The Cell and Tissue Kinetics Core was developed to facilitate skin-related research by assisting the centerinvestigators in isolation and cultivation of primary skin cells in two and three-dimensional cultures and inanalysis of genes related to skin diseases by efficient and systematic generation of transgenic tissue modelsof skin that show either transgene overexpression or suppression.
The Specific Aims are as follows:1. To provide assistance and training in isolation and culture of mouse and human skin cells includingkeratinocytes, dermal fibroblasts, melanocytes and to provide expertise in construction of three dimensionalcultures of human skin from normal cells, diseased cells or transgenic cells.2. To provide assistance and training in a variety of functional in vitro assays for keratinocyte stem cells.3. To provide and develop proper transgenic skin models to study functional consequence of normal ormutant gene expression in human and mouse epidermis.Problems will be brought to the Cell and Tissue Kinetics Core after routine morphological analysis in the SkinPhenotyping Core or cell culture revealed an unusual finding. Findings made by the Cell and Tissue Corewill be referred to the Molecular biology Core if they suggest specific changes in gene expression or otherproblems in molecular biology have occurred. The Cell and Tissue Kinetics Core is committed to provideboth services and training for center investigators to develop necessary skills to perform these experimentsin their own laboratories. The services provided by this core will benefit not only the pilot and feasibilitystudies included in this application but to those likely to be recruited to the Skin Diseases Research Center inthe future.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases (NIAMS)
Type
Center Core Grants (P30)
Project #
2P30AR044535-05A2
Application #
7137098
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZAR1-HL-J (J1))
Project Start
2006-04-01
Project End
2011-03-31
Budget Start
2006-04-01
Budget End
2007-06-30
Support Year
5
Fiscal Year
2006
Total Cost
$120,750
Indirect Cost
Name
Columbia University (N.Y.)
Department
Type
DUNS #
621889815
City
New York
State
NY
Country
United States
Zip Code
10032
Shen, Yao; Stanislauskas, Milda; Li, Gen et al. (2017) Epigenetic and genetic dissections of UV-induced global gene dysregulation in skin cells through multi-omics analyses. Sci Rep 7:42646
Marshall, Kara L; Clary, Rachel C; Baba, Yoshichika et al. (2016) Touch Receptors Undergo Rapid Remodeling in Healthy Skin. Cell Rep 17:1719-1727
Mackay-Wiggan, Julian; Jabbari, Ali; Nguyen, Nhan et al. (2016) Oral ruxolitinib induces hair regrowth in patients with moderate-to-severe alopecia areata. JCI Insight 1:e89790
Harris, John E; Rashighi, Mehdi; Nguyen, Nhan et al. (2016) Rapid skin repigmentation on oral ruxolitinib in a patient with coexistent vitiligo and alopecia areata (AA). J Am Acad Dermatol 74:370-1
Mathew, Grinu; Hannan, Abdul; Hertzler-Schaefer, Kristina et al. (2016) Targeting of Ras-mediated FGF signaling suppresses Pten-deficient skin tumor. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 113:13156-13161
Shen, Yao; Kim, Arianna L; Du, Rong et al. (2016) Transcriptome Analysis Identifies the Dysregulation of Ultraviolet Target Genes in Human Skin Cancers. PLoS One 11:e0163054
Dai, Zhenpeng; Xing, Luzhou; Cerise, Jane et al. (2016) CXCR3 Blockade Inhibits T Cell Migration into the Skin and Prevents Development of Alopecia Areata. J Immunol 197:1089-99
Abaci, Hasan E; Guo, Zongyou; Coffman, Abigail et al. (2016) Human Skin Constructs with Spatially Controlled Vasculature Using Primary and iPSC-Derived Endothelial Cells. Adv Healthc Mater 5:1800-7
Dainichi, Teruki; Hayden, Matthew S; Park, Sung-Gyoo et al. (2016) PDK1 Is a Regulator of Epidermal Differentiation that Activates and Organizes Asymmetric Cell Division. Cell Rep 15:1615-23
Johnson, Dylan; Mathur, Mohit C; Kobayashi, Tomoyoshi et al. (2016) The Cardiomyopathy Mutation, R146G Troponin I, Stabilizes the Intermediate ""C"" State of Regulated Actin under High- and Low-Free Ca(2+) Conditions. Biochemistry 55:4533-40

Showing the most recent 10 out of 130 publications