Keith Blackwell headshot

T. Keith Blackwell, M.D., Ph.D.

Section Head, Islet Cell and Regenerative Biology in Immunology, Joslin Diabetes Center
Professor of Genetics, Harvard Medical School

My laboratory uses the nematode C. elegans to study specific gene regulatory mechanisms that are important for cell development or function. In one major project, we are investigating the functions and regulation of a conserved transcriptional response to oxidative stress. We also study specialized mechanisms that regulate gene expression programs in germ cells, which provide a model for embryonic and other stem cell lineages. We have shown that the transcription factor SKN-1, which initiates embryonic digestive system development, later mobilizes a conserved response to oxidative stress in the intestine. This response appears to be the ancestral function of SKN-1, and may be the most important organismal defense against oxidative stress. We have found that SKN-1 is required for stress resistance and longevity, and can be harnessed to extend lifespan. We are now applying advantages of C. elegans to investigate how SKN-1 and this detoxification pathway are regulated, and have found that SKN-1 is directly targeted by p38, GSK-3, and insulin-like signaling. By uncovering how this stress response functions and is controlled, we expect to identify mechanisms that could be utilized for prevention or treatment of diseases in which oxidative stress plays a central role. We also study mechanisms that regulate gene expression in the germline, a model stem cell population. During germ cell development, many mRNAs are “stored” in particles that we believe are a form of P bodies, a recently described structure in which translationally silenced mRNAs may be stored or degraded. We identified and are studying a group of proteins that regulate the translation and stability of maternal mRNAs in P bodies, and also modulate the frequency at which developing oocytes die by apoptosis. Our studies provide a whole-organism model for studying P bodies, and a window into the little-understood process of developmental germ cell death. In parallel, we are investigating mechanisms that globally silence transcription during late oogenesis and in the early germline. These last studies are important for understanding aspects of germ cell pluripotency and function. As a teacher I have been involved in various Medical and Graduate school courses and teaching activities. During the past year I have tutored in the second year HMS New Pathway Pathology course, after tutoring for many years in this course or Identity, Microbes, and Defense. I have also given the diabetes lecture in a graduate course (Pathology 211, The Molecular Basis of Disease), and have lead a group in the Genetics 330 Proposal Writing course. I have continued to serve on the Preliminary Qualifying Exam Committee of the Harvard Medical School BBS Graduate Program, in which I chair up to 4 exams per year. Until 2004, I served on the Board or Tutors in Biochemical Sciences at Harvard College. As such I advised a small group of undergraduates (2-8), and led them through a non-credit critical reading program. I plan to rejoin the Board of Tutors next year. Finally, in my laboratory I currently supervise seven postdoctoral fellows and share supervision of a graduate student.

A redox-sensitive peroxiredoxin that is important for longevity has tissue- and stress-specific roles in stress resistance.
Authors: Authors: Oláhová M, Taylor SR, Khazaipoul S, Wang J, Morgan BA, Matsumoto K, Blackwell TK, Veal EA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
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OMA-gosh, where's that TAF?
Authors: Authors: Blackwell TK, Walker AK.
Cell
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Actigraphy-measured sleep characteristics and risk of falls in older women.
Authors: Authors: Stone KL, Ancoli-Israel S, Blackwell T, Ensrud KE, Cauley JA, Redline S, Hillier TA, Schneider J, Claman D, Cummings SR.
Arch Intern Med
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Germline survival and apoptosis.
Authors: Authors: Gartner A, Boag PR, Blackwell TK.
WormBook
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Cognition in older women: the importance of daytime movement.
Authors: Authors: Barnes DE, Blackwell T, Stone KL, Goldman SE, Hillier T, Yaffe K.
J Am Geriatr Soc
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Protection of specific maternal messenger RNAs by the P body protein CGH-1 (Dhh1/RCK) during Caenorhabditis elegans oogenesis.
Authors: Authors: Boag PR, Atalay A, Robida S, Reinke V, Blackwell TK.
J Cell Biol
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Endoplasmic reticulum stress in alveolar epithelial cells is prominent in IPF: association with altered surfactant protein processing and herpesvirus infection.
Authors: Authors: Lawson WE, Crossno PF, Polosukhin VV, Roldan J, Cheng DS, Lane KB, Blackwell TR, Xu C, Markin C, Ware LB, Miller GG, Loyd JE, Blackwell TS.

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Direct inhibition of the longevity-promoting factor SKN-1 by insulin-like signaling in C. elegans.
Authors: Authors: Tullet JM, Hertweck M, An JH, Baker J, Hwang JY, Liu S, Oliveira RP, Baumeister R, Blackwell TK.
Cell
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Comparison of sleep parameters from actigraphy and polysomnography in older women: the SOF study.
Authors: Authors: Blackwell T, Redline S, Ancoli-Israel S, Schneider JL, Surovec S, Johnson NL, Cauley JA, Stone KL.
Sleep
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The lysophosphatidic acid receptor LPA1 links pulmonary fibrosis to lung injury by mediating fibroblast recruitment and vascular leak.
Authors: Authors: Tager AM, LaCamera P, Shea BS, Campanella GS, Selman M, Zhao Z, Polosukhin V, Wain J, Karimi-Shah BA, Kim ND, Hart WK, Pardo A, Blackwell TS, Xu Y, Chun J, Luster AD.
Nat Med
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