Mary
Lou Guerinot, Ph.D.
Ronald and Deborah Harris Professor
Department of Biological Sciences
Dartmouth College
6044 Gilman, Room 304
Hanover, NH 03755-3526
USA
Tel: 603-646-2527
Fax: 603-646-1347
E-mail: Mary.Lou.Guerinot@Dartmouth.Edu
Areas of Expertise: Metal
transport; Molecular genetics
Member, Molecular Toxicology
Group, Center for Environmental Health Sciences at Dartmouth
Research: Mary
Lou Guerinot studies the molecular mechanisms of metal ion
uptake and its regulation in both prokaryotic and eukaryotic
cells. She uses a combined genetic, molecular and biochemical
approach to examine the uptake of iron, zinc, manganese and
cadmium in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae and the model
plant Arabidopsis thaliana. Her goal is to ultimately understand
the functional connections between genes, proteins, metabolites
and mineral ions. As part of a multi-investigator project,
Guerinot is using ICP-MS [inductively coupled spectroscopy-mass
spectroscopy] nutrient and trace element profiling as a tool
to determine the biological significance of connections between
a plant's genome and its elemental profile. They are
screening loss of function mutants in each of the predicted
ORFs in the Arabidopsis genome and have already identified
a number of proteins of unknown function that dramatically
alter a plant's elemental composition. The lab is also investigating
the reduction of iron by a family of membrane-bound Fe(III)
reductases and metal metabolism in the symbiosis between
Bradyrhizobium japonicum and soybeans.