Milena Andzelm, MD, PhD

Neurologist, Department of Neurology
Instructor of Neurology, Harvard Medical School
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Milena Andzelm, MD, PhD

Milena Andzelm, MD, PhD

Neurologist, Department of Neurology
Instructor of Neurology, Harvard Medical School

Medical Services

Languages
English
Education
Undergraduate School
Harvard College
Cambridge
MA
Graduate School
Harvard University
Cambridge
MA
Medical School
Harvard Medical School
Boston
MA
Internship
Pediatrics
Boston Children's Hospital
Boston
MA
Residency
Pediatric Neurology
Boston Children's Hospital
Boston
MA
Fellowship
Neuro-Immunology
Boston Children's Hospital
Boston
MA
Certifications
American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology (Child and Adolescent Neurology)

Publications

Human genetic variation shapes the response of neurons to interferons. View Abstract
Mechanisms and Emerging Therapies for Treatment of Seizures in Pediatric Autoimmune Encephalitis and Autoinflammatory/Autoimmune-Associated Epilepsy. View Abstract
Expansion of the clinical and neuroimaging spectrum associated with NDUFS8-related disorder. View Abstract
Chromatin Environment and Cellular Context Specify Compensatory Activity of Paralogous MEF2 Transcription Factors. View Abstract
A Late Phase of Long-Term Synaptic Depression in Cerebellar Purkinje Cells Requires Activation of MEF2. View Abstract
MEF2D drives photoreceptor development through a genome-wide competition for tissue-specific enhancers. View Abstract
Elements between the IgH variable (V) and diversity (D) clusters influence antisense transcription and lineage-specific V(D)J recombination. View Abstract
CD151 accelerates breast cancer by regulating alpha 6 integrin function, signaling, and molecular organization. View Abstract
Myosin IIA is required for cytolytic granule exocytosis in human NK cells. View Abstract
TGFbeta promotes conversion of CD16+ peripheral blood NK cells into CD16- NK cells with similarities to decidual NK cells. View Abstract
Contrasting effects of EWI proteins, integrins, and protein palmitoylation on cell surface CD9 organization. View Abstract
Human decidual NK cells form immature activating synapses and are not cytotoxic. View Abstract
The mature activating natural killer cell immunologic synapse is formed in distinct stages. View Abstract