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headshot of Adam Session

Adam Session

Assistant Professor

Biological Sciences

Background

Adam Session started his research career in behavioral genetics at Rutgers University, but became inspired to study genome evolution during internships at Duke and UC Berkeley. His PhD focused on studying the genome of Xenopus laevis, a tetraploid frog commonly used in developmental biology. He was able to prove the allotetraploid hypothesis of X. laevis using data intrinsic to the genome, as well as detail the asymmetric evolution that followed.

For his postdoctoral fellowship, he focused on plant genome duplications, as polyploidy is more common in plants. He helped sequence the Brachypodium hybridum, Miscanthus sinensis and Panicum virgatum genomes, as well as develop new methods for identifying allopolyploids and timing their hybridization through studying transposon evolution.

Looking forward, he hopes to continue his study of polyploids in plants, animals and fungi, with the goal of unifying the techniques used to study these genomes in different lineages, as well as use allopolyploids to further our understanding of speciation.

Education

  • PhD, Berkeley
  • BS Rutgers

Research Interests

  • Genomics
  • Evolution
  • Transposons
  • Polyploids

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