J. Zhu, R.K. Dadga and C.
Chu. Univ. of Pittsburgh.
A442
873.14 Silencing of drpr leads to muscle and brain
degeneration in adult Drosophila.
I. Draper, L.J. Mahoney,
S. Mitsuhashi, M.R. Freeman, R.N. Salomon and P.B.
Kang. Tufts Med. Ctr., Boston Children’s Hosp. and Univ. of
Massachusetts Med. Sch.
A443
873.15 New insights on sodium iodate-induced retinal
degeneration.
J. Wang, J. Iacovelli, C. Spencer and M. Saint-
Geniez. Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infrim., Harvard Med.
Sch.
A444
873.16 Herpes encephalitis and Abeta plaques. E.L.
Bearer, R. Woltjer, J.E. Donahue and K. Kilpatrick. Univ. of
New Mexico Hlth. Sci. Ctr., Oregon Hlth. & Sci. Univ. and Brown
Univ.
A445
873.17 Endogenous LRRK2 dimerizes and
translocates to novel membrane compartments during
monocyte activation.
J. Schapansky and M.J. LaVoie. Harvard
Med. Sch. and Brigham and Women’s Hosp.
A446
873.18 Stimulation of the amyloid-
b precursor
protein metabolism by cAMP.
R. Ricciarelli, E. Canepa, C.
Domenicotti, B. Marengo, E. Gardella, U.M. Marinari, M.A.
Pronzato and E. Fedele. Univ. of Genoa.
A447
873.19 Trichostatin A epigenetically increases
calpastatin expression, and inhibits calpain activity and
calcium-induced SH-SY5Y neuronal cell toxicity: implication of
histone deacetylase inhibitors in Alzheimer’s disease.
S. Jo,
J. Seo, C.J. Byun, J. Park, H.J. Lee, S. Hwang and I. Jo.
Dankook Univ., Wonkwang Univ., Ewha Womans Univ. Med.
Sch. and Col. of Pharm., Dankook Univ., South Korea.
A448
873.20 PET-CT analysis of cererbral glucose
metabolism in patients with post-operative cognitive dysfunction.
J.M. Herter, N. Brenscheid, L. Nienhaus, C. Dieterich, H. Van
Aken, M. Weckesser and H.D. Stubbe. Univ. of Muenster,
Max Planck Inst. for Molec. Biomed., Muenster and Paracelsus
Hosp., Osnabrueck, Germany.
874. TRANSLATIONAL RESEARCH IN HUMAN AND
ANIMAL MODELS
Poster
m
on
. 7:30
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
,
e
xhiBit
h
alls
a-B
Presentation time: 11:45
am
-1:45
pm
A449
874.1
A comprehensive assay for CFTR mutational
analysis using next-generation sequencing.
A.N. Abou
Tayoun, C.D. Tunkey, L.J. Tafe, E. Levandowsky, J. Spangler,
M. Dindinger, T. Ross, M. Shah, S. McLaughlin, C.C. Lee, T.T.
Harkins, G. Raia, C.I. Amos, W.A. Wells and G.J. Tsongalis.
Dartmouth-Hitchcock Med. Ctr., Geisel Sch. of Med. at
Dartmouth and Life Technol. Inc., Beverly, MA.
A450
874.2
The engraftment problem: identifying proteins
that mediate stem cell adhesion.
A. Prisco, B.R. Hoffmann,
C.C. Kaczorowski and A.S. Greene. Med. Col. of Wisconsin.
A451
874.3
A synopsis of chromosomal microarray cases
at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center.
A.N. Abou Tayoun,
G.J. Tsongalis and J.A. Lefferts. Geisel Sch. of Med. at
Dartmouth.
A452
874.4
Equine navicular syndrome: historical,
pathological and biomechanical insights into pathogenesis and
treatment.
E.W. Uhl and J.L. Cornille. Univ. of Georgia and
Sci. of Motion, Datonton, GA.
A453
874.5
Contraceptive and abortifacient effects of
lime vaginal douche in albino Wistar rats.
R.B. Bassey, A.A.
Bakare, I.A. Edagha and A.I. Peter. Univ. at Buffalo, Univ. of
Uyo and Univ. of Lagos, Nigeria.
A454
874.6
Immunohistochemical localization of
arginase-1 expression in B6 and BALB/c mice.
D.K. Meyerholz.
Univ. of Iowa Carver Col. of Med.
A455
874.7
Inhibiton of IRF7 prevents developing
corticosteroid-induced osteonecrosis of the femoral head.
S. Okazaki, S. Nagoya, R. Katada, K. Mizuo, M. Sasaki, S.
Watanabe, T. Yamashita and H. Matsumoto. Sapporo Med.
Univ., Japan.
A456
874.8
Differential inhibition of tissue factor mediated
activation of thrombin generation by dabigatran, apixaban,
rivaroxaban and otamaxaban: pharmacologic implications.
J.
Fareed, D. Kahn, D. Hoppensteadt, W. Jeske and B. Lewis.
Loyola Univ. Med. Ctr.
A457
874.9
Effects of dietary resistant starch on beta-
catenin in azoxymethane-treated colonic epithelium.
N. Cray,
A. Pillatzki, Y. Zhao, D.F. Birt and E.M. Whitley. Iowa State
Univ.
A458
874.10 Glycogen storage disease II in Lapland dogs.
K.J. Dillard, K. Vainio-Siukola, G. Vidgren and M. Anttila.
Evira, Helsinki.
A459
874.11 Necropsy: useful tool to study the life habits
and the parasitism by Dioctophyme renale in maned wolf
(Chrysocyonbrachyurus), Brazil.
J. Duarte, C.M. Ribeiro,
V.C.C. Hyodo, A.M.B. Costa, J.A. Martins and M.E. Oliveira.
Univ. Paulista, San Jose dos Campos and Fatec, Jacarei,
Brazil.
A460
874.12 The effects of glyphosate-based herbicides
on chick embryo morphology during development.
B. Winnick
and E.M. Dzialowski. Univ. of North Texas.
A461
874.13 Pathology of the Nile rat developing type 2
diabetes.
J. Lyons, F. Brown, D.E. Remillard, J. Bolsinger
and K.C. Hayes. Tufts Univ. and Brandeis Univ.
MONDAY PATHOLOGY
280
A462
874.14 Identifications of novel SNPs in Portuguese
essential hypertensive patients.
M.J. Pinho, M. Vaz-da-Silva
and P. Soares-da-Silva. Fac. of Med., Univ. of Porto, Portugal.
A463
874.15 Three rodent strain-wide comparisons: cardio-
pathological markers in a mouse model subjected to repeated
social aggressor.
M.M.N. Melige. U.S. Army Ctr. for Envrn. Hlth.
and Res., Fort Detrick, MD.
A464
874.16 Use of the proximity ligation assay to detect
immune complexes in histologic sections.
K. Petrosky, K.
Merriam and J.B. Rottman. Tufts Cummings Sch. of Vet. Med.
and Amgen Inc., Cambridge, MA.
A465
874.17 Investigation of the utility of the simport-matrix
chaperones for avian influenza virus sample storage and
transportation.
M. Echevarria, P. Ferro, C. Vuong, K. Metz, M.
Hogan and B. Lupiani. Univ. of Puerto Rico at Ponce, Texas
A&M Univ. and IntegenX Inc., Pleasanton, CA.
A466
874.18 Myostatin inhibition improves insulin signaling
in muscles of mice with high fat diet-induced diabetes.
Y. Dong,
H.Q. Han, Y. Dong, W.E. Mitch and L. Zhang. Baylor Col. of
Med.
A467
874.19 Lipoprotein metabolism indicators improve
cardiovascular risk prediction.
A.A. de Graaf, D.B. van
Schalkwijk, E. Tsivtsivadze, L.D. Parnell, B.J.C. van der
Werff-van der Vat, B. van Ommen, J. van der Greef and J.M.
Ordovas. TNO, Zeist, Netherlands and USDA at Tufts Univ.
A468
874.20 IT Telehealth Center for telecytopathology. O.
Markovic and N. Markovic. BioSciCon Inc., Rockville, MD.
A469
874.21 A novel monoclonal antibody to human stem
cell factor and its effect on ex vivo stem cell expansion.
Y. Jiang,
J. Fan and X. Ding. Chinese Acad. of Med. Sci. & Peking Union
Med. Col. and Biopharmagen Corp., Suzhou, China.
A470
874.22 Evaluation of Ion Torrent’s AmpliSeq Cancer
Hotspot Panelv2 on FFPE tissues.
C.D. Tunkey, C.I. Amos, W.A.
Wells and G.J. Tsongalis. Geisel Sch. of Med. at Dartmouth,
Norris Cotton Cancer Ctr. and Dartmouth-Hitchcock Med. Ctr.
A471
874.23 Genotyping the FCGR3a polymorphism using
melt curve analysis.
P.R. Burchard, S. Malhotra, P. Kaur
and G.J. Tsongalis. Geisel Sch. of Med. at Dartmouth and
Dartmouth Hitchcock Med. Ctr.
A472
874.24 Role of CDX2 protein expression in the
diagnosis of Barrett’s esophagus.
M. Abdelbaqui and D.
Coppola. Univ. of South Florida Moffitt Cancer Ctr. and Col. of
Med.
A473
874.25 Characterization of small Maf regulators in
lens fiber cell differentiation and cataract formation.
C. Dang,
S.A. Agrawal, S.M. Waters, H. Motohashi and S.A. Lachke.
Univ. of Delaware and Tohoku Univ. Grad. Sch. of Med., Japan.
A474
874.26 Stabilization of gene expression in whole
blood: high quality RNA with room temperature handling of
human blood samples.
V. Liberal, A. Stassinopoulos, S.
Whitney, S. Wilkinson, W. Huang, R. Muller and J. Muller-
Cohn. Biomatrica Inc., San Diego.
A475
874.27 Ceramide mediates smoking-induced insulin
resistance.
M.O. Thatcher, E.S. Brassfield, M.E. Smith,
M.B. Nelson, J.T. Prince, P.R. Reynolds and B.T. Bikman.
Brigham Young Univ. (
See Saturday Session 52. at 11:10
am
)
A476
874.28 Low voltage transmission electron microscopy
in cell biology.
M. Bendayan. Univ. of Montreal.
A477
874.29 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.
A478
874.30 Single nucleotide polymorphisms in the 3’
untranslated and near gene regions of transthyretin may play a
role in senile systemic amyloidosis.
J.L. Sikora, B.H. Spencer,
T.B. Prokaeva and L.H. Connors. Boston Univ. Sch. of Med.
Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
875. VASCULAR INJURY MODELS
Poster
m
on
. 7:30
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
,
e
xhiBit
h
alls
a-B
Presentation time: 12:30
pm
-2:30
pm
A1
875.1
Role of Ets-2 in CD144 expression in human
peripheral blood mononuclear cells and early-outgrowth cells.
T. Tejerina, U. Medina, S. Redondo, F. Ostos, J. Navarro-
Dorado and M. Ramajo. Sch. of Med., Univ. Complutense of
Madrid.
A2
875.2
Transcriptional regulation of endothelial
arginase 2 by histone deacetylases and its role in
atheresclerosis.
D. Pandey, L. Romer and D. Berkowitz.
Johns Hopkins Univ.
A3
875.3
Activation of Rac1 at adherens junctions
promotes VE-cadherin trans interaction.
N. Daneshjou, Y.A.
Komarova and A.B. Malik. Univ. of Illinois at Chicago.
A4
875.4
Morphine induces endothelial-to-mesenchymal
transition by upregulation of gap junction protein connexin 43
expression during wound healing.
M-W. Lin, C-S. Chiou, C-F.
Lam, Y-B. Huang, C-C. Huang, Y-C. Liu, Y-C. Tsai and P-C.
Wu. Kaohsiung Chang Gung Mem. Hosp., Natl. Cheng Kung
Univ. Med. Col. and Hosp. and Kaohsiung Med. Univ. , Taiwan.
A5
875.5
End binding protein 3 regulates calcium
signaling and permeability of the endothelial barrier.
M. Geyer,
L. Gu, S.M. Vogel, A.B. Malik and Y.A. Komarova. Univ. of
Illinois at Chicago.
A6
875.6
Cerebral vascular dysfunction following
traumatic brain injury.
N. Villalba-Isabel, T.L. Tran, M.T.
Nelson, G.C. Wellman and K. Freeman. Univ. of Vermont.
A7
875.7
Hyperoxia-induced microvascular injury
involves arginase 2-induced oxidative stress, microglia/
macrophage activation and constitutive NOS downregulation.
J. Suwanpradid, R.W. Caldwell and R.B. Caldwell. Georgia
Hlth. Sci. Univ. and Charlie Norwood VA Med. Ctr.
A8
875.8
Decreased eNOS relaxations and relation
with hsp90 in hypercholesterolemic rabbit aorta.
G. Ozsarlak-
Sozer, M. Arun, G. Sevin, E. Ertuna, Z. Yilmaz, S. Ulasan and
G. Yetik-Anacak. Fac. of Pharm., Ege Univ., Turkey.
PATHOLOGY/PHARMACOLOGY MONDAY
281
M
O
N
A9
875.9
Increased endothelial calcium signals in
cerebral vessels following traumatic brain injury.
T.L. Tran, N.
Villalba-Isabel, M.T. Nelson, G.C. Wellman and K. Freeman.
Univ. of Vermont.
876. VASCULAR SMOOTH MUSCLE TRP CHANNEL
SIGNALING
Poster
m
on
. 7:30
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
,
e
xhiBit
h
alls
a-B
Presentation time: 12:30
pm
-2:30
pm
A10
876.1
9-Phenanthrol inhibits TMEM16A channels.
S.
Burris, Z.P. Neeb and J. Jaggar. Univ. of Tennessee, Memphis.
A11
876.2
Nitric oxide inhibits IP
3
R-mediated activation of
TRPM4 in cerebral artery smooth muscle cells.
A.L. Gonzales
and S. Earley. Colorado State Univ.
A12
876.3
TRP-ML1 channels-mediated Ca
2+
release
contributes to FasL-induced lysosomal trafficking and
interactions with the sarcoplasmic reticulum in coronary
arterial myocytes.
M. Xu, X. Li, Y. Zhang and P-L. Li. Virginia
Commonwealth Univ.
A13
876.4
Cinnamaldehyde and poly-cinnamaldehyde
micelles induce relaxation of isolated porcine coronary
arteries.
G. Raffai, B. Kim, D. Wu, G. Khang, D. Lee and P.M.
Vanhoutte. Chonbuk Natl. Univ., South Korea.
A14
876.5
The antagonism of TRPV1 receptors prevent
the cardiovascular changes during septic shock.
F.F. Alves,
D.G. dos Reis, L. Resstel and F.M. Correa. Fac. of Med. of
Ribeirão Preto, Brazil.
A15
876.6
Role of endothelial TRPC3 channels in
endoplasmic reticulum stress induced apoptosis in human
coronary endothelial cells.
K. Smedlund, M. Ingels and G.
Vazquez. Univ. of Toledo Col. of Med.
A16
876.7
Disruption of TRPV4 Ca
2+
signaling at
myoendothelial projections contributes to endothelial
dysfunction in Ang II hypertension.
S.K. Sonkusare, A.D.
Bonev, T. Dalsgaard, L.F. Santana, M.I. Kotlikoff and M.T.
Nelson. Univ. of Vermont, Univ. of Washington and Cornell
Univ.
877. VASCULAR SMOOTH MUSCLE K
+
CHANNEL
SIGNALING
Poster
m
on
. 7:30
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
,
e
xhiBit
h
alls
a-B
Presentation time: 12:30
pm
-2:30
pm
A17
877.1
Adenosine A
1
receptor signaling inhibits BK
channels.
S.S. Kunduri, G.M. Dick, M.A. Nayeem and S.J.
Mustafa. West Virginia Univ.
A18
877.2
Role of BK
Ca
channels in NO-induced relaxation
of control and nitrate tolerant isolated mesenteric arteries.
M.
Sane, P. Shukla, C. Sun and S. O’Rourke. North Dakota State
Univ.
A19
877.3
Vascular relaxation induced by NO donor in
mesenteric resistance artery from 2K-1C rats involves reactive
oxygen species and potassium channels activation.
F.A.
Andrade, R.S. da Silva and L.M. Bendhack. Sch. of Med. and
Fac. of Pharmaceut. Sci. of Ribeirão Preto, Univ. of São Paulo.
A20
877.4
Adiponectin vasodilates small arteries
by increasing BK activity.
A.S. Greenstein, A. Bonev, S.
Sonkusare, T. Heppner and M. Nelson. Univ. of Manchester
and Univ. of Vermont.
A21
877.5
A novel signaling role for NAADP in arterial
smooth muscle.
C. Lim, G. Churchill, A. Galione, C. Garland
and K. Dora. Univ. of Oxford.
A22
877.6
K
v
1 channel-mediated dilation to isoproterenol
in cerebral arteries is disrupted in angiotensin II-induced
hypertension.
C.L. Moore, P.L. Nelson, B.B. Chandrika and
S.W. Rhee. Univ. of Arkansas for Med. Sci.
A23
877.7
Pregnancy regulates thromboxane A
2
-induced
contractions via endothelium-derived factors and large-
conductance calcium-activated potassium channels in rat
uterine artery.
S. Goulopoulou, J. Hannan, T. Matsumoto
and R.C. Webb. Georgia Hlth. Sci. Univ., Johns Hopkins Med.
Instns. and Hoshi Univ., Japan.
A24
877.8
Inwardly rectifying potassium channels 2.x
contribute to endothelial hyperpolarization and vasorelaxation
to P2Y receptor stimulation in murine cerebral artery.
M.Y.
Kochukov and S.P. Marrelli. Baylor Col. of Med.
A25
877.9
Mechanism of pituitary adenylate cyclase
activating polypeptide-induced dilation of middle meningeal
artery: role of ATP-sensitive potassium channels.
A.U. Syed,
M. Koide, V. May and G.C. Wellman. Univ. of Vermont.
A26
877.10 Targeting the high-conductance Ca
2+
-activated
K
+
(BK) channel as vasodilator therapy for pulmonary
hypertension.
N.D. Detweiler, S.V. Kharade, R.J. Versluis,
S.W. Rhee, N.J. Rusch and P.A. Crooks. Univ. of Arkansas for
Med. Sci.
878. REGULATION OF VASCULAR ENDOTHELIAL
CELL SIGNALING
Poster
m
on
. 7:30
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
,
e
xhiBit
h
alls
a-B
Presentation time: 12:30
pm
-2:30
pm
A27
878.1
Optimized caveolin-1 scaffolding domain-
derived peptides for increasing protective nitric oxide production
in vascular diseases.
A.E. Trane and P.N. Bernatchez. Univ. of
British Columbia.
A28
878.2
G
a12-dependent constitutive EC-specific vWF
secretion.
L. Rusu, G. Liu, D. Visintine, K. Kim, A.B. Malik, X.
Du, J. Cho, T.E. Meigs and R.D. Minshall. Univ. of Illinois at
Chicago and Univ. of North Carolina at Asheville.
A29
878.3
Angiotensin-(1-7) augments endothelium-
dependent relaxations of porcine coronary arteries to bradykinin
by inhibiting ACE1.
P.M. Vanhoutte, D. Wu, G. Khang and G.
Raffai. The Univ. of Hong Kong and Chonbuk Natl. Univ., South
Korea.
A30
878.4
The non-neuronal cholinergic system: sources
of vascular ACh.
H. Davis, K. Smith, P. Bagher, K. Dora and
C. Garland. Univ. of Oxford.
A31
878.5
Role of smooth muscle cell hyperpolarization
in modulation of endothelial cell spontaneous Ca
2+
events.
T.
Beleznai and K. Dora. Univ. of Oxford.
A32
878.6
Chronic Toll-like receptor 9 activation mediates
heightened vascular contractility via attenuated NOS activity
in isolated aortic segments.
C. McCarthy, S. Goulopoulou, C.
Wenceslau, T. Matsumoto and R.C. Webb. Georgia Hlth. Sci.
Univ. and Hoshi Univ., Japan.
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