The Department of Neurobiology at Harvard Medical School is located in the Longwood Medical Area of Boston, MA.[1][2] The Department is part of the Basic Research Program at Harvard Medical School, with research pertaining to development of the nervous system, sensory neuroscience, neurophysiology, and behavior. The Department was founded by Stephen W. Kuffler in 1966, the first department dedicated to neurobiology in the world. The mission of the department is “to understand the workings of the brain through basic research and to use that knowledge to work toward preventive and therapeutic methods that alleviate neurological diseases”.[3]
History
Prior to moving to Boston, while at Johns Hopkins University, Kuffler recruited Torsten N. Wiesel, David Hubel, David Potter, and Edwin Furshpan to work on various aspects of nerve physiology. As Hubel later recounted, Wiesel, Hubel, and Kuffler "...represented central nervous system physiology; Furshpan and Potter (and of course Steve) represented synaptic physiology; and Ed Kravitz, representing neurochemistry, arrived soon after our move to Harvard."[4]
The group moved to Harvard Medical School in 1959 as a sub-department within the Department of Pharmacology, headed by Otto Krayer. In 1966, Kuffler came up with the term neurobiology to unite these sub-disciplines into the first-ever Department of Neurobiology, an independent department at Harvard Medical School. Hubel later said, “I can’t be absolutely certain how the term neurobiology originated, but I believe Steve Kuffler invented it when we had to think up a title for our department when it was founded on 1965. That he almost single-handedly invented the field of neurobiology, I think few would dispute.”[5]
Early on, the founders of the department worked to recruit students and researchers to work in their laboratories, and paid special attention to recruiting with a social conscience. According to David Potter, "There’s another fact of the department that interests me personally, [that] has to do with our involvement in acceptance of medical students who were minorities… it was something new, and it was a political struggle and that made it very interesting. I spent a lot of time there, time that I should have been spending in the lab doing science and research, on admissions and recruiting, and I got kind of devoted to that. I don’t regret that at all, it was an education for me."[6]
Wiesel chaired the department from 1973, and was succeeded by David Potter in 1982, Gerald Fishbach in 1990, and Carla Shatz in 2000 (the first woman to chair such a department). In 2008, Michael E. Greenberg assumed the position of Department chair, a position he held until 2022. Under his leadership, he has integrated Harvard Neurobiology with neuroscience in the Harvard-affiliated hospitals, such as Boston Children’s Hospital, Dana-Farber Cancer Center, Massachusetts General Hospital, and the Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary. To further facilitate the interaction and collaboration of neuroscientists at Harvard University in Cambridge, MA and Harvard Medical School, the Harvard Brain Initiative, co-chaired by Michael Greenberg and Joshua Sanes, funds collaborations and research initiatives specifically between members of the Department faculty and other neuroscientists at Harvard University.[7]
David D. Ginty assumed the role of chair in 2022.
In October 2016, current and past faculty, students, and researchers will gather in Boston to celebrate the 50th Anniversary of the founding of the Department.
Notable contributions to neurobiology
Receptive fields in visual cortex: pioneering work on the selective responses of retinal ganglion cells by Kuffler
^Wiesel, T. N.; Hubel, D. H. (1963-11-01). "Effects of Visual Deprivation on Morphology and Physiology of Cells in the Cat's Lateral Geniculate Body". Journal of Neurophysiology. 26 (6): 978–993. doi:10.1152/jn.1963.26.6.978. ISSN0022-3077. PMID14084170.
^Kravitz, E. A.; Potter, D. D.; Van Gelder, N. M. (1962-04-28). "Gamma-aminobutyric acid and other blocking substances extracted from crab muscle". Nature. 194 (4826): 382–383. doi:10.1038/194382b0. ISSN0028-0836. PMID14459471.
^Woolf, CJ (1983). "Evidence for a central component of post-injury pain hypersensitivity". Nature. 306 (5944): 686–8. doi:10.1038/306686a0. PMID6656869.
^Sabatini BL, Regehr WG (1996). "Timing of neurotransmission at fast synapses in the mammalian brain". Nature. 384 (6605): 170–2. doi:10.1038/384170a0. PMID8906792.
^Binshtok, Alexander M.; Bean, Bruce P.; Woolf, Clifford J. (2007-10-04). "Inhibition of nociceptors by TRPV1-mediated entry of impermeant sodium channel blockers". Nature. 449 (7162): 607–610. doi:10.1038/nature06191. ISSN1476-4687. PMID17914397.