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Faculty Research: Inflammation /Artherosclerosis

Inflammation /Atherosclerosis

Berliner, Judith, A. Ph.D.

Research Area: Regulation of Monocyte Endothelial Interactions

Research Interests: My research deals with the events mediating chronic inflammatory processes such as occur in atherosclerosis, cancer and rheumatoid arthritis. We employ cell, molecular and biochemical methods to the study the mechanisms by which oxidized phospholipids activate endothelial cells to bind monocytes and mediate monocyte entry into tissues. HPLC and Mass Spectroscopy have been used to identify several oxidized phospholipids that can activate endothelial cells in culture to bind monocytes. We have shown that these oxidized phospholipids are increased in atherosclerotic lesions isolated from mice and rabbits. These lipids appear to interact with an previously unidentified G-Protein coupled receptor/s. A major aim of our current students is to identify the receptor/s using several cloning approaches including oocyte and mammalian expression systems. We have also shown that oxidized phospholipids activate endothelial cells in culture to deposit a particular alternative splice form of fibronectin on the apical surface; monocytes are able to bind to this form of fibronectin. We now propose to use gene targeting strategies to determine whether this form of fibronectin is important in atherosclerosis in mice. For these studies a dominant negative and a mutational approach will be utilized.

Selected Publications:
Parhami F, Fang ZT, Fogelman AM, Andalibi A, Territo MC and Berliner JA. Minimally Modified Low Density Lipoprotein-induced inflammaory responses in endothelial cells are mediated by cyclic adenosine monophosphate. J Clin Invest 92: 471-478, 1993. Watson AD, Leitinger N, Navab M, Faull KF, Witztum JL, Subbanagounder G, Fogelman AM and Berliner JA. Structural Identification by Mass Spectrometry of oxidized phospholipids in Minimally Oxidized LDL that induce monocyte-endothelial interactions and evidence for their presence in vivo. J. Biol. Chem. 272:13597-13607, 1997.

 

Fishbein, Michael, C. M.D.

Research Area: Atherosclerosis/Transplantation Pathology/Cardiovascular Pathology

Research Interests: Research includes study of cardiovascular diseases in man and experimental models. Most recent studies involve transplantation pathology, arrhythmogenesis, and pathology of intravascular interventional therapy.

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Ganz, Tomas, M.D., Ph.D.

Research Area: Antimicrobial Peptides in Host Defense and Inflammation

Research Interests: Multicellular organisms, including humans, employ potent and rapidly acting antimicrobial defense mechanisms that are mediated by small peptide antibiotics. Unlike conventional antibiotics produced by specialized metabolic pathways of bacteria and fungi, the antibiotics of higher eukaryotes are generated by posttranslational processing of gene-encoded prepropeptides. The microbicidal granules of phagocytic cells and the secretions on mucosal surfaces are particularly rich in such peptides. Our research is focussed on two large families of mammalian antibiotics: defensins and "cathelin-related" peptides. We are studying: 1) their structure, activity and distribution in cells and tissues, 2) the functions of propeptides in biosynthesis and subcellular targeting, 3) the regulation of antibiotic peptide biosynthesis by developmental, tissue-specific and microbial signals, and 4) the roles of antibiotic peptides in host defense and inflammation. Experimental approaches range from analysis of gene regulation in cell lines and transgenic mice, recombinant production and antimicrobial testing of natural and modified peptides, to histopathologic studies and assays of samples from human patients and experimental animals. Potential applications include the development of novel antibiotic medications and the production of transgenic animals with increased disease resistance.

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Tontonoz, Peter, M.D., Ph.D.

Research Area: Nuclear hormone receptors

Research Interests: The nuclear hormone receptors are a family of ligand-activated transcription factors that play diverse roles in mammalian physiology. While it has long been recognized that these proteins are central to development and homeostasis in vertebrate organisms, recent work has begun to define an unexpected role for members of this superfamily in human disease. Obesity, diabetes and cardiovascular disease are the leading causes of morbidity and mortality in industrialized societies. The common thread that links these disorders is a dysregulation of lipid metabolism. Recent years have seen a new paradigm emerge for the transcriptional regulation of metabolic pathways with the discovery of nuclear receptors that are activated by lipids. Included in this group are PPARgamma, which is activated by fatty acids, and LXR, which is activated by cholesterol metabolites. These receptors modulate differentiation and lipid homeostasis in multiple cell types, and the pathways they control have critical links to metabolic disease.

Our present focus is on defining the role of the PPAR and LXR signaling pathways in macrophages and adipocytes. We use a combination of molecular biology, mouse genetics and gene array technology. Our goal is to understand the importance of these receptors in both normal physiology and diease. As ligand-activated transcription factors, nuclear receptors make ideal drug targets. Recent work suggests that both PPARg and LXR may represent targets for therapuetic intervention in atherosclerosis.

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