UCI
School of Biological Sciences
Developmental and Cell Biology

Lee Bardwell

Lee Bardwell, PhD

Lee Bardwell, Ph.D.
Professor

5207 McGaugh Hall
University of California Irvine
Irvine, CA 92697

Tel: (949) 824-6902
Fax: (949) 824-4709
Email: bardwell@uci.edu
Website: Lab Homepage

Cell Signaling - We use the techniques of molecular biology, biochemistry, genetics and cell biology to study fundamental questions of cell signaling and regulation.

faculty-bardwell-1.pngSignal transduction networks are a crucial part of the circuitry by which a cell regulates and coordinates its growth and developmental program, and its response to the external environment. Faulty or malfunctioning signaling pathways lie at the heart of the molecular pathology of many diseases, including cancer. The signaling components we study have been highly conserved through evolution, and are thus of great importance to basic biology, as well as medicine.

Recent Publications

  • Cullen, PJ, Sabbagh, W, Irick, MM, Graham, E, van Olden, E, Neal, C, Delrow, J Bardwell, L and Sprague, GF, Jr. (2004) Msb2 is a Signaling Mucin at the Head of the Yeast Filamentous Growth MAPK Pathway. Genes & Development 18:1695-708
  • Bardwell, AJ, M Abdollahi and Bardwell (2004)
    Anthrax lethal factor-cleavage products of mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) kinases exhibit reduced binding to their cognate MAPKs. Biochemical Journal 378:569-577.
  • Kusari, AB, DM Molina, W Sabbagh Jr., CS Lau and L Bardwell (2004)
    A conserved protein interaction network involving the yeast MAP kinases Fus3 and Kss1.
    Journal of Cell Biology 164:267-77.
  • Ho, DT, AJ Bardwell, M Abdollahi and L Bardwell (2003)
    A docking site in MKK4 mediates high-affinity binding to JNK MAP kinases and competes with similar docking sites in JNK substrates.
    Journal of Biological Chemistry 278:32662-72.
  • AJ Bardwell, M Abdollahi and L Bardwell (2003)
    Docking sites on mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) kinases, MAPK phosphatases and the Elk-1 transcription factor compete for MAPK binding and are crucial for enzymic activity.
    Biochemical Journal 370:1077-1085.