HYUNG DON RYOO, Ph. D.
Objectives
Curriculum
Faculty
Admissions
Links
Home

Assistant Professor (NYU School of Medicine),
Ph. D. 2000, Columbia University

Department of Cell Biology
New York University School of Medicine
550 First Avenue MSB 6102
New York, NY 10016
Tel.: (212) 263-7257

E-mail: ryooh01@med.nyu.edu

Representative Publications:
Research Interests Biography Lab Pages


Ryoo, H.D., P.M. Domingos, Kang, M.-J., H. Steller, Unfolded Protein Response during Retinal Degeneration in a Drosophila Model for Retinitis Pigmentosa. Submitted (2006).

Ryoo, H.D. and H. Steller, Developmental Apoptosis” in Apoptosis in Health and Disease, Martin Holcik et. al. ed., Cambridge University Press (2005).

Ryoo, H.D., T. Gorenc, H. Steller.  Apoptotic cells can induce compensatory proliferation through the JNK and the wingless signaling pathways. Developmental Cell, 7, 491-501 (2004).

Ryoo, H.D. and H. Steller, Hippo’s mission for growth control. Nature Cell Biology, 5, 853-855 (2003).

B. Gebelein, J. Culi, H.D. Ryoo, W. Zhang, R.S.Mann.  Specificity of Distalless Repression and Limb Primordia Development by Abdominal Hox proteins. Developmental Cell 3, 487-498 (2002).

Ryoo, H.D., A. Bergmann, H. Gonen, A. Ciechanover, H. Steller.  Regulation of Drosophila IAP1 degradation and apoptosis by reaper and ubcD1. Nature Cell Biology (full article and cover) 4, 432-438 (2002).

Ryoo, H.D., T. Marty, F. Casares, M. Affolter and R.S. Mann.  Regulation of Hox target genes by a DNA bound Hox/Exd/Hth complex. Development 126, 5137-5138 (1999).

Ryoo, H.D. and R.S. Mann, The control of trunk Hox specificity and activity by Extradenticle.  Genes and Dev. 13, 1704-1716 (1999).

 


 

Objectives | Curriculum | Faculty | Admissions | Links | Home

 
School of Medicine Home Sackler Graduate Program NYU School of Medicine
550 First Avenue New York, NY 10016 (212)263-5648
sackler-info@med.nyu.edu
<
NYU Dept. of Biology Main Building, 10th Floor
100 Washington Square East, New York, NY 10003
(212) 998-8200  biology@nyu.edu
NYU Home


The Sackler Institute