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David M Sabatini

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Citizenship
  
Role
  
Biochemist

Name
  
David Sabatini

Nationality
  
American


David M. Sabatini httpswwwbroadinstituteorgfilesstylesbioske


Born
  
January 27, 1968 (age 56) New York, United States (
1968-01-27
)

Institutions
  
Whitehead InstituteMassachusetts Institute of TechnologyBroad Institute

Known for
  
mammalian target of rapamycinFK506 binding protein 12-rapamycin associated protein 1RictorRaptor

Residence
  
Awards
  
Fields
  
Biochemistry, Cell biology, Systems biology

Doctoral advisor
  

Dr. David Sabatini's Research on the mTOR Pathway


David M Sabatini is an American scientist and Professor of Biology at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology as well as a member of the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research. He has been an investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute since 2008 and was elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 2016. He is known for his important contributions in the areas of cell signaling and cancer metabolism, most notably the discovery and study of mTOR, a protein kinase that is an important regulator of cell and organismal growth that is deregulated in cancer, diabetes, as well as the aging process.

Contents

David M. Sabatini David M Sabatini MD PhD HHMIorg

Biography

David M. Sabatini 2015 Speakers Chicago Symposium on Cell Signaling

David M. Sabatini was born and raised in New York to Dr. David D. Sabatini and Dr. Zulema Sabatini, both Argentine immigrants from Buenos Aires. He obtained his B.S. from Brown University followed by both his MD and his Ph.D. at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine in Baltimore, Maryland, where he worked in the lab of Solomon H. Snyder. He joined the Whitehead Institute as a Whitehead Fellow in 1997, and in 2002 he became an Assistant Professor at MIT and a Member of the Whitehead Institute. He was promoted to tenured professor in 2006.

David M. Sabatini David M Sabatini DMSabatini Twitter

Sabatini currently resides in Cambridge, Massachusetts and is an avid biker and also enjoys gardening. His father, David D. Sabatini is a cell biologist and Professor at New York University. His younger brother, Bernardo L. Sabatini is a neuroscientist and Professor at Harvard University Medical School.

David M. Sabatini Sabatini lab Whitehead Institute

Sabatini is the scientific founder of Navitor, Raze Therapeutics and KSQ Therapeutics.

Scientific Contributions

David M. Sabatini David Sabatini Demystifying mTOR The Scientist Magazine

As a graduate student in Solomon Snyder’s Lab at Johns Hopkins, Sabatini began working on understanding the molecular mechanism of rapamycin; a macrolide antibiotic discovered in the soil of Easter Island that has potent antifungal, immunosuppressive, and anti-tumorigenic properties. Although the TOR/DRR genes had been identified in 1993 as conferring rapymycin resistance in budding yeast, the direct target of rapamycin and its mechanism of action in mammals was unknown. In 1994, Sabatini used rapamycin and its binding partner FKBP12 to purify the mechanistic Target of Rapamycin (mTOR) protein from rat brain, showing it to be the direct target of rapamycin in mammals and the homolog of the yeast TOR/DRR genes.

David M. Sabatini Science in Their Blood HHMI Bulletin Spring 2013 Howard Hughes

Since starting his own lab at the Whitehead Institute in 1997, Sabatini has made numerous key contributions to the understanding of mTOR function, regulation, and importance in diseases such as cancer. For example, his lab discovered the mTORC1 and mTORC2 multi-protein complexes, the nutrient sensing Rag GTPase pathway upstream of mTORC1, as well as the direct amino acid sensors Sestrin and CASTOR.

Sabatini’s research interests have expanded in recent years to include cancer metabolism as well as technology development surrounding the use of high-throughput genetic screens in human cells, most notably through the use of RNA interference and the CRISPR-Cas9 system. As of 2016, Sabatini has authored over 250 publications and has an h-index of 100.

Selected Awards and Honors

Paul Marks Prize for Cancer Research (2009)

NAS Award in Molecular Biology (2014)

Lurie Prize in Biomedical Sciences (2017)

References

David M. Sabatini Wikipedia


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