S. R. Smith. Sanford-Burnham
Med. Res. Inst.
WEDNESDAY PHARMACOLOGY
132
11:15
5-HT2C receptor agonists: a mechanistically new target
for type 2 diabetes treatment.
L. Heisler. Univ. of
Cambridge.
11:50 5HT2C receptor agonist anorectic efficacy potentiated
by 5-HT1B receptor agonist co-application: an effect
mediated via augmented pro-opiomelanocortin
neuron activation.
B. Doslikova. Univ. of Cambridge.
479. SIR JAMES BLACK LECTURE
(Sponsored by: The British Pharmacological Society and
ASPET)
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The Sir James Black Lecture, sponsored jointly this year by
the British Pharmacological Society and ASPET, is given to honor
the eminent pharmacologist and Nobel Laureate, Sir James Black,
who is credited with revolutionizing medical treatment through
his discovery of the first beta-blocker drug, propranolol, and the
first histamine antagonist, cimetidine. Dr. Robert Lefkowitz was
selected because of the leading role he has played in garnering
an understanding of the structure and function of G-Protein
coupled receptors.
Note: This lecture is part of the G-Protein Coupled Receptors
Colloquium which continues Wednesday evening and Thursday.
While this lecture is open to any EB registrant, attendance at
the poster session, dinner, and remainder of the colloquium
Wednesday evening and Thursday requires separate registration.
2:00 Introduction.
H. Rang. British Pharmacol. Society.
2:05 Molecular mechanisms of biased agonism at 7
transmembrane receptors.
R. J. Lefkowitz. Duke
Univ. Med. Ctr.
480. BRIDGING THE EFFICACY DIVIDE: NOVEL
MOLECULAR INSIGHTS DRIVING BIASED
LIGAND DRUG DISCOVERY
Symposium
(Sponsored by: The British Pharmacological Society and
the ASPET Divisions for Neuropharmacology; Molecular
Pharmacology; Drug Discovery and Development; and
Toxicology)
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Note: This session is part of the G-Protein Coupled Receptors
Colloquium which continues Wednesday evening and Thursday.
While this session is open to any EB registrant, attendance at
the poster session, dinner, and remainder of the colloquium
Wednesday evening and Thursday requires separate registration.
3:00 Biased ligands: developing better drugs through
selective signaling at GPCRs.
J. Violin. Tevana Inc.
3:35
Ligand-biased signaling under the light of BRET.
M.
Bouvier. Univ. of Montreal.
4:10 Allosteric modulation of endogenous metabolites:
implications for on- and off-target drug action and
bias.
P. M. Sexton. Monash Univ., Australia.
4:45
Moving from biased signaling to functional (physiological)
bias.
A. Tobin. Univ. of Leicester.
5:20
The atypical antipsychotic clozapine induces 5-HT2AR-
mediated signaling and behavioral events in a beta-
arrestin2-independent but Akt-dependent manner.
C.L. Schmid, J.M. Streicher and L.M. Bohn. The
Scripps Res. Inst.
(1171.7)
481. PERIPHERAL MECHANISMS OF OPIOID
ANALGESIA
Symposium
(Sponsored by: The Divisions for Neuropharmacology;
Behavioral Pharmacology; and Molecular Pharmacology)
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pm
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3:00
Current status of pain therapeutics.
K. M. Hargreaves.
Univ. of Texas Hlth. Sci. Ctr. at San Antonio.
3:35
Molecular determinants and thermodynamics of opioid
receptor signaling.
M. Filizola. Mount Sinai Sch. of
Med.
4:10
6’GNTI is a G protein-biased kappa opioid receptor
agonist that inhibits arrestin recruitment.
J. A. Javitch.
Columbia Univ. Med. Ctr.
4:45 DOR-KOR heteromer-mediated signaling and
antinociception in primary sensory neurons.
W. P.
Clarke. Univ. of Texas Hlth. Sci. Ctr. at San Antonio.
5:20 Discussion.
482. SLEEP APNEA: A SLEEPING GIANT IN
DISEASE PATHOLOGIES
Symposium
(Sponsored by: The Divisions for Integrative Systems,
Translational and Clinical Pharmacology; Behavioral
Pharmacology; Cardiovascular Pharmacology; and
Neuropharmacology)
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pm
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3:00
Sleep apnea for non-experts.
N. Ayas. Univ. of British
Columbia.
3:30
Animal models of sleep apnea.
V. Polotsky. Johns
Hopkins Univ.
4:00
Sleep apnea as a risk factor for cardiovascular diseases.
T. D. Bradley. Univ. of Toronto.
4:30
Sleep apnea and type 2 diabetes.
E. Tasali. Univ. of
Chicago Med. Ctr.
5:00
Biomarkers in sleep apnea.
A. Malhotra. Brigham and
Women’s Hosp., Harvard Med. Sch.
PHARMACOLOGY WEDNESDAY
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483. STEM CELLS: PHARMACOLOGY AND
THERAPEUTICS
Symposium
(Sponsored by: The British Pharmacological Society-
Young Scientists and the ASPET Divisions for Integrative
Systems, Translational and Clinical Pharmacology; and
Behavioral Pharmacology)
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pm
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3:00
Introduction to stem cells in pharmacology.
D. Reed.
Imperial Col. London.
3:10
Langer Lab research: microfluidics and hESC research.
A. Sharei and J. Zolden. MIT.
3:45
Bioinformatic analysis of microglia-neural stem cell
interactions: a role for wnt5a?
M. Woodbury, K.
Ingraham, R. Freilich and T. Ikezu. Boston Univ. Sch.
of Med.
(1181.5)
3:55
Stem cells as a platform for biotherapeutic drug safety
screening.
J. A. Mitchell. Imperial Col. London.
4:25 Cell-Based solutions for cardiovascular disease.
D.Taylor. Texas Health Inst.
5:00
Stem cells: the future of therapy for pulmonary
hypertension.
D. J. Stewart. Ottawa Hosp. Res. Inst.
484. SYSTEMS BIOLOGY ANSWERING
PHARMACOLOGICAL QUESTIONS
Symposium
(Sponsored by: The Divisions for Toxicology and Integrative
Systems, Translational and Clinical Pharmacology)
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pm
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3:00
P4 medicine: how a systems approach will revolutionize
medicine.
L. Hood. Inst. for Systems Biol.
3:45
Network models in cancer pharmacology.
D. Pe’er.
Columbia Univ.
4:20 Practical applications of systems biology in the
pharmaceutical industry.
B. Gomes. Novartis Insts.
for BioMed. Res.
4:55
Metabolic network analysis to predict therapeutic
responses.
J. Papin. Univ. of Virginia.
485. ASPET CLOSING RECEPTION
Special Event
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pm
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allroom
F
oyer
Physiology
APS President’s Symposium Series
From Animals to Human Models of Disease
486
. NOBEL PRIZE IN PHYSIOLOGY OR MEDICINE
LECTURE
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pm
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Translational Physiology
Title: Unraveling Smell
Speake
r: L. Buck. Fred Hutchinson Cancer Res. Ctr.
487
. ASSEMBLY AND TRAFFICKING TO THE
INTESTINAL BRUSH BORDER
Symposium
(Sponsored by: APS Gastrointestinal and Liver
Physiology Section)
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am
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8:00
A role for protocadherins in the cross-linking and
assembly of apical microvilli.
M. Tyska. Vanderbilt
Univ.
8:30
Role of Cdc42 in apical trafficking and microvillus
morphogenesis.
N. Gao. Rutgers Univ.
9:00
Role of myosin Vb and Rabs in assembly of the brush
border microvilli.
J. R. Goldenring. Vanderbilt Univ.
9:30
Acute regulation of NHE3 occurs via separate control of
trafficking and microvillar cytoskeletal association.
M.
Donowitz. Johns Hopkins Univ.
488
. BRAIN STRAIN: CHALLENGES TO CEREBRAL
BLOOD FLOW REGULATION IN HUMANS
Featured Topic
(Sponsored by: APS Environmental and Exercise
Physiology Section)
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am
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erraDor
8:00 Introduction.
J. M. Serrador. Brigham and Women’s
Hosp., Harvard Med. Sch.
8:05
New concepts in the regulation of cerebral blood flow.
S.
Tzeng. Univ. of Otago, New Zealand.
8:25
Sex differences in age-related changes in cerebral
vasodilator responses.
J.N. Barnes, J.L. Taylor, W.T.
Nicholson and M.J. Joyner. Mayo Clin. (1203.11)
8:40
Improvement of hypovolemic men’s and women’s
orthostatic tolerance by a short exposure to artificial
gravity.
J.M. Evans, L.C. Ribeiro, S. Wang, M.J.
Falvo, J. Serrador, C.R. Ferguson, F.B. Moore,
J.D. Smith, J.C. Rask, V. Kostas, Q. Zhang and
C.F. Knapp. Univ. of Kentucky, WyleST&E, Houston,
VA New Jersey Healthcare, East Orange and NASA
Ames Res. Ctr., CA.
(1203.2)
WEDNESDAY PHARMACOLOGY/PHYSIOLOGY
134
8:55
Changes in cerebral scattering and hemodynamics
associated with acute mountain sickness.
D.M.
DiPasquale, Z. Li, S.R. Muza and G.E. Strangman.
Massachusetts Gen. Hosp., Charlestown, Harvard
Med. Sch. and U.S. Army Res. Inst. of Envrn. Med.,
Natick, MA.
(1203.9)
9:10
Metabolic syndrome alters the balance of prostaglandins
in hypoxia-mediated cerebral vasodilation.
J.W.
Harrell, P.A. Yanke and W.G. Schrage. Sch. of Med.
and Publ. Hlth., Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison.
(1203.10)
9:25
Association between cerebral tissue structural integrity
and dynamic cerebral autoregulation in elderly
individuals.
S. Purkayastha, O. Fadar, A. Mehregan,
L.A. Lipsitz and F.A. Sorond. Hebrew SeniorLife,
Boston, Harvard Med. Sch. and Brigham and Women’s
Hosp.
(1203.12)
9:40 Cerebral blood flow regulation during central
hypovolemia.
C. A. Rickards. Univ. of North Texas
Hlth. Sci. Ctr.
489
. CROSSTALK BETWEEN 1-CARBON
METABOLISM AND PATHWAYS ASSOCIATED
WITH METABOLIC DISEASES
Featured Topic
(Sponsored by: APS Endocrinology and Metabolism Section)
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Metabolic Diseases
8:00
Choline metabolism in mitochondrial function and
insulin sensitivity.
S. H. Zeisel. Univ. of North Carolina,
Kannapolis.
8:30
Nuclear receptor regulation of one carbon metabolism
associated with metabolic disease.
L. Wang. Univ. of
Utah Sch. of Med.
9:00
Body-on-a-chip BOAC: a tool to elucidate clinical
observations that involve modulations of the
“ethylation pathway in association with the expression
of adipokines.
M. Ariza-Nieto, J.B. Alley, S.A. Samy,
L. Fitzgerald and M.L. Shuler. Cornell Univ. and
Guthrie Clin., Sayre, PA.
(1153.13)
9:15
A novel Mito-Timer reporter gene for measurement of
mitochondrial quantity and quality in vivo.
R.C. Laker,
P. Xu, K. Ryall, A. Sujkowski, M. Zhang, P. Adler, R.
Wessells, J. Saucerman and Z. Yan. Univ. of Virginia
and Univ. of Michigan.
(1209.5)
9:30
The role of suppressor enhancer lin-12 1 like in
cholesterol metabolism.
C. Krumm, A. Francisco,
W-H. Chang and Q. Long. Cornell Univ. (1208.10)
9:45 Phosphorylation of rat skeletal muscle pyruvate
dehydrogenase phosphatase in response to insulin
stimulation.
J. Choptiany, R. MacPherson, P. LeBlanc
and S. Peters. Brock Univ., Canada. (1208.1)
490. MICRORNA AND STEM CELL IN MUSCLE
PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
Featured Topic
(Sponsored by: APS Muscle Biology Group)
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8:00
Role of cardiac stem cell in cardiac pathophysiology.
P.
Anversa. Brigham and Women’s Hosp.
8:30
microRNA in cardioprotection.
R. C. Kukreja. Virginia
Commonwealth Univ.
9:00
miR-133a ameliorates cardiac stem cells survival and
differentiation in Insulin2 mutant diabetic mice.
V.
Chavali, N.L. Diaz, S.C. Tyagi and P.K. Mishra. Univ.
of Louisville.
(1151.2)
9:15 Mitochondrial division inhibitor ameliorates post-
myocardial infarction via stimulating stem cell by
elevating level of miR-499 in diabetes.
N. Qipshidze,
P.K. Mishra and S.C. Tyagi. Univ. of Louisville.
(1151.1)
9:30
Ablation of MMP9 ameliorates epigenetic modifications
and mitigates diabetic cardiomyopathy.
P.K. Mishra,
V. Chavali, N. Metreveli and S.C. Tyagi. Univ. of
Louisville.
(1129.3)
9:45
General discussion.
491. NCAR TRAINEE FEATURED TOPIC
Featured Topic
(Sponsored by: APS Neural Control and Autonomic
Regulation Section)
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8:00 Acute prorenin infusion mediates angiotensin II-
dependent pressor response via binding to (pro)
renin receptor in the central nervous system.
W. Li,
H. Peng, A. Ichihara and Y. Feng. Tulane Univ. and
Tokyo Women’s Med. Univ.
(927.1)
8:15
Central sympathoinhibition ameliorates the reduction
of splenic regulatory T cells with decreased IL-
17 production in hypertensive rats.
M. Katsuki, Y.
Hirooka, T. Kishi and K. Sunagawa. Kyushu Univ.
Grad. Sch. of Med. Sci., Japan.
(927.2)
8:30 Unilateral renal denervation improves autonomic
balance in conscious rabbits with chronic heart failure.
A. Schiller, K. Haack, P. Curry and I. Zucker. Univ. of
Nebraska Med. Ctr.
(927.16)
8:45
Brain targeted ACE2 overexpression prevents DOCA-
salt hypertension and cardiac hypertrophy by
modulating NOS and ERK1/2 phosphorylation.
S.
Sriramula, H. Xia and E. Lazartigues. LSU Hlth. Sci.
Ctr.-New Orleans.
(927.7)
9:00
Central neural mechanisms underpinning amplified
respiratory-sympathetic coupling in the spontaneously
hypertensive rat.
D.J.A. Moraes, B.H. Machado and
J.F.R. Paton. Univ. of São Paulo, Ribeirão Preto and
Univ. of Bristol.
(927.12)
PHYSIOLOGY WEDNESDAY
135
W
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9:15
Increased expression of AT2 receptors in the nucleus
of the solitary tract improves baroreflex function in
renovascular hypertensive rats.
G.T. Blanch, A.H.
Freiria-Oliveira, K. Rigatto, H. Li, E. Colombari, C.
Sumners and D.S.A. Colombari. Fac. of Odontol.,
São Paulo State Univ., Araraquara, Fed. Univ. of
Hlth. Sci., Porto Alegre, Brazil, Sch. of Biotechnol.,
Southern Med. Univ., China and Univ. of Florida.
(927.10)
9:30 Does endothelial peroxisome proliferator-activated
receptor gamma protect baroreflex function during
obesity?
B.H. McCully, K.D. Duffy, C.D. Sigmund
and V.L. Brooks. Oregon Hlth. & Sci. Univ. and Univ.
of Iowa.
(927.11)
9:45
Aldosterone acts in the nucleus tractus solitarius to
increase expression of vasopressin (AVP) in the
paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus.
N. Cho
and D. Scheuer. Univ. of Florida. (927.15)
492. NEUROTROPHINS IN THE RESPIRATORY
SYSTEM
Symposium
(Sponsored by: APS Respiration Section)
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8:00
Brain-derived neurotrophic factor in the developing
airway.
R. J. Martin. Case Western Reserve Univ.
8:25
Nerve growth factor in epithelial responses to viral
infections in neonates.
G. Piedimonte. West Virginia
Univ.
8:50
Neurotrophins and GDNF in vagal innervation of the
respiratory tract.
B. J. Undem. Johns Hopkins Univ.
9:15
Autocrine/paracrine effects of brain-derived neurotrophic
factor in human airways, and their role in asthma.
Y. S.
Prakash. Mayo Clin.
9:40
Neurotrophin regulation of diaphragmatic function: from
development through aging.
C. Mantilla. Mayo Clin.
493. THE ROLE OF PSYCHOLOGICAL STRESS
AND DEPRESSION IN DETERMINING
CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE RISK: THE
USE OF ANIMAL MODELS AND CLINICAL
APPLICATION
Symposium
(Sponsored by: APS Cardiovascular Section)
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