OU-HCOM kidney damage study receives NIH boost
Grant
funds student position to assist
Coschigano-Malgor research team
By Matt Bates
Nov. 04, 2009
Karen
Coschigano, Ph.D., and Ramiro Malgor,
Ph.D., both assistant professors of
biomedical sciences, were awarded a supplemental
grant of $16,101 in July for their work on
“Cross-talk between growth hormone and
inflammation pathways in kidney damage,” a
research project that began last year with a
$221,250 grant from
the National Institutes of Health (NIH).
This
grant has afforded senior microbiology major
Katie Schreiber the opportunity of assisting
their research, which focuses on growth hormone
(GH) receptors in kidneys and their possible
link to kidney inflammation. Ultimately, this
work could lead to the development of gene
manipulation techniques that limit or even halt
kidney damage associated with diabetes.
Coschigano looks at the presence of macrophages,
tiny cells that invade the kidney, and whether
these macrophages are involved in “cross-talk,”
or interaction with inflammatory molecules that
may be regulated by GH receptors. Meanwhile,
Malgor approaches the topic from a protein
perspective, looking at the specific proteins
involved with kidney damage that interact with
GH receptors.
To
determine the relationship between GH receptors
and cell death, the researchers use “knockout
mice,” or dwarf mice whose smaller size results
from the fact that their GH receptors have been
permanently blocked. This effectively shuts down
the “information pathway” for growth hormones,
distinguishing these knockout mice from normal
“control” mice.
This is
where Schreiber comes in. Using real-time
reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction
(RT-PCR), which allows her to compare
levels of RNA expression in kidney cells,
Schreiber compares the level
of kidney damage in different groups of mice. So
far the research has
found higher levels of kidney damage in the
regular diabetic mice than in the diabetic
knock-out mice, suggesting that GH, which cannot
interact with receptors in the knock-out mice,
are involved in the pathway leading to kidney
damage.
The
summer supplement grant, part of the American
Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, funds
student research assistant positions for two
summers. This allowed Coschigano to bring
Schreiber into the lab this year to assist her
study with Malgor and two other student
researchers. And, for Schreiber, the fruits of
this grant don’t end there.
According to Schreiber, who continues to work in
Coschigano’s lab, this experience has helped her
decide what to do with her future. She
previously had not considered a career related
to health care, but she is now planning to
enroll in a one-year licensing program in
medical technology to train to work in hospital
laboratories.