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Faculty: R–Z

A–F  |  G–Q  |  R–Z  |  Emeritus  |  Affiliate

Click on the name of the faculty member to view a complete biography.

Mark L. Richter
Ph.D., University of New South Wales, 1982
Professor
4031 Haworth
(785) 864-3334; email:
"Our research involves the application of gene engineering, biochemical and biophysical experiments aimed at elucidating the relationship between the structure and biological function of oligomeric proteins. Much of our work is focused on the ATP synthase enzymes from mitochondria, chloroplasts, and bacterial cytoplasmic membranes, as well as a family of transcription factors which utilize a structure similar to that of the ATP synthase to regulate procaryotic transcription."
Joseph E. Steinmetz
Ph.D., Ohio University, 1983
Professor and Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences
4012 Haworth
(785) 864-5849; email:
"Dr. Steinmetz investigates the neurobiology of learning and memory-how memories are encoded, stored, and retrieved in the mammalian brain-utilizing a variety of neuroscience techniques. Of especial interest is the cerebellum and its role in the acquisition and expression of classical eyeblink conditioning in the rat and rabbit. His current work utilizes eyeblink conditioning to study the damaging effects of binge-like alcohol exposure on the developing cerebellum, and separately, disturbances in temporal motor coordination, similar to those seen in schizophrenic patients."
Dean A. Stetler
Ph.D., Kansas, 1980
Associate Professor
3043 Haworth
(785) 864-3549; email:
"Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is a complex autoimmune disease affecting multiple organ systems and characterized by the production of a wide variety of autoantibodies. A multitude of environmental, genetic, hormonal, and immunoregulatory factors participate in the etiology and pathogenesis of the condition. Current therapy involves the use of general immunosuppressive agents such as prednisone and azathiaprine, which are inadequate and accompanied by serious side-effects and/or toxicities. The laboratory is investigating the possibility of using recombinantly prepared ricin A chain fused to SLE autoantigens to specifically target, and kill, only the immature B lymphocytes that will produce the corresponding autoantibodies."
Kathy A. Suprenant
Ph.D., University of Virginia, 1982
Professor
4010 Haworth
(785) 864-4580; email:
"The Suprenant lab investigates how the cytoskeleton affects cell signaling and cell structure/function in muscles and sensory neurons of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans."
Fusao Takusagawa
Ph.D., Osaka City University, Japan, 1974
Professor
3004 Haworth
(785) 864-4727; email:
"Research in Dr. Takusagawa's group focuses on the structure-function relationships of the key biomacromolecules that are involved in various biological processes. Three dimensional structures of biomacromolecules have been determined at atomic resolution by a single crystal X-ray diffraction method. His group has two imaging plate detectors on a rotating anode X-ray generator. X-ray diffraction data can be measured at any temperature between ambient temperature and -180deg C. We also are studying the anticancer drug actinomycin D (AMD) by X-ray crystallography, chemical synthesis, spectroscopies, and inhibition measurement."
Liang Tang
Ph.D., Chinese Academy of Sciences, 1998
Assistant Professor
Haworth 8041
(785) 864-5838; email:
"Many biological processes are carried out by complex, multi-component macromolecular assemblies. The assembly and dynamics of these molecular machines has been central to structural and cell biology, and has imposed tremendous challenges owing to their unusual complexity. The research in this lab aims to understand the structural basis of assembly, dynamics and function of molecular complexes by using X-ray crystallography and electron cryo-microscopy as primary techniques. The current research is focused on viruses and bacterial infectosome."
Lisa Timmons
Ph.D., Johns Hopkins, 1996
Assistant Professor
5041 Haworth
(785) 864-7363; email:
"Double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) elicits significant biological effects in many different species, including humans. These effects include systemic responses that prevent establishment of a foreign genome -- defenses against viral or transposon invasion, for example. dsRNA can also lead to sequence-specific gene silencing in many plants and animals, a process referred to as RNAi in Caenorhabditis elegans or post-transcriptional gene silencing (PTGS) in other species. These effects are dependent upon entry of dsRNA into cells--dsRNA has an intrinsic ability to enter cells and spread throughout an organism. Our lab is investigating the mechanisms that mediate dsRNA cellular uptake and spreading using genetic, molecular, and cellular approaches in the model organism Caenorhabditis elegans."
Ilya Vakser
Ph.D., Moscow State University, 1989
Professor
200A MRB
(785) 864-1057; email:
"The research in our laboratory focuses on molecular modeling in the context of structural genomics and bioinformatics. The major goals are to develop approaches to the modeling of protein interactions and to design procedures for reconstruction of the network of connections between proteins in a genome."
Robert Ward
Ph.D., Duke University, 1998
Assistant Professor
4004 Haworth
(785) 864-5235; email:
"The primary interest of my lab is understanding the mechanisms that provide spatial and temporal specificity for morphogenesis. We study the elongation and eversion of the adult legs in Drosophila because of the relative simplicity of this system and the availability of powerful molecular and genetic tools. Leg morphogenesis is triggered by a steroid hormone and requires signaling through the Rho1 small GTPase. Our current efforts are aimed at understanding how hormonal signaling regulates Rho activity in the cell."
Robert F. Weaver
Ph.D., Duke University, 1969
Professor, Associate Dean, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences
3005 Haworth
(785) 864-3399; email:
"We are interested in the control of transcription in eukaryotes, particularly the great switch in transcription that occurs when viruses infect their host cells. We are studying a baculovirus -- a DNA virus that infects caterpillars. Transcription in insect cells infected by this virus occurs in three stages: early, late, and very late. The switch from early to late transcription occurs at the onset of viral DNA replication 6-7 hours post-infection. I am no longer accepting graduate or undergraduate students."
Yang Zhang
Ph. D., Central China Normal University, 1996
Assistant Professor
200B MRB
(785) 864-1948; e-mail:
"Our laboratory is developing various novel computational algorithms to generate large-scale, high-throughput predictions of tertiary protein structures and protein-protein interactions from amino acid sequences. The goal is to annotate the function of proteins based on the sequence-to-structure-to-function paradigm and therefore enhance the impact of genome sequencing on biology and medicine."