M.A. Knepper. NHLBI, NIH. (1111.3)
9:15 ER
a66 contributes to early diabetic renal disease in
mice.
D.L. Irsik, R.W. Fallet, E. Adun, E. Chavez,
H.L. Brooks, P.K. Carmines and P.H. Lane. Univ.
of Nebraska Med. Ctr., Univ. of Arizona and Univ. of
Oklahoma Hlth. Sci. Ctr.
(702.12)
9:30
Increased UT-A1 ubiquitination is partially due to
decreased deubiquitination activity in streptozotocin-
induced diabetic rat kidney inner medulla.
H. Su, T.O.
Ilori, J.D. Klein, J.M. Sands and G. Chen. Emory
Univ.
(1111.4)
9:45 RNA-Seq analysis of glycosylation related gene
expression in streptozotocin-induced diabetic rat
kidney inner medulla.
G. Chen, X. Li, H. Su, T.O. Ilori,
J.D. Klein and R.P. Hughey. Emory Univ. and Univ. of
Pittsburgh Sch. of Med.
(1111.16)
TUESDAY PHYSIOLOGY
118
420. EPIGENETICS AND EXERCISE
Featured Topic
(Sponsored by: APS Environmental and Exercise
Physiology Section)
t
ue
. 10:30
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 211
C
haired
: m. h
arGreaves
Metabolic Diseases
10:30 Histone modifications and exercise adaptations.
M.
Hargreaves. Univ. of Melbourne.
11:00 DNA methylation and exercise.
J. Zierath. Karolinska
Inst.
11:30 Endurance training changes the DNA methylation
pattern in human skeletal muscle.
M.E. Lindholm, F.
Marabita, D. Gomez-Cabrero, H. Fischer, J. Tegnér
and C.J. Sundberg. Karolinska Inst., Stockholm and
Huddinge.
(1134.1)
11:45 HDZCs are O-GlcNAc modified and OGT
O-GlcNAcylation is decreased with acute exercise.
H.M. Medford and S.A. Marsh. Washington State
Univ.
(1134.2)
12:00
Exercise during pregnancy attenuates prenatal high-fat
diet-induced hypermethylation of the Pgc-1
a gene
and protects against age-induced glucose intolerance
in the offspring.
R.C. Laker, T. Lillard, M. Okutsu, J.
Connelly and Z. Yan. Univ. of Virginia. (1134.3)
12:15 Maternal exercise during pregnancy improves glucose
metabolism of offspring.
K.I. Stanford, M-Y. Lee, K.M.
Getchell, M.F. Hirshman and L.J. Goodyear. Joslin
Diabetes Ctr.
(1134.4)
421. INFLAMMATION AS AN ORCHESTRATOR IN
HEART FAILURE
Featured Topic
(Sponsored by: APS Cardiovascular Section)
t
ue
. 10:30
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 208
C
haired
: r. m. a
ltara
anD
W. m. B
lanKesteiJn
Inflammation and Immune Responses
Translational Physiology
10:30 Chair introduction: inflammation as an orchestrator in
heart failure.
R. M. Altara. Univ. of Maastricht.
10:40 Regulation of the inflammatory response in cardiac
repair.
N. G. Frangogiannis. Albert Einstein Col. of Med.
11:05 Nicotine reduced post-infarct inflammation and improved
cardiac output during exercise in conscious mice.
H.L. Lujan,
R. Wang, A.J. Blumberg and S.E. DiCarlo. Wayne State Univ.
Sch. of Med.
(1128.17)
11:20 Osteonectin protects against adverse cardiac
inflammation during viral myocarditis.
A. Papageorgiou,
M. Rienks, D. Vanhoutte, W. Verhesen, P. Carai, T.
Vandendriessche, M. Chuah and S. Heymans. Maastricht
Univ., Netherlands, Univ. Leuven, Belgium and Cincinnati
Children’s Hosp. Med. Ctr.
(1128.8)
11:35 Circulating
Porphyromonas gingivalis lipopolysaccharide
induces left ventricular dysfunction through MMP-
9 regulation of inflammation.
K.Y. DeLeon, L.E. de
Castro Bras, J. Zhang and M.L. Lindsey. Univ. of
Texas Hlth. Sci. Ctr. at San Antonio.
(1128.14)
11:50 The inflammatory mediator SH2B3 increases risk of
heart failure.
M.J. Flister, C. Moreno, M.J. Hoffman,
S.Z. Prisco, J. Lazar, J.L. Hall and H.J. Jacob. Med.
Col. of Wisconsin and Univ. of Minnesota, Minneapolis.
(1128.16)
12:05 Cardiac remodeling and the immune system: insides
from basic and clinical science.
S. Frantz. Univ. of
Wurzburg.
422. INTEGRATIVE CARDIOVASCULAR AND
RESPIRATORY PHYSIOLOGY OF NON-MODEL
ORGANISMS
Featured Topic
(Sponsored by: APS Comparative and Evolutionary
Physiology Section)
t
ue
. 10:30
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 212
C
haired
: J. e
me
Hypoxia and Oxidative Stress
10:30 Chronic hypoxia (10% O
2
) alters cardiovascular
regulation and gene expression in snapping turtle
embryos (Chelydra serpentina).
J. Eme, T. Rhen,
K.B. Tate, K. Gruchalla, Z.F. Kohl, C.E. Slay and
D.A. Crossley II. Univ. of North Texas, Univ. of North
Dakota and Univ. of California, Irvine.
(714.15)
10:45 Developmental phenotypic plasticity of reptiles and
birds.
D. Crossley. Univ. of North Texas.
11:15 Video microscopy detection of oyster spat heart
rate: acclimation temperature alters HR response
to acute temperature change.
N.J. Domnik, E.T.
Polymeropoulos, N.G. Elliott, P.B. Frappell and J.T.
Fisher. Queen’s Univ., Canada, Univ. of Tasmania,
Australia and Commonwealth Sci. and Indust. Res.
Org., Hobart, Australia.
(714.9)
11:30 Heart rate and metabolic rate of bar-headed geese
flying in hypoxia.
J.U. Meir, W. Jardine, J. York, B.
Chua and W.K. Milsom. Harvard Med. Sch. and Univ.
of British Columbia.
(1149.16)
11:45
Functional and morphological changes in the trout heart
during thermal acclimation.
J.M. Klaiman, W.G. Pyle
and T.E. Gillis. Univ. of Guelph, Canada. (714.10)
12:00 Cardiac remodeling from a fish perspective.
H. Shiels.
Univ. of Manchester.
LAST DAY TO
VISIT EXHIBITS
Tuesday, April 23
9:00 AM – 4:00 PM
PHYSIOLOGY TUESDAY
119
T
U
E
423. ION TRANSPORT IN CELL DIFFERENTIATION,
MIGRATION, POLARIZATION AND ADHESION
Featured Topic
(Sponsored by: APS Cell and Molecular Physiology
Section)
t
ue
. 10:30
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 206B
C
haired
: r. W
orrell
Transporters and Ion Channels
10:30
b-Adrenergic receptor agonists known to stimulate
b-arrestin-dependent signaling inhibit CFTR activity,
cell migration and airway epithelial restitution.
E.R.
Peitzman and S.M. O’Grady. Univ. of Minnesota, St.
Paul.
(1145.4)
10:45 On the potential role of potassium channel KCNK5
in human T cell activation.
S.S. Kirkegaard, A.J.
Hansen, S. Gammeltoft and E.K. Hoffmann. Univ.
of Copenhagen, Glostrup Hosp. and Novo Nordic,
Måløv, Denmark.
(913.29)
11:00 Adenosine inhibits human T lymphocyte migration
via inhibition of KCa3.1 channels.
A.A. Chimote,
V. Kucher, N. Boiko, P. Hajdu, Z. Kuras, Y-H. Yun,
O. Szilagyi and L. Conforti. Univ. of Cincinnati and
North Carolina A&T State Univ.
(1145.6)
11:15 Regulation of cell motility by Na
+
/H
+
exchanger NHE1:
implications for cancer development.
S. F. Pedersen.
Univ. of Copenhagen.
11:45 ERM proteins colocalize with the Na
+
/H
+
exchanger
NHE1 in MCF-7 breast cancer cell invadopodia and
affect invadopodia number.
G.A.B. Roest and S.F.
Pedersen. Univ. of Copenhagen. (1145.2)
12:00 TRPV4-mediated Ca
2+
influx promotes airway smooth
muscle cell proliferation via NFATc3.
L. Zhao, M.N.
Sullivan, A.L. Gonzales and S. Earley. Colorado
State Univ.
(913.50)
12:15 Chloride channel inhibition reduces tail regeneration in
the developing vertebrate Ambystoma mexicanum.
B.M. Franklin, R. Voss and J. Osborn. Univ. of
Kentucky.
(1145.5)
424. IS THERE A PHYSIOLOGICAL ROLE FOR
C-PEPTIDE?
Symposium
(Sponsored by: APS Endocrinology and Metabolism
Section)
t
ue
. 10:30
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 206a
C
haired
: C. m
ariC
-B
ilKan
anD
G. y
osten
Metabolic Diseases
10:30 The relevance of C-peptide in diabetes and its
complications: introduction.
J. Wahren. Karolinska
Inst.
11:00 Effects of C-peptide in the diabetic kidney.
C. Maric-
Bilkan. Univ. of Mississippi Med. Ctr.
11:30
Anti inflammatory effects of C-peptide.
P. Luppi. Univ. of
Pittsburgh Sch. of Med.
12:00 Searching for the C-peptide receptor.
G. Yosten. Saint
Louis Univ. Sch. of Med.
425. JULIUS H. COMROE, JR. DISTINGUISHED
LECTURESHIP OF THE APS RESPIRATION
SECTION
t
ue
. 10:30
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 205C
Title: The Serpentine Path to a Novel Mechanism-Based
Inhibitor of Acute Inflammatory Lung Injury
Speaker:
A. Fisher. Univ. of Pennsylvania Sch. of Med.
426. NEUROTRANSMISSION AND CA
2+
-
SENSITIZATION IN GASTROINTESTINAL
SMOOTH MUSCLES
Featured Topic
(Sponsored by: APS Gastrointestinal and Liver
Physiology Section)
t
ue
. 10:30
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 209
C
haired
: B. p
errino
Transporters and Ion Channels
10:30 Cholinergic neurotransmission and bath applied
agonists activate different Ca
2+
sensitization pathways
in gastric smooth muscles.
B. A. Perrino. Univ. of
Nevada Sch. of Med.
11:00 Calcium sensitization mechanisms of colonic smooth
muscle during inflammation: a novel role for MAPK-
dependent regulation of myosin phosphatase.
J.
MacDonald. Univ. of Calgary.
11:30 NANC neuron mediated relaxation of murine gastric
fundus smooth muscle: phosphorylation of MYPT1 on
T696 (ROK site) and S695 (PKG site) are mutually
exclusive.
G. Pfitzer, M.S. Hunger, S. Puetz, D.
Metzler, L.T. Lubomirov and A.V. Somlyo. Univ. of
Cologne, Germany and Univ. of Virginia.
(1164.1)
11:45
Inhibition of RhoA/Rho kinase pathway and contraction
by endogenous and exogenous hydrogen sulfide
in gastrointestinal smooth muscle.
A.D. Nalli, S.
Rajagopal, S. Mahavadi, J.R. Grider and K.S.
Murthy. Virginia Commonwealth Univ. (1164.2)
12:00
Pharmacologically-induced alterations in gastrointestinal
motility affects regional colonic microbial assemblage.
K. Touw, Y. Wang, E. Huang, V. Leone and E. Chang.
Univ. of Chicago.
(1164.3)
427. OBESITY AND INFLAMMATION:
CONTRIBUTIONS TO VASCULAR AND RENAL
DISEASE
Featured Topic
(Sponsored by: APS Water and Electrolyte Homeostasis
Section)
t
ue
. 10:30
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 207
C
haired
: C. D
e
m
iGuel
anD
F. t. s
praDley
10:30 Obesity fans the flames of inflammatory diseases.
P.
Libby. Brigham and Women’s Hosp.
TUESDAY PHYSIOLOGY
120
11:00 Weight-loss surgery rapidly alleviates platelet
hyperactivity in morbid obesity.
Y. Dobrydneva, M.
Periasamy, M. Butcher, E. Galkina, N. Kuhn, D.
Lieb, M. Fontana, S. Wohlgemuth and J. Nadler.
Eastern Virginia Med. Sch. and Sentara Med. Gp.,
Norfolk.
(1114.1)
11:15 Role of the angiotensin AT
2
receptor in obesity-linked
inflammation and renal injury: effect of gender.
I.
Dhande, M.A. Khan, S. Nag and T. Hussain. Univ. of
Houston.
(1114.2)
11:30 Etanercept improves glucose intolerance and
dyslipidemia in insulin-resistant rats.
A. Lee, R.
Rodriguez, R. Ortiz and M. Ryan. Univ. of California
Merced and Univ. of Mississippi Med. Ctr.
(1114.3)
11:45
Mutation of Sh2b3 attenuates Dahl SS hypertension via
inflammatory signaling.
N. Rudemiller, H. Lund, C.
Guo, A. Geurts, H. Jacob and D.L. Mattson. Med.
Col. of Wisconsin.
(1114.4)
12:00
Acute kidney injury following orthopedic trauma in obese
Zucker rats.
P. Mittwede, L. Xiang, J. Clemmer, S.
Lu, A. Gowdey and R. Hester. Sch. of Med., Univ. of
Mississippi Med. Ctr.
(1114.6)
428. THE ROLE OF ER STRESS IN
CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE
Featured Topic
(Sponsored by: APS Neural Control and Autonomic
Regulation Section)
t
ue
. 10:30
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 205B
C
haired
: r. D
avisson
anD
D. C
ai
Blood Pressure Regulation
Central Control of Homeostasis
10:30
ER stress in the brain and hypertension.
R. L. Davisson.
Cornell Univ.
11:00 ER stress, inflammation and metabolic syndrome.
D.
Cai. Albert Einstein Col. of Med.
11:30 Relief of endoplasmic reticulum stress in the brain
subfornical organ selectively prevents high fat diet-
induced hepatic dysfunction but not the development
of adiposity or hypertension.
C.N. Young, J.A.
Horwath, S.D. Butler, A.L. Mark and R.L. Davisson.
Cornell Univ., Univ. of Iowa and Weill Cornell Med.
Col.
(929.4)
11:45 Activation of the unfolded protein response in vascular
endothelial cells of non-diabetic obese middle-aged
and older adults.
R.E. Kaplon, D.R. Seals and C.L.
Gentile. Univ. of Colorado Boulder and Colorado
State Univ.
(929.2)
12:00 Cardiomyocyte specific overexpression of C3orf58
activates ER stress leading to impaired cardiac
function.
Z. Zhang, M. Mirotsou, A. Payne, H. Mu,
L. Zhang, E.A. Finch, R.E. Pratt, P. Rosenberg and
V.J. Dzau. Duke Univ. Med. Ctr. (929.7)
12:15 ACE2 inhibits endoplasmic reticulum stress and
autophagy associated to neurogenic hypertension.
H. Xia, T. Johnson, I. Mungrue and E. Lazartigues.
LSU Hlth. Sci. Ctr., New Orleans.
(929.1)
429. TISSUE ENGINEERING OF EPITHELIAL
ORGANS: APPLICATIONS TO PHYSIOLOGY
AND DISEASE
Symposium
t
ue
. 10:30
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 210a
C
haired
: t. C. G
riKsCheit
10:30
Developmental approaches to kidney tissue engineering.
S. Nigam. UCSD.
11:00
Microscale hepatic tissue engineering.
S. Bhatia. MIT.
11:30 A human 3D lung tissue model using acellular lung
scaffold to study disease and formation of fibrosis.
J.
Cortiella. Univ. of Texas Med. Branch.
12:00 Tissue-engineering the intestinal tract: the importance
of the stem cell niche.
T. Grikscheit. Univ. of Southern
California.
430. HISTORY OF PHYSIOLOGY GROUP LECTURE
(Sponsored by: APS History of Physiology Group)
t
ue
. 1:00
pm
—r
enaissanCe
B
oston
W
aterFront
h
otel
,
p
aCiFiC
G
ranD
B
allroom
D
Title: Resolving an 80-Year-Old Controversy on the
Formation of Urine That Began the Modern Era of
Renal Physiology
Speaker:
R. L. Jamison. Stanford Univ.
431. ROBERT M. BERNE DISTINGUISHED
LECTURESHIP OF THE APS CARDIOVASCULAR
SECTION
t
ue
. 2:00
pm
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 205C
Title: A Long and Winding Road: The Story of Nitric
Oxide in the Heart
Speaker:
D. J. Lefer. Emory Univ. Sch. of Med.
432. AUGUST KROGH DISTINGUISHED
LECTURESHIP OF THE APS COMPARATIVE
AND EVOLUTIONARY PHYSIOLOGY SECTION
(Sponsored by: Novo Nordisk Foundation)
t
ue
. 3:15
pm
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 205B
Title: From Tusko to Titin: Giant Insights from
Comparative Physiology
Speaker:
S. Lindstedt. Northern Arizona Univ.
PHYSIOLOGY TUESDAY
121
T
U
E
433. BRAIN RENIN-ANGIOTENSIN SIGNALING IN
METABOLIC DISEASES
Featured Topic
(Sponsored by: APS Neural Control and Autonomic
Regulation Section)
t
ue
. 3:15
pm
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 211
C
haired
: K. r
ahmouni
anD
h. x
ia
Metabolic Diseases
3:15
Metabolic rate regulation: opposing roles of brain and
peripheral renin-angiotensin systems.
J. L. Grobe.
Univ. of Iowa.
3:45
Brain angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 in the regulation
of metabolism.
H. Xia. LSU Hlth. Sci. Ctr., New
Orleans.
4:15
Mice lacking the gene for Toll like receptor-4 had an
attenuated blood pressure response to angiotensin
II infusion.
R.B. Dange, H. Peng, Y. Feng and J.
Francis. Sch. of Vet. Med., LSU and Sch. of Med.,
Tulane Univ.
(696.4)
4:30
Selective knockout of novel intracellular renin isoform
results in reduced adiposity.
M.D. Folchert, N.K.
Littlejohn, X. Liu, J.L. Grobe and C.D. Sigmund.
Univ. of Iowa.
(696.2)
4:45
Deletion of p22
phox
-dependent reactive oxygen species
in the paraventricular nucleus protects against diet-
induced obesity by increasing thermogenesis and
lipolysis.
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