Filter by Last Name or Area of Research
Susan L. Cotman, PhD
Assistant in Neuroscience, Massachusetts General Hospital
Assistant Professor of Neurology, Harvard Medical School
The Cotman laboratory’s research is focused on understanding the role of the endosomal-lysosomal system in human disease, with a particular emphasis on NCL (Batten disease), the most common cause of neurodegeneration in childhood that also more rarely affects adults.
Mark J. Daly, PhD
Chief, ATGU, Massachusetts General Hospital
Associate Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School
The Daly Lab focuses on computational approaches to understanding the genetics of human disease using integrative genomics approaches. The lab has extensive experience in linkage and association analysis, with a focus on developing statistical methods for the design and interpretation of association studies, and applying these approaches specifically to major common disease areas such as neuropsychiatric disease, inflammatory bowel and autoimmune diseases, and diabetes.
Alysa E. Doyle, PhD
Psychologist, Massachusetts General Hospital
Assistant Professor of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School
We study neuropsychiatric illness and related outcomes across the lifespan. Our research aims to promote a better understanding of the development of neuropsychiatric illness across the lifespan by investigating risk mechanisms, phenotypic variation, and moderators of youth trajectories.
Florian Eichler, MD
Director, Center for Rare Neurological Diseases, Massachusetts General Hospital
Professor of Neurology, Harvard Medical School
Katherine B. Sims Chair in Neurogenetics
Our laboratory at MGH explores the relationship of mutant genes to specific biochemical defects and their contribution to neurodegeneration. To develop novel treatments, our laboratory assesses the consequences of disease causing genes.
Jose C. Florez, MD, PhD
Chief, Endocrine Division and Diabetes Unit, Massachusetts General Hospital
Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School
The Florez lab aims to unravel the genetic basis of type 2 diabetes, related metabolic traits and its vascular complications, and provide the rationale for effective, precision-tailored therapies. The overarching goal is to bring the clinical treatment of diabetes and its complications into the new paradigm of molecular medicine, using genomic, metabolomic, experimental, physiological and pharmacogenetic approaches.
Yulia Grishchuk, PhD
Assistant Investigator, Massachusetts General Hospital
Assistant Professor of Neurology, Harvard Medical School
Our research is focused on pre-clinical studies and biomarker discovery for rare pediatric neurologic diseases with high unmet need to enable further development of therapies. Our therapeutic strategies have been focused on use of adeno-associated viral vectors for optimized transduction and transgene delivery to central nervous system, including brain, retina, and optic nerve.
James F. Gusella, PhD
Research Staff, Massachusetts General Hospital
Bullard Professor of Neurogenetics in the Department of Genetics, Harvard Medical School
Dr. Gusella’s laboratory is currently pursuing collaborative studies at all stages of the genetic research cycle aimed at discovering genes that cause, predispose to or modify neurological and behavioral disorders or caused abnormal development in subjects with balanced chromosomal aberrations and developmental phenotypes, delineating mechanisms of pathogenesis and modifiers in Huntington’s disease, the neurofibromatosis, and autism and exploring the potential for mechanism-based treatments.
Hailiang Huang, PhD
Assistant Investigator, Massachusetts General Hospital
Assistant Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School
The Huang Lab develops and applies cutting-edge statistical genetics and computational techniques to understand the genetic architecture of human complex disorders, especially autoimmune and psychiatric disorders. We are especially interested in novel methods to leverage cross-ancestry genomics data for insights into the disease pathogenesis.
Konrad J. Karczewski, PhD
Assistant in Investigation, Massachusetts General Hospital
Instructor in Medicine, Harvard Medical School
Our research is focused on interpreting putative disease variants in common and rare diseases to improve our understanding of human disease and the regulation of the human genome. We do so by assembling and analyzing massive public datasets of genetic variation and functional genomics, building scalable tools and methods to keep pace with the exponential growth of these data types.
Phil H. Lee, PhD
Associate Professor, Massachusetts General Hospital
Associate Professor, Harvard Medical School
We use computational and statistical approaches to understand the genetic bases of complex neuropsychiatric traits and mental disorders. Multivariate pathway analysis forms the backbone of our research on identifying disease risk genes and mechanisms. We also apply multi-modal data analysis integrating genomic and neuroimaging data.
Marcy E. MacDonald, PhD
Research (Non-Clinical) Staff, Massachusetts General Hospital
Professor of Neurology, Harvard Medical School
Our research, evolving from the discovery of the genetic causes of inherited brain disorders (hereditary spastic paraparesis, neurofibromatosis, neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis, Huntington’s disease), is now largely focused on the DNA variants that modify the effects of the unstable expanded CAG repeat that causes Huntington’s disease. We do molecular genetic studies with disease and population cohorts and genetically precise model systems. Our goal is to enable timely intervention, diagnosis and disease-management.
Alicia Martin, PhD
Assistant Investigator, Massachusetts General Hospital
Assistant Professor, Harvard Medical School
As a population and statistical genetics lab, our research examines the role of human history in shaping global genetic and phenotypic diversity. Given vast Eurocentric study biases, we investigate the generalizability of knowledge gained from large-scale genetic studies across globally diverse populations. We are focused on ensuring that the translation of genetic technologies particularly via polygenic risk does not exacerbate health disparities induced by these study biases. Towards this end, we are developing statistical methods, community resources for genomics, and research capacity for multi-ancestry studies especially in underrepresented populations.
Patricia L. Musolino, MD, PhD
Physician-Scientist, Massachusetts General Hospital
Assistant Professor of Neurology, Harvard Medical School
The Musolino Laboratory at the Center for Genomic Medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School is a translational neuroscience laboratory focusing on developing gene targeted therapies for inherited inborn errors of metabolism and cerebrovascular disorders that lead to stroke and leukodystrophy.
Pradeep Natarajan, MD, MMSc
Director of Preventive Cardiology, Massachusetts General Hospital
Associate Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School
The Natarajan Lab focuses on the germline and somatic genetic drivers of human atherosclerosis applying advances in genomic profiling with concomitant methods development. The interdisciplinary group spans human genetics, computational biology, and clinical medicine. The lab spearheads and contributes to several research consortia, often spanning hundreds of investigators and millions of participants to achieve project goals.
Aarno Palotie
Lecturer, Harvard Medical School
Group Leader, Massachusetts General Hospital
Understanding disease genetics using the Finnish founder population
Roy H. Perlis, MD
Associate Chief for Research, Department of Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital
Professor of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School
Our lab focuses on developing clinical and genomic predictors of treatment response, and on developing novel therapeutics based on cellular models of brain disease. We use cellular modeling, transcriptomics, clinical phenotyping, and small molecule screening to study psychiatric disorders including schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and depression.
Vijaya Ramesh, PhD
Neuroscientist, Massachusetts General Hospital
Professor of Neurology, Harvard Medical School
My lab has been primarily working on understanding the pathophysiology of two different inherited neurocutaneous syndromes, Neurofibromatosis 2 (NF2) and Tuberous Sclerosis Complex (TSC). We have collaborative studies with investigators outside MGH for these studies. We also collaborate with Dr. Xandra Breakefield and Dr. Casey Maguire labs for gene therapy studies of NF2 and TSC.
Heidi L. Rehm, PhD
Chief Genomics Officer, Massachusetts General Hospital
Professor of Pathology, Harvard Medical School
The Translational Genomics Group (TGG) has a mission to support the discovery of the genetic basis of rare disease and translate our work into medical practice by focusing on community-centered projects that promote collaboration, data sharing and open science. Heidi Rehm leads the TGG, with co-leadership by Anne O’Donnell-Luria for the rare disease group and Mark Daly for the gnomAD project. TGG is composed of a multidisciplinary team of researchers, clinicians, computational biologists, and software engineers. We are located at Massachusetts General Hospital and the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard.
Kaitlin E. Samocha, PhD
Assistant Investigator, Massachusetts General Hospital
Our group studies patterns of rare genetic variation in large collections of human genomic data, both from patients and reference population individuals, and designs tools and methods to help interpret that variation. We are focused on moving from studying single variants at a time to understanding how they impact disease in their genomic context.
Jeremiah M. Scharf, MD, PhD
Physician-Scientist, Massachusetts General Hospital
Assistant Professor of Neurology, Harvard Medical School
The Scharf lab investigates the genetic and neurobiological mechanisms of Tourette Syndrome (TS) and related developmental neuropsychiatric disorders that lie at the interface between traditional concepts of neurologic and psychiatric disease, including obsessive compulsive spectrum disorders (OCD/OCSD) and attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). We conduct genetic and clinical research to identify both genetic and non-genetic risk factors that contribute to the predisposition of TS, ADHD, and OCD in patients and families. We hope to identify novel targets for treatment, to understand the course of TS and related conditions at a patient-specific level, and to better predict treatment response.
Susan A. Slaugenhaupt, PhD
Professor of Neurology (Genetics), Harvard Medical School
Investigator, Massachusetts General Hospital
My research focuses on two neurological disorders, familial dysautonomia (FD) and mucolipidosis type IV (MLIV), as well as the common cardiac disorder mitral valve prolapse (MVP). Our work is focused on gene discovery and therapeutic development, specifically targeting mRNA splicing.
Jordan W. Smoller, MD, ScD
MGH Trustees Endowed Chair in Psychiatric Neuroscience, Massachusetts General Hospital
MGH Trustees Endowed Chair in Psychiatric Neuroscience, Massachusetts General Hospital
Professor of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School
The focus of Dr. Smoller’s research interests has been:
- Understanding the genetic and environmental determinants of psychiatric disorders across the lifespan.
- Integrating genomics and neuroscience to unravel how genes affect brain structure and function.
- Using “big data”, including electronic health records and genomics, to advance precision medicine.
Alexander Soukas, MD, PhD
Associate Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School
Associate Professor of Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital
Aging is the single, greatest contributor to nearly every disease and condition that affects us after our youth. Diabetes, obesity, heart disease, stroke, cancer, osteoporosis, and dementia are all diseases of aging. In the Soukas Laboratory, we endeavor to figure out how things go wrong in the cells of the body in aging, and more excitingly, how to fix what goes wrong. Our findings have the ability to impact not one, but nearly every disease that impacts humankind. We have the major goal of identifying molecular “switches” that can be thrown to turn back the clock on the aging process, promoting healthy aging and staving off aging-associated diseases.
David A. Sweetser MD, PhD
Pediatrician, Massachusetts General Hospital
Assistant Professor of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School
The Sweetser Lab has two areas of focus. One is rare disease work. Our work with the Undiagnosed Diseases Network takes a deep dive into phenotyping, evaluations, and genome sequencing, and functional characterization to identify novel genetic disorders. We also have focused projects in Pitt Hopkins syndrome, IQSEC2, and epileptic encephalopathies with Natural History studies and creating patient derived stem cell models. The second area of research seeks to characterize the leukemic stem cell niche and develop targeted cancer therapies.
Michael E. Talkowski, PhD
Associate Investigator, Massachusetts General Hospital
Associate Professor of Neurology, Harvard Medical School
The Talkowski lab integrates molecular and computational genomics methods to study the genetic etiology of disorders affecting prenatal, neonatal, and early childhood development, as well as neurodevelopmental and psychiatric disorders. Our lab is also interested in variant-to-function studies to understand genomic perturbations to regulatory pathways in rare diseases and the applications of emerging technologies to clinical diagnostic screening.
Miriam Udler, MD, PhD
Assistant Professor, Harvard Medical School
Attending in Endocrinology, Massachusetts General Hospital
Director, MGH Diabetes Genetics Clinic
We focus on advancing precision diagnosis and management of metabolic diseases.
Vanessa C. Wheeler, PhD
Research Geneticist, Massachusetts General Hospital
Associate Professor of Neurology, Harvard Medical School
Repeat expansion diseases such as Huntington’s disease (HD) are characterized by the instability of their causative repeat mutations. The inherited repeat undergoes further somatic expansion that drives disease pathogenesis. Our lab uses patients and model systems to characterize and uncover the underlying modifiers and mechanisms of repeat instability in order to identify targets for disease-modifying therapies.