Carl James Johnston, Ph.D.

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Contact

University of Rochester
School of Medicine and Dentistry
601 Elmwood Ave, Box 850
Rochester, New York 14642

Office: 585 275-5948

Portrait

Dr. Carl Johnston's work seeks to understand how the postnatal lung copes with external stress. A critical biological factor that plays a role in childhood pulmonary susceptibility is that a significant portion of lung development takes place postnatally. One of the environmental factors relevant to developmental lung disease is the recent increase in complexity and distribution, if not the levels, of airborne pollutants, including allergens and endotoxins, respirable particulate matter and irritant gases, exposure to which damages various cell types. Among the most important of these are the respiratory epithelium and critical immune effector cell populations. Furthermore; combined exposures to multiple pollutants may activate several unique signaling pathways which are age dependent and depending on the sequence of initiation may result in responses not predicted by evaluating exposures to an individual pollutant. His work depends heavily on mRNA analysis, microarray technology, immuno-histochemistry and in situ hybridization. This work is supported by participation in several NIH grants.

Specialty

Neonatology

Current Appointments

Education
PhD Pharmacology and Toxicology SUNY at Buffalo 2006
MS Toxicology University of Rochester 1993
BA Biology SUNY at Buffalo 1987
Recent Journal Articles
Showing the 5 most recent journal articles. (58 available)
Johnston, CJ, Hernady E, Reed C, Thurston SW, Finkelstein JN, and Williams JP. "Early Alteration sin Cytokine Expression: Surrogate Markers in Adult vs Developing Lung in Mice Following Radiation Exposure." Radiation Research, In Press, (2009).
Saperstein S, Huyck H, Kimball E, Johnston CJ, Finkelstein JN, Pryhuber G. "The Effects of Interleukin-1 beta in tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha-induced Acute Pulmonary Inflammation in Mice." Cytokine, In Review, (2009).
Johnston CJ, Williams J, Hernady E, Reed C, Finkelstein JN. "Inflammatory Cells versus Parenchyma in Normal Tissue Response to Radiation Induced Lung Fibrosis." Radiation Research, In Review, (2009).
Johnston CJ, Gelein R, Oberdoerster G, Finkelstein JN. "Developmental Effects of PM During Postatal Lung Development." in preparation (2009).
Vitiello PF; Staversky RJ; Gehen SC; Johnston CJ; Finkelstein JN; Wright TW; O'Reilly MA. "p21Cip1 protection against hyperoxia requires Bcl-XL and is uncoupled from its ability to suppress growth." The American journal of pathology. 2006; 168(6):1838-47.