Beth A. Montelone, Ph. D.
Associate Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, Kansas State University
Professor of Biology
Research and Scholarship
DNA Repair and Mutagenesis (note--I am no longer accepting students for
this research):
DNA repair is a ubiquitous, "housekeeping"
process that occurs in all types of organisms and is now recognized as
being intimately tied with basic cellular mechanisms such as DNA replication,
transcription, and regulation of the cell cycle. In my lab, we use
the model organism Saccharomyces cerevisiae, or bakers' yeast, to
investigate mechanisms of spontaneous genetic changes in cells and their
relationship to DNA repair systems. We have worked with mutant alleles
of the genes MMS9,
MMS13, MMS21, and RAD3 that
confer elevated rates of spontaneous mutation and mitotic recombination.
These characteristics are of interest because cells in higher organisms
that had these properties would be highly likely to become transformed
into cancer cells. Our overall goal is to understand how cells normally
avoid spontaneous genetic changes and how they can become altered in such
a way as to accumulate them.

Some
spontaneous mutants: the orange tabby cat with a black spot on his
head.
The white morning glory on a plant
with otherwise blue flowers.
Both are examples of somatic mutations.
Molecular Biology of Cryptosporidium parvum (note--I am no longer
accepting students for this research):
The coccidial protozoan parasite
Cryptosporidium
parvum is an important public health threat around the world, causing
diarrheal disease that is unpleasant in healthy individuals, but can be
severely debilitating or even fatal in newborns, the elderly, and immunosuppressed
or immunocompromised individuals. This organism cannot be grown through
a complete life cycle in culture and is not tractable by genetic methods.
In a collaboration with
Dr.
Steve Upton, our labs have begun molecular analysis of genes of
C.
parvum, in hopes of better understanding mechanisms of infection and
pathogenesis by this organism and in studying its capability for DNA repair.
Publications
in this area
Educational and Human Resource Development
GENE and Research Link
I've worked with others to develop instructional activities for high school
and college biology classes making use of the yeast system and its collection
of DNA repair mutants. This started out as the GENE project, in collaboration
with Dr. Thomas Manney, Professor Emeritus of Physics at K-State, and has
been continued under the auspices of the NSF-funded
Research
Link 2000 program.
The GENE Project
homepage Research
Link 2000 yeast homepage
GROW
With support from the National Science Foundation, several K-State women
faculty members and administrators created the Girls Researching Our World
(GROW) Program in 1999. This effort is made possible through a network
of University faculty, staff, and students, K-12 teachers, and scientists
and engineers working in governmental agencies, non-profit organizations,
and Kansas industries. GROW offers a series of on-campus events during
the summer and academic year with the goal of encouraging the interests
of middle-school girls in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics
(STEM).
GROW Program homepage
ADVANCE
In 2003, K-State was awarded a $3.5 million NSF ADVANCE Institutional Transformation
grant to improve the recruitment, retention, and success of women faculty
members in the sciences and engineering. I am currently co-Principal
Investigator on this project and a member of the project Executive Committee.
ADVANCE
homepage
CORES
The Collaborative for Outreach, Recruitment, and Education in STEM (CORES)
was created in 2006 to bring together programs with the common goal of
increasing participation in STEM disciplines by women and individuals from
groups historically underrepresented in these fields.
CORES
homepage
Courses Taught
No current assignments; occasional guest
lectures in BIOL 705.
Service Organizations
Association for Women in Science--an
organization dedicated to increasing the numbers of women in the sciences
and supporting those already there.
Sigma Xi--a scientific honorary
society and service organization
Personal
The Tortie Terror Tag Team
A page dedicated to the memory of my late friend Ellery. Ellery's
page
Contact me by email at bethmont@ksu.edu;
phone at (785) 532-6900 (Deans' Office); snail-mail -- College of Arts
& Sciences Deans' Office, Eisenhower Hall, Kansas State University,
Manhattan, KS 66506-1005.
Last updated: 2-20-08