Thomas Schwarz

Thomas Schwarz, Ph.D.

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

The Cell Biology of Neurons

Many fascinating unanswered questions lie at the interface of fundamental cell biology and neuroscience. For example, how do motors control the distribution of organelles? How are organelles supplied and cleared when far from the nucleus? The neuron, because of its extraordinarily complex structure offers special challenges to general cell biological processes.  Solving neurodegenerative disorders may depend on understanding how the neuron meets these challenges.

The Schwarz lab is focused on the cell biology of the neuron and seeks to understand how nerve cells work and keep their distant parts well-supplied and healthy. We do so with the expectation that understanding how the cell functions can give us insight into the pathology of neurological disorders when those functions fail. Moreover, much as the shape and style of a building is constrained and influenced by the properties of the building materials, so too is the architecture and circuitry of the brain dependent on how these cellular components operate.

The research interests of the Schwarz Lab include 1) axonal transport of organelles, particularly mitochondria, by kinesins and dynein; 2) the development and structural plasticity of synapses; and 3) the mechanisms that preserve the quality of axonal components. Our inquiries into these fundamental processes have brought us in contact with translational questions of neurodevelopmental disorders and neurodegenerative diseases. The etiology of Parkinson’s Disease and peripheral neuropathies have become a particular concern of our group.

Projects move back and forth between Drosophila melanogaster, mice, rats, and human cell lines as the scientific question demands. We approach each question through a combination of genetics, biochemistry, electrophysiology, cell biology, pharmacology, and imaging.

Publications View
Cloning of genomic and complementary DNA from Shaker, a putative potassium channel gene from Drosophila.
Authors: Authors: Papazian DM, Schwarz TL, Tempel BL, Jan YN, Jan LY.
Science
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Sequence of a probable potassium channel component encoded at Shaker locus of Drosophila.
Authors: Authors: Tempel BL, Papazian DM, Schwarz TL, Jan YN, Jan LY.
Science
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Proctolin in the lobster nervous system.
Authors: Authors: Siwicki KK, Beltz BS, Schwarz TL, Kravitz EA.
Peptides
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Proctolin in the lobster: the distribution, release, and chemical characterization of a likely neurohormone.
Authors: Authors: Schwarz TL, Lee GM, Siwicki KK, Standaert DG, Kravitz EA.
J Neurosci
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Serotonin-induced protein phosphorylation in a lobster neuromuscular preparation.
Authors: Authors: Goy MF, Schwarz TL, Kravitz EA.
J Neurosci
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Amines and a peptide as neurohormones in lobsters: actions on neuromuscular preparations and preliminary behavioural studies.
Authors: Authors: Kravitz EA, Glusman S, Harris-Warrick RM, Livingstone MS, Schwarz T, Goy MF.
J Exp Biol
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A peptide action in a lobster neuromuscular preparation.
Authors: Authors: Schwarz TL, Harris-Warrick RM, Glusman S, Kravitz EA.
J Neurobiol
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Life Sci Alliance
Authors: Authors: Miro GTPase domains regulate the assembly of the mitochondrial motor-adaptor complex
2023 Jan; 6(1).
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Cell Syst
Authors: Authors: Virtual screening for small-molecule pathway regulators by image-profile matching
2022 Sep 21; 13(9):724-736.e9.
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