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of
Cardiovascular Medicine
Yale University
School of Medicine
333 Cedar Street
PO Box 208017
New Haven, CT 06510
USA
(203) 785-4114
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Yale | Cardiovascular
Medicine | Faculty


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Jeffrey R. Bender, M.D.

Robert I. Levy
Professor of Preventive Cardiology
Professor of Medicine (Cardiovascular Medicine) and Immunobiology
Associate Chief, Cardiovascular Medicine
Member, Vascular Biology and Therapeutics Program
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B.A., Brandeis
University, 1975; M.D., University of California, San
Francisco, 1979; Residency Training, Yale-New Haven Hospital and Yale
University School of Medicine, 1983; Postdoctoral Fellowship Training,
Stanford University School of Medicine, 1988; Joined Yale Faculty,
1988.

Inflammatory,
Immune, Metabolic and Hormonal Effects on
the Endothelium

Leukocyte-endothelial cell (EC) interactions are thought to play a role
in a variety of pathological processes including inflammation,
allograft rejection, and atherosclerosis. As the contiguous
barrier to circulating immunocompetent cells in vascularized
allografts, donor endothelium is a major stimulator and target of
alloimmune responses by recipient lymphocytes, resulting in graft
rejection, one form of which is transplant coronary
arteriosclerosis. Furthermore, non-transplant atherosclerosis is
now recognized as a multifactorial complex process that bears many
similarities to chronic inflammatory conditions as demonstrated by the
focal accumulation of leukocytes. The gender/hormonal influences
on the development of atherosclerosis may be manifested in alterations
in these inflammatory components. The systemic abnormalities
associated with the metabolic syndrome have profound influences on the
endothelium, creating an inflammatory, dysfunctional endothelial
environment. The efforts of my laboratory are directed at
defining cellular and molecular mechanisms that govern leukocyte-EC
interactions and endothelial dysfunction, and to test these molecular
discoveries in animal vascular pathology models. More
specifically, there are four major areas of investigation:
(1) molecular mechanisms of cell-cell adhesion; (2)
leukocyte-mediated vascular activation and injury; (3) influence of
ovarian steroid hormones of endothelial activation; and (4) the effects
of lipid abnormalities associated with the metabolic syndrome on
angiogenesis.
With regard to the first area, our adhesion studies have focused on the
heterodimeric integrin complex LFA-1 as a transmembrane signaling
molecule in T lymphocytes and macrophages, evaluating nuclear
targets and stabilization of activating mRNAs encoding cytokines and
chemokines involved in atherogenesis, plaque instability and
allograft rejection. These studies include the development of
leukocyte-specific knockouts of integrin-induced,
regulatory genes and assessment in atherosclerosis, vascular rejection
and ischemia-angiogenesis models. The second area of
investigation is most recently directed at novel subsets of innate
immune cells that have the potential to modulate (promote or retard)
atherosclerosis. In vitro, ex vivo and animal model experiments
address the localization and function of these cells in vascular
pathology. Thirdly, in our studies of hormonal effects on
endothelial activation, we have recently focused on the effects of
17β-estradidiol on rapid, estrogen receptor (ER)-mediated signaling in
EC, leading to nitric oxide synthase activation through a sequential
kinase cascade. Attempts to define novel, membrane-associated EC
ERs, which mediate these responses, are ongoing. This work
includes vasoreactivity studies on aortas obtained from genetically
modified mice, and membrane protein purification for ER structural
analysis. Recently, we have evaluated estrogen receptor isoforms
in endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs), and how estrogen affects EPC
contributions to angiogenic responses. The fourth area involves
assessing the effects of free fatty acids on endothelial responses to
VEGF, and on angiogenic responses to ischemia in vivo.
My newest interest involves the broad area of "molecular
imaging." This represents a union of nuclear imaging with the
basic principles of molecular and cellular biology to fashion a new
means of evaluating basic disease processes and mechanisms of disease.
These studies are being performed in collaboration with Mehran Sadeghi.


Li, L., Haynes, M.P., Bender, J.R. Plasma Membrane
Localization and Function of the Estrogen Receptor α Variant (ER46) in
Human Endothelial Cells. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci,
USA., 100:4807-4812, 2003.
Sadeghi, M.M., Krassilnikova, S., Zhang, J., Gharaei, A.A., Luo, G.,
Kooshkabadi, A., Edwards, S., Yalamanchili, P., Harris, T.D., Sinusas,
A.J., Zaret, B.L., Bender, J.R.: Detection of injury-induced
proliferative process by targeting activated αvβ3 integrin in
vivo. Circulation,
110:84-90, 2004.
Fabbri, M., Di Meglio, S., Gagliani, M.C., Consonni, E., Molteni, R.,
Bender, J.R. Tacchetti, C., Pardi, R.: Dynamic partitioning into
lipid rafts controls the endo-exocytic cycle of the l/2 integrin
(LFA-1) during leukocyte chemotaxis. Mol Biol Cell.
116:5793-5803, 2005.
Kim, K-H., Bender, J.R.: Rapid, Estrogen Receptor-mediated
Signaling in Vascular Cells: Why is the Endothelium So Special? Science (STKE). pe28,
1-4, 2005.
Zhang, J., Krassilnikova, S., Gharaei, A.A., Fassaie, H.R.,
Esmailzadeh, L., Asadi, A., Edwards, D.S., Harris, T.D., Azure, M.,
Tellides, G., Sinusas, A., Zaret, B., Bender, J.R., Sadeghi, M.:
αvβ3- targeted detection of arteriopathy in transplanted human coronary
arteries: an autoradiographic study. FASEB J.
19:1857-1859, 2005.
Mehra, V., Ramgolam, V., Bender, J.R.: Inflammatory Mechanisms in
Vascular Disease. Drug Discovery Today: Molecular Mechanisms,
2:77-84, 2005.
Wang, J., Collinge, M., Ramgolam, V. Ayalon, A.,
Xinhao, C.F., Pardi, R., Bender, J.R.: LFA-1-Dependent HuR
Nuclear Export and Cytokine mRNA Stabilization in T Cell
Activation.. J. Immunol.
176(4):2105-2113, 2006.
Moriarty, K., Bender, J.R.: Rapid, Non-genomically Mediated
Effects of Estradiol, Endocrinology,
147:5557 – 5563, 2006.
Sadgehi, M.M., Bender, J.R.: Targeting αvβ3 in vascular
remodeling. Trends in
Cardiovascular Medicine. 17:5-10, 2007
Smith, D., Sadeghi, M.M., Bender, J.R.: Imaging Targets in
Atherosclerosis. In: Textbook
of Cardiovascular Molecular Imaging. Informa Healthcare
Publishing. Ed. Sinusas A, Gropler R, Glover D, Taegtmeyer
H. Ch. 18, p. 189-202, 2007.
Li, L., Hisamoto, K., Haynes, P., Bauer, P., Sanjay, A.,
Baron,R., Sessa, W.C., Bender, J.R. Variant Estrogen Receptor -c-Src
Molecular Interdepen Proc.
Natl. Acad. Sci, USA, 104(42):16468-16473, 2007.
Panattoni, M., Sanvito, F., Basso, V., Bender, J.R., Doglioni, C.,
Casorati, G., Mondino, A., Pardi, R.: Targeted Inactivation Of
the COP9 Signalsome Impairs Multiple Stages Of T Cell Development. J. Exp. Med.,
doi:10/1084/jem/20070725, 2008.
Kim, KH, Moriarty K, Bender, JR: Vascular cell signaling by
membrane estrogen receptors. Steroids, in press.
Ramgolam, V.,
DeGregorio, S., Subaran, S., Pardi, R., Collinge, M., Bender, J.R.:
LFA-1 Engagement Induces HuR-dependent Cytokine mRNA Stabilization
Through a Phosphadylinositol 3-Kinase, Vav-1, Rac Cascade. J. Immunol., submitted.



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Last modified:Thursday, 03-Apr-2008 14:29:11 EDT (PL).

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