David Van Vactor

David Van Vactor, Ph.D.

Professor of Cell Biology
Director, Biological and Biomedical Sciences Graduate Program (HMS)
Director, Curriculum Fellows Program (HMS)

David Van Vactor, Ph.D. is a Professor of Cell Biology in the Blavatnik Institute at Harvard Medical School (HMS) and a member of the Program in Neuroscience and the DFCI/Harvard Cancer Center. He is the Faculty Director of the HMS Curriculum Fellows program and Director/PI of Harvard’s Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Dynamics (MCD2) T32 PhD training program. He is also a Visiting Professor at the Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology (OIST) Graduate University in Japan.  Dr. Van Vactor received his B.A. in Behavioral Biology at the Johns Hopkins University and his Ph.D. from the Department of Biological Chemistry at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), before post-doctoral research at the University of California, Berkeley.

The Van Vactor Lab is focused on understanding the development, maintenance and plasticity of neuromuscular connectivity in the model organism Drosophila. The coordinated morphogenesis of the synapse, fundamental unit of cell-cell communication in neural networks, requires many layers of regulatory mechanisms.  Genome-wide enhancer/suppressor screens to define the molecular machinery controlling neuromuscular junction development (NMJ) led us to multiple translational regulators, including a number of microRNA (miR) genes. Because the fly NMJ has served so well for genetic analysis of synapse development and function in many labs, we have a sophisticated knowledge of underling pathways and gene networks, thus making this a system particularly well suited to explore upstream regulatory logic. Using conditional genetic tools to manipulate the function of conserved miRs and their target genes, we have identified several novel regulatory pathways.  In addition, through a close and long-term collaboration with the Artavanis-Tsakonas Lab, we have worked to better understand developmental and age-dependent degeneration of the neuromuscular system using a variety of models for human disease in Drosophila.

Harvard Medical School

Dept. of Cell Biology, LHRRB 314

240 Longwood Avenue

Boston, MA 02115

Lab telephone: 617-432-2195

Lab fax: 617-432-1144

Growth cone-specific functions of XMAP215 in restricting microtubule dynamics and promoting axonal outgrowth.
Authors: Authors: Lowery LA, Stout A, Faris AE, Ding L, Baird MA, Davidson MW, Danuser G, Van Vactor D.
Neural Dev
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Retrograde BMP signaling at the synapse: a permissive signal for synapse maturation and activity-dependent plasticity.
Authors: Authors: Berke B, Wittnam J, McNeill E, Van Vactor DL, Keshishian H.
J Neurosci
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Genetic and functional studies implicate synaptic overgrowth and ring gland cAMP/PKA signaling defects in the Drosophila melanogaster neurofibromatosis-1 growth deficiency.
Authors: Authors: Walker JA, Gouzi JY, Long JB, Huang S, Maher RC, Xia H, Khalil K, Ray A, Van Vactor D, Bernards R, Bernards A.
PLoS Genet
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Drosophila semaphorin2b is required for the axon guidance of a subset of embryonic neurons.
Authors: Authors: Emerson MM, Long JB, Van Vactor D.
Dev Dyn
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Genetic circuitry of Survival motor neuron, the gene underlying spinal muscular atrophy.
Authors: Authors: Sen A, Dimlich DN, Guruharsha KG, Kankel MW, Hori K, Yokokura T, Brachat S, Richardson D, Loureiro J, Sivasankaran R, Curtis D, Davidow LS, Rubin LL, Hart AC, Van Vactor D, Artavanis-Tsakonas S.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
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Catalyzing curriculum evolution in graduate science education.
Authors: Authors: Gutlerner JL, Van Vactor D.
Cell
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Multiparametric analysis of CLASP-interacting protein functions during interphase microtubule dynamics.
Authors: Authors: Long JB, Bagonis M, Lowery LA, Lee H, Danuser G, Van Vactor D.
Mol Cell Biol
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MicroRNA-276a functions in ellipsoid body and mushroom body neurons for naive and conditioned olfactory avoidance in Drosophila.
Authors: Authors: Li W, Cressy M, Qin H, Fulga T, Van Vactor D, Dubnau J.
J Neurosci
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Embryonic and larval neural connectivity: progressive changes in synapse form and function at the neuromuscular junction mediated by cytoskeletal regulation.
Authors: Authors: Long JB, Van Vactor D.
Wiley Interdiscip Rev Dev Biol
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Neural Explant Cultures from Xenopus laevis.
Authors: Authors: Lowery LA, Faris AE, Stout A, Van Vactor D.
J Vis Exp
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