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

How Experience Shapes Gene Expression & Connectivity in the Brain

Our interactions with the outside world trigger changes in neurons that are critical for proper brain development and higher cognitive function. Experience-driven neuronal activity shapes gene expression in ways that promote the maturation and refinement of neural circuits.

The Greenberg lab studies precisely how, at a molecular level, neuronal activity controls gene expression and connectivity in the brain. A number of human brain developmental disorders, including autism and Rett syndrome, have now been linked to abnormalities in experience-driven brain pathways. Our lab studies the underlying basis of such neurological disorders.

Beginning in the mid-1980s, with the appreciation that growth factors trigger rapid transcription of an important activity-responsive gene called Fos, we have focused on elucidating the nature and role of neuronal transcriptional programs triggered by extracellular stimuli. In this effort, we have discovered various signaling pathways that convey neurotrophin and calcium-dependent signals from distal synapses (far from the cell body) to the nucleus of neurons, where transcription occurs. We have also studied the role of these activity-regulated transcriptional programs in modulating the plasticity of brain circuits.

Given the strong links between these processes and various human disorders of cognitive function, we continually seek to exploit our molecular insights to advance understanding of clinically relevant neurological conditions. Current projects in the lab include studies of sensory-driven circuit development, the role of enhancer elements in activity-dependent transcriptional responses, human-specific molecular neurobiology and the function of MeCP2, the gene mutated in Rett syndrome.

Publications View
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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N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors are critical for mediating the effects of glutamate on intracellular calcium concentration and immediate early gene expression in cultured hippocampal neurons.
Authors: Authors: Bading H, Segal MM, Sucher NJ, Dudek H, Lipton SA, Greenberg ME.
Neuroscience
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Calcium regulation of gene expression.
Authors: Authors: Rosen LB, Ginty DD, Greenberg ME.
Adv Second Messenger Phosphoprotein Res
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L-type voltage-sensitive calcium channel activation stimulates gene expression by a serum response factor-dependent pathway.
Authors: Authors: Misra RP, Bonni A, Miranti CK, Rivera VM, Sheng M, Greenberg ME.
J Biol Chem
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CREB: a mediator of long-term memory from mollusks to mammals.
Authors: Authors: Frank DA, Greenberg ME.
Cell
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Nerve growth factor activates a Ras-dependent protein kinase that stimulates c-fos transcription via phosphorylation of CREB.
Authors: Authors: Ginty DD, Bonni A, Greenberg ME.
Cell
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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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Requirement for BDNF in activity-dependent survival of cortical neurons.
Authors: Authors: Ghosh A, Carnahan J, Greenberg ME.
Science
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Calcium regulation of gene expression in neuronal cells.
Authors: Authors: Ghosh A, Ginty DD, Bading H, Greenberg ME.
J Neurobiol
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