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Broad Institute

The Eli and Edythe L. Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard (IPA: /brd/, pronunciation respelling: BROHD),[1] often referred to as the Broad Institute, is a biomedical and genomic research center located in Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States. The institute is independently governed and supported as a 501(c)(3) nonprofit research organization under the name Broad Institute Inc.,[2][3] and it partners with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Harvard University, and the five Harvard teaching hospitals.

History[edit]

The Broad Institute evolved from a decade of research collaborations among MIT and Harvard scientists.[4] One cornerstone was the Center for Genome Research of Whitehead Institute at MIT. Founded in 1982, the Whitehead became a major center for genomics and the Human Genome Project. As early as 1995, scientists at the Whitehead started pilot projects in genomic medicine, forming an unofficial collaborative network among young scientists interested in genomic approaches to cancer and human genetics. Another cornerstone was the Institute of Chemistry and Cell Biology established by Harvard Medical School in 1998 to pursue chemical genetics as an academic discipline.[5] Its screening facility was one of the first high-throughput resources opened in an academic setting. It facilitated small molecule screening projects for more than 80 research groups worldwide.


To create a new organization that was open, collaborative, cross-disciplinary and able to organize projects at any scale, planning took place in 2002–2003 among philanthropists Eli and Edythe Broad, MIT, the Whitehead Institute, Harvard and the Harvard-affiliated hospitals (in particular, the Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Children's Hospital Boston, the Dana–Farber Cancer Institute and the Massachusetts General Hospital).


The Broads made a founding gift of $100 million and the Broad Institute was formally launched in May 2004. In November 2005, the Broads announced an additional $100 million gift to the institute.[6] On September 4, 2008, the Broads announced an endowment of $400 million to make the Broad Institute a permanent establishment.[7] In November 2013, they invested an additional $100 million to fund a second decade of research at the institute.[8]


During the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States, the Broad Institute ran laboratory tests for the virus for about 100 colleges and universities in the northeastern U.S.[9] As of September 2020, the Broad was processing one out of every 20 COVID-19 tests in the nation.

Program

Cancer

Program in and Population Genetics

Medical

Biology and Cell Circuits Program

Genome

Program

Chemical Biology

Program

Metabolism

Program

Infectious Disease

Stanley Center for Psychiatric Research at Broad Institute

and Analysis Program

Genome Sequencing

Program

Epigenomics

Program

Vertebrate Genomics

The Broad Institute has 11 core faculty[10] and 195 associate members from Harvard, MIT, and the Harvard-affiliated hospitals.[11]


The Broad Institute is made up of three types of organizational units: core member laboratories, research programs, and platforms. The institute's scientific research programs include:[12]


The Broad Institute's platforms are teams of professional scientists who focus on the discovery, development, and optimization of the technological tools that Broad and other researchers use to conduct research. The platforms include:[13]


The Broad Institute also supports the Data Visualization Initiative led by the Institute creative director Bang Wong, which is aimed at developing data visualizations to explore and communicate research findings.[15]

is an expert in microfluidic systems to study single molecules and cells; one of the main aims of his lab is to make single-cell analysis routine.

Paul Blainey

a physician-researcher, is the director of the Broad Institute.[19] He applies genomic tools to the classification and study of cancers.

Todd Golub

Deborah Hung is a chemical biologist and an infectious disease physician who studies the interactions between and their hosts, with the goal of discovering new antibiotic targets.

pathogens

is the director of the Stanley Center for Psychiatric Research.[20]

Steven Hyman

is the founding director of the Broad Institute. A geneticist, molecular biologist and mathematician, Lander has been a driving force in the development of genomics and a prominent leader of the Human Genome Project.

Eric Lander

is a chemist and a chemical biologist, the Director of the Merkin Institute, the inventor of DNA-templated synthesis, phage-assisted directed evolution and Cas9/CRISPR base-editing.

David R. Liu

is director of the Chemical Biology program. He has developed systematic ways to explore biology, especially disease biology, using small molecules toward the development of therapeutic drugs.

Stuart Schreiber

is the former President of Merck Research Laboratories, former Director and current Chief Scientist of the Stanley Center for Psychiatric Research.

Edward Scolnick

is a professor at MIT who developed optogenetics and genome editing (CRISPR) technologies.

Feng Zhang

Erin Chen, is a biologist and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Hanna H. Gray Fellow.

Fei Chen is a researcher in biological engineering in the Department of Stem Cell and Regenerative Biology

Sam Peng is a chemist who researches axonal transport in neurons and the molecular dynamics of dynein motors.

William Sellers is a biologist and director of the institute's Cancer Program.

is a co-director of the Stanley Center for Psychiatric Research at Broad Institute.

Morgan Sheng

is statistician working in the field of machine learning and applications in genomics.

Caroline Uhler

is a Thomas D. and Virginia W. Cabot Professor at MIT in the Department of Chemistry.

Xiao Wang

Ramnik Xavier is a director of the Klarman Cell Observatory.

The faculty and staff of the Broad Institute include physicians, geneticists, and molecular, chemical, and computational biologists. The faculty currently includes 17 Core Members,[16] whose labs are primarily located within the Broad Institute, and 195 Associate Members, whose primary labs are located at one of the universities or hospitals.[17]


The Core Members of the Broad Institute include:[18]


Former Core Members include:

Facilities[edit]

The Broad Institute's facilities at 320 Charles Street in Cambridge, Massachusetts, house one of the largest genome sequencing centers in the world. As WICGR (Whitehead Institute/MIT Center for Genome Research), this facility was the largest contributor of sequence information to the Human Genome Project.


In February 2006, The Broad Institute expanded to a new building at 415 Main Street, adjacent to the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research.[21] This seven-story 231,000-square-foot (21,500 m2) building contains office, research laboratory, retail and museum space. It was designed by Architects Elkus Manfredi with Lab Planner McLellan Copenhagen and was awarded high honors by R&D Magazine.[22] In 2011, the institute announced plans to construct an additional tower adjacent to the 415 Main Street site at 75 Ames Street.[23] On May 21, 2014, the Broad officially inaugurated a 375,000-square-foot research building at 75 Ames Street in Cambridge's Kendall Square.[24] The new facility has 15 floors, 11 of which are occupied, and has LEED gold certification. As of July 2014, it has around 800 occupants.

Funding[edit]

Between 2009 and 2012, the operating revenue of the institute was approximately $200 million, with 55% of that coming from federal grants.[25] The Broad Foundation (Eli and Edythe Broad) has provided $700 million in funding to the Broad Institute as of February 2014.[26]


The Klarman Family Foundation provided a $32.5 million grant to Broad to study cellular processes in 2012.[27] In October 2013, Fundación Carlos Slim (the Carlos Slim Foundation) of Mexico announced a $74 million grant to Broad Institute for the SIGMA2 consortium.[28]


In July 2014, coinciding with the publication of a new study on the genetics of schizophrenia,[29] the Broad Institute received a $650 million gift from the Stanley Family Foundation, one of the largest private gifts ever for scientific research.[30][31][32]


On October 10, 2017, it was reported that Deerfield Management Co. was giving $50 million to the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard to support biology research.[33]


Dr. Richard Merkin has been donating since 2009 in support of research, founding the Merkin Institute for Transformative Technologies in Healthcare. Dedicated on October 6, 2021, The Broad Institute's new building at 415 Main Street in Cambridge, Massachusetts was named the Richard N. Merkin Building in his honor.[34]

Honors[edit]

Since 2010, the Broad Institute has been listed on The Boston Globe's Top Places to Work. The 2014 report from Thomson Reuters' ScienceWatch entitled "The World's Most Influential Scientific Minds" recognized that 12 out of the 17 "hottest" researchers in science belonged to genomics, and 4 out of the top 5 were affiliated with the Broad Institute.[35] Additionally, Stacey B. Gabriel of the Broad Institute topped this entire list. Twenty-eight researchers from Broad Institute have been recognized on ISI's Highly Cited, a database that recognizes the top 250 researchers in multiple areas of science.[36]


Eric S. Lander, Stuart L. Schreiber, Aviv Regev and Edward M. Scolnick are members of the National Academy of Sciences[37] and the Institute of Medicine. David Altshuler is a member of the Institute of Medicine.[38] Feng Zhang received the 2014 Alan T. Waterman Award from the National Science Foundation, its highest honor that annually recognizes an outstanding researcher under the age of 35, for contributions to both optogenetics and CRISPR technology.[39]


In biochemistry, genetics, and molecular biology areas, the institute was ranked #1 in the "Mapping Excellence" report, a survey that assessed high-impact publications.[40]


For its architecture, Broad's 415 Main Street building architects Elkus Manfredi Architects of Boston and AHSC McLellan Copenhagen of San Francisco received high honors in the 2007 Laboratory of the Year competition of the R&D Magazine.[41]

Kevin Ahern, Ph.D. (2009). "GEN Best of the Web". Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News. 29 (8): 66. Commentary on the Broad Institute's website, receiving a 4-star excellent rating.

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