David Pellman

David Pellman, M.D.

Margaret M. Dyson Professor of Pediatric Oncology (Dana-Farber Cancer Institute)
Professor of Cell Biology (HMS)
HHMI Investigator

David Pellman, M.D. is the Margaret M. Dyson Professor of Pediatric Oncology at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, a Professor of Cell Biology at Harvard Medical School, an Investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, and the Associate Director for Basic Science at the Dana-Farber/Harvard Cancer Center.  He received his undergraduate and medical degrees from the University of Chicago.  During medical school, he did research at the Rockefeller University.  His postdoctoral fellowship was at the Whitehead Institute/Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

The Pellman Lab works on the mechanism of cell division and how certain cell division errors drive rapid genome evolution.  The normal processes studied in the laboratory have included spindle positioning and asymmetric cell division, the mechanism of spindle assembly and cytokinesis, and the mechanism of nuclear envelope assembly and how it is coordinated with chromosome segregation.  The mutational processes studied in David’s group are particularly important for cancer, but have relevance for genome evolution in other contexts.  Current projects include: the mechanism of a newly discovered mutational process called “chromothripsis”, how the architecture and integrity of the nuclear envelope impacts genome maintenance, and the role of cytoplasmic chromatin in triggering innate immune proinflammatory signaling. The lab uses a variety of approaches which include, molecular genetics, biochemistry, and imaging.  Currently there is a heavy emphasis on using a combination of live-cell imaging and single-cell genome sequencing developed in the lab (“Look-Seq”) to relate the consequences of cell division errors to genome alterations. 

Dana Farber Cancer Institute

Dept. of Pediatrics, Mayer-612

450 Brookline Ave

Boston, MA 02115

Lab phone: 617-632-4918

Lab fax: 617-632-5363

Yeast formins Bni1 and Bnr1 utilize different modes of cortical interaction during the assembly of actin cables.
Authors: Authors: Buttery SM, Yoshida S, Pellman D.
Mol Biol Cell
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Tetraploidy, aneuploidy and cancer.
Authors: Authors: Ganem NJ, Storchova Z, Pellman D.
Curr Opin Genet Dev
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Cell biology: aneuploidy and cancer.
Authors: Authors: Pellman D.
Nature
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Genome-wide genetic analysis of polyploidy in yeast.
Authors: Authors: Storchová Z, Breneman A, Cande J, Dunn J, Burbank K, O'Toole E, Pellman D.
Nature
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Plus end-specific depolymerase activity of Kip3, a kinesin-8 protein, explains its role in positioning the yeast mitotic spindle.
Authors: Authors: Gupta ML, Carvalho P, Roof DM, Pellman D.
Nat Cell Biol
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Polo-like kinase Cdc5 controls the local activation of Rho1 to promote cytokinesis.
Authors: Authors: Yoshida S, Kono K, Lowery DM, Bartolini S, Yaffe MB, Ohya Y, Pellman D.
Science
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Cytokinesis failure generating tetraploids promotes tumorigenesis in p53-null cells.
Authors: Authors: Fujiwara T, Bandi M, Nitta M, Ivanova EV, Bronson RT, Pellman D.
Nature
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MEN signaling: daughter bound pole must escape her mother to be fully active.
Authors: Authors: Yoshida S, Guillet M, Pellman D.
Dev Cell
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Mitotic spindle: laser microsurgery in yeast cells.
Authors: Authors: Carvalho P, Pellman D.
Curr Biol
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Defects arising from whole-genome duplications in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.
Authors: Authors: Andalis AA, Storchova Z, Styles C, Galitski T, Pellman D, Fink GR.
Genetics
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