Professor David E. Harrison
David E. Harrison, Ph.D. is Professor and Senior Staff Scientist
at The Jackson Laboratory in Bar Harbor, Maine.
Dave’s research group has two focus areas. Under “Gerontology:
Mechanisms of Aging”, he investigates aging in mouse models, focusing on
processes that have the potential to retard aging and prolong health.
For example, one line of research investigates mutations that reduce
IGF-1 and insulin function. Such mutations can increase lifespan and
delay certain aspects of aging, especially development of cancer. Now he
is developing models that combine multiple mutations. He will use these
models to test effects of these mutations on physiological and molecular
pathways critical to aging processes.
Under “Hematology: Stem Cells” his focus is on hematopoietic stem cells
(HSCs) and other adult stem cells, which constantly proliferate and
differentiate to maintain tissue functions throughout life. If aging
exhausts the function of adult stem cells, the balance between damage
and repair is disrupted and tissue functions become defective. His group
has found that genetic mechanisms protect hematopoietic stem cells from
exhaustion in some mouse strains. Now his focus is to define the
specific mechanisms. His long-term goal is to promote healthful aging in
humans, either by delaying normal aging processes or by minimizing or
eliminating diseases of aging.
Dave authored
Genetic Effects on Aging, and
coauthored
Lifespan extension and delayed immune and collagen aging in mutant
mice
with defects in growth hormone production,
Number and continuous proliferative pattern of transplanted
primitive immunohematopoietic stem cells,
Normal Production of Erythrocytes by Mouse Marrow Continuous for 73
Months,
In vivo kinetics of murine hemopoietic stem cells,
Competitive repopulation in unirradiated normal recipients,
and
The same exhaustible multilineage precursor produces both
myeloid and lymphoid cells as early as 3–4 weeks after
marrow transplantation.
Read the
full list of his publications!
Dave earned a Bachelor’s of Science in Chemistry from
Bates College, Lewiston, Maine, and a Ph.D. in Inorganic
Chemistry from Stanford University, California. He completed
a post-doc in physiologic genetics at The Jackson Laboratory.
He has served as a member of the AFAR National Scientific
Advisory Council and a site evaluator for the NIA’s Aging
Review Committee, and currently serves as the Principal
Investigator on two NIA ROI grants, as well as a NIA Shock
Center.
Watch
Biomarkers of Aging: The Key in the Search for the Fountain of
Youth?
Read
Cancer Drug Delays Aging in Mice.