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Dr. Terry Magnuson is the Sarah
Graham Kenan professor and founding chair of the department of genetics
in the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine.
He is organizing a campuswide center for genome sciences.
He graduated from the University of Redlands, majoring
in biology. His thesis work was completed in the Sloan-Kettering division
of Cornell University, focusing on cell surface organization during early
mouse development. Magnuson completed postdoctoral work at the University
of California at San Francisco, where he characterized several developmental
mutations affecting the early mouse embryo.
In 1984, Magnuson moved to Case Western Reserve University,
where he worked his way through the ranks to professor and director of
the Developmental Biology Center, and developed a research program focused
on the use of genetics and genomics tools toward understanding how the
mammalian embryo is patterned. He came to UNC-Chapel Hill last summer.
Magnuson's honors include a National Institutes of
Health New Investigator Award, the March of Dimes Basil O'Connor Award,
the Pew Scholars Award and election (twice) as the "outstanding graduate
mentor" of the year. He is a founding member of the International
Mammalian Genome Society and serves as an elected member of the Secretariat
of this society.
In addition, he is an elected member of the board of the Society of Developmental
Biology. He has also served as co-chair of the mouse Chromosome 7 committee
and was chair of the Genetic Basis of Disease Review Committee for the
NIH. He serves on the editorial advisory board of two journals, Development
and Mammalian Genome, and is co-editor-in-chief of a third journal, Genesis:
The Journal of Genetics and Development.
Magnuson also served as co-director of the summer
course known as the Molecular Embryology of the Mouse at the Cold Spring
Harbor Laboratory. His research continues to focus on genomics and mammalian
developmental genetics.
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