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The Nancy S. Rafferty Lectureship

Sharon Amacher

7/1/09 - 1:30 PM, Speck Auditorium

"Visualizing in Vivo the Dynamics of the Zebrafish Segmentation Clock"
Sharon Amacher, University of California, Berkeley


Sharon Amacher received her BA in Physiology from the University of California, Berkeley. For her graduate thesis, she studied muscle-specific gene regulation with Dr. Stephen Hauschka at the University of Washington in Seattle, graduating with a PhD in Biochemistry. She did her postdoctoral work in developmental genetics with Dr. Charles Kimmel at the University of Oregon, studying embryonic mesodermal cell fate specification, before joining the UC Berkeley faculty in 1999, where she is a member of the Division of Genetics, Genomics & Development in the Department of Molecular and Cell Biology.







Nancy Rafferty

The Nancy S. Rafferty Lectureship
in Embryology has been established to recognize Dr. Rafferty’s long career in eye research.  Dr. Rafferty was instrumental in elucidating the ultrastructural relationship between lens accommodation and actin filament arrays in mammals and amphibians.

Dr. Rafferty received her M.S and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Illinois in 1953 and 1958, respectively, under the tutelage of Dr. S. Meryl Rose. Following her dissertation work, Dr. Rafferty completed a postdoctoral fellowship at The Johns Hopkins University, where she subsequently served as assistant professor in the department of anatomy in the School of Medicine. In 1970, she and her husband Keen moved to the Chicago area, where she joined the department of anatomy at Northwestern University Medical School.  She was promoted to professor in 1976.

During her career, Dr. Rafferty published 55 journal articles and 31 abstracts. She served on study sections of the National Institutes of Health and was a member of the Vision Advisory Research Committee. Dr. Rafferty traveled the world giving invited talks in Great Britain (Guy’s Hospital Medical School, Nottingham University, Oxford University and Edinburgh University), East Germany, Holland, Spain, Canada, Japan, Australia, San Francisco, Finland, and Sweden.

Dr. Rafferty first came to the MBL in 1955 as a student in the Embryology course.  She returned periodically to conduct research at the MBL beginning in 1988. Upon retirement from Northwestern in 1994, she moved her laboratory to MBL where she was a Senior Scientist and a member of the Corporation.

Dr. Rafferty and her husband long felt a love for the MBL and Woods Hole. She would have been particularly pleased that a lectureship in embryology has been established in her name.