原文檢索: Nature 449, 96-100 (6 September 2007) | doi:10.1038/nature06056; Received 28 May 2007; Accepted 28 June 2007 Polo inhibits progenitor self-renewal and regulates Numb asymmetry by phosphorylating Pon [Abstract]
Email: bingwei@stanford.edu Academic Appointments AppointmentOrganizationAssistant ProfessorPathologyGraduate & Fellowship Program
Honors & AwardsTitleOrganizationDate(s)
McKnight Scholar AwardThe McKnight Endowment Fund for Neurosciences2002 Career Scientist AwardMonique Weill-Caulier Trust2002 Speaker's Fund for Biomedical Research AwardNew York Academy of Sciences2002 Young Investigator AwardThe Arnold and mabel Beckman Foundation2002 Research FellowThe Alfred P. Sloan Foundation2002
Professional EducationDegreeAwarding InstitutionField of StudyYear of Graduation Ph.D.Cornell University Genetics and Development 1995 B.S.Fudan UniversityGenetics 1987
Research Interests
Our laboratory is interested in understanding how the diverse neuronal cell types are generated and maintained in the nervous system. We are taking a combined molecular, cellular, genetic, and genomic approach in the model organism Drosophila to address these questions. To study how neuronal diversity is generated, we focus on investigating the mechanisms of asymmetric division of neural stem cell that produces daughter cells with different developmental potentials. To study how neurons are properly maintained after they are integrated into neural networks, we are creating neurodegenerative phenotypes in Drosophila similar to that observed in Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s diseases in humans. We are employing the power of fly genetics to identify genetic modifiers that can suppress or enhance these disease phenotypes. Given the unanticipated high level conservation of signaling pathways, regulatory mechanisms, and physiological processes between flies and mammals, our research promises to provide insights into fundamental mechanisms that control the generation and maintenance of neuronal diversity in humans.
Publications Zhang Y, Guo H, Kwan H, Wang JW, Kosek J, Lu B "PAR-1 Kinase Phosphorylates Dlg and Regulates Its Postsynaptic Targeting at the Drosophila Neuromuscular Junction." Neuron 2007; 53: 2: 201-15 Wang, J-W., Imai Y., Lu, B. "Activation of PAR-1 Kinase and Stimulation of Tau Phosphorylation by Diverse Signals Require the Tumor Suppressor Protein LKB1" The Journal of Neuroscience 2007; 27: 3: 574-581 Yang Y, Gehrke S, Imai Y, Huang Z, Ouyang Y, Wang JW, Yang L, Beal MF, Vogel H, Lu B "Mitochondrial pathology and muscle and dopaminergic neuron degeneration caused by inactivation of Drosophila Pink1 is rescued by Parkin." Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 2006; More ? Yang Y, Gehrke S, Haque ME, Imai Y, Kosek J, Yang L, Beal MF, Nishimura I, Wakamatsu K, Ito S, Takahashi R, Lu B "Inactivation of Drosophila DJ-1 leads to impairments of oxidative stress response and phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/Akt signaling." Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 2005; Nishimura I, Yang Y, Lu B "PAR-1 kinase plays an initiator role in a temporally ordered phosphorylation process that confers tau toxicity in Drosophila." Cell 2004; 116: 5: 671-82