Middle‑aged person with short, dark, wavy hair smiles softly at the camera. They are wearing a dark blue shirt, and the background shows a bright room with large windows and blurred office equipment.”

Thomas Schwarz, Ph.D.

Professor of Neurology and Neurobiology in the Department of Neurology
Boston Children's Hospital

Thomas Schwarz, Ph.D. – Faculty Profile

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Title: Professor of Neurology and Neurobiology in the Department of Neurology, Boston Children's Hospital.

The Aim

The Schwarz Lab studies the inner workings of neurons, including how they transport essential materials and how mitochondria sustain them. The lab aims to reveal how breakdowns in these processes contribute to disorders such as Parkinson’s disease and optic neuropathy.

The Impact

The Schwarz Lab investigates how nerve cells keep their many parts healthy and connected, focusing on how organelles like mitochondria or molecules like RNA are delivered across long distances. By uncovering the basics of nerve cell maintenance and transport, their work sheds light on how failures in these systems can lead to disorders like Parkinson’s disease and neuropathy. Their research bridges fundamental cell biology and neuroscience, helping to reveal how brain cells grow, adapt, and break down in both health and disease.

A Closer Look

Article: How Mitochondria Stay Still in Neurons , The Scientist, March 2024. This article explains how brain cells use a helper protein to hold their “power plants” (mitochondria) in the right spots so they can reliably fuel learning and memory.

Article: New Research Offers Hope to Preserve Vision in Autosomal Dominant Optic Atrophy , News Medical Life Sciences, July 2025. The article describes how Dr. Thomas Schwarz’s team discovered that shutting down a single protein called SARM1 in a mouse model can protect the eye’s vision‑carrying nerve cells, offering a promising new path to preserve sight in people with autosomal dominant optic atrophy.

Contact

Email: thomas.schwarz@childrens.harvard.edu
Lab website: www.schwarzlab.org

Publications View
Genetic manipulation of cardiac K(+) channel function in mice: what have we learned, and where do we go from here?
Authors: Authors: Nerbonne JM, Nichols CG, Schwarz TL, Escande D.
Circ Res
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Absence of junctional glutamate receptor clusters in Drosophila mutants lacking spontaneous transmitter release.
Authors: Authors: Saitoe M, Schwarz TL, Umbach JA, Gundersen CB, Kidokoro Y.
Science
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The consequences of disrupting cardiac inwardly rectifying K(+) current (I(K1)) as revealed by the targeted deletion of the murine Kir2.1 and Kir2.2 genes.
Authors: Authors: Zaritsky JJ, Redell JB, Tempel BL, Schwarz TL.
J Physiol
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Intracellular persistence of Staphylococcus aureus small-colony variants within keratinocytes: a cause for antibiotic treatment failure in a patient with darier's disease.
Authors: Authors: von Eiff C, Becker K, Metze D, Lubritz G, Hockmann J, Schwarz T, Peters G.
Clin Infect Dis
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Inhibition of growth of melanoma cells by CD95 (Fas/APO-1) gene transfer in vivo.
Authors: Authors: Aragane Y, Maeda A, Cui CY, Tezuka T, Kaneda Y, Schwarz T.
J Invest Dermatol
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SNAP-24, a Drosophila SNAP-25 homologue on granule membranes, is a putative mediator of secretion and granule-granule fusion in salivary glands.
Authors: Authors: Niemeyer BA, Schwarz TL.
J Cell Sci
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Targeted disruption of Kir2.1 and Kir2.2 genes reveals the essential role of the inwardly rectifying K(+) current in K(+)-mediated vasodilation.
Authors: Authors: Zaritsky JJ, Eckman DM, Wellman GC, Nelson MT, Schwarz TL.
Circ Res
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Female mice heterozygous for IKK gamma/NEMO deficiencies develop a dermatopathy similar to the human X-linked disorder incontinentia pigmenti.
Authors: Authors: Makris C, Godfrey VL, Krähn-Senftleben G, Takahashi T, Roberts JL, Schwarz T, Feng L, Johnson RS, Karin M.
Mol Cell
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NSF is up to new tricks.
Authors: Authors: Schwarz TL.
Nat Cell Biol
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Flamingo, a seven-pass transmembrane cadherin, regulates planar cell polarity under the control of Frizzled.
Authors: Authors: Usui T, Shima Y, Shimada Y, Hirano S, Burgess RW, Schwarz TL, Takeichi M, Uemura T.
Cell
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