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Nancy Marie Hollingsworth, Ph.D.
Professor
Department of Biochemistry and Cell Biology
314 Life Sciences Building
Stony Brook University
Stony Brook, NY 11794-5215
Office telephone: 631-632-8581
Lab telephone: 631-632-8583
Fax: 631-632-8575
E-mail: Nancy.Hollingsworth@stonybrook.edu
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Research Description |
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Meiosis is a specialized type
of cell division used by sexually reproducing organisms
to produce haploid gametes from diploid cells. My lab uses a variety of approaches to
understand chromosome behavior during meiosis. Our most recent work
has used a chemical genetic approach to conditionally inactivate two key
protein kinases, Cdc7 and Mek1, as a way of defining the roles of these kinases
in meiotic recombination and cell cycle progression. Mek1 kinase activity
promotes recombination between homologs during meiosis by inhibiting sister
chromatid recombination. Current projects in this area involve identifying
the substrates of Mek1 and elucidating the mechanism by which Mek1 is activated
in response to double strand breaks (DSBs), the initiating event of recombination. Cdc7
is an evolutionarily conserved kinase best known for its role in the initiation
of DNA replication in vegetative cells. Cdc7 is not, however, absolutely
required for premeiotic DNA synthesis. Instead we have found that Cdc7
is necessary for a number of different meiotic processes, including the initiation
of recombination, meiotic progression and the mono-orientation of sister
chromatids at the first meiotic division. We are working on defining
the meiotic targets of Cdc7 to determine the molecular
mechanisms by which Cdc7 functions in meiosis.
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