Obesity Archives - Sanford Burnham Prebys

William Stallcup earned his PhD in biochemistry from the University of California at Berkeley in 1972. He did postdoctoral work at the Salk Institute, where he was appointed Assistant Professor in 1976. Dr. Stallcup was recruited to Sanford Burnham Prebys in 1984.

Select Publications

Showing 3 of 3

Dr. Levine is Emeritus Professor at Sanford Burnham Prebys. Prior to that, he was a Professor in the Department of Pediatrics at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine, where he continues to see children with inherited metabolic diseases. Dr. Levine received his undergraduate degree in biochemistry from Harvard and his MD and PhD degree in genetics from the University of Washington. His clinical training as a pediatric geneticist was at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. Dr. Levine has been working in the field of cell transplantation therapies for diabetes and b-cell biology for more than fifteen years. His laboratory was the first to develop immortalized cell lines from the human endocrine pancreas as models of beta-cell growth and differentiation. He has made insights into cellular senescence in the endocrine pancreas, finding that b-cells undergo rapid senescence when stimulated to proliferate. Most recently, he and his co-workers demonstrated the existence of endocrine stem cells in the adult human pancreas. The laboratory continues to pursue the development of cell therapies for diabetes using a variety of approaches, including high throughput screening.

Education

1979-86: PhD, University of Washington (Genetics)
1979-86: MD, University of Washington
1975-79: A.B., Harvard University (Biochemistry)

Postgraduate Training

1989-91: Genetics Fellow, Dept. of Pediatrics, UCSD School of Medicine
1988-89: Clinical Genetics Fellow, Children’s Hosp. of Philadelphia
1987-89: Pediatric Resident, Children’s Hosp. of Philadelphia
1986-87: Pediatric Intern, Children’s Hosp. of Philadelphia

Other Appointments

Health Sciences Clinical Professor of Pediatrics, UCSD School of Medicine
Attending Physician, Rady Children’s Hospital

Select Publications

Showing 3 of 3

Rolf Bodmer earned his PhD in Biochemistry and Neurobiology from the University of Basel, Switzerland, in 1983. Dr. Bodmer trained as a postdoctoral fellow in Neurobiology at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York, and also studied Molecular Genetics at the University of California, San Francisco. He was appointed Assistant Professor of Biology in 1990 at the University of Michigan. There, he was promoted to Associate Professor of Biology in 1996, and then appointed to Associate Professor of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology in 2001. Dr. Bodmer joined Sanford Burnham Prebys in 2003, where he is Professor and Program Director of the Development, Aging, and Regeneration Program.

Other Appointments

Adjunct professor, University of California, San Diego

Funding Awards and Collaborative Grants

1 P01 AG033561 “Genetic Analysis of Drosophila Functional Aging”

Honors and Recognition

Ellison Foundation Senior Scholar Award

Select Publications

Showing 3 of 3

A global in vivo Drosophila RNAi screen identifies NOT3 as a conserved regulator of heart function.

Neely GG, Kuba K, Cammarato A, Isobe K, Amann S, Zhang L, Murata M, Elmén L, Gupta V, Arora S, Sarangi R, Dan D, Fujisawa S, Usami T, Xia CP, Keene AC, Alayari NN, Yamakawa H, Elling U, Berger C, Novatchkova M, Koglgruber R, Fukuda K, Nishina H, Isobe M, Pospisilik JA, Imai Y, Pfeufer A, Hicks AA, Pramstaller PP, Subramaniam S, Kimura A, Ocorr K, Bodmer R, Penninger JM

Cell 2010 Apr 2 ;141(1):142-53