Ruta graduated summa cum laude from
Hunter College in Chemistry in 2000. She went on to perform doctoral research in the laboratory of
Rod Mackinnon, earning her Ph.D. in Biology from
The Rockefeller University in 2005. In Mackinnon's lab, she played a critical role in solving the structure of the voltage-dependent potassium ion channel. During her graduate work, she investigated the structural biology and function of potassium channels. These deeply conserved proteins conduct ions across biological membranes and are targets of toxin including those produced by the tarantula. Vanessa worked out the mechanism by which spider toxins bind the voltage sensor domain of potassium channels. As a postdoctoral fellow with
Richard Axel at
Columbia University, Ruta switched fields to the analysis of how the brain encodes both innate and learned stimuli and discovered a sexually dimorphic circuit that drives male fly responses to a pheromone, and traced the activity of the circuit from the periphery to the motor output. She joined the faculty at
The Rockefeller University in 2011. ==Career==