Michelle DuBois, PhD
Professor and Associate Chair
Biography
Teaching
Current courses:
- Cell Biology (Biology 4750+4751)
- Molecular Biology Projects Lab (Biology 3750)
- Biology I – Molecular and Cellular Biology (Biology 1610+1611)
Research
Chromosomal dynamics have been of interest to Dr. DuBois since graduate school. The basic organization of genes and stability and inheritance of chromosomes within single-celled organisms have provided complicated enough questions to keep her busy for years in research. Initially the bizarre organization of genes and developmental relationship between the micronucleus and macronucleus of ciliated protozoa caught her attention and led to an evolutionary analysis of scrambled genes among a group of ciliates. Later, an interest in the components that are responsible for the protection of the chromosomal end against degradation and recombination led to the development of a quantitative assay to characterize these components in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Current research has taken advantage of molecular genetics in budding yeast to characterize various mutations in DNA repair and chromatin remodeling pathways.
Biography
- Postdoctoral Fellow --- Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center
- Ph.D. in Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology --- University of Colorado, Boulder
- B.S. in Biochemistry and B.A. in Chemistry --- North Carolina State University