Monday, July 4, 2011
2011 Plant Science Program HHMI-GBMF Investigators
Philip Benfey, Ph.D.
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Benfey is studying how plants control the form and function of their root systems. More | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Dominique Bergmann, Ph.D.
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By studying the formation of the structures plants use to control the exchange of water and carbon dioxide, Bergmann is making fundamental discoveries about how cells acquire their fates and establish the patterns needed to build a complete organism. More | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Simon Chan, Ph.D.
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By studying basic chromosome biology, Chan has made discoveries that have practical implications for making crop plants easier to breed. More | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Xuemei Chen, Ph.D.
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Chen’s lab has two overlapping goals: deciphering the molecular programs that control flower formation, and determining how small RNAs control gene activity in plants. More | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Jeff Dangl, Ph.D.
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Plants are confronted by a daunting range of bacteria, fungi, and viruses. Dangl is working to understand how plants recognize beneficial versus pathogenic microbes. More | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Xinnian Dong, Ph.D.
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Dong is investigating how plant defense genes promote resistance to pathogens. More | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Jorge Dubcovsky, Ph.D.
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Dubcovsky’s investigations of wheat genetics have enabled him to boost the plant’s nutritional content, increase yield, and optimize the growing cycle for particular climates. More | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Joseph Ecker, Ph.D.
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Ecker is trying to understand how plants perceive and respond to gases required for stress protection, seed germination and fruit ripening. More | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Mark Estelle, Ph.D.
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Estelle is investigating how hormones help plants respond to alter their growth in response to changes in including light, temperature, water, and nutrient availability. More | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Sheng Yang He, Ph.D.
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He works to identify the techniques that bacteria use to attack plants and make them more susceptible to disease, which has implications for both crops and human health. More | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Robert Martienssen, Ph.D.
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The gene silencing methods studied in Martienssen’s lab keep mobile genetic elements under control and are critical to normal plant reproduction and development. More | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Elliot Meyerowitz, Ph.D.
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One of the questions that interests Meyerowitz is how plant cells recognize and respond to chemical and mechanical signals. More | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Krishna Niyogi, Ph.D.
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Niyogi has spent two decades delving into photosynthesis and has made fundamental discoveries that help scientists understand the strategies plants use to adapt to their environment. More | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Craig Pikaard, Ph.D.
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One of the major research interests in Pikaard’s lab is understanding how plant genes are silenced. More | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Keiko Torii, Ph.D.
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Torii’s lab studies how plant cells coordinate proliferation and differentiation during organ morphogenesis to generate beautiful, orderly patterns. More | ||||||||||||||||||||
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