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Ilaria Rebay

Associate Professor, Cell & Molecular Biology, Committee on Cancer Biology, Committee on Developmental Biology, Committee on Genetics, Genomics & Systems Biology

Education:

B.A., Mathematics, Columbia University, 1987 Ph.D., Biology, Yale University, 1993

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Office:
929 East 57th Street
Chicago, IL 60637
W340 CIS
Phone: (773) 702-5753
Fax: (773) 702-4476

Lab:
929 East 57th Street
Chicago, IL 60637
W325M GCIS
Phone: (773) 834-1067

Ilaria Rebay

Research Summary / Selected Publications

My laboratory works at the interface between signal transduction and developmental biology. The long term goal of our research is to understand how complex developmental decisions are controlled in time and space by multiple signaling pathways. Our approach involves first identifying the individual genes comprising the regulatory network, and second elucidating the complex functional relationships between the components in order to determine the critical nodes where information is integrated. Specifically, we study how nuclear events downstream of the receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK) pathway regulate cell fate specification decisions during embryonic and retinal neural development, with particular emphasis on elucidating the post-translational control mechanisms that modulate and facilitate interactions within the network. Drosophila, and in particular the fly eye, provides an unparalleled model tissue in which to study the mechanisms of signal integration both because of its experimental tractability and because a complex interplay between multiple signaling pathways regulates many aspects of its development. Furthermore, because developmental signaling mechanisms have all been highly conserved in evolution, our work elucidating the molecular circuitries used in Drosophila directly advances understanding of how cell fates are...

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Jemc, J. and Rebay, I. (2007. "Identification of transcriptional targets of the dual-function transcription factor/phosphatase eyes absent." Dev Biol PMID: 17714699 

Vivekanand, P. and I. Rebay (2006). "Intersection of signal transduction pathways and development." Annu Rev Genet 40: 139-57. 

Mutsuddi M, Chaffee B, Cassidy J, Silver SJ, Tootle TL, Rebay I. (2005). Using Drosophila to decipher how mutations associated with human branchio-oto-renal syndrome and optical defects compromise the protein tyrosine phosphatase and transcriptional functions of eyes absent. Genetics 170: 687-95  abstract

Rebay I, Silver SJ, Tootle TL. (2005). New vision from Eyes absent: transcription factors as enzymes. Trends in Genetics I21: 163-71.  abstract

Silver, S., and Rebay, I. (2005). Signaling circuitries in development: Insights from the Retinal Determination Gene Network. Development 132, 3-13.  abstract

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