Gina V. Caldas, Ph.D.
- Title
- Postdoctoral Fellow
- Department
- Molecular & Cell Biology
- Institution
- University of California, Berkeley
- Address
-
460 Stanley Hall
MC 3220 - City, State, ZIP
- Worcester, MA 94720-3220
- Country
- United States
- Phone
- (510) 664-4209
- [email protected]
- Website
- http://mcb.berkeley.edu/labs/dernburg/
- Research field
- Molecular biology
- Award year
- 2015
- Country of origin
- Colombia
- Mentor name
- Abby Dernburg, Ph.D.
Research
The Mello lab studies how the same systems responsible for silencing genes can sometimes activate them. In the worm C. elegans, as in other organisms, proteins called Argonautes take up small ribonucleic acid (RNA) molecules that they use as "bait" to catch and destroy other RNAs-- a process that effectively shuts down or silences the genes that produced the captured RNAs. But one C. elegans Argonaute protein behaves somewhat differently. Although the protein is perfectly capable of chopping up RNAs in a test tube, in the worm, the protein captures RNAs, but does not eliminate them. Instead, this protein appears to protect RNA from destruction by other Argonautes. I will explore how this specific protein performs this paradoxical feat of molecular heroism-- and whether this behavior is somehow linked to the protein's ability to destroy RNAs. Because similar systems of genetic control operate in humans, these results will provide insights into the role such opposing pathways play in human health and disease.