Timothy Nelson
Professor Emeritus of Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental BiologyDownloadHi-Res Photo
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Director, Marsh Botanical Garden
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Professor Emeritus of Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology
Director, Marsh Botanical Garden
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Overview
One effort
in the lab is aimed at understanding the formation of the regular venation
pattern that appears to guide leaf cell differentiation on a fine scale. We
have used three strategies to identify the genes and pathways that form the
simple venation pattern of Arabidopsis leaves:
1) cloning
of vascular pattern mutants,
2) screening
of genes with provascular (PV)-specific expression patterns, and
3) analysis
of expression profiles of PV cells by laser-capture microdissection (LCM) and
microarray analysis.
Recently, we characterized the roles of specific phosphoinositols (PIs) that
regulate intracellular vesicle traffic essential for vein polarity and vascular
cell continuity in developing leaves, and characterized several mutants with
defective vein patterns that correspond to the proteins that produce or
perceive these PIs.
In
collaboration with the Deng and Zhao labs, we mined our growing cell-specific
transcriptome atlas for rice (http://plantgenomics.biology.yale.edu/riceatlas/) to
identify a host of features specific to individual cell types, including
cell-specific genes and promoter motifs, cell-specific pathways and
hormone-response centers.
In a third
(collaborative) area of effort, we are undertaking a systems biology comparison
of developing leaves of three grass species: rice (a C3-type plant), maize
(moderate C4 plant), and sorghum (extreme C4 plant), to attempt to learn the
molecular developmental basis of high-efficiency C4-type photosynthesis. We have thus far obtained the inventories of transcriptomes,
proteomes and metabolites from maize developmental stages and
physiological states and are now obtaining comparable data from corresponding stages and states of rice.
Medical Research Interests
Botany; Developmental Biology; Genetics; Molecular Biology; Plants
Research at a Glance
Yale Co-Authors
Frequent collaborators of Timothy Nelson's published research.
Research Interests
Research topics Timothy Nelson is interested in exploring.
Susan Tausta
Francine Carland
Ning Sun, PhD
Plants
Publications
2009
CVP2‐ and CVL1‐mediated phosphoinositide signaling as a regulator of the ARF GAP SFC/VAN3 in establishment of foliar vein patterns
Carland F, Nelson T. CVP2‐ and CVL1‐mediated phosphoinositide signaling as a regulator of the ARF GAP SFC/VAN3 in establishment of foliar vein patterns. The Plant Journal 2009, 59: 895-907. PMID: 19473324, DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-313x.2009.03920.x.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchCitationsMeSH Keywords and ConceptsConceptsPleckstrin homology domainVein phenotypeCell polarityHomology domainSpecific phosphoinositideADP-ribosylation factor GTPaseVein pattern formationIntracellular vesicle transportPlant ArabidopsisVesicle trafficLeaf developmentVesicle cargoVesicle transportVAN3Animal cellsFoliar organsPhosphoinositidePi-ligandCellular sitesMutantsPattern formationMutationsCvp2PhenotypeRecent evidenceVH1/BRL2 receptor‐like kinase interacts with vascular‐specific adaptor proteins VIT and VIK to influence leaf venation
Ceserani T, Trofka A, Gandotra N, Nelson T. VH1/BRL2 receptor‐like kinase interacts with vascular‐specific adaptor proteins VIT and VIK to influence leaf venation. The Plant Journal 2009, 57: 1000-1014. PMID: 19000166, PMCID: PMC2793540, DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-313x.2008.03742.x.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchCitationsMeSH Keywords and ConceptsConceptsReceptor-like kinasesMultiple downstream pathwaysIntracellular signal transductionVein differentiationKinase interactsVesicle trafficProcambial cellsAdaptor proteinCytoplasmic domainBRL2Leaf venationSignal transductionDownstream pathwaysVascular developmentLigand signalsProteasome activityGround cellsAdaptorSame cellsVenationDistinct time pointsProteinCellsPattern defectsArabidopsisA transcriptome atlas of rice cell types uncovers cellular, functional and developmental hierarchies
Jiao Y, Lori Tausta S, Gandotra N, Sun N, Liu T, Clay NK, Ceserani T, Chen M, Ma L, Holford M, Zhang HY, Zhao H, Deng XW, Nelson T. A transcriptome atlas of rice cell types uncovers cellular, functional and developmental hierarchies. Nature Genetics 2009, 41: 258-263. PMID: 19122662, DOI: 10.1038/ng.282.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchCitationsAltmetricMeSH Keywords and Concepts
2008
Vein patterning screens and the defectively organized tributaries mutants in Arabidopsis thaliana.
Petricka JJ, Clay NK, Nelson TM. Vein patterning screens and the defectively organized tributaries mutants in Arabidopsis thaliana. The Plant Journal : For Cell And Molecular Biology 2008, 56: 251-263. PMID: 18643975, DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-313X.2008.03595.x.Peer-Reviewed Original Research
2006
LASER MICRODISSECTION OF PLANT TISSUE: What You See Is What You Get
Nelson T, Tausta SL, Gandotra N, Liu T. LASER MICRODISSECTION OF PLANT TISSUE: What You See Is What You Get. Annual Review Of Plant Biology 2006, 57: 181-201. PMID: 16669760, DOI: 10.1146/annurev.arplant.56.032604.144138.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchCitationsMeSH Keywords and ConceptsConceptsLaser microdissectionCell typesComplex tissuesStable cell wallCell-specific DNAMost cell typesSpecific cell typesPlant cellsPlant tissuesDNA modificationsCell wallCell-specific propertiesTissue organizationMetabolite profilingSpecific cellsPlantsCellsMicrodissectionMetabolite studiesTissueRNAProteinDNAIdentificationProfiling
Others
- Nelson, T., et al. (2007). A rice cell type transcriptional atlas: cellular profiles for a comparative approach to regulation of pathways and venation patterns. In: IRRI Workshop on C4 Rice (In press).Peer-Reviewed Original Research
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