EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - (Page 6) 6 COVER STORY FEBRUARY 2008 CREATING THE U-M CENTER FOR ARRHYTHMIA RESEARCH Continued from cover What were your reasons for wanting to move to U-M? There are many scientific and professional reasons for wanting to move to such an excellent university. First and foremost, the idea of collaborating directly with Drs. Oral and Fred Morady, two outstanding clinical electrophysiologists, is extremely attractive. For example, one of our major objectives is to investigate the mechanisms of atrial fibrillation (AF), which is the most common cardiac arrhythmia seen in clinical practice and the major cause of stroke. Being close to a first-class clinical EP lab such as the Hakan-Morady lab gives us basic scientists the unique opportunity to team up with worldleading experts in our efforts to test directly and ethically in patients the relevance of the ideas for AF diagnosis and therapy that we generate in the experimental laboratory. Conversely, many puzzling clinical questions about AF can be addressed in the experimental lab and the predictions derived from the experiment can in turn be tested back in the clinical EP lab. In other words, combining the two teams to target the molecular, genetic and cellular causes of AF, as well as focus on patients with that condition, will empower us to move the field forward in leaps and bounds. Another reason is that the scientific environment at the University of Michigan is truly exceptional. While our primary appointments will be in the Division of Cardiology of the Department of Internal Medicine, most of us have been offered or will seek joint appointments in basic science departments such as Pharmacology and Molecular & Integrative Physiology. This will provide us with a great opportunity to establish new collaborations with outstanding basic scientists in those departments whose interests and expertise compliment ours. Moreover, access to those departments will enable us to recruit additional highly trained and motivated graduate students to work in our respective laboratories. Finally, the facilities and resources available for U-M researchers are among the most modern and complete, and the research support personnel is among the best trained in the world. Altogether, a total of 33 individuals will be moving to Ann Arbor as part of our team. Mario Delmar, MD, PhD and I have been appointed as professors with tenure and co-directors of the center. The appointments of Omer Berenfeld, PhD, Karen Vikstrom, PhD, Jerome Kalifa, PhD, and Justus Anumonwo, PhD, are as tenure track assistant professors. In addition, five non-tenure track assistant professors, Drs. Karen Maass, Sandeep Pandit, Sergey Mironov, Hassan Musa and Sharon Zlochiver will be joining us, as well as a number of postdoctoral fellows, graduate students, technicians and clerical staff. Incidentally, three of our students, Katherine Campbell, Luqia Hou and Halina Chkourko have been accepted as full-time students in the M&IP Department, while the rest will remain as SUNY students while working with us in Michigan. When will the move be complete? When will the U-M Center for Arrhythmia Research officially open? The move will start around March 15, 2008; I hope to complete it before April 1. There is no official date yet. Renovations of the space are currently undergoing. How many staff members from SUNY will move to the U-M Center for Arrhythmia Research? Who are some of the staff members that will be coming with you? For the first time, we feel confident that knowledge derived from such work can be applied in a rigorous manner to the understanding of the most common arrhythmia seen in clinical practice in human patients. Will the U-M Center for Arrhythmia Research be located in an existing building, or are there plans to build a new facility? Initially, the Center for Arrhythmia Research will be in an existing building that has been leased by U-M at a location in Ann Arbor, about 6 miles from the main campus. The reason for this was that on such a short notice it was virtually impossible to find adequate consolidated research and office space on campus for 33 people. The Dean of the Medical School has assigned for us prime space in a research building that is currently under construction very close to the Medical Center.We are scheduled to move to that location in about two years time. What new and/or ongoing research will you be bringing with you or working on at U-M? I can summarize our current work in two major areas of cardiac electrophysiology research. The first one deals with the problems of intercellular communication and impulse propagation in the heart. The second one investigates arrhythmia mechanisms in two rare but lethal inherited cardiac diseases. In the first area, the clearly defined central theme of “intercellular communication and impulse propagation” unifies four highly interactive projects that comprise one of our two NIH program project grants. The propagation of electrical impulses through the heart depends on both functional ion channels controlling the excitation of the cardiac cell and intercellular communication through open channels formed by proteins called connexins on the membranes of those cells. Cardiac dysfunction and arrhythmias are direct results of the lack of intercellular communication or altered excitation. As such, each of the projects contributes crucial information on one or more aspects to that central theme and provides compelling scientific rationale for conducting multidisciplinary research. Project 1 will study mechanisms of AF in the human heart. It, in fact, represents the culmination of many years of experience and hard experimental work leading to a better understanding of cardiac fibrillation using both mathematical and experimental animal models. For the first time, we feel confident that knowledge derived from such work can be applied in a rigorous manner to the understanding of the most common arrhythmia seen in clinical practice in human patients, i.e., atrial fibrillation. This would not be possible without the direct integration of project 1 with project 2, which addresses mechanisms of cardiac fibrillation at the molecular level, or without the daily communication between the investigators and the sharing of expertise and resources that are vital to both projects. Project 3 addresses the structural bases for the regulation of cardiac intercellular communication under physiological or pathological conditions. Closure (or not) of the intercellular channels formed by the connexin proteins in the whole heart is considered a fundamental aspect of impulse propagation. In this regard, projects 2 and 3 are by necessity highly interactive both at the experimental and theoretical levels and provide crucial thematic continuity to the program. Whereas through the years, the laboratory of Dr. Mario Delmer, Co-director of the Center for Arrhythmia Research, has developed tremendous expertise in cellular physiology, it lacks the necessary resources for the study of propagation in multicellular preparations, particularly by means of optical mapping. My laboratory, See CREATING THE U-M CENTER FOR ARRHYTHMIA RESEARCH page 8 Dr. José Jalife. Dr. Mario Delmar.
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of EP Lab Digest - February 2008 EP Lab Digest - February 2008 Creating the U-M Center for Arrhythmia Research: Interview with José Jalife, MD Texas Cardiac Arrhythmia Institute and St. David’s Medical Center Launch State-of-the-Art Training Center Contents Letter from the Editor Spotlight Interview: Caritas St. Elizabeth’s Medical Center 10-Minute Interview: Sue Deck, BS, RN, RCES Keeping Pace With a Blog Roundtable Discussion on Cryoablation Procedures Email Discussion Group: February 2008 Events Calendar Industry News and Products Classifieds Advertisers Index EP Lab Digest - February 2008 EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Texas Cardiac Arrhythmia Institute and St. David’s Medical Center Launch State-of-the-Art Training Center (Page 1) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Texas Cardiac Arrhythmia Institute and St. David’s Medical Center Launch State-of-the-Art Training Center (Page 2) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Texas Cardiac Arrhythmia Institute and St. David’s Medical Center Launch State-of-the-Art Training Center (Page BRC1) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Texas Cardiac Arrhythmia Institute and St. David’s Medical Center Launch State-of-the-Art Training Center (Page BRC2) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Contents (Page 3) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Letter from the Editor (Page 4) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Letter from the Editor (Page 5) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Letter from the Editor (Page 6) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Letter from the Editor (Page 7) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Letter from the Editor (Page 8) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Letter from the Editor (Page 9) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Letter from the Editor (Page 10) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Letter from the Editor (Page 11) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Spotlight Interview: Caritas St. Elizabeth’s Medical Center (Page 12) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Spotlight Interview: Caritas St. Elizabeth’s Medical Center (Page 13) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Spotlight Interview: Caritas St. Elizabeth’s Medical Center (Page 14) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Spotlight Interview: Caritas St. Elizabeth’s Medical Center (Page 15) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Spotlight Interview: Caritas St. Elizabeth’s Medical Center (Page 16) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Spotlight Interview: Caritas St. Elizabeth’s Medical Center (Page 17) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - 10-Minute Interview: Sue Deck, BS, RN, RCES (Page 18) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - 10-Minute Interview: Sue Deck, BS, RN, RCES (Page 19) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Keeping Pace With a Blog (Page 20) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Keeping Pace With a Blog (Page 21) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Keeping Pace With a Blog (Page 22) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Keeping Pace With a Blog (Page 23) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Roundtable Discussion on Cryoablation Procedures (Page 24) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Roundtable Discussion on Cryoablation Procedures (Page 25) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Roundtable Discussion on Cryoablation Procedures (Page 26) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Roundtable Discussion on Cryoablation Procedures (Page 27) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Roundtable Discussion on Cryoablation Procedures (Page 28) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Roundtable Discussion on Cryoablation Procedures (Page BRC3) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Roundtable Discussion on Cryoablation Procedures (Page BRC4) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Roundtable Discussion on Cryoablation Procedures (Page 29) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Roundtable Discussion on Cryoablation Procedures (Page 30) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Roundtable Discussion on Cryoablation Procedures (Page 31) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Roundtable Discussion on Cryoablation Procedures (Page 32) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Email Discussion Group: February 2008 (Page 33) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Email Discussion Group: February 2008 (Page 34) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Events Calendar (Page 35) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Events Calendar (Page 36) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Industry News and Products (Page 37) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Industry News and Products (Page 38) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Industry News and Products (Page 39) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Industry News and Products (Page 40) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Classifieds (Page 41) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Advertisers Index (Page 42) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Advertisers Index (Page 43) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Advertisers Index (Page 44) EP Lab Digest - February 2008 - Advertisers Index (Page BRC5)
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