Vitae

20
Philip G. Haydon April 2010 1 PHILIP G. HAYDON Department of Neuroscience Tufts University 136 Harrison Avenue - 208 Arnold Boston, MA 02111 617 636 2190 Phone 617 636 2413 Fax 610 505 2401 Business Cell Email: [email protected] Websites Lab: http://www.neurosci.tufts.edu/faculty_labs/haydon/haydon.html EDUCATION AND POSITIONS B.Sc. (Hons): Dept. of Physiology, The University of Leeds, England. 1979 Ph.D: Dept. of Physiology, The University of Leeds, England. (W. Winlow)1982 Postdoctoral Associate: Department of Biology, The University of Iowa. (S.B. Kater)1982-1985 Research Investigator: Department of Biology, The University of Iowa. (S.B. Kater)1985-1986 Assistant Professor: Department of Zoology, Iowa State University. 1986-1990 Associate Professor: Department of Zoology and Genetics, Iowa State University. 1990-94 Professor: Department of Zoology and Genetics, Iowa State University. 1994-2001 Program Director: Signal Transduction Training Group, Iowa State University. 1991-2001 Director: Laboratory of Cellular Signaling, Iowa State University. 1993-2001 Associate Director: Microanalytical Instrumentation Center, Iowa State University. 1998-2001 Collaborator: Iowa State University, Dept. of Zoology and Genetics 2001-2002 Professor Department of Neuroscience, The University of Pennsylvania. 2001-2008 Adjunct Professor Joseph Stokes Jr. Research Institute, The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. 2003-2008 Director: Center for Dynamic Imaging of Nervous System Function. 2003-2008 Director: Silvio O. Conte Center for studies of the tripartite synapse. 2004-2008 Vice Chair: Department of Neuroscience, The University of Pennsylvania, 2005-2008 Professor and Chair: Department of Neuroscience, Tufts University {Annetta and Gustav Grisard}, 2008-present BUSINESS ENTERPRISES Founding Partner Prairie Technologies, Corp., Middleton Wisconsin Founding Partner GrantWrite, LLC, Narberth, PA PROFESSIONAL AWARDS Emma and Leslie Reid Scholarship: 1979-1982 First Annual WCBR Fellowship: 1985 Alberta Heritage Fellowship: 1985 (declined) Alfred P. Sloan Fellow: 1989-1991 McKnight Investigator Award: 1994-1996 Jacob Javits Investigator Award: 2002-2009

Transcript of Vitae

Page 1: Vitae

Philip G. Haydon April 2010

1

PHILIP G. HAYDON Department of Neuroscience

Tufts University 136 Harrison Avenue - 208 Arnold

Boston, MA 02111 617 636 2190 Phone

617 636 2413 Fax 610 505 2401 Business Cell

Email: [email protected]

Websites Lab: http://www.neurosci.tufts.edu/faculty_labs/haydon/haydon.html

EDUCATION AND POSITIONS

B.Sc. (Hons): Dept. of Physiology, The University of Leeds, England. 1979 Ph.D: Dept. of Physiology, The University of Leeds, England. (W. Winlow)1982 Postdoctoral Associate: Department of Biology, The University of Iowa. (S.B. Kater)1982-1985 Research Investigator: Department of Biology, The University of Iowa. (S.B. Kater)1985-1986 Assistant Professor: Department of Zoology, Iowa State University. 1986-1990 Associate Professor: Department of Zoology and Genetics, Iowa State University. 1990-94 Professor: Department of Zoology and Genetics, Iowa State University. 1994-2001 Program Director: Signal Transduction Training Group, Iowa State University. 1991-2001 Director: Laboratory of Cellular Signaling, Iowa State University. 1993-2001 Associate Director: Microanalytical Instrumentation Center, Iowa State University. 1998-2001 Collaborator: Iowa State University, Dept. of Zoology and Genetics 2001-2002 Professor Department of Neuroscience, The University of Pennsylvania. 2001-2008 Adjunct Professor Joseph Stokes Jr. Research Institute, The Children’s Hospital of

Philadelphia. 2003-2008 Director: Center for Dynamic Imaging of Nervous System Function. 2003-2008 Director: Silvio O. Conte Center for studies of the tripartite synapse. 2004-2008 Vice Chair: Department of Neuroscience, The University of Pennsylvania, 2005-2008 Professor and Chair: Department of Neuroscience, Tufts University {Annetta and Gustav

Grisard}, 2008-present

BUSINESS ENTERPRISES

Founding Partner Prairie Technologies, Corp., Middleton Wisconsin Founding Partner GrantWrite, LLC, Narberth, PA

PROFESSIONAL AWARDS

Emma and Leslie Reid Scholarship: 1979-1982 First Annual WCBR Fellowship: 1985 Alberta Heritage Fellowship: 1985 (declined) Alfred P. Sloan Fellow: 1989-1991 McKnight Investigator Award: 1994-1996 Jacob Javits Investigator Award: 2002-2009

Page 2: Vitae

Philip G. Haydon April 2010

2

SERVICE TO SCIENTIFIC COMMUNITY

Co-organizer 11th annual Midwest Neurobiology Meeting, 1988 Organizer Symposium on Neuronal Development, 1988 Co-organizer Meeting of Molecular Neurobiology of Aplysia, CSH, 1993-1995 Chair Peptides and other Neurotransmitters, meeting of Molecular

Neurobiology of Aplysia, CSH, 1993 Member Columbia University, Center for Neurobiology and Behavior Program

Project Review Committee, 1988-1993.

American Society for Neurochemistry Council, 2009-2013 Reviewer for Biol. Bulletin; Biophysics J.; Brain Research; European J. Neurosci.; J.

Cell Biol.; J. Exp. Biol.; J. Neurobiology; J. Neurochem.; J. Neurosci.; J. Neurosci. Methods; Learning and Memory; J. Physiol.; Molecular Neurobiology, Neuron; Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. Science; Cell

Editorial Board J. Invertebrate Neuroscience, 1994-2001 Guest Editor Seminars in the Neurosciences, 1996 Associate Editor J. Neuroscience, 1996-2002 National Advisory Committee Integrated Microscopy Resource, 1997, 1998 Resident Faculty Imaging Section of Woodshole Neurobiology course, 1997-1999 Ad Hoc Study Section Member NIH Neurology B-1, 1995 Study Section NIH Neurology B-1, Regular member, 1996-98 Study Section NIH MCDN#4, Regular member, 1998-1999 Chair MCDN#4 Study Section, NIH, 1999-2001 Study Section NIH, NDGB, 2006-2007 Study Section NIH, CMBG, 2007-2009 Study Section Chair NIH, CMBG, 2009-2011 External review panel Laboratories of the Scientific Director, National Institute of Child Health

and Human Development, National Institutes of Health; 2002, 2006 External Review Panel RIKEN Institute, Japan, 2007 Council Member American Society for Neurochemistry Council, 2009-2013

Receiving Editor European Journal of Neuroscience, 2001-2006 Editorial Positions Brain Cell Biology, 2005 – present

Neuronal Glial Biology, 2004 – present

Glia, 2003 – present

Neuropharmacology, Executive Editor 2007 - present Scientific Program Chair 41st Annual ASN Meeting, Santa Fe NM, March 2010

SERVICE TO THE PENN COMMUNITY

Conflict of Interest Standing Committee: 2004 - 2008 MINS Named Seminars Committee, Chair 2006-2007 School of Medicine, Centers and Institutes Review Committee, 2005 Neuroscience Search Committee, 2001-2002 Committee on Academic positions and Promotion, Chair, 2006 - 2008 School of Medicine Medical Faculty Standing Committee, 2003-2005 Academic Review Committee, Neuroscience Graduate Group, 2003-2005

TUFTS UNIVERSITY SERVICE

Page 3: Vitae

Philip G. Haydon April 2010

3

Faculty Advisory Committee to the Dean, TUSM 2009-present Presidential Search Committee 2010

INVITED TALKS

Department of Medical Physiology, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada (October 1986) Department of Physiology, University of Leeds, Leeds, England (December 1986) Department of Neuroscience, University of Sussex, England (January 1987) Department of Physiology-Anatomy, University of California, Berkeley, CA (May 1987) Department of Biology, Augustana College, Sioux Falls, SD (April 1988) Department of Medical Physiology, University of Calgary, Canada (July 1988) Department of Physiology, University of Sussex, England (October 1988) Department of Biology and Pre-Clinical Medicine, University of St. Andrews, Scotland (October 1988) 13th Annual Gif Lectures in Neurobiology, Gif-sur-Yvette, France (December 1988) Department of Biology, University of South Western Louisiana, Lafayette, LA (March, 1989) Department of Neurochemistry, Max-Planck-Institute of Psychiatry, FRG ( July 1989) The Whitney Marine Laboratory, University of Florida, St Augustine, FL (October 1989) Department of Zoology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI (November 1989) Department of Cell Biology and Neuroscience, Southwestern University, Dallas, TX (March 1990) Department of Pharmacology, University of Alberta, Canada (April 1990) Symposium on Neuromodulation at Midwest Neurobiology Meeting, (April 1990) Symposium on Molluscan Neuroscience, Amsterdam, Netherlands (August 1990) "Molecular Neurobiology of Aplysia", Cold Spring Harbor, NY (October 1990). Department of Molecular Neuroendocrinology, Max-Planck-Institute, Goettingen, FRG (Dec 1990) Department of Physiology and Biophysics, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA (May 1991) Program in Neuronal Growth and Development, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO (December 1991) Meeting on "Brain Development and Epilepsy", Houston, TX (March 1992) Meeting on "Neurones in Culture", Lancaster, England (April 1992) Neuroscience Program, Yale MA (May 1992) MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Cambridge, England (1992) Otto Loewi Center for Cellular and Molecular Neurobiology, Jerusalem, Israel (1992) Mechanisms and regulation of neurotransmitter release, Gif-sur-Yvette, France (1992) Mayo Clinic, Rochester Minnesota (April 1993) Molecular Neurobiology of Aplysia, Cold Spring Harbor, NY (April 1993) International Congress of Physiological Sciences, Glasgow, Scotland (August 1993) "Molecular and Cellular Mechanisms of Neurotransmitter Release", Stockholm, Sweden (September 1993) Loeb Research Institute, Ottawa, Canada (October 1993) Neurosciences program, University of Montreal, Montreal, Canada (December 1993) Department of Biology, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA (March 1994) Committee on Neurobiology, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL (March 1994) Plenary Lecture, National Brain Research Association, Southampton, England (April 1994) Symposium on "Invertebrate Neurotransmitters" for Canadian Society of Zoologists, Winnipeg,

Manitoba, Canada (May 1994) Program in Neuroscience, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN (May 1994)

Page 4: Vitae

Philip G. Haydon April 2010

4

Department of Biology, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA (May 1994) Johns Hopkins, Department of Physiology (November 1994) Committee on Neurobiology, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL (March 1994) The NIH, Synaptic Mechanisms Section, Bethesda, MD (November 1994) Colorado State University, Program in Neuronal Growth and Development, Fort Collins, CO (December 1994) Optical Imaging Methods in Physiology Symposium, Napa, CA (February 1995) Imaging of intercellular communication in neurons and glia. Society for Neurochemistry, Santa Monica,

CA. (March 1995) Molecular and Behavioral Biology of Aplysia and Related Molluscs, Cold Spring Harbor, NY(April 1995) Vrije Universitie, Amsterdam, Netherlands, (May 1995). Meeting on “EAAs and the Cerebral Cortex”, Ancono, Italy (May 1995) Symposium on Scanning Probe Microscopy, Rutgers, NJ (October 1995) Department of Biology, Texas A&M, College Station, TX (October 1995) Symposium on Scanning Probe Microscopy, Tokyo, Japan (January 1996) Winter Conference on Brain Research, Aspen CO (January 1996) Symposium at Integrated Microscopy Resource, Madison WI (September 1996) Department of Zoology, University of Madison, Madison, WI (September 1996) Imaging Science Center, University of Florida, FL (February 1997) Department of Physiology, University of Florida, FL (1997) AFM Workshop, Biophysics meeting, New Orleans, LA (1997) Symposium on Scanning Probe Microscopy, Dresden, FDR (March 1997) Department of Neuroscience, Hebrew University, Israel (March 1997) Department of Biology, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA (October 1997) Marine Biological Laboratory, Woodshole MA (March 1998) Symposium on “The Chemical Synapse: Mechanisms of transmission and modulation.” The Universitie

de Montreal, Canada (May 1998) Max-Planck Institute, Frankfurt, FDR (May 1998) European Meeting on Glial Cell Function in Health and Disease. Greece (May 1998) DIBATO, Milan, Italy. (May 1998) University of Padua, Italy (May 1998) Gordon Conference, NH (June 1998) Department of Physiology, New York Medical College, Valhalla NY (July 1998) Symposium on Glial Function, Physiological Society of Great Britain, Southampton, England (1998) Satellite Symposium of 1998 Neuroscience meeting at USC – Neuron-glial Interactions University of

Southern California, CA (November 1998) Imaging Methods in Neuroscience, Winter Brain Conference, CO (January 1999) Astrocyte-neuron signaling session. Winter Brain Conference, CO. (January 1999) Department of Physiology and Biophysics, Wright State University, Dayton, OH (April 1999) Gordon Conference, NH (August 1999) Symposium on Astrocyte Synaptic Interactions. Annual Society for Neuroscience meeting, Miami, FL

(October, 1999) Cajal Institute, Madrid, Spain (November 1999) University of Ljubliana, Ljubliana, Slovenia (November 1999) Neuroscience Department, University of Illinois, Champaign Urbana, IL(December 1999) Department of Neurobiology, University of Illinois, Chicago, IL(December 1999)

Page 5: Vitae

Philip G. Haydon April 2010

5

University of Leipzig, FDR (January 2000) Novartis Pharmaceutical Company, Basel, Switzerland (January 2000) Midwest Neurobiology Meeting, Ames, IA (May 2000) European meeting on Glial cell Function in Human Health and Disease, Barcelona, Spain (May 2000) Glial Symposium, Federation for European Neurosciences, Brighton, England (June 2000) University College London, London, England (June 2000) The University of Iowa, Department of Biology, Distinguished Alumini Semiar Series (September 2000) The University of Philadelphia, Department of Neuroscience (September, 2000) The University of Connecticut, Department of Physiology and Neurobiology (October, 2000) The University of Wisconsin, Madison, Department of Anatomy (October, 2000) Workshop on Emerging Techniques in Screening and Imaging Science, The University of Wisconsin,

Madison, (October, 2000). The University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, Dept. of Pharmacology (April 2001) Thomas Jefferson University, (April 2001). The University of Minnesota, Department of Neuroscience (April 2001) BioPhotonics meeting, Symposium Speaker; Madison WI, August 2001 IUPS meeting, Synthesium Speaker; New Zealand, August 2001 Paris, Symposium on Glial Cells in Nervous System Function, October 2001 Tufts University, Boston MA, February 2002 Winter Brain Meeting, Sedona Arizona, March 2002 University of Maryland, Department of Biology, March 2002 NIH Hematopoietic Stem Cell Biology RFA Meeting, April 2002 Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, May 2002 Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven CT, May 2002 NIH Astrocyte function meeting, September 2002 Neuroscience program, University of Maryland, October 2002 Trinity College Dublin, Ireland, Cost B10 meeting, October 2002 American College of Neuropsychopharmacology, San Juan, Puerto Rico, December 2002 Neuroscience Program, New York University, February 2003 International Neuroscience Symposium, Bonn, Germany, February 2003 Gordon Research Conference – Glia Neuron Interactions, Ventura, CA, February 2003 Schizophrenia meeting, Colorado Springs, CO April 2003 Neurochemistry meeting, Newport Beach CA, May 2003 UCSF Dept of Neuroscience, May 2003 Neurology Grand Rounds, NYU, July 2003 IBRO meeting, Prague Czech Republic, July 2003 Dartmouth Medical College, August 2003 Berlin, Germany Euroglia meeting, September 2003 Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Department of Neuroscience, September 2003 University of Connecticut, Dept. of Neurobiology and Behavior, September 2003 Goettingen Germany, October 2003 Center for Neurobiology and Behavior, University of Pennsylvania, November, 2003 University of Toronto, November 2003 Goettingen, Germany, December 2003 Madrid Spain, December 2003 Vanderbilt University, March 2004 Stonybrook, March 2004

Page 6: Vitae

Philip G. Haydon April 2010

6

The University of Pittsburg, Department of Neurobiology, March 2004 University of Colorado, Boulder, April 2004 Colorado State University, Fort Collins, April 2004 Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, April 22, 2004 Hippocampal Conference, Grand Cayman Islands, May 3-6, 2004 Nelson Festschrift, NIH, May 7, 2004 NCDEU meeting, Phoenix Arizona, June 2004 FENS, Lisbon Portugal July 2004 University of Illinois, Urbana Champaign, November 2004 First Annual Glia Neuron Network symposium, Tokyo, Japan, January 2005 German Physiological Society, Goettingen, Germany, March 2005 Gordon Research Conference, Ventura, CA, March 2005 Imaging symposium, University of Pennsylvania, April 2005 Penn State University, State College, PA, April 2005 International Cell Physiology and Engineering meeting, Lipica, Slovenia, May 2005 Novartis Foundation Symposium on Purines, London, England, June 2005 Keynote Lecture, XXVIIe Symposium international Neuron-glia interactions. University of Montreal, Montreal Canada, June 2005 Neuron-Glial Interactions Symposium, American Society of Neurochemistry, Madison, WI, July 2005 Institute of Neuroscience, Shanghai, China, October 2005 Keynote Lecture, Chinese Neuroscience Society Annual meeting, Chinchong, China, October 2005 Keynote Lecture, Ist annual International Chinese Glia meeting, Wuhan, China, October, 2005 Keynote Lecture, Korean Physiological Society, Muju, Korea, October, 2005 Center for Molecular and Behavioral Neuroscience, Rutgers University, December 2005 Medical College of Georgia, January 2006 University of Padua, February 2006 Department of Neurobiology, University of Alabama-Birmingham, February 2006 University of Wisconsin-Madison, February 2006 Oregon Health & Science University, March 2006 Neurobiology of Disease, Stanford University, March 2006 Department of Neuroscience, University of Cincinnati, April 2006 Department of Neurobiology, University of Massachusetts, May 2006 International Meeting on Purines, Ferrara Italy, May 2006 National Academy of Sciences, Slovenia, May 2006 University of Lausanne, Switzerland, June 2006 Society for Neurotrauma, St. Louis, MO, July 2006 Cold Spring Harbor, Invited Speaker, July 2006 Gordon Epilepsy Conference, Colby College-Maine, August 2006 CNS Injury Seminar, University of Pennsylvania, September 2006 Yale University, Interdepartmental Neuroscience Program, November 2006 Grass Lecture, University of California-Riverside, December 2006 American Epilepsy Society, San Diego, CA, December 2006 Thomas Jefferson University, Dept of Molecular Physiology & Biophysics, December 2006 Creol Institute, University of Central Florida, February 2007 Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, February 2007 Washington University, St Louis, February 2007 Wyeth Neuroscience, New Jersey, March 2007 Gordon Research Conference, Ventura CA, March 2007

Page 7: Vitae

Philip G. Haydon April 2010

7

British Neuroscience Association, Harrogate, ENGLAND, April 2007 Princeton, Neuroscience, April 2007 Dept. of Neuroscience, UC Riverside, April 2007 Tokyo University of Pharmacy and Life Science, May 2007 Calcium Channels and Transporters, The University of Manchester, May 2007 Tufts University, Department of Neuroscience, May 2007 Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, Neuroscience and Cell Biology, May 2007 International Symposium: Calcium Channels and Transporters, Manchester ENGLAND, May 2007 Riken Brain Science Institute, Saitama Japan, May 2007 Institute of Cell and Integrative Neuroscience, University of Strasbourg, Strasbourg, FRANCE, July 2007 American Society for Neurochemistry, August 2007 Euro Glia, London UK, September 2007 Keynote Lecture, Great Lakes Glia Meeting, Michigan, Septemeber 2007 Symposium Speaker, Sick Kids Hospital, Toronto CANADA, September 2007 University of Miami, October, 2007 UCB Pharma Research Day, Brussels, BELGIUM, October 2007 Keynote Lecture, Tufts Neuroscience Retreat, November 2007 American Epilepsy Society, November 2007 University of Washington, Seattle, February 2008 American Society for Neurochemistry, San Antonio, TX, March 2008 University of California, Irvine – EpiCenter Symposium, Irvine, CA, March 2008 USA-Japan Joint Meeting for Glial Research – Co-Chair, Philadelphia, PA, March 2008 ISN Special Neurochemistry Conference, Beijing, China, June 2008 Epilepsy Gordon Research Conference, Waterville, ME, August 2008 MIT Brain & Cognitive Sciences Colloquium, Boston, MA, September 2008 Hotchkiss Brain Institute, University of Calgary, Calgary, CANADA, September 2008 Molecular Cardiology Research Institute (MCRI), Tufts University, October 2008 Case Western Physiology Seminar, November 2008 Harvard University, Invited Seminar Speaker, November 2008 Conference on Glial Biology, University of Alabama-Birmingham, December 2008 Psychiatric Grand Rounds, Tufts University, January 2009 American Neuropsychiatric Association, 20th Annual Meeting, San Antonio TX, February 2009 American Society for Neurochemistry, 40th Annual Meeting, Charleston SC, March 2009 Gordon Research Conferences: Glia Biology, Ventura CA, March 2009 Jasper’s Basic Mechanisms of the Epilepsies, 4th Int’l Workshop, Yosemite Park CA, March 2009 Invited Seminar Speaker, Dept of Biology, Cal Tech, April 2009 APSS 23rd Annual Meeting, Seattle WA, June 2009 Visiting Lecturer, Woods Hole, July 2009 11th International Congress on Amino Acids, Peptides and Proteins, Vienna Austria, Aug 2009 Invited Seminar Speaker, Dept of Pharmacology, Boston University, Boston MA, October 2009 Keynote Lecturer, Federation of European Physiological Studies, Ljubljana Slovenia, November 2009 Invited Seminar Speaker, Dept of Cell and Developmental Biology, Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-

Champaign, December 2009 Invited Lecturer, American College of NeuroPsychopharmacology 48th Annual Meeting, Hollywood FL,

December 2009 Invited Speaker, Dept of Neuroscience Brain and Behavior Distinguished Lecture Series, Georgia State

University, February 2010 Scientific Program Chair, 41st Annual ASN Meeting, Santa Fe NM, March 2010

Page 8: Vitae

Philip G. Haydon April 2010

8

Invited Seminar Speaker, Brain Research Institute, UCLA, April 2010 Invited Speaker, Keystone Symposium on Synapses, Snowbird UT, April 2010

FORMER TRAINEES Graduate Students Liz Sievers - Associate Editor, Brown Publishing Helen Man-Son-Hing- Physician Lisa Funte – Medical Student Lynn Smith – Advisor to At-Risk Students, Iowa State University Trent Basarsky – Axon Instruments Amy Newcomer – Medical Student Rita Sanzgiri – Law Student Robert Doyle – Director, Carver Laboratory for Ultrahigh Resolution Biological Microscopy. Nianzhen Li – Research Scientist, Fluxion BioScience, San Francisco CA Qi Zhang – Postdoctoral Fellow, Stanford University Cathryn Kubera – Postdoctoral Researcher, Yale University Di Liu – Graduate Student, Biology, University of Pennsylvania Michael Halassa – Resident/Postdoc, Neuropsychiatry, Mass General Hospital Postdoctoral Fellows Mark Zoran - Associate Professor and Graduate Advisor, Texas A&M Christopher Price- Postdoctoral Fellow, University of British Columbia Louis Trudeau- Associate Professor, Universitie de Montreal Janet Richmond- Assistant Professor, University of Illinois Silvio Marchese-Ragona- Vice President for Engineering, Chapman Instruments Y. Fang - unknown Raj Lartius- Scientist, BioProbes. Fred Bahls - Neurologist, VA Hospital, Des Moines, IA Alfonso Araque - Assistant Professor, Cajal Institute, Madrid, Spain

Barbara Innocenti - Postdoctoral Fellow, University of Tübingen Vladimir Parpura - Associate Professor, University of Alabama-Birmingham

Huanmian Chen – Postdoctoral Fellow, The National Institutes of Health Mary Mazzanti – Postdoctoral Fellow, Brigham & Women’s Hospital Xiaohong Ma – Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia Daniel Evanko – Assitant Editor, Nature Methods Conrad Messam – Glaxo Smith Klein Olivier Pascual – Assistant Professor, Ecole Normale Superieure, Paris France Marcello D’Ascenzo – Assistant Professor, Catholic University, Rome Italy Shinghua Ding – Assistant Professor, University of Missouri-Columbia Jai-Yoon Sul – Senior Research Investigator, University of Pennsylvania Yingzi Zhu – On leave Tommaso Fellin – Assistant Professor, CNR, University of Padova, Genova Italy Yilong Shu – Postdoctoral Researcher, Biology, University of Pennsylvania James Munoz – Postdoctoral Fellow, Pediatric Neurology, Children’s Hospital of Phila Joshua Jackson – Postdoctoral Fellow, Neurology, University of Pennsylvania Adrienne Benediktsson – Postdoctoral Researcher, University of Calgary Alison Mungenast – Freelance Scientific Editor, Arlington, MA Research Associates Hajime Takano – Senior Research Investigator, Pediatric Neurology, Children’s Hospital Of Phila

Page 9: Vitae

Philip G. Haydon April 2010

9

CURRENT TRAINEES Graduate Students Luke (Ian) Schmitt Jeannine Foley Laura Gainey Postdoctoral Fellows Jerome Clasadonte Jinghui Dong Qiudong Deng So-Young Lee Sally McIver Dustin Hines Tamara Blutstein Mathilde Faideau

PUBLICATIONS

Research Articles

1. Haydon PG and Winlow W. (1981) Morphology of the giant dopamine-containing neurone R.Pe.D.1 in Lymnaea stagnalis (L.) revealed by Lucifer Yellow CH. J.Exp. Biol. 94: 149-157.

2. Winlow W, Haydon PG and Benjamin PR. (1981) Multiple postsynaptic actions of the giant dopamine-containing neurone R.Pe.D.1 of Lymnaea stagnalis. J. Exp. Biol. 94: 137-148.

3. Haydon PG and Winlow W. (1982) Multipolar neurones of Lymnaea stagnalis. I. Multiple spike initiation sites and conduction block allow neuronal compartmentalization. J. Comp. Physiol. A. 147: 503-510.

4. Haydon PG, Holden AV and Winlow W. (1982) The effects of menthol on central neurones of the pond snail, Lymnaea stagnalis (L.). Comp. Biochem. Physiol. 73C: 95-100.

5. Holden AV, Winlow W and Haydon P.G. (1982) Effects of tetraethylammonium and 4-aminopyridine on the somatic potentials of an identified molluscan neurone. Comp. Biochem. Physiol. 73A: 303-310.

6. Holden AV, Winlow W and Haydon P.G. (1982) The induction of periodic and chaotic activity in a molluscan neurone. Biol. Cybern. 43: 169-173.

7. Winlow W, Holden AV and Haydon PG. (1982) Characterization of Lymnaea neurones by determination of action potential trajectories. J.Exp. Biol. 99: 207-221.

9. Holden AV, Haydon PG and Winlow W. (1983) Multiple equilibria and exotic behaviour in excitable membranes. Biol. Cybern. 46: 167-172.

10. Winlow W and Haydon PG. (1986) A behavioural and neuronal analysis of the locomotory system of Lymnaea stagnalis. Comp. Biochem. Physiol. 83A: 13-21.

Page 10: Vitae

Philip G. Haydon April 2010

10

11. Haydon PG and Winlow W. (1986) Shell movements associated with locomotion of Lymnaea are driven by a central pattern generator. Comp. Biochem. Physiol. 83A, 23-25.

12. Haydon PG, McCobb DP and Kater SB. (1984) Serotonin selectively inhibits growth cone motility and synaptogenesis of specific identified neurons. Science 226: 561-564.

13. Haydon PG, Cohan CS, McCobb DP, Miller HR and Kater SB. (1985) Neuron-specific growth cone properties as seen in identified neurons of Helisoma. J. Neurosci. Res. 13: 135-147.

14. Cohan CS, Haydon PG and Kater SB. (1985) Single channel activity differs in growing and non-growing growth cones of isolated identified neurons of Helisoma. J. Neurosci. Res. 13: 285-300.

15. Haydon PG, McCobb DP and Kater SB. (1987) The regulation of neurite outgrowth, growth cone motility, and synaptogenesis by serotonin. J. Neurobiol. 18: 197-215.

16. Cohan CS, Haydon PG, Mercier AJ and Kater SB. (1987) Formation, maintenance and breaking of connections between identified Helisoma neurons in situ. J. Neurobiol. 18: 197-215.

17. McCobb DP, Haydon PG and Kater SB. (1988) Dopamine and serotonin inhibit neurite elongation of different identifed neurons. J. Neurosci. Res. 19: 19-26.

18. Haydon PG and Kater SB. (1988) The differential regulation of chemical and electrical synaptogenesis. J. Neurobiol. 18: 636-655.

19. Haydon PG. (1988) Chemical synapses form between isolated neuronal somata in the absence of neurite extension. J. Neurosci. 8: 1032-1038.

20. Zucker RS and Haydon PG. (1988). Membrane potential has no direct role in evoking neurotransmitter release. Nature 335: 360-363.

21. Haydon PG and Man-Son-Hing HJ. (1988) Low- and high-voltage-activated calcium currents: Their relationship to the site of neurotransmitter release in an identified neuron of Helisoma. Neuron 1: 919-927.

22. Zoran MJ, Haydon PG and Matthews PJ. (1989) Aminergic and peptidergic modulation of motor function at an identified neuromuscular junction in Helisoma. J. Exp. Biol. 142: 225-243.

23. Haydon PG and Zoran MJ. (1989) Formation and modulation of chemical connections: evoked acetylcholine release from growth cones and neurites of specific identified neurons. Neuron 2: 1483-1490.

24. Man-Son-Hing HJ, Zoran MJ, Lukowiak K and Haydon PG. (1989) A neuromodulator of synaptic transmission acts on secretory apparatus as well as ion channels. Nature 341: 237-239.

25. Haydon PG, Zoran M, Man-Son-Hing HJ, Sievers EM and Doyle RT. (1990) A relation between synaptic specificity and the acquisition of presynaptic properties. J. Physiol. (Paris) 84: 111-120.

26. Zoran MJ, Doyle RT and Haydon PG. (1990) Target dependent induction of secretory capabilities in an identified motoneuron during synaptogenesis. Developmental Biology 138: 202-213.

Page 11: Vitae

Philip G. Haydon April 2010

11

27. Zoran MJ, Doyle RT and Haydon PG. (1991) Target contact regulates calcium responsiveness of secretory machinery during synaptogenesis. Neuron 6: 145-151.

28. Richmond JE, Funte LR, Smith WL, Price DL and Haydon PG. (1991) Activation of a peptidergic synapse locally modulates postsynaptic calcium influx. J. Exp. Biol. 161: 257-271.

29. Haydon PG, Man-Son-Hing HJ, Doyle RT and Zoran MJ. (1991) FMRFamide modulation of secretory machinery underlying presynaptic inhibition of synaptic transmission requires a pertussis toxin-sensitive G protein. J. Neuroscience 11: 3851-3860.

30. Man-Son-Hing HJ and Haydon PG. (1992) Modulation of growth cone calcium current is mediated by a pertussis toxin-sensitive G protein. Neurosci. Letts. 137: 133-136

31. Bahls FH, Richmond JE, Smith WL and Haydon PG. (1992) A lipoxygenase pathway of arachidonic acid metabolism mediates FMRFamide activation of a potassium current in an identified neuron of Helisoma. Neurosci. Letts.138: 165-168.

32. Man-Son-Hing HJ, Codina J, Abramowitz J and Haydon PG. (1992) Microinjection of the -subunit of the G protein Go2, but not Go1, reduces a voltage-sensitive calcium current. Cellular

Signalling 4: 429-441.

33. Henderson E, Haydon PG and Sakaguchi DS. (1992) Actin filament dynamics in living glia cells imaged by atomic force microscopy. Science 257: 1944-1946.

34. Parpura V, Haydon PG and Henderson E. (1993) Three-dimensional imaging of living neurons and glia with the atomic force microscope. J. Cell Science 104: 427-432.

35. Zoran MJ, Funte LR, Kater SB and Haydon PG. (1993) Synaptic target-induced regulation of neuronal calcium homeostasis. Developmental Biology 158: 163-171

36. Parpura V, Haydon PG, Sackaguchi DS and Henderson E. (1993) Atomic Force microscopy and manipulation of living glial cells. J. Vac Sci. Technol. 11: 773-775.

37. Durgerian S, Bahls F, Richmond J, Doyle RT, Larson DD and Haydon PG. (1993) Roles for Arachidonic acid and GTP-binding proteins in synaptic transmission. J. Physiol. Paris. 87: 123-137.

38. Funte LR and Haydon PG. (1993) Synaptic target rapidly enhances presynaptic calcium influx by activating cAMP-dependent protein kinase during synaptogenesis. Neuron 10: 1069-1078.

39. Richmond J and Haydon PG. (1993) Rab effector domain peptides stimulate the release of neurotransmitter from cell cultured synapses. FEBS Letters 326: 124-130.

40. Haydon PG and Zoran MJ. (1994) Retrograde regulation of presynaptic development during synaptogenesis. J. Neurobiol. 25: 694-706.

41. Parpura V, Basarsky TB, Liu F, Jeftinija S, Jeftinjia S and Haydon PG. (1994) Glutamate-mediated astrocyte-neuron signaling. Nature 369: 744-747.

Page 12: Vitae

Philip G. Haydon April 2010

12

42. Fang Y, Durgerian S, Basarsky T and Haydon PG. (1994) GTP-binding proteins: Necessary components of the presynaptic terminal for synaptic transmission and its modulation. Advances in second messenger and phosphoprotein research . 29: 121-132.

43. Basarsky T, Parpura V and Haydon PG. (1994) Hippocampal synaptogenesis in cell culture: Developmental time course of synapse formation, calcium influx, and synaptic protein distribution. J. Neurosci. 14: 6402-6411

44. Haydon PG, Henderson E and Stanley E. (1994) The spatial distribution of individual calcium channels in the release face of a presynaptic terminal. Neuron 13: 1275-1280.

45. Parpura V, Liu F, Brethorst S, Jeftinija K, Jeftinija S and Haydon PG. (1995) -latrotoxin stimulates glutamate release cortical astrocytes in cell culture. FEBS Letts. 360: 266-270.

46. Parpura V, Doyle RT, Basarsky TA, Henderson E and Haydon PG. (1995) Dynamic imaging of purified individual synaptic vesicles. Neuroimage 2: 3-7.

47. Bahls FH, Emery DG and Haydon PG. (1995) Glutamate-mediated synaptic transmission between neuron B4 and salivary cells of Helisoma trivolvis. Invertebrate Neuroscience 1: 123-131

48. Parpura V, Liu F, Jeftinija K, Haydon PG and Jeftinija S. (1995) Neuroligand-evoked calcium-dependent release of excitatory amino acids from Schwann cells. J. Neuroscience 15: 5831-5839.

49. Tan W, Parpura V, Haydon PG and Yeung ES. (1995) Neurotransmitter imaging in living cells based on native fluorescence detection. Analytical Chemistry 67: 2575-2579.

50. Parpura V, Fang Y, Basarsky TA, Jahn R and Haydon PG. (1995) Expression of synaptobrevin II, cellubrevin and syntaxin, but not SNAP-25 in cultured astrocytes. FEBS Letts. 377:489-492.

51. Trudeau L-E, Doyle RT, Emery DE and Haydon PG. (1996) Calcium-independent activation of the secretory apparatus by ruthenium red: A new tool to assess modulation of presynaptic function in hippocampal neurons. J. Neurosci. 16: 46-54.

52. Haydon PG, Marchese-Ragona S, Basarsky TA, Szulczewski M and McCloskey M. (1996) Near-Field Confocal Optical Spectroscopy (NCOS): Sub-diffraction optical resolution for biological systems. J. Microscopy 182: 208-216.

53. Haydon PG, Lartius R, Parpura V and Marchese-Ragona S. Membrane deformation of living glial cells using atomic force microscopy. (1996) J. Microscopy 182: 114-120.

54. Trudeau L-E, Emery DE and Haydon PG. (1996) Direct Modulation of the Secretory Machinery underlies PKA-dependent synaptic facilitation in hippocampal neurons. Neuron 17: 789-797.

55. Lindgren CA, Emery DG and Haydon PG. (1997) Intracellular acidification reversibly reduces endocytosis at the neuromuscular junction. J. Neuroscience 17: 3074-3084

56. Bahls FH, Lartius RJ, Trudeau L-E, Doyle RT, Fang Y, Witcher D, Campbell K and Haydon, PG. (1998) Contact-dependent regulation of N-type calcium channel subunits during synaptogenesis. J Neurobiology 35: 198-208.

Page 13: Vitae

Philip G. Haydon April 2010

13

57. Trudeau L-E, Fang Y and Haydon PG. (1998) Modulation of an early step in the secretory machinery in hippocampal nerve terminals. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 95: 7163-7168

58. Parpura V, Tong W, Yeung ES and Haydon PG. (1998) Laser-induced native fluorescence (LINF) imaging of serotonin depletion in depolarized neurons. J. Neuroscience Methods 82: 151-158..

59. Araque A, Parpura V, Sanzgiri RP and Haydon PG. (1998) Astrocytes modulate hippocampal synaptic transmission. European Journal of Neuroscience10: 2129-2142.

60. Araque A, Sanzgiri RP, Parpura V and Haydon PG. (1998) Calcium elevation in astrocytes causes an NMDA receptor-dependent increase in the frequency of miniature synaptic currents in cultured hippocampal neurons. J. Neuroscience 18: 6822-6829.

61. English DS, Doyle RT, Petrich JW and Haydon PG. (1999) Subcellular distributions and excited-state processes of hypericin in neurons. Photochemistry and Photobiology 69: 301-305

62. Parpura V and Haydon PG. (1999) UV Photolysis using a micromanipulated optical fiber to deliver UV energy directly to the sample. J. Neurosci Methods 87: 25-34.

63. Parpura V and Haydon PG. (1999) Uncaging using optical fibers to deliver UV light directly to the sample. Croatian Medical Journal 40: 340-345.

64. Araque A, Sanzgiri RP, Parpura V and Haydon PG. (1999) Astrocyte-induced modulation of synaptic transmission. Can J of Physiol and Pharm. 77: 699-706..

65. Trudeau L, Parpura V and Haydon PG. (1999) Activation of neurotransmitter release in hippocampal nerve terminals during recovery from intracellular acidification. J. Neurophysiology 81: 2627-2635.

66. Sanzgiri, R., Araque, A. and Haydon, P. G. (1999) Prostaglandin e2 induces astrocyte-mediated slow inward currents in cultured hippocampal neurons. J. Neurobiology 41: 221-229.

67. Araque A, Li N, Doyle RT and Haydon PG. (2000) Snare protein-dependent glutamate release from astrocytes. Journal of Neuroscience 20: 666-673.

68. Innocenti B, Parpura V and Haydon PG. (2000) Imaging extracellular waves of glutamate during calcium signaling in cultured astrocytes. Journal of Neuroscience 20: 1800-1808.

69. Wang Z, Haydon PG and Yeung ES. (2000) Direct observation of calcium-independent ATP signaling in astrocytes. Analytical Chemistry 72: 2001-2007.

70. Parpura V and Haydon PG.(2000) Physiological astrocytic calcium levels stimulate glutamate release to modulate adjacent neurons. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 97: 8629-8634.

71. Doyle RT, Szulczewski MJ and Haydon PG. (2001) Extraction of Near-Field fluorescence from composite signals, to provide high resolution images of glial cells. Biophys J. 80:2477-2482.

Page 14: Vitae

Philip G. Haydon April 2010

14

72. Takano, H, Sul J-Y, Mazzanti M, Doyle RT, Haydon PG, Porter MD. (2002) Micropatterned Substrates: Approach to Probing Intercellular Communication Pathways. Analytical Chemistry.15: 4640-4646.

73. Mazzanti M and Haydon PG. (2003) Astrocytes selectively enhance N-type calcium current in hippocampal neurons. Glia. 41: 128-136

74. Krżan M, Stenovec M, Kreft M, Pangršič T, Grilc S, Haydon PG and Zorec R. (2003) Calcium-Dependent Exocytosis of Atrial Natriuretic Peptide from Astrocytes. Journal of Neuroscience 23(5): 1580-1583

75. Li, N, Sul, J-Y and Haydon, PG. (2003) A Calcium-Induced Calcium Influx Factor, Nitric Oxide, Modulates the Refilling of Calcium Stores in Astrocytes. The Journal of Neuroscience 23(32): 10302-10.

76. Sul, J-Y, Orosz, G, Givens, RS and Haydon, PG. (2004) Astrocytic Connectivity in the Hippocampus. Neuron Glia Biology 1, 3-11. PMCID#: PMC1420681.

77. Zhang Q, Pangršič T, Kreft M, Kržan M, Li N, Sul JY, Halassa M, van Bockstaele E, Zorec R and Haydon PG (2004). Fusion-related release of glutamate from astrocytes. J Biol.Chem. 279 (13):12724-12733.

78. Kreft M, Stenovec M, Rupnik M, Grilc S, Kržan M, Potokar M, Pangršič T, Haydon PG and Zorec R. Properties of Ca2+-dependent exocytosis in cultured astrocytes. Glia 46 (4):437-445, 2004.

79. Zhang, Q., Fukuda, M., Van Bockstaele, E., Pascual, O. and Haydon, PG. (2004) Synaptotagmin IV regulates glial glutamate release. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 101(25): 9441-6.

80. Fellin, T., Pascual, O., Gobbo, S., Pozzan, T., Haydon, PG and Carmignoto, G. (2004). Neuronal synchrony mediated by astrocytic glutamate through activation of extrasynaptic NMDA receptors. Neuron 43: 729-743.

81. Fedoryak, O., Sul, J-Y., Haydon, PG and Ellis-Davies, G.C.R. Synthesis of a caged glutamate for efficient one and two-photon photorelease on living cells. Chemical Communications. (Camb.) (29):3664-3666, 2005

82. Evanko, D. and Haydon, PG. Elimination of environmental sensitivity in a cameleon FRET-based calcium sensor via replacement of the acceptor with Venus. Cell Calcium 37 (4):341-348, 2005.

83. Zhang, G., Jin, L.Q., Sul, J.Y., Haydon, PG, and Selzer, M.E. Live imaging of regenerating lamprey spinal axons. Neurorehabil. Neural Repair 19 (1):46-57, 2005.

84. Pascual, O., Casper, K., Kubera, C., Zhang, J., Revilla-Sanchez, J., Sul, J.Y., Takano, H., Moss, S., McCarthy, F. and Haydon, PG. Astrocytic Purinergic Signaling Coordinates Synaptic Networks. Science 2005 Oct 7;310(5745):113-6. 85. Jacob, Tija C, Bogdanov, Yury D, Magnus, Christopher, Saliba, Richard S, Kittler, Josef T, Haydon,

PG and Moss, Stephen J. Gephyrin Regulates the Cell Surface Dynamics of Synaptic GABAA Receptors J. Neuroscience 2005 Nov 9;25(45):10469-78.

Page 15: Vitae

Philip G. Haydon April 2010

15

86. Glanzer, J, Miyashiro, K Y, Sul, JY, Barrett, L, Belt, B, Haydon, P and Eberwine, J. RNA splicing capability of live neuronal dendrites. Proc.Natl.Acad.Sci.U.S.A 102 (46):16859-16864, 2005.

87. Haydon PG, Ellis-Davies GC. Ultrahigh-speed photochemical stimulation of neurons.

Nat Methods. 2005 Nov 2(11):811-2. 88. Barrett LE, Van Bockstaele EJ, Sul JY, Takano H, Haydon PG, Eberwine JH. Elk-1 associates with

the mitochondrial permeability transition pore complex in neurons. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2006 Mar 28;103(13):5155-60.

89. Fellin T, Pascual O, Haydon PG. Astrocytes coordinate synaptic networks: balanced excitation and

inhibition. Physiology (Bethesda). 2006 Jun 21:208-15. 90. Barrett LE, Sul JY, Takano H, Van Bockstaele EJ, Haydon PG, Eberwine JH. Region-directed

phototransfection reveals the functional significance of a dendritically synthesized transcription factor. Nat Methods. 2006 Jun;3(6):455-60.

91. Messam CA, Ding S and Haydon PG. Functional differentiation of human brain progenitor cells.

Neuron Glia Biol. 2006 Aug;2(3):187-98. 92. Bogdanov Y, Michels G, Armstrong-Gold C, Haydon PG, Lindstrom J, Pangalos M, Moss SJ.

Synaptic GABA(A) receptors are directly recruited from their extrasynaptic counterparts. EMBO J. 2006 Aug 31;25(18):4381-4389.

93. Fellin T, Gomez-Gonzalo M, Gobbo S, Carmignoto G, Haydon PG. Astrocytic glutamate is not

necessary for the generation of epileptiform neuronal activity in hippocampal slices. J Neurosci. 2006 Sep 6 26(36):9312-22.

94. Martin ED, Fernandez M, Perea G, Pascual O, Haydon PG, Araque A, Cena V. Adenosine released

by astrocytes contributes to hypoxia-induced modulation of synaptic transmission.

Glia. 2006 Sep 26. 95. Pangrsic T, Potokar M, Haydon PG, Zorec R, Kreft M. Astrocyte swelling leads to membrane

unfolding, not membrane insertion. J Neurochem. 2006 Oct;99(2):514-23. 96. Mrass P, Takano H, Ng LG, Daxini S, Lasaro MO, Iparraguirre A, Cavanagh LL, von Andrian UH,

Ertl HC, Haydon PG, Weninger W. Random migration precedes stable target cell interactions of tumor-infiltrating T cells. J Exp Med. 2006 Nov 27;203(12):2749-61.

97. Ding S, Messam CA, Li P, Selzer ME, Dichter MA, Haydon PG. Murine brain progenitor cells have

the ability to differentiate into functional neurons and integrate into the CNS. Cell Transplant. 2006;15(8-9):699-710.

98. D’Ascenzo M, Fellin T, Terunuma M, Revilla-Sanchez R, Meaney DF, Auberson YP, Moss SJ,

Haydon PG. mGluR5 stimulates gliotransmission in the nucleus accumbens. PNAS USA. 2007 Feb 6;104(6):1995-2000

99. Halassa MM, Fellin T, Haydon PG. The tripartite synapse: roles for gliotransmission in health and

disease. Trends Mol Med. 2007 Feb:13(2):54-63.

Page 16: Vitae

Philip G. Haydon April 2010

16

100. Halassa MM, Fellin T, Takano H, Dong JH and Haydon PG. Synaptic islands defined by the territory of a single astrocyte. J Neurosci. 2007 Jun 13;27(24):6473-7.

101. Lee SY and Haydon PG. Astrocytic glutamate targets NMDA receptors. J Physiol. 2007 Jun

15;581(Pt 3):887-8.

102. Ding S, Fellin T, Zhu Y, Lee SY, Auberson YP, Meaney DF, Coulter DA, Carmignoto G, Haydon

PG. Enhanced astrocytic Ca2+ signals contribute to neuronal excitotoxicity after status epilepticus. J Neurosci. 2007 Oct 3;27(40):10674-84.

103. Ahn M, Lee J, Gustafsson A, Enriquez A, Lancaster E, Sul JY, Haydon PG, Paul DL, Huang Y,

Abrams CK, Scherer SS. Cx29 and Cx32, two connexins expressed by myelinating glia, do not interact and are functionally distinct. J Neurosci Res. 2007 Oct 30.

104. Fellin T, D’Ascenzo M and Haydon PG. Astrocytes control neuronal excitability in the nucleus

accumbens. Scientific World Journal. 2007 Nov 2;7:89-97.

105. Terunuma M, Xu J, Vithlani M, Sieghart W, Kittler J, Pangalos M, Haydon PG, Coulter DA and Moss SJ. Deficits in phosphorylation of GABA(A) receptors by intimately associated protein kinase C activity underlie compromised synaptic inhibition during status epilepticus. J Neurosci. 2008 Jan 9;28(2):376-84.

106. Ahn M, Lee J, Gustafsson A, Enriquez A, Lancaster E, Sul JY, Haydon PG, Paul DL, Huang Y,

Abrams CK, Scherer SS. Cx29 and Cx32, two connexins expressed by myelinating glia, do not interact and are functionally distinct. J Neurosci Res. 2008 April;86(5):992-1006. PMCID#

PMC2663799

107. Haydon PG, Blendy J, Moss SJ and Jackson FR. Astrocytic control of synaptic transmission and plasticity: a target for drugs of abuse? Neuropharmacology 2008 Jul 3:1-8. PMCID# PMC2636575

108. Jackson FR and Haydon PG. Glial cell regulation of neurotransmission and behavior in Drosophila.

Neuron Glia Biol. 2008 Oct 27:1-7. PMCID# pending

109. Ding S, Wang T, Cui W and Haydon PG. Photothrombosis ischemia stimulates a sustained astrocytic Ca(2+) signaling in vivo. Glia 2008 Nov 4. [Epub ahead of print]. PMCID#

PMC2697167

110. Halassa MM, Florian C, Fellin T, Munoz JR, Lee SY, Abel, ET, Haydon PG and Frank MG. Astrocytic modulation of sleep homeostasis and cognitive consequences of sleep loss. Neuron 2009 Jan 61;2:213-19. PMCID# PMC2673052

111. Wilson EH, Harris TH, Mrass P, Joh G, TAit ED, Wu GF, Pepper M, Wherry EJ, Dzierzinski F, Roos

D, Haydon PG, Laufer TM, Weninger W and Hunter CA. Behavior of parasite-specific effector CD8+ T cells in the brain and visualization of a kinesis-associated system of reticular fibers. Immunity. 2009 Feb 20;30(2):300-11 PMCID# PMC2696229

112. Miller WJ, Leventhal I, Scarsella D, Haydon PG, Janmey P and Meaney DF. Mechanically induced

reactive gliosis causes ATP-mediated alterations in astrocyte stiffness. J Neurotrauma. 2009 May;26(5):789-97 PMCID# PMC2828878

Page 17: Vitae

Philip G. Haydon April 2010

17

113. Jin LQ, Zhang G, Jamison C Jr, Takano H, Haydon PG and Selzer ME. Axon regeneration in the absence of growth cones: acceleration by cyclic AMP. J Comp Neurol. 2009 July 20;515(3):295-312

114. Fellin T, Halassa MM, Terunuma M, Succol F, Takano H, Frank M, Moss SJ and Haydon PG.

Endogenous nonneuronal modulators of synaptic transmission control cortical slow oscillations in vivo. Proc Natl Acad Sci. 2009 Sep1;106(35):15037-42. PMCID# PMC2736412

Books 1. Volterra A, Magistretti PJ and Haydon PG, editors (2002) The Tripartite Synapse: Glia in Synaptic

Transmission. Oxford University Press.

Invited Review Articles and Book Chapters

1. Haydon PG, Holden AV and Winlow W. (1982) Coherent and incoherent computation in identified molluscan neurones. In: Cybernetics and Systems Research (ed. Trappl R.) North Holland Publishing Co., Amsterdam. pp. 265-270.

2. Kater SB, Cohan CS and Haydon PG. (1985) Determinants of specificity of electrical synapses: The making and breaking of connections in Helisoma. In: Gap Junctions (eds. M.V.L. Bennett and D.C. Spray) Cold Spring Harbor Publications. pp 241-250.

3. Kater SB and Haydon PG. (1987) Multifunctional roles for neurotransmitters: The regulation of neurite outgrowth, growth cone motility and synaptogenesis. In: Model Systems of Development and Aging in the Nervous System. (ed. A. Vernadakis) . pp239-255.

4. Haydon PG and Kater SB. (1987) Novel roles for neurotransmitters: The regulation of neurite outgrowth, growth cone motility and synaptogenesis. In: Growth and Plasticity of Neural Connections. (eds. W Winlow and C McCrohan). pp3-21. Manchester University Press, England.

5. Haydon PG. (1989) Neuronal strategies underlying the formation of chemical connections in Helisoma. In Press. In: Cellular Basis of Neuronal Plasticity. (ed. A.G.M. Bulloch) Manchester University Press, England. pp129-151.

6. Haydon PG, Man-Son-Hing HJ and Doyle RT. (1991) FMRFamide acts through a pertussis-toxin-sensitive G protein(s) to modulate secretory machinery and ion channels. In: Molluscan Neurobiology. (eds HH Boer, KS Kits and J Joose) Elsevier North Holland Publishing Company, Amsterdam pp 108-116.

7. Haydon PG and Zoran MJ. (1991) Chemical synapses in cell culture. In Cellular Neurobiology: A practical approach. (eds. H. Wheal and J. Chad) IRL Press, Oxford. pp 57-71.

8. Haydon PG and Drapeau P. (1995) From contact to connection: Early events during synaptogenesis. Trends in Neurosciences 18: 196-201.

9. Parpura V, Basarsky TA and Haydon PG. (1996) Astrocyte-Neuron signaling. In: Excitatory Amino Acids and the Cerebral Cortex. (eds. F. Conti and P. Hicks) pp 167-174.

10. Marchese-Ragona S and Haydon PG. (1997) Practical Aspects of Near-field optical microscopy. In Neurotransmitter Release and Uptake. (ed Sakire Pogun. Springer Verlag) pp 67-77.

11. Haydon PG, Innocenti B, Wolf D and Szulczewski M. (1998) Near-Field Microscopy of Living Cells. SPIE 3273: 174-178.

Page 18: Vitae

Philip G. Haydon April 2010

18

12. Haydon PG and Trudeau L-E. (1998) Regulatory roles for GTP-binding proteins in nerve terminals. Seminars in Neurosciences 9: 220-231.

13. Araque A, Parpura V, Sanzgiri RP and Haydon PG. (1999) Tripartite Synapses: Glia, the unacknowledged partner. Trends in Neurosciences. 22: 208-215.

14. Takano H, Porter M and Haydon PG. (2000) Imaging the spatial organization of calcium channels in nerve terminals using atomic force microscopy. In: Ion Channel Localization Methods and Protocols. (eds. A. Lopatin, and C. Nichols).

15. Haydon PG. (2000) Neuroglial networks: Neurons and glia talk to each other. Current Biology, 10: R712-R714.

16. Araque A, Carmignoto G and Haydon PG. (2001). Dynamic Signaling Between Astrocytes and Neurons. Annual Reviews of Physiology. 63: 795-813.

17. Haydon PG. (2001). Glial: Listening and Talking to the Synapse. Nature Reviews Neuroscience. 2: 185-193.

18. Mazzanti M, Sul J-Y and Haydon PG. (2001). Glutamate on demand: Astrocytes serve as a ready source. The Neuroscientist 7(5):396-405.

19. Haydon PG and Araque A. (2002) Astrocytes as modulators of synaptic transmission. The Tripartite Synapse: Glia in Synaptic Transmission. eds. Volterra, A., Magistretti, P.J. and Haydon, P.G. Oxford University Press.

20. Haydon PG. Biological Near-Field Microscopy. (2003) Methods in Enzymology. Volume 360, Biophotonics, Part A. eds. Marriott, G. and Parker, I. Academic Press. 501-508.

21. Pascual O and Haydon PG. (2003) Synaptic inhibition mediated by glia. Neuron 40(5): 873-5.

22. Glanzer J, Haydon PG and Eberwine JH. (2004) Expression Profile Analysis of Neurodegenerative Disease: Advances in Specificity and Resolution. Neurochemical Research, Vol. 29, No. 6, June 2004 (© 2004), pp. 1155–1162.

23. Evanko DS, Zhang Q, Zorec R and Haydon PG. (2004) Defining pathways of loss and secretion of chemical messengers from astrocytes. Glia 47(3): 233-40.

24. Zhang Q and Haydon PG. (2004) Roles for gliotransmission in the nervous system. J. Neural Transmission. 112(1):121-5.

25. Haydon PG and Ellis-Davies GC. Ultrahigh-speed photochemical stimulation of neurons. Nat Methods 2 (11):811-812, 2005.

26. Fellin T and Haydon PG. Do astrocytes contribute to excitation underlying seizures? Trends Mol.Med 11 (12):530-533, 2005.

27. Fellin T, Sul J-Y, D’Ascenzo M, Takano H, Pascual O and Haydon PG. Bidirectional astrocyte- neuron communication: the many roles of glutamate and ATP. Novartis Found Symp. 2006;276:208- 17; discussion 217-21, 233-7, 275-81.

28. Haydon PG and Carmignoto G. Astrocyte control of synaptic transmission and neurovascular coupling. Physiol Rev. 2006 Jul;86(3):1009-31.

29. Fellin T, Pascual O and Haydon PG. Astrocytes coordinate synaptic networks: balanced excitation and inhibition. Physiology (Bethesda). 2006 Jun;21:208-15.

30 Lee SY and Haydon PG. Astrocytic glutamate targets NMDA receptors. J Physiol. 2007 Jun 15;581(Pt 3):887-8.

Page 19: Vitae

Philip G. Haydon April 2010

19

31 Fellin T, D'Ascenzo M, Haydon PG. Astrocytes control neuronal excitability in the nucleus

accumbens. Scientific World Journal 2007 Nov 2;7:89-97. 32. Halassa MM, Fellin T and Haydon PG. Tripartite synapses: roles for astrocytic purines in the

control of synaptic physiology and behavior. Neuropharmacology. 2009 Sep;57(4):343-6 PMCID#

pending

33. Halassa MM and Haydon PG. Integrated brain circuits: astrocytic networks modulate neuronal

activity and behavior. Annu Rev Physiol. 2010 March 17;72:335-55. PMCID# pending

GRANT FUNDING HISTORY

12/01/86-11/30/89 NIH, R01 $86,000 annual direct costs The Regulation of Synaptogenesis (PI)

12/01/88-11/30/93 NIH, R01 $108,107 annual direct costs Calcium Channels and G Proteins in Synaptic Transmission (PI)

12/01/89-11/30/94 NIH, R01 $134,524 annual direct costs The Regulation of Synaptogenesis (PI)

09/15/91-09/14/96 NSF, TG $274,000 annual direct costs Signal Transduction Training Grant (PI)

07/01/94-06/30/97 NIH, R01 $157,010 annual direct costs Calcium Channels and G Proteins in Synaptic Transmission (Co-PI)

09/01/94-08/31/97 USA/Israeli Binational Science Foundation $47,392 annual direct costs Long-Term Remodelling by Calcium-Activated Processes

01/01/94-12/30/96 McKnight Foundation $40,000 annual direct costs Mechanisms of Synaptic Transmission (PI)

07/01/95-06/30/01 NIH/NINDS, R01 $138,140 annual direct costs The Regulation of Synaptogenesis (PI)

09/15/96-09/14/01 NSF, TG $171,899 annual direct costs Signal Transduction Training Group (PI)

09/01/97-08/31/00 NIH, R43 $12,800 annual direct costs Near-Field Microscopy (Consultant)

04/01/98-03/31/02 NIH/NINDS, R01 $191,016 annual direct costs Astrocyte Neuron Signaling (PI)

07/01/99-06/31/01 Roy J. Carver Charitable Trust $900,000 annual direct costs National Center for Biological Scanning Probe and Laser-Based Microscopy (Co-Investigator)

09/01/01-03/31/02 NIH/NINDS, R43 $9,071 annual direct costs Integrated Twin Epi-Fluorescence System (Consultant)

08/15/01-02/14/02 NIH/NINDS, R43 $13,594 annual direct costs Near-Field Confocal Imaging of Calcium Microdomains (Consultant)

06/11/02-12/10/02 NIH/NINDS, R43 $12,681 annual direct costs The Swept Field Confocal Microscope (Consultant)

Page 20: Vitae

Philip G. Haydon April 2010

20

09/15/95-09/14/96 Topometrix Corp. $56,000 annual direct costs Near-Field Scanning Microscopy (PI)

07/01/97-06/30/99 Iowa St. Univ. Biotechnology Council $100,000 annual direct costs Imaging Secretion UV-based Microscopy and Photolysis (PI)

02/01/99-09/01/99 University of Delaware $12,000 annual direct costs Near-Field Microscopy (Co-PI)

04/01/00-03/31/03 NIH $32,000 annual direct costs Molecular Mechanism of Glutamate Release from Astrocytes (Co-PI)

07/15/01-07/14/06 NIH/NINDS, R01 $250,000 annual direct costs Reciprocal Signaling Between Synapses and Astrocytes (PI)

09/30/01-09/29/05 NIH/NINDS, R01 $284,500 annual direct costs Integration of Adult Human Mesenchymal Stem Cells in the CNS (PI)

04/01/02-03/31/04 NIH/NINDS, R21 $125,000 annual direct costs Imaging Calcium and Vesicle Dynamics in Nerve Terminals (PI)

08/01/02-07/31/14 NIH/NINDS, R01 $250,000 annual direct costs

Astrocyte Neuron Signaling (PI)

09/30/03-07/31/08 NIH/NINDS, P30 $482,930 annual direct costs Center for Dynamic Imaging of Nervous System Function (PI)

08/01/04-07/31/08 NIH/NIMH, P20 $500,000 annual direct costs Silvio O. Conte Center for Integration at the Tripartite Synapse (PI)

08/25/05-08/24/08 Wyeth-Ayers, SRA $100,000 annual direct costs Application of Imaging to Murine Models of Neurodegeneration 02/01/06-01/31/08 NIH/NIMH, R21 $135,000 annual direct costs In vivo two photon imaging of stem cell differentiation (PI) 04/01/06-03/31/11 NIH/NINDS, R01 $225,000 annual direct costs

Roles for Gliotransmission in Seizure-Related Disorders (PI)

07/01/06-01/31/11 NIH/NINDS, R01 $276,000 annual direct costs

Reciprocal Signaling Between Synapses and Astrocytes (PI)

09/15/08-05/31/2013 NIH/NIDA, R01 $250,000 annual direct costs

Roles for Gliotransmission in Substance Abuse (PI)

03/01/09-02/28/12 Wyeth-Ayers, SRA $121,000 annual direct costs

Imaging to murine models of neurodegeneration (Co-PI)