8 results match your criteria: "New York Medical College at Touro University[Affiliation]"

Chronic Kidney Disease: A Vicarious Relation to Premature Cell Senescence.

Am J Pathol

June 2020

Renal Research Institute, and the Departments of Medicine, Pharmacology, and Physiology, New York Medical College at Touro University, Valhalla, New York. Electronic address:

Chronic kidney disease (CKD), commonly fostering nonrenal complications, themselves more life threatening than renal pathology, remains enigmatic. Despite more than a century of intense research, therapeutic options to halt or reverse renal disease are rather limited. Recently, similarity between manifestations of progressive CKD and aging kidney has attracted investigative attention that revealed senescent cells and secreting proinflammatory and profibrotic mediators in all renal compartments, even at young age, in patients with kidney maladies.

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Background: Our laboratory has previously demonstrated that Sirt1endo-/- mice show endothelial dysfunction and exaggerated renal fibrosis, whereas mice with silenced endothelial transforming growth factor beta (TGF-β) signaling are resistant to fibrogenic signals. Considering the fact that the only difference between these mutant mice is confined to the vascular endothelium, this indicates that secreted substances contribute to these contrasting responses.

Methods: We performed an unbiased proteomic analysis of the secretome of renal microvascular endothelial cells (RMVECs) isolated from these two mutants.

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Endothelial glycocalyx-the battleground for complications of sepsis and kidney injury.

Nephrol Dial Transplant

February 2018

Renal Research Institute, Departments of Medicine, Pharmacology and Physiology, New York Medical College at Touro University, Valhalla, NY, USA.

After briefly discussing endothelial glycocalyx and its role in vascular physiology and renal disease, this overview focuses on its degradation very early in the course of microbial sepsis. We describe our recently proposed mechanism for glycocalyx degradation induced by exocytosis of lysosome-related organelles and release of their cargo. Notably, an intermediate in nitric oxide synthesis, NG-hydroxy-l-arginine, shows efficacy in curtailing exocytosis of these organelles and improvement in animal survival.

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The third path of tubulointerstitial fibrosis: aberrant endothelial secretome.

Kidney Int

September 2017

Renal Research Institute, Departments of Medicine, Pharmacology and Physiology, New York Medical College at Touro University, Valhalla, New York, USA. Electronic address:

The secretome, defined as a portion of proteins secreted by specific cells to the extracellular space, secures a proper microenvironmental niche not only for the donor cells, but also for the neighboring cells, thus maintaining tissue homeostasis. Communication via secretory products exists between endothelial cells and fibroblasts, and this local mechanism maintains the viability and density of each compartment. Endothelial dysfunction, apart from obvious cell-autonomous defects, leads to the aberrant secretome, which predisposes fibroblasts to acquire a myofibroblastic fibrogenic phenotype.

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Vascular endothelium in diabetes.

Am J Physiol Renal Physiol

February 2017

Departments of Medicine, Pharmacology, and Physiology, Renal Research Institute, New York Medical College at Touro University, Valhalla, New York

Three decades ago a revolutionary idea was born that ascribed to dysfunctional endothelia some manifestations of diabetes, the Steno hypothesis, so named after the Steno Diabetes Center, Gentofte, in Denmark. Here I briefly outline the accomplishments accrued in the past 15 years to buttress this hypothesis. Those include development of novel technological platforms to examine microcirculatory beds, deeper understanding of patterns of microvascular derangement in diabetes, pathophysiology of nitric oxide synthesis and availability, nitrosative and oxidative stress in diabetes, premature senescence of endothelial cells and the role of sirtuin 1 and lysosomal dysfunction in this process, and the state of endothelial glycocalyx and endothelial progenitor cells in diabetes.

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Stress-Induced Premature Senescence of Endothelial and Endothelial Progenitor Cells.

Adv Pharmacol

December 2017

New York Medical College at Touro University, Valhalla, NY, United States; Yale University, New Haven, CT, United States. Electronic address:

This brief overview of premature senescence of dysfunctional endothelial and endothelial progenitor cells provides information on endothelial cell differentiation and specialization, their ontogeny, and controversies related to endothelial stem and progenitor cells. Stressors responsible for the dysfunction of endothelial and endothelial progenitor cells, as well as cellular mechanisms and consequences of endothelial cell dysfunction are presented. Metabolic signatures of dysfunctional endothelial cells and senescence pathways are described.

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