Alecia Septer was an ARCS Scholar at the University of Georgia during the 2010-2012 academic years. Following completion of her Ph.D. degree, Dr. Septer moved to Cambridge, MA, and Harvard University, where she is a Life Sciences Research Foundation Postdoctoral Fellow in the Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology. The Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation is funding the three-year fellowship. She has published two first-author papers from her dissertation work and two co-author papers from her postdoctoral work.
Dr. Septer describes her postdoctoral research focus as follows: “Communication between individuals is an important aspect of social behavior and is required for coordinating group activities in a wide range of organisms. While we use language as a primary mode of communication, microorganisms have evolved their own diverse strategies employing diffusible molecules and contact-dependent mechanisms to send and receive signals both within and between species. Bacteria use these communication methods to coordinate group functions including host infection and toxin production for inter-cellular competition. As a microbiologist, I’m interested in understanding the genetic approach to identify and characterize the environmental factors, regulatory pathways, and molecular mechanisms that control social behavior in bacteria.”
Alecia Septer, Ph.D.
ARCS Scholar
UGA
2010-2012