The goal of this training program is to prepare predoctoral students, physicians and PhDs for biomedical research careers by providing a concentrated, in-depth research experience. The program will provide research training to a total of five postdoctoral fellows, with an overall mix of three to four renal fellows and one to two non-clinical Ph.D. trainees, and two predoctoral students per year. This program is designed to foster a rigorous approach to scientific inquiry in basic science or clinical investigation. Five areas of research are emphasized: (1) renal/epithelial transport; (2) epithelial cell biology; (3) cell signaling; (4) renal epidemiology/outcomes research; and (5) hypertension and genetics. Our training program faculty is from the University of Pittsburgh. Together they form a close and well-integrated collaborative entity dedicated to research training and investigation in nephrology, epithelial biology, or epidemiology. Trainees will develop a research project under the close supervision of a faculty trainer and will be closely monitored by an advisory group or thesis committee as well as by a research training executive committee. Didactic lectures, research seminars, journal clubs, formal course work, and attendance at scientific meetings will supplement this intensively structured research experience. Predoctoral graduates of this comprehensive training experience will be equipped to compete for individual training support. Postdoctoral graduates will be prepared to compete for independent funding and entry-level faculty positions in academic medicine.
Espiritu, Eugenel B; Crunk, Amanda E; Bais, Abha et al. (2018) The Lhx1-Ldb1 complex interacts with Furry to regulate microRNA expression during pronephric kidney development. Sci Rep 8:16029 |
Blobner, Brandon M; Wang, Xue-Ping; Kashlan, Ossama B (2018) Conserved cysteines in the finger domain of the epithelial Na+ channel ? and ? subunits are proximal to the dynamic finger-thumb domain interface. J Biol Chem 293:4928-4939 |
Boyd-Shiwarski, Cary R; Shiwarski, Daniel J; Roy, Ankita et al. (2018) Potassium-regulated distal tubule WNK bodies are kidney-specific WNK1 dependent. Mol Biol Cell 29:499-509 |
Ray, Evan C; Miller, Rachel G; Demko, John E et al. (2018) Urinary Plasmin(ogen) as a Prognostic Factor for Hypertension. Kidney Int Rep 3:1434-1442 |
Jobbagy, Soma; Tan, Roderick J (2018) Nitrolipids in kidney physiology and disease. Nitric Oxide : |
Preston, G Michael; Guerriero, Christopher J; Metzger, Meredith B et al. (2018) Substrate Insolubility Dictates Hsp104-Dependent Endoplasmic-Reticulum-Associated Degradation. Mol Cell 70:242-253.e6 |
Eshbach, Megan L; Sethi, Rahil; Avula, Raghunandan et al. (2017) The transcriptome of the Didelphis virginiana opossum kidney OK proximal tubule cell line. Am J Physiol Renal Physiol 313:F585-F595 |
Unruh, Mark L; Pankratz, V Shane; Demko, John E et al. (2017) Trial of Amiloride in Type 2 Diabetes with Proteinuria. Kidney Int Rep 2:893-904 |
Preston, G Michael; Brodsky, Jeffrey L (2017) The evolving role of ubiquitin modification in endoplasmic reticulum-associated degradation. Biochem J 474:445-469 |
Boyd-Shiwarski, Cary R; Subramanya, Arohan R (2017) The renal response to potassium stress: integrating past with present. Curr Opin Nephrol Hypertens 26:411-418 |
Showing the most recent 10 out of 89 publications