Integrin Regulation of Neuromuscular Disease
The association of skeletal muscle fibers with the
extracellular matrix is essential to muscle integrity and
function. Defects in protein complexes that mediate this
association result in muscle disease. Our lab focuses on the role
that the α7β1 integrin, a transmembrane receptor that links laminin in the extracellular matrix to the cell cytoskeleton, plays in muscle integrity and disease.
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Integrin Regulation of Vascular Smooth
Muscle Development and Disease
Changes in the differentiated state of vascular smooth muscle cells, or
phenotypic plasticity, plays a key role in in the initial development
and integrity of the vasculature as well as a variety of vascular
diseases. Recent work published by our laboratory demonstrated
for the first time that the α7β1 integrin is important for the recruitment or
survival of cerebral vascular smooth muscle cells and implicates the α7β1 integrin in vascular development and integrity. As part of a collaborative effort through the UNR
Center for Biomedical Research Excellence (COBRE), our lab now seeks to
understand the molecular mechanisms by which the α7β1 integrin mediates
these effects. |