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How do genes shape behavior?

How do genetic programs sculpt neural circuit function?

How do sex-specific behaviors emerge from shared circuits?

Our group uses the nematode C. elegans, a powerful experimental model, to study the relationships between genes, neural circuits, and behavior. Much of our research focuses on sex differences, which offer striking examples of naturally occurring behavioral variation. For example, while adult hermaphrodites (the female equivalent in C. elegans) focus on feeding and food-searching, well-fed adult males will abandon a source of food to search for mates. Interestingly, the modulation of sensory function by biological sex is an important contributor to this difference. Thus, biological sex can shape an animal's view of its environment by enforcing detection of the stimuli that are most salient for its survival and reproductive fitness. 

 

By asking how biological sex tunes developmental and physiological processes in C. elegans, we aim to identify genetic and circuit mechanisms that produce adaptive plasticity in innately programmed behavior. Our findings also provide a framework for understanding how biological sex can modulate susceptibility to a variety of neurological and neuropsychiatric disorders.​

Karli Mowrey

News

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April 28, 2025

Ryan and Zack win poster prizes at Genetics Day!

Two of the three grad student poster prizes at this year's Genetics Day went to Portman Lab grad students! 🎉 Huge congrats to Ryan Zhang (co-First Prize!) and Zack Ward (Runner Up)!!

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April 25, 2025

Doug wins Shrager Award

Doug was awarded the Peter Shrager Award for Service to the Rochester Neuroscience Community at the 2025 Neuroscience Retreat.

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April 4, 2025

Ember wins a Schwartz Discovery Grant

Undergrad Ember Johnson was awarded a Schwartz Discover Grant to fund her full-time research in the lab this summer. Congratulations, Ember!

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October 25, 2024

Doug on "Neuroscience Perspectives"

Doug was interviewed on the Del Monte Neuroscience Institute's podcast, "Neuroscience Perspectives."

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October 14, 2024

Ryan wins Bio Retreat Poster Prize!

Grad student Ryan Zhang won the CDM Graduate Student Poster Prize at this year's Biology Department retreat! Congratulations, Ryan!!

University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry

Kornberg Medical Research Building

Room 2-9905/15

601 Elmwood Avenue, Box 633

Rochester, NY 14642

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