The UC Riverside NSF Integrated Graduate Education Research and Training (IGERT) Program on
Video Bioinformatics

 

 

Contact Information

The IGERT Program
Winston Chung Hall Room 216
University of California, Riverside
900 University Avenue
Riverside, CA 92521-0425


Tel: (951)-827-3954

IGERT Resource Center
Bourns College of Engineering
CRIS
VisLab
CPCB
SCCF
UCR

Video Bioinformatics Edited Book 2013

Participating Ph.D. Programs:
Electrical and Computer Engineering
Bioengineering
Computer Science and Engineering
Cell, Molecular and Development Biology
Botany & Plant Sciences
Nematology
Plant Pathology and Microbiology
Biomedical Sciences
Psychology
Biology
Entomology
Mechanical Engineering
Chemical & Environmental Engineering

 

 

Ilva Cabrera




Ilva Cabrera graduated from California State University, Long Beach in 2009 with a Bachelor of Science in Molecular Cell Biology and a Bachelor of Arts in Sociology. During her undergraduate work she was an active member of the NIH-funded Research Initiative for Science Enhancement (RISE). Her research focused on inositol metabolism in the human pathogenic fungus, Cryptococcus neoformans. She used various bioinformatics programs to identify and examine three proteins that regulate myo-inositol synthesis. This research was then extended to Drosophila melanogaster to gain further insight into myo-inositol metabolism in a higher eukaryote. Confocal microscopy and proteomics were extensively utilized to analyze protein localization and expression. This data was presented at the National Conference of The American Society of Biochemistry and Molecular Cell Biology; in a poster entitled "Myo-inositol catabolism in Drosophila melanogaster: implications for diabetes and development"

In 2010 Ilva enrolled as a graduate student in the Ph.D. program in Genetics, Genomics, and Bioinformatics, and worked in the laboratory of Professor Katherine Borkovich. Her Ph.D. research was focused on investigating the role regulators of G protein signaling (RGS) proteins in heterotrimeric G protein signaling in the model filamentous fungus Neurospora crassa. Characterization of the RGS proteins were to be accomplished via biochemical assays, genetic analysis, and video bioinformatics.

Ilva received her Ph.D. in Genetics, Genomics, and Bioinformatics from the University of California Riverside in 2015.
Link to Ilva's Ph.D. Dissertation

Return to IGERT Fellows

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The UC Riverside Integrated Graduate Education Research and Training Program in Video Bioinformatics
Last modified: 06/15/2016