Pediatric Scientist Development Program (PSDP)
Postdoctoral Fellow
Developmental Biology/Joyner Lab, Sloan-Kettering Institute
Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center
Project: Analysis of Fgf Signaling During Midbrain and Hindbrain Embryogenesis
Chief Fellow, Pediatric Neurology
Children’s Hospital, Boston
Harvard Medical School
Resident in Pediatrics
Babies and Children’s Hospital of New York
Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center
M.D., University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine
Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine
Thesis: Identification of SANE, a Novel BMP Inhibitor that Regulates Dorsal-Ventral Patterning During Xenopus laevis Embryogenesis
Advisor: Peter S. Klein, MD, PhD; Howard Hughes Medical Institute
B.A. in Biochemistry, University of Pennsylvania
Woo, Y. J., Raju, G. P., Gardner, T. J., Balice-Gordon R. J., Swain, J. L. (1996) In Utero Murine Recombinant Adenoviral Gene Transfer. Surgical Forum, 47: 277-278.
Raju. G. P., Tan, C., and Klein, P. S. (1999), “Concepts in Early Embryonic Pat-terning” Chapter in Molecular Biology in Reproductive Medicine. ed. BCJM Fauser; Parthenon Publishing Group, New York.
I am a pediatric neurologist with a research background in signal transduction during embryogenesis using biochemical and molecular biology approaches. I joined Alex’s research group as a postdoctoral fellow to learn mouse genetics. I hope to combine my biochemistry experience with the sophisticated mouse tools that are being developed within the Joyner lab to understand mechanisms of early CNS embryogenesis with a focus on signal transduction pathways.
Specifically, I am currently working on the role of FgfR1 in early midbrain and hindbrain patterning using a novel mosaic analysis technique in mouse. In addition, I am also taking advantage of the chick embryo system to biochemically analyze signal transduction mechanisms of Fgf8 and Fgf17.