin Assembly Complex-1 Protein excludes non-acetylatable forms of histone H4 from chromatin and the nucleus. Molecular and Cellular Biology, 24 (23): 10180-10192. Enomoto, S, L Glowczewski, JG Berman (2004). Telomere cap components influence the rate of senescence in telomerase-deficient yeast cells. Molecular and Cellular Biology, 24 (2):837-45. Enomoto, S, L Glowczewski, JG Berman. (2002) MEC3, MEC1 and DDC2 are essential components of a telomere checkpoint pathway required for cell cycle arrest during senescence in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Molecular Biology of the Cell, 13 (8):2626-38. Glowczewski, L, P Yang, T Kalashnikova, MS Santisteban, MM Smith. (2000) Histone-histone interactions and centromere function. Molecular and Cellular Biology, 20 (15): 5700-11. Meluh, PB, P Yang, L Glowczewski, D Koshland, and MM Smith. (1998) Cse4p is a component of the core centromere of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Cell, 94(5): 607-613. |