Steven Gygi, Ph.D.

Steven Gygi, Ph.D.

Professor of Cell Biology (HMS)

Steven Gygi, Ph.D., received his Ph.D. from the University of Utah in Pharmacology and Toxicology performing small molecule mass spectrometry.  He went on to pursue postdoctoral work with Ruedi Aebersold at the University of Washington in 1996.  A revolution in biological mass spectrometry was occurring which allowed for the measurement of protein expression levels and a new field, Proteomics, was born.  In 2000, Dr. Gygi moved to Harvard Medical School and joined the Department of Cell Biology.  Currently, he is the faculty director of two MS core facilities (Taplin Biological MS Facility, and the Thermo Fisher Center for Multiplexed Proteomics—TCMP@HMS).

Research in the Gygi lab centers around developing and applying new technologies in the field of mass spectrometry-based proteomics.  These include the systematic and proteome-wide measurements of many protein properties including their expression levels, modification states, structure, localization, function, and interactions.  For example, the Gygi lab, together with the Harper lab at HMS, is creating a genome-scale map of the protein-protein interaction landscape in cells (termed BioPlex).  In addition, sample multiplexing techniques like Tandem Mass Tags (TMT) are being improved to allow up to 16 proteomics samples to be analyzed simultaneously using high resolution mass spectrometry.

Harvard Medical School

Dept. of Cell Biology, C-523B

240 Longwood Avenue

Boston, MA 02115

Lab telephone: 617-432-3155

Deep proteomics of the Xenopus laevis egg using an mRNA-derived reference database.
Authors: Authors: Wühr M, Freeman RM, Presler M, Horb ME, Peshkin L, Gygi S, Kirschner MW.
Curr Biol
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Promoter decommissioning by the NuRD chromatin remodeling complex triggers synaptic connectivity in the mammalian brain.
Authors: Authors: Yamada T, Yang Y, Hemberg M, Yoshida T, Cho HY, Murphy JP, Fioravante D, Regehr WG, Gygi SP, Georgopoulos K, Bonni A.
Neuron
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Prolyl hydroxylation by EglN2 destabilizes FOXO3a by blocking its interaction with the USP9x deubiquitinase.
Authors: Authors: Zheng X, Zhai B, Koivunen P, Shin SJ, Lu G, Liu J, Geisen C, Chakraborty AA, Moslehi JJ, Smalley DM, Wei X, Chen X, Chen Z, Beres JM, Zhang J, Tsao JL, Brenner MC, Zhang Y, Fan C, DePinho RA, Paik J, Gygi SP, Kaelin WG, Zhang Q.
Genes Dev
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SUMOylation of Psmd1 controls Adrm1 interaction with the proteasome.
Authors: Authors: Ryu H, Gygi SP, Azuma Y, Arnaoutov A, Dasso M.
Cell Rep
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iPSC-derived neurons from GBA1-associated Parkinson's disease patients show autophagic defects and impaired calcium homeostasis.
Authors: Authors: Schöndorf DC, Aureli M, McAllister FE, Hindley CJ, Mayer F, Schmid B, Sardi SP, Valsecchi M, Hoffmann S, Schwarz LK, Hedrich U, Berg D, Shihabuddin LS, Hu J, Pruszak J, Gygi SP, Sonnino S, Gasser T, Deleidi M.
Nat Commun
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Meteorin-like is a hormone that regulates immune-adipose interactions to increase beige fat thermogenesis.
Authors: Authors: Rao RR, Long JZ, White JP, Svensson KJ, Lou J, Lokurkar I, Jedrychowski MP, Ruas JL, Wrann CD, Lo JC, Camera DM, Lachey J, Gygi S, Seehra J, Hawley JA, Spiegelman BM.
Cell
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Quantitative temporal viromics: an approach to investigate host-pathogen interaction.
Authors: Authors: Weekes MP, Tomasec P, Huttlin EL, Fielding CA, Nusinow D, Stanton RJ, Wang EC, Aicheler R, Murrell I, Wilkinson GW, Lehner PJ, Gygi SP.
Cell
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Post-transcriptional regulation of meiotic genes by a nuclear RNA silencing complex.
Authors: Authors: Egan ED, Braun CR, Gygi SP, Moazed D.
RNA
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Quantitative phosphoproteomic analysis reveals system-wide signaling pathways downstream of SDF-1/CXCR4 in breast cancer stem cells.
Authors: Authors: Yi T, Zhai B, Yu Y, Kiyotsugu Y, Raschle T, Etzkorn M, Seo HC, Nagiec M, Luna RE, Reinherz EL, Blenis J, Gygi SP, Wagner G.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
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Autoubiquitination of the 26S proteasome on Rpn13 regulates breakdown of ubiquitin conjugates.
Authors: Authors: Besche HC, Sha Z, Kukushkin NV, Peth A, Hock EM, Kim W, Gygi S, Gutierrez JA, Liao H, Dick L, Goldberg AL.
EMBO J
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