Beth Stevens


Beth Stevens is an associate professor in the Department of Neurology at Harvard Medical School and the F. M. Kirby Neurobiology Center at Boston Children’s Hospital. She has helped to identify the role of microglia and complement proteins in the "pruning" or removal of synaptic cells during brain development, and has also determined that the impaired or abnormal microglial function could be responsible for diseases like autism, schizophrenia, and Alzheimer's.
In 2012, Stevens’s team published evidence that microglia 'eat' synapses, especially those that are weak and unused. The findings pinned down a new role for microglia in wiring the brain, indicating that adult neural circuitry is determined not only by nerve cells but also by the brain’s immune cells; this helped to explain how the brain, which starts out with a surplus of neurons, trims some of the excess away. Neuron named the paper its most influential publication of 2012.
Stevens continues to study the function of microglia in both healthy and diseased brains, uncovering evidence that specific proteins play a role in tagging synapses and regulating their engulfment by microglia. She received a MacArthur Fellowship in 2015.

Early life and education

Beth Stevens was born in Brockton, Massachusetts. Her mother taught elementary school, and her father was the school's principal.
Stevens earned a B.S. in Biology from Northeastern University, where she worked full-time in medical labs through Northeastern's co-op program. She earned a Ph.D. in Neuroscience from the University of Maryland, College Park.
Stevens completed her postdoctoral fellowship with Ben Barres at the Stanford University School of Medicine in 2008. There, she carried out research on the role of astrocytes and in synapse formation by triggering neurons to produce a protein that tags "eat-me" signals on immature synapses instead of mature ones.

Research

Currently, Stevens is a Research Associate in Neurology at Boston's Children's Hospital, Associate Professor of Neurology at Harvard Medical School, and institute member of the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard. She is the Principal Investigator of the Stevens Lab, which "seeks to understand how neuron-glia communication facilitates the formation, elimination and plasticity of synapses—the points of communication between neurons—during both healthy development and disease." Stevens's work has led her to the discovery of different roles of microglia and their relevance in neurological diseases.

Microglia

Stevens has identified microglia as playing a central role in neuron-glia communication. As the resident phagocytes of the central nervous system, microglia survey their local environment, clear cellular debris, and make contact with neurons to aid in synaptic pruning during development and learning. She has proposed a "quad-partite" expansion of the tripartite synapse model by including microglia as functional participants in developing and mature synapses.
Stevens has found that microglia play a role in synapse loss in a range of disease states, including West Nile virus infection and neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's disease, where synapse loss precedes neuron death. Microglia may contribute to disease both by phagocytosing synaptic material and activating neurotoxic astrocytes. Her research indicates that neurodegenerative diseases may represent a local reactivation of microglial pruning pathways that are beneficial during development but detrimental in the mature brain. Stevens has also identified microglia as a contributor to Rett syndrome progression. This is independent of MECP2 mutation, which is known to cause the disease.

Complement system in the CNS

In 2007, Stevens discovered that proteins of the classical complement pathway were required for synaptic pruning by microglia. She has explored the role of complement components in schizophrenia, Alzheimer's disease, and glaucoma.
Her current research focuses on the selective targeting of synapses for complement tagging.

Awards

Beth Stevens has received recognition for her discoveries and is the recipient of several awards, including the following:
Stevens received the MacArthur Foundation's award of $625,000 in order to continue her studies on brain cells. Out of the 24 recipients of the award only 9, including Stevens, were women. Stevens received the Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers in 2012, which is awarded to young scientists by the US government. In October 2015, she gave one of 4 Presidential lectures at the annual meeting of the Society for Neuroscience, the world's largest gathering of neuroscientists. She shared this honor with 3 other neuroscientists, two of which are Nobel laureates.