The mitochondrial transcription machinery.- Mitochondrial RNA turnover in Metazoa.- Mitochondrial RNase P complex in animals: mitochondrial tRNA processing and links to disease.- Intercompartment RNA trafficking in mitochondrial function and communication.- Control mechanisms of the holo-editosome in trypanosomes.- Mitochondrial RNA editing and processing in diplonemid protists.- Mechanisms and evolution of tRNA 5′-editing in mitochondria.- Editing of mitochondrial RNAs in Physarum polycephalum.- Requirement of various protein combinations for each C-to-U RNA editosome in plant organelles.
Dr. Jorge Cruz-Reyes, Department of Biochem. & Biophysics,
and Department of Genetics. Texas A&M University and Texas
AgriLife Research (AgriLife), College Station, Texas, USA.Email:
cruzrey@tamu.edu
Jorge Cruz-Reyes is a Professor in the Department of Biochemistry &
Biophysics, and Department of Genetics, Texas A&M University
(TAMU).
Since he joined the faculty at TAMU in 2001 he has carried out
studies of the RNA editing apparatus and mechanism in trypanosome
mitochondria. More recently he began working on the development of
lead compounds against in T. brucei and T. cruzi and molecular
genetics of the potential targets. His multi-disciplinary research
involves collaborations with several labs at TAMU and in other
Universities in the USA and abroad.
He obtained a Master's degree in Biomedical Research from the
Institute of Biotechnology in UNAM, Mexico. He received a Ph.D. in
MolecularParasitology from the London School of Hygiene and
Tropical Medicine, University of London. His interest in RNA
biology and a prestigious Pew Fellowship Award led him to The Johns
Hopkins School of Medicine, where he joined the lab of Barbara
Sollner-Webb to work on trypanosome RNA editing during his
postdoctoral training. Currently, he teaches courses in Molecular
Genetics and RNA Biology. He also regularly serves in scientific
review groups at the NIH and the NSF.
Dr. Michael W. Gray, Dalhousie University Dept. Biochem. &
Molecular Biol. and Centre for Comparative Genomics and
Evolutionary Bioinformatics (CGEB), Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.
Email: m.w.gray@dal.ca
Michael W. Gray is Professor Emeritus in the Department of
Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Dalhousie University (Halifax,
Nova Scotia, Canada), which he joined in 1970, serving as head from
2004 to 2007. Since 1970, he has carried out research on the
structure, function, and evolution of organelles (particularly
mitochondria) and of eukaryotic RNA processing pathways
(particularly RNA modification and RNA editing). A focus on
protists (eukaryotic microbes) and use of a comparative genomics
approach has underpinned his research.
Gray obtained his BSc (1964) and PhD (1968) in biochemistry from
the University of Alberta, Edmonton, subsequently moving to
Stanford University for postdoctoral training (1968–70). During his
tenure as a faculty member at Dalhousie University, he was a Fellow
in the Program in Evolutionary Biology of the Canadian Institute
for Advanced Research (1987–2007) and held a Tier I Canada Research
Chair in Genomics and Genome Evolution (2001–08). He was elected to
Fellowship in the Royal Society of Canada (1996) and the American
Academy of Microbiology (2014). Currently, he serves as a member of
the Steering Committee of the Centre for Comparative Genomics and
Evolutionary Bioinformatics (CGEB) at Dalhousie University.
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |