The Reading List is a newsletter from the School of Medicine Basic Sciences in which we amplify biomedical research from our four departments and campus-wide collaborators.
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Department of Biochemistry
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Mtg16/Eto2 tumor suppressor maintains and establishes repression by distinct mechanisms. Molecular Cell.
Anna Gilbert*, Monica Bomber, Jacob Ellis, Luke Bartlett, Andrew Folkmann, Scott Hiebert*. - Staphylococcus aureus ZigA is implicated in survival in zinc-deplete and genotoxic environments. Microbiology Spectrum.
Kyle Enriquez*, Andy Weiss, Yasiru Perera, Indu Bhatia, Melumo Togashi, Tae Akizuki, W. Hayes McDonald, Walter Chazin, Eric Skaar*.
Supported by the Center for Structural Biology and the Mass Spectrometry Research Center. -
Identification of KLHL12 Ligands Using Fragment-Based Methods. Journal of Medicinal Chemistry.
Alex Waterson*, Anish Vadukoot, Somnath Jana, Jianwen Cui, Kelvin Luong, Tyson Rietz, Ezequiel Alejandro Madrigal-Carrillo, Brian Lehmann, John Sensintaffar, Bin Zhao, Kangsa Amporndanai, Zoe Petros, William Scaggs, Selena Chacon Simon, Rakesh Vekariya, Kwangho Kim, Manikandan Thangaraj, Plamen Christov, Taylor South, Jiqing Sai, Anusha Thiruvaipati, Edward Olejniczak, Jason Phan, Stephen Fesik*.
Supported by the Biomolecular NMR Facility and the High-Throughput Screening Facility.
Center for Structural Biology: Marked for destruction: designing new targets for protein degradation therapies
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Department of Cell and Developmental Biology |
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Guiding Principles: Current practices and considerations for benchmarking human gastrointestinal organoids. Cellular and Molecular Gastroenterology and Hepatology.
Monica Brown*, Antoine Gleizes* (The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Rekha Nagarajan, Matthew Tyska, Ken Lau*. -
Mitochondrial potential reflects T cell fitness and function during cancer immunotherapy. The Journal of Immunology.
Paul Lindau*, Caroline Roe, Madelyn Landis, Zaid Hatem, Allison Sewell, Allison Blount, Jackie Bader, Jonathan Irish, Jeffrey Rathmell*, Kathryn Beckermann*. -
TIPE3 in Cancer: A Multifaceted Regulator of Tumorigenesis, Therapeutic Resistance, and Clinical Outcomes. Technology in Cancer Research & Treatment.
Yuling Zhang* (The Affiliated Hospital of Qingdao University), Ken Lau, Zequn Li*.
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Department of Molecular Physiology and Biophysics |
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Morning glucagon disrupts insulin induced hepatic metabolic memory and subsequent afternoon glucose metabolism in canines. Frontiers in Endocrinology.
Hannah Waterman*, Marta Smith, Ben Farmer, Kalisha Yankey, Karin Bosma, Richard O'Brien, Derek Claxton, Tristan Howard, Guillaume Kraft, Alan Cherrington, Dale Edgerton.
School of Medicine Basic Sciences: Eating breakfast affects how your body responds to lunch—and a hormone is to blame -
Pancreatic islet α cell function and proliferation require the arginine transporter SLC7A2. The Journal of Clinical Investigation.
Erick Spears*, Jade Stanley*, Matthew Shou, Linlin Yin, Xuan Li, Chunhua Dai, Amber Bradley, Katelyn Sellick, Greg Poffenberger, Katie Coate, Shristi Shrestha, Anna Marie Schornack, Taverlyn Shepard, Madushika Wimalarathne, Regina Jenkins, Keith Wilson, Wenbiao Chen, Alvin Powers, Danielle Dean*.
Supported by the Cell Imaging Shared Resource. -
Annexin A6 Modulates the Secretion of Pro-Inflammatory Cytokines and Exosomes via Interaction with SNAP23 in Triple-Negative Breast Cancer Cells. Cells.
Nobelle Sakwe* (Meharry Medical College), Heather Beasley, Antentor Hinton Jr. -
Identification of potent and selective small molecule TALK-1 inhibitors that promote β-cell function. Molecular Pharmacology.
Arya Nakhe*, Jordyn Dobson, Prasanna Dadi, Emily Days, Paige Vinson, C. David Weaver, Jerod Denton, Spencer Peachee, Soma Behera, Shannon Gibson, Valentina Rodriguez Da Silva, Amit Sela, Matthew Dickerson, David Jacobson*.
Supported by the High-Throughput Screening Facility.
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Department of Pharmacology |
Other Vanderbilt basic biomedical research |
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First or corresponding authors are identified with an *. Only Vanderbilt collaborators are listed except for first authors.
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Faculty resource: Proofig AI
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Proofig AI is your go-to platform for catching image issues like duplications, manipulations, plagiarism, and AI-generated problems. This resource is provided at no cost to primary SOMBS faculty and is part of our commitment to supporting research excellence and maintaining the highest standards of scientific integrity. Faculty can access Proofig by visiting its homepage or their OneVU dashboard.
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Papers must be submitted by email by noon on Thursdays to be included in the following week’s newsletter. Please send the paper’s URL.
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Vanderbilt University School of Medicine Basic Sciences
MRB III U-1200 465 21st Avenue South | Nashville, TN 37240 US
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