Stephen Liberles

Stephen Liberles, Ph.D.

Professor of Cell Biology, Harvard Medical School
Tutor in Molecular and Cellular Biology, Faculty of Arts & Sciences

Stephen Liberles, Ph.D. is a Professor and HHMI Investigator in the Cell Biology Department at Harvard Medical School. Dr. Liberles received an undergraduate degree in Chemistry from Harvard in 1994, and a Ph.D. in Chemistry and Chemical Biology from Harvard in 1999, working in the lab of Stuart Schreiber. He then performed post-doctoral work in the lab of Linda Buck, first at Harvard Medical School and then at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle.

The Liberles Lab focuses on the molecular neuroscience of sensory systems, including olfaction, pheromone sensing, taste, and internal organ senses of the vagus nerve. Some discoveries from his lab include characterizing non-classical families of olfactory receptors, odors and pheromones that stimulate innate behaviors, vagus nerve cell types that selectively control autonomic physiology, and mechanisms underlying sensation within internal organs, including airway stretch and changes in aortic blood pressure.

Harvard Medical School

Dept. of Cell Biology, LHRRB 601A

240 Longwood Avenue

Boston, MA 02115

Lab phone: 617-432-7283

Lab fax: 617-432-7285

Aversion and attraction through olfaction.
Authors: Authors: Li Q, Liberles SD.
Curr Biol
View full abstract on Pubmed
Transcriptional profiling at whole population and single cell levels reveals somatosensory neuron molecular diversity.
Authors: Authors: Chiu IM, Barrett LB, Williams EK, Strochlic DE, Lee S, Weyer AD, Lou S, Bryman GS, Roberson DP, Ghasemlou N, Piccoli C, Ahat E, Wang V, Cobos EJ, Stucky CL, Ma Q, Liberles SD, Woolf CJ.
Elife
View full abstract on Pubmed
Sensory biology. Evolution of sweet taste perception in hummingbirds by transformation of the ancestral umami receptor.
Authors: Authors: Baldwin MW, Toda Y, Nakagita T, O'Connell MJ, Klasing KC, Misaka T, Edwards SV, Liberles SD.
Science
View full abstract on Pubmed
An excitatory paraventricular nucleus to AgRP neuron circuit that drives hunger.
Authors: Authors: Krashes MJ, Shah BP, Madara JC, Olson DP, Strochlic DE, Garfield AS, Vong L, Pei H, Watabe-Uchida M, Uchida N, Liberles SD, Lowell BB.
Nature
View full abstract on Pubmed
Mammalian pheromones.
Authors: Authors: Liberles SD.
Annu Rev Physiol
View full abstract on Pubmed
High-affinity olfactory receptor for the death-associated odor cadaverine.
Authors: Authors: Hussain A, Saraiva LR, Ferrero DM, Ahuja G, Krishna VS, Liberles SD, Korsching SI.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
View full abstract on Pubmed
A juvenile mouse pheromone inhibits sexual behaviour through the vomeronasal system.
Authors: Authors: Ferrero DM, Moeller LM, Osakada T, Horio N, Li Q, Roy DS, Cichy A, Spehr M, Touhara K, Liberles SD.
Nature
View full abstract on Pubmed
Animal behavior: shifting neural circuits with sex hormones.
Authors: Authors: Ferrero DM, Liberles SD.
Curr Biol
View full abstract on Pubmed
Synchronous evolution of an odor biosynthesis pathway and behavioral response.
Authors: Authors: Li Q, Korzan WJ, Ferrero DM, Chang RB, Roy DS, Buchi M, Lemon JK, Kaur AW, Stowers L, Fendt M, Liberles SD.
Curr Biol
View full abstract on Pubmed
Neurons expressing trace amine-associated receptors project to discrete glomeruli and constitute an olfactory subsystem.
Authors: Authors: Johnson MA, Tsai L, Roy DS, Valenzuela DH, Mosley C, Magklara A, Lomvardas S, Liberles SD, Barnea G.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
View full abstract on Pubmed