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Zhilin Qu, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Medicine
Co-Director, Cardiac Computation Laboratory
Office:  615 BA

Phone:  (310) 794-6050
Email: 
zqu@mednet.ucla.edu 

 

Curriculum Vitae

Research Summary

Dr. Qu’s general research interest is to apply dynamical theories to biological systems at the systems level. The specific research areas are:

  1. Multi-scale modeling of cardiac excitation-contraction coupling and arrhythmias. Ventricular fibrillation (VF) is the leading cause of sudden cardiac death and the only effective therapy is implantable cardioverter-defibrillators but expensive and limited in availability worldwide. Developing new effective and economic anti-arrhythmic drugs and improving the efficacy of defibrillators are apparently attractive therapeutic strategies, which need a better understanding of the mechanisms of VF. The cardiac system is extremely complex with nonlinear interactions, involving many levels of regulation: ion channel  sub-cellular compartment  whole cell  multi-cellular tissue  anatomical heart. Combined with experiments, computer modeling at all different levels and theories developed according to nonlinear dynamics are critically useful for the understanding of the mechanisms of VF and thus for the development of novel therapeutics. My goal is to develop an integrated computational system with multiple scales of regulation to understand the excitation-contraction coupling and arrhythmogenesis in the heart.
     

  2. Dynamics of cardiac metabolism. Cell metabolism is regulated by a complex network which not only controls the energy demand for the cell but can also generate dynamics to trigger cell death and arrhythmias. The initial research goal is to understand the dynamics due to the coupling between the glycolytic cycle, the mitochondria TCA cycle, and the SR/glycogenic cycle and their spatiotemporal dynamics through mathematical modeling and computer simulation, and to provide theoretical bases for how cardiac metabolism affects cardiac arrhythmogenesis and cardioprotection against ischemic injury. The ultimate goal is to develop a computational model system that will eventually include the interaction networks of genes, proteins, and metabolites and link the dynamics of the interactions to cardiac arrhythmogensis and mitochondria-related cell death.
     

  3. Cell cycle control and biological signal transduction. Biological processes are regulated by complex networks of genes, proteins, and metabolites. Although understanding the functions of individual genes or proteins provides critical detailed information, this reductionist approach normally favored by biologists has limitations and it is far from understanding the whole system, since the interactions between the building blocks are complex and nonlinear. Due to the complexity, intuition has limited capability for synthesizing all of the information gathered from the biological experiments into a cohesive holistic understanding of the system behavior. Computer modeling and complex system theory become more and more important for understanding the behaviors of signal transduction networks in biology. I will use cell cycle control as a specific working example but I am also interested in generic dynamics arising from biological signal transduction network.
     

Representative Publications

Zhilin Qu, Alan Garfinkel, Peng-Sheng Chen, James N. Weiss: Mechanisms of discordant alternans and induction of reentry in a simulated cardiac tissue. Circulation 102, 1664-1670(2000).

Ohara, T, Zhilin Qu, Lee M-H, Ohara K, Omichi C, Mandel WJ, Chen P-S,
Karagueuzian HS: Increased Vulnerability to Inducible Atrial Fibrillation Caused by partial cellular uncoupling with heptanol. Am. J. Physiol. 283, H1116-H1122 (2002).

Ling Yang, Robb MacLellan, Zhangang Han, James N. Weiss, Zhilin Qu: Multi-site phosphorylation and network dynamics of cyclin-dependent kinase signaling in the eukaryotic cell cycle. Biophys. J. 86, 3432-3443 (2004).

Fagen Xie, Zhilin Qu, Junzhong Yang, James N. Weiss, and Alan Garfinkel: A simulation study of the effects of cardiac anatomy in ventricular fibrillation. J. Clin. Invest. 113, 686-693 (2004).

Zhilin Qu, James N. Weiss and Robb MacLellan: Coordination of cell growth and cell division: a mathematical modeling study. J. Cell Sci. 117, 4199(2004).

Zhangang Han, Ling Yang, Robb MacLellan, James N. Weiss, Zhilin Qu: Hysteresis and Cell cycle transitions: How crucial is it? Biophys. J. 88, 1626-1634(2005).

Zhilin Qu: The critical mass hypothesis revisited: the effect of dynamical wave stability on spontaneous termination of cardiac fibrillation, Am. J. Physiol. 290, H255-263 (2006).

James N. Weiss, Alain Karma, Peng-Sheng Chen, Alan Garfinkel, Zhilin Qu: From pulsus to pulseless – the saga of cardiac alternans, Circ. Res. 98, 1244-1253 (2006).

Ling Yang, Zhangang Han, W. Robb MacLellan, James N. Weiss, Zhilin Qu: Linking cell division to cell growth in a spatiotemporal model of the cell cycle. J. Theor. Biol. 2006 (in press)

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