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Markus Tamas

Professor

Department of Chemistry & Molecular
Biology
Visiting address
Medicinaregatan 7 B
41390 Göteborg
Room number
1450
Postal address
Box 462
40530 Göteborg

About Markus Tamas

RESEARCH

Molecular biology of metal toxicity and tolerance

Many metals endanger the environment and human health, but are also increasingly used as therapeutic agents for medical treatment. Yet, little is known about the molecular mechanisms causing metal toxicity or the mechanisms by which eukaryotic cells counteract toxicity and acquire tolerance. To gain insights into metal action and cellular tolerance mechanisms, we use front-line tools in molecular biology, biochemistry, cell biology, chemical biology and functional genomics. We study (1) transport proteins through which metals enter or leave cells, (2) signal transduction and transcriptional regulatory mechanisms that cells use to sense and respond to metals, and (3) proteins and cellular processes that are targeted by metals. We use the model eukaryote Saccharomyces cerevisiae to explore fundamental aspects of metal biology and also as a heterologous expression system to study tolerance factors from other organisms such as plants and mammals.

Publications ResearcherID: www.researcherid.com/rid/E-8183-2010

Publications Google Scholar: scholar.google.se/citations

Research team: Stefanie Andersson (PhD student), Emma Lorentzon (PhD student), Jakub Masaryk (postdoc)

TEACHING

  • Eukaryotic Molecular Microbiology (BIO440)
  • Molecular Microbiology (BIO277)
  • Cell biology (BIO900)

COMMISSIONS

  • Head of Department: Department of Chemistry and Molecular Biology 2018-2021

QUALIFICATIONS

Markus J. Tamás studied molecular biology and biochemistry in Lund (Sweden) and Liège (Belgium) and spent a year as a research scholar at the Public Health Research Institute in New York (USA). Markus completed his PhD at the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven (Belgium) in 1999 and then moved to Gothenburg. Markus was awarded an assistant professorship by the Swedish Research Council in 2003 and became professor in eukaryotic microbiology in 2010.