Recent News Releases
July 22 - USM Awards Elkins Professorship to UMBI's Ilia Baskakov
July 18 - Recirculation Oyster Farming Gets Boost
July 18 - UMBI and Ocean Equities Partner to Develop Recirculating Oyster Aquaculture
July 14 - Herbal Medicines: To Regulate or Not to Regulate? An Update [WYPR Audio]
July 10 - UMBI Approved for Two Maryland Industrial Partnership Awards
July 2 - UMBI Develops Green Fish Farming [CNN/Fortune Video]
June 20 - UMBI Lands $2.5 Million Federal Contract
June 19 - UMBI Awarded $2.5M Contract to Develop Threat-Detection Systems
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Bio
Gene Levinson is Director of Communications for the University of Maryland Biotechnology Institute----part of the UMBI Institutional Advancement team. Gene holds a Ph.D. in Molecular Genetics from the University of California at Irvine, and a Bachelor's in Zoology from U.C. Berkeley. As a graduate student, he developed the leading theory for repetitive DNA sequence evolution, known as slipped-strand mispairing. He taught at Harvard College for three years while he was a postdoctoral fellow at Harvard Medical School, and also did postdoctoral research at the Dana Farber Cancer Institute. In addition to basic research, he also brings industrial and clinical experience, having served as a researcher in commercial drug discovery enterprises as well as director of a human clinical genetics laboratory for eight years. Most recently he has been a senior researcher at the National Institutes of Health. With numerous peer-reviewed scientific publications, Gene's passion for some years has also been popular science writing, and he is enthusiastic about making UMBI's research accessible to general audiences, both regionally as well as nationally.
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Representative Publications
Levinson, G., and Gutman, G.A. 1987. Slipped-strand mispairing: A major mechanism for DNA sequence evolution. Molecular Biology and Evolution 4: 203-221.
Levinson, G., Fields, R.A., Harton, G.L., Palmer, F.T., Maddalena, A., Fugger, E.F. and Schulman, J.D. 1992. Reliable gender screening for human preimplantation embryos, using multiple DNA target-sequences. Human Reproduction 7:1304-13.
Levinson, G. 1995. Rethinking evolution. World & I, January, pp. 194-201. (Models based on genetic algorithms demonstrate how evolution could be accelerated by a novel fusion of recombination and mutation).
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