Steven Gygi, Ph.D.

Steven Gygi, Ph.D.

Professor of Cell Biology (HMS)
C-523C

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

Genomic and proteomic profiling reveals reduced mitochondrial function and disruption of the neuromuscular junction driving rat sarcopenia.
Authors: Authors: Ibebunjo C, Chick JM, Kendall T, Eash JK, Li C, Zhang Y, Vickers C, Wu Z, Clarke BA, Shi J, Cruz J, Fournier B, Brachat S, Gutzwiller S, Ma Q, Markovits J, Broome M, Steinkrauss M, Skuba E, Galarneau JR, Gygi SP, Glass DJ.
Mol Cell Biol
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Cooperative interaction between phosphorylation sites on PERIOD maintains circadian period in Drosophila.
Authors: Authors: Garbe DS, Fang Y, Zheng X, Sowcik M, Anjum R, Gygi SP, Sehgal A.
PLoS Genet
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A multi-parametric flow cytometric assay to analyze DNA-protein interactions.
Authors: Authors: Arbab M, Mahony S, Cho H, Chick JM, Rolfe PA, van Hoff JP, Morris VW, Gygi SP, Maas RL, Gifford DK, Sherwood RI.
Nucleic Acids Res
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The deacetylase Sirt6 activates the acetyltransferase GCN5 and suppresses hepatic gluconeogenesis.
Authors: Authors: Dominy JE, Lee Y, Jedrychowski MP, Chim H, Jurczak MJ, Camporez JP, Ruan HB, Feldman J, Pierce K, Mostoslavsky R, Denu JM, Clish CB, Yang X, Shulman GI, Gygi SP, Puigserver P.
Mol Cell
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Network-based inference from complex proteomic mixtures using SNIPE.
Authors: Authors: Nusinow DP, Kiezun A, O'Connell DJ, Chick JM, Yue Y, Maas RL, Gygi SP, Sunyaev SR.
Bioinformatics
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Accurate multiplexed proteomics at the MS2 level using the complement reporter ion cluster.
Authors: Authors: Wühr M, Haas W, McAlister GC, Peshkin L, Rad R, Kirschner MW, Gygi SP.
Anal Chem
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Phosphorylation of the eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4E-transporter (4E-T) by c-Jun N-terminal kinase promotes stress-dependent P-body assembly.
Authors: Authors: Cargnello M, Tcherkezian J, Dorn JF, Huttlin EL, Maddox PS, Gygi SP, Roux PP.
Mol Cell Biol
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Alternative RISC assembly: binding and repression of microRNA-mRNA duplexes by human Ago proteins.
Authors: Authors: Janas MM, Wang B, Harris AS, Aguiar M, Shaffer JM, Subrahmanyam YV, Behlke MA, Wucherpfennig KW, Gygi SP, Gagnon E, Novina CD.
RNA
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Mycobacterium tuberculosis prokaryotic ubiquitin-like protein-deconjugating enzyme is an unusual aspartate amidase.
Authors: Authors: Burns KE, McAllister FE, Schwerdtfeger C, Mintseris J, Cerda-Maira F, Noens EE, Wilmanns M, Hubbard SR, Melandri F, Ovaa H, Gygi SP, Darwin KH.
J Biol Chem
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FUS-SMN protein interactions link the motor neuron diseases ALS and SMA.
Authors: Authors: Yamazaki T, Chen S, Yu Y, Yan B, Haertlein TC, Carrasco MA, Tapia JC, Zhai B, Das R, Lalancette-Hebert M, Sharma A, Chandran S, Sullivan G, Nishimura AL, Shaw CE, Gygi SP, Shneider NA, Maniatis T, Reed R.
Cell Rep
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