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个人简介

Education B.S., University of Arizona, 1977 M.D., The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, 1983 Ph.D., The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, 1983 Residency, Internal Medicine, Baylor College of Medicine, Texas Heart Institute, 1984-85 Fellowship, Cardiology, University of Texas School of Medicine, 1985-88 Awards and Recognitions Elected Chair, Gordon Research Conference on Atherosclerosis, 2009 Fifth Annual Stewart-Niewiarowski Award for Women in Vascular Biology, 2007 Jeffrey M. Hoeg Award of the American Heart Association for Basic Science and Clinical Research, 2003 Franklin D. Murphy Research Prize, UCLA, 2002 UCLA Chancellor’s Award for Academic Border Crossing, 2002 Davidson Memorial Endowed Lectureship, Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh, 2001 Stein/Oppenheimer Award for Biomedical Research, 1993

研究领域

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vascular biology biomineralization vascular calcification mesenchymal stem cells The research in my laboratory addresses the cellular and molecular mechanisms of artery wall mineralization, particularly atherosclerotic calcification. We pioneered this field by showing that the process is regulated at the molecular level and occurs by osteoblastic differentiation of vascular stem cells stimulated by inflammatory cytokines, many of which are induced by oxidized lipoprotein nanoparticles. To show the osteogenic mechanism of atherosclerotic calcification, we demonstrated expression of the potent osteoinductive factors, bone morphogenetic protein-2 and alkaline phosphatase, in human atherosclerotic plaque, and we developed an in vitro model of vascular cell calcification in which purified vascular cells spontaneously differentiate into osteoblastic cells and produce hydroxyapatite mineral, following the same cascade of osteogenic gene expression as skeletal osteoblasts. We also elucidated the intracellular signal transduction pathways driving this process, including the cAMP/protein kinase A pathway and SMAD pathway, as well as the role of Runx2, the master regulator of osteoblastic differentiation. In a serendipitous observation, we found that oxidatively modified lipoproteins inhibit differentiation and mineralization of skeletal osteoblasts, offering a possible new mechanism for age-related osteoporosis, and explaining the age-independent association of osteoporosis with hyperlipidemia. As a result, wee have extended our work into bone biology research, studying the effects of oxidized lipids and hyperlipidemia on bone formation and parathyroid hormone anabolism. Based on a hunch,we demonstrated that the osteogenic vascular cells are also mesenchymal stem cells with multilineage potential. We further showed that these vascular stem cells self-organize in vitro into intricate, periodic patterns that are predicted by a mathematical model consisting of a system of partial differential equations based on the principle of reaction-diffusion. We identified the activator and inhibitor morphogens responsible for the reaction-diffusion phenomenon as bone morphogenetic protein (BMP-2) and its inhibitor, matrix GLA protein (MGP). Predictions of the mathematical model were confirmed experimentally, including the ability of exogenous MGP to produce spot patterns and the ability of the MGP inhibitor, warfarin, to produce a doubling of stripe density. These findings have major clinical implications given the widespread clinical use of calcium, vitamin D, warfarin, and parathyroid hormone.

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