Catherine E. Ovitt, Ph.D.

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Contact

University of Rochester
School of Medicine and Dentistry
601 Elmwood Ave, Box 611
Rochester, New York 14642

Office: 585 275-2920 (primary)

Lab: 585 273-3076

Fax: 585 276-0190

Portrait

The salivary glands are exocrine glands whose function is critical for the maintenance of oral health and function. Age, drug treatments, diseases such as Sjogren's syndrome, and radiation treatment of patients with head and neck cancers, cause cellular damage in the salivary glands that is usually severe, irreversible, and renders them atrophic. Permanent repair of such damage is the next medical challenge in therapy, and could potentially be accomplished by cell-replacement. The long-range goal of this laboratory is to identify the source of progenitor cells in the salivary gland and to use these cells for the restoration of salivary function in an impaired gland. Research projects in our laboratory are directed at the study of salivary gland development and regeneration using mouse models. Projects include the identification and characterization of progenitor cells, and the study of signaling mechanisms involved in regeneration.

Current Appointments

Education
PhD Molecular Biology Washington University 1987
BS Arts & Sciences University of Connecticut 1977
Post-Doctoral Training & Residency
Postdoctoral Fellow, European Molecular Biology Laboratory, Heidelberg, Germany 1987 - 1997

Lab Description

Application of Mouse Genetics to the Analysis of Genes Involved in Salivary Gland Function.


Lab Website

http://www.urmc.rochester.edu/biomedical-genetics/faculty/ovitt-lab.cfm


Recent Journal Articles
Showing the 5 most recent journal articles. (20 available)
Bullard T; Koek L; Roztocil E; Kingsley PD; Mirels L; Ovitt CE. "Ascl3 expression marks a progenitor population of both acinar and ductal cells in mouse salivary glands." Developmental biology. 2008; 320(1):72-8. Epub 2008 Apr 23.
Nakamoto T; Srivastava A; Romanenko VG; Ovitt CE; Perez-Cornejo P; Arreola J; Begenisich T; Melvin JE. "Functional and molecular characterization of the fluid secretion mechanism in human parotid acinar cells." American journal of physiology. Regulatory, integrative and comparative physiology. 2007; 292(6):R2380-90. Epub 2007 Mar 08.
Chen J; Bush JO; Ovitt CE; Lan Y; Jiang R. "The TGF-beta pseudoreceptor gene Bambi is dispensable for mouse embryonic development and postnatal survival." Genesis (New York, N.Y. : 2000). 2007; 45(8):482-6.
Lan Y; Wang Q; Ovitt CE; Jiang R. "A unique mouse strain expressing Cre recombinase for tissue-specific analysis of gene function in palate and kidney development." Genesis (New York, N.Y. : 2000). 2007; 45(10):618-24.
Schmidt D; Ovitt CE; Anlag K; Fehsenfeld S; Gredsted L; Treier AC; Treier M. "The murine winged-helix transcription factor Foxl2 is required for granulosa cell differentiation and ovary maintenance." Development (Cambridge, England). 2004; 131(4):933-42. Epub 2004 Jan 21.