Skip to main content
MIT Corporate Relations
MIT Corporate Relations
Search
×
Read
Watch
Attend
About
Connect
MIT Startup Exchange
Search
Sign-In
Register
Search
×
MIT ILP Home
Read
Faculty Features
Research
News
Watch
Attend
Conferences
Webinars
Learning Opportunities
About
Membership
Staff
For Faculty
Connect
Faculty/Researchers
Program Directors
MIT Startup Exchange
User Menu and Search
Search
Sign-In
Register
MIT ILP Home
Toggle menu
Search
Sign-in
Register
Read
Faculty Features
Research
News
Watch
Attend
Conferences
Webinars
Learning Opportunities
About
Membership
Staff
For Faculty
Connect
Faculty/Researchers
Program Directors
MIT Startup Exchange
Back to Faculty/Researchers
Prof. David Bartel
Professor of Biology
Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) Investigator
Member, Whitehead Institute
Primary DLC
Department of Biology
MIT Room:
WI-601B
(617) 258-5287
dbartel@wi.mit.edu
Areas of Interest and Expertise
Catalytic RNA (Ribozymes)
RNA Structure
Emergence of Biocatalysis
Early Molecular Evolution
Bioengineering
Structural Biology
Biochemistry and Biophysics
RNA Folding and Structure
RNA-Mediated Cellular Processes
Origin of Life
Molecular Evolution
Research Summary
The Bartel lab studies study small RNAs that regulate gene expression. Our main focus is on microRNAs (miRNAs), which are ~22-nt RNAs that specify gene repression by base-pairing to messages of protein-coding genes. Our lab is uncovering both the widespread influence of miRNAs on metazoan gene expression and the roles that miRNAs play during growth and development of plants and animals. For example, our work indicates that more than half of human protein-coding genes are conserved regulatory targets of miRNAs and that the miRNA regulation of one of these genes is important for preventing human cancers.
In earlier work, Bartel and his colleagues investigated RNA's ability to catalyze reactions and studied how new RNA enzymes (ribozymes) emerge. The group created new ribozymes with enzymatic activities thought to have been required early in evolution, before the emergence of enzymes made of protein. For example, the researchers generated a ribozyme that synthesizes small pieces of RNA, supporting the idea of an "RNA world" during the early evolution of life that featured RNA self-replication.
Recent Work
Projects
July 18, 2008
Department of Biology
Other Small Regulatory RNAs
Principal Investigator
David Bartel
July 18, 2008
Department of Biology
Regulatory Targets of MicroRNAs
Principal Investigator
David Bartel
December 20, 2006
Department of Biology
Genomics of MicroRNAs
Principal Investigator
David Bartel
December 20, 2006
Department of Biology
Biological Functions of MicroRNAs
Principal Investigator
David Bartel
August 8, 2001
Department of Biology
Bartel Laboratory
Principal Investigator
David Bartel
Related Faculty
Prof. Harikesh S Wong
MIT/Ragon Institute Assistant Professor of Biology
Prof. Thomas Schwartz
Boris Magasanik Professor of Biology
Esther Greaves Estwick
Senior Human Resources Representative