Students surviving this selection were further screened for the ability to work long hours with vending machine snacks as a sole carbon source; clones satisfying these requirements were dubbed "post-docs". In order to identify assistant professors from amongst the post-docs, this pool was further mutagenized, and screened for the ability to turn esoteric results into a 50 minute seminar.
Finally, these assistant professors were evaluated for their potential to become full professors in two ways: first, they were screened for overproduction and surface display of stress proteins such as Hsp70. Assistant professors that displayed such proteins (so-called "stressed-out" mutants) were then fused to the M13 coat protein, displayed on phages and passed over a friend and family members column, to identify those that were incapable of functional interactions. These were called full professors.
Although these mutants arose independently, they shared striking
phenotypes. These included the propensity to talk incessantly about
their own research, the inability to accurately judge the time required
to complete bench work, and the belief that all their ideas constituted
good thesis projects. The linkage of all these traits suggests that these
phenotypes are coordinately regulated. Preliminary experiments have
identified a putative global regulator. Studies are currently being
conducted to determine if overexpression of this gene product in post-docs
and grad students can speed up the grad student-full professor evolutionary
process.
Thank you to Jenifer Ramsey, grad student at HSU, for this one.
In turn, she received from Sarah Gerkin, Darline Marine Center, University
of Maine.
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