Keiko Torii

Career

Keiko Torii (鳥居 啓子, Torii Keiko) is a plant scientist working on stem cell maintenance and the cell-to-cell communication required to correctly pattern tissue during development, focusing on stomatal development as a model.[1] Her work on cell-to-cell communication has also focused on the mechanisms that determine organ size and shape. In September 2019, Dr. Torii joined the faculty of the University of Texas at Austin,[2] where she is a professor of molecular biosciences and holds the Johnson & Johnson Centennial Chair in Plant Cell Biology.[3] She is also an Investigator at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute [1] and a Principal Investigator and Visiting Professor at the World Premier Research Initiative, Institute of Transformative Biomolecules (WPI-ITbM), Nagoya University, Japan.[4] Prior to joining the University of Texas at Austin, Dr. Torii was the Endowed Distinguished Professor of Biology at the University of Washington.[5]

Early life

Dr. Torii was born in Tokyo, Japan in 1965. She completed her B.S. (1987) and M.S. (1989) degrees in Biochemistry and Biophysics at the Institute of Biological Sciences at University of Tsukuba, Japan.[6] She also obtained a PhD (1993) from the University of Tsukuba, researching seed development in carrots.[7]

Positions

  • Professor, Department of Molecular Biosciences, University of Texas at Austin . 2019-
  • Oversea Principal Investigator and Visiting Professor, Institute of Transformative Biomolecules, Nagoya University, Japan 2013-
  • Investigator, Howard Hughes Medical Institute  2011-
  • Endowed Distinguished Professor of Biology, University of Washington 2011-2019
  • Professor, Department of Biology, University of Washington 2009-
  • PRESTO Researcher, Japan Science and Technology Agency 2008-2012
  • Affiliate Faculty, University of Washington Institute of Stem Cell and Regenerative Medicine 2006-
  • Associate Professor, Department of Biology, University of Washington 2005-2009
  • Assistant Professor, Department of Biology, University of Washington 2002-2005

Awards and honors

  • 2008 - JSPS prize for 'Mechanisms of Stomatal Patterning and Differentiation in Plants' [8]
  • 2012 - Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) [9]
  • 2015 - Saruhashi Prize [10]

Publications[2]

Putarjunan, A., Ruble, J., Srivastava, A., Zhao, C., Rychel, A.L., Hofstetter, A.K., Tang, X., Zhu, J.K., Tama, F., *Zheng, N., and *Torii, K.U. (2019) Bipartite anchoring of SCREAM enforces stomatal initiation by coupling MAP Kinases to SPEECHLESS. Nature Plants 5: 742-754

Perraki, A., DeFalco, T., Derbyshire, P., Avila, J., Sere, D., Sklenar, J., Qi, X., Stransfeld, L, Schwessigner, B., Kadota, Y., Macho, A.P., Jiang, S., Coudo, D., Torii, K.U., Menke, F.L.H., and *Zipfel, C. Phosphocode-dependent functional dichotomy of a receptor in plant signaling. Nature 561: 248-252

*Torii, K.U., Takahashi, K., Uchida, N., and Hagihara, S. (2018) Harnessing synthetic chemistry to probe and hijack auxin signaling. New Phytologist 220: 417-424

Fendrych, M., Akhmanova, M., Merrin, J., Glanc, M., Hagihara, S., Takahashi, K., Uchida, N., Torii, K.U., and *Friml. J. (2018) Rapid root growth brake by TIR1 auxin signaling. Nature Plants '4:'453-459

Han, S.K., Qi, X., K. Sugihara, Endo, T.A., Dang, J.H., Miura, T., Miller, K.A., Kim, E., and *Torii, K.U. (2018) Direct orchestration of cell-state switch and the single symmetric division to create stomata. Developmental Cell 45: 303-315

Uchida, N., Takahashi, K., Iwasaki, R., Zhang, H., Endo, T.A., Kimura, S., Yamada, R., Yoshimura, M., Tada, Y., Kinoshita, T., Itami, K., *Hagihara, S., and *Torii, K.U. (2018) Chemical hijacking of auxin signaling with an engineered auxin-TIR1 pair. Nature Chemical Biology 14: 299-305

Qi, X., and *Torii, K.U. (2018) Hormonal and environmental signals guiding stomatal development. BMC Biology 16: e21

Qi, X., Han, S.K., Dang, J.H., Garrick, J.T., Ito, M., Hofstetter, A.K., and *Torii, K.U. (2017) Autocrine regulation of stomatal differentiation potential by EPF1 and ERECTA-LIKE1 ligand-receptor signaling. eLife: e24102

Ziadi, A, Uchida, N., Kato, H., Hisamatsu, R., Sato, Y., Hagihara, S., *Itami, K., and *Torii, K.U. (2017) Synthetic small molecules that enhance the number of stomata: C-H Functionalization chemistry for plant biology. Chem Commun 53: 9632-9635

Hirakawa, Y., Shinohara, H., Matsubayashi, Y., *Torii, K.U., *Uchida, N. (2017) Cryptic bioactivity capacitated by synthetic hybrid peptide. Nature Commun 8: 14318

Tameshige, T., Okamoto, S., Lee, J.S., Aida, M., Tasaka, M., *Torii, K.U.  and *Uchida, N. (2016) A Secreted Peptide and its Receptors Specifying the Auxin Response Pattern during Leaf Margin Morphogenesis. Current Biology 26: 2478-2485

Lee, J.S., Hnilova, M., Maes, M., Lin, Y.C.L., Putarjunan, A., Han, S.K., Avila, J., and *Torii, K.U. (2015) Competitive binding of antagonistic peptides fine-tunes stomatal patterning Nature 522:439-443

gollark: næeat.
gollark: Oh, *that's* what you mean by "nameless", neat.
gollark: Ah, so "lambda" technology?
gollark: I ßee.
gollark: Well, they seem to not want to make it general-purpose, and also remove any feature which people might be able to misuse.

References

  1. "Keiko U. Torii". HHMI.org.
  2. "Torii, Keiko - Molecular Biosciences - CNS Directory". cns.utexas.edu. Retrieved 2019-12-02.
  3. "Prominent Plant Biologist Keiko Torii Joins Faculty". molecularbiosci.utexas.edu. Retrieved 2019-09-25.
  4. "Keiko Torii - WPI World Premier International Research Center Initiative: Institute of Transformative Bio-Molecules, Nagoya University". www.itbm.nagoya-u.ac.jp.
  5. "Awards, Honors, and Professorships". University of Washington. University of Washington College of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved June 22, 2019.
  6. https://www.cell.com/current-biology/pdf/S0960-9822(13)01038-5.pdf
  7. 鳥居, 啓子; Torii, Keiko (7 March 1993). "Cell differentiation of the outermost cells of developing endosperm in carrot" via jairo.nii.ac.jp. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  8. "JSPS PRIZE - Japan Society for the Promotion of Science". www.jsps.go.jp.
  9. "AAAS names 11 UW researchers as fellows".
  10. "Nagoya University Awards". en.nagoya-u.ac.jp.
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