STUART LIPTON, M.D., PH.D.
Director, Del E. Webb Neuroscience, Aging and Stem Cell Research Center
Program Director, Professor
Neurodegenerative Diseases
858.795.5261 (phone)
858.795.5262 (fax)
slipton@burnham.org
RESEARCH FOCUS, BIOGRAPHY, PUBLICATIONS
Research Focus
The Lipton laboratory studies molecular mechanisms of neurodegenerative diseases and stroke, including the role of excessive stimulation of ion channels and intracellular signaling pathways in nerve cells. Among the laboratory's accomplishments and ongoing activities are (i) the development of the first glutamate receptor/channel antagonist drug (Memantine) to be clinically approved for dementia (approved by the European Union in May, 2002 and the FDA in the USA in October, 2003), (ii) characterization of signaling events leading to neuronal injury and apoptosis in AIDS, and (iii) cloning of a gene that programs Embryonic Stem Cells to become nerve cells in the brain. These studies have led to the development of the first neuroprotective drugs to be administered successfully to humans to combat various neurodegenerative and vascular diseases of the brain.
Biography
Stuart Lipton went to Cornell University,
entered an M.D./Ph.D. Program at the University of Pennsylvania
(UPENN), and completed his M.D. at UPENN and his Ph.D. with John
Dowling at Harvard in 1977. He was then a medical intern and neurology
resident at Harvard and a postdoctoral fellow of Torsten Wiesel when
Wiesel won the Nobel prize in 1981. In 1997, after spending 15 years on
the staff of Children's Hospital in Boston, Dr. Lipton moved to Brigham
and Women's Hospital to become Chief of the CNS Research Institute at
Harvard Medical School.
Dr. Lipton was recruited to the Burnham Institute for Medical Research in September 1999 as
Professor and Director of the Del E.Webb Center for Neuroscience and
Aging Research. At that time he initiated the Center's program on
Neurodegenerative Disease Research.
Dr. Lipton has been interested in
the role of ion channels in neuronal outgrowth, plasticity and
survival. His group has developed several clinically-tolerated
drugs to prevent neuronal damage and apoptosis due to excessive
stimulation of ion channels by excitatory neurotransmitters acting at
the NMDA subtype of glutamate receptor in the brain. These drugs may be
useful for several neurological disorders, including stroke, spinal
cord and head injury,
glaucoma,
Huntington's disease, and
AIDS dementia. Drugs developed in his laboratory are currently in advanced
clinical trials. Recently, Dr. Lipton was asked to deliver a Nobel
Foundation Lecture at the Karolinska Institute and a plenary lecture at
the National Academy of Sciences on the topic
of NMDA open-channel blockers and nitric oxide-related drugs for the
treatment of AIDS dementia, a field in which he continues to be among
the leaders.
Selected Publications
Kaul, M.
Garden, G.A., and Lipton, S.A. Pathways to neuronal injury and
apoptosis in HIV-associated dementia. Nature 410:988-994, 2001.
Digicaylioglu M. and Lipton, S.A. Erythropoietin mediated
neuroprotection involves cross-talk between Jak2 and NF-ƒÛB signalling
cascades. Nature 412:641-647, 2001.
Chatterton,
J.E., Awobuluyi, M., Premkumar, L.S., Takahashi, H., Talantova, M.,
Shin, Y., Cui, J., Sevarino, K.A., Tu, S., Nakanishi, N., Tong, G.,
Lipton, S.A., and Zhang, D. Excitatory glycine receptor containing the
NR3 family of NMDA receptor subunits. Nature 415:793-798, 2002.
Gu, Z., Kaul, M., Yan, B., Kridel, S.J., Cui, J., Strongin, A., Smith,
J.W., Liddington, R.C., and Lipton, S.A. S-nitrosylation of matrix met
all oproteinases: signaling pathway to neuronal cell death. Science
297:1186-1190, 2002.
List of Publications via PubMed
(NIH National Library of Medicine)
Research Report
DEVELOPING THERAPIES TO PREVENT NEURONAL APOPTOSIS
Download report as PDF
Our
laboratory uses basic molecular signaling pathways to prevent neuronal
apoptosis and to promote neuronal survival and outgrowth during normal
aging and various neurodegenerative diseases, including cerebrovascular
disease (stroke) and AIDS dementia. Neuronal damage is curtailed by
preventing excessive activity of the NMDA subtype of glutamate receptor
and its downstream effectors (see figure). Cultures of cerebrocortical
neurons as well as transgenic and knock-out animal models are used to
show the involvement of calcium, free radicals, caspases, and
transcription factors in NMDA receptor-mediated neuronal apoptosis. Two
NMDA antagonists that we have developed are clinically
tolerated because they have been designed using biophysical principles
to decrease only excessive NMDA receptor activity while leaving
physiological levels of activity relatively spared - these drugs are
now in clinical trials. Techniques used in the laboratory include
patch-clamp recording, site-directed mutagenesis of recombinant NMDA
receptor subunits and GABAC subunits, multi-photon confocal imaging of
mitochondrial activities, deconvolution microscopy, gene reporter
assays, and various fluorogenic methods for apoptosis assessment.
Additionally, during the past few years we cloned and are currently characterizing
two novel NMDA receptor subunits (one was recently published in
Nature), and cloned a transcription factor, MEF2C, that controls the
expression of NMDA receptor subunit genes and determines whether
neurons undergo apoptosis after glutamate-related insults (recently
published in PNAS and JBC). MEF2C is activated by the p38 stress kinase
pathway, an active area of research in the laboratory that mediates
both neuronal cell apoptosis and ischemic tolerance in the brain.
Recently, we also discovered a new action of nitric oxide-related species on
cysteine residues of the NMDA receptor. This reaction, termed
S-nitrosylation (transfer of the NO group to critical cysteine
sulfhydryls), down-regulates NMDA receptor activity as well as caspase
activity and may be useful clinically.
Several other protein targets of nitrosylation are being examined in
the laboratory (recently published by us in Neuron and in Nature).
We have also found a possible cause of neuronal apoptosis in AIDS brains (about one-third of AIDS patients eventually
develop dementia). We discovered that the coat protein gp120 of HIV-1
produces a dramatic rise in neuronal calcium. This destructive process
is primarily mediated by stimulation/activation of macrophage chemokine
receptors by gp120 to release toxins that in turn trigger NMDA
receptor-mediated neuronal destruction. Therefore, in some ways, this
pathway resembles neuronal damage observed after stroke and other
neurodegenerative diseases. (recently published in Nature, and Neuron,
and JAMA). The involvement of apoptotic pathways in this type of cell
death, involving reactive oxygen species, nitric oxide, mitochondrial
toxins and caspases, is currently being explored.

Schematic illustration of the signaling pathways discovered or characterized in the Neurodegenerative Disease Program that can be targeted to prevent neuronal apoptosis and thus treat various neurologic diseases. Drug or molecular therapies are being developed to (1) antagonize NMDA receptors (NMDA-Rc), (2) modulate activation of the p38 mitogen activated kinase (MAPK) - MEF2C (transcription factor) pathway, (3) prevent toxic reactions of free radicals such as nitric oxide (NO) and reactive oxygen species (ROS), and (4) inhibit apoptosis-inducing enzymes including caspases.

