Picture of Stephen Blacklow

Stephen Charles Blacklow, Ph.D., M.D.

Gustavus Adolphus Pfeiffer Professor of Biological Chemistry and Molecular Pharmacology

For many years, my laboratory has focused on understanding fundamental mechanisms of signal transduction at the structural and molecular level. Our work has emphasized the investigation of how information is communicated across the plasma membrane. Current studies in the laboratory center on the Notch pathway, which relies on cell-cell contact to transmit a signal. Notch signals influence a wide spectrum of cell fate decisions, both during development and in adult organisms, yet dysregulated Notch signaling has been implicated in the pathogenesis of a number of human cancers. The Notch proteins are single-pass transmembrane receptors that convey signals upon activation by transmembrane ligands expressed on neighboring cells. Ligand binding initiates signaling by triggering a process called regulated intramembrane proteolysis, releasing the intracellular part of Notch (ICN) from the membrane. In canonical Notch signaling, ICN ultimately enters the nucleus, where it assembles into a transcriptional activation complex to induce the expression of Notch target genes. Our current efforts are directed toward answering a number of unresolved questions about how proteins genetically implicated in the Notch pathway modulate signaling in normal and cancer contexts. Priorities include understanding the detailed sequence of events that occur at the plasma membrane upon signal activation, uncovering the molecular mechanism of normal and pathogenic activation of Notch receptors by ADAM-family metalloproteases, elucidating how Notch cooperates with other nuclear factors to control target gene transcription, and understanding how negative feedback regulators fine-tune signaling.  

Dr. Blacklow is currently the Gustavus Adolphus Pfeiffer Professor and Chair of the Department of Biological Chemistry and Molecular Pharmacology at Harvard Medical School, and a member of the Department of Cancer Biology at the Dana Farber Cancer Institute.

Research led by Dr. Blacklow’s team has shown how cell surface receptors can convey a developmental signal directly from one contacting cell surface to the next and then from the membrane to the nucleus. He has elucidated key molecular events in Notch signal transduction, a conserved cell-cell communication system that influences cell fate decisions in all metazoan organisms, and that is frequently hijacked as an oncogenic driver in human leukemia. His research on the Notch pathway has led to the development of new investigational therapies for hematologic malignancies such as T cell acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL).

Dr. Blacklow was a recipient of the National Cancer Institute’s prestigious Outstanding Investigator Award in 2017, and elected to the Association of American Physicians in 2018. Dr. Blacklow directed the MD-PhD Program in Basic and Translational Sciences at Harvard Medical School and has served on Advisory Committees for pre-clinical departments, graduate programs, and MD-PhD programs at several major research universities and institutions, including Stanford, the University of Pennsylvania, and the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center.

Dr. Blacklow received his MD and PhD degrees from Harvard University in 1991, completed his residency in Clinical Pathology at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and carried out postdoctoral research at the Whitehead Institute with Dr. Peter S. Kim.

Publications View
A trimeric structural domain of the HIV-1 transmembrane glycoprotein.
Authors: Authors: Lu M, Blacklow SC, Kim PS.
Nat Struct Biol
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A trimeric subdomain of the simian immunodeficiency virus envelope glycoprotein.
Authors: Authors: Blacklow SC, Lu M, Kim PS.
Biochemistry
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Quantitative plasma D-dimer levels among patients undergoing pulmonary angiography for suspected pulmonary embolism.
Authors: Authors: Goldhaber SZ, Simons GR, Elliott CG, Haire WD, Toltzis R, Blacklow SC, Doolittle MH, Weinberg DS.
JAMA
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Stepwise improvements in catalytic effectiveness: independence and interdependence in combinations of point mutations of a sluggish triosephosphate isomerase.
Authors: Authors: Blacklow SC, Liu KD, Knowles JR.
Biochemistry
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How can a catalytic lesion be offset? The energetics of two pseudorevertant triosephosphate isomerases.
Authors: Authors: Blacklow SC, Knowles JR.
Biochemistry
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Searching sequence space by definably random mutagenesis: improving the catalytic potency of an enzyme.
Authors: Authors: Hermes JD, Blacklow SC, Knowles JR.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
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A reliable method for random mutagenesis: the generation of mutant libraries using spiked oligodeoxyribonucleotide primers.
Authors: Authors: Hermes JD, Parekh SM, Blacklow SC, Köster H, Knowles JR.
Gene
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Triosephosphate isomerase catalysis is diffusion controlled. Appendix: Analysis of triose phosphate equilibria in aqueous solution by 31P NMR.
Authors: Authors: Blacklow SC, Raines RT, Lim WA, Zamore PD, Knowles JR.
Biochemistry
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The development of enzyme catalytic efficiency: an experimental approach.
Authors: Authors: Hermes JD, Blacklow SC, Knowles JR.
Cold Spring Harb Symp Quant Biol
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ACS Synth Biol
Authors: Authors: Functional Comparison between Endogenous and Synthetic Notch Systems
2022 Oct 21; 11(10):3343-3353.
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