INDUSTRY: AN ACADEMIC FAUSTIAN
BARGAIN?
Special Session
(Supported by an educational grant from Organovo)
(Sponsored by: ASIP Education Committee and ASIP
Committee for Career Development, Women & Minorities)
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Education
12:00
Conflict of Interest (made ridiculously simple).
D. Korn.
Massachusetts Gen. Hosp.
12:30
Reaping What You Sow (Intellectual Property and other
important concepts).
B. E. Bierer. Brigham and
Womens Hosp.
1:00
Corporate Sponsored Research and Licensing (not the
enemy).
F. Toneguzzo. Brigham and Womens Hosp.
383. A THOUSAND WAYS TO DIE: CELL DEATH
STORIES
Symposium
(Sponsored by: ASIP and the Italian Society of Pathology
and Translational Medicine)
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Cell Death
2:00
Regulation and function of authophagy during cell death.
E. H. Baehrecke. Univ. of Massachusetts Med. Sch.
2:45
Methuosis: a novel form of non-apoptic cell death
triggered by dysfunctional macropinocytosis.
W. A.
Maltese. Univ. of Toledo.
3:30
Non-canonical cell death pathways in Drosophila
oogenesis.
K. McCall. Boston Univ.
4:15
Toward a unified model of cell death and its role in
human disease.
R. N. Kitsis. Albert Einstein Col. of
Med.
384. MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR BASIS OF
DISEASE: STOWELL SYMPOSIUM: CELL,
SCAFFOLD AND TISSUE ENGINEERING:
SUCCESSES ACHIEVED AND HURDLES YET TO
OVERCOME
Symposium
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See
Session 377 on page 103 for session details.
385. BREAST CANCER WORKSHOP: HER2+
BREAST CANCER: BIOLOGY, DIAGNOSTICS
AND THERAPEUTICS
Workshop
(Supported by an educational grant from Academic Press)
(Sponsored by: ASIP Breast Cancer Scientific Interest
Group)
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Neoplasia
2:00
HER2+ breast cancer biology.
W. B. Coleman. Univ. of
North Carolina at Chapel Hill Sch. of Med.
2:45
Companion diagnostics for HER2+ breast cancer.
G.
Tsongalis. Dartmouth-Hitchcock Med. Ctr., Geisel
Sch. of Med. at Dartmouth.
3:30
Standard therapeutics for the treatment of HER2+
breast cancer.
E. P. Winer. Harvard Med. Sch.
4:15
Alternative treatment strategies for HER2+ breast
cancer patients.
I. E. Krop. Harvard Med. Sch.
386. PATHOPHYSIOLOGY OF CARDIAC DISEASE
Minisymposium
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pm
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Cardiac Pathobiology
2:00
386.1
Compensatory mechanisms acting in
dystrophin deficient hearts.
M. A. Rossi, V. Blefari, P. Ferezin
and M.D. Baruffi. Fac. of Med. of Ribeirão Preto, Univ. of São
Paulo and Fac. of Pharmaceut. Sci., Ribeirão Preto.
2:15
386.2
Impaired intracellular Ca
2+
signaling alters the
activity of growth promoting signaling molecules in Ryr2ADA/
ADAmice.
M-X. Zou, T. Huang, D. A. Pasek and G. Meissner.
Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
2:30
386.3
Growth hormone administration alters protein
expression in skeletal muscle of rats with aortic stenosis-
induced heart failure.
A. R. R. Lima, R .L. Damatto, L.U. Pagan,
C. Bonomo, M. D. M. Cezar, D. M. Guizoni, P. F. Martinez, M.
J. Gomes, K. Okoshi and M. P. Okoshi. Botucatu Med. Sch.-
UNESP, Brazil.
TUESDAY PATHOLOGY
106
2:45
386.4
Muscle RING Finger-1 inhibits insulin-like
growth factor-1-dependent cardiomyocyte hypertrophy by
reducing Akt nuclear activity.
K.M. Wadosky, R.L. Hite and
M.S. Willis. Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and American
Physiol. Soc., Bethesda.
3:00
386.5
STAT3 activation in cardiac hypertrophy
induced by ryanodine receptor 2 mutation.
T. Huang, J-H. Lee,
M. Zou, D.A. Pasek, M.S. Willis and G. Meissner. Univ. of
North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
3:15
386.6
Role of renin angiotensin system inhibitors on
Toll-like receptors expression in cardiac hypertrophy induced
by renal ischemia/reperfusion.
M. Abrahão and M.S. Carneiro-
Ramos. Fed. Univ. of ABC, Brazil.
3:30
386.7
Pressure-overload hypertrophy of the
developing heart reveals activation of divergent gene and
protein pathways in the left and right ventricular myocardium.
I. Friehs, D.B. Cowan, Y-H. Choi, K.M. Black, R. Barnett, P.J.
Del Nido, S. Levitsky and J.D. McCully. Boston Children’s
Hosp., Harvard Med. Sch. and Beth Israel Deaconess Med. Ctr.
3:45
386.8
Phenylephrine-induced cardiomyocyte
hypertrophy and calcification are regulated by CD73-TNAP
interaction and inhibited by adenosine receptor activation.
T.X. Gan, S. Taniai, G. Zhao, C. Huang, T.J. Velenosi, B.L.
Urquhart and M. Karmazyn. Univ. of Western Ontario and ,
Canada.
4:00
386.9
Differential effect of mesenchymal stem cell
therapy on cardiac glucose utilization in the infarcted heart
following chow and high fat feeding.
C. Hughey, L. Ma, F.D.
James, D.P. Bracy, D.H. Wasserman, J.N. Rottman and J.
Shearer. Univ. of Calgary, Canada and Vanderbilt Univ.
4:15
386.10 NF
kB activation drives mesenchymal
transformation and susceptibility to calcification in aortic valve
endothelial cells.
E.J. Farrar and J.T. Butcher. Cornell Univ.
4:30
386.11 Potential novel role of the immune system in
the pathogenesis of myxomatous mitral valve disease.
N.M.
Thalji, M.A. Hagler, R.M. Suri and J.D. Miller. Mayo Clin.
4:45
386.12 Matrix metalloproteinase-28 deletion
attenuates early cardiac dysfunction following myocardial
infarction by restraining neutrophil infiltration and limiting the
inflammatory response.
Y. Ma, A. Yabluchanskiy, J. Zhang,
T.A. Ramirez, A.M. Manicone and M.L. Lindsey. Univ. of
Texas Hlth. Sci. Ctr. at San Antonio and Univ. of Washington.
387. LIVER INJURY, FIBROSIS AND CANCER
Minisymposium
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Liver Pathobiology
2:00
387.1
Bile acid depletion increases susceptibility to
acetaminophen-induced hepatotoxicity in mice.
B. Bhushan,
P. Borude, G. Edwards, C. Walesky, J. Cleveland, F. Li, X. Ma
and U. Apte. Univ. of Kansas Med. Ctr.
2:15
387.2
Bile acids elicit production of interleukin-23 by
hepatocytes.
K.M. O’Brien and B.L. Copple. Michigan State
Univ.
2:30
387.3
Absence of beta-catenin in liver attenuates
bile duct injury.
K.N. Nejak-Bowen, M.D. Thompson and S.P.
Monga. Univ. of Pittsburgh and Nationwide Children’s Hosp.,
Columbus.
2:45
387.4
Regulation of hepatic stellate cell activation
through LRP1: a novel signaling role for t-PA in liver.
L-I. Kang,
W.C. Bowen, A. Orr, S.C. Muratoglu, D.K. Strickland, G.K.
Michalopoulos and W.M. Mars. Univ. of Pittsburgh Sch. of
Med. and Univ. of Maryland Sch. of Med.
3:00
387.5
Acidic sphingomyelinase inhibition limits CCl
4
-
induced hepatic fibrosis.
R.C. Quillin III, G. Wilson, H. Nojima,
J. Wang, R. Schuster, J. Blanchard, M. Edwards, E. Gulbins
and A. Lentsch. Univ. of Cincinnati.
3:15
387.6
Disfunction of endosome prevents developing
alcoholic fatty liver disease via inhibition of TLR4, TLR7, and
TLR9 signaling pathways.
H. Matsumoto, S. Okazaki and R.
Katada. Sapporo Med. Univ. Sch. of Med.
3:30
387.7
Disparate
b-catenin activation following iron
overload is responsible for hepatocyte proliferation in male
mice.
G.J. Logan, A. Misse and S.P.S. Monga. Univ. of
Pittsburgh.
3:45
387.8
Biogenic amines secreted by
cholangiocarcinoma modulate macrophage activation.
D.
Leyva-Illades and S. DeMorrow. Texas A&M Hlth. Sci. Ctr. and
Central Texas Veterans Healthcare Syst., Temple.
4:00
387.9
Drug-induced glutamine depletion hinders the
growth of
b-catenin mutated human liver cancer xenografts. M.
Chiu, S. Tardito, S. Pillozzi, A. Arcangeli, N. Campanini, E.M.
Silini and O. Bussolati. Univ. of Parma and Univ. of Florence.
4:15
387.10 Rsu-1 (Ras suppressor protein 1)—a
potential tumor suppressor in hepatocellular carcinoma.
S.
Donthamsetty, W. Mars and G. Michalopoulos. Univ. of
Pittsburgh Sch. of Med.
4:30
387.11 Role of hepatocyte nuclear factor 4 alpha
in promotion of hepatocellular carcinoma.
C. Walesky, S.
Gunewardena, G. Edwards, P. Borude and U. Apte. Univ. of
Kansas Med. Ctr.
4:45
387.12 Hedgehog signaling pathway regulates
autophagy in human hepatocellular carcinoma cells.
Y. Wang,
C. Han and T. Wu. Tulane Univ. Sch. of Med. and Tongji Med.
Col. Tongji Hosp., China.
388. BREAST CANCER SCIENTIFIC INTEREST
GROUP POSTER DISCUSSION AND
NETWORKING SESSION
Poster Discussion
(Sponsored by: ASIP Breast Cancer Scientific Interest
Group)
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Neoplasia
P1
Syndecan-2 regulates the invasive phenotype of human
breast carcinoma cells.
H.C. Lim, H. Multhaupt and
J. Couchman. Univ. of Copenhagen. (650.3)
P2
mTOR inhibition leads to decrease of breast cancer
progression in vitro via cytoskeleton remodeling.
O.
Cherednyk, A. Khoruzhenko, V. Kosach and V.
Filonenko. Inst. of Molec. Biol. and Genet., NAS of
Ukraine, Kiev.
(1088.2)
PATHOLOGY TUESDAY
107
T
U
E
P3
A novel interplay between AR and DAX-1 controls
aromatase expression in estrogen-dependent
cancers.
M. Lanzino, P. Maris, R. Sirianni, I.
Barone, A. Chimento, C. Giordano, C. Morelli, G.E.
Trombino, D. Bonofiglio, S. Catalano and S. Andò.
Univ. of Calabria, Italy.
(471.6)
P4
Development of model systems for analysis of effects of
cell-cell and cell-microenvironment interactions on pH
regulatory proteins in breast cancer.
A.P. Andersen,
L. Ronnov-Jessen, A. Hulikova, P. Swietach and
S.F. Pedersen. Univ. of Copenhagen and Univ. of
Oxford.
(471.4)
P5
Regulation of the Na
+
,HCO
3
-
cotransporter NBCn1
(SLC4A7) by a constitutively active ErbB2 receptor
in MCF-7 breast cancer cells.
A. Gorbatenko,
C. Olesen, E. Valen and S.F. Pedersen. Univ. of
Copenhagen and Harvard Univ.
(471.5)
P6
Association of HER2 Ile655Val and Ala1170Pro
polymorphisms with breast cancer prognosis factors.
D. Furrer, C. Laflamme, M-A. Côté, L. Provencher,
F. Barabé, S. Jacob, C. St-Pierre, É. Demers,
R. Tremblay-LeMay, C. Nadeau-Larochelle, A.
Michaud, J. Lemieux and C. Diorio. Res. Ctr. CHUQ,
Laval Univ. Canada.
(1087.12)
P7
Aromatase inhibitor resistance in breast cancer: a
potential role for cytokine signaling network.
I.
Barone, L. Gelsomino, C. Giordano, M. Lanzino,
D. Bonofiglio, S.A.W. Fuqua, S. Catalano and S.
Andò. Univ. of Calabria, Italy and Baylor Col. of Med.
(471.7)
389. DER SCHADENKLUB CELL INJURY SCIENTIFIC
INTEREST GROUP POSTER DISCUSSION AND
NETWORKING SESSION
Poster Discussion
(Sponsored by: ASIP Cell Injury Scientific Interest Group)
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Cell and Tissue Injury
P8
Neutrophil-derived microparticles as novel effectors in
joint disease.
S.E. Headland, F. Dell’Accio and M.
Perretti. Barts and The London Med. Sch., Queen
Mary Univ. of London.
(137.6)
P9
Phosphoinositide-3-kinase regulation of neutrophil
mechanosensing is context dependent.
X. O’Brien,
K.E. Oakley, A.J. Loosley, J.X. Tang and J.S.
Reichner. Rhode Island Hosp., Warren Alpert Med.
Sch. of Brown Univ. and Brown Univ.
(650.1)
P10
The effect of adiponectin on intestinal fibroblasts.
C.M. Williams, R. Fayad, M.K. Anderson and T.A.
Reaves. Med. Univ. of South Carolina and Univ. of
South Carolina.
(132.1)
P11
Novel role of suppressor of cytokine signaling 3 in
regulating LPS-induced matrix metalloproteinase 13
gene expression in osteoblasts.
A. Gao, A. Kantarci,
H. Gao and T. Van Dyke. The Forsyth Inst. and
Brigham and Women’s Hosp.
(132.9)
P12
Resolvin E1 enhances phagocytosis-induced neutrophil
apoptosis.
D. El Kebir, P. Gjorstrup and J.G. Filep.
Univ. of Montreal and Resolvyx Pharmaceuts.,
Cambridge, MA.
(137.10)
P13
Characterization of endometrial scarless healing using
a postpartum mouse model.
A. Yoshii, S. Kitahara
and T. Ezaki. Tokyo Womens’ Med. Univ. (650.5)
P14
Mechanism underlying the antioxidant activity of taurine.
C.J. Jong and S. Schaffer. Univ. of South Alabama.
(1086.1)
P15
Cellular and molecular response of mouse subcutaneous
tissue to a triantibiotic intracanal medication.
G. Faria,
M.S.S. Pereira, C.R. Cardoso, J.S. Silva, M.C. Kuga,
L.A.B. Silva and M.A. Rossi. São Paulo State Univ.,
Araraquara and Univ. of São Paulo, Ribeirão Preto.
(650.6)
P16
Epithelial wound repair: insights into the multifaceted
roles of annexin A1.
G. Leoni, P-A. Neumann, A.
Alam, R.S. Hilgarth, D.J. Lambeth, D. Kusters, C.
Reutelingsperger, M. Perretti, C.A. Parkos, A.S.
Neish and A. Nusrat. Emory Univ., CARIM Sch. for
Cardiovas. Dis., Maastricht and William Harvey Res.
Inst., London, U.K.
(132.3)
P17
Caspase-generated neoepitopes as markers of axonal
degeneration in neural development and injury.
J.D.
Sokolowski, D.S. Heffron, C. Deppmann, A.C.
LeBlanc and J.W. Mandell. Univ. of Virginia and
McGill Univ.
(1086.8)
P18
Autophagy in neuronal bioenergetics and survival.
J.
Zhang, M. Dodson, Q. Liang, G. Benavides and
V.M. Darley-Usmar. Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham
and Birmingham VA Med. Ctr.
(1086.3)
P19 Concussive injury elicits human cerebrovascular
endothelial cell activation in vitro.
C. Augustine, G.
Cepinskas and D. Fraser. Univ. of Western Ontario,
Children’s Hlth. Res. Inst. and Lawson Hlth. Res. Inst.
(650.10)
P20
Evidence of donor epithelial type 2 cell engraftment in
bleomycin-injured murine lung after airway delivery.
P.M. Wang and W.J. Martin II. NICHD, NIH. (1166.16)
P21
Proliferation and differentiation potential of adipose-
derived stem cells isolated from dystrophin and
utrophin double knockout mice.
J. Sohn, N. Oyster,
Y. Tang, A. Lu, B. Wang and J. Huard. Univ. of
Pittsburgh.
(874.29)
P22
Endothelium exposed to atheroprone flow promotes
monocyte transmigration and specification.
A.
Turjman, E.R. Edelman and G. García-Cardeña.
MIT, Brigham and Women’s Hosp. and Harvard Med.
Sch.
(379.4)
P23 TNF-
a induced eNOS uncoupling mediates endothelial
dysfunction through elevated reactive oxygen species.
E.J. Farrar, G. Huntley, K.S. Hsu and J.T. Butcher.
Cornell Univ. and Brown Univ.
(379.5)
P24
Control of VEGF-endothelial response by ECM stiffness.
K.E. Derricks, V. Trinkaus-Randall and M.A. Nugent.
Boston Univ. Sch. of Med.
(646.11)
TUESDAY PATHOLOGY
108
390. CLUB HEPATOMANIA
Poster Discussion
(Sponsored by: ASIP Liver Pathobiology Scientific
Interest Group)
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Liver Pathobiology
P25
Regulation of liver growth by Glypican 3, CD81,
Hedgehog, and Hhex.
V. Bhave, W. Mars, S.
Donthamsetty, J. Luo, W. Bowen and G.
Michalopoulos. Univ. of Pittsburgh Sch. of Med.
(872.3)
P26
Adaptation to chronic alcohol intake alters STAT3
genome-wide binding dynamics during liver
regeneration.
B. Patra, L. Kuttippurathu, R.
Vadigepalli and J.B. Hoek. Thomas Jefferson Univ.
(872.4)
P27
Med1 subunit of the mediator complex is phosphorylated
by AMPK.
Y. Jia, N. Viswakarma, L. Bai, A. Vluggens,
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