
 |
Charles Abrams, MD, Medline
search 
Associate Professor of Medicine
Room 912, BRB
II/III
421 Curie Blvd.
Philadelphia, PA 19104-6160
(215) 573-3288
(215)573-7400 fax
Research:
Our laboratory is focused on phospholipid signaling in hematopoietic cells.
Ongoing projects are directed at understanding the roles of pleckstrin
and lipid kinases in platelets and leukocytes. Pleckstrin (p47) was once
solely known as an early marker of platelet activation; more recently
it has been noted to contain the prototypic Pleckstrin Homology motif.
Over the past half dozen years, work derived from our laboratory has demonstrated
that pleckstrin plays a dominant role in the reorganization of the platelet,
and lymphocyte, cytoskeleton. Furthermore, our laboratory has established
these effects are regulated by pleckstrin phosphorylation, require critical
lipid-binding residues contained with the amino-terminal Pleckstrin Homology
domain, and have implicated an effector for this process to be the small
GTP-binding protein, Rac. Additional work from our laboratory has helped
define the role of phospholipid kinases in the pathway that is initiated
by G-protein coupled, and T-cell, receptors and ultimately leads to actin
reorganization. Our studies use molecular and cellular biologic techniques
to examine blood cell biology, and involve expression mutagenesis, single
cell microinjection, genetic library screening, and murine homologous
gene targeting ("gene knock-out").
|