WELCOME
TO THE HERMAN LAB!
There
are two very different projects ongoing in the Herman laboratory.
The
first concerns the control
of cell polarity in developing systems using the nematode,
C. elegans as a model. We are studying cell polarity
in the free-living soil nematode Caenorhabditis elegans
because it has a small number of cells, all of which can be
seen in the light microscope, and is amenable to genetic analysis.
The overall goal of this project is to understand how cell
polarity is generated and maintained during animal development.
Our approach is to identify and study genes involved in the
control of cell polarity by identifying mutations that disrupt
the polarities of individual cells. Much of our work has focused
on the role Wnt signaling pathways play in the control of
cell polarity.

The second
project is very different and aims to link responses of living
systems to environmental change at the genetic level. The
question is, which genes are most important for how organisms
respond to the environment. Our approach is to implement projects
that meld the disciplines of genetics and ecology in the relatively
new discipline of Ecological
Genomics. The Herman Lab is part of a multidisciplinary
group that is investigating the genetic
basis for the changes in nematode species composition
in response to environmental cues. The long-term goal of this
project is to discover which genes are induced or repressed
in response to variations in resource availability.
We are
located in the Division
of Biology at Kansas
State University.
We are
part of the Program
in Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology (MCDB)
as well as the KSU
Ecological Genomics Institute.
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