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Revision as of 17:01, 12 July 2014

Professor David Lichtstein
Assumed office
2013
Preceded byProfessor Eran Leitersdorf
Personal details
Born1949
Lodz, Poland

David Lichtstein is Dean of the Faculty of Medicine at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem since 2013. He acted as the Chairman of the Institute for Medical Research, Israel-Canada, between 2008-2012. Lichtstein is a full professor of Physiology at the Hebrew University and is the Walter & Greta Stiel Chair in Heart Studies.[1]

Life and career

David Lichtstein was born in Lodz, Poland in 1949. He immigrated to Israel with his family in 1957. As a student at the Hebrew University, he completed a B.Sc. in Physiology and Zoology in 1970, followed by an M.Sc. in Physiology in 1972 and a Ph.D. in Physiology in 1977. Lichtstein chose medical sciences as a career because of the opportunity to combine science and contributing to human welfare. His Ph.D research, under the supervision of Prof. J. Dobkin and Prof. J. Magnes, concentrated on metabolic changes in the brain under normal and pathological circumstances. His Postdoctoral research (1977–1980) on opioid peptides was held at the Roche Institute of Molecular Biology, Nutley, New Jersey.[2]

In 1980, when he returned to Israel, Lichtstein joined the Department of Physiology of the Hebrew University-Hadassah Medical School as a lecturer; he received fellow professorship in 1988 and full professorship in 1994. He was a visiting scientist at the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (1985–1986) and the Eye Institute (1997–1998) at the National Institutes of Health in Maryland, and a visiting professor at the Toledo School of Medicine in Ohio (2007).

Lichtstein served as the President of the Israel Society for Physiology and Pharmacology from 1996 to 1999. In addition, Lichtstein has held many roles at The Hebrew University and its Faculty of Medicine, including Chairman of the Neurobiology Teaching Division (1983–1986), Chairman of the Department of Physiology (1992–1996), Chairman of the Institute for Medical Sciences (1999–2002) and Chairman of the Institute for Medical Research, Israel-Canada (2008–2012). In 2013, Lichtstein was elected to serve as the Dean of the Faculty of Medicine at the Hebrew University.

Lichtstein has a wife and three children.

Research

Prof. Lichtstein's research has implications on the fundamental understanding of body functions, as well as for several pathological states such as heart failure, hypertension and neurological and psychiatric diseases.

His research focuses on understanding the regulation of ion transport across the plasma membrane of eukaryotic cells. Specifically, Prof. Lichtstein examines the main transport system for sodium and potassium, the sodium-potassium-ATPase, and its regulation by cardiac steroids. His work led to the discovery of specific steroids, released from the adrenal gland, which have crucial roles in the regulation of cell viability, heart contractility, blood pressure and brain function. Identifying and understanding these steroids may then be very significant in the development of medicines to many diseases and pathological states, and Prof. Lichtstein's lab is currently conducting various experiments to examine such potential effects.[3]

Lichtstein published dozens of papers in different scientific journals, including some of the most influential magazines (such as Nature (journal)).[4] In addition, Prof. Lichtstein serves as an acting reviewer for many journals.

References

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