Lumsden has served on the Medical Research Council Neurosciences and Mental Health Board and Grants Committee (1992—1998), the Wellcome Trust Neuroscience Funding Committee (1997—2000), and the Brain Functions Grant Review Committee of the Human Frontier Science Program (1998—2001). He has also served as editor of Development[7] (1995—2007) and is co-founder of the on-line, open-access journal Neural Development.[8] In addition, Andrew Lumsden is a co-Head of Section for Faculty of 1000.[9]
Andrew Lumsden has co-authored a book entitled The Developing Brain with Michael Brown and Roger Keynes.[10] Following his PhD on epithelial-mesenchymal interactions in mammalian development, Lumsden's interest moved to the question of how integumental structures, such as teeth and vibrissae acquire their nerve supply, and how the cranial neural crest contributes to their patterning. Studies on the development of the trigeminal nerve and ganglion led on to observations of the organisation of their corresponding motor and sensory regions of the central nervous system. His seminal observations and experiments on the developing hindbrain of mammal and bird embryos confirmed the long suggested but never agreed view that this brain region has a rigidly segmented organisation, much like the body plan of insects and worms. To assist his research, he developed the Lumsden BioScissors™.[11][12] Most recently, he has focussed on the developing forebrain, where he discovered signalling properties in a small set of cells that pattern the large surrounding region of the thalamus.
Lumsden A, Sprawson N, Graham A (December 1991). "Segmental origin and migration of neural crest cells in the hindbrain region of the chick embryo". Development. 113 (4): 1281–91. doi:10.1242/dev.113.4.1281. PMID1811942.
Guthrie S, Muchamore I, Kuroiwa A, Marshall H, Krumlauf R, Lumsden A (March 1992). "Neuroectodermal autonomy of Hox-2.9 expression revealed by rhombomere transpositions". Nature. 356 (6365): 157–9. Bibcode:1992Natur.356..157G. doi:10.1038/356157a0. PMID1545869. S2CID4346647.
Simon H, Lumsden A (August 1993). "Rhombomere-specific origin of the contralateral vestibulo-acoustic efferent neurons and their migration across the embryonic midline". Neuron. 11 (2): 209–20. doi:10.1016/0896-6273(93)90179-U. PMID8394719. S2CID35121927.
Lumsden A, Clarke JD, Keynes R, Fraser S (June 1994). "Early phenotypic choices by neuronal precursors, revealed by clonal analysis of the chick embryo hindbrain". Development. 120 (6): 1581–9. doi:10.1242/dev.120.6.1581. PMID8050364.
Bell E, Wingate, R. Lumsden A. (1999). "Homeotic transformation of rhombomere identity following localised Hoxb1 misexpression". Science. 284 (5423): 2168–2171. doi:10.1126/science.284.5423.2168. PMID10381880.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
Zeltser L, Larsen C, Lumsden A (2001). "A new developmental compartment in the forebrain regulated by Lunatic fringe". Nature Neuroscience. 4 (7): 683–684. doi:10.1038/89455. PMID11426219. S2CID26205097.
Matsumoto K, Nishihara S, Kamimura M, Shiraishi T, Otoguro T, Uehara M, Maeda Y, Ogura K, Lumsden A, Ogura T (2004). "The prepattern transcription factor Irx2, a target of the FGF8/MAP kinase cascade, is involved in cerebellum formation". Nature Neuroscience. 7 (6): 605–612. doi:10.1038/nn1249. PMID15133517. S2CID23807922.
Kiecker C, Lumsden A (2004). "Hedgehog signalling from the zona limitans intrathalamica regulates the emergence of thalamic and prethalamic identity". Nature Neuroscience. 7 (11): 1242–1249. doi:10.1038/nn1338. PMID15494730. S2CID29863625.
Kiecker C, Lumsden A (2005). "Compartments and their boundaries in vertebrate brain development". Nature Reviews Neuroscience. 6 (7): 553–564. doi:10.1038/nrn1702. PMID15959467. S2CID10869618.