| Dr.
Verlie A. Tisdale, M.S. Ph.D.
Dr. Tisdale is the Chair of the Division of Natural Sciences and Mathematics.
Her research interest is biochemical analysis of enzymes. Current duties
include administration of curricular design to prepare students for
graduate and health professions school by challenging them to become
conceptual learners and critical thinkers. She also advises student
researchers on their research projects: 1) design, 2) methodology, 3)
analyses, 4) writing and 5) presentation. Dr.
Omar Bagasra, M.D., Ph.D.
Dr. Bagasra is the Director of Claflin University’s South Carolina
Center for Biotechnology. His research interests have long been associated
with the study of HIV and AIDS. In fact, he has been on the trail of
the virus since 1981—the year of the first scientific report.
For the past several years, he has focused on trying to gain insight
into modes of virus transmission, natural immunities to retro viral
infection, as well as the development of gene therapy treatments for
HIV-1. Recently, he has concentrated on the molecular pathogenesis of
prostate and breast cancers and in the development of edible vaccines
for HCV and malaria with funding from the Department of Defense and
the South Carolina Biomedical Research Infrastructure Network . His
unswerving dedication to his work has resulted in over 200 scientific
articles, book chapters, and books. He also has national and international
collaborations with numerous well-known scientists, and many of these
colleagues received training in molecular morphology in his laboratory
at Lincoln University. He is the inventor of the in situ PCR technique.
He also keeps a hand in clinical work—he is currently board-eligible
in anatomic pathology and a diplomat of the American Board of Medical
Laboratory Immunology, and the American boards of Forensic Examiners
and Forensic Medicine. Dr.
Rebecca Bullard-Dillard, Ph.D.
Dr. Bullard-Dillard is Chair of the Department of Biology and Director
for Research Development at Claflin University. Her efforts in building
research infrastructure at the University are funded by the NIH. Her
research projects investigate the role of plant proteins that are immunohomologs
of Systemic Lupus Erythematosus autoantigens in oral tolerance mechanisms.
She is working with Dr. Omar Bagasra on his prostate cancer research
project. She has a collaborative project with researchers from MUSC
and the Savannah River Site to map the Peromyscus genome. Dr.
Jianguo Chen, Ph.D.
Dr. Chen joined the department in August 2003. He comes to Claflin from
a position as a Senior Scientist at Applied Biosystems, Inc. He has
significant experience with methods development for microsatellite analysis
and sequencing. Dr. Chen is the Director of our Genomics and Sequencing
laboratory. Dr.
Gemma Geslani, M.S., M.P.H., Ph.D.
Dr. Geslani’s research interests lie in the arena of public health
and health disparities. She is currently engaged in a pilot study entitled:
“Reducing Risks for Cardiovascular Diseases, Hypertension and
Diabetes through Physical Activity” which has been funded as a
sub-project on Dr. Bullard-Dillard’s NIH EARDA grant. In addition,
she will be working as a co-investigator on the Kellogg Foundation grant
to USC School of Public Health’s Minority Health Disparities Grant. Dr.
Randall Harris, Ph.D.
Dr.
Harris’ research interests focus on characterizing the role that
bacteria play in certain disease processes and discovering new antibiotics.
One of his projects deals with identifying and characterizing novel
virulence determinants of the respiratory pathogen Moraxella catarrhalis.
He is also collaborating with researchers at USC to investigate the
increased colon cancer risk associated with particular resident microflora.
Lastly, Dr. Harris is working on a project with Dr. Joseph Rugutt in
the Dept. of Chemistry examining antimycobacterial properties of African
plant extracts.
Dr.
Edythe Jones, Ph.D.
Dr. Jones she is currently completing a grant application to NASA through
which to fund a new line of inquiry into the effects of weightlessness
on the frequency of firefly flash. In addition, to this new area of
interest she is a trained electron microscopist. Mrs.
Florence Anoruo, M.A.T., Ph.D. candidate, University of South Carolina.
Mrs. Anoruo is the Director of the Claflin University Greenhouse. She
is an environmental scientist with extensive training in botany. She
is currently engaged in bioremediation research funded through NOAA
and the USDA and is finishing her Ph.D. training in botany (plant molecular
biology) with a project which focuses on plant hormones. In addition,
she is interested in developing a phytoremediation process for removal
of munitions contaminants such as TNT residues, RDX and ammonium perchlorate
from soils contaminated by weapons storage or testing. Ms.
Charlease Kelly, M.A.T.
Ms. Kelly serves as the Laboratory Manager and Instructor of Biology.
She has graduate level training in Microbiology and an MAT in secondary
science education. She specializes in science pedagogy research. Dr.
Kamal Chowdhury, Ph.D.
Dr. Chowdhury has recently joined the Biology department as plant /
agricultural biotechnologist to develop and direct a plant biotechnology
program at Claflin. Before joining Claflin, he was a Senior Scientist
with Arborgen, world’s leading forest biotechnology company. Prior
to that he was the Group Leader of tissue culture section of International
Paper, world’s largest paper and pulp company. His research contribution
in plant biotechnology area includes 38 publications in 18 peer-reviewed
journals on 14 crop species in the area of quantitative and molecular
genetics, plant tissue culture and genetic engineering. In addition
to working on agricultural biotechnology, his future research interest
is in the area of plant-made-pharmaceuticals and utilization of transgenic
plants for phytoremediation.
|