Greenberg lab presents at ASCB 2021

The Greenberg lab had 2 posters as ASCB 2021: Dr. Samantha Barrick presented a poster: A Troponin T Variant Linked with Pediatric Dilated Cardiomyopathy Decreases Cardiac Contractility by Reducing the Coupling of Thin Filament Activation to Myosin and Calcium Binding And Michael Greenberg presented: Utilizing Multiscale Models of a Dilated Cardiomyopathy Mutation for Precision Medicine, which included collaborative work from the Lavine lab.
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New Greenberg lab publication on pediatric dilated cardiomyopathy from Dr. Barrick

New publication from the Greenberg lab is now online at the Molecular Biology of the Cell (here).  This work, led by first author Dr. Samantha Barrick, examines a variant in troponin T associated with pediatric onset dilated cardiomyopathy. We show that this variant causes molecular and cellular alterations consistent with those seen in known pathogenic variants. We show that the molecular mechanism driving the early disease pathogenesis is reduced coupling between calcium binding to troponin C and thin filament activation. This in turn leads to changes in cellular contractility and sarcomeric organization.
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New Greenberg lab publication on the molecular and cellular basis of a hypertrophic cardiomyopathy mutation

Our new publication determined the initial molecular insult driving the disease pathogenesis in a hypertrophic cardiomyopathy mutant and how the insult drives the activation of downstream adaptive pathways. This is a collaboration with Jeanne Nerbonne's lab. The paper can be found here. Congratulations to Sarah, Paige, David, Lina, Tom, Eve, and Jeanne.
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