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Max and Anne Wien Professor of Life Sciences

Jeffrey Macklis

Max and Anne Wien Professor of Life Sciences

Professor of Stem Cell and Regenerative Biology

Research

Our lab studies the mammalian cerebral cortex– its fundamental molecular development, controls over immense neuronal diversity and development-maintenance of specific circuitry, degenerative diseases of projection neurons, and new routes to regeneration. These linked directions investigate how specific brain circuitry of the cortex is generated at the cellular and axon guidance-synapse formation levels; what goes wrong in the cortex with specificity in human disease including ALS, autism, and intellectual disabilities; how we might prevent degeneration with circuit specificity; and how to regenerate functional circuitry, e.g. in spinal cord injury. We employ both mouse molecular-genetics and cell biology, and directed differentiation of human pluripotent stem cells, as complementary systems for investigation. Our work informs basic understanding of the organization, function, “molecular logic”, evolution, and human disease vulnerability of the cerebral cortex, and discovers routes to therapy for disease.

Aspects of our work investigate molecular specification of cortical projection neuron circuitry, including both progenitor-stage and postmitotic regulation of diversity; neural progenitor and “stem cell” biology; adult neurogenesis (birth of new neurons); and subtype-specific local growth cone RNA and protein machinery controlling subtype-specific axonal growth and circuit formation-maintenance. We also employ directed neuronal subtype differentiation of progenitors and pluripotent cells (m/h ES/iPS) via molecular manipulation. We integrate basic development, organization, disease, and regeneration of the cerebral cortex.