Renee Reijo Pera

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Born
United States
KnownforHuman reproductive biologist
SpouseFred Pera
Renee Reijo Pera
Born
United States
Alma materUniversity of Wisconsin–Superior, BS, 1983

Kansas State University, MS, 1987

Cornell University, PhD, 1993
Known forHuman reproductive biologist
SpouseFred Pera
Scientific career
FieldsStem Cell Biology
InstitutionsCalifornia Polytechnic State University (current)
Montana State University
Stanford University
University of California, San Francisco
Whitehead Institute

Renee Reijo Pera is a stem cell biologist and the President of the McLaughlin Research Institute in Great Falls, MT. She previously served as Vice President of Research and Economic Development, for more than 8 years at the California Polytechnic State University and at Montana State University. Reijo Pera's research focuses on human development and disease, in particular, on the development and differentiation of somatic and germ cell lineages and neurodegenerative diseases such as Parkinson's disease and also infertility in men and women.

Reijo Pera grew up in Iron River, Wisconsin as the youngest of six children. She initially enrolled in University of Wisconsin–Superior as a business major, but switched her interests during her junior year after taking a class on human genetics for non-majors.[1] She changed her major to biology and received her bachelor's degree in 1983, becoming the first in her family to finish a four-year degree.[2]

She then attended Kansas State University to work as a research technician, and ultimately received her master's degree in entomology.[1] She next attended Cornell University, where she received her doctorate in biochemistry in 1993, working in the laboratory of Tim Huffaker. There, her research centered on studying mitotic and meiotic mutants in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

In 1993, Reijo Pera became a postdoctoral researcher at the Whitehead Institute, which is affiliated with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. There, she worked in the laboratory of David C. Page, where she worked to map genes linked to male infertility on the Y chromosome, including those that result in a total loss of sperm.[3]

Research career

Awards and honors

References

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