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Malgor receives NIH
grant

Ramiro Malgor,
M.D.
$221,250 for
“Understanding
WNT-5A and TLR-4
cross-signaling
during
atherosclerosis”
By Anita Martin
April 8, 2009
Ramiro Malgor, M.D.,
assistant professor
of biological
sciences, is the
principal
investigator on a
new, two-year
$221,250 grant from
the National
Institutes of Health
for the project,
“Understanding
WNT-5A and TLR-4
cross-signaling
during
atherosclerosis.”
The research will
test a hypothesis
that WNT-5A, a
protein first
noticed in the
development of
embryos and later
linked to cancer
development, plays a
role in the
development of
atherosclerosis.
Malgor’s team, which
includes Kelly
McCall, Ph.D.,
assistant professor
of specialty
medicine, and Doug
Goetz, Ph.D.,
professor of
biomolecular
engineering, was the
first to notice the
presence of WNT-5A
in atherosclerosis.
Atherosclerosis
occurs when
cholesterol
particles in the
bloodstream become
absorbed into the
inner lining of
blood vessels,
creating fatty
lesions that
increase the risk of
heart attack and
stroke. Malgor and
his team hypothesize
that these
cholesterol
particles activate
the toll-like
receptor TLR-4, a
signaling pathway
that, in turn,
elicits the presence
of WNT-5A. The
WNT-5A protein may
help trigger
inflammation within
the blood vessels,
worsening
atherosclerosis and
increasing the
related risks of
cardiovascular
disease, the main
cause of death in
the United States,
Europe and Asia.
The research group
is working with
atherosclerotic
lesions taken from
both mice and humans
to confirm the
presence of WNT-5A
and determine
whether it plays a
role in this disease
process.
“In our project, we
hope to better
understand the
mechanism of how
atherosclerosis
develops, which will
help develop better
therapeutic
strategies to
intervene,” Malgor
says.
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