Vincent Allen Pieribone PhD
Associate Professor of Cellular and Molecular Physiology and of Neurobiology; Associate Fellow, John B. Pierce Laboratory

Departments & Organizations
Biological and Biomedical Sciences (BBS): Neuroscience | Molecular Medicine, Pharmacology, and PhysiologyInterdepartmental Neuroscience Program
Neurobiology
Cellular & Molecular Physiology: Membrane Proteins - Ion Channels | Membrane Biophysics | Cellular Neurophysiology | Neurobiology and Physiology of Synapses | Cell to Cell Communication | Physiology of Human Disease | Physiology and Integrative Medical Biology Track | Graduate Program in Cellular and Molecular Physiology | John B. Pierce Laboratory
John Pierce Laboratory
Biography
Vincent Pieribone attended New York University College of Arts and Sciences where he received a baccalaureate degree in Biology and Chemistry in 1986. He then attend New York University's Graduate School of Arts and Sciences and received his doctorate in Philosophy in 1992 in neuroanatomy and neurophysiology.From 1990 to 1992 he was a National Science Foundation and Fogarty International Fellow at the Nobel Institute of Neurophysiology at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm Sweden. From Sweden Vincent did post-doctoral work at The Rockefeller University in New York from 1992 to 1995 and became an Assistant Professor there in 1995. Vincent joined the Pierce laboratory in December 1997.
Education
- B.A., New York University , 1986
- Ph.D., New York University , 1992
Selected Publication
- Baker BJ, Mutoh H, Dimitrov D, Akemann W, Perron A, Iwamoto Y, Jin L, Cohen LB, Isacoff EY, Pieribone VA, Hughes T, Knöpfel T. Genetically encoded fluorescent sensors of membrane potential. Brain Cell Biol, 36:53-67, 2008.
Articles

Winter 2007
Aglow in the Dark: The Revolutionary Science of Biofluorescence
by Vincent A. Pieribone, Ph.D., associate professor of cellular and molecular physiology and neurobiology, and David F....

Spring 2005
Lessons from the depths
Accounts of death row inmates released from prison based on DNA evidence have become as routine as news stories about...



