Bruce Bean

Bruce Palmer Bean, PhD

Robert Winthrop Professor of Neurobiology

Neuronal Excitability and Ion Channel Pharmacology

Neurons communicate with each other using electrical impulses. Information is encoded as patterns of “action potentials”, millisecond-long reversals of the voltage across the cell membrane. Different neurons in the brain fire action potentials with a variety of distinct patterns. The Bean lab seeks to understand these different patterns of firing in terms of the underlying molecular devices – tiny pores in the membrane known as ion channels.

In mammalian brains, each neuron possesses several dozen different types of ion channels. Most of these are closed when the neuron is at rest (electrically silent). It is the coordinated, transient opening, or “gating” of particular types of ion channels that underlies electrical signaling. To understand how different combinations of ion channels work together to generate the distinct patterns of action potential firing in different neurons, we make electrical recordings of these cells using patch clamp, voltage clamp and other electrophysiological approaches.

Our goal is to use knowledge of the particular ion channels in different kinds of neurons to find new drugs that can selectively inhibit or enhance electrical activity of specific type of neurons by targeting specific ion channels. In collaboration with Dr. Clifford Woolf’s laboratory, we are currently focused on finding new drugs to treat pain, itch, and cough. We are also seeking to identify new drugs to disrupt epileptic activity.

Publications View
All-optical electrophysiology in mammalian neurons using engineered microbial rhodopsins.
Authors: Authors: Hochbaum DR, Zhao Y, Farhi SL, Klapoetke N, Werley CA, Kapoor V, Zou P, Kralj JM, Maclaurin D, Smedemark-Margulies N, Saulnier JL, Boulting GL, Straub C, Cho YK, Melkonian M, Wong GK, Harrison DJ, Murthy VN, Sabatini BL, Boyden ES, Campbell RE, Cohen AE.
Nat Methods
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Inhibition of A-type potassium current by the peptide toxin SNX-482.
Authors: Authors: Kimm T, Bean BP.
J Neurosci
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Pathways disrupted in human ALS motor neurons identified through genetic correction of mutant SOD1.
Authors: Authors: Kiskinis E, Sandoe J, Williams LA, Boulting GL, Moccia R, Wainger BJ, Han S, Peng T, Thams S, Mikkilineni S, Mellin C, Merkle FT, Davis-Dusenbery BN, Ziller M, Oakley D, Ichida J, Di Costanzo S, Atwater N, Maeder ML, Goodwin MJ, Nemesh J, Handsaker RE, Paull D, Noggle S, McCarroll SA, Joung JK, Woolf CJ, Brown RH, Eggan K.
Cell Stem Cell
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Intrinsic membrane hyperexcitability of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis patient-derived motor neurons.
Authors: Authors: Wainger BJ, Kiskinis E, Mellin C, Wiskow O, Han SS, Sandoe J, Perez NP, Williams LA, Lee S, Boulting G, Berry JD, Brown RH, Cudkowicz ME, Bean BP, Eggan K, Woolf CJ.
Cell Rep
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Intrinsic membrane hyperexcitability of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis patient-derived motor neurons.
Authors: Authors: Wainger BJ, Kiskinis E, Mellin C, Wiskow O, Han SS, Sandoe J, Perez NP, Williams LA, Lee S, Boulting G, Berry JD, Brown RH, Cudkowicz ME, Bean BP, Eggan K, Woolf CJ.
Cell Rep
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Kv2 channel regulation of action potential repolarization and firing patterns in superior cervical ganglion neurons and hippocampal CA1 pyramidal neurons.
Authors: Authors: Liu PW, Bean BP.
J Neurosci
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Sidedness of carbamazepine accessibility to voltage-gated sodium channels.
Authors: Authors: Jo S, Bean BP.
Mol Pharmacol
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Bupivacaine-induced cellular entry of QX-314 and its contribution to differential nerve block.
Authors: Authors: Brenneis C, Kistner K, Puopolo M, Jo S, Roberson D, Sisignano M, Segal D, Cobos EJ, Wainger BJ, Labocha S, Ferreirós N, von Hehn C, Tran J, Geisslinger G, Reeh PW, Bean BP, Woolf CJ.
Br J Pharmacol
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Persistent sodium current drives conditional pacemaking in CA1 pyramidal neurons under muscarinic stimulation.
Authors: Authors: Yamada-Hanff J, Bean BP.
J Neurosci
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Activity-dependent silencing reveals functionally distinct itch-generating sensory neurons.
Authors: Authors: Roberson DP, Gudes S, Sprague JM, Patoski HA, Robson VK, Blasl F, Duan B, Oh SB, Bean BP, Ma Q, Binshtok AM, Woolf CJ.
Nat Neurosci
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