Featured Story:
Double Agents: How Glial Tumors Take On Interneuronal Identities
January 2, 2025
How do pediatric brain tumors mimic normal brain development, and how can this be leveraged for therapies? Ilon Liu, Mariella Filbin and colleagues find that a specific brain tumor type resembles GABAergic interneuron development, and with this knowledge they identify novel targets against this lethal tumor.
Community Stories
January 13, 2025
Jakob Hartmann and Kerry Ressler share new work uncovering how SKA2, a protein regulating stress-related signaling, interacts with the glucocorticoid receptor to maintain balance in the brain’s stress response. By highlighting altered SKA2 expression in bipolar disorder, this work offers new insights into the molecular underpinnings of stress-related psychiatric conditions and potential pathways for therapeutic intervention.
Original article in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences >
December 10, 2024
Sophie Barton shares new research investigating how humans may have unwittingly altered the brain morphology of domestic dogs through selective breeding for head shape. Dogs with extreme head shapes show widespread reductions in gray matter volume across the brain.
Original article in: Journal of Comparative Neurology >
October 10, 2024
Clifford Woolf shares a perspectives piece about what scientists can learn from the opioid crisis as they develop new pain treatments. The piece is part of a special Nature Outlook edition on pain.
Original article in: Journal of Comparative Neurology >
September 9, 2024
Tari Tan shares an article she has written in the Journal of Undergraduate Neuroscience Education together with colleagues from three other institutions, providing a general overview of the neuroscience PhD admissions landscape, followed by a deeper dive into two specific examples, at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and Harvard and discussion of training programs that increase participation and diversity in neuroscience.
Original article in: Journal of Comparative Neurology >
In the News
February 20, 2025
An increase in high-fat, high-fructose foods in people’s diets has contributed to a dramatic increase in type 2 diabetes. This, in turn, has led to an increase in peripheral neuropathy. New research reveals that months before this damage occurs, immune cells flood into peripheral nerves in an apparent attempt to protect them. This surprising insight could lead to strategies to prevent peripheral neuropathy or at least minimize and slow the onset of the damage.
Original article in: Nature >
February 20, 2025
New research from Nao Uchida, Jan Drugowitsch, and colleagues, first author Adam Lowett deepens the connections between natural and artificial intelligence — using modern advances in reinforcement learning to probe the computational principles underlying the anatomy and physiology of the striatum and its dopamine neurons.
Original article in: Nature >
February 20, 2025
HMS news profiles the research of married couple Richard S. Schwartz, HMS associate professor of psychiatry, part-time, at McLean Hospital, and Jacqueline Olds, HMS associate professor of psychiatry, part-time, at Massachusetts General Hospital, and what their research has gleaned about the most elusive of human experiences.
Original article in: Nature >
Awards & Honors
February 4, 2025
Round up of awards and honors earned by the HBI community.
January 17, 2025
Round up of awards and honors earned by the HBI community.
Banner Image:
Spiral ganglion neuron density. Image courtesy of Isle Bastille (Lab of Lisa Goodrich, Harvard Medical School).