J.M. Beasley, J. Larson, A.Z. LaCroix, M.L. Neuhouser, L.F.
Tinker, R. Jackson, Y. Huang, L. Snetselaar, C. Eaton and
R.L. Prentice. Albert Einstein Col. of Med., Fred Hutchinson
Cancer Res. Ctr., Univ. of Iowa and Brown Univ.
3:30
249.3
Effect of dietary protein on bone status in U.S.
adults aged 50 years and older: NHANES 1999-2004.
J.E.
Kim, M. Zanovec, V.L. Fulgoni III and W.W. Campbell. Purdue
Univ., LSU AgCtr., Nutr. Impact LLC, Battle Creek, MI.
3:45
249.4
The contribution of gastroenteropancreatic
appetite hormones to protein-induced satiety.
A. Astrup, A.
Belza, C. Ritz, M.Q. Sørensen, J.J. Holst and J.F. Rehfeld.
Univ. of Copenhagen, Frederiksberg and Copenhagen and
Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen.
4:00
249.5
The effect of eggs on satiety in children and
adolescents.
A. Liu, R.S. Puyau, H. Han, W.D. Johnson, F.L.
Greenway and N.V. Dhurandhar. Pennington Biomed. Res.
Ctr., Baton Rouge.
4:15
249.6
Carbohydrate co-ingestion with protein
delays dietary protein digestion and absorption but does
not modulate postprandial muscle protein accretion.
S.H.
Gorissen, N.A. Burd, H.M. Hamer, A.P. Gijsen and L.J.C. van
Loon. Maastricht Univ. and TI Food and Nutr., Wageningen,
Netherlands.
4:30
249.7
Daily addition of a protein-rich breakfast for
long-term improvements in energy intake regulation and
body weight management in overweight and obese ‘breakfast
skipping’ young people.
H.J. Leidy, H.A. Hoertel, S.M. Douglas
and R.S. Shafer. Univ. of Missouri-Columbia.
4:45
249.8
The use of an ad libitum higher-protein, low-
glycemic index diet in overweight children: the Diogenes Study.
A. Astrup, C.T. Damsgaard, A. Papadaki, S.M. Jensen, S-M.
Dalskov, P. Hlavaty, W.H.M. Saris, J.A. Martinez, T. Handjieva-
Darlenska, M. Rohr-Andersen, S. Stender, T.M. Larsen,
C. Mølgaard and K.F. Michaelsen. Univ. of Copenhagen,
Frederiksberg, Univ. of Crete, Endocrinol., Prague, Maastricht
Univ., Netherlands, Univ. of Navarra, Spain, Med. Univ., Sofia,
Bulgaria and Gentofte Hosp., Denmark.
Pathology
250. ACVP SYMPOSIUM: INSIDE-OUT:
EXTRACELLULAR ROLES FOR HEAT SHOCK
PROTEINS
Symposium
(Sponsored by: ASIP and the American College of
Veterinary Pathologists)
m
on
. 8:30
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 162a
C
haired
: m. o
GlesBee
C
oChaired
: t. l
a
B
ranChe
Veterinary Pathology
8:30
Hsp70 and a novel axis of innate immunity in the virus-
infected brain.
M. Oglesbee. The Ohio State Univ.
9:15
Extracellular heat shock proteins: mechanisms and
immune functions.
S. Calderwood. Beth Israel
Deaconess Med. Ctr.
10:00
Extracellular hsp72 is a DAMP released by stress.
M. R.
Fleshner. Univ. of Colorado Boulder.
10:45 Regulation of extraceullular alpha-synuclein oligomer
formation by hsp70: implications for Parkinson’s
disease therapeutics.
P. McLean. Mayo Clin. Fndn.
251. ANGIOGENESIS IN PHYSIOLOGY AND
PATHOLOGY
Symposium
(Supported by an educational grant from Organovo)
m
on
. 8:30
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 160B
C
haired
: p. D’a
more
C
oChaired
: D. B
ielenBerG
Vascular Biology
8:30
Molecular controls of arteriogenesis.
M. Simons.
Dartmouth-Hitchcock Med. Ctr.
9:15
The role of epoxyeicosatrienoic acids in cancer
metastasis and regeneration.
D. Panigrahy. Boston Children’s
Hosp.
9:55
251.1
Glutaredoxin overexpression inhibits
angiogenesis in vivo through regulation of soluble VEGFR1.
C.E. Murdoch, M.M. Shuler, R. Kikuchi, K. Walsh, R.A.
Cohen and R. Matsui.
Boston Univ.
10:10
New approaches to target blood vessel
assembly in infantile hemangioma.
J. Bischoff. Boston
Children’s Hosp.
10:50
Development of the ocular vasculature.
R.
Lang.
Cincinnati Children’s Hosp.
MONDAY NUTRITION/PATHOLOGY
70
252. EMERGING INFECTIONS
Symposium
m
on
. 8:30
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 160C
C
haired
: s.r. z
aKi
anD
D. m
ilner
Inflammation
8:30
Introductory comments.
S. R. Zaki. Ctrs. for
Dis. Control and Prevent.
8:45
Developing new therapeutics and vaccinces for
the emerging Henipaviruses.
K. Bossart. Boston Univ.
9:25
Lighting up morbillivirus pathogenesis: Is virus
eradication a reality, a redundant concept or a risk?
P. Duprex.
Boston Univ.
10:05
Imaging immunity to infection in the living
brain.
D. McGavern. NINDS, NIH.
10:45
252.1
Interactions between Francisella tularensis
and hepatocytes.
C.A. Thomas and M. Furie. Stony Brook
Univ.
253. LIVER PATHOBIOLOGY SYMPOSIUM:
FLIRTIN’ WITH DISASTER: LIVER INJURY,
INFLAMMATION AND THE FAST LANE TO HCC
Symposium
(Sponsored by: ASIP Liver Pathobiology Scientific
Interest Group)
m
on
. 8:30
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 160a
C
haired
: a. r
oGers
anD
B. G
ao
Liver Pathobiology
8:30 Introduction.
8:35
Expression and regulation of tissue factor on hepatocytes:
Match in a dynamite factory?
J. Luyendyk. Michigan
State Univ.
9:10
Inflammation, liver stem cells and cancer: a key role of
interleukin-22.
B. Gao. NIAAA, NIH.
9:45
Regulators of liver development and regeneration.
W.
Goessling. Harvard Stem Cell Inst.
10:20 Grrl power: mechanisms of female resistance to HCC.
A. Rogers. Univ. of North Carolina.
10:55
Tumor suppressors in liver cancer: stress begets cancer
and emergent concepts for therapy.
E. Knudsen.
Univ. of Texas Southwestern.
254. PULMONARY INFLAMMATION AND INJURY
Minisymposium
m
on
. 8:30
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 161
C
haired
: l. K
oBziK
C
oChaired
: J. m
ontGomery
Pulmonary Pathobiology
8:30
254.1
Role of Hedgehog in bleomycin-induced
pulmonary fibrosis.
B. Hu, J. Liu, Z. Wu, T. Liu, M.R. Ullenbruch
and S.H. Phan. Univ. of Michigan.
8:46
254.2
Minocycline blocks allergen-induced
eosinophilia and production of TH2 cytokines and IgE by
interfering with the T cell receptor-NF-
kB-GATA-3-interleukin
(II)-4 axis in a murine asthma model without an effect on PARP.
A.S. Naura, H. Kim, J. Ju, P.C. Rodriguez, J. Jordan, K.
Pyakurel, A.F. Tarhuni, A.C. Ochoa and H.A. Boulares. LSU
Hlth. Sci. Ctr., New Orleans and Univ. of Castilla-La Mancha,
Spain.
9:02
254.3
Increased alveolar surface area in neonatal
pups with acute lung injury.
O.J. Mezu-Ndubuisi, N.M. Reddy
and S.P. Reddy. Children’s Hosp. of Univ. of Illinois at Chicago.
9:18
254.4
Resolvin E1 promotes neutrophil apoptosis
and accelerates resolution of acute pulmonary inflammation.
J.G. Filep, P. Gjorstrup and D. El Kebir. Univ. of Montreal and
Resolvyx Pharmaceuts., Boston.
9:34
254.5
Endothelial GATA6 deficiency promotes
pulmonary arterial hypertension through ER stress-mediated
CHOP upregulation.
S. Lenna, I.M. Chrobak, A. Ghatnekar,
R. van Deuren, T. Radstake, C. Feghali-Bostwick and M.
Trojanowska. Boston Univ. Med. Ctr., Med. Univ. of South
Carolina, Radboud Univ. Nijmegen Med. Ctr., Netherlands and
Univ. of Pittsburgh.
9:50
254.6
Endothelial cells contribute to inflammation
and fibrosis in bleomycin-induced lung injury.
H.G. Leach, I.
Chrobak and M. Trojanowska. Boston Univ. Sch. of Med.
10:06
254.7
Remote lung injury after experimental
intestinal ischemia-reperfusion in horses.
J.B. Montgomery,
S. Singh Suri, L. Johnson, D. Wilson and B. Singh. Univ. of
Saskatchewan.
10:22
254.8
Surfactant activity and mobilization in minced
saline extracts of neonatal brain, heart, kidney, liver, and lung.
D.R. Shanklin. Marine Biol. Lab., Woods Hole.
10:38
254.9
Fat embolism syndrome following bone fracture
may be exacerbated by LPS.
A. Molteni, L. Torres-Romero, E.
Black, J. Friedrich, J.C. Tanner, A. Poisner and B. Herndon.
Univ. of Missouri-Kansas City Sch. of Med. and Univ. of Kansas
Med. Ctr.
10:54
254.10 Lysophosphatidylcholine-induced mitochondrial
ROS formation and activation of AMPK promote macrophage
chemotaxis and efferocytosis.
S. Jiang, D.W. Park, H-B. Bae
and J.W. Zmijewski. Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham and
Chonnam Natl. Univ., South Korea.
11:10
254.11 Rage signaling influences diesel particulate
matter-induced inflammation in primary alveolar macrophages.
D.B. Barton, B.C. Bettridge, T.D. Earley, A.B. Robinson and
P.R. Reynolds. Brigham Young Univ.
255. ASIP COTRAN EARLY CAREER INVESTIGATOR
AWARD LECTURE
Lecture
(Supported from an educational grant from Elsevier)
m
on
. 2:00
pm
—B
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C
onvention
& e
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C
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, 160B
Neuropathology
2:00 Introduction
S. Gonias. UCSD.
2:05
Endoplasmic reticulum stress in disease pathogenesis.
J. H. Lin. UCSD.
PATHOLOGY MONDAY
71
M
O
N
256. EPITHELIAL INTERCELLULAR JUNCTIONS
AND BARRIER REGULATION
Minisymposium
m
on
. 2:00
pm
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 160a
C
haired
: J. W
asChKe
C
oChaired
: C.r. W
eBer
2:00
256.1
Identification of unitary tight junction pore
opening/closing events in MDCK monolayers.
C.R. Weber,
G.H. Liang, L. Shen, Y. Wang, D.J. Nelson, A.S. Yu and J.R.
Turner. Univ. of Chicago and Univ. of Kansas Med. Ctr.
2:15
256.2
JAM-A –mediated regulation of epithelial
barrier function is dependent on a complex with ZO-2, Afadin
and PDZ-GEF1 that modulates Rap2c activity.
A. Monteiro,
R. Sumagin, C.R. Rankin, G. Leoni, D. Reiter, T. Stehle, T.
Dermody, R.A. Hall, A. Nusrat and C.A. Parkos. Emory Univ.,
Univ. of Tübingen and Vanderbilt Univ.
2:30
256.3
Claudin-4 promotes epithelial repair and
restoration of barrier function via interactions with the small
GTPase Rap1.
K. Sutherland, T. Bentley, M. LaFemina and
J. Frank. UCSF and San Francisco VA Med. Ctr.
2:45
256.4
Developmental expression and transcriptional
regulation of claudin-6 in the murine lung.
F.R. Jimenez, J.B.
Lewis, T.T. Wood and P.R. Reynolds. Brigham Young Univ.
3:00
256.5
Fundamental role for hifHIF-2-regulated
creatine kinase pathway in epithelial apical junctional integrity.
L.E. Glover, B. Saeedi, S. Ehrentraut, E. Campbell, C. Kelly,
D. Kominsky and S. Colgan. Univ. of Colorado Denver, Aurora.
3:15
256.6
Pemphigus autoantibodies identify a
desmoglein 3/p38MAPK adhesion complex regulating
keratinocyte cohesion.
V. Spindler, C. Dehner, V. Roetzer and
J. Waschke. Ludwig Maximilians Univ., Munich.
3:30
256.7
Desmoglein 2 ectodomain regulates intestinal
epithelial cell homeostasis.
R. Kamekura, P. Nava-Dominguez,
R. Hamilton, C.A. Parkos and A. Nusrat. Emory Univ.
3:45
256.8
P38MAPK is involved in loss of keratinocyte
cohesion induced by plakoglobin but not desmoplakin depletion.
C. Dehner, V. Spindler and J. Waschke. Ludwig Maximilians
Univ., Munich.
4:00
256.9
The inflammatory cytokine IFN
g regulates
intestinal epithelial homeostasis by controlling the
spatiotemporal localization of Akt, 14.3.3
z and b-catenin. P.
Nava, R. Kamekura, R. Hamilton, O. Medina-Contreras,
K.N. Kolegraff, T.L. Denning, C. Parkos and A. Nusrat.
CINVESTAV, Mexico City and Emory Univ. Sch. of Med.
4:15
256.10 Plakoglobin at adherens junctions after
b-catenin loss: mechanism and biological implications in
hepatocellular carcinoma.
E.D. Wickline and S.P.S. Monga.
Univ. of Pittsburgh.
257. LIVER GROWTH AND REGENERATION
Minisymposium
m
on
. 2:00
pm
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 160C
C
haired
: G.K. m
iChalopoulos
C
oChaired
: J. r
eDDy
Liver Pathobiology
2:00
257.1
Wnt signaling in liver homeostasis and
regeneration.
J. Yang, B. Wiiliams and S.P. Monga. Univ. of
Pittsburgh and Van Andel Res. Inst., Grand Rapids, MI.
2:15
257.2
Med1 subunit of the mediator complex is
phosphorylated by AMPK.
Y. Jia, N. Viswakarma, L. Bai, A.
Vluggens, S. Sandra, P. Misra, T.J. Lukas, J. Borensztajn,
Y-J. Zhu, B. Thimmapaya and J.K. Reddy. Northwestern
Univ., Feinberg Sch. of Med. and Dr. Reddy’s Inst. of Life Sci.,
Hyderabad, India.
2:30
257.3
miR-21 inhibition overcomes ethanol
suppression of rat liver regeneration.
E. Juskeviciute, R.P.
Dippold, A. Swarup and J.B. Hoek. Thomas Jefferson Univ.
and Univ. of Maryland Baltimore.
2:45
257.4
Hypoxia-inducible factor-1
a activation in
hepatocytes promotes liver regeneration after acetaminophen
overdose.
B.L. Copple and J.P. Luyendyk. Michigan State
Univ.
3:00
257.5
Triiodothyronine-induced hepatocyte
proliferation requires
b-catenin. M. Fanti, S. Singh, J. Stoops,
A. Columbano and S.P.S. Monga. Univ. of Cagliari, Italy and
Univ. of Pittsburgh Sch. of Med.
3:15
257.6
Concurrent inhibition of MET and EGFR in
regenerating mice liver following a partial hepatectomy: effects
on survival.
S. Paranjpe, W.C. Bowen, T. Paranjpe, J. Luo,
V. Bhave, D. Prosser, A. Lokshin and G.K. Michalopoulos.
Univ. of Pittsburgh and Univ. of Pittsburgh Cancer Inst.
3:30
257.7
Thy1-positive cell transplantation activates the
growth of small hepatocyte-like progenitor cells in rat livers
treated with retrorsine and PH.
T. Mitaka, N. Ichinohe, J.
Kon, N. Tanimizu, Y. Nakamura, T. Mizuguchi and K. Hirata.
Sapporo Med. Univ., Japan.
3:45
257.8
Mesenchymal stem cells from porcine bone
marrow of the os femoris and the crista iliaca.
P. Stock, S.
Brückner, H. Tautenhahn, S. Pelz, M. Hempel and B. Christ.
Univ. of Leipzig, Germany.
4:00
257.9
Effects of prototypical nuclear receptor ligands
on the expression of enzymes and transporters in primary
human hepatocytes.
A. Ullrich, M. Keiser, A. Sauer, D. Runge,
W. Siegmund and S. Oswald. PRIMACYT Cell Culture
Technol. GmbH, Schwerin and Univ. Greifswald, Germany.
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MONDAY PATHOLOGY
72
259. ASIP MEMBERSHIP BUSINESS MEETING AND
AWARDS PRESENTATION
Business Meeting
m
on
. 5:00
pm
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 160B
C
haired
: e. u
nGer
260. ASIP CENTENNIAL CELEBRATION AT THE
INSTITUTE OF CONTEMPORARY ART
Special Event
m
on
. 6:30
pm
258. ASIP PRESIDENTIAL SYMPOSIUM: HPV -
REMAINING CHALLENGES IN TRANSLATIONAL
SUCCESS STORY
Symposium
m
on
. 3:00
pm
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 160B
C
haired
: e. u
nGer
Neoplasia
3:00 Introduction.
E. Unger. Ctrs. for Dis. Control and Prevent.
3:15
HPV16 DNA methylation in cervical cells is an
informative biomarker of the grade of neoplasia and
invasive cancer.
J. Brandsma. Yale Univ.
3:50
HPV-associated non-cervical cancers: burden and
prevention potential.
A. Chaturvedi. NCI, NIH.
4:25
The future of HPV vaccines.
J. Schiller. NCI, NIH.
Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
261. J.J. ABEL LECTURE
m
on
. 8:30
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 107C
The John J. Abel Award in Pharmacology, supported
by Pfizer, Inc., is named after the founder of ASPET, was
established to stimulate fundamental research in pharmacology
and experimental therapeutics by young investigators. Dr. Arthur
Christopoulos was selected in recognition of his fundamental
contributions to the field of analytical pharmacology and the study
of G protein-coupled receptors, notably in his work on allosteric
modulation and biased signaling of GPCRs.
8:30 Introduction.
S. Lanier. Med. Univ. of South Carolina.
8:35
Reciprocal relationships: the yin and yang of GPCR
allostery.
A. Christopoulos. Monash Univ., Australia.
262. NEW KIDS ON THE BLOCK: ORGANIC
CATION TRANSPORTERS AND PLASMA
MEMBRANE MONOAMINE TRANSPORTER IN
NEURODEGENERATIVE, PSYCHIATRIC AND
ADDICTIVE DISORDERS
Symposium
(Sponsored by: The Divisions for Neuropharmacology;
Drug Metabolism; Integrative Systems, Translational and
Clinical Pharmacology; Molecular Pharmacology; and
Toxicology)
m
on
. 9:30
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 107C
C
haired
: l.C. D
aWs
9:30
Plasma membrane monoamine transporter: structure,
function, and therapeutic potential for mental illness.
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