Carla J. Shatz

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Carla J. Shatz
Institutions Howard Hughes Medical Institute
Stanford University
Alma mater Radcliffe College, University College London, Harvard University
Doctoral advisor David Hubel, Torsten Wiesel
Other academic advisors Pasko Rakic

Carla J. Shatz, Ph.D., is an American neurobiologist and a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the National Academy of Sciences, and the Institute of Medicine.

Career

Carla Shatz graduated from Radcliffe College in 1969 with a B.A. in chemistry. She received an M.Phil. in Physiology from the University College London in 1971 on a Marshall Scholarship. In 1976, she received a Ph.D. in neurobiology from Harvard Medical School, where she studied with the Nobel laureates David Hubel and Torsten Wiesel. From 1976 to 1978 she obtained postdoctoral training with Dr. Pasko Rakic in the department of neuroscience, Harvard Medical School.

In 1978, Dr. Shatz moved to Stanford University, where she began her studies of the development of the mammalian visual system in the department of neurobiology. She became professor of neurobiology in 1989. In 1992, she moved her laboratory to the department of molecular and cell biology at the University of California, Berkeley, where she became a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator.

During 1994-1995 she was president of the Society for Neuroscience and served on the Council of the National Academy of Sciences from 1998 to 2001. From 2000 until 2007, she was the chair of the Department of Neurobiology at Harvard Medical School and the Nathan Marsh Pusey Professor of Neurobiology. She also helped to develop the Harvard Center for Neurodegeneration and Repair (now named the NeuroDiscovery Center) and led the Harvard Center for Brain Imaging. Dr. Shatz is the inaugural chair holder of The Sapp Family Provostial Professorship, holds professorship appointments in both the Biology department (School of Humanities and Sciences) and in Neurobiology (School of Medicine) and is David Starr Jordan Director of the Bio-X program at Stanford University School of Medicine.

Research

Dr. Shatz is one of the pioneers who determined some of the basic principles of early brain development. She found that the spontaneous activity of neurons in utero is critical for the formation of precise and orderly neural connections in the central nervous system. Her recent work shows that waves of spontaneous activity in the retina can alter gene expression and the strength of synaptic connections.

It is Carla Shatz who coined in the nineties the famous sentence summarizing the Hebbian theory : "Cells that fire together, wire together". The exact phrase, first published in a Scientific American Article published in 1992 is: "Segregation to form the columns in the visual cortex [...] proceeds when the two nerves are stimulated asynchronously. In a sense, then, cells that fire together wire together. The timing of action-potential activity is critical in determining which synaptic connections are strengthened and retained and which are weakened and eliminated".[1]

Awards

Dr. Shatz's many honors include the Society for Neuroscience Young Investigator Award, the Gill Prize presented by the Indiana University Gill Center for Biomolecular Sciences, the Silvo Conte Award from the National Foundation for Brain Research, the Charles A. Dana Award for Pioneering Achievement in Health and Education, the Alcon Award for Outstanding Contributions to Vision Research, the Bernard Sachs Award from the Child Neurology Society, and the Weizmann Women & Science Award. She has been elected to the National Academy of Sciences, the Institute of Medicine, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and the American Philosophical Society. In 1997 she was invited by President Bill Clinton and First Lady Hillary Clinton to speak at the White House Conference on Early Childhood Development and Learning. In 2011 she was elected a Foreign Member of the Royal Society of London. In 2015, she was awarded the Gruber prize in Neuroscience. [2]

Major publications

  • Sretavan D, Shatz CJ. (1984) Prenatal development of individual retinogeniculate axons during the period of segregation. Nature 308(5962):845-8.
  • McConnell SK, Ghosh A, Shatz CJ. (1989) Subplate neurons pioneer the first axon pathway from the cerebral cortex. Science 245(4921):978-82.
  • Ghosh A, Antonini A, McConnell SK, Shatz CJ. (1990) Requirement for subplate neurons in the formation of thalamocortical connections. Nature 347(6289):179-81.
  • Meister M, Wong RO, Baylor DA, Shatz CJ. (1991) Synchronous bursts of action potentials in ganglion cells of the developing mammalian retina. Science 252(5008):939-43.
  • Ghosh A, Shatz CJ. (1992) Involvement of subplate neurons in the formation of ocular dominance columns. Science 255(5050):1441-3.
  • Wong RO, Chernjavsky A, Smith SJ, Shatz CJ. (1995) Early functional neural networks in the developing retina. Nature 374(6524):716-8.
  • Katz LC, Shatz CJ. (1996) Synaptic activity and the construction of cortical circuits. Science 274(5290):1133-8. Review
  • Penn AA, Riquelme PA, Feller MB, Shatz CJ. (1998) Competition in retinogeniculate patterning driven by spontaneous activity. Science 279(5359):2108-12.
  • Catalano SM, Shatz CJ. (1998) Activity-dependent cortical target selection by thalamic axons. Science 281(5376):559-62.
  • Stellwagen D, Shatz CJ, and Feller MB. (1999) Dynamic processes of a developing retinal circuit are controlled by c-AMP, Neuron 24: 673-685.
  • Huh GS, Du H, Boulanger LM, Riquelme P, Brotz TM, and Shatz CJ. (2000) Functional requirement for Class I MHC in CNS development and plasticity. Science 290:2155-2159.
  • Man-Kit Lam D and Shatz CJ. (Eds.) Development of the Visual System. MIT Press, 1991. ISBN 0-262-12154-9.
  • Stellwagen D, Shatz CJ. (2002) An instructive role for retinal waves in the development of retinogeniculate connectivity. Neuron 33:357-367.
  • Kanold PO, Kara P, Reid RC, and Shatz CJ. (2003) The subplate is required for functional maturation of visual cortical columns. Science 301:521-525.
  • Boulanger LM, Shatz CJ. (2004) Immune signaling in neural development, synaptic plasticity, and disease. Nature Reviews Neuroscience 5: 521-531.
  • Tagawa Y, Kanold PO, Majdan M, Shatz CJ. (2005) Multiple periods of functional ocular dominance plasticity in mouse visual cortex. Nature Neuroscience 8(3):380-8.
  • Kanold PO, Shatz CJ. (2006) Subplate neurons regulate maturation of cortical inhibition and outcome of ocular dominance plasticity. Neuron 51(5):627-38.
  • Syken J, Grandpre T, Kanold PO, Shatz CJ. (2006) PirB restricts ocular-dominance plasticity in visual cortex. Science 313(5794):1795-800.
  • Majdan M, Shatz CJ. (2006) Effects of visual experience on activity-dependent gene regulation in cortex. Nature Neuroscience 9(5):650-9.
  • Goddard, CA, Butts, D, Shatz, CJ (2007) Regulation of CNS synapses by neuronal MHC Class I. PNAS 104: 6828-6833.
  • Butts, DA, Kanold, PO, Shatz CJ (2007) A burst-based 'Hebbian' learning rule at retinogeniculate synapses links retinal waves to activity dependent refinement. PLoS Biology 5: E61.
  • Atwal JK, Pinkston-Gosse J, Syken J, Stawicki S, Wu Y, Shatz CJ, Tessier-Lavigne MT (2008) PirB is a functional receptor for myelin inhibitors of axonal regeneration. Science 322: 967-970. PMCID: 2672503.
  • McConnell, MJ, Huang, YH, Datwani, A, Shatz, CJ (2009) H2-Kb and H2-Db regulate cerebellar long term depression and limit motor learning. PNAS 106: 6784-6789. PMCID: 2672503.
  • Kanold PO, Kim YA, Grandpre T, Shatz CJ (2009) Co-regulation of ocular dominance plasticity and NMDA Receptor subunit expression in Glutamic Acid Decarboxylase-65 Knock-Out Mice. J. Physiol. Epub 04/30/09 PMID 19406876.
  • Shatz, CJ (2009) MHC class I: an unexpected role in neuronal plasticity. Neuron 64 (1): 40-5.
  • McKellar, CE, Shatz, CJ (2009) Synaptogenesis in purified cortical subplate neurons. Cereb Cortex 19 (8): 1723-37.
  • Datwani A, McConnell MJ, Kanold PO, Micheva KD, Busse B, Shamloo M, Smith SJ, Shatz CJ (2009) Classical MHCI molecules regulate retinogeniculate refinement and limit ocular dominance plasticity. Neuron 64 (4):463-70.
  • Adelson JD, Barreto GE, Xu L, Kim T, Brott BK, Ouyang YB, Naserke T, Djurisic M, Xiong X, Shatz CJ, Giffard RG (2012) Neuroprotection from stroke in the absence of MHCI or PirB. Neuron 73 (6): 1100-7.
  • William CM, Andermann ML, Goldey GJ, Roumis DK, Reid RC, Shatz CJ, Albers MW, Frosch MP, Hyman BT (2012) Synaptic plasticity defect following visual deprivation in Alzheimer's disease model transgenic mice. J. Neurosci. 32:8004-11.
  • Kim T, Vidal GS, Djurisic M, William CM, Birnbaum ME, Garcia KC, Hyman BT, Shatz CJ (2013) Human LilrB2 Is a β-Amyloid Receptor and Its Murine Homolog PirB Regulates Synaptic Plasticity in an Alzheimer's Model. Science 341:1399-1404.
  • Djurisic M, Vidal GS, Mann M, Aharon A, Kim T, Ferrao Santos A, Zuo Y, Hübener M, Shatz CJ (2013) PirB regulates a structural substrate for cortical plasticity. PNAS 110(51):20771-6
  • Lee H, Brott BK, Kirkby LA, Adelson JD, Cheng S, Feller MB, Datwani A, Shatz CJ (2014) Synapse elimination and learning rules coregulated by MHC Class I H2-Db. Nature 509(7499):195-200

References

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