Jennifer L. Young, 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: 585 276-4219

Lab: 585 276-4219

Fax: 585 756-7780

Portrait

Lung diseases, such as acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), and pulmonary fibrosis, affect millions of Americans and account for a great number of deaths in this country each year. The pathology of all of these diseases is characterized by initial injury to the epithelium, an extensive inflammatory response, and cell death (apoptosis and necrosis) leading to the aberrant healing of the injury. The inflammatory responses associated with lung injury have been extensively studied and several models of lung injury have been established to study these responses. LPS administration, for example, induces a significant tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFa) response that mimics the inflammatory responses of several lung diseases. Activation of the cytokine TNFa is a hallmark of lung injury. TNFa is a well-characterized cytokine that displays a broad spectrum of functions including lymphocyte activation and migration, cell proliferation, differentiation as well as apoptosis, but more often cell survival, and TNFa likely requires a co-factor for cell death.

My research focuses on elucidating the mechanism(s) of cell death and survival of primary alveolar epithelial cells and lung fibroblasts in response to the extracellular matrix associated signaling molecule, CCN1/Cyr61. CCN1/Cyr61 is an extracellular matrix (ECM)-associated signaling molecule that functions to promote cell adhesion, migration, survival and differentiation in the context of vascular development. Most recently we have shown that CCN1/Cyr61 can also modulate cell death in certain cells and can promote cell death in response to TNFa. In the context of the lung, I have found that CCN1/Cyr61 together with TNFa causes apoptosis of alveolar epithelial cells and lung fibroblasts. Because CCN1/Cyr61 has been shown to be induced in the lungs of patients with COPD and ARDS, I hypothesize that CCN1/Cyr61, together with inflammatory mediators such as TNFa causes cell death of primary lung cells in vivo, thus contributing to lung injury. I have also found that CCN1/Cyr61 functional knock-out mice have greatly reduced pulmonary inflammation at early times (<24 hrs) after LPS treatment, suggesting that CCN1/Cyr61, in addition to playing a role in apoptosis and cell survival, is likely to be involved in the initial inflammatory response as well. My research goals include determining a role for CCN1/Cyr61 in lung injury and inflammation and defining the mechanism by which CCN1/Cyr61 and TNFa cause cell death of lung cells in vivo. The ultimate goal of these studies is to gain a better understanding of the complex pathology of lung diseases such as COPD and ARDS so that better treatments for these lung diseases can be developed.

Specialty

Neonatology

Current Appointments

Education
Ph.D. Molecular Biology and Genetics Northwestern University 2004
BS Biomedical Sciences University of South Alabama 1998
Post-Doctoral Training & Residency
Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL, Dr. Lester F. Lau. 2004 - 2007
Fellowship Awards
PI: Jennifer L. Young; Sponsor: Lau. Total award (direct costs) $97,224; American Heart Association, Midwest Affiliate. 2006 - 2008
NIH Institutional Training Grant A. Malik; Sponsor: Lau Post-doctoral Training Grant 2004 - 2005
PI: J. L. Young; Sponsor: Dean. "Nuclear targeting gene therapy vectors for the prevention of intimal hyperplasia". Total award (direct costs) $49,000; American Heart Association, Midwest Affiliate. 2002 - 2004
Recent Journal Articles
Showing the 5 most recent journal articles. (8 available)
Young, J.L.; Zimmer, W.E.,; Dean, D.A. "Smooth muscle-specific gene delivery in the vasculature based on restriction of DNA nuclear import." Experimental Biology and Medicine Epub doi: 10.3181/0721-Rm-331. (2008).
Chen CC; Young JL; Monzon RI; Chen N; Todorovi? V; Lau LF. "Cytotoxicity of TNFalpha is regulated by integrin-mediated matrix signaling." The EMBO journal. 2007; 26(5):1257-67. Epub 2007 Feb 22.
Machado-Aranda D; Adir Y; Young JL; Briva A; Budinger GR; Yeldandi AV; Sznajder JI; Dean DA. "Gene transfer of the Na+,K+-ATPase beta1 subunit using electroporation increases lung liquid clearance." American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine. 2005; 171(3):204-11. Epub 2004 Oct 29.
Machado-Aranda, D., Y. Adir, J. L. Young, A. V. Yeldandi, G. R. S. Budinger, J. I. Sznajder, and D. A. Dean. "Non-viral gene transfer of the Na+,K+-ATPase (beta)1 subunit using electroporation increases lung liquid clearance in rats." Am J Resp Crit Care Med. 171 (2003): 204-211.
Shirasawa Y; Rutland TJ; Young JL; Dean DA; Joseph BN. "Modulation of protein kinase C (PKC)-mediated contraction and the possible role of PKC epsilon in rat mesenteric arteries." Frontiers in bioscience : a journal and virtual library. 2003; 8():a133-8. Epub 2003 May 01.