Dr. David W. Galbraith
Professor, Department of Plant Sciences

Marley Building, Room 822D
Phone: (520) 621-9153
Email: galbraith@arizona.edu

 

Visit these web-sites to learn more about Dr. Galbraith and his research

 

 

 

   
Background and Interests
 

David Galbraith received his B.A., M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in Biochemistry from Cambridge University. Here at the University of Arizona he teaches PLS539, and participates in teaching PLS660 and EEB/MCB/BIOC 453/553. His research interests include biological instrumentation, developmental and tissue-specific gene expression in eukaryotes, functional genomics and proteomics, and food safety issues. Dr. Galbraith was recently elected a Fellow of the American Association for Advancement of Science. (For a list of recent publications, please see below):

 
Publications
 

Mathiason K, He D, Grimplet J, Venkateswari J, Galbraith DW, Or E, Fennell A. Jul 2008. Transcript profiling in Vitis riparia during chilling requirement fulfillment reveals coordination of gene expression patterns with optimized bud break. Funct Integr Genomics,2008 Jul 17;

Edwards JD, Janda J, Sweeney MT, Gaikwad AB, Liu B, Leung H, Galbraith DW. May 2008. Development and evaluation of a high-throughput, low-cost genotyping platform based on oligonucleotide microarrays in rice. Plant Methods, 4:13

Zhang C, Barthelson RA, Lambert GM, Galbraith DW. May 2008. Global characterization of cell-specific gene expression through fluorescence-activated sorting of nuclei. Plant Physiol, 147:30-40

Yuan JS, Galbraith DW, Dai SY, Griffin P, Stewart CN Jr. Apr 2008. Plant systems biology comes of age. Trends Plant Sci, 13:165-71

Barthelson RA, Lambert GM, Vanier C, Lynch RM, Galbraith DW. Sep 2007. Comparison of the contributions of the nuclear and cytoplasmic compartments to global gene expression in human cells. BMC Genomics, 8:340

Weng Z, Barthelson R, Gowda S, Hilf ME, Dawson WO, Galbraith DW, Xiong Z. Sep 2007. Persistent infection and promiscuous recombination of multiple genotypes of an RNA virus within a single host generate extensive diversity. PLoS ONE, 2:e917

Keilin T, Pang X, Venkateswari J, Halaly T, Crane O, Ogrodovitch A, Sherman A, Volpin H, Galbraith DW, Or E. Aug 2007. Digital expression profiling of a grape-bud EST collection leads to new insight into molecular events during grape-bud dormancy release. Plant Science, 173:446-457

Galbraith DW. Aug 2007. Silica breaks through in plants. Nature Nanotech, 7:272-3

Displaying 1 - 8 of 174     << first < prev | [1] | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | next > last >>

 

 



 

       
 
 


Plant Sciences Home

Department Directory|Seminar Schedule|Course Home Pages
UA Home |UA Admissions|College of Agriculture and Life Sciences|
Site maintained by: Mario Marquez

Mailing Address: The University of Arizona
Department of Plant Sciences
Forbes Building

P.O. Box 210036
Tucson, AZ 85721