Jeffrey B. Woodruff, Ph.D.
The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
Titles & Positions | |
|
|
Institutional & Related Links | |
Profile
Biography
Grant Information |
---|
Grant ID: RR170063 |
Grant Mechanism: Recruitment of First-Time, Tenure-Track Faculty Members |
Recruited From: Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics |
Date Awarded: August 16, 2017 |
Grant Amount: $2,000,000 |
The hallmarks of cancer are well established. But how does a normal cell become cancerous in the first place? It is now clear that dysregulation of a subcellular structure called the centrosome can trigger tumor formation and metastasis. My lab combines live-cell microscopy, synthetic biology, and nano-scale materials science techniques to reveal the control mechanisms that prevent centrosome dysregulation in healthy cells.
My research career began at the University of Texas at Austin, where I studied tissue development in leech embryos. During my Ph.D. at the University of California, Berkeley, I used genome analysis and live-cell microscopy to dissect the mechanisms of cell division in baker’s yeast. For my post-doc at the MPI-CBG in Dresden, Germany, I developed a molecular toolkit that allowed me to build synthetic centrosomes in a test tube.