Home About Press Employ Contact Spyglass Advanced Search
HHMI Logo
HHMI News
HHMI News
Scientists & Research
Scientists & Research
Janelia Farm
Janelia Farm
Grants & Fellowships
Grants & Fellowships
Resources
Resources
  Scientists & Research
  Overview  
dashed line
  FindSci  
dashed line
Scientific Competitions
dashed line
Investigators
dashed line
  JFRC Scientists  
dashed line
  International Scholars  
dashed line
  HHMI Professors  
dashed line
  Nobel Laureates  

HHMI-NIH Research Scholars
Learn about the HHMI-NIH Research Scholars Program, also known as the Cloister Program. Moresmall arrow

dashed line

Janelia Farm Research Campus
Learn about the new HHMI research campus located in Virginia. Moresmall arrow

Interdisciplinary Explorations in Genomics


Summary: Major areas of Hunt Willard's research include genetic and genomic studies of X chromosome inactivation, functional genomics of human and other mammalian centromeres, creation of human artificial chromosomes as a tool for genome exploration, and the epigenetic basis of gene silencing. His HHMI project will provide undergraduates interested in a research career with a coherent four-year research experience in the genome sciences. It will consist of a series of interdisciplinary courses that tie genomics and its implications for science and society, laboratory research experiences, a literature-based course, and a course in scientific writing.

Project Summary
The aim of this project is to provide a coherent four-year research experience in the genome sciences for motivated science undergraduates with an interest in pursuing research careers. The project will be based in the Duke Institute for Genome Sciences and Policy and will consist of three separate, but related, activities. First, a group of 30 first-year students will be introduced to the genome sciences and their implications for health and society through a series of four related courses, offered as part of Duke's FOCUS (First-year Opportunity for Comprehensive, Unified Study) program in the first semester of college. The Genome Revolution FOCUS will be explicitly tied to initial research opportunities in the laboratory during the freshman year and during the summer between freshman and sophomore years. Students will begin to apply what they learned in the course, gaining early familiarity with large datasets and inquiry-driven design of lab-based and computational experimentation in areas such as genome biology, comparative genomics, cancer genomics, pharmacogenomics, and evolutionary genomics. For selected students, these research opportunities can extend into the second year to complement their other coursework.

A second activity will involve an advanced literature-based course in the genome sciences, designed for 10 to 15 students in their junior year, which will entail working in groups to design research approaches to a selected set of open-ended questions in genetics and genomics. Teams will include both experimentally and computationally oriented students, working together to design approaches to explore questions generated from reading the primary research literature in the genome sciences. Each team will work with advanced graduate students or postdoctoral fellows who wish to gain experience in research mentoring and management. The goal of the course is to enable students to work effectively with large datasets and to allow interdisciplinary teams to design a comprehensive series of experiments in the genome sciences. Another goal is to link the design work in the classroom to actual open-ended experimentation, with research extending throughout the junior year and during the summer.

The third activity, the culmination of the second, will be development of a “capstone” course in the genome sciences for students in their senior year. In this course, students pursue research questions arrived at during their junior year. In addition to research, the course will consist of weekly seminar discussions, involving seniors, advanced graduate students, and postdoctoral fellows who are working in the same laboratories, to interpret current data, plan next steps, and discuss new approaches. This course will be the culmination of the multiyear research project, with a final goal of preparing an honor's thesis, a paper for publication, and/or a talk for presentation at a national conference.

Research Summary
Our research interests include human genetics, genome biology, epigenetics, and implications of the genome sciences for medicine and society. Major areas of investigation have included genetic and genomic studies of X chromosome inactivation, functional genomics of human and other mammalian centromeres, creation of human artificial chromosomes as a tool for genome exploration, and the epigenetic basis of gene silencing.

Last updated September 2006

HHMI PROFESSOR

Huntington F. Willard
Huntington F. Willard
 

Related Links

AT HHMI

bullet icon

HHMI Names 20 New Million-Dollar Professors—Top Research Scientists Tapped for their Teaching Talent

bullet icon

Request a Photo

bullet icon

HHMI professors competition

ON THE WEB

external link icon

Willard Lab

external link icon

Duke Institute for Genome Sciences & Policy

search icon Search PubMed
dashed line
 Back to Topto the top
HHMI Logo

Home | About HHMI | Press Room | Employment | Contact

© 2008 Howard Hughes Medical Institute. A philanthropy serving society through biomedical research and science education.
4000 Jones Bridge Road, Chevy Chase, MD 20815-6789 | (301) 215-8500 | e-mail: webmaster@hhmi.org