The University of Pennsylvania's Digestive Diseases Research Core Center (DDRCC), entitled Center for Molecular Studies in Digestive and Liver Diseases, has been funded since 1997. This competing grant proposal continues to unite investigators from multiple disciplines for integrated digestive and liver based research. The research base includes investigators organized in the following 3 interrelated scientific focus or affinity groups: (1) Development biology and genetics, (2) Immunobiology and host responses, and (3) Cell growth and differentiation. The research base consists of 55 members, with interrelated scientific programs, and represents a spectrum of departments, Centers, Institutes and Schools at the University of Pennsylvania. In addition, there is a young investigator base of 14 associate members, whose own individual programs and career development are nurtured by the Center. Center members are supported by $30,650,813 in digestive-diseases related NIH research funding, of which 42.12% is through NIDDK. A fundamental goal of our Center is to foster interdisciplinary research that leads to a cooperative understanding of the molecular and biochemical processes that form, regulate, and operate digestive tract, pancreatic and liver organs and their organizing tissues in health and disease. In this context, our intent is to utilize the Center as a means to develop innovative ideas by attracting and engaging established investigators into digestive and liver research. An equally important goal of the Center is to develop young investigators in this research. Four highly successful Scientific Core facilities are designed to provide digestive-specific services for the stimulation of collaborative research: Morphology, Molecular Biology/Gene Expression, Transgenic and Chimeric Mouse, and Cell Culture. An Administrative Core directs the fiscal and organizational aspects of the Center, including the coordination and publicity of the Scientific Cores, Pilot and Feasibility Grant Program, Academic Enrichment Program and Internal/External Advisory Committees. The Pilot and Feasibility Grant Program has been extremely successful for the promotion of new investigators in digestive research. Four proposals were selected based on their relevance to the Center's scientific focus and the priority of promoting digestive research among young investigators: (1) Role of protein-tyrosine phosphatase 1B (PTP1B) in obesity-related insulin resistance and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD);(2) An organotypic culture model of Barrett's esophagus;(3) Hematopoietic contribution to the gut vasculature;and (4) A p53/IGFBP1 regulatory circuit and liver cancer. Our DDRCC's aggregate functions maintain the digestive and liver research programs at the forefront of biomedical science.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK)
Type
Center Core Grants (P30)
Project #
3P30DK050306-14S1
Application #
8144540
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZDK1-GRB-4 (J1))
Program Officer
Podskalny, Judith M,
Project Start
1998-07-01
Project End
2012-06-30
Budget Start
2010-07-01
Budget End
2011-06-30
Support Year
14
Fiscal Year
2010
Total Cost
$92,352
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Pennsylvania
Department
Internal Medicine/Medicine
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
042250712
City
Philadelphia
State
PA
Country
United States
Zip Code
19104
Wang, Amber W; Wangensteen, Kirk J; Wang, Yue J et al. (2018) TRAP-seq identifies cystine/glutamate antiporter as a driver of recovery from liver injury. J Clin Invest 128:2297-2309
Lang, Fengchao; Sun, Zhiguo; Pei, Yonggang et al. (2018) Shugoshin 1 is dislocated by KSHV-encoded LANA inducing aneuploidy. PLoS Pathog 14:e1007253
Giroux, VĂ©ronique; Stephan, Julien; Chatterji, Priya et al. (2018) Mouse Intestinal Krt15+ Crypt Cells Are Radio-Resistant and Tumor Initiating. Stem Cell Reports 10:1947-1958
Barnoud, Thibaut; Budina-Kolomets, Anna; Basu, Subhasree et al. (2018) Tailoring Chemotherapy for the African-Centric S47 Variant of TP53. Cancer Res 78:5694-5705
Wangensteen, Kirk J; Wang, Yue J; Dou, Zhixun et al. (2018) Combinatorial genetics in liver repopulation and carcinogenesis with a in vivo CRISPR activation platform. Hepatology 68:663-676
Andres, Sarah F; Williams, Kathy N; Rustgi, Anil K (2018) The Molecular Basis of Metastatic Colorectal Cancer. Curr Colorectal Cancer Rep 14:69-79
Serper, M; Forde, K A; Kaplan, D E (2018) Rare clinically significant hepatic events and hepatitis B reactivation occur more frequently following rather than during direct-acting antiviral therapy for chronic hepatitis C: Data from a national US cohort. J Viral Hepat 25:187-197
Avetisyan, Marina; Rood, Julia E; Huerta Lopez, Silvia et al. (2018) Muscularis macrophage development in the absence of an enteric nervous system. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 115:4696-4701
Kim, Yong Hoon; Marhon, Sajid A; Zhang, Yuxiang et al. (2018) Rev-erb? dynamically modulates chromatin looping to control circadian gene transcription. Science 359:1274-1277
Costea, Paul I; Hildebrand, Falk; Arumugam, Manimozhiyan et al. (2018) Enterotypes in the landscape of gut microbial community composition. Nat Microbiol 3:8-16

Showing the most recent 10 out of 700 publications