Skip to main content
Area of Study/Expertise
Glial stem/progenitor cell biology
Office Location
666 Hoes Lane R141, Piscataway NJ 08854
Phone Number
732.235.4419

Randall D. McKinnon, PhD

Research - RWJMS

Associate Professor | Rutgers RWJMS

 

Dr. McKinnon has a PhD in Virology, and Fellowships in molecular genetics, neurobiology and glial cell biology. He has a five-decade record of novel, innovative and pioneering research in areas spanning bacterial and Drosophila genetics to cancer biology, glial and stem cell biology, and neurodegeneration. He elucidated how bacterial transposable elements target their insertion sites (1985). Dr. McKinnon pioneered the ‘bubbling’ modification of the calcium technique for DNA-mediated gene transfer (1986). He pioneered growth factors to expand tissue derived stem/progenitor cells in vitro (1990). He identified Wnt as the ligand for orphan receptor derailed that opened a new field of axon pathfinding (2003). He discovered the receptor tyrosine kinase ‘RTK rheostat’ that interprets ligand gradients for directed migration (2005). He defined threshold levels of cell therapeutics required to rescue a neurodegenerative disease (2008). And, he elucidated a pathway for toxin entry that circumvents the elaborate defense mechanisms protecting CNS neurons (2021). Dr. McKinnon’s lab has been generously funded by the NIH, the National Multiple Sclerosis Society, the NJ Commission on Spinal Cord Research, the Stem Cell Institute of NJ, and collaborations with biotechnology firms. Dr. McKinnon has also mentored innumerable undergraduates, graduate students, postdoctoral fellows, medical students and junior faculty members.

__________________________________________________________________

Education:

Undergraduate:
BSc (Honors Biology), Queens University, Kingston Canada, 1978

Doctorate:
Ph.D (Virology), McMaster University, Hamilton Canada, 1984

Fellowship:
Senior Postdoctoral Fellowship, U.S. National Multiple Sclerosis Society, 1988-1990.
Research Fellow, Scripps Clinic, La Jolla CA (J.G. Sutcliffe), 1987
Postdoctoral Fellowship, National Cancer Institute (Canada), 1984-1987

__________________________________________________________________

Awards:

  • Guest Editor, Brain Sciences “Myelin Repair” (2012)
  • Dean’s Research Award, Rutgers-RWJMS; best student publication (2011)
  • Invited Chair, 1st Int Forum on Stem Cells, Tianjin PRC (2008)
  • Soc Neuroscience, Featured Abstract, Public Ed Communication Press Book (2007)
  • NJ Comm Stem Cell Research – first public funded hESC research grant in USA (2007)
  • Symposia Chair, American Society for Neurochemistry, Newport Beach CA (2003)
  • Toshiba Exploravision Award, National Science Teachers Association, first place (2001)
  • The Gallo Award, The Cancer Institute of New Jersey (1998)
  • Chair, Rutgers-RWJMS Distinguished Lecture Series (1998-2002)
  • Member, NIH Center for Scientific Review, MCDN-6, NIH Bethesda (1998-2004)
  • First Award, National Institute of Health, NINDS (1996)
  • Jordi Folch-Pi Memorial Award, Am Soc Neurochemistry (1994)
  • Academic Reporter, International School of Neuroscience, Praglia Italy (1992)
  • Invited Instructor, Marine Biology Laboratory, Woods Hole MA (1991, 1999)

__________________________________________________________________

Research Interests:

  • Molecular mechanism of tumor formation by myelin forming glial cells in the CNS (oligodendrocytes) and PNS (Schwann cells).

__________________________________________________________________

Publications:

Nonrandom insertion of Tn5 into cloned human adenovirus DNA
McKinnon RD., JS Waye, D Bautista, FL Graham, Gene 40: 31-38 [PMID:3005126], 1985

Transformation of mammalian cells with DNA using the calcium technique
McKinnon RD., and FL Graham, Microinjection and Organelle Transplantation Techniques p.199-214, 1986

FGF modulates the PDGF-driven pathway of oligodendrocyte development.
McKinnon RD., T. Matsui, M. Dubois-Dalcq and S.A. Aaronson, Neuron 5:603-14 [PMID:2171589], 1990

Wnt-mediated axon guidance through the Drosophila Derailed receptor
Yoshikawa S., McKinnon RD., M Kokel, JB Thomas, Nature 422:583-88 [PMID:12660735], 2003

PDGFR alpha-Receptor signal strength controls an RTK Rheostat that integrates PI3’-kinase and PLC-g during oligodendrocyte maturation,
McKinnon RD., S Waldron, ME Kiel, J. Neurosci 25:3499-3508 [PMID:15814780], 2005

Stem cell-derived therapeutic myelin repair requires 7% cell replacement,
Kiel ME, CP Chen, D Sadowski, McKinnon RD., Stem Cells 26: 2229-36 [PMID:18635868], 2008

Adjunctive MSCs enhance myelin formation by xenogenic oligodendrocyte precursors transplanted in the retina,
Arriola, AG, ME Kiel, Y Shi, McKinnon RD., Cell Research 20:728-31 [PMID:20440303], 2010

Teratogenic potential in cultures optimized for oligodendrocyte development from embryonic stem cells,
Sadowski, D, ME Kiel, M Apicella, AG Arriola, CP Chen & McKinnon RD., Stem Cells and Development 19, 1343-53 [PMID:20131970], 2010

Suicide transport blockade of motor neuron survival generates a focal graded injury and functional deficit,
Liang, AS, JE Pagano, CA Chrzan and McKinnon RD., Neural Regen Research 16 (7) 1281-1287. [PMID:33318406], 2021

Security breach: peripheral nerves provide unrestricted access for toxin delivery into the CNS,
Lupinski, I, AS Liang and McKinnon RD., Neural Regen Research 18(1):64-67 [PMID: 35799510], 2023

__________________________________________________________________

Location:

Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey

Staged Research Building
661 Hoes Lane West, room 141
Piscataway, NJ 08854