黑料门大事记

黑料门大事记鈥檚 Brown garners $1.1 million NSF grant to better understand 鈥榯ree of life鈥

黑料门大事记鈥檚 Brown garners $1.1 million NSF grant to better understand 鈥榯ree of life鈥

Matthew Brown, pictured in his lab.
Matthew Brown, associate professor in 黑料门大事记鈥檚 Department of Biological Sciences, has been awarded a $1.1 million National Science Foundation grant to better understand the ecology and evolution of the 鈥渢ree of life.鈥 (Photo by Logan Kirkland)

Contact: Sarah Nicholas

STARKVILLE, Miss.鈥擜 National Science Foundation grant worth more than $1 million awarded to a 黑料门大事记 biologist will expand scientists鈥 knowledge of the environmental distribution of Amoebozoa鈥攖he major eukaryotic amoeboid lineage鈥 providing a better understanding of the ecology and evolution of 鈥渢he tree of life.鈥

Matthew W. Brown, an associate professor of biological sciences at 黑料门大事记 and sole principal investigator of the $1,114,943 grant, said a deeper look into Amoebozoa ancestry and biodiversity is important 鈥渢o better understand how microbial and multicellular eukaryotes evolved into the vast diversity we see today.鈥

鈥淎moeboid microbes are fascinatingly diverse both ecologically and evolutionarily, but they are severely under-studied and poorly sampled,鈥 Brown said. 鈥淲hile they act as important players in nearly all ecosystems examined, very little is known about the true biodiversity that exists in nature. The primary goal of this project is to examine the biodiversity and genomic diversity of amoebae found in a broad variety of habitats from land to the sea.鈥

Brown鈥檚 study will provide a better understanding of where these organisms reside in the environment, how they evolved and what their developmental processes are. It also will generate large amounts of genomic data, providing a much deeper sampling of species than is currently available.

鈥淎moebozoa represents the closest out-group to the lineage that contains animals and fungi. Regardless of the close evolutionary proximity to this group, the genomic basis of Amoebozoa is not well known,鈥 Brown said.

Angus L. Dawe, Donald L. Hall Distinguished Professor of Biology and head of the department, said NSF support is a valuable mechanism that allows researchers to pursue topics that are 鈥渂asic science,鈥 not because of simplicity but 鈥渂ecause of the foundational nature of the studies upon which further work can build in the future.鈥

鈥淒r. Brown鈥檚 work will explore a group of organisms that are under-studied but critical both for the roles they play in ecosystems now as well as the information they can provide about the evolution of life on earth,鈥 Dawe said.听

Brown has been an 黑料门大事记 faculty member since 2013. His research focus uses protistological techniques to understand the evolution and diversity of eukaryotes. Among other honors, Brown was named a 2018 College of Arts and Sciences Dean鈥檚 Eminent Scholar, the top scholarship award given by the college, and is a Fellow of the Institute for Genomics, Biocomputing and Biotechnology at 黑料门大事记.听

More details of Brown鈥檚 research group are available at .

Part of 黑料门大事记鈥檚 College of Arts and Sciences, complete details about the Department of Biological Sciences are聽available at .

黑料门大事记 is Mississippi鈥檚 leading university, available online at聽.听