Amy K - Duke University



Amy K. Schmid, Ph.D.

Institute for Systems Biology, 1441 N. 34th St. Seattle, WA. 98103.

(206)-732-1493

aschmid@

EDUCATION

1996 International foreign exchange, Eberhard-Karls University, Tübingen, Germany (German language and literature).

1997 B.S., Marquette University, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, with honors and Magna cum laude (Biology and German literature).

1998 Fulbright Fellow, Eberhard-Karls University and Max Planck Institute, Tübingen,Germany, with Professor Thomas Meyer (German language and literature, molecular biology). “Differential regulation of host signaling pathways in response to Neisseria infection”.

2004 Ph.D., University of Washington, Seattle, Washington (Molecular and Cellular Biology), Professor Mary E. Lidstrom. “Characterization of stress response in the radioresistant bacterium Deinococcus radiodurans.”

PROFESSIONAL POSITIONS

2004-2008 Postdoctoral fellowship, Institute for Systems Biology, Seattle, Washington, Professor Nitin S. Baliga. “Systems analysis of the transcriptional and translational response to oxygen changes in halophilic archaea.”

2008-2009 Senior Scientist, Institute for Systems Biology, Seattle, WA.

August 2009- Assistant Professor, Duke University, Durham, NC.

HONORS and FELLOWSHIPS

1993-1997 Marquette University Honors Program.

1993-1997 Marquette University Ignatius Scholarship for Academic Excellence.

1997-present Phi Beta Kappa academic honors fraternity.

1997-1998 J. William Fulbright Fellowship, Tübingen, Germany.

1999-2002 NIH NRSA Molecular and Cellular Biology Graduate Training Grant, University of Washington, (NIH, T32 GM07270).

2006-2008 NIH Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Award (NRSA) for Individual Postdoctoral Fellows, Institute for Systems Biology, (NIH F32GM078980).

PUBLICATIONS

1. Schmid, A.K. and Lidstrom, M.E., 2002. Involvement of two putative alternative sigma factors in stress response of the radioresistant bacterium Deinococcus radiodurans. J. Bacteriol. 184(22):6182-6189.

2. Schmid, A.K., Lipton, M.S., Mottaz, H., Monroe, M.E., Smith, R.D., and Lidstrom, M.E. 2005. Global whole-cell FTICR mass spectrometric proteomics analysis of the heat shock response in the radioresistant bacterium Deinococcus radiodurans. J. Proteome Res. 4(3):709-718.

3. Schmid, A.K., Howell, H.H., Battista, J.R., Peterson, S.N., and Lidstrom, M.E. 2005. Global transcriptional and proteomic analysis of the Sig1 heat shock regulon of Deinococcus radiodurans. J Bacteriol 187(10):3339-3351.

4. Schmid, A.K., Howell, H.H., Battista, J.R., Peterson, S.N., and Lidstrom, M.E. 2005. HspR is a global negative regulator of heat shock gene expression in Deinococcus radiodurans. Mol Microbiol 55(5):1579-1590.

5. Schmid, A.K. and Baliga, N.S. 2006. Prokaryotic Systems Biology, p395-423. In M. Al-Rubeai and M. Fussenegger (ed.), Cell Engineering Vol. 5: Systems Biology. Springer Press, New York, NY.

6. Rothfuss, H.M., Lara, J.C., Schmid, A.K., and Lidstrom, M.E. 2006. Involvement of the S-layer proteins Hpi and SlpA in the maintenance of cell envelope integrity in Deinococcus radiodurans R1. Microbiology. 152(9): 2779-2787.

7. Bare, C.J., Shannon, P.T., Schmid, A.K., Baliga, N.S. 2007. The Firegoose: two-way integration of diverse data from different bioinformatics web resources with desktop applications. BMC Bioinformatics. 8:456.

8. Bonneau, R., Facciotti, M.T., Reiss, D.J., Schmid, A.K., Pan, M., Kaur, A., Thorsson, V., Shannon, P., Johnson, M., Bare, C.J., Longabaugh, W., Vuthoori, M., Whitehead, K., DiRuggiero, J., Johnson, C., Hood L., and Baliga, N.S. 2007. A predictive model for transcriptional control of physiology in a free-living cell. Cell. 131(7):1354-65 (cover article).

9. Schmid, A.K., Reiss, D.J., Kaur, A., Pan, M., King, N., Van, P., Hohmann, L., Martin, D.B., and Baliga, N.S. 2007. Anatomy of microbial cell state transitions in response to oxygen. Genome Research. 17(10):1399-413.

10. Van, P.T., Schmid, A.K., King, N., Kaur, A., Pan, M., Whitehead, K., Koide, T., Facciotti, M., Reiss, D.J., and Baliga, N.S. 2007. The Halobacterium salinarum NRC-1 peptide atlas: toward strategies for targeted proteomics and improved proteome coverage. J Proteome Res. 7(9):3755-64.

11. Schmid, A.K. Reiss, D.J., Pan, M., Koide, T., and Baliga, N.S. 2009. A single transcription factor regulates evolutionarily diverse but functionally linked metabolic pathways in response to nutrient availability. Nature Mol Sys Biol., 5:282.

12. Koide , T., Reiss, D.J., Bare, C.J., Facciotti , M., Schmid , A.K., Pan, M., Marzolf, B., Van , P., Lo , F-Y., Pratap, A., Deutsch , E., Peterson , A., Martin, D., Pang, W.L., Baliga, N.S. 2009. Prevalence of transcription promoters within archaeal operons and coding sequences. Nature Mol Sys Biol., 5:285.

TEACHING EXPERIENCE

Workshops

Co-organized and team taught Systems Biology Course at the Institute for Systems Biology. November, 2006 and August, 2008.

Teaching Assistantships

Spring 1999

BIOL 401, Molecular and Cellular Biology and Science Writing, Teaching assistantship, University of Washington, Seattle, WA.

Summer 2000

MICROM 302, General Microbiology and Recombinant DNA Technology Laboratory, Teaching assistantship, BRIDGE program, University of Washington, Seattle, WA.

Mentoring Undergraduate and High School Students.

Spring 2003

• Hands-on teaching of concepts of recombinant DNA technology, bacterial growth and survival experiments in a one-on-one situation.

• Supervised experiments and assisted in evaluation of experimental results.

Summer 2005, 2006, 2008

• Advised two high school research assistants and their two teachers during the creation and testing of systems biology laboratory kits and problem-based curriculum materials for deployment in Seattle area high schools.

Spring 2003 and Spring 2006-present

Mentored three undergraduate research assistants:

• Sam Chan – Cloning and construction of heat shock genes in D. radiodurans.

• Phu Van - Construction of the first microbial proteomics peptide atlas and the writing of the publication (J Proteome Res, in press).

• Jamie Mazon - Construction of GFP-promoter fusion clones in Halobacterium salinarum NRC-1 for the purpose of optimizing microfluidics platforms. Mr. Mazon is now in Pharmacy school.

Summer 2008

• Designed curriculum and taught 1-week intensive training course for 10 undergraduate interns for the Center for Systems Biology summer program.

• Served as overseeing advisor for 10 undergraduate interns during the course of the summer.

June 9, 2008

Invited career seminar speaker for Bellevue High School chemistry students.

INVITED CONFERENCE AND SYMPOSIA ORAL PRESENTATIONS

West Coast Bacterial Physiologists’ Annual Meeting, Asilomar Conference Center, Pacific Grove, California, December, 2001. “Regulation of the heat shock response in the radioresistant bacterium Deinococcus radiodurans.”

Research in Progress, Institute for Systems Biology. May 3, 2006.

Microbial Stress Response Gordon Research Conference, South Hadley, Massachusetts, July, 2006. “Systems-level analysis of the oxygen response in the halophilic archaeon Halobacterium salinarum NRC-1”.

Symposium on Biological Networks: from Measurements to Modeling, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, Washington, September, 2007. “A predictive systems model of cellular responses to environmental perturbations”.

Center for Systems Biology Collaborative Meeting, Virginia State University, Petersburg, Virginia, October, 2007. “Systems biology: goals, research, and results”.

Association for Women in Science Network Meeting, Institute for Systems Biology, Seattle, Washington, January, 2008. “Systems-level analysis of the oxygen response in the halophilic archaeon Halobacterium salinarum NRC-1”.

University of California, Berkeley, Department of Plant and Microbial Biology (job talk). January, 2008. “Systems biology in archaea: the anatomy of cell state transitions in response to oxygen.”

University of California, Davis, Department of Microbiology (job talk). January, 2008.

University of New Mexico, Department of Biology, Albuquerque, NM (job talk). February, 2008.

Duke University, Department of Biology and Center for Systems Biology, Durham, NC (job talk). February, 2008.

European Molecular Biology Laboratory, European Bioinformatics Institute. Cambridge, UK. October 27, 2008. “Boosting predictive accuracy in regulatory network models”.

Seattle Rotary Club Luncheon, February 17, 2009. “Wholistic biology for bioenergy”.

Duke University, Center for Systems Biology Colloquium, Durham, NC. April, 22, 2009. “Evolution and regulation of nutrient utilization”.

CONFERENCE AND SYMPOSIA POSTER PRESENTATIONS

Microbial Stress Response Gordon Research Conference, July, 2000, Newport, Rhode Island. Amy K. Schmid and Mary E. Lidstrom. “Characterization of stress responses in the extremely radioresistant bacterium Deinococcus radiodurans.”

Microbial Stress Response Gordon Research Conference, July, 2002, Newport, Rhode Island. Amy K. Schmid and Mary E. Lidstrom. “Involvement of two alternative sigma factors in the stress response of Deinococcus radiodurans.”

103rd General Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology, May, 2003, Washington, D.C. Amy K. Schmid and Mary E. Lidstrom. “Involvement of the alternative sigma factor Sig1 in the stress response of Deinococcus radiodurans.”

3rd International Conference on Pathways, Networks, and Systems: Theory and Experiments, October, 2005, Rhodes, Greece. Amy K. Schmid, M. Facciotti, A. Kaur, M. Pan, M. Vuthoori, P. Shannon, L. Hohmann, and N.S. Baliga. “Systems-level analysis of the oxygen response in the halophilic archaeon Halobacterium sp. NRC-1 indicates bimodal metabolism.”

Microbial Stress Response Gordon Research Conference, July, 2006, South Hadley, Massachusetts. Amy K. Schmid. “Systems-level analysis of the oxygen response in the halophilic archaeon Halobacterium NRC-1”.

Keystone Symposium on Systems Biology and Regulatory Networks, March, 2007, Steamboat Springs, Colorado. Amy K Schmid, D. Reiss, A. Kaur, M. Pan, P.T. Van, N. King, L. Hohmann, and N.S. Baliga. “The anatomy of microbial cell state transitions in response to oxygen.”

7th International Symposium on Systems Biology: Systems Biology and the Environment, April, 2007, Institute for Systems Biology, Seattle, Washington. Amy K Schmid, D. Reiss, A. Kaur, M. Pan, P. T. Van, N. King, L. Hohmann, and N.S. Baliga. “The anatomy of microbial cell state transitions in response to oxygen.”

Keystone Symposium on Omics Meets Cell Biology., January, 2009, Breckenridge, Colorado. Amy K. Schmid, D.J. Reiss, M. Pan, T. Koide, R. Bonneau, N.S. Baliga. “Toward Boosting Predictive Accuracy in Gene Regulatory Network Models.”

8th International Symposium on Systems Biology: Molecular Systems Biology of the Cell. Amy K. Schmid, D.J. Reiss, M. Pan, T. Koide, N.S. Baliga. “A single transcription factor regulates evolutionarily diverse but functionally linked metabolic pathways in response to nutrient availability.”

COMMUNITY AND DEPARTMENTAL SERVICE

1997. Marquette Action Program member (participated in spring break trips to rural areas to help maintain and rebuild homes).

1997. Marquette Student Ministry Volunteer

2000, 2002 Student leader for the University of Washington Molecular and Cellular Biology Program new student recruitment weekend.

Winter 2003 Student panel spokesperson, HHMI undergraduate course.

2005-

present St. Catherine of Siena Marriage Preparation Team member and facilitator, Seattle, Washington.

2004-2006 Institute for Systems Biology Employee Advisory Committee member. Spearheaded the Employee Bicycle Program, providing bikes for employees to bike to work and use at lunchtime.

2007 Presented at the Systems Biology Discussion group, October 18, 2007. Discussion topic: “Synthetic Biology: practice and ethics.”

2008 Spearheaded the Institute for Systems Biology Postdoctoral Association. Led and organized grants and scientific writing workshops and monthly meetings.

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