Curriculum Vitae
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CURRICULUM VITAE DEBORAH I. LUTTERSCHMIDT Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology University of California, Irvine 321 Steinhaus Hall, Irvine, California 92697 Email: [email protected] PROFESSIONAL APPOINTMENTS Associate Professor University of California, Irvine Starting Oct 2019 Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Assistant Chair Portland State University Oct 2018-Jul 2019 Department of Biology, Portland, Oregon Associate Professor Portland State University Sept 2016-Sept 2019 Department of Biology, Portland, Oregon Assistant Professor Portland State University Sept 2010-Sept 2016 Department of Biology, Portland, Oregon Postdoctoral Fellow NSF Center for Behavioral Neuroscience Sept 2006-Aug 2010 and Neuroscience Institute, Georgia State University, Atlanta, Georgia (Advisor: Walter Wilczynski) EDUCATION Doctor of Philosophy Oregon State University Jun 2006 Department of Integrative Biology, Corvallis, Oregon Dissertation Title: Chronobiology of Garter Snakes: Environmental and Hormonal Mechanisms Mediating Hibernation and Reproduction. (Advisor: Robert T. Mason) Master of Science University of Oklahoma May 2000 Department of Biology, Norman, Oklahoma Thesis Title: Influence of Melatonin, Thyroid Hormones, and Their Interactions on the Behavioral Thermoregulation of the Nocturnal African House Snake, Lamprophis fuliginosus. (Advisor: Victor H. Hutchison) Bachelor of Science DeSales University, Magna cum laude May 1997 Department of Biology, Center Valley, Pennsylvania Minors: Chemistry, Neuroscience AWARDS, FELLOWSHIPS, AND HONORS Graduate Mentoring Excellence Award Portland State University, 2019. Gorbman-Bern New Independent Investigator Award North American Society for Comparative Endocrinology, 2015. Outstanding Scientific Researcher Award for Biological Sciences Sigma Xi, Columbia-Willamette Chapter, 2015. CURRICULUM VITAE D. I. LUTTERSCHMIDT John Eliot Allen Outstanding Teaching Award Nominee Portland State University, 2013. Ruth L. Kirschstein Individual Postdoctoral National Research Service Award (NRSA) NIH Institute of General Medical Sciences, 2008-2010. Dorothy M. Skinner Scholar Award ($1000) Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology, 2008. Student Travel Award ($800) Society for Behavioral Neuroendocrinology, 2005 (annual meeting in Austin, Texas). L’Oréal Fellowship for Women in Science, Honorable Mention L’Oréal USA, 2004. Philanthropic Educational Organization (PEO) Scholar Award ($8000) PEO International Sisterhood, 2003-2004. Herbert Frolander Teaching Award Nominee Nomination submitted by the Department of Zoology, Oregon State University, 2003. Student Travel Award ($500) Society for Behavioral Neuroendocrinology, 2002 (annual meeting in Amherst, MA). P.F. Yerex and Nellie Buck Yerex Graduate Fellowship ($6000) Oregon State University, 2001-2002. Zoology Department Award for Excellence in Graduate Student Teaching University of Oklahoma, 2000. Provost’s Graduate Teaching Assistant Award University of Oklahoma, 1999. M. Blanche Adams and M. Frances Adams Scholarship in Zoology ($5000) Department of Zoology, University of Oklahoma, 1999-2000. Summer Graduate Research Fellowship ($2200) Department of Zoology, University of Oklahoma, 1998 and 1999. Biological Station Scholarship ($275) University of Oklahoma, 1998. Graduate Student Research Poster Session Winner of Biological Sciences, 1st Place. University of Oklahoma, 1998. Excellence in Research Award Department of Biology, DeSales University, 1997. RESEARCH INTERESTS My research goals are broadly directed at understanding the mechanisms of life-history transitions. More specifically, I aim to understand the environmental, neuroendocrine, and metabolic factors that mediate seasonal transitions from one life-history stage to another. My research is both integrative and comparative in nature, with my interests lying at the interface of the traditional disciplines of physiology, endocrinology, neurobiology, animal behavior, and ecology. Research in my laboratory can be grouped into three primary themes, as outlined below. In each theme, I am particularly interested in understanding sex and phylogeographic variation in the underlying mechanisms. • What are the neuroendocrine mechanisms and metabolic factors that mediate temperature-induced reproductive behavior in ectotherms? • What are the environmental, neuroendocrine, and metabolic factors that regulate seasonal transitions from mating behavior to migration and foraging? • How do environmental cues (including social signals) synchronize seasonal rhythms in reproductive behavior with optimal environmental conditions? PAGE 2 OF 13 CURRICULUM VITAE D. I. LUTTERSCHMIDT PUBLICATIONS BOOKS AND BOOK CHAPTERS 4. Lutterschmidt, D.I. 2013. Keeping time in the dark: Neuroendocrine mechanisms of seasonal reproduction in garter snakes. Pp 265-289. In: W.I. Lutterschmidt (editor), Reptiles in Research: Investigations of Ecology, Physiology, and Behavior from Desert to Sea. Nova Science Publishers, Hauppauge, New York. 3. Uhrig, E.J., D.I. Lutterschmidt, M.P. LeMaster, and R.T. Mason. 2013. Methyl ketone production in juvenile female red-sided garter snakes, Thamnophis sirtalis parietalis. Pp 235-243. In: M.L. East and M. Dehnhard (editors), Chemical Signals in Vertebrates 12. Springer Science and Business Media, New York. 2. Krohmer, R.W. and D.I. Lutterschmidt. 2011. Environmental and neuroendocrine control of reproduction in snakes. Pp 289-346. In: B.G.M. Jamieson (series editor), Reproductive Biology and Phylogeny, Volume 9: Reproductive Biology and Phylogeny of Snakes (R.D. Aldridge and D.M. Sever, volume editors). CRC Press, Boca Raton, Florida. 1. Lutterschmidt, W.I. and D.I. Lutterschmidt. 2007. Laboratory Exercises in Human Physiology: A Clinical and Experimental Approach. McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., New York, New York. This text is currently in its second edition, published 2008. RESEARCH ARTICLES (UNDERGRADUATE AND HIGH SCHOOL STUDENT AUTHORS ARE UNDERLINED) 31. Lutterschmidt, D.I., A.R. Lucas, R.A. Karam, V.T. Nguyen, M.R. Rasmussen. 2018. Sexually dimorphic patterns of neurogenesis are linked to seasonal life-history transitions in red-sided garter snakes. Frontiers in Neuroscience, 12:364. doi: 10.3389/fnins.2018.00364. Invited submission. 30. Dayger, C.A., M.P. LeMaster, and D.I. Lutterschmidt. 2018. Physiological correlates of reproductive decisions: Relationships among body condition, reproductive status, and the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis in a reptile. Hormones and Behavior, 100: 1-11. 29. Lucas, A.R., D.Y. Richards, L.M. Ramirez, and D.I. Lutterschmidt. 2017. Arginine vasotocin and neuropeptide Y vary with seasonal life-history transitions in garter snakes. Integrative and Comparative Biology, 57: 1166-1183. Invited submission and Cover Photo. 28. Dayger, C.A. and D.I. Lutterschmidt. 2017. Patterns of stress responses shift during seasonal life-history transitions: an analysis comparing baseline, maximal and integrated corticosterone in female red-sided garter snakes (Thamnophis sirtalis parietalis). General and Comparative Endocrinology, 246: 29-36. 27. Wilczynski, W. and D.I. Lutterschmidt. 2016. Biological Rhythms: Melatonin shapes the space-time continuum of social communication. Current Biology 26: R892-R895. Invited Dispatch. 26. Dayger, C.A. and D.I. Lutterschmidt. 2016. Seasonal and sex differences in responsiveness to adrenocorticotropic hormone contribute to stress response plasticity in red-sided garter snakes (Thamnophis sirtalis parietalis). Journal of Experimental Biology 219: 1022-1030. 25. Howard, C.M. and D.I. Lutterschmidt. 2015. The effects of melatonin on brain arginine vasotocin: Relationship with sex and seasonal differences in melatonin receptor type 1 in green treefrogs (Hyla cinerea). Journal of Neuroendocrinology 27: 670-679. Cover Photo. PAGE 3 OF 13 CURRICULUM VITAE D. I. LUTTERSCHMIDT 24. Maine, A.R., S.E. Powers, and D.I. Lutterschmidt. 2014. Seasonal variation in cell proliferation and cell migration in the brain of adult red-sided garter snakes (Thamnophis sirtalis parietalis). Brain, Behavior and Evolution 84: 181-196. 23. Lutterschmidt, D.I. and A.R. Maine. 2014. Sex or Candy? Neuroendocrine regulation of the seasonal transition from courtship to feeding behavior in male red-sided garter snakes (Thamnophis sirtalis parietalis). Hormones and Behavior 66: 120-134. Cover Photo and Invited Contribution to the special issue “Comparative Approaches to the Study of Ingestive Behavior, Energy Balance, and Metabolic Control of Reproduction.” 22. Dayger, C.A., A.J. Cease, and D.I. Lutterschmidt. 2013. Responses to capture stress and exogenous corticosterone vary with body condition in female red-sided garter snakes (Thamnophis sirtalis parietalis). Hormones and Behavior 64: 748-754. Cover Photo. 21. Lutterschmidt, D.I. 2012. Chronobiology of reproduction in garter snakes: Neuroendocrine mechanisms and geographic variation. General and Comparative Endocrinology 176: 448-455. Invited Review. 20. Lutterschmidt, D.I. and W. Wilczynski. 2012. Sexually dimorphic effects of melatonin on brain arginine vasotocin immunoreactivity in green treefrogs (Hyla cinerea). Brain, Behavior and Evolution, 80: 222-232. 19. Uhrig, E.J., D.I. Lutterschmidt, R.T. Mason, and M.P. LeMaster. 2012. Pheromonal mediation of intraseasonal declines in the attractivity of female red-sided garter snakes, Thamnophis sirtalis parietalis. Journal of Chemical Ecology, 38: 71-80. 18. Krohmer, R.W., G.A. DeMarchi, D.D. Baleckaitis, D.I. Lutterschmidt, and R.T. Mason. 2011. Brain nuclei