BiochemistryBiologyPrehealth Faculty Advisory Committee

Bruce Wightman

Professor, Dept. Chair, Biology
BiochemistryBiologyPrehealth Faculty Advisory Committee

Bruce Wightman

Professor, Dept. Chair, Biology

Education

  • Ph.D., Harvard University
  • B.A., Oberlin College

Teaching Interests

Learning biology is similar to learning a foreign language. Before you can have a very interesting conversation, you need to know the vocabulary and grammar. This is what makes learning introductory sciences so difficult for many—until you really own the language of the discipline, it can be hard to think critically about it. So much about learning biology is about learning how to imagine—how to model—invisible objects and complex processes.

I am interested in how science epistemology (the study of knowledge) influences modern thought. Our ideas about what constitutes truth and what kinds of arguments have the most weight are heavily influenced by science. This can be an effective way of establishing reality and best practices, but it can also blind us from other ways of knowing.

Research and Scholarship

My lab studies the molecular genetics of development in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans. This microscopic worm has proved a fruitful model for understanding basic biological problems. Research students in my lab are studying a gene called fax-1, which is a nuclear receptor gene found in all other animals including humans. We’re trying to understand how specific neurons influence insulin signaling to regulate sleep.

For more detailed information, consult the Wightman Research Lab homepage.

  • Biology Independent Study/Research
  • Biology Independent Study/Research - Animal Development
  • Biology Independent Study/Research - C. elegan Development
  • Biology Independent Study/Research - C. elegan Genetics
  • Biology Independent Study/Research - C. Elegans Neuropeptide
  • Biology Independent Study/Research - Mechanisms of Development
  • Biology Independent Study/Research - Molecular Genetics
  • Biology Independent Study/Research - Wightman Lab
  • Biology Independent Study/Research: C. elegan Genetics
  • Biology Independent Study/Research: Mechanisms of Development
  • Biology Independent Study/Research: Molecular Genetics
  • Biology Independent Study/Research: Osmotic Stress Arrest
  • Biology Independent Study/Research: Wightman Research Lab
  • CUE: Molecular Biology of Cancer
  • From Organisms to Molecules
  • Genetics

  • Bodofsky, S. (’18),  Liberatore, K. (’19), Pioppo, L. (’12), Lapadula, D. (’14), Thompson, L. (’18), Birnbaum, S. (’18), McClung, G. (’12), Kartik, A. (’17), Clever, S. and Wightman, B., 2018, A tissue-specific enhancer of the C. elegans nhr-67/tailless gene drives coordinated expression in uterine stem cells and the differentiated anchor cell, Gene Expression Patterns, 30: 71-81.
  • Bodofsky, S. (’18), Koitz, F. (’19), and Wightman, B., 2017, Conserved and Exapted Functions of Nuclear Receptors in Animal Development, Nuclear Receptor Research4: 1-34, Article ID 101305.
  • Corsi, A., Wightman, B., Chalfie, M., 2015, A Transparent Genetic Window into Biology:  A Primer on the Caenorhabditis elegans Model System, Genetics, 200: 387–407 [Published in parallel in WormBook: The Online Review of C. elegans Biologywww.wormbook.org.]
  • Weber, K. P., Alvaro, C. G. (’10), Baer, G. M. (’12), Reinert, K. (’02), Cheng, G. (’04), Clever S., Wightman, B., 2012, Analysis of C. elegans NR2E nuclear receptors defines three conserved clades and ligand-independent functions, BMC Evolutionary Biology, 12:81.
  • Wightman, B. and Hark, A. T., 2012, Integration of Bioinformatics into an Undergraduate Biology Curriculum and the Impact on Development of Mathematical Skills, Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 40(5): 310–319.
  • Verghese, E. (’08), Schocken, J. (’09), Jacob, S., Wimer, A. M. (’05), Royce, R., Nesmith, J.E. (’09), Baer, G.M. (’12), Clever, S., McCain, E., Lakowski, B., and B. Wightman, 2011, The tailless ortholog nhr-67 functions in the development of the C. elegans ventral uterus, Developmental Biology, 356:516-28.
  • DeMeo, S. (’04), Lombel, R. (’03), Snowflack, D. (’03), Smith, E. (’02), Reinert, K. (’02), Cronin, M., Clever, S., and B. Wightman, 2008, Specificity of DNA-binding by the FAX- 1 and NHR-67 nuclear receptors of Caenorhabditis elegans is partially mediated via a subclass-specific P-box residue, BMC Molecular Biology, 9:2.

  • Williams Award for Scholarship
  • Hoffman Award for Research
  • Bridge Builder Award

  • B. Wightman and Z. He (’19), 2019, “Insulin-Dependent Quiescence and Arrest at Hatching.” 22nd International C. elegans Conferences, UCLA, Los Angeles, June 20-24. International Conference. Invited talk.
  • K. Liberatore (’19), Z. He (’19), F. Koitz (’19),  D. Silver (’18), and B. Wightman, 2019,” FAX-1 interneurons and insulin signaling regulate arousal and quiescence,” 22nd International C. elegans Conferences, UCLA, Los Angeles, June 20-24.
  • E. Schlesinger (’20), K. Liberatore (’19), A. Mesrobian (’20), and B. Wightman, 2019,”The Effects of DAF-16/FOXO Translocation on Quiescent Peri-Hatching Arrest in Caenorhabditis elegans,” 22nd International C. elegans Conferences, UCLA, Los Angeles, June 20-24.  
  • J.I. Mardick, B. Wightman, D.J. Reiner, 2019, “The RalGEF-Ral signaling module confers positional information in cell migration.” 22nd International C. elegans Conferences, UCLA, Los Angeles, June 20-24. 
  • K. Liberatore (’19) and B. Wightman, 2018,” Insulin signaling and neuronal function in arousal in C. elegans,” 21st Undergraduate Research Symposium, U. Maryland, Baltimore Co., Baltimore, MD, October 20. 
  • Z. He (’19) and B. Wightman, 2018, “The role of insulin signaling and neuron function in developmental progression,” 21st Undergraduate Research Symposium, U. Maryland, Baltimore Co., Baltimore, MD, October 20.
  • F. Koitz (’19) and B. Wightman, 2018, “The C. elegans RevErb gene, nhr-85, is expressed increasingly over the first half of larval development,” 21st Undergraduate Research Symposium, U. Maryland, Baltimore Co., Baltimore, MD, October 20.
  • B. Wightman, 2018,” Insulin-dependent quiescence and arrest at hatching,”C. elegans Developmental Biology and Gene expression Meeting, Barcelona, Spain, June 13-17. 
  • B. Wightman, K. Lightfoot (’17)  and E. Bayer (’14), 2017, “The fax-1 and nhr-85 nuclear receptors of C. elegans function in gonad development,” 21st International C. elegans Conferences, UCLA, Los Angeles, June 21-25. 
  • S. Bodofsky (’18), S. Birnbaum (’18), L. Thompson (’18), S. Clever and B. Wightman, 2017,” An nhr-67 promoter element mediates expression in AC and VU uterine cells,” 21st International C. elegans Conferences, UCLA, Los Angeles, June 21-25.
  • F. Koitz (’19), E. Bayer (’14), S. Clever and B. Wightman, 2017, “FAX-1 and UNC-42 transcription factors mediate insulin-dependent quiescence and arrest,” 21st International C. elegans Conferences, UCLA, Los Angeles, June 21-25. 

Biology

Prehealth Faculty Advisory Committee