Ethan Block, Ph.D.

Photo of Ethan Block
Associate Professor of Biology
412-365-1486
Buhl - 008

Hometown: Pittsburgh, PA
Joined Chatham: 2015

ACADEMIC AREAS OF INTEREST

Biology, Neuroscience, Cell biology, Signal transduction, Membrane trafficking, Neurotransmitter transporters, Drug addiction, Epithelial wound healing, Cancer

PERSONAL AREAS OF INTEREST

Family, Ice hockey, Cooking

BIOGRAPHY

I fell in love with science as an undergraduate working in a molecular endocrinology laboratory, and I am pleased to be able to share my passion and expertise with Chatham science students. I am a cellular and molecular biologist with specific expertise in signal transduction, protein trafficking, and neuroscience. A common theme in my research career has been cell communication. As an undergraduate, I studied the endocrine regulation of growth hormone receptor; as a graduate student I studied intra- and extra-cellular signal transduction in the cornea; as a post-doc I studied a key aspect of neurotransmission. My current work focuses on the dopamine re-uptake transporter, a membrane protein that regulates neurotransmission by clearing dopamine from the synapse. Elucidating the cell signals that regulate transporter function may help to explain mechanisms of neurodegeneration and psychiatric disorders, such as drug addiction. Research in my laboratory will capitalize on recent discoveries that certain isoforms of protein kinase C regulate dopamine transporter endocytosis, and that the transporter displays brain-region specific patterns of distribution. In addition to collaborations at the University of Pittsburgh, I use basic biochemical and microscopic techniques to test hypotheses related to re-uptake transporter function that are relevant to psychiatric disorders, drug addiction, and neurodegenerative disease.

EDUCATION
ACHIEVEMENTS
  • Jonas Salk Health Services Fellow, 2007
  • NRSA predoctoral fellow, National Eye Institute, 2008-2009
  • NRSA postdoctoral fellow, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, 20011-2013
  • NRSA postdoctoral fellow, National Institute on Drug Abuse, 2014
ORGANIZATIONS
SELECTED PUBLICATIONS
SELECTED PRESENTATIONS
  • Block, E. R., Nuttle, J., Balcita-Pedecino, J. J., Caltagarone, J., Watkins, S. C., Sesack, S. R., and Sorkin, A. (2015). Brain Region-Specific Trafficking of the Dopamine Transporter. Annual Meeting of the Society for Neuroscience (Chicago, IL), October 2015
RESEARCH

The brain chemical dopamine is important for emotion, cognition, learning, and movement. Dysregulation of dopamine physiology is involved with disorders such as Parkinson’s Disease, depression, ADHD, and substance use disorder.

My research focuses on the dopamine transporter, which is a primary regulator of normal dopamine physiology as well as being the target of numerous therapeutic and addictive drugs such as cocaine, amphetamine, and some antidepressants. The goal of my research program is to define the effects on dopamine transporter function of amphetamine-like stimulants, and to further probe the cellular signals and protein interactions underlying these effects. Open projects in the laboratory use mammalian cell culture, immunocytochemistry, microscopy, and behavioral analysis of the microscopic roundworm C. elegans.

There are also ongoing collaborative projects with Dr. Rob Lettan (drug discovery), Dr. Nataliya Myshakina (structural modeling), Dr. EJ Ryan (stimulant use and performance), and Dr. Alexander Sorkin, University of Pittsburgh (confocal fluorescence microscopy and ex vivo analysis).  Knowledge gained from this research contributes to an overall understanding of dopamine physiology and pharmacology, and lends insights toward new therapeutic avenues for substance use and other neurological disorders.

All students interested in joining the laboratory should contact Dr. Block. It is great to have a strong background in biology (BIO143 & 144) and laboratory technique (CHM108 & 110, BIO143L &144L), in addition to either cell and molecular biology (BIO231W) or neuroscience (BIO209). 

View List of Publications


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Victoria Vernail (BS Biology, 2020) presenting her project at Chatham University Research Day 2019.


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Christian West (BS Biology, 2019) presenting his project at Chatham University Research Day 2019.


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Frederick Leach (BA, Biology, 2020) performing cytotoxicity analysis using the multi-well spectrophotometer.


 

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Dopamine transporter endocytosis is measured using immunocytochemistry to label surface (red) and endocytosed (green) transporters.


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Toxicity of stimulants is measured by using fluorescence microscopy to observe the dopamine transporter (blue) and functioning mitochondria (red).


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The microscopic nematode C. elegans is used to measure dopamine dependent behaviors such as feeding, chemical sensation, movement, and cue conditioning.