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SHIP1 deficiency in IBD. Sandra Fernandes 1 , James C. Ryan 2 , William G. Kerr 1 1 SUNY-Upstate Medical University, Syracuse, NY 2 UCSF/SFVA, San Francisco, CA Friday, December 13, 2013. DISCLOSURES. Nothing to disclose. SHIP1 and PI3K / Akt pathway. Fernandes & al., 2013.
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SHIP1 deficiency in IBD Sandra Fernandes1, James C. Ryan2, William G. Kerr1 1SUNY-Upstate Medical University, Syracuse, NY 2UCSF/SFVA, San Francisco, CA Friday, December 13, 2013
DISCLOSURES • Nothing to disclose
SHIP1 and PI3K/Akt pathway Fernandes& al., 2013
SHIP-/- mice Germline SHIP1-deficiency cause fatal eosinophilic pneumonia and Crohn’s-like ileitis in mice For more on SHIP1 and mucosal inflammation in mouse model, please visit poster P-188 Kerr & al., GUT, 2011
Western Blotting SHIP1 : P1C1 + goat anti-mouse HRP, Actin : C-19 + donkey anti-goat HRP, Santa Cruz Biotechnologies
Protein degradation or translation inhibition? Modified from Grabbe & al. 2011 Ameres & Zamore, 2013
Take home message • SHIP1-deficiency is found in 10/47 samples (>20% of samples) • Both CD and UC • SHIP1-deficiency is stable over months • No correlation to treatments at time of sampling or to other clinical parameters • No reduction in SHIP1 mRNA levels • Translational or post-translational
Acknowledgments • William Kerr • James Ryan and his team at UCSF/SFVA • NeetuSrivastava • Raki Sudan • Bonnie Toms • Robert Brooks • Matt Gumbleton • Sonia Iyer • SudhaNeelam • Christie Youngs • Katie Miller • Scott Stegemann • Summer students • CCFA (Senior Research Award to WGK) • NIH • Paige Arnold Butterfly Run • Carol M. Baldwin Foundation