Joseph M. Miano, Ph.D.

See information for Patients. Viewing information for Researchers.

Contact

University of Rochester
School of Medicine and Dentistry
601 Elmwood Ave, Box CVRI
Rochester, New York 14642

Office: 585 276-9789 (primary)

Lab: 585 276-9851

Fax: 585 276-9830

Portrait

Research in the Miano Lab is focused on the expression regulation and biology of several genes cloned from vascular smooth muscle cells (SMC). The genes include serum response factor (SRF) and its coactivator, myocardin (MYOCD), which together represent a powerful transcriptional master-switch for the SMC contractile phenotype; a direct target of this transcriptional switch called SMC calponin (CNN1); a tumor suppressor gene, AKAP12, comprising three independent transcription units including one, AKAP12(beta), that is a direct target of SRF and another, AKAP12(alpha), that is massively induced by retinoids; and, finally, a novel orphan vascular serine carboxypeptidase we call SCPEP1. Our ideas and efforts span the spectrum from computer to DNA to cells to whole animals. We intend to elucidate the regulation of these genes and/or their functions during normal or pathological processes involving, but not limited to, the cardiovascular system. For example, the transcriptional program of SMC differentiation is under study to gain insight into basic processes underlying vascular development as well as cancer, Alzheimer's disease, and vascular occlusive disease. Tools in genetics, genomics, bioinformatics, and molecular biology are utilized to define regulatory elements called CArG boxes that bind the SRF-Myocardin master switch. Efforts are underway to define functionally important variants (SNPs) that may alter this program

Current Appointments

Education
PhD Experimental Pathology New York Medical College 1992
MS Experimental Pathology New York Medical College 1988
BS Biology SUNY Coll at Cortland 1986
Post-Doctoral Training & Residency
Department of Biochemistry & Molecular Biology, University of Texas, MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston Texas. (Eric Olson, Mentor) 1992 - 1995

Lab Description

Transcriptional regulation of gene expression; pathobiology of SRF and myocardin; genome mining.


Lab Website

http://www.urmc.rochester.edu/cvri/research/miano-lab.cfm


Recent Journal Articles
Showing the 5 most recent journal articles. (57 available)
Bell, R.D.; Deane Chow, N.; Long, X.; Sagare, A.; Streb, J.W.; Guo, H.; Rubio, A.; Van Nostrand, W.; Miano, J.M.,; and, R, Zlokovic, B.V. "SRF and myocardin repress LRP-mediated amyloid-beta clearance in brain vascular smooth muscle cells via SREBP2." Nature Cell Biology 11 (2009): 143-153.
Long, X.; Bell, R.D.; Gerthoffer, W.T.; Zlokovic, B.V.; Miano, J.M. "Myocardin is sufficient for a smooth muscle cell-like contractile phenotype." Arteriosclerosis Thrombosis & Vascular Biology 28 (2008): 1505-1510.
Davis JL; Long X; Georger MA; Scott IC; Rich A; Miano JM. "Expression and comparative genomics of two serum response factor genes in zebrafish." The International journal of developmental biology. 2008; 52(4):389-96.
Long X.; Creemers, E.E.; Wang, D-Z.; Olson, E.N; Miano, J.M. "Myocardin is a bifunctional switch for smooth versus skeletal muscle differentiation." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 104 (2007): 16570-16575.
Chow, N.; Bell, R.D.; Deane R., Streb, J.W.; Guo, H.; Chen, J.; Rubio, A.; Brooks, A.; Van Nostrand, W.; Miano, J.M.; Zlokovic, B.V. "Serum response factor and myocardin mediate arterial hypercontractility and cerebral blood flow dysregulation in Alzheimer's phenotype." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 104 (2007): 823-828.