Skip to main content
impact
impact
open science
subheadline
careers and opportunities
subheadline
people & teams
people & teams
subheadline
allenites
subheadline
allen institute advisors
subheadline
board of directors
subheadline
shanahan foundation fellowship
subheadline
next generation leaders
subheadline
research
overview
our approach
subheadline
publications
subheadline
open science
subheadline
accelerator
brain science
subheadline
cell science
subheadline
neural dynamics
subheadline
immunology
subheadline
synthetic biology
subheadline
education
education
science education
subheadline
education resources
subheadline
field trips
subheadline
open science
subheadline
open science quest
subheadline
news
news
stories
subheadline
podcast
subheadline
sign up for our newsletter
subheadline
events
events
all events
subheadline
conferences
subheadline
event code of conduct
subheadline
events
open science quest
subheadline
summer workshop on the dynamic brain
subheadline
open science week
subheadline
brain fest
subheadline
science resources
science resources
allencell.org
subheadline
allenimmunology.org
subheadline
allenneuraldynamics.org
subheadline
brain-bican.org
subheadline
brain-map.org
subheadline
microns-explorer.org
subheadline
impact
back to menu
impact
open science
subheading
careers and opportunities
subheading
people & teams
people & teams
subheading
allen institute advisors
subheading
board of directors
subheading
shanahan foundation fellowship
subheading
next generation leaders
subheading
research
back to menu
impact
Label
subheading
Label
subheading
people & teams
education
back to menu
research
Label
subheading
Label
subheading
Heading
news
back to menu
research
Label
subheading
Label
subheading
Heading
events
back to menu
research
Label
subheading
Label
subheading
Heading
science resources
back to menu
science resources
allencell.org
subheading
allenimmunology.org
subheading
allenneuraldynamics.org
subheading
brain-bican.org
subheading
brain-map.org
subheading
microns-explorer.org
subheading
search
impact
people

Larry Goldstein

University of California, San Diego

Larry Goldstein is Distinguished Professor in the Department of Cellular and Molecular Medicine and the Department of Neurosciences at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD) School of Medicine, as well as Director of the UC San Diego Stem Cell Program, Scientific Director of the Sanford Consortium for Regenerative Medicine, and Director of the Sanford Stem Cell Clinical Center. He received his B.A. degree in biology and genetics from UCSD in 1976 and his Ph.D. degree in genetics from the University of Washington, Seattle in 1980. Goldstein did postdoctoral research at the University of Colorado at Boulder from 1980 to 1983 and at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology from 1983 to 1984. He was assistant, associate, and full professor at Harvard University in the Department of Cellular and Developmental Biology from 1984 to 1993. Goldstein then moved to UCSD as Professor of Pharmacology from 1993-2000, Investigator with the Howard Hughes Medical Institute from 1993-2012, Professor and then Distinguished Professor of Cellular and Molecular Medicine from 1999-present, and Distinguished Professor of Neurosciences from 2011-present. He has served as Director of the UCSD Stem Cell Program since 2006, Scientific Director of the Sanford Consortium for Regenerative Medicine since 2012, and Director of the Sanford Stem Cell Clinical Center beginning in 2013. His awards include a Senior Scholar Award from the Ellison Medical Foundation, an American Cancer Society Faculty Research Award, and The Loeb Chair in Natural Sciences when he was at Harvard University, election to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and the 2009 Public Service Award from the American Society for Cell Biology.Funding from the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine (CIRM), the Ara Parseghian Medical Research Foundation (APMRF) and Department of Defense (DOD), supports Goldstein’s work. His research is focused on understanding the molecular mechanisms of movement inside brain cells and how failures in the movement systems may lead to neurodegenerative diseases. His laboratory has discovered important links between transport processes and diseases such as Alzheimer and Huntington diseases. He is now focused on using human stem cells to understand and treat Alzheimer Disease, Niemann-Pick Type C, and ALS.Goldstein has had an active role in national science policy, having served on many public scientific advisory committees, in addition to serving as an expert commentator on the issue of stem cell research and biomedical research policy by print and broadcast media. He has testified on a number of occasions in the U.S. House of Representatives and the Senate about NIH funding and stem cell research. Goldstein also served as co-chair of the scientific advisory committee to the campaign for the Proposition 71 stem cell research initiative, which authorizes $3 billion in tax-free state bonds to fund stem cell research in California over 10 years. As a co-founder and consultant of the biotechnology company Cytokinetics, he has also had an active role in private industry where he has gained experience in translating scientific insights to new therapeutic approaches. Public understanding will be considerably improved with his recent well-received book, Stem Cells for Dummies.

back to team
featured contributions
featured publications
featured media
featured stories
featured events

featured publications

No articles for the category

featured events

No articles for the category

featured stories

No articles for the category

featured media

No articles for the category
we acceleratedevelopcatalyzeimpact

science done differently. shared with the world.

explore our accelerators

brain science

Mapping every cell, connection, and circuit in the brain—openly shared with the world.

cell science

Decoding how cells become tissues, then programming that knowledge into powerful new research tools.

neural dynamics

Revealing the brain's hidden algorithms that transform neural activity into real-world behavior.

immunology

Creating the deepest open reference for the healthy human immune system ever built.

synthetic biology

Engineering cells to record their own histories, transforming how we understand disease over time.

research

Big questions, open answers, and science built to be shared.

education

Inspiring the next generation of scientists through open science resources.

impact

Our science is empowering researchers and advancing health worldwide.
advancing science through open, collaborative research
Get the allen institute newsletter
Stay informed on the latest breakthroughs in neuroscience, bioscience, and AI-driven research.
allen institute
impactpeople & teamscareers & opportunitiesalumnihistory & founder
science resources
allencell.orgallenimmunology.orgallenneuraldynamics.orgbrain-bican.orgbrain-map.orgmicrons-explorer.org
research
brain sciencecell scienceneural dynamicsimmunologysynthetic biologypublications
education
science educationfield tripsprofessional developmenteducation resources
quick links
newseventsopen sciencepodcastscience resourceshuman brain donationvisit uscontact
follow us/

allen institute, 615 Westlake Ave North, Seattle, WA 98109 +12065487055

© 0000 allen institute. all rights reserved.
privacy policyterms of usecitation policyemployee portalpolicy & compliance