Medicine@Yale publication

Medicine@Yale.

July/August 2008   Volume 4 Issue 3

Inside this issue

Cover stories

An indelible smile, and a caring heart

Leading scientist is appointed new chair of Cell Biology

New aid policy lowers debt, widens career choices

Partnerships

Opening up the lines of communication

Grants & contracts

People

Lifelines: Linda Mayes
audio file

Neuroscientist wins inaugural Kavli Prize

Researcher lauded for work on psychiatric disorders
audio file

Local doctor appointed CMO of Yale Medical Group

Expert on bacteria is new HHMI investigator

Out & about

Science

A 'Shangri-La' for stem cell research
RSS

Advances: A replacement for hormone replacement? | Clearing out Alzheimer’s plaques | Feminine pharaoh: a genetic anomaly? | Natural selection tames alcohol use

Health

The kindest cut: single-port surgery at Yale



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Expert on internal workings of bacteria is new HHMI investigator

Christine Jacobs-Wagner

Christine Jacobs-Wagner

Christine Jacobs-Wagner, Ph.D., the Maxine Singer Associate Professor of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology at Yale, has been named an investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI), a non-profit medical research organization that is one of the nation’s largest philanthropies.

Jacobs-Wagner is one of the world’s leading authorities on the internal organization of bacteria. Working with the bacterium Caulobacter crescentus, a common inhabitant of freshwater lakes and streams, Jacobs-Wagner and colleagues discovered that the organism contains intermediate filaments, a cytoskeletal structure previously thought to be present only in animal cells.

According to the online Human Intermediate Filament Database, 79 diseases, including amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (Lou Gehrig’s disease), Parkinson’s disease and some forms of cataracts, have been associated with defects in intermediate filaments. Jacobs-Wagner says that C. crescentus offers an excellent model system for understanding these structures.

HHMI’s 298 investigators, selected through rigorous national competitions, include 12 Nobel Prize winners and 122 members of the National Academy of Sciences.

Jacobs-Wagner, who received her doctorate at the University of Liège, Belgium, becomes one of 17 scientists at Yale who now hold the prestigious appointment. image

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