TopicNeuroscience

tissue samples

Content Overview
4Total items
2ePosters
1Grant
1Seminar

Latest

GrantNeuroscience

Targeting the fibrogenic ECM as an alternative approach to treating IPF

National Heart Lung and Blood Institute
Feb 28, 2028

Project Abstract Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis and, more broadly, progressive pulmonary fibrosis are wound healing disorders whose hallmark is unorganized and unchecked extracellular matrix (ECM) deposition leading to scarring/stiffening of the lung interstitium. A highly complex, multicellular process, the generation of scar itself is primarily a function of activated fibroblasts with contributions from multiple subpopulations and non-fibroblastic cells. Myofibroblasts, the contractile cohort of activated fibroblasts, physically perturb (i.e. stretch) the local ECM microenvironment, which we have recently shown triggers site-specific, stretch-dependent conformational changes within the ECM protein fibronectin. We have previously demonstrated that a specific stretch-induced conformational change in the critical receptor binding domain of fibronectin triggers a cellular “integrin switch”, a stark change in the ECM receptors used by cells to engage fibronectin. This integrin switch is sufficient to drive activation of naïve lung fibroblasts, acquisition of mesenchymal characteristics in alveolar epithelial cells, and pathogenic remodeling of vascular structures. In this proposal we hypothesize that fibronectin displays a stretch- dependent conformational change specifically in regions of active lung fibrogenesis and that this conformational change disrupts homeostatic integrin binding dynamics in fibroblasts, leading to their acquisition of a pro-fibrogenic phenotype and transcriptional program. We address this hypothesis in a systematic way through three proposed aims. The first aim focuses on quantifying the presence and spatial localization of the stretch-induced conformational change within a cohort of lung fibrosis patient tissue samples, determining if it represents a consistent marker of active fibrogenic regions and elucidation of critical microenvironmental signatures that further expand our understanding of the impact of fibronectin's integrin switch in driving disease. In the second aim we will begin to unravel the molecular mechanism explaining how the integrin switch that emerges because of the stretch-induced conformational change drives fibroblast activation and fibrogenic gene programs using both idealized in vitro culture systems as well as ex vivo human disease tissue models. Finally, in the third aim we will explore the therapeutic potential of binding and blocking this specific stretch-induced conformation of fibronectin using a promising new and potential antibody drug in both in vivo and ex vivo models of disease.

SeminarNeuroscience

Inclusive Basic Research

Dr Simone Badal and Dr Natasha Karp
University of the West Indies, Astra Zeneca
Jun 9, 2021

Methodology for understanding the basic phenomena of life can be done in vitro or in vivo, under tightly-controlled experimental conditions designed to limit variability. However stringent the protocol, these experiments do not occur in a cultural vacuum and they are often subject to the same societal biases as other research disciplines. Many researchers uphold the status quo of biased basic research by not questioning the characteristics of their experimental animals, or the people from whom their tissue samples were collected. This means that our fundamental understanding of life has been built on biased models. This session will explore the ways in which basic life sciences research can be biased and the implications of this. We will discuss practical ways to assess your research design and how to make sure it is representative.

ePosterNeuroscience

Development of a HPLC-UV-FLD method for monoamine determination in lizard brain tissue samples

Dunja Šikić, Matea Matković, Tomislav Gojak, Olga Malev, Sofia A. Blažević
ePosterNeuroscience

Ribosomal tagging (Ribotag) in Astrocytes: Methodological approach for extracting mRNA from small brain tissue samples

Despoina Binou, Vsevolod Treshin, Sidra Gull, Samia Afzal, Madlen Günther, Anja Urbach, Marta Sánchez-Carbonell, Jean-Christopher Hennings, Otto W. Witte, Silvio Schmidt

tissue samples coverage

4 items

ePoster2
Grant1
Seminar1

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