Research
Interest
The
laboratory has four main projects: 1) Cardiovascular Biology
and Aging with emphasis in coronary and cerebral arteries,
2) Src tyrosine kinases signaling complexes and vascular
tone in vessels subject to thrombotic episodes, 3) Molecular
Genetics and Cell Biology of Ion channels with focus on
voltage and Ca-activated K channels, and 4) Remodeling of
Cardiac and Smooth Muscle K channels by Sex Hormones during
pregnancy and during functional cardiac hypertrophy. Our
studies are focused mainly to understand the molecular,
cellular and genetic mechanisms underlying the regulation of
cardiovascular K channel remodeling that occurs during aging
and under the influence of sex hormones. The activity of
this type of ion channels defines smooth muscle tone and
cardiac contractility, and thereby, they have a key role on
the control of blood pressure, and cardiac function. Our
studies will provide tools for Molecular Medicine and will
help understand and treat cardiovascular disease in the
growing aging population.
Representative
Publications
Alioua A.,
Mahajan A., Nishimaru K., Zarei M. M., Stefani E., and
Toro
L. Coupling of c-Src to Large Conductance Voltage- and
Ca2+-activated K+ channels as a New Mechanism of Agonist-Induced
Vasoconstriction. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA.
99(22):14560-14565, 2002.
Eghbali M.,
Toro L.
and Stefani E. Diminished Surface Clustering and Increased Perinuclear
Accumulation of Large Conductance Ca2+-Activated K+ Channel in Mouse
Myometrium with Pregnancy. J. Biol. Chem. 278(46):45311-453117, 2003.
Kazuhide Nishimaru,
Mansoureh Eghbali, Rong Lu, Jure Marijic, Enrico Stefani and
Ligia
Toro. Functional and Molecular Evidence of MaxiK Channel β1 Subunit
Decrease with Coronary Artery Ageing in the Rat. J. Physiol. London.
559(3):849–862, 2004.
Masoud M. Zarei,
Mansoureh Eghbali, Abderrahmane Alioua, Min Song, Hans-Günther Knaus,
Enrico Stefani, and Ligia Toro. An Endoplasmic Reticulum
Trafficking Signal Prevents Surface Expression of a Voltage and
Ca2+-activated K+ Channel Splice Variant. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA.
101(27):10072-10077, 2004 |