Anthony N. Van den Pol PhD
Professor of Neurosurgery

Departments & Organizations
Molecular VirologyDiabetes Endocrinology Research Center
Neurosurgery: van den Pol Research
Molecular Virology
Biography
Dr. Anthony van den Pol is a Professor of Neurosurgery. After completing his graduate education at Yale University, Dr. van den Pol did postdoctoral work at Oxford, Semmelweis, and Stanford Universities in the areas of neuropharmacology, neuroanatomy, and neurophysiology. Dr. van den Pol has two overlapping research interests, related to basic cellular mechanisms and approaches to understanding the normal and diseased brain, and the treatment of brain disorders.One focus is on the organization and mechanisms of action of hypothalamic peptides and amino acid transmitters, using a combination of patch clamp electrophysiology, ultrastructural cytochemistry, digital imaging, and molecular biology. The other interest is in neurovirology, including how viruses alter normal function in the developing and mature brain, and the use of viral vectors to study normal brain or treat the diseased brain, or utilization of replication-competent oncolytic viruses to treat brain cancer. Dr. van den Pol's research is supported by the National Institute of Health.
Education
- Ph.D., Yale University , 1977
Selected Publication
- Tsunematsu,T, Fu LY, Yamanaka A, Ichiki K, Tanoue A, Sakurai T, van den Pol AN (2008) Vasopressin increases locomotion through a V1a receptor in orexin/hypocretin neurons- implications for water homeostasis. J. Neurosci. 28: 228-238.
Latest Honor and Recognition
- American Physiology Society Travel Award
Articles
Spring 2002
Anthony N. van den Pol, Ph.D.
Anthony N. van den Pol, Ph.D., professor of neurosurgery, was awarded a $1.4 million grant from the National Institutes...
Summer 2002
Case of the vanishing virus
Viruses that leave no molecular fingerprints as they destroy brain cells may be behind certain psychiatric and...
Spring 2008
Tiny RNAs discovered in “junk” DNA play an important role in controlling gene function, Yale scientists reported in the journal Nature in October.
Yale researchers have engineered a virus that can find its way through the vascular system and kill deadly brain...
Spring 2003
Hope for the sleep-deprived
Narcoleptics and those who are sleep-deprived may find comfort in a recent study by Yale scientists. According to...

Spring 2002
A link from sleep to pain
A neuropeptide whose absence may be a factor in sudden sleep attacks also appears to modulate pain. A team that...

Autumn 2005
A livestock virus may offer a new approach to treating glioblastoma
Viruses are hijackers, wreaking infectious havoc by taking over a cell’s machinery and using it to replicate. But their...
Fall 1999 | Winter 2000
New labs, new appraoch bring hope for spinal cord injuries
Traditionally, physicians have believed that spinal cord injuries are irreversible. Paralysis will never go away and...



