Christopher A. Walsh (born 1957) is the Bullard Professor of Neurology at
Harvard Medical School, Chief of the Division of Genetics at
Children's Hospital Boston, Investigator of the
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, and the former Director of the Harvard–MIT MD–PhD Program. His research focuses on genetics of human cortical development and
somatic mutations contributions to human brain diseases.[1]
Walsh was a founding Board Member of the International Center for Genetic Disease (iCGD) at Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, which focuses on the analysis of patients and healthy subjects from different parts of the world for genetics research into human disease and health.[2]
Early life and education
Walsh earned his B.S degree in chemistry from
Bucknell University in 1978. He went on to graduate school at
the University of Chicago, where he earned his MD (1985) and Ph.D. (1983) in life science in 1988 with Ray Guillery.[1]
Career
Walsh completed a postdoctoral fellowship at
Harvard Medical School in 1993 with Constance Cepko, and later that year joined the faculty at
Harvard Medical School as a professor of genetics, where he remains to this day. Walsh has authored more than 350 publications in scholarly journals and trained several graduate students and postdoctoral researchers. In 2018 Walsh was elected to the
National Academy of Sciences.[3] In 2021 he received the
Gruber Prize in Neuroscience (shared with
Christine Petit)[4] and in 2022 he was awarded the
Kavli Prize in Neuroscience.[5]
Shen, Jun; Gilmore, Edward C; Marshall, Christine A; Haddadin, Mary; Reynolds, John J; Eyaid, Wafaa; Bodell, Adria; Barry, Brenda; Gleason, Danielle; Allen, Kathryn; Ganesh, Vijay S; Chang, Bernard S; Grix, Arthur; Hill, R Sean; Topcu, Meral; Caldecott, Keith W; Barkovich, A James; Walsh, Christopher A (31 January 2010).
"Mutations in PNKP cause microcephaly, seizures and defects in DNA repair". Nature Genetics. 42 (3). Springer Science and Business Media LLC: 245–249.
doi:
10.1038/ng.526.
ISSN1061-4036.
PMC2835984.
PMID20118933.