Monica Justice | |
Birth Place: | Kansas |
Education: | BSc, Fort Hays State University PhD, 1987, Kansas State University |
Thesis Title: | Specific locus applications of ethylnitrosourea mutagenesis in the mouse: genetic dissection of the t-region of mouse chromosome 17 and characterization of the enu-induced quaking and brachyury alleles |
Thesis Year: | 1987 |
Workplaces: | University of Toronto Baylor College of Medicine |
Monica J. Justice (nee Maxwell) is an American–Canadian developmental geneticist. She is the Canada Research Chair in Mammalian Molecular Genetics at the University of Toronto and Program Head of Genetics and Genome Biology at SickKids Hospital.
Justice was born in western Kansas and was raised on the family farm.[1] Growing up, she attended Quinter High School where she was inducted into the Quinter chapter of the National Honor Society as a junior.[2] Following high school, Justice enrolled a Fort Hays State University and began working as a medical technologist at St. Francis Hospital.[3] She worked as a technologist for six year before returning to school for her PhD in developmental genetics. During her doctoral studies, she helped to pioneer chemical mutagenesis approaches in mice.[1] [4] Upon completing her PhD, Justice began a postdoctoral fellowship in the Mammalian Genetics Laboratory at the National Cancer Institute.[5]
Upon completing her fellowship, Justice was recruited by Allan Bradley to join the faculty at Baylor College of Medicine (BCM) to continue her research in developing high-throughput methods for assigning functions to mammalian genes.[1] As a professor of molecular and human genetics at BCM, she became a co-principal investigator on a project to develop mouse models which would enable scientists to identify the function of protein-coding genes in the mammalian genome.[6] Through a grant, Justice co-identified a mutation in a gene involved in the synthesis of cholesterol which led to the development of new treatments for Rett syndrome.[7] [8]
Justice eventually left BCM to become a Canada Research Chair in Mammalian Molecular Genetics at the University of Toronto and Canadian Institutes of Health Research.[9] In this role, she was elected a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.[10]
Justice married Robert A. Justice in 1978.[3]