Professor
Ph.D., University of Washington
Phone: 812-237-7898
E-mail: lsstuar@isugw.indstate.edu
Office: Science Building 233
Web Site
Research Interests:
1) Molecular Mechanisms of Vertebrate Development
One aspect of research in our laboratory is directed toward a detailed understanding of the molecular mechanisms by which vertebrate
organisms develop from single-celled embryos into complex organisms. This research utilizes zebrafish as a model organism. Advantages of
the zebrafish include fecundity, an optically clear, rapidly developing embryo, and the opportunity to experimentally manipulate
fertilization and development so as to produce parthenogenetic or haploid offspring. In addition, a full genomic sequence for the
zebrafish will be available soon.
A technique of central importance is the production of transgenic zebrafish via the direct microinjection of cloned genes into fish embryos. Transgenic zebrafish possessing recombinant gfp and rfp marker genes are being generated for a variety of purposes, including 1) basic research into recombination mechanisms and transgenesis strategies, and 2) the analysis of transgene inheritance, transgene expression, and insertional mutagenesis.
2) Molecular Systematics and Phylogenetic Analysis
As whole genome sequence information for a wide variety of organisms continues to accumulate, new exhaustive methods for estimating
phylogentic relatedness become possible. We have developed a revolutionary method for generating whole genome phylogenies using vector
representations of protein sequences. This method uses a standard matrix decomposition (SVD) to process a peptide frequency matrix
containing vector representations for all proteins within a large, multi-genome dataset. Precise vector definitions for the proteins in
high-dimensional space are obtained as output. Pairwise analysis of vector angles provides distance measures useful for building accurate
gene trees. Furthermore, following simple vector addition by species, these same protein definitions can be used to generate comprehensive
species trees based on total genome content. A particularly attractive aspect of the SVD-based method is that local sequence alignments
are neither generated or required.
Our work in this area is expanding to include a wide variety of genome data sets. A parallel implementation of the SVD algorithm will allow very large genome collections to be analyzed in the near future using ISU's newly acquired high performance cluster. This work is currently being done in collaboration with Michael Berry at the University of Tennessee Knoxville, Khidir Hilu at Virginia Tech, and Cynthia Gibas at UNC-Charlotte.
3) Construction and Analysis of DNA Vaccines Against B-cell Lymphoma
Somewhat surprisingly, raw injected DNA can be taken up and expressed in vivo. This allows the design of simple DNA vaccines capable of
expressing target antigens for presentation to the immune system. A variety of delivery methods and antigen structures are currently being
explored in attempts to understand how best to design DNA vaccines against a mouse B-cell lymphoma, 2C3. This work is being done in
collaboration with Prof. Swapan Ghosh here in the Biology Department.
Reprints for some publlications are available as PDF files. By accessing the PDF file, the user agrees to abide by all copyright laws and education fair-use regulations.
Dong, J., Stuart, G. W. 2004.
Transgene manipulation in zebrafish by using recombinases.
Methods in Cell Biology 77:363-79. (
Download PDF -
229 kB)
Stuart, G. W., Berry,
M. 2004. An SVD-based comparison of nine whole
eukaryotic genomes supports a coelomate rather than ecdysozoan
lineage. BMC Bioinformatics 5, 204. (
Download PDF -
443 kB)
Stuart, G. W., Moffett, K., and Leader, J.J. 2004. A Whole Genome Phylogeny for Plant Virus Family Tombusviridae Archives of Virology 149, 1595-1610.
Stuart, G. W., Berry,
M. (2003) A Comprehensive Whole Genome Bacterial Phylogeny using
Correlated Peptide Motifs defined in a High Dimensional Vector
Space. Journal of Bioinformatics and Computation Biology Biology
1, 475-493. (
Download PDF -
311 kB)
Nebert DW, Stuart GW, Solis WA, Carvan MJ 3rd. 2002 Use of reporter genes and vertebrate DNA motifs in transgenic zebrafish as sentinels for assessing aquatic pollution. Environ Health Perspect. 110, A15.
Stuart, G. W.
, Moffett, K., and Leader, J.J. 2002. A comprehensive
vertebrate phylogeny using vector representations of protein
sequences from whole genomes. Molecular Biology and
Evolution 19: 554-562. (
Download PDF -
202 kB)
Stuart, G. W
., Moffett, K., and Baker, S. 2002. Integrated gene and species
phylogenies from unaligned whole genome protein sequence.
Bioinformatics 18: 100-108. (
Download PDF -
197 kB)
Laxmanan, S., Stuart, G. W., and
Ghosh, S.K. 2001. A stable single chain variable fragment expressing
transfectoma demonstrates induction of idiotype-specific cytotoxic
T-cell during early growth stages of a murine B-lymphoma. Cancer
Immunology and Immunotherapy 50: 437-444. (
Download PDF -
289 kB)
Lim, S-Y., Laxmanan, S., Stuart, G. W.,
Ghosh, S.K. 2001. Anti-B lymphoma Immunity: Relative Efficacy of
Peptide and Recombinant DNA vaccine.Cancer Detection and
Prevention 25: 470-478. (
Download PDF -
268 kB)
Shah, D., Aurora, D., Lance, R and Stuart, G. W. 2000. POU Genes in Metazoans: Homologs in Sea
Anemones, Snails, and Earthworms. DNA Sequence
11, 457-461.(
Download PDF -
432 kB)
Nebert, D.W., Dalton, T.P., Stuart, G. W.,
and Carvan, M.J. 2000. Gene-Swap knock-in cassette in mice to study
allelic differences in human genes. Ann. NY Acad. Sci.
919:148-70.
(
Download PDF -
425 kB)
Carvan III, M.J., Dalton, T.P., Stuart, G. W., and Nebert, D.W. 2000. Transgenic Zebrafish as
Sentinels for Aquatic Pollution. Ann. NY Acad. Sci. 919,
133-47.
(
Download PDF -
334 kB)
Alvager, T., Stuart, G. W., and Shotwell, A. (1999) DNA, Proteins, and Compressibility. Proceedings of the International Joint Conference on Neural Networks (IJCNN'99) #260, IEEE, Piscataway, New Jersey.
Gillespie, G.A., Stuart, G. W., and Bozarth, B.
1999. RT-PCR method for detecting cowpea mottle virus in
Vigna germplasm. Plant Disease 83, 639-643.
(
Download PDF -
557 kB)
Sampath. K. and G. W. Stuart. 1996.
Developmental expression of class III & IV POU domain genes in the
zebrafish. Biochem. Biophys. Res. Comm. 219: 565-571.
(
Download PDF -
171 kB)
Stuart, G. W. , Z. Zhu, K.
Sampath, and M. W. King, 1995. POU domain sequences from the flatworm
Dugesia tigrina. Gene 161: 299-300.
(
Download PDF -
55 kB)
You, X-J., J. W. Kim, G. W. Stuart,
and R. F. Bozarth. 1995. The nucleotide sequence of cowpea mottle
virus and its sequence homology to carmoviruses. J. Gen. Virology
76: 2841-2845.
(
Download PDF -
541 kB)
Westerfield, M., Stuart, G. W., and Wegner, J. 1993. Expression of foreign genes in zebrafish. Developments in Industrial Microbiology Wm. C. Brown, Dubuque IA, pp658-664.
Stuart, G. W. , J. R.
Vielkind, J. V. McMurray, and M. Westerfield. 1990. Stable lines of
transgenic zebrafish exhibit reproducible patterns of transgenic
expression. Development 109: 577-584.
(
Download PDF -
334 kB)
Stuart, G. W., McMurray, J., and Westerfield, M. 1989. Germ-line transformation of the zebrafish, in Gene transfer and gene therapy, Alan R. Liss, Inc., N.Y., pp. 19-28.
Stuart, G. W. , J. V.
McMurray, and M. Westerfield. 1988. Replication, integration, and germ
line transmission of foreign DNA injected into the early zebrafish
embryo. Development 103: 403-412.
(
Download PDF -
1077 kB)
Searle, P.F., Stuart, G. W., and Palmiter, R.D.
1987. Metal regulatory elements of the mouse metallothionein-I
Gene. Metallothionein II Birkhauser Verlag, Basel. Vol. 52 p. 407-441 (
Download PDF -
87 kB)
Stuart, G. W. , P. F. Searle, and R. D. Palmiter. 1985. Identification of multiple regulatory elements in mouse metallothionein-I promoter by assaying synthetic sequences. Nature 317: 828-831.
Searle, P.F., Stuart, G. W., and Palmiter, R.D.
1984. Building a metal responsive promoter with synthetic
regulatory elements. Mol. Cell. Biol. 5, 1480-1489.
(
Download PDF -
1953 kB)
Stuart, G. W., Searle, P.F., Chen, R.L., Brinster,
R.L., and Palmiter R.D. 1984. A 12 base pair DNA motif
that is repeated several times in metallothionein gene promoters
confers metal regulation to a heterologous gene. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci.
USA 81, 7318-7322.
(
Download PDF -
1059 kB)
Searle, P.F., Davison, B.L., Stuart, G. W.,
Wilkie, T.M., Norstedt, G., and Palmiter, R.D. 1984. Regulation,
linkage, and sequence of mouse metallothionein I and II genes. Mol.
Cell. Biol. 4, 1221-1230.
(
Download PDF -
2449 kB)