Inflammation/ Atherosclerosis

Immunology
Cancer
Neurosciences

Aging
Genetics

Effros, Rita, Ph.D.
Research Area: Immune dysfunction associated with aging and chronic infection.

Research Interests: Our research is focused on the immune deficiency of aging and AIDS, with particular emphasis on a novel aspect of T cell biology known as replicative senescence. Replicative senescence describes the irreversible state of growth arrest which all normal human somatic cells reach after a finite number of cell divisions. In addition to the cell cycle arrest, senescent cells show a variety of changes in gene expression and function. We have defined certain characteristics of replicative senescence in human T lymphocytes in cell culture, and have then shown that T cells with these identical characteristics accumulate in the elderly as well as in younger persons infected with HIV. Current studies are focused on defining the pleiotropic effects of senescent CD8 T cells on other aspects of immune function and on bone homeostasis, as well as on testing gene therapy approaches to reverse replicative senescence. I have recently been named to the Elizabeth and Thomas Plott Endowed Chair in Gerontology, and I teach one of the year-long Freshman GE Cluster courses entitled: Frontiers of Human Aging. Finally, I am Director of the Human Tissue-Research Center Shared Resource Core of the Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center, which serves as a centralized unit within the Dept of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine to coordinate the procurement, processing, quality control, and distribution of human tissue samples for research purposes.

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Dorshkind, Ken Ph.D.
Research Area: Cell differentiation in the immune and hematopoietic systems
Research Interests: The aim of work in my laboratory is to define microenvironmental and systemic signals that regulate the development of B and T cells from immature hematopoietic precursors. Much of our work has focused on primary B cell production and has resulted in the identification of bone marrow stromal cell and endocrine derived factors that control growth and differentiation within the B cell developmental pathway. Additional studies are focusing on the regulation of early T cell development by the thymic microenvironment. A long-term, thymic epithelial cell dependent culture system that maintains CD4-CD8- intrathymic progenitors with normal developmental potential has recently been developed and is being used to characterize immature thymocytes and to identify factors that affect early thymopoiesis.

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