Fellowship Program
Research Training
Key "breakthroughs" of our section, in the past decade:
- Development of monoclonal antibodies to protective determinants
of the outer surface protein of the Lyme bacillus (Borrelia burgdorferi).
- Development of a protective vaccine (in mice) against the Lyme bacillus.
Confirmatory human studies (in Block Island) are in process.
- Mechanism's of immune cutaneous resistance to ticks. Demonstration
that antibodies and T cells, recruit basophils and eosinophils,
to mediate immune cutaneous resistance to ticks.
- Demonstration that mast cells and platelets, by releasing serotonin
(5-HT), play a key role in T cell-mediated immunity in several systems:
allergic contact dermatitis, delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH), GI
responses to helminthic worms (trichinella) etc.
- Discovery of positive regulatory serotonin receptors (5-HT2R) on
T cells.
- Discovery of a mouse model for asthma, with in vivo measurement
of airway hyperreactivity to a methacholine dose-response challenge.
Suggestions for Flagship Interdisciplinary Ideas:
- Immunobiology of asthma
Collaborating investigators; P. W. Askenase, J. Elias, G. Geba, C. Rochester,
R. Flavell, K. Bottomly, and J. Pober
- Clinical and Experimental Immunology
A large interdisciplinary program that could be constructed from the
already available immunologists, that are working in diverse disciplines
within the department of medicine, and in neighboring departments and
sections.
Summary
It can be seen that the research thread that runs through the entire
training faculty is the regulation of the immune response. The areas in
which immunoregulation are studied range from Lyme disease to allergy
and from mast cells to T cell receptors in the regulation of autoimmune
diseases and in immune responses. Also, there is molecular immunology
research directed at important in vivo biologic questions such as the
role of specific MHC molecules in specialized cell subsets, and identification
of the autoantigen in diabtes. As these areas are diverse and yet unified,
so will the experience of the trainees be diverse and yet unified by this
broad exposure to current immunologic thinking and techniques.
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