K.N. Gibson-Corley, A.L. Simons, P.
Lu, R.A. Robinson, D.K. Meyerholz and J.D. Colgan. Univ. of
Iowa.
9:50
53.5
Overexpression of the lysophosphatidic acid
generating enzyme autotaxin/ENPP2 potentially promotes
the pathogenesis of neurofibromatosis type 1-associated
neurofibromas and malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumors.
L.T. Peavler, S.J. Byer, K.A. Roth and S.L. Carroll. Univ. of
Alabama at Birmingham.
10:10
53.6
Epigenetic and stem cell biomarkers in
experimental melanoma metastases.
C.G. Lian, J. Ma, Y.G.
Shi, Q. Zhan, C. Lezcano, M.H. Frank and G.F. Murphy.
Brigham and Women’s Hosp., Harvard Med. Sch. and Boston
Children’s Hosp.
10:30
53.7
Two distinct stem cells in the human small
and large intestine.
J.M. Chandler and E. Lagasse. Univ. of
Pittsburgh.
10:50
53.8
Over-expression of cancer testis antigen genes
in multiple myeloma stem cell-like cells.
J. Wen, B. Savoldo, Y.
Zu and C-C. Chang. The Methodist Hosp., Baylor Col. of Med.
and Florida Hosp., Orlando.
11:10
53.9
Susceptibility of multiple myeloma stem
cells and their progeny to NK-cell mediated cytotoxicity.
M.
Podberezin, J. Wen and J. Chang. Texas Methodist Hosp.,
Houston and Florida Hosps., Orlando.
54. 13TH ANNUAL WORKSHOP ON GRADUATE
EDUCATION IN PATHOLOGY: WE ALL CAN’T BE
PLS: PREPARING GRADUATE STUDENTS FOR
ALTERNATIVE CAREER PATHS
Workshop
(Sponsored by: ASIP Education Committee)
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. 11:30
am
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estin
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aterFront
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,
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arBor
B
allroom
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: D. r
emiCK
anD
J.s. r
eiChner
Education
11:30
Interface of academics and the pharmaceutical industry.
K. L. Gann. Amylin Pharmaceuts. LLC.
12:00 Working with recruiters.
C. Young. Russell Reynolds
Assocs.
12:30 Working with biotechnology, industry perspective.
D.
Young. Wolf Greenfield, Boston.
1:00
A career teaching high school.
M Germain. Braintree
Public Schools.
55. HIGHLIGHTS: GRADUATE STUDENT
RESEARCH IN PATHOLOGY
Poster Discussion
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pm
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eaves
anD
J. D. J
ones
-t
riChe
Career Development
Oral Presentations
1:30
Welcome and introduction.
T. A. Reaves, J. D. Jones-
Triche. Med. Univ. of South Carolina, and Univ. of
Michigan.
1:35 NF
kB activation drives mesenchymal transformation and
susceptibility to calcification in aortic valve endothelial
cells.
E.J. Farrar and J.T. Butcher. Cornell Univ.
(386.10)
1:45
Investigating novel roles for exogenous and endogenous
galectin-3 in controlling vascular inflammation.
B.
Gittens, M. Perretti and D. Cooper. Barts and the
London Med. Sch., Queen Mary Univ. of London.
(138.12)
1:55
A one, two finish of
b-catenin: targeting its activity and
synthesis in hepatocellular carcinoma by novel small
molecules and antisense peptide-nucleic acids.
E.R.
Delgado, R. Bahal, D. Ly, G. Mustata and S.P.S.
Monga. Univ. of Pittsburgh, Yale Univ., Carnegie
Mellon Univ. and Univ. of Southern Indiana.
(872.9)
2:05
Poster Presentations
P2
The role of wnt/
b-catenin signaling in regulating
angiogenesis in hepatocellular carcinoma.
E.R.
Delgado, R. Bahal, D. Ly and S.P.S. Monga. Univ.
of Pittsburgh, Yale Univ. and Carnegie Mellon Univ.
(471.1)
P4
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
SATURDAY PATHOLOGY
16
South Carolina.
(132.1)
P6
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.
(386.4)
P8
Role of Elp1 in neural crest cell migration, differentiation
and target tissue innervation in familial dysautonomia.
M.Z. Jackson, K.A. Gruner and W.G. Tourtellotte.
Northwestern Univ., Chicago.
(380.5)
P10
Epigenetic regulation of PTEN in hepatic cancer.
X.V.
Qadir, C. Han and T. Wu. Tulane Univ. Sch. of Med.
(1087.19)
P12
Microbiota-dependent Th17 and Foxp3
+
regulatory T
cell differentiation in the intestinal lamina propria.
D.
Geem, O. Medina-Contreras, R. Newberry and T.L.
Denning. Emory Univ. and Washington Univ. Sch. of
Med.
(131.3)
Oral Presentations
2:35
Two distinct stem cells in the human small and large
intestine.
J.M. Chandler and E. Lagasse. Univ. of
Pittsburgh.
(53.7)
2:45
Fundamental role for HIF-1
a in expression of enteric
human
b defensin-1. C.J. Kelly, L.E. Glover, E.L.
Campbell, S.F. Ehrentraut, D.J. Kominsky, B.E.
Bowers, A.J. Bayless, B.J. Saeedi and S.P. Colgan.
Univ. of Colorado Sch. of Med.
(131.7)
2:55
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.
(256.2)
3:05
Poster Presentations
P1
Sublethal hypoxic injury increases intestinal permeability
via disruption of sealing tight junction proteins, but
not pore forming tight junction proteins in human
intestinal epithelium.
Y. Jin and A.T. Blikslager. Col.
of Vet. Med., North Carolina State Univ.
(650.11)
P3
Kupffer cells potentiate the risk for liver sinusoidal
endothelial cell injury in sepsis through programmed
cell death receptor-1 ligation.
N.A. Hutchins , F. Wang,
C-S. Chung and A. Ayala. Brown Univ. Warren Alpert
Sch. of Med. and Rhode Island Hosp.
(379.8)
P5
microRNA-155 plays an important role in endothelial cell
activation.
A. Virtue, H. Wang and X-f. Yang. Temple
Univ.
(134.1)
P7
Interactions between Francisella tularensis and
hepatocytes.
C.A. Thomas and M. Furie. Stony
Brook Univ.
(252.1)
P9
Prolonged NLRP3 inflammasome activation enhances
the secretion of autophagy-derived vesicles containing
LC3II in murine dendritic cells.
H.M. Russo and G.R.
Dubyak. Case Western Reserve Univ. (1086.7)
P11
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. (256.10)
3:35
ASIP Excellence in Science Award Lecture
Dynamic properties of tight junction structure and
function.
C. R. Weber. Univ. of Chicago.
3:50
Concluding remarks.
56. HISTOLOGICAL IMAGE ANALYSIS AND
DECISION SUPPORT: READY FOR PRIME TIME?
Symposium
(Supported by an educational grant from IOS Press)
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pm
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haired
: J.e. t
omaszeWsKi
anD
r.m. l
evenson
Imaging
2:00
Laser capture micro-dissection parsed by quantitative
image analysis.
J. Hipp. NCI, NIH.
2:34
Computational image analysis and machine learning for
cancer pathology.
A. Beck. Beth Israel Deaconess,
Harvard Med. Sch.
3:30
HistoCAD in prostate and breast cancer evaluation.
J.
Tomaszewski. Univ. at Buffalo, SUNY.
4:15
Histological image analysis: the raw and the cooked.
R.
Levenson. Univ. of California, Davis Med. Ctr.
57
. ENDOTHELIAL-DEPENDENT MECHANISMS OF
LEUKOCYTE RECRUITMENT
Minisymposium
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. 2:00
pm
—B
oston
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onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 160C
C
haired
: a. l
iChtman
C
oChaired
: p. a
lCaiDe
Inflammation
2:00
57.1
Multiphoton imaging reveals a novel leukocyte
recruitment paradigm in the inflamed glomerulus.
M. Hickey, S.
Devi, A. Li, C. Westhorpe and A.R. Kitching. Monash Univ.
Med. Ctr., Australia.
2:15
57.2
DEPTOR: a novel cell-intrinsic molecule that
plays a critical role in the regulation of endothelial activation,
proinflammatory and angiogenic responses.
S. Bruneau, C.B.
Woda and D.M. Briscoe. Boston Children’s Hosp. and Harvard
Med. Sch.
2:30
57.3
TNFR2 induces IRF-1 dependent IFN
b
autocrine signaling in endothelial cells to promote monocyte
recruitment.
D.A. Venkatesh, T. Ernandez, F. Rosetti, I. Batal,
X. Cullere, Y. Zhang, G. García-Cardeña, G. Stavrakis, B.
Horwitz and T.N. Mayadas. Brigham and Womens Hosp.,
Harvard Med. Sch.
2:45
57.4
A role for endomucin-1 in maintaining a non-
inflammatory endothelial surface and in the regulation of
leukocyte-endothelial cell interactions.
J. Yang, A. Zahr, P.
Alcaide, A. Jones, M. Gregory-Ksander, F.W. Luscinskas,
B. Ksander, P. Argueso and P.A. D’Amore. Schepens Eye
Res. Inst./Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirm., Harvard Med.
Sch., Tufts Med. Ctr. and Brigham and Women’s Hosp.
3:00
57.5
ICAM1 ligation-induced transmigratory
complex formation regulates leukocyte transendothelial
migration.
M.R. Williams, S.D. Auerbach, P. Alcaide, G.
Newton and F.W. Luscinskas. Brigham and Women’s Hosp.
PATHOLOGY SATURDAY
17
S
A
T
and Harvard Med. Sch.
3:15
57.6
Contribution of E-selectin ligands and
the chemokine CCL20 to Th17 lymphocyte rolling and
transendothelial migration.
A. Grodecki-Pena, A. Knapp, A.M.
Salvador and P. Alcaide. Tufts Med. Ctr. and Tufts Univ. Sch.
of Med.
3:30
57.7
Mechanisms of acute lung injury: programmed
cell death receptor (PD)-1 ligation as a regulator of
angiopoietin-2 expression.
J. Lomas-Neira, S. Monaghan, X.
Huang, Y. Chen and A. Ayala. Alpert Sch. of Med. at Brown
Univ./Rhode Island Hosp.
3:45
57.8
Endothelial cell IQGAP1 is an important
regulator of the transendothelial migration of leukocytes.
D.P.
Sullivan and W.A. Muller. Northwestern Univ. Feinberg Sch.
of Med.
4:00
57.9
Fine tuning of the inflammaotry response
by human deneddylase-1/SENP8.
S.F. Ehrentraut, E.L.
Campbell, L.E. Glover, B. Bowers, A.J. Bayless, C.J. Kelly,
D.J. Kominsky and S.P. Colgan. Univ. of Colorado Denver,
Aurora.
4:15
57.10
Carbon monoxide-dependent modulation
of polymorphonuclear leukocyte adhesion to human
cerebrovascular endothelial cells in an in vitro model of
endotoxemia.
F. Serizawa, E. Patterson, R.F. Potter, D. Fraser
and G. Cepinskas. Lawson Hlth. Res. Inst. and Children’s Hlth.
Res. Inst., London, Canada.
4:30
57.11
VE-cadherin “”gap”” formation during
transendothelial migration is regulated by a novel mechansim
involving the lateral border recycling compartment.
A.M.
Gonzalez, B. Cyrus and W.A. Muller. Northwestern Univ.,
Chicago.
4:45
57.12
Expression of an endocytic-defective VE-
cadherin mutant cannot restore cell-cell-adhesion in the
absence p120 in the endothelium.
J.P. Garrett, A.M. Lowery,
A.P. Kowalczyk and P.A. Vincent. Albany Med. Col. and
Emory Univ. Sch. of Med.
58. MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF LUNG
MALIGNANCY
Minisymposium
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. 2:00
pm
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 161
C
haired
: C. K
im
C
oChaired
: l. s
holl
Pulmonary Pathobiology
2:00
Molecular biology of lung malignancy.
C. Kim. Children’s
Hosp. Boston.
2:35
58.1
Identification of ALDOA as a new lung
adeonocarcinoma predict gene involve cancer metabolism
and tumor metastasis.
Y-C. Chang, Y-H. Jan, Y-C. Chang, Y-F.
Yang, C-Y. Su, T-C. Lai, Y-P. Liu and M. Hsiao. Genomics Res.
Ctr., Acad. Sinica, Taipei.
2:55
58.2
Nicotine increases the expression of alpha7-
nicotinic receptors (alpha7-nAChRs) in human squamous cell
lung cancer cells via Sp1/GATA pathway.
P. Dasgupta, J.K.
Lau, K.C. Brown, H. Luo and Y.C. Chen. Joan C. Edwards
Sch. of Med., Marshall Univ. and Alderson-Broaddus Col., WV.
3:15
58.3
Diminished expression of plasminogen
activator inhibitor 2 correlates with local tumor aggressiveness
in lung adenocarcinoma.
C.Y. Su and M. Hsiao. Genomics
Res. Ctr., Acad. Sinica, Taipei.
3:35
58.4
High throughput mutation profiling of lung
adenocarcinoma.
L.M. Sholl, E. Garcia, Y. Jia, L. MacConaill
and N. Lindeman. Brigham and Women’s Hosp. and Dana-
Farber Cancer Inst.
3:55
58.5
Phosphoserine aminotransgerase I is a
predictor of early recurrence and poor prognosis of resected
stage I non-small cell lung cancer that induces metastasis via
MMP1 activation.
Y-C. Chan, Y-P. Liu, C-Y. Su, Y-H. Jan, Y-F.
Yang, Y-C. Chang, C-C. Lai and M. Hsaio. Genomic Res. Ctr.,
Acad. Sinica, Taipei and Natl. Cheng-Kung Univ., Taiwan.
4:15
58.6
Inhibition of cholinergic signaling causes
apoptosis in human bronchioalveolar carcinoma.
K.C. Brown,
J.K. Lau, B.A. Thornhill, C.M. Crabtree, A.M. Dom, T.R. Witte,
W.E. Hardman, C.A. McNees, C.A. Stover, A.B. Carpenter, H.
Luo, Y.C. Chen, B. Shiflett and P. Dasgupta. Joan C. Edwards
Sch. of Med., Marshall Univ. and Alderson-Broaddus Col., WV.
4:35
58.7
NDUFS1 as a prognostic marker in lung
cancer: a clinicopathological analysis of 106 cases of non-
small cell lung cancer.
C.Y. Su and M. Hsiao. Genomics Res.
Ctr., Acad. Sinica, Taipei.
59. TRAINEE WELCOME RECEPTION
Special Session
(Sponsored by: ASIP Committee for Career
Development, Women & Minorities)
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, 162B
60. ASIP OUTSTANDING INVESTIGATOR AWARD
LECTURE
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pm
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, 160B
Neoplasia
5:00 Introduction
G.J. Tsongalis. Dartmouth-Hithcock Med.
Ctr.
5:05
Targeting the epigenome for improved treatment of
triple-negative breast cancer.
W. B. Coleman. Univ. of
North Carolina at Chapel Hill Sch. of Med.
SATURDAY PATHOLOGY
18
Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
2:00
Introducing the individual development plan: a key to
success.
L. Wecker. Univ. of South Florida.
3:00
Introduction to ASPET mentoring program.
R. Brim. CC,
NIH.
3:30
Career Path Speakers
G. Kern. AstraZeneca Pharmaceut., Boston.
F. Bernal. NCI, NIH.
M. Köhn. European Molec. Biol. Lab., Heidelberg.
S. Sutherland. Freelance Sci. Writer, Scientific
American MIND and Pain Res. Forum.
E. Kennedy. Univ. of Georgia.
3:55
Break-Out Session Group Leaders
M. J. Kallman. Covance Labs., Indianapolis.
M. Delatte. FDA, Silver Spring.
C. C. Carrico. ASPET.
A. Hanna-Mitchell. Univ. of Pittsburgh Sch. of Med.
M. J. Kallman. Covance Labs., Indianapolis.
H. Kamendi. AstraZeneca.
S. Ingram. Oregon Hlth. & Sci. Univ.
63. ASPET BUSINESS MEETING AND OPENING
AWARDS RECEPTION
Business Meeting
s
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. 6:00
pm
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, 107aB
Opening Awards Reception
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. 7:30
pm
—B
oston
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xhiBition
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enter
,
s
outhWest
l
oBBy
61. 2013 TEACHING INSTITUTE: TRAINING MODELS
FOR UNDERGRADUATE PHARMACOLOGY:
US/UK PERSPECTIVES
Symposium
s
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. 12:00
pm
—B
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C
onvention
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xhiBition
C
enter
, 108
C
haired
: n. G
oulDin
Education
12:00
Setting an agenda for undergraduate pharmacology.
N.
J. Goulding. Barts Med. Sch., London
12:05 Undergraduate degrees in the UK: Where are we going?
S. Brain. King’s Col. London
12:35 Toward an integrated undergraduate pharmacology
curriculum.
R. Watson. Stony Brook Univ., SUNY
1:05
Educating the next generation of in vivo pharmacologists:
meeting the needs of industry and academia.
D.
Lewis. Sci. Univ. of Leeds Sch. of Biomed.
1:35
Pharmacology for undergraduates: The Duke Model.
R.
D. Schwartz-Bloom. Duke Univ. Med. Ctr.
2:05 Panel Q&A. Future prospects for undergraduate
education in pharmacology: an agenda for ASPET
and BPS.
62. GRADUATE STUDENT COLLOQUIUM:
INTRODUCING THE INDIVIDUAL
DEVELOPMENT PLAN: A KEY TO SUCCESS
Colloquium
s
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. 2:00
pm
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
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, 107C
C
haired
: l. W
eCKer
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