HSC Newsletter, February 19, 2004
Media/Communications · HSC Online News
In this issue: February 19, 2004

1. USF/VA study: Bone marrow cell hormone may hasten recovery from brain injury.

2. Dr. Naik recognized for contributions to India's health development.

3. In Memoriam: Tanja Zigova, PhD.

4. Florida holds first magnet nursing research conference.

5. Research Day features genome expert.

6. Dr. Ledford elected to Board of AAAAI.


USF/VA study: Bone marrow cell hormone may hasten recovery from brain injury

By Anne DeLotto Baier

A blood vessel-dilating hormone released by bone marrow stromal cells has been found in the brain — a finding that suggests the hormone may be tapped to help patients recover from stroke or other neurological injuries disrupting blood flow to the central nervous system. The hormone, known as brain natriuretic peptide, was reported for the first time by researchers at the USF and James A. Haley Veterans' Hospital in a laboratory study, results from which are published in the January 2004 issue of the journal Experimental Neurology.

"We're suggesting that transplanted bone marrow stromal cells may hasten recovery by releasing brain natriuretic peptide and other factors that improve blood flow to the brain and decrease swelling and pressure around the site of injury," said lead investigator Juan Sanchez-Ramos, MD, PhD, professor of neurology and research director at the USF Center for Aging and Brain Repair. "By helping irrigate, or restore the blood circulation to the brain, brain natriuretic factor may reduce the extent of damage from stroke or spinal cord injuries."

Researchers at USF and other institutions have demonstrated that some cells from adult bone marrow can be converted with growth factors and other agents into immature nerve cells — both in the laboratory and following transplant into animals. Furthermore, rats suffering from stroke or other traumatic brain injury recover neurological function quicker following intravenous infusions of bone marrow stromal cells. However, no one has proven that this recovery results from converted bone marrow cells directly replacing or repairing damaged neurons. A growing number of scientists, including Dr. Sanchez-Ramos, hypothesize that growth factors, cytokines and other substances secreted by bone marrow cells may play a more important role than first realized in recovery from neurological injuries.

The USF researchers identify bone marrow-derived brain natriuretic factor (BNP) as a potential candidate for treating stroke, spinal cord injury and other neurological damage. Although found in the brain, BNP belongs to a family of atrial natriuretic peptides, hormones made by the heart that exhibit powerful diuretic and blood pressure-lowering characteristics. In rat models of stroke, these atrial natriuretic peptides have been reported to decrease brain swelling or edema. Human bone marrow is capable of producing significant amounts of BNP, the USF researchers demonstrated. Bone marrow stromal cells grown in the laboratory secreted levels of BNP far exceeding the amounts normally found in circulating blood and spinal fluid.

The researchers next plan to measure the effects of BNP from bone marrow cells transplanted into rats with strokes and spinal cord injuries. Co-investigators for the study were Shijie Song, MD; Siddharth Kamath, MS; Diana Mosquera, MD; Tanja Zigova, PhD; David Vesely, MD, PhD; and Paul Sanberg, PhD, DSc.

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Dr. Naik recognized for contributions to India's health development


Eknath Naik, MD, PhD, (right) was honored for his work with USF-India CHART.

Eknath Naik, MD, PhD, of the USF College of Public Health, has been awarded the Rashtriya Vikas Ratna Gold Award from the International Integration and Growth Society in New Delhi, India. The national award is bestowed yearly on those in the public and private sectors who have significantly contributed to India's economic, health and social development.

Dr. Naik is an assistant professor of epidemiology, biostatistics and medicine and director of the USF-India Center for Health, HIV/AIDS Research and Training (CHART). He was one of 60 award recipients honored Dec. 15 at an invitation-only event in New Delhi's International Convention Center. The event received widespread media coverage in India.

Dr. Naik received the Gold Award for CHART's work in establishing a thriving HIV/AIDS education and exchange program between USF and India. The partnership has grown to encompass 39 health centers across India – the beginning of an infrastructure to help India care for people suffering from AIDS. The CHART team includes USF's Dr. Naik, Dr. John Sinnott, Dr. Sagar Galwankar, Dr. Jeffrey Nadler, and advisory chair Dr. Kiran Patel, a Tampa cardiologist and benefactor of the program.

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In Memoriam: Tanja Zigova, PhD

Tanja Zigova, PhD, an assistant professor in the College of Medicine, collapsed at a scientific meeting in Chicago Feb. 6 and died. Dr. Zigova worked with the Center for Aging and Brain Repair, and held appointments in Neurosurgery and Anatomy, as well as Pharmacology and Therapeutics.

She earned her PhD from the Institute of Neurobiology in Czechoslovakia, and her bachelor's and master's degrees from Safarik University in Czechoslovakia. She came to USF from Emory University in 1998.

Considered a rising star by many, Dr. Zigova won a USF Presidential Young Faculty Award in 2001, and was named the Jim and Amy Shimberg Scholar for her project "Cell-based therapies for neurodegenerative diseases."

She authored and co-authored 119 scientific journal articles.

She is survived by her daughter Magdelina Zigova. Memorial donations should be sent to the Tanja Zigova Memorial Fund for Young Women in Science (made out to USF Foundation and sent to MDC 70, 12901 Bruce B. Downs Blvd., Tampa, FL 33612). For more information, please contact the Center for Aging and Brain Repair at 813-974-3154.

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Florida holds first magnet nursing research conference

More than 200 nurses, administrators, and healthcare providers attended the state's first Magnet Nursing Research Conference Feb. 6 in Tampa to share their research initiatives and begin work on a collaborative research agenda. The Magnet designation by American Nurses Credentialing Center recognizes excellence in nursing services provided in an environment that supports patient care, nursing staff and interdisciplinary collaboration. Ten of the state's 12 magnet hospitals were represented at the conference.

The USF College of Nursing Continuing Education Program helped sponsor the inaugural conference, said Patricia Quigley, PhD, ARNP, CRRN, deputy director of the James A. Haley Veterans' Hospital's VISN 8 Patient Safety Center of Inquiry and an adjunct faculty member at the USF College of Nursing. The Florida Hospital Association provided social marketing and financial support.

"We're the first state in the country and the world to pull together all our current and emerging magnet hospitals, with the support of academia and a hospital association, for such a conference," Dr. Quigley said. "This was an important first step in collectively examining how we can improve health care and the practice environment, and build knowledge about the impact of magnet hospitals on patient, nursing and workforce outcomes. By working together, across different institutional settings, our research findings could have greater implications."

Three Tampa Bay area hospitals are among 103 nationwide that have earned Magnet status from the ANCC. They are James A. Haley Veterans' Hospital (the first Department of Veterans Affairs health care facility to achieve magnet status), Bayfront Medical Center, and Morton Plant Mease Hospital. The conference participants plan to build a research agenda and conduct multi-site research studies within the state's magnet hospitals. Dr. Quigley and Patricia Gorzka, PhD, ARNP, USF associate professor of nursing and coordinator of nursing continuing education, co-directed the inaugural conference. The Florida Hospital Association plans to publish abstract proceedings of the event, Dr. Quigley said.

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Research Day features genome expert

The 14th Annual HSC Research Day is Feb. 26 and features the Eighth Annual Roy H. Behnke, MD, Distinguished Lectureship at noon in the HSC Auditorium. This year's guest is Eric Green, MD, PhD, director of the Division of Intramural Research and director of the Intramural Sequencing Center of the National Human Genome Research Institute at the National Institutes of Health. His talk is titled "Beyond the Human Genome Sequence: The Future of Genomics and Its Implications For Clinical Medicine."

During his residency training in clinical pathology, Dr. Green worked in the laboratory of Dr. Maynard Olson, where he initiated a project to construct a complete physical map of human chromosome 7 within the Washington University Genome Center— one of the first funded Centers in the Human Genome Project. In 1992, he became an assistant professor of pathology and genetics as well as a co-investigator in the Human Genome Center at Washington University. In 1994, he moved his research laboratory to the Intramural Program of the National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI) at the National Institutes of Health (in Bethesda, MD).

In addition to his role as Chief of the Genome Technology Branch and director of the NIH Intramural Sequencing Center, Dr. Green was appointed to the position of scientific director of NHGRI in 2002. Dr. Green's research focuses on the mapping and sequencing of mammalian genomes and the isolation and characterization of genes causing human genetic diseases.


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Dr. Ledford elected to Board of AAAAI

Dennis Ledford, MD, professor of medicine in Division of Allergy and Immunology, Department of Internal Medicine, has been elected to the 15-member Board of Directors of the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology. He will serve a four-year term beginning March 22.

The AAAAI is the largest specialty society representing allergists and immunologists, with more than 6,000 members in the United States and abroad dedicated to advancing the knowledge and practice of allergic disease. Both Dr. Ledford and Division Director Richard Lockey, MD, are members of the Editorial Board for the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, the official peer-reviewed journal of the AAAAI.

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