Jon Schnorr
Associate Professor
Biology
Pacific University
India
Biography
Education: PhD in Genetics, University of Washington, Seattle, Wash., in 1997 Bachelor of Arts in Biology, University of Chicago, Chicago, Ill., in 1990
Research Interest
Research Interests: My laboratory uses the common fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster, to investigate basic questions in the biological sciences. The fruit fly has been intensely studied for more than 90 years and has become one of the most important models systems for the study of biology. It is not that the fruit fly is an important pest; rather, investigations over time have shown that the biological principles discovered in flies often hold true in other systems (like humans). Flies are economical and simple to raise in the lab, and decades of genetic studies have given present day Drosophila biologists many mutant strains, specialized chromosomes, and powerful techniques that simplify answering basic biological questions. Flies have been critical to our increased understanding of development, particularly how animals form their basic body plans(1995 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine). Flies remain at the forefront of biological research, especially in areas such as signal transduction and neurobiology. In 2000, the entire DNA sequence of the Drosophila Genome became available, adding to the power and efficiency of this model system.
Publications
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Xu M, Schnorr J, Keibler B, Simon HM. Comparative analysis of 16S rRNA and amoA genes from archaea selected with organic and inorganic amendments in enrichment culture. Applied and environmental microbiology. 2012 Apr 1;78(7):2137-46.
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Schnorr JD, Holdcraft R, Chevalier B, Berg CA. Ras1 interacts with multiple new signaling and cytoskeletal loci in Drosophila eggshell patterning and morphogenesis. Genetics. 2001 Oct 1;159(2):609-22.
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Schnorr JD, Berg CA. Differential activity of Ras1 during patterning of the Drosophila dorsoventral axis. Genetics. 1996 Dec 1;144(4):1545-57.