Crick Watkins, DO
- Assistant Professor, Emergency Medicine
Crick Watkins, DO
Research Interests
- Pediatric Emergency Medicine
- Substance Use Disorders
- International Emergency Medicine
- Education
- DO, Kansas City University of Medicine and Biosciences, 2009
- Residency
- Emergency Medicine, Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center, 2012
- Fellowship
- Pediatric Emergency Medicine, Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center, 2014
- Board Certifications
- American Board of Emergency Medicine, Pediatric Emergency Medicine
- Memberships
- American College of Emergency Medicine
- American College of Emergency Physicians
- American Academy of Pediatrics
- Positions
- Assistant Professor, Emergency Medicine
- Departments and Affiliations
- Emergency Medicine
Research
- Inhibition of the ethylene response by 1-MCP in tomato suggests that polyamines are not involved in delaying ripening, but may moderate the rate of ripening or over-ripening. Tassoni A, Watkins CB, Davies PJ. J. Exp. Bot. 2006; 57(12):3313-25.
- The use of 1-methylcyclopropene (1-MCP) on fruits and vegetables. Watkins CB. Biotechnol. Adv. ; 24(4):389-409.
- Isolation and characterization of a lipid transfer protein expressed in ripening fruit of Capsicum chinense. Liu K, Jiang H, Moore SL, Watkins CB, Jahn MM. Planta. 2006 Mar; 223(4):672-83.
- 1-Methylcyclopropene interactions with diphenylamine on diphenylamine degradation, alpha-farnesene and conjugated trienol concentrations, and polyphenol oxidase and peroxidase activities in apple fruit. Apollo Arquiza JM, Hay AG, Nock JF, Watkins CB. J. Agric. Food Chem. 2005 Sep; 53(19):7565-70.
- A GH3-like gene, CcGH3, isolated from Capsicum chinense L. fruit is regulated by auxin and ethylene. Liu K, Kang BC, Jiang H, Moore SL, Li H, Watkins CB, Setter TL, Jahn MM. Plant Mol. Biol. 2005 Jul; 58(4):447-64.