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The Institute for Immunity, Transplantation and Infection at Stanford. In order to fulfill the mission of the ITI, the following goals were set : (1) To help recruit faculty whose interests are in ITI based diseases, and whose research is aimed toward moving discoveries from the bench to
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The Institute for Immunity, Transplantation and Infection at Stanford
In order to fulfill the mission of the ITI, the following goals were set: (1) To help recruit facultywhose interests are in ITI based diseases, and whose research is aimed toward moving discoveries from the bench to bedside or bedside to bench. To develop and fund young clinical facultyin the area of clinical trial development and technology transfer in order to both understand the pathophysiology as well as the treatment of ITI based diseases. To establish a Postdoctoral Fellowship Program for MD or MD PhD fellows who will do a project either in basic research aimed toward pre-clinical models or clinical trials.
Continued; Goals of the ITI To establish new interactions among the ITI faculty through seminars, retreats and educational initiatives (5)* To support high school summer students who will spend at least eight weeks studying in a lab oriented toward ITI based disease pathophysiology or therapy. (established; Dr P.J. Utz, Director) (6)* To develop an “Immune Monitoring Unit.” This unit will allow innovative techniques in monitoring the immune system developed at Stanford and elsewhere to be applied to patient care. (7)* To Develop Innovative Curriculum, a new program has been developed to teach clinical approaches to PhD students from multiple disciplines.
A “Clinical Immunology” Summer School for High School Students P.J. Utz, M.D.
Summer Student Model • Background: • Initiated in summer 2000 with 10 students • Funded by donors and the NCAF • Expanded to 25 students in 2001 - 2004 • ~15, 42, 141, and 193 applications • 2003 statistics: Mean GPA 4.06, SAT 1363, • s3 valedictorians, 10 #1 in class • Students from public and private schools • 80% women
Goals for High School and Undergraduate Program: • Interest students in careers in biomedical research • Improve teaching skills of graduate students and • postdoctoral fellows • Encourage interactions among faculty members • Community outreach • University • Medical School • Industry
Existing MODEL • Program: • Lab selection by student from faculty • 15 lectures on basic immunology • 300 page syllabus with assigned reading • Lectures by individual faculty • Lectures on poster assembly and presentation • Intensive research experience • Poster presentation • Longitudinal study of “program graduates” is ongoing
This model has been exported nationally to • 10 of 30 FOCIS Centers of Excellence: • Centralized educational materials • Syllabus • PowerPoint lectures • All administrative materials • Advertisements • Application forms • Letters of acceptance/rejection/waitlist • Organizational materials • Lecture schedules • Public relations materials • Information for participating mentors/labs
Immune Monitoring Core at Stanford Needed to support new therapies and innovative trials. • Current facilities are in multiple labs • A centralized facility will provide better patient care • Advantages of proposed immune monitoring core • Provide a resource to the “community” • Designed to allow novel techniques in genomics and proteomics to be integrated as information based medicine by new “bioinformatics” technology • Substantial opportunity currently exists to build on existing expertise in research and to increase both clinical investigation and delivery of novel therapies.
Potentially Useful Multiplex Proteomics Assays: • FACS/Phospho FACS • Autoantibody Profiling • Cytokine Profiling • Bead-Based • Cleavable Tags • Planar Arrays • Signaling Molecule Assays • FACS-Based Techniques • Planar Capture Arrays • Cleavable Tags • Lysate Arrays • Serum Proteome Analysis by Mass Spectroscopy
Activated vs Static Signaling Proteomics in Autoimmunity. Garry P. Nolan, Ph.D. Stanford University Dept. of Microbiology & Immunology Signaling Phenotypes in single immune cells
Revealing Lupus (SLE) Immune Deficiencies requires stimulation of cells SLE prone animals were given a “drug” iv and isolated cells assayed before and following activation ex vivo T cells Autoimmune Normal Peter Krutzik Matt Hale
Proteomic Assays P.J. Utz, M.D. and Bill Robinson, MD. Ph.D. Stanford University
Produce arrays using a robotic microarrayer
Details of Current Arrays: • Coated Glass Slides • 150 Slides Per Print Run • Approximately 4,000-5,000 Spots/Features Per Slide • Features are Duplicated • 200uM Feature, 200pg Antigen • Protein, Peptide, Nucleic Acid, RNP, Complex • Monoclonal Antibody or Complex Mixtures • 30ul Volume • Fluorescent Detection (Cy3, Cy5, BoDipy) • Secondary Antibody vs Competition • Sensitive and Specific
Potential Applications: • Multiplex Diagnostic Test • Epitope Spreading • Follow Response to Therapy • Guide Selection of Therapy • Discovery Tool
Reverse Phase Protein Lysate Microarrays P.J. Utz, M.D.
In Vitro Studies Using Lysate Arrays: • Analysis of Rare Cell Populations • FACS-Sorted Cells • Laser Capture Microdissection • Antigen-Specific Cells (e.g., Tetramers) • Correlation With Transcript Profiling (genomics) Experiments
MHC-Cytokine Arrays Secondary cytokine Detection antibody Conjugated to a flurophore Co-spotted Cytokine Capture antibody Cytokine secreted by T cell after recognition of Peptide/MHC
aCD8 Co-Spots MART1/A2 Co-Spots MART1/A2 brightfield aCD8 brightfield
Functional T Cell Responses to Peptide Vaccines Key # of Blocks Denotes gp100 Specific Activity
What is now possible • Identifying disease subsets by proteomic signatures • Correlating proteomic signatures with clinical or therapy induced outcome in disease • DIRECT build-out of patient-specific proteomic maps and mechanistic inferences • Observation of rare subsets that would be missed by all other signaling analyses (mass spec, chromatography, elisa, bead)
Introduction to Medicine for PhD studentsImmunology 230 How to learn about a disease using a prototype (diabetes) Betsy Mellins MD
Course Goals • Understand how medical knowledge is organized • Appreciate the concerns and tools of the various scientific fields and clinical disciplines within medicine • Identify quality sources of medical information • Gain some familiarity with medical language • Learn specific information about human physiology and pathophysiology • Identify opportunities to apply your primary discipline to unsolved medical problems
Focus on one disease • This models the situation that may be confronted in the future • The idea is that a guided learning experience about one disease will teach skills that can be applied to learning about other diseases Focus on Diabetes • Multi-system disorder: Many branches of medicine needed to understand it • Relatively common • Partially understood: many ?s that will draw on your expertise
Projects Project goals • To work in inter-disciplinary teams on a medical problem that draws on each student’s primary expertise • To practice learning about medicine in the context of a focused effort to solve a problem • To demonstrate your acquisition of medical knowledge in the project report Project teams • 3-4 students from different disciplines with a “coach” who is a graduate of last year’s course
Design of Human Microarray Experiment for Identifying Genes Associated with Insulin Resistance Presented by Su-In Lee, Mechanical Engineering & Kevin Pan, Biophysics
“Our Commitment to medical research and education and their role in serving the public go to the very core of what the University is about.” John Hennessy, President