John McCutcheon is an Investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, professor in the School of Life Sciences, and associate director of the Biodesign Center for Mechanisms of Evolution. He and his group study bacteria (and sometimes fungi) that form long-term infections in host cells. Most of the symbioses his lab studies are beneficial, where the intracellular bacteria provide essential nutrients to their hosts, but he is also interested in transitions between pathogenic and beneficial infections. His group studies how and why symbioses form, how they are maintained, and why they sometimes breakdown. They use a variety of approaches—cell biology, genetics, genomics, microscopy, molecular biology, molecular evolution, biochemistry, and field biology—to address their questions.
2006-2010: Postdoctoral Fellow, Microbial Genomics, University of Arizona
2006: PhD, Computational Biology, Washington University in St. Louis
2000: MS, Human Genetics, University of Utah
1996: BS, Biochemistry, University of Wisconsin
Spring 2022 | |
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Course Number | Course Title |
MBB 495 | Undergraduate Research |
Fall 2021 | |
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Course Number | Course Title |
MIC 220 | Biology of Microorganisms |
BIO 495 | Undergraduate Research |
Fall 2020 | |
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Course Number | Course Title |
BIO 498 | Pro-Seminar |