User:Orsolya Kiraly: Difference between revisions

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==Publications==
==Publications==
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===Research papers===
===Research papers===
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Nemoda Z, Kiraly O, Barta C, Sasvari-Szekely M. '''Pharmacogenetic Aspects of Dopaminergic Neurotransmission-Related Gene Polymorphisms.''' In: Darvas F, Guttman A, Dormán G (Eds): Chemical Genomics, Marcel Dekker Inc., New York, 2003, pp. 275-313.
Nemoda Z, Kiraly O, Barta C, Sasvari-Szekely M. '''Pharmacogenetic Aspects of Dopaminergic Neurotransmission-Related Gene Polymorphisms.''' In: Darvas F, Guttman A, Dormán G (Eds): Chemical Genomics, Marcel Dekker Inc., New York, 2003, pp. 275-313.


==Teaching==
==Teaching==

Revision as of 10:15, 28 September 2013

Contact Info

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Education

Research interests

My current work is about genome rearrangements (large-scale mutations), which can lead to cancer

I received my PhD for work on how mutations in pancreatic trypsin inhibitor cause inflammation. In the Engelward Lab, my work is aimed at genome rearrangements in the pancreas in vivo.

Genome rearrangements are a hallmark of cancer cells. They can be deletions, inversions or duplications that can drive cancer by activating oncogenes or inactivating tumor suppressor genes. Rearrangements can form by homologous recombination (HR), which is an important DNA repair/tolerance mechanism but can lead to genetic changes.

Using a transgenic reporter mouse, we have found that the formation of HR-driven rearrangements is governed by an interplay of genes, environment and tissue physiology. This is an example of gene-environment interactions and may be used to identify people with a higher risk for cancer. Further, we found that inflammation, a major cancer risk factor, induces HR-driven rearrangements through increasing both DNA damage and regenerative proliferation.

These findings have led to the generation of an advanced reporter mouse for use in ongoing studies on HR-driven genetic changes, and a collaborative project at SMART developing mitigators of inflammation-induced tissue injury.

Past projects

Functional effects of sequence variants in promoters, introns, and protein-coding regions

  • In the laboratory of Miklos Sahin-Toth at Boston University, I determined the functional effects of patient-derived mutations in SPINK1, the pancreatic secretory trypsin inhibitor. Inhibition of trypsin activity by SPINK1 is important because trypsin activity can result in the activation of other digestive enzymes in a cascade reaction, which can lead to cell damage and pancreatic inflammation. We found that signal peptide mutations abolish the secretion of SPINK1 into pancreatic juice, and coding region mutations cause misfolding of the protein which is then degraded intracellularly and is not secreted. In patients with these mutations, spontaneously activated trypsin is thus not inhibited by SPINK1, eventually resulting in autodigestion and inflammation.


Publications

Research papers

See them on PubMed

Citation Index on Google Scholar

Book chapters

Kiraly O, Guan L, Sahin-Toth M. Expression of Recombinant Proteins with Uniform N-Termini. In: Ming-Qun X, Evans T (Eds): Heterologous Protein Expression in E. coli, Methods in Molecular Biology 705, Springer, Berlin, 2011, pp. 175-194.

Nemoda Z, Kiraly O, Barta C, Sasvari-Szekely M. Pharmacogenetic Aspects of Dopaminergic Neurotransmission-Related Gene Polymorphisms. In: Darvas F, Guttman A, Dormán G (Eds): Chemical Genomics, Marcel Dekker Inc., New York, 2003, pp. 275-313.

Teaching

File:MIT cab.jpg


Bookmarks

Laboratory tools and resources

Just another lab door at Brookhaven National Lab

Useful links

Good books

Books in Central Square, Cambridge
  • The Suffering Gene is a very readable book about the various environmental exposures that can damage DNA
  • At the End of an Age by historian John Lukacs is not a scientific book, but it contains a deeply informed reflection on the nature of historical and scientific knowledge. Read a shorter essay on this here

Miscellaneous