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Barnard Ecology Professor Jeanne Poindexter, Founder of a Field of Research, Delivers Keynote Address at Canadian Microbiology Conference, July 9

Contact: Petra Tuomi, Office of Public Affairs, 212-854-7907
James Griffith, Office of Public Affairs, 212-854-2037

New York, NY, July 31, 2002—In the December 22, 1962, issue of Nature, Barnard ecology professor and Chair of the Biological Sciences Department, Jeanne Poindexter, then a Ph.D student at Berkeley named Jeanne Stove, and her co-author, R.Y. Stanier, published the groundbreaking paper, "Cellular Differentiation in Stalked Bacteria." Their research demonstrated the highly unusual cell cycle of Caulobacter crescentus bacteria, giving birth to an entire field of developmental research. There are now around 20 laboratories worldwide dedicated to the study of Caulobacter’s development.

Caulobacter divides asymmetrically, with one half of the original cell developing a flagellum, a wavy "tail" attached to the cell, and the second half developing a straight "tail," or a stalk (caulis is Latin for "stalk"). As the two cells develop, the stalk cell renews the division process immediately, while the cell with the flagellum goes through a second stage of developing a stalk before dividing again. Poindexter’s research showed that Caulobacter has a legitimate juvenile stage in its development, an extreme rarity in single-cell organisms.

On Tuesday, July 9, 2002, Poindexter delivered the keynote address at the inaugural Caulobacter Meeting in Manoir du Lac Delage in Québec. The meeting ran from July 8-10, just before the American Society for Microbiology Conference on Prokaryotic Development in Québec City, which lasted from July 10-14. The Caulobacter Meeting, along with others like it, was designed as a specialized breakout meeting for those whose research focuses on that particular bacterium.

In her keynote address, titled, "Variations on a life style: C. crescentus and beyond," Poindexter discussed other bacteria that are probably regulated in their cell cycles in much the same way and that probably share many of the same genes. It was also an overview of related bacteria and their development. 15 of the world’s Caulobacter laboratories were represented.

"The most satisfying thing for me," said Poindexter, "was seeing how my Ph.D dissertation had unfolded."

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