#  Michael B. Miller 

Assistant Professor of Pathology

 

 

 



   ![Miller](/sites/g/files/omnuum5321/files/styles/hwp_4_5__320x400/public/2024-12/Untitled.jpg?itok=-0ZA1tkO) 

 



 

 smartphone [617-732-7510](tel:617-732-7510) 

 email <mbmiller@bwh.harvard.edu> 

 laptop\_windows [Lab Website](https://www.mbmillerlab.org/) 

 laptop\_windows [Publications](https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/myncbi/163iDMLHu4dAf/bibliography/53882670/public/) 

 

Brigham and Women's Hospital  
Building for Transformative Medicine, 8002K  
60 Fenwood Road  
Boston, MA 02115

 

 



 

We are interested in the fundamental mechanisms of neurodegenerative disorders like Alzheimer’s disease. Over the past century-plus, research has revealed specific proteins that misfold and are deposited in neurodegeneration, and recent discoveries have identified other molecular and cellular actors that appear to play a role in the development and progression of disease. However, despite these advances, disease-modifying therapies are limited.  
  
To address this gap, we are examining neurodegeneration from new perspectives and making use of new technologies in our research. We study the genomic changes (somatic mutations) that occur in brain cells during aging and disease. We examine how somatic mutations are created and what they can teach us about disease at the level of individual cells. Our research utilizes interdisciplinary approaches, including neurodegenerative disease biology, genomics, neuropathology, molecular biology, neuroscience, and computational biology. Our methods include the isolation of single cells, amplification of genomes, single-cell genome sequencing, and analysis of the patterns found in each cell’s genome. One major interest of the lab is innovating new methods for single-cell biology based on single-cell cytopathology, and innovating the molecular biology of single-cell genome amplification. With these new approaches, we are interrogating how individual cells experience aging and neurodegeneration, directly from human tissue. We seek to use this knowledge to contribute to the development of new diagnostic and therapeutic approaches for neurodegeneration.  
  
We are looking for enthusiastic, curious, kind students to join us in our goal to understand the pathogenic mechanisms of neurodegeneration. Our research is supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health, including the NIH Director’s New Innovator Award, as well as from the Doris Duke Foundation and BrightFocus Foundation.



 

 

 





 

 

- ## Program Affiliation
    
     [Genetics](/bbs-faculty/genetics)
- ## Discipline
    
     [Biochemistry](/discipline/biochemistry) [Computational](/discipline/computational) [Genetics](/discipline/genetics) [Genomics](/discipline/genomics) [Molecular Biology](/discipline/molecular-biology)
- ## Organism
    
     [Human](/organism/human) [Mouse](/organism/mouse)
- ## People
    
     [Faculty](/people/faculty)
- ## Location
    
     [Brigham and Women's Hospital](/location/brigham-and-womens-hospital)