Since 2005, Ackerman has served as an investigator at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.[2] Her work there has centered on the mice that are available through the Jackson Laboratory, known as the Jax mice.[2] These mice have a wide array of genotypic mutations, which lead to different phenotypic expression. Ackerman observes these mice and investigates the genotypic variations that lead to defects in mice. She then investigates the product of these genes and how they affect neurological development and preservation.[2] She was elected a member of the National Academy of Sciences and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in April 2019.[3]
Unc5c
Ackerman's research has centered largely on the Unc5c gene.[2] The gene product of Unc5c is the Unc5c protein, a neurological netrin receptor.[4] Her research on Unc5c protein revealed that the protein is integral in the development of the corpus callosum, the neurons that form the connection between the two hemispheres of the brain. A mutation in the Unc5c gene, in association with other mutated genes, leads to a degeneration of the corpus callosum. However, if Unc5c is the only gene that is mutated, no noticeable difference in the corpus callosum is present. This is because the Unc5c receptor is only integral in the formation of the corpus callosum in early-born, deep layer neurons. These neurons comprise a small percentage of the corpus callosum relative to the late-born, upper layer neurons.[4]
Other projects Ackerman has been involved in include the mutation of a U2 snRNA and its connection to neurodegeneration, an editing defective tRNAsynthetase that leads to protein misfolding and neurodegeneration, and ribosome stalling by tRNA mutations that leads to neurodegeneration.[6][7][8]