Michael Greenberg

Michael Greenberg, Ph.D.

Nathan Marsh Pusey Professor of Neurobiology, Harvard Medical School
Professor of Neurology, Boston Children's Hospital
Director of the Hock E. Tan and K. Lisa Yang Center for Autism Research, Harvard Medical School

Michael Greenberg, Ph.D. – Faculty Profile

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Title: Nathan Marsh Pusey Professor of Neurobiology, Harvard Medical School; Director of the Hock E. Tan and K. Lisa Yang Center for Autism Research, Harvard Medical School; Professor of Neurology, Boston Children's Hospital.

The Aim

The Greenberg Lab studies how life experiences turn genes on or off to shape learning and brain development. The lab focuses on the molecular mechanisms by which sensory experiences regulate gene expression in the brain.

The Impact

This research has illuminated how the brain rewires itself in response to experience, a process essential for learning, memory, and behavior. Several of the genes and pathways the lab has identified are mutated in autism and other neurodevelopmental disorders, positioning this work as foundational for developing new therapies for these conditions.

A Closer Look

Article: State of Stasis , Harvard Medical School / Harvard Gazette, June 2020. This piece describes how Mike Greenberg and colleagues identified a tiny cluster of hypothalamic neurons that can flip mice into and out of a hibernation‑like state, or torpor, revealing brain circuits that dial down body temperature and metabolism and opening avenues for understanding suspended animation and its medical uses.

Article: Decoding Brain Evolution , Harvard Medical School, December 2021. This article highlights Mike Greenberg’s co‑leadership of the Allen Discovery Center for Human Brain Evolution, which links evolutionary genetic variants to their effects in neurons to explain how human brains acquired uniquely human cognitive and behavioral capacities.

Contact

Email: michael_greenberg@hms.harvard.edu
Lab website: greenberg.hms.harvard.edu

Publications View
Activity-dependent transcription and disorders of human cognition.
Authors: Authors: Greer PL, Zieg J, Greenberg ME.
Am J Psychiatry
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Genome-wide analysis of MEF2 transcriptional program reveals synaptic target genes and neuronal activity-dependent polyadenylation site selection.
Authors: Authors: Flavell SW, Kim TK, Gray JM, Harmin DA, Hemberg M, Hong EJ, Markenscoff-Papadimitriou E, Bear DM, Greenberg ME.
Neuron
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A biological function for the neuronal activity-dependent component of Bdnf transcription in the development of cortical inhibition.
Authors: Authors: Hong EJ, McCord AE, Greenberg ME.
Neuron
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Activity-dependent regulation of inhibitory synapse development by Npas4.
Authors: Authors: Lin Y, Bloodgood BL, Hauser JL, Lapan AD, Koon AC, Kim TK, Hu LS, Malik AN, Greenberg ME.
Nature
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From synapse to nucleus: calcium-dependent gene transcription in the control of synapse development and function.
Authors: Authors: Greer PL, Greenberg ME.
Neuron
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SnapShot: Ca(2+)-dependent transcription in neurons.
Authors: Authors: Zieg J, Greer PL, Greenberg ME.
Cell
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Identifying autism loci and genes by tracing recent shared ancestry.
Authors: Authors: Morrow EM, Yoo SY, Flavell SW, Kim TK, Lin Y, Hill RS, Mukaddes NM, Balkhy S, Gascon G, Hashmi A, Al-Saad S, Ware J, Joseph RM, Greenblatt R, Gleason D, Ertelt JA, Apse KA, Bodell A, Partlow JN, Barry B, Yao H, Markianos K, Ferland RJ, Greenberg ME, Walsh CA.
Science
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Developmental axon pruning mediated by BDNF-p75NTR-dependent axon degeneration.
Authors: Authors: Singh KK, Park KJ, Hong EJ, Kramer BM, Greenberg ME, Kaplan DR, Miller FD.
Nat Neurosci
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Medicine. Activating a repressor.
Authors: Authors: Cohen S, Zhou Z, Greenberg ME.
Science
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Identification of molecular markers of bipolar cells in the murine retina.
Authors: Authors: Kim DS, Ross SE, Trimarchi JM, Aach J, Greenberg ME, Cepko CL.
J Comp Neurol
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