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One or more keywords matched the following properties of Carroll, Steven
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overview Dr. Steven Carroll is is Professor and Chair of the Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine at the Medical University of South Carolina (MUSC), where he holds the Gordon R. Hennigar, Jr., MD, Endowed Chair in Pathology. Dr. Carroll is board certified by the American Board of Pathology in Anatomic Pathology and Neuropathology. Dr. Carroll’s research program, which is funded by the National Institutes of Health, the Department of Defense and the Children’s Tumor Foundation, studies the role that the growth factor neuregulin-1 and its erbB receptors plays in the pathogenesis of neurodegenerative diseases and neurofibromatosis-associated peripheral nerve sheath tumors. Dr. Carroll serves as the Director of the South Carolina Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center at MUSC and as Director of the Carroll A. Campbell Jr. Neuropathology Laboratory (Brain Bank). Dr. Carroll also serves as Director of the Hollings Cancer Center Biorepository & Tissue Analysis Shared Resource. Dr. Carroll is an Associate Editor for the American Journal of Pathology and the Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology and is a member of the Editorial Board for Neuro-Oncology. He is a founding member of the international Down Syndrome Biobanking Consortium, which includes MUSC, the Barrow Neurological Institute, the University of Colorado Denver, the University of California Irvine, New York University, the Sant Pau Memory Unit (Barcelona, Spain), Cambridge University (UK), the Karolinska Institutet (Stockholm, Sweden) and the University of Calcutta (India). Working with the Children’s Tumor Foundation, Dr. Carroll has established a national network to bank biospecimens from autopsied patients who had neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1), neurofibromatosis type 2 (NF2) and schwannomatosis. In addition to these research areas, Dr. Carroll participates in the Human Cooperative Tissue Network, a multi-institution network that banks and distributes tumor tissue for research to investigators across the United States and elsewhere. The Biorepository is also an active participant in an effort headed by Dr. Marvella Ford that partners MUSC with South Carolina State University; this project focuses on understanding the basis for disparate outcomes in cancer patients from diverse backgrounds. Dr. Carroll received his B.S. degree from the University of Memphis in 1981. He then attended Baylor College of Medicine, receiving his Ph.D. in Cell Biology in 1986 and his M.D. in 1988. Dr. Carroll’s postdoctoral research fellowship, Anatomic Pathology Residency and Neuropathology Fellowship were performed at the Washington University School of Medicine (1988-1994). Prior to his arrival at MUSC, Dr. Carroll was Professor of Pathology, Neurobiology and Cell Biology at the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) and the Director of the UAB Division of Neuropathology. While at UAB, Dr. Carroll served as an attending neuropathologist at the University of Alabama Hospital, the Birmingham VA, UAB Highlands Hospital and Alabama Children’s Hospital. He was a Scientist in the UAB Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center, the Mental Retardation Research Center, the Center for Aging, the Center for Glial Biology in Medicine, the Civitan International Research Center and the Center for Neurodegeneration and Experimental Therapeutics as well as being as a Member of the Comprehensive Neuroscience Center and a Senior Scientist in the UAB Comprehensive Cancer Center. Dr. Carroll is certified by the American Board of Pathology in Anatomic Pathology and Neuropathology. The Carroll laboratory focuses on identifying the abnormalities that promote the pathogenesis of cancer and neurodegenerative diseases and using this information to develop effective new therapies. We have a particular interest in the role that the growth factor neuregulin-1 (NRG1) and its erbB receptors play in the development of these diseases. Our work in cancer biology is directed towards determining how neurofibromas and malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumors (MPNSTs) develop in patients with the multi-system genetic disease neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) with therapeutic development being the end goal. We are pursuing a two-pronged approach to achieve this goal. In our first approach, we are using our understanding of the natural history of neurofibromas and MPNSTs to guide us to existing agents that are potentially effective against these tumors. For instance, since aberrant Ras signaling is characteristic of these tumors, we have used phosphoproteomics and other approaches to identify potential druggable targets within the pathways downstream of NF1-regulated Ras proteins as well as upstream activators of Ras in neurofibromas and MPNSTs. This latter group includes receptors for the growth factor neuregulin-1 (NRG1), which led us to create mice in which we can genetically ablate these receptors and examine the effect this has on MPNST pathogenesis. Our second, longer term approach is to identify novel therapeutic targets by comprehensively defining the genomic and epigenetic abnormalities that mediate the pathogenesis of plexiform neurofibromas and MPNSTs. To achieve this, we are using cross-species comparative oncogenomics, a method in which driver mutations are first identified in a mouse cancer model and then validated in human tumors. For these studies, we have created several genetically engineered mouse models which recapitulate the process of neurofibroma-MPNST progression seen in humans. We have performed comprehensive genomic analyses (array comparative genomic hybridization, high density SNP array analyses, whole exome sequencing and whole transcriptome sequencing) of MPNSTs from these mice, together with a reference set of human MPNST tumors and cell lines, to identify the driver mutations responsible for tumor development. We have partnered these genomic analyses with functional (genome-scale shRNA) screens to identify gene products that are essential for proliferation and survival. Ongoing work is directed towards performing preclinical trials with mouse models to test the effectiveness of drugs that target these gene products. Our work in neurobiology focuses on Alzheimer’s disease, frontotemporal dementias and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Our laboratory was the first to show that NRG1, a protein that plays an important role in synaptogenesis, and its receptors are aberrantly distributed in neuritic plaques in humans with Alzheimer’s disease and genetically engineered mouse models of Alzheimer’s disease. After globally identifying the cellular populations expressing erbB receptors in the adult rat brain with immunohistochemistry and in situ hybridization, we additionally showed that NRG1 plays an important role in shaping the dendritic and axonal trees of hippocampal neurons and that this growth factor is an important survival factor for motor neurons in the spinal cord. At present, we are constructing several new genetically engineered mouse models to assess the role that specific erbB mutations play in the pathogenesis of frontotemporal dementias and ALS and to ascertain whether NRG1 can be used to slow the development of Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias. As with our cancer work, we partner mouse and cell culture models of neurodegenerative diseases with studies of brain tissue and other biospecimens collected from patients with dementia. These studies are facilitated by the fact that Dr. Carroll is the Director of the Carroll A. Campbell, Jr. Neuropathology Laboratory, which contains a collection of several hundred brains from patients with Alzheimer’s and related dementias that have been donated for research. In collaboration with Drs. Eric Hamlett, Brad Schulte and Judy Dubno, we are using these specimens to determine whether pathologic changes affecting the brain circuitry responsible for hearing and other senses occurs in Alzheimer’s disease and whether clinical changes in these senses can be used as a biomarker for diagnosing the early stages of Alzheimer’s disease. As noted above, the Carroll A. Campbell, Jr. Neuropathology Laboratory is a founding member of an international consortium of brain banks that collect brain tissue and other research specimens from Down syndrome patients, who almost inevitably develop Alzheimer’s disease in their forties. In collaboration with Dr. Eric Hamlett and Lotta Granholm, we have used specimens from these patients to establish that changes in the protein cargo contained in neuronally-derived exosomes can be used as a biomarker for the early stages in the development of Alzheimer’s disease.
One or more keywords matched the following items that are connected to Carroll, Steven
Item TypeName
Academic Article Common genetic variants in the CLDN2 and PRSS1-PRSS2 loci alter risk for alcohol-related and sporadic pancreatitis.
Concept Gene Expression Profiling
Concept Genes, Lethal
Concept Gene Regulatory Networks
Concept Multigene Family
Concept Genes, Tumor Suppressor
Concept Epistasis, Genetic
Concept Gene Expression
Concept Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide
Concept Proto-Oncogenes
Concept Genes
Concept Amino Acid Sequence
Concept Genes, Neurofibromatosis 1
Concept Genetic Loci
Concept Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental
Concept Genes, erbB
Concept Genes, ras
Concept Repetitive Sequences, Nucleic Acid
Concept Gene Expression Regulation
Concept Consensus Sequence
Concept Genes, Neoplasm
Concept Genome, Human
Concept Gene Targeting
Concept Quantitative Trait Loci
Concept Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic
Concept Sequence Homology, Amino Acid
Concept Sequence Homology, Nucleic Acid
Concept Gene Frequency
Concept Base Sequence
Concept Alleles
Concept Genes, Recessive
Concept Gene Knockdown Techniques
Concept Molecular Sequence Data
Concept Gene Dosage
Academic Article Elements in the 5' flanking sequences of the mouse low-affinity NGF receptor gene direct appropriate CNS, but not PNS, expression in transgenic mice.
Academic Article Neurotrophin receptor genes are expressed in distinct patterns in developing dorsal root ganglia.
Academic Article Expression of neuregulins and their putative receptors, ErbB2 and ErbB3, is induced during Wallerian degeneration.
Academic Article Neurotrophin sensitivity of prevertebral and paravertebral rat sympathetic autonomic ganglia.
Academic Article ErbB transmembrane tyrosine kinase receptors are differentially expressed throughout the adult rat central nervous system.
Academic Article Tumor suppressor mutations and growth factor signaling in the pathogenesis of NF1-associated peripheral nerve sheath tumors. I. The role of tumor suppressor mutations.
Academic Article Ganglion-specific patterns of diabetes-modulated gene expression are established in prevertebral and paravertebral sympathetic ganglia prior to the development of neuroaxonal dystrophy.
Academic Article Improved gene delivery into neuroglial cells using a fiber-modified adenovirus vector.
Academic Article Tumor suppressor mutations and growth factor signaling in the pathogenesis of NF1-associated peripheral nerve sheath tumors: II. The role of dysregulated growth factor signaling.
Academic Article Activation of the neuregulin-1/ErbB signaling pathway promotes the proliferation of neoplastic Schwann cells in human malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumors.
Academic Article BH3-only proapoptotic Bcl-2 family members Noxa and Puma mediate neural precursor cell death.
Academic Article How does the Schwann cell lineage form tumors in NF1?
Academic Article Knockout of plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 gene reduces amyloid beta peptide burden in a mouse model of Alzheimer's disease.
Academic Article Common variants at 7p21 are associated with frontotemporal lobar degeneration with TDP-43 inclusions.
Academic Article Genetically engineered mouse models shed new light on the pathogenesis of neurofibromatosis type I-related neoplasms of the peripheral nervous system.
Academic Article The pan erbB inhibitor PD168393 enhances lysosomal dysfunction-induced apoptotic death in malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor cells.
Academic Article Malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor invasion requires aberrantly expressed EGF receptors and is variably enhanced by multiple EGF family ligands.
Academic Article Neuregulin-1 overexpression and Trp53 haploinsufficiency cooperatively promote de novo malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor pathogenesis.
Academic Article Evaluation of the safety and biodistribution of M032, an attenuated herpes simplex virus type 1 expressing hIL-12, after intracerebral administration to aotus nonhuman primates.
Academic Article Assessment of oncolytic HSV efficacy following increased entry-receptor expression in malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor cell lines.
Academic Article Novel late-onset Alzheimer disease loci variants associate with brain gene expression.
Academic Article Classic Ras Proteins Promote Proliferation and Survival via Distinct Phosphoproteome Alterations in Neurofibromin-Null Malignant Peripheral Nerve Sheath Tumor Cells.
Academic Article STAT1 and NF-?B Inhibitors Diminish Basal Interferon-Stimulated Gene Expression and Improve the Productive Infection of Oncolytic HSV in MPNST Cells.
Academic Article BH3 mimetics suppress CXCL12 expression in human malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor cells.
Academic Article Rare coding variants in PLCG2, ABI3, and TREM2 implicate microglial-mediated innate immunity in Alzheimer's disease.
Academic Article Dorsal root ganglion neurons expressing trk are selectively sensitive to NGF deprivation in utero.
Academic Article Recent Advances in the Diagnosis and Pathogenesis of Neurofibromatosis Type 1 (NF1)-associated Peripheral Nervous System Neoplasms.
Academic Article Usp9X Regulates Cell Death in Malignant Peripheral Nerve Sheath Tumors.
Academic Article ErbB4 promotes malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor pathogenesis via Ras-independent mechanisms.
Grant Novel Treatment of NF-1 Associated Malignant Peripheral Nerve Sheath Tumors
Grant Comparative Oncogenomics for Peripheral Nerve Sheath Cancer Gene Discovery
Grant Role of Neuregulin-1 in Schwann Cell Neoplasia
Academic Article Structure and complete nucleotide sequence of the chicken alpha-smooth muscle (aortic) actin gene. An actin gene which produces multiple messenger RNAs.
Academic Article The nontranscribed chicken calmodulin pseudogene cross-hybridizes with mRNA from the slow-muscle troponin C gene.
Academic Article A 29-nucleotide DNA segment containing an evolutionarily conserved motif is required in cis for cell-type-restricted repression of the chicken alpha-smooth muscle actin gene core promoter.
Academic Article Developmentally regulated expression of pleiotrophin, a novel heparin binding growth factor, in the nervous system of the rat.
Academic Article Meta-analysis confirms CR1, CLU, and PICALM as alzheimer disease risk loci and reveals interactions with APOE genotypes.
Academic Article Initial assessment of the pathogenic mechanisms of the recently identified Alzheimer risk Loci.
Academic Article Association of MAPT haplotypes with Alzheimer's disease risk and MAPT brain gene expression levels.
Academic Article ABCC9 gene polymorphism is associated with hippocampal sclerosis of aging pathology.
Academic Article Association of Long Runs of Homozygosity With Alzheimer Disease Among African American Individuals.
Academic Article Discovery of gene-gene interactions across multiple independent data sets of late onset Alzheimer disease from the Alzheimer Disease Genetics Consortium.
Academic Article Alzheimer's Disease Risk Polymorphisms Regulate Gene Expression in the ZCWPW1 and the CELF1 Loci.
Academic Article A novel Alzheimer disease locus located near the gene encoding tau protein.
Academic Article Genetically elevated high-density lipoprotein cholesterol through the cholesteryl ester transfer protein gene does not associate with risk of Alzheimer's disease.
Academic Article Establishment and genomic characterization of a sporadic malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor cell line.
Concept Exome
Academic Article R-Ras subfamily proteins elicit distinct physiologic effects and phosphoproteome alterations in neurofibromin-null MPNST cells.
Academic Article Defining Gene Functions in Tumorigenesis by Ex vivo Ablation of Floxed Alleles in Malignant Peripheral Nerve Sheath Tumor Cells.
Academic Article Targeting and functional role of N-RAP, a nebulin-related LIM protein, during myofibril assembly in cultured chick cardiomyocytes.
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