The Emory Center of Excellence in Hemoglobinopathy Research (CEHR) aspires to improve the health of individuals with sickle cell disease (SCD) by developing novel therapeutics and biomarkers for the major cause of death in SCD acute chest syndrome (ACS), through the discovery of critical molecular and cellular mechanisms, and genetic markers of human diversity that influence ACS, and to build capacity in our community in translational research, awareness and career pipelines in biomedical research. Our overarching scientific hypothesis is that heme, a product of tissue damage and hemolysis induces ACS via interaction with toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4). The Emory CEHR assembles a multi-disciplinary team of geneticists, hematology physicians and scientists, and lung biologists to rigorously test this hypothesis and explore its therapeutic potential in three inter-related Specific Aims: [1] Define cellular and molecular mechanisms, and inhibitors of heme-induced endothelial dysfunction and lung injury. [2] Determine the role of TLR4 in the development of ACS in SCD mice and generate pre-clinical data for novel therapeutics. [3] Identify genetic polymorphisms associated with the incidence and severity of ACS. A Translational Research Skills Development Core aims to train an MD and a PhD scientist in clinical research and provide mentored research experience for them to become independent investigators. Training for the MD scholar will emphasize phase I clinical trial design, execution and analysis, and the scholar will participate in the design of a Phase I trial of candidate drug(s) emerging from the research project. The PhD scholar, pursuing training in clinical research and genomics, will also be positioned to participate in the research studies of the CEHR. The Sickle Cell Summer Research Training Program for high school students links with a robust program of career development for minority students at Morehouse School of Medicine. In summary, the proposed project of the Emory CEHR will rigorously test a novel mechanism of lung injury, identify candidate drugs that interfere with it, and lay a solid foundation - in both scientific and human resources - for the development of an entirely new therapeutic approach to preventing or treating ACS in sickle cell disease.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
Type
Research Project--Cooperative Agreements (U01)
Project #
5U01HL117721-03
Application #
8857243
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZHL1)
Program Officer
Hanspal, Manjit
Project Start
2013-08-15
Project End
2016-05-31
Budget Start
2015-06-01
Budget End
2016-05-31
Support Year
3
Fiscal Year
2015
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Emory University
Department
Pediatrics
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
066469933
City
Atlanta
State
GA
Country
United States
Zip Code
30322
Vance Utset, Leah; Ivy, Zalaya; Willen, Shaina M et al. (2018) Inhaled corticosteroid use to prevent severe vaso-occlusive episode recurrence in children between 1 and 4 years of age with sickle cell disease: a multicenter feasibility trial. Am J Hematol 93:E101-E103
Zhang, Yun; Qiu, Yongzhi; Blanchard, Aaron T et al. (2018) Platelet integrins exhibit anisotropic mechanosensing and harness piconewton forces to mediate platelet aggregation. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 115:325-330
Hartmann, David A; Hyacinth, Hyacinth I; Liao, Francesca-Fang et al. (2018) Does pathology of small venules contribute to cerebral microinfarcts and dementia? J Neurochem 144:517-526
Shih, Andy Y; Hyacinth, Hyacinth I; Hartmann, David A et al. (2018) Rodent Models of Cerebral Microinfarct and Microhemorrhage. Stroke 49:803-810
Qiu, Yongzhi; Ahn, Byungwook; Sakurai, Yumiko et al. (2018) Microvasculature-on-a-chip for the long-term study of endothelial barrier dysfunction and microvascular obstruction in disease. Nat Biomed Eng 2:453-463
Brockman, Joshua M; Blanchard, Aaron T; Pui-Yan Ma, Victor et al. (2018) Mapping the 3D orientation of piconewton integrin traction forces. Nat Methods 15:115-118
Carden, Marcus A; Fay, Meredith E; Lu, Xinran et al. (2017) Extracellular fluid tonicity impacts sickle red blood cell deformability and adhesion. Blood 130:2654-2663
Bello, Natalie A; Hyacinth, Hyacinth I; Roetker, Nicholas S et al. (2017) Sickle cell trait is not associated with an increased risk of heart failure or abnormalities of cardiac structure and function. Blood 129:799-801
Mannino, Robert G; Santiago-Miranda, Adriana N; Pradhan, Pallab et al. (2017) 3D microvascular model recapitulates the diffuse large B-cell lymphoma tumor microenvironment in vitro. Lab Chip 17:407-414
Carden, Marcus A; Fay, Meredith; Sakurai, Yumiko et al. (2017) Normal saline is associated with increased sickle red cell stiffness and prolonged transit times in a microfluidic model of the capillary system. Microcirculation 24:

Showing the most recent 10 out of 24 publications