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Gavin Woodruff

Gavin Woodruff, PhD

Gavin Woodruff, PhD

Assistant Professor


gcwoodruff@ou.edu
Woodruff's Website

Rank/Title

  • Assistant Professor

Degrees and Institutions

  • Ph.D., Biology, University of Maryland
  • B.S., Biological Sciences, Georgia State University

Research Areas

  • Evolutionary developmental biology
  • Genetics
  • Genomics

Research Interests

We aim to understand the genetic basis of phenotypic diversity across multiple scales of biological organization. We are driven by these questions: 

  • How does genetic change lead to change in developmental processes?
  • How does developmental variation promote morphological variation?
  • What are the processes that generate and maintain genetic diversity in the first place? 

We use various genetic, developmental, genomic, computational, and field approaches to address these questions. We also leverage the power of the Caenorhabditis elegansroundworm model system by focusing on its closest known relative, C. inopinata, which is morphologically divergent and lives in close association with figs and fig wasps.


Recent/Significant Publications

J. Van Goor, G. C. Woodruff, and N. Kanzaki 2023., “How to be a fig nematode”, Acta Oecologica

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.actao.2023.103916


E.W. Hammerschmidth*, G. C. Woodruff*, K. A. Moser, E. Johnson, and P. C. Phillips 2022, “Opposing directions of stage-specific body shape change in a close relative of C. elegans” BMC Zoology

https://doi.org/10.1186/s40850-022-00131-y


G. C. Woodruff and A. A. Teterina 2020 “Degradation of the repetitive genomic landscape in a close relative of C. elegans” Molecular Biology and Evolution

https://doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msaa107


G. C. Woodruff and P. C. Phillips 2018 “Field studies reveal a close relative of C. elegans thrives in the fresh figs of Ficus septica and disperses on its Ceratosolen pollinating wasps” BMC Ecology

https://doi.org/10.1186/s12898-018-0182-z


G. C. Woodruff, J. H. Willis, and P. C. Phillips 2018 “Dramatic evolution of body length due to post-embryonic changes in cell size in a newly discovered close relative of C. elegans” Evolution Letters

https://doi.org/10.1002/evl3.67