headshot of david ginty wearing a dark blue collared shirt

David D Ginty, Ph.D.

Edward R. and Anne G. Lefler Professor of Neurobiology, Harvard Medical School
Head of the Department of Neurobiology, Harvard Medical School

David D Ginty, PhD – Faculty Profile

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Title: Edward R. and Anne G. Lefler Professor of Neurobiology and Department Chair, Department of Neurobiology, Harvard Medical School; Investigator, Howard Hughes Medical Institute.

The Aim

The Ginty Lab explores how the nervous system encodes our sense of touch.

The Impact

Using a range of advanced tools, the Ginty Lab is able to map how signals from the skin travel through the nervous system to encode touch perception. These circuits are what allow us to differentiate between textures, temperatures, and levels of pressure. Understanding how they develop and function provides insight into conditions such as chronic pain or autism, in which touch feels painful or becomes overwhelming. Ultimately, this research could lead to better treatments for sensory disorders and pain-related conditions.

A Closer Look

Article: Autism. Chronic pain. Rising colon cancer rates. New Harvard center explores urgent health problems. , The Boston Globe, September 2025. A $30 million gift from philanthropist K. Lisa Yang launched Harvard’s new Brain-Body Center, designed to support collaborative research and training. This timely and generous support has the potential to deepen our understanding of autism, chronic pain, and colon cancer.

Article: Highly sensitive science , The Harvard Gazette, July 2025. Ginty describes how sensory overload in autism arises from heightened activity in peripheral and spinal neurons rather than in the brain. He also discusses how funding freezes threaten advances in research, which could delay or halt the development of new therapies for conditions of touch and pain.

Contact

Email: david_ginty@hms.harvard.edu
Lab website: gintylab.hms.harvard.edu

Publications View
An NGF-TrkA-mediated retrograde signal to transcription factor CREB in sympathetic neurons.
Authors: Authors: Riccio A, Pierchala BA, Ciarallo CL, Ginty DD.
Science
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Coupling of the RAS-MAPK pathway to gene activation by RSK2, a growth factor-regulated CREB kinase.
Authors: Authors: Xing J, Ginty DD, Greenberg ME.
Science
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Calcium activates serum response factor-dependent transcription by a Ras- and Elk-1-independent mechanism that involves a Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent kinase.
Authors: Authors: Miranti CK, Ginty DD, Huang G, Chatila T, Greenberg ME.
Mol Cell Biol
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Serine 133-phosphorylated CREB induces transcription via a cooperative mechanism that may confer specificity to neurotrophin signals.
Authors: Authors: Bonni A, Ginty DD, Dudek H, Greenberg ME.
Mol Cell Neurosci
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L-type voltage-sensitive Ca2+ channel activation regulates c-fos transcription at multiple levels.
Authors: Authors: Thompson MA, Ginty DD, Bonni A, Greenberg ME.
J Biol Chem
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Membrane depolarization and calcium influx stimulate MEK and MAP kinase via activation of Ras.
Authors: Authors: Rosen LB, Ginty DD, Weber MJ, Greenberg ME.
Neuron
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A growth factor-induced kinase phosphorylates the serum response factor at a site that regulates its DNA-binding activity.
Authors: Authors: Rivera VM, Miranti CK, Misra RP, Ginty DD, Chen RH, Blenis J, Greenberg ME.
Mol Cell Biol
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Regulation of gene expression in hippocampal neurons by distinct calcium signaling pathways.
Authors: Authors: Bading H, Ginty DD, Greenberg ME.
Science
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Trans-synaptic regulation of gene expression.
Authors: Authors: Ginty DD, Bading H, Greenberg ME.
Curr Opin Neurobiol
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The activity of cAMP-dependent protein kinase is required at a posttranslational level for induction of voltage-dependent sodium channels by peptide growth factors in PC12 cells.
Authors: Authors: Ginty DD, Fanger GR, Wagner JA, Maue RA.
J Cell Biol
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