Pere Puigserver

Pere Puigserver, Ph.D.

Professor of Cell Biology (Dana-Farber Cancer Institute)
Professor of Cell Biology (HMS)

Pere Puigserver, Ph.D. is Professor of Cell Biology at Harvard Medical School and Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. He received his PhD in Biochemistry from UIB (Spain) that included research at Stockholm University, following postdoctoral work at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. He joined the faculty of Cell Biology at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in 2002 and subsequently returned in 2006 to the Department of Cell Biology (Harvard Medical School) and Cancer Biology (Dana-Farber Cancer Institute).

The Puigserver Lab focuses on the regulatory molecular mechanisms of core metabolic processes that maintain cell homeostasis and phenotypes. The research program of the Puigserver Lab includes main areas such as 1) mitochondrial biology, 2) intermediary metabolism and, 3) cancer metabolism and energetics. In mitochondrial biology, particular interests are in the regulatory mechanisms that control mitochondrial energetics and biogenesis, with implications in a variety of diseases including metabolic and mitochondrial diseases. In intermediary metabolism, a major focus is in liver and adipose cells and their regulatory mechanisms that control nutrient-derived metabolic and energetic activities. In cancer metabolism and energetics, the Puigserver Lab addresses how these processes drive core cancer biology programs such as cell growth, survival and resistance mechanisms.  The Puigserver Lab uses a multidisciplinary experimental design and approaches including chemical and genetic screens in mammalian cells, quantitative metabolomics and proteomics, biochemistry, mouse pre-clinical models of obesity/diabetes, mitochondrial diseases and cancer.    

Dana Farber Cancer Institute

Dept. of Cell Biology, LC-6213

360 Longwood Avenue

Boston, MA 02115

Lab telephone: 617-582-7977

Lab fax: 617-632-5363

A cold-inducible coactivator of nuclear receptors linked to adaptive thermogenesis.
Authors: Authors: Puigserver P, Wu Z, Park CW, Graves R, Wright M, Spiegelman BM.
Cell
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Diminished response to food deprivation of the rat brown adipose tissue mitochondrial uncoupling system with age.
Authors: Authors: Garcia-Palmer FJ, Pericas J, Matamala JC, Puigserver P, Bonet ML, Palou A, Gianotti M.
Biochem Mol Biol Int
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Retinoic acid modulates retinoid X receptor alpha and retinoic acid receptor alpha levels of cultured brown adipocytes.
Authors: Authors: Bonet ML, Puigserver P, Serra F, Ribot J, Vázquez F, Pico C, Palou A.
FEBS Lett
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In vitro and in vivo induction of brown adipocyte uncoupling protein (thermogenin) by retinoic acid.
Authors: Authors: Puigserver P, Vázquez F, Bonet ML, Picó C, Palou A.
Biochem J
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Effect of selective beta-adrenoceptor stimulation on UCP synthesis in primary cultures of brown adipocytes.
Authors: Authors: Puigserver P, Picó C, Stock MJ, Palou A.
Mol Cell Endocrinol
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Cold exposure induces different uncoupling-protein thermogenin masking/unmasking processes in brown adipose tissue depending on mitochondrial subtypes.
Authors: Authors: Moreno M, Puigserver P, Llull J, Gianotti M, Lanni A, Goglia F, Palou A.
Biochem J
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Dietary regulation of fasting-induced mitochondrial protein degradation in adult rat brown adipose tissue.
Authors: Authors: Puigserver P, Palou A, Gianotti M.
Biochem Int
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Induction and degradation of the uncoupling protein thermogenin in brown adipocytes in vitro and in vivo. Evidence for a rapidly degradable pool.
Authors: Authors: Puigserver P, Herron D, Gianotti M, Palou A, Cannon B, Nedergaard J.
Biochem J
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Impaired starvation-induced loss of mitochondrial protein in the brown adipose tissue of dietary obese rats.
Authors: Authors: Puigserver P, Gianotti M, Palou A.
Int J Obes Relat Metab Disord
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Evidence for masking of brown adipose tissue mitochondrial GDP-binding sites in response to fasting in rats made obese by dietary manipulation. Effects of reversion to standard diet.
Authors: Authors: Puigserver P, Lladó I, Palou A, Gianotti M.
Biochem J
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