Center for Structural and Functional Neuroscience
David Poulsen
The University of Montana, Skaggs 397
Tel: 406-243-4709
Fax: 406-243-5228
E-mail: david.poulsen@umontana.edu
Research Interests
Selected Publications
Poulsen Lab Page
After completing a Bachelors degree in Microbiology at Brigham Young University, David Poulsen obtained his Masters and Ph.D. degrees in Molecular Virology from the University of Delaware. Following the completion of his doctoral degree, Dr. Poulsen trained at the National Institutes of Health as an Intramural Training Research Award (ITRA) fellow with Dr Bruce Cheesbro in the Laboratory of Persistent Viral Diseases (National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease, Rocky Mountain Laboratories). Following his training at the NIH, Dr. Poulsen served a second post-doctoral fellowship in the CNS Gene Therapy Center at Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia, PA. In 2001, Dr. Poulsen joined the Montana Neuroscience Institute as a Research Assistant Professor in the Department of Biomedical and Pharmaceutical Sciences at the University of Montana and as a Translational Research Scientist with St. Patrick Hospital and Health Sciences Center. He was promoted to Research Associate Professor in fall 2007.
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INTERESTS OF THE POULSEN LABORATORY
Adeno-Associated viral vectors are used to deliver proteins to select cells with the rat cochies.
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SELECTED PUBLICATIONS
Julie V. Selkirk, Theodore H. Stiefel, Ida M. Stone, Greg S. Naeve, Alan C. Foster & David J. Poulsen. Over-expression of the human EAAT2 glutamate transporter within neurons of mouse organotypic hippocampal slice cultures leads to increased vulnerability of CA1 pyramidal cells. Eur J Neuroscience 2005 Apr;21(8):2291-6.
Ida M. Stone, Diana I. Lurie, Mathew W. Kelley, and David J. Poulsen. ADENO-ASSOCIATED VIRUS MEDIATED GENE TRANSFER TO HAIR CELLS AND SUPPORT CELLS OF THE MURINE COCHLEA. Molecular Therapy 2005. 11(6):843-848.
A.M. Babcock, D. Standing, K. Bullshields, E. Schwartz, C.M. Paden, D.J. Poulsen. In Vivo Inhibition of Hippocampal Ca2+/Calmodulin-dependent Protein Kinase II by RNA Interference. Molecular Therapy 2005 Jun;11(6):899-905.
Harrop JS, Poulsen DJ, Xiao W, Freese A, During MJ. Effect of altering titer, serotype, and promoter in recombinant adenoassociate virus gene therapy expression of spinal cord neurons and astrocytes. Spine. (2004). Dec 15;29(24):2787-92.
Poulsen, D J, J S Harrop, M D, and M J During, M D (2001). Gene therapy for spinal cord injury and disease. J of Spinal Cord Med. 25(1): 2-11
During, M J, C W Symes, P A Lawlor, J Lin, J Dunning, H L Fitzsimons, D Poulsen, P Leone, R Xu, B L Dicker, J Lipski and D Young. (2000). An oral vaccine against NMDAR1 with efficacy in experimental stroke and epilepsy. Science 287:1453-1460.
Poulsen, D J, C Favara, E Snyder, J Portis, B Chesebro, (1999). Increased neurovirulence of polytropic mouse retroviruses delivered by inoculation of brain with infected neural stem cells, Virology, 263, 23-29.
Poulsen, D J, S J Robertson, C A Favara, J L Portis, B W Chesebro, (1998). Mapping of a neurovirulence determinant within the envelope protein of a polytropic murine retovirus: induction of CNS disease by low levels of virus, Virology, 248, 199-207.
Poulsen, D J, C L Keeler Jr., (1997). Characterization of the assembly and processing of infectious laryngotracheitis virus glycoprotein B J Gen. Virology, 78, 2945-2951.
Poulsen, D J, C R A Burton, J J O’Brian, S J Rabin, C L Keeler Jr., (1991). Identification of the infectious laryngotracheitis virusglycoprotein gB gene by the polymerase chain reaction. Virus Genes, 5,335-347.
