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Susan Mango Tracks Organ Development in the Worm

After developmental biologist Susan Mango received a surprise call announcing her MacArthur Foundation Fellowship (casually dubbed a “genius grant”), congratulatory emails streamed in from New York, London, and Washington DC – places she had lived as her father, who was from Turkey, followed his career as a Byzantine historian.

The MacArthur Foundation cited her discoveries of the genes that control the formation and physiology of the digestive track – and that are often mutated in cancer and birth defects – and the role of the digestive track in starvation. [more]

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GABA Neurons Turn a Blind Eye

A new study, published in this week’s Nature, that helps tease apart the role of single cells in the neural circuit controlling vision is helping researchers understand neuronal plasticity, whereby new experiences can ‘shape’ neural networks.[more]

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MCO Faculty Host Undergraduate Student Interns

In Summer 2009, 12 undergraduate students from diverse colleges and universities spent eight to ten weeks conducting research in the Molecules, Cells and Organisms (MCO) Program.[more]

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Annual Thanksgiving Food Drive (Thursday, November 12, until Thursday, November 19, 2009)

For the forth year in a row, MCB Building Operations is organizing the annual Thanksgiving Food Drive. [more]


- NEWS ARCHIVE -

2009      2008      2007      2006      2005      2004       2003      

05/09/09

Putting the Kinetochore Together

Errors in chromosome segregation can often lead to human disease. For example, chromosomal instability is a hallmark of cancer, at least 5% of all recognized human pregnancies result in trisomy or monosomy, most leading to miscarriage, and Down Syndrome (trisomy 21) is the leading genetic cause of developmental disability. For chromosomes to precisely segregate in mitosis, the two sister chromatids must be bound to opposite poles of the bipolar spindle. Chromosomes attach to the spindle through a large macromolecular complex called the kinetochore that is assembled on centromeric DNA. Kinetochores not only link chromosomes to spindle microtubules, but they are also able to recognize inappropriate microtubule attachment and repair errors in attachment. [more]

10/16/09

Harvard Students to Help 3500 Fellow Scientists in Kenya this Fall

Quick – look at that old piece of equipment gathering dust on the end of your bench, in the corner of the room, or sitting up on the highest shelf. Think it’s not useful anymore? Well, think again. That older piece of equipment that you no longer use might be just the thing that a scientist somewhere else in the world desperately needs. And this fall you can ensure that it gets to that scientist, by giving it to Seeding Labs.[more]

10/20/09

Hidde Ploegh to Deliver 2009 John T. Edsall Lecture

Hidde Ploegh first joined the Department from the Netherlands in the mid 1970s to do his undergraduate thesis in microbiology in Jack Strominger’s lab. The lab was then working on bacterial cell walls and penicillin. He stayed for six months, returned to Holland to finish his undergraduate degree and then came back as a visiting graduate student from the University of Leiden (a university nearly a 100 years older than Harvard!).[more]

09/24/09

Life Sciences-HHMI Outreach Summer Program 2009

One chilly July afternoon, five high school biology teachers were energetically discussing how to design an animation that would best portray the complex process of blood sugar regulation in the human body. Dale Muzzey, a biophysics graduate student and animator, stepped in occasionally to provide guidance on what Macromedia Flash software could and could not do well.[more]

10/05/09

David E. Clapham Presents 2009 Bloch Lecture

On October 15, 2009, the annual Bloch Lecture will be presented by Dr. David E. Clapham, HHMI Investigator, Aldo R. Castañeda Professor of Cardiovascular Research, Director of Cardiovascular Research, Children’s Hospital, and Professor of Neurobiology, Harvard Medical School. The title of his seminar is Sex and Ion Channels.Dr. Clapham’s distinguished career has centered on G-protein coupled receptors, calcium signaling and ion channels. Throughout his research, Dr. Clapham has shown an affinity for particularly challenging research problems, sometimes going against the dogma of the times. For instance, his early work focused on the link between ion channels and muscarinic G-protein coupled receptors. He showed that the bgsubunits of G-proteins were not simple accessories or bystanders, but had their own set of effectors - including ion channels - just like the better characterized Ga subunits.[more]

09/17/09

MCB Awards 2009 Peralta and Meselson Prizes to Natalie Funk and Itay Budin

Two MCB graduate students were recognized for their academic achievement at MCB’s 2009 retreat at Harvard in September.

This year’s Peralta Prize was awarded to Natalie Funk of the Andrew Murray lab for her graduate thesis proposal, “Investigation of a Tension-Sensing Mechanism in the Spindle Checkpoint: The Ipl1-Cohesin Sliding Ring Model.” Itay Budin of the Jack Szostak lab at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) received the 2nd annual Meselson Prize for his experiment, “Self-Assembly of Model Protocells in a Thermal Diffusion Column.” Each prize includes $1,500 for travel or training and $1,000 for unrestricted enjoyment. [more]

09/01/09

Optogenetics in India

What do you get when you put two Harvard professors in India? Wrong answer: A Nature paper on the non-linear dynamics of snake charming. Right answer: Crazy and fun science! As a part of the Harvard-Bangalore Science Initiative (HSBI), Prof. Venkatesh Murthy's brainchild, a rigorous summer course on the exciting and upcoming field of Optogenetics was organized at the National Center for Biological Sciences in Bangalore (NCBS), India. [more]

09/01/09

Florian Engert Receives Tenure

Neurobiologist Florian Engert has been promoted to become a tenured Professor of Molecular and Cellular Biology at Harvard University. “Like many things, tenure is probably most important if you do not have it,” he said. “But I’m very happy that it worked out because I can stay in this department with the tremendous support of my colleagues, who have become my good friends. Also, I now have the space and resources to make a real thrust at studying the complete brain of an animal at a single cell resolution in the context of behavior and function. [more]

05/18/09

Briana Burton Ponders the Oil and Water Problem of DNA Transportation

Each time the world girds itself for a new epidemic, scientists give the public a refresher course on how genes jump species, giving us flu strains that mingle DNA from birds, pigs and humans – and that pick up virulence genes along the way. Exactly how genes hop in and out of cells is still not well understood, but Briana Burton, a recently appointed Assistant Professor of Molecular and Cellular Biology at Harvard University, is elucidating some of the fundamental protein machinery underlying this process. [more]

05/27/09

Serotonin and Smell

A moment’s introspection reveals that our perceptions and actions are strongly affected by our behavioral states.  Whether you are sleepy, awake, distracted or vigilant will affect how you perceive the world. Of course, perceptions are also altered by neurological disorders or drug use. [more]

05/05/09

Out with the Bad in with the Good

Add your voice to the Activity Poll [more]

06/03/09

Four Hoopes for MCB

Four undergraduates - Brandon Weissbourd in Catherine Dulac’s lab, Alana Mendelsohn in Jeff Lichtman's lab, Sara Trowbridge in John Dowling's lab, and Albert Li in Rachelle Gaudet's lab – received the prestigious Hoopes Prize for their research projects in MCB laboratories. [more]

06/08/09

15th Annual Boston Bacterial Meeting to be Held at Science Center June 18-19

Boston Bacterial Meeting (BBM) 2009 will take place Thursday June 18 – Friday June 19 at the Harvard University Science Center. The meeting will feature ~25 oral and 60+ poster presentations by students and postdocs representing diverse arenas of bacterial research, including cell and molecular biology, development, pathogenesis, ecology, and evolution. [more]

06/03/09

Kaloyan Tsanov Wins the Lawrence J. Henderson Prize for His Undergraduate Thesis

Kaloyan Tsanov has been awarded the Lawrence J. Henderson Prize for his thesis, An Embryonic Stem Cell Based System for Rapid Analysis of Developmentally Regulated Enhancer Elements. The Henderson Prize is awarded annually to the undergraduate who submits the most meritorious thesis to the Board of Tutors in Biochemical Sciences. [more]

05/04/09

Congratulations 2009 MCB Graduate Student Fellowship Recipients!

We are pleased to announce that the following MCB graduate students have been selected for 2009 Graduate Student Fellowships. [more]

05/04/09

Emeritus MCB Professor “Untangles” the Double Helix in New Book

James C. Wang, the emeritus Mallinckrodt Professor of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, who retired from MCB and Harvard in 2005, has writtenUntangling the Double Helix: DNA Entanglement and the Action of the DNA Topoisomerases (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, 2009). [more]

03/05/09

A Structural Model for the DNA Damage Sensor in Bacterial Nucleotide Excision Repair

Genomic DNA is under a constant attack by various damaging agents.  Left uncorrected, such damage can lead to mutations that are deleterious to cells.  To safeguard against damage to their genomes, cells have evolved several DNA repair pathways.  Among these, nucleotide excision repair (NER) is unique in its ability to recognize and repair a variety of structurally unrelated DNA lesions, and it is the primary DNA repair pathway available for removal of bulky adducts.[more]

01/06/09

After Much Travel, New Professor Alights in Cambridge

Vlad Denic has been around. He’s lived in Belgrade and Baghdad. He went to college in New Zealand and did his graduate work in San Francisco. At the beginning of the semester, he was installed in a fourth-floor office in the Northwest Labs building. Denic, an Assistant Professor in Molecular and Cellular Biology, is one of MCB’s five new faculty appointments this year. He’s hard-pressed to pin down his exact research interests – but he finally gives it a shot. [more]

04/27/09

J. Craig Venter to Give Prather Lectures May 8

This year's Prather Lectures will be delivered by J. Craig Venter, Founder of the J. Craig Venter Institute and Synthetic Genomics Inc. [more]

04/02/09

Rich Losick Recipient of 2009 Canada Gairdner Award

The Gairdner Foundation announced on March 31 that MCB’s Maria Moors Cabot Professor of Biology Rich Losick was one of seven recipients of its 2009 Canada Gairdner Awards.Given annually to leading scientists, the Gairdner is one of the most prestigious awards in biomedical research. The awards are sometimes known as the “Baby Nobels” – of 298 recipients, 73, or one in four, have gone on to win the Nobel Prize.[more]

04/21/09

YOU can Save a Life

On April 29, 2009, register as a bone marrow donor. [more]

04/13/09

Second Annual EPB Symposium to be Held Saturday April 25

On Saturday, April 25, the second Engineering and Physical Biology (EPB) Symposium will be held at the Fairchild Lecture Hall, 7 Divinity Ave.  Speakers from constituent fields – Physics, Engineering, Chemistry and Molecular Biology - will present significant recent findings that range from single molecule studies to investigations of collective cell behavior. [more]

04/13/09

April 18th Symposium Explores the Richest Biological Reservoir on Earth: Microbial World

Microbes (including bacteria, viruses, fungi, and protists) are ubiquitous on Earth and affect every part of our lives, yet they are mostly invisible. Microbial scientists believe the vast majority of microbes are still unknown to us. On Saturday, April 18, Harvard Microbial Sciences Initiative will host the Sixth Annual Microbial Sciences Symposium, an all-day event free and open to the public, to be held in the Radcliffe Gymnasium at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Studies on the Cambridge campus. [more]

03/25/09

Visual Space within a Dendrite

More than a century ago, famous neuroanatomist and histologist Ramon y Cajal proposed the idea that a neuron receives information through its extensive dendritic tree and sends it to downstream targets via its axon, a principle referred to as 'dynamic polarization'. Ever since, neuroscientists have been wondering how the shape of a dendritic tree contributes to the processing of incoming information before it is sent to postsynaptic target neurons. In recent years, we have learned much about how signals that arrive almost synchronously at various locations in the dendritic tree are processed and summed to compute neuronal output. [more]

03/23/09

Evolution and Specificity of MAP Kinases

During evolution certain gene families have increased in number following gene duplication by repeatedly finding novel functions even though random mutations tend to destroy the majority of such duplicates into non-coding DNA. What molecular properties have allowed the proteins in these families to be so flexible? [more]

03/23/09

Leschziner Receives Sloan Foundation Fellowship

Andres Leschziner, Assistant Professor of Molecular and Cellular Biology, will be a 2009 Sloan Research Fellow, the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation announced recently. The fellowships are awarded each year to researchers in a variety of fields who show “strong evidence…of creativity as … independent investigator[s]. [more]

03/2/09

Outreach Program for Teachers Focused on Microbes and Disease

If you were tempted by cookies and coffee outside the Biolabs lecture hall on Wednesday afternoons in the fall, you were likely one of many MCB community members dismayed to see fierce signs stating, “For Outreach Teachers Only.” [more]

02/12/09

Connectomics

It is widely believed that in order to understand how the nervous system works, one needs to know where neural processes go and with which cells they connect. Conventionally, this kind of information is obtained by labeling a small number of neurons from one sample and then pooling data from multiple samples in order to infer the organization of the complete circuit. [more]

03/06/09

Geometric Cue for Protein Localization

Although bacteria are much more architecturally simple than eukaryotic cells, it has been evident for over a decade now that they are very highly organized on a molecular level. For example, bacteria are able to distinguish between different subcellular regions that display no evident chemical uniqueness and routinely sort proteins to these locations in order to establish polarity or build localized supramolecular structures and machines. [more]

01/19/09

Charting Olfaction

Our brains generally represent the outside world using ordered maps. For example, neighboring points in visual space activate neighboring points on the retina, and this relation is preserved through several subsequent stages of processing. This sort of systematic projection of an external variable onto the brain’s surface is found in most sensory systems – vision, audition and touch. [more]

02/19/09

Buy Daffodils and Support the American Cancer Society

Please support MCB's annual fundraiser to support the American Cancer Society.[more]

01/29/09

Silent Communication

Distant cells in our body talk to each other to co-ordinate what they do. Typically, one cell sends a signal that is recognized by specialized receptors on the surface of another distant cell. These signal-bound receptors then transduce the signal and instruct the cell to generate an appropriate response. Our recent experiments, published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), reveal a paradigm of highly specific communication between cells that can occur without such signal transduction. [more]

01/07/09

Undergraduate Summer Internship Program for Underrepresented Minority Students

The Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, in partnership with the "Molecules, Cells, and Organisms" graduate training program, is pleased to announce a new summer internship program for undergraduate students from backgrounds traditionally underrepresented in science.

Starting in June 2009, we will host up to six well-qualified student interns from across the nation for ten weeks. Interns will work closely with faculty, postdoctoral fellows, and graduate students on current research projects, developing important skills and techniques while learning about the cultures of basic research and graduate school.[more]

12/12/2008

How Not to Wear Out a Welcome

Just as dinner party guests who linger at the table long after coffee and dessert can strain the patience of their hosts, an over-extended stay at the replication fork by certain DNA polymerases can have deleterious consequences for their host, the cell. During DNA replication, the vast majority of the chromosome is replicated by the so-called "replicative" polymerases, pols delta and epsilon. These enzymes display both high processivity and high fidelity (one mistake per 100,000 nucleotides synthesized), two characteristics desirable in a polymerase whose job is to duplicate the genome in a timely manner.[meor]

12/10/2008

Wnts on the Brain: Requirement of Wnt Signaling in CNS Vasculature Development

All tissues in our bodies require blood vessels for oxygen and nutrients. While all vasculature share certain features, their formation in distinct organ systems occurs by different modes and results in endothelial blood vessels that exhibit properties tailored to the organ’s need. In the brain and spinal cord, which together make up the central nervous system (CNS), the vasculature forms a tight seal generating a physical blood-brain barrier (BBB) quite distinct from the more porous vasculatures permeating other organs .[more]

11/25/08

Annual Holiday Gift Drive (accepting donations until December 18, 2008)

For the fourth year in a row, MCB's Human Resources is Organizing the Annual Toy and Clothing Drive [more]

09/22/08

Matthew Meselson’s “Beautiful Experiment” Turns Fifty

Fifty years ago, Matthew Meselson and Franklin Stahl – a Caltech grad student and post-doc, respectively – published an experiment in which they proved that DNA replication   occurs when each strand copies itself to produce two identical daughter molecules, each a hybrid of old and new. The now-famous experiment was a validation of the double-helix model of DNA, which had been proposed five years before by James Watson and Francis Crick, but was still being hotly debated. Brilliantly conceived and expertly executed, the Meselson-Stahl work has been called “the most beautiful experiment in biology.” [more]

11/19/08

Dissecting Transcriptional Network Structure and Function

The gene expression program in a cell is set in response to the level, timing and combination of hundreds of developmental and environmental stimuli. This precise control depends on a network of signaling pathways, transcription factors (TFs) and gene promoters that work together to not only process the information a cell receives but to create the appropriate output as well. But what do these networks look like and how do they work? [more]

11/14/08

Annual Thanksgiving Food Drive (Tuesday, November 18 - Tuesday, November 25, 2008)

For the third year in a row, MCB Building Operations is organizing the annual Thanksgiving Food Drive [more]

10/27/08

A Quantitative Model of Transcription Factor–activated Gene Expression

One of the main challenges in the postgenomic era is to understand how genetic information is translated into quantitative transcriptional output. Transcription factors bind DNA at specific sequence motifs and they bind more strongly to some sites than others. In eukaryotic cells, some binding sites are in nucleosome-free regions and are readily accessible to transcription factors, while some sites are in nucleosomal regions and require energy-driven chromatin remodeling to become accessible. [more]

10/1/08

MCB would Like to Extend a Special Welcome to Our Five New Faculty Members

Briana Burton, Philippe Cluzel, Vlad Denic, Daniel Needleman, Sharad Ramanathan. [more]

11/10/08

Alexander Rich to Deliver 2008 John T. Edsall Lecture

Alexander Rich, M.D., the William Thompson Sedgwick Professor of Biophysics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, will give the 2008 John T. Edsall Lecture on Thursday, November 13.  Dr. Rich’s lecture, ”The Role of Z-DNA Binding Proteins in Infection and Innate Immunity,” will focus on his current research, which involves the biological roles of Z-DNA – also known as “left-handed” DNA – and the proteins that bind to it. [more]

10/10/08

Decoding Regulatory Circuitry in Mammalian Limb Development

The vertebrate limb has been one of the central models for understanding the problem of complex pattern formation. The critical determinant is Sonic hedgehog, a posterior mesenchymal signal that is required for the establishment of the appropriate number and identity of digits. [more]

09/09/08

Engineering Binocularity in the Zebrafish Brain

A major outstanding question in neurobiology is how the brain can evolve to perform new computations. For instance, how did binocular brain areas, with access to information from both eyes, emerge from monocular ancestoral homologues primarily connected to one eye? Did these more complex networks arise from the exploitation of preexisting developmental rules or were fundamentally new ones required? [more]

09/11/08

Perceiving Smells with Sparse Connections

Many regions of the brain are organized in such a way that they form an ordered representation of our sensory experiences. Similar physical stimuli –nearby points of light or sounds of similar frequency– are typically represented by physically adjacent neurons. This organization allows many computations in the brain to be performed locally, which reduces the length of required connections as well as the energy needed for communication. [more]

09/15/08

HHMI Outreach Summer Program 2008

In mid-July, Bauer Café regulars might have noticed the threads of unfamiliar conversation in the air. High school biology teachers from Belfast, Maine to Sandwich, Massachusetts gathered over coffee to discuss students, state standards, and school cultures. Mainly, they were there to figure out how best to incorporate exciting new research into basic biology lessons. [more]

06/16/08

The Four Phases of Richard Losick's Microbial Career

A lot has changed since microbiologist Richard Losick came to Harvard University as a Junior Fellow in 1968. He is now a renowned Harvard College Professor, and biology has become a much more interdisciplinary field, which affects both Losick's teaching and research.[more]

08/08/08

Seminar to Celebrate Darwin’s Bicentennial

On September 11, 2008, Harvard’s Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology and the Massachusetts 2009 Darwin Bicentennial Project will host “From Darwin to Dover and Beyond: On the Front Lines of the Evolution-Creationism Controversy”. [more]

08/08/08

Trigger for Brain Plasticity Identified

Researchers have long sought a factor that can trigger the brain’s ability to learn – and perhaps recapture the “sponge-like” quality of childhood. In the August 8 issue of the journal Cell, neuroscientists at Children’s Hospital Boston and the Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology at Harvard report that they’ve identified such a factor, a protein called Otx 2. [more]

08/07/08

Self-renewal in the Kidney: A Developing Story

The kidney is a remarkable organ. Its actions maintain an appropriate water/salt balance within tissue fluids, remove nitrogenous waste and modify blood composition and blood pressure. The rise in kidney disease, now the third biggest cost within the United States health care sector, makes an understanding of how this organ is built and repaired an urgent priority. [more]

06/27/08

Piggy-backing Meiotic Chromosomes

Movement plays important fundamental roles in basic chromosomal processes. Motion is most obvious when organized chromosomes congress and segregate at mitosis. However, other types of chromosomal movement occur throughout the cell cycle: disparate chromosomal loci colocalize during DNA replication, [more]

06/25/08

Astrocytes Spy on Neuronal Conversation to Bring a Rush of Blood to the Head

The human brain represents approximately 2% of the total body weight, but accounts for about 20% of the energy consumed. Functional hyperemia (local increases in blood flow triggered by neuronal activation) ensures that local brain activity is always matched by an adequate supply of oxygen and nutrients through blood flow. This phenomenon was first described over 100 years ago, but the underlying cellular pathways have largely remained unknown.[more]

06/26/08

Watching Synapses Change in Animals

It is widely assumed that alterations in synaptic connections between nerve cells accounts for the amazing adaptability of our nervous system. These alterations fall into two general categories: first, there are changes in efficacy of synapses that can occur rapidly and reversibly and second, there are changes in the number of synapses that are thought to be long lasting. [more]

06/02/08

Undergraduates Win Awards for Their Research in MCB Labs

Two undergraduates working on research projects in MCB laboratories—Katie Rose Clapham, 2008 (Losick lab) and Elisa Zhang, 2008 (Maniatis lab)—were recently awarded Hoopes Prizes for their senior theses. According to the FAS Prizes website, the Hoopes Prize for Excellence in the Work of Undergraduates was established in 1982 from the estate of Thomas Temple Hoopes, 1919, to “grant awards to undergraduates on the basis of outstanding scholarly work or research.” [more]

02/25/08

Andres Leschziner: Looking at Flexibility of Macromolecules

What type of research might appeal to a young scientist whose interests span the elegance of chemistry and the excitement of biology? For Andres Leschziner structural biology was the compelling choice. [more]

05/30/08

14th Annual Boston Bacterial Meeting to be Held at Science Center June 12-13

The Boston Bacterial Meeting (BBM) 2008 will take place on Thursday June 12 and Friday June 13 at the Harvard University Science Center. The meeting will feature ~25 oral presentations and 60+ poster presentations by students and postdocs representing diverse areas of bacterial research, including bacterial cell and molecular biology, development, pathogenesis, ecology, and evolution. [more]

05/29/08

A Common Aquatic Animal's Genome can Capture Foreign DNA

Long viewed as straitlaced spinsters, sexless freshwater invertebrate animals known as bdelloid rotifers may actually be far more promiscuous than anyone had imagined: Scientists at Harvard University have found that the genomes of these common creatures are chock-full of DNA from plants, fungi, bacteria, and animals. [more]

05/20/2008

High School Students Gain from Hands-on Learning through MCB's Outreach Program

As fifteen teenagers from Cambridge Rindge and Latin High School shuffled into the Hunter lab's "tea room," their nonchalant demeanors seemed out of place. The students jockeyed for seats next to their friends and plopped themselves unenthusiastically into chairs. But when Hunter post-doc, Jacqueline Brooks, premiered her video-tour of the zebrafish facility, her audience quickly focused. [more]

04/24/2008

Chromatin — A One-Stop Engineering Solution for Compacting DNA and Parameterizing Gene Behavior

If stretched end-to-end, the DNA inside a single human cell would measure approximately 2-3 meters. A fiber of this length is physically compacted a million-fold by a hierarchy of packing proteins to fit into the confines of a cell’s nucleus. At the gene level, 150 base pair segments of DNA are compacted by being spooled around protein particles known as nucleosomes. [more]

05/01/2008

Huda Zoghbi to give Prather Lectures May 7,8,9

This year's Prather Lectures will be delivered by Huda Y. Zoghbi, M.D.. Professor of Molecular and Human Genetics, Pediatrics, Neurology and Neuroscience at Baylor College of Medicine and an Investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.  A Pediatric Neurologist, Dr. Zoghbi has discovered the genes mutated in several hereditary neurological diseases. In each case, she has then used her genetic insights as a starting point for elegant cellular and molecular analysis of disease pathogenesis and of normal developmental mechanisms.[more]

03/27/2008

What's "Up" with Mouse Vision?

A mouse is small, close to the ground. Hawks and cats may attack it from above, but not much comes at it from below. Yet Harvard University researchers have discovered that mice have a remarkable type of nerve cell in the eye, seemingly specialized to tell the animal when objects in its world move upward[more]

04/18/2008

Ruth Lehman Presents 2008 Bloch Lecture

On April 24, 2008, Dr. Ruth Lehmann, Professor of Cell Biology and Director of the Skirball Institute at NYU Medical Center will present the 2008 Bloch Lecture. The title of her talk is How Germ Cells Find Their Niche: Stem Cell Migration in Vivo. .[more]

04/10/2008

First Ever Symposium in Engineering and Physical Biology (EPB)

On Saturday, April 5, the Engineering and Physical Biology (EPB) Symposium will be held at the Fairchild Lecture Hall, 7 Divinity Ave. Speakers from several fields – Physics, Engineering, Chemistry and Molecular Biology - will present significant recent findings in the area.[more]

04/07/2008

Microbial Science Symposium to be Held Saturday, April 5

Microbes (including bacteria, viruses, fungi, and protests) are ubiquitous on Earth and affect every part of our lives, yet they are mostly invisible. Microbial scientists believe the vast majority of microbes are still unknown to us. On Saturday, April 5, Harvard Microbial Sciences Initiative will host the Fifth Annual Microbial Sciences Symposium, an all-day event free and open to the public, to be held in the Science Center on the Cambridge campus. [more]

04/03/2008

Small but Mighty

In a behaving animal, the brain processes information from sensory inputs, and communicates its intentions to muscles via the pattern of activity in descending projection neurons. In vertebrates, these cells transmit their motor command to the local networks of the spinal cord, which in turn initiate and coordinate muscle contraction. [more]

04/02/2008

A Neural Code Based on Spike Timing in the Retina

The process of vision begins in the retina. This neuronal network at the back of the eyeball receives incident light and extracts relevant visual information. Nerve cells in the retina then send on this information to different brain regions in the form of electrical pulses ("spikes"). [more]

02/25/08

Beauty in the Brain of the Beholder

Jean Livet recently received first place the Olympus BioScapes Digital Imaging Competetion for his image of a “Brainbow” mouse brain stem.  His image depicted different neurons in mouse brain circuits.  [more]

01/26/08

2008 Daffodil Days

MCB supports the American Cancer Society's Daffodil Days

01/22/08

Dulac Lab: Small RNAs and the Sense of Smell

Modern genetics textbooks highlight the concept of the ‘central dogma’ which states that DNA is transcribed into messenger RNA (mRNA) and that mRNA is subsequently translated into proteins. [more]

01/22/08

Jeruzalmi and Verdine Labs: Structure of a First Responder to Chemical Attacks on DNA

Genomic DNA is under constant attack by various damaging agents, both endogenous such as reactive oxygen species generated in the cells during metabolism, and exogenous such as UV radiation and carcinogens in our food and environment. [more]

01/22/08

Uchida and Francis Receive Awards

Harvard Assistant Professors of Molecular and Cellular Biology Nicole Francis and Nao Uchida were recently honored. [more]

01/22/08

Venkatesh Murthy Takes the Road Less Traveled

Looking back on his career, Venkatesh (Venki) Murthy sees no direct path or single-minded passion. “I find there’s joy on the side roads,” explains the newly tenured Biophysics/Neurobiology Professor in the Molecular and Cellular Biology (MCB) department. [more]

11/28/07

Meister Lab: The Eye Has a Short Attention Span

No matter how hard we fix our gaze, our eyes are in constant motion due to involuntary head and eye movements. The resulting image motion on our retinas can be quite substantial as is aptly demonstrated by the Hermann-Hering illusion. [more]

11/08/07

Gelbart Lab: Genome Analysis of Twelve Drosophila Species

On Thursday, November 8, there was a birth announcement that has been two years in the making: the initial publications on the comparative genome analysis of the entire DNA sequences of 12 species of fruit fly (genus Drosophila). The announcement will include two main papers in Nature describing the community effort. [more]

11/15/07

Summer Research in Bangalore

Through the Harvard-Bangalore Science Initiative, MCB Professor Venkatesh Murthy, along with Professor L. Mahadevan from the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, is working to connect these two scientific centers of Cambridge, Massachsuetts and Bangalore, India. [more]

11/28/07 Technicolor Brains: Mapping Neural Circuits in “Brainbow” Mice

In a paper published in the November 1 issue of Nature (Livet et al, 2007), we present transgenic strategies that give rise to multicolor neuronal labeling in each brain. We use DNA recombination to randomly shuffle in each nerve cell genes for fluorescent proteins of different colors. As a result of this method, each nerve cell expresses its own mixture of red, green, and blue fluorescent proteins. [more]

11/2/07 Sir John Skehel to Deliver 2007 John T. Edsall Lecture

The annual John T. Edsall Lecture returns on Thursday, November 8th with Sir John Skehel of the National Institute of Medical Research. Skehel, a leading virologist, is well known at Harvard for his collaboration with Don Wiley to decipher the mechanism of membrane fusion, which lasted until Wiley’s death in 2001. [more]

10/24/07 Christopher Murphy Awarded 2007 Peralta Prize

This year’s Peralta Prize has been awarded to Christopher Murphy of the Matt Michael lab in MCB for his graduate work, “Mechanism of Checkpoint Activation at the Midblastula Transition”. The annual Prize recognizes the single outstanding dissertation proposal submitted by 2nd year graduate students and includes $1500 travel and $1000 personal awards. It is given in memory of Prof. Ernest Peralta of MCB. [more]

10/17/07 Multisite Phosphorylation and Circadian Oscillations

Michael Rust and Joe Markson, a postdoc and graduate student in Erin O’Shea’s lab, sought to understand the underlying mechanism that allows the core circadian system found in cyanobacteria to generate stable oscillation. [more]

10/4/07 Recycling Equipment to Help Scientists in Need

In February 2005, a group of Harvard University graduate students spent the better part of a weekend packing up boxes of used laboratory instruments (electrophoresis equipment, magnetic stirplates, a vacuum concentrator) as well as surplus lab supplies (culture dishes, pipettes, and centrifuge tubes). In total, they filled over 30 cartons with supplies and machines collected from labs around the Harvard campuses, shipping it all to a small lab in Argentina that, a few months earlier, they never even knew existed... [more]

 

9/20/07 Jim Watson to Offer Public Lecture on Lessons from a Life In Science: Wednesday, October 3

Nobel Laureate and former MCB Professor Jim Watson will be presenting a public lecture entitled "Avoid Boring People: Lessons from a Life in Science" on Wednesday, October 3rd at Harvard Memorial Chruch. [more]

9/13/07 Andrew McMahon Elected to the Royal Society of London

Andrew McMahon, Frank B. Baird, Jr. Professor of Science within MCB and a principal faculty of the Harvard Stem Cell Institute, was recently admitted into The Royal Society of London, the oldest scientific society in existence. Selection recognizes those scientists, engineers and mathematicians who amongst UK or Commonwealth citizens have made exceptional contributions to the "Improvement of Natural Knowledge". [more]

8/31/07 MicroRNAs and Nodal Signaling

Choi et al. developed a technology to block the interaction between microRNAs and their target sites in specific mRNAs. They found that antisense morpholino oligonucleotides complementary to microRNA binding sites protected mRNAs from microRNA-mediated repression. These target protectors allow the analysis of specific microRNA-mRNA pairs. [more]

8/30/07 Gaining Strength From Inactivity

Perhaps you have had the experience of walking into a new environment, such as a Moroccan bazaar or a Chinese supermarket for the first time, and being struck by the strength of novel odors in that environment. Odors present in familiar environments such as your own home barely register in your consciousness. Why is this so? Our recent experiments suggest that part of this adaptation may occur in one of the first steps in the olfactory pathway, right behind your nose. [more]

8/29/07 Female and Male Mice Sexual Behaviors are Just a Sniff Away

In a set of experiments published in the August 5th issue of Nature (Kimchi, Xu, & Dulac, 2007) we have shown that the vomeronasal organ (VNO), an olfactory sensory organ in the nasal cavity of many mammals (although not in humans nor in higher primates) which detects pheromones, is responsible for the control of male- and female-specific social and sexual behaviors. [more]

8/13/07 Richard Losick "FEEDS" Studies in Science

On Friday, March 16th, thirty Harvard undergraduates participated in Professor Richard Losick’s HHMI-funded "Freshmen from Economically and Educationally Disadvantaged backgrounds in Science" (FEEDS) initiative. Losick, a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Professor and the Maria Moors Cabot Professor of Biology in MCB, developed the FEEDS program in 2002 to involve freshman from disadvantaged science backgrounds in long-term, inquiry-based research projects. [more]

8/7/07 Switching on Brain-Specific Alternative Splicing with a microRNA

In an exciting breakthrough the Maniatis lab has now identified a critical link between miRNA and alternative splicing in the nervous system. Specifically, they showed that an abundant neuron-specific miRNA called miR-124 directly targets mRNA encoding PTBP1, a global repressor of nervous system-specific alternative pre-mRNA splicing. [more]

8/6/07 Catherine Dulac’s Phenomenal Pheromone Fascination

The brain’s cognitive abilities fascinate most people in neuroscience, but Catherine Dulac is drawn to the non-cerebral, genetically encoded, instinctive behaviors on which an animal’s very survival depends. She has devoted her meteoric career to learning how olfaction underlies relevant murine behaviors like mating, male aggression towards rivals, and maternal devotion. [more]

7/30/07 Rachelle Gaudet Awarded Klingenstein Fellowship

Rachelle Gaudet has been selected to receive a Klingenstein Fellowship Award in the Neurosciences for 2007 for her project, "Structural biology of temperature sensing by the TRPM8 channel". Gaudet, Assistant Professor in MCB, will received $150,000 over a three-year period beginning July 1. [more]

7/30/07 State of the Art

The 16th International C. elegans Meeting was held at UCLA at the end of June. One of the meeting highlights was the fifth anniversary of the worm art show, which runs concurrent with the poster sessions. This year, members of the Craig Hunter Lab won five of the thirteen awards. [more]

7/20/07 Giving Hedgehog the Gas: Identification of Gas1 as a Novel Positive Component of Shh Signaling

In the May 15th issue of Genes & Development, Allen et al., demonstrate a novel role for the cell surface protein growth arrest specific 1 (Gas1) in the promotion of Shh signaling in multiple tissues during mouse embryogenesis. [more]

6/26/07 Fine-tuning Heat Sensitivity

Everyone has felt burning pain sensations, whether it was from touching something that was too hot or eating their favorite spicy food. Taking the example of spicy food a bit further, the first bites typically taste hotter than the next ones. That is because the receptors that sense heat reduce their activity when under the constant presence of a stimulus; in other words, they desensitize. This paper from the Gaudet lab (Lishko et al (2007) Neuron) addresses the molecular mechanisms for regulating the heat receptor sensitivity. [more]

6/20/07 Howard Berg Receives Two Notable Awards

On March 6, Professor Howard Berg was presented with the Biophysical Society’s annual U.S. Genomics Award for Outstanding Investigator in the Field of Single Molecule Biology (SMB). Then, on March 26, Dr. Berg of MCB was awarded a Doctor of Science honoris causa degree from the University of Osnabrück’s Faculty of Biology and Chemistry. [more]

6/14/07 Embryonic Stem Cells and Cloned Animals Produced by Chromosome Transfer into Mouse Zygotes

Our lab sought other cell types besides oocytes that might be able to reprogram a somatic nucleus. The zygote, as the fertilized cell that most closely resembles the oocyte, seemed the obvious choice. [more]

6/11/07 Turning Back the Developmental Clock: Directly Reprogrammed Fibroblasts Indistinguishable from Embryonic Stem Cells

Nuclear transfer experiments, such as the cloning of Dolly the sheep, have demonstrated that the genome of differentiated adult cells can be reset to an embryonic state, indicating that restrictions on a cell’s developmental potency can be erased. Understanding the factors that mediate this process has been a long sought-after goal in the field of nuclear reprogramming. [more]

6/8/07 2007 Hoopes Prize Winners in MCB

Several students associated with MCB faculty have been awarded 2007 Thomas T. Hoopes Prizes. The annual Prizes are awarded to undergraduates for exceptional scholarly efforts, usually senior theses. [more]

6/6/07 Vicki Sato’s Wild Ride: From Academia to Industry and Back Again

Vicki Sato figured she could give herself two years with a new biotech startup company before she acquired the “mark of Cain” that would prevent her from returning to academia. Twenty-five years later, just when she retired as a captain of biotechnology, MCB has lured her back, and so has the Business School. [more]

5/18/07 Chipping Away at Hedgehog-Mediated Neural Patterning

The Hedgehog signaling pathway represents one of approximately six major families of signaling pathways that dictate development in most bilateria. An especially interesting property of Hedgehog signaling is that it acts as a morphogen in the vertebrate neural tube, specifying the fate of several ventral neuronal sub-types in a dose-dependent fashion. [more]

5/18/07 MCB Places 1st and 2nd in CSHL Genome Research Poster Competition

Itay Yanai, a post-doc in the Craig Hunter lab, created the poster about exploring the degree of differences in gene expression between two organisms (C. elegans and C. briggsae) that are morphologically near-identical but genetically more different than human is to mouse. MCB took 2nd place in the contest, as well, with a poster by Steve Vokes of the McMahon lab. [more]

5/15/07 Randy Schekman Presents 2007 Bloch Lecture

The annual Bloch lecture returns on Thursday, May 31st, with Randy Schekman, Professor, Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of California, Berkeley, Investigator, Howard Hughes Medical Institute. Research in Schekman’s lab is devoted to a molecular description of the process of membrane assembly and vesicular traffic in eukaryotic cells. [more]

5/9/07 David Kingsley to give Prather Lectures May 23, 24, 25

The annual John M. Prather Lectures in Biology will showcase the work of David Kingsley, Professor of Developmental Biology, Howard Hughes Medical Institute and Stanford University School of Medicine. As an evolutionary biologist, Kingsley studies one of the biggest questions about life: "We’re interested in how evolution creates new organisms", he says. [more]

5/4/07 A Kinase Pathway Required for Neuronal Polarity

Proper polarization of neurons during development is essential for circuit function. In the May 4th issue of Cell, MCB researchers Brendan Lilley, Albert Pan and Joshua Sanes report on a molecular cascade that is responsible for establishing the polarity of cortical neurons in the developing brain. [more]

5/4/07 Rhinos Bessie and Victoria Celebrate 70 Years

Vicky and Bess, the two rhinoceros sculptures outside the Bio Labs Building, will be celebrating their seventieth birthdays on May 11th, 2007. Afternoon festivities will be held in their honor. Celebrations will be held in the Bio Labs courtyard beginning at 4:00 PM on Friday, May 11th with special guests in attendance. Pizza, birthday cake and beverages will be served. [more]

4/30/07 Merck Presents 2007 Awards for Genome-Related Research

The recipients of the 2007 Merck Genome-Related Research Awards were honored at a special luncheon Monday, April 9, in Sherman Fairchild. Two postdoctoral awards and four awards for Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS) members are presented annually through MCB to support genomics research in FAS. [more]

4/24/07 Neurodegeneration in a Petri-Dish: An Embryonic Stem Cell Model for ALS

This publication (authored by DiGiorgio, Carrasco, Siao, Maniatis and Eggan) describes the development of a system based on the in vitro differentiation of mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells bearing a human gene known to cause ALS. In vitro differentiation of these ES cells generated motor neurons and other cell types found in the spinal chord. [more]

4/20/07 Regulation of Cyclin-CDK Activity by Inositol Pyrophosphates

Lee et al. recently defined a new role for the inositol polyphosphate IP7, which contains a pyrophosphate group (2 phosphates linked together) on one of the inositol ring positions. They demonstrated that IP7 regulates the activity of a cyclin-CDK-CDK inhibitor complex involved in relaying information about availability of the nutrient inorganic phosphate. [more]

4/16/07 2007 GGTP Symposium: Sex and Conflict

Every year, second year students from the Genetics and Genomics Training Program host a symposium that highlights an area of study that incorporates molecular, cellular, organismic and evolutionary biology. This year, in an effort to provide a fascinating symposium for the broadest of life sciences communities, the symposium committee has selected the ever-interesting world of Sex and Conflict. [more]

4/5/07 Target-Derived Signals Organize Motor Nerve Terminals

Using the neuromuscular junction, an accessible, peripheral synapse between a motoneuron and a muscle fiber, Fox et al. found one explanation for the multiplicity of signals: they act sequentially at distinct developmental stages to pattern the nerve terminal. [more]

4/2/07 Retinal Ganglion Cells Rapidly Change Polarity

Different neurons are tuned to different features, for example some ganglion cells fire when the light dims, others when it brightens. Here we show that a rapid shift in the image on the retina can cause a dramatic change in a neuron’s preferred feature. [more]

3/14/07 April 21 Symposium: How Quantitative Biology is Measuring Up

On Saturday, April 21, a day-long symposium will be held at Harvard on "New Directions in Quantitative Biology". Sponsored by Harvard’s Division of Life Sciences and hosted by MCB, the Symposium reflects the increasing importance of quantitative approaches in the biological sciences. [more]

3/12/07 Putting a Face on a Class of Viral Deubiquitinating Enzymes

Members of the Gaudet and Ploegh labs teamed up and showed that some herpesvirus-encoded cysteine proteases are not as picky as cellular deubiquitinating enzymes, since they indiscriminately cleave most ubiquitin molecules attached to host proteins. To reveal how these enzymes recognize and cleave ubiquitin from proteins, the murine cytomegalovirus cysteine protease was crystallized in complex with a ubiquitin-based suicide inhibitor, and the structure of the complex was determined by x-ray crystallography. [more]

3/6/07 Yanking the Chain: Pulling on Bacterial Flagella to Trigger Polymorphic Transformations

In many of the bacteria that swim by rotating helical flagella, the flagellum itself is not a simple, passive propeller. The flagellar filament (a homopolymer of tens of thousands of flagellin monomers, accounting for more than 99% of the flagellar length) can adopt several helical shapes of varying pitch, radius and handedness. Although a single polymorphic form dominates during forward swimming, other variants are commonly seen during tumbling. [more]

3/5/07 Ikβ Kinase IKKε Plays Critical Role in Antiviral Innate Immunity

Previous work from our lab identified two functionally redundant kinases called TBK1 and IKKe, which are activated by virus infection, and phosphorylate transcription factors required for IFN-b gene expression.  To determine whether IKKe has a unique function in the innate immune response, we knocked out the mouse IKKe gene, and homozygous mutant mice were infected with flu virus.  We found that the mutant mice produced normal levels of IFN-b, and they mounted a normal adaptive immune response to the virus.  However, they succumbed to the infection at much lower doses than wild type mice. [more]

2/23/07 Takao Hensch: Linking Neuroscience and Society

Takao Hensch thinks of himself as a bridge-builder, and since his work spans continents, languages, and schools on the Harvard campus, it’s easy to see why. A neuroscientist and new MCB professor, Hensch comes to Harvard from the RIKEN Brain Science Institute in Japan. At the age of 40, he’s already at the top of his field—a pioneer who’s done much to explain how the developing brains of infants and children wire themselves in response to their environments. [more]

2/23/07 Microbial Sciences Symposium To Be Held Saturday, March 10

On Saturday, March 10, Harvard will host the Microbial Sciences Symposium, a major program open to the public, to be held in the Science Center on the Cambridge campus. Reflecting the convergence of many approaches to microbiological studies, the Symposium "features an exciting line up of speakers from the disciplines of engineering, physics, chemistry, earth and planetary sciences, and bacteriology," notes MCB Professor Richard Losick. [more]

2/12/07 Richard Losick Receives National Academy’s Waksman Award

The National Academy of Sciences has announced that Prof. Richard Losick of MCB has been awarded the Selman A. Waksman Award in Microbiology for 2007. The biennial prize recognizes "extraordinary scientific achievement" in the field of microbiology. Prof. Losick was awarded for "discovering alternative bacterial sigma factors and [for] his fundamental contributions to understanding the mechanism of bacterial sporulation." [more]

1/23/07 Catherine Dulac Receives the 2006 Richard Lounsbery Award

Catherine Dulac of MCB and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute has been awarded the prestigious Richard Lounsbery Award for 2006. According to the National Academy of Sciences, the award "is given in alternate years to young American and French scientists in recognition of extraordinary scientific achievement in biology and medicine." [more]

1/22/07 New Light on Bioluminescence Evolution

The evolution of genes for light emission might have involved either fusion or fission. Thus, the ancestral system may have had two genes, which fused in the Noctiluca lineage but remained separate in the branch leading to the photosynthetic species. Alternatively, based on the more primitive status of Noctiluca, its luciferase gene can be viewed as similar to the ancestral gene in dinoflagellates, which then split in giving rise to L. polyedru. [more]

1/9/07 David Jeruzalmi: Making Strides in Structural Biology

For MCB Associate Professor David Jeruzalmi, the lure of research lies in the minute molecular engines that drive what he calls the "broad strokes" of biology. Most of biology’s big-picture views have been well defined, he says, but they can also be changed by what scientists learn about their internal features. "And that’s what interests me," he says. "I want to understand how the broad strokes can be changed by the details." [more]