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Search Results to Rosalia Simmen

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One or more keywords matched the following properties of Simmen, Rosalia

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overview I am Full Professor, Department of Physiology & Biophysics and Faculty Affiliate in the Winthrop P Rockefeller Cancer Institute Breast Cancer Program. I have been conducting basic and translational research in hormone-related aspects of women’s diseases for the last 30 years. I have a broad background in molecular, cellular and developmental biology, with specific training and expertise in steroid hormone receptors, signaling pathways, and tumor biology. As PI or Co-I on numerous university, Department of Defense, USDA and NIH-funded grants over the span of my independent academic career, I have collaborated with many groups of scientists to study the mechanistic underpinnings of steroid hormone receptors and associated co-regulators in the biology and pathobiology of the female reproductive tract. Our studies were the first to identify the Sp-related transcription factors Kruppel-like (KLF) family members KLF 9 and KLF13, as novel regulators of steroid receptor signaling in vivo and in vitro and to delineate their mechanisms of gene activation in concert with progesterone receptor and estrogen receptor, in endometrial and myometrial cells. These studies have provided strong support for the involvement of these and other KLFs in human uterine pathologies (endometriosis, endometrial cancer, and prolonged labor). In recent years, my research has established the infrastructure for elucidating the pathogenesis of endometriosis. In particular, we have developed an immunocompetent mouse model of endometriosis and have fortified our collaborations with clinicians within and outside of UAMS to provide medical translational relevance to our basic research on endometriosis. My research program in mammary biology aims to understand how early exposure to a favorable ‘nutritional’ milieu influences neonatal/perinatal mammary development to promote molecular events favoring increased tissue differentiation and increase resistance to genetic and epigenetic changes that drive breast cancer. My group is one of the first to demonstrate that specific dietary factors regulate mammary tumor risk by targeting oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes in mammary epithelial populations with tumor initiating potential. We have found that a major target of dietary factors is the tumor suppressor PTEN via cross-talk with insulin and p53 signaling. My team also showed that very early developmental events in utero can alter mammary gland biology in female progeny to increase predisposition to tumor risk. Our research aims to mechanistically evaluate the epigenome and the metabolome as regulatory nexus by which the maternal environment controls breast cancer risk in progeny.

One or more keywords matched the following items that are connected to Simmen, Rosalia

Item TypeName
Academic Article Subfertility, uterine hypoplasia, and partial progesterone resistance in mice lacking the Kruppel-like factor 9/basic transcription element-binding protein-1 (Bteb1) gene.
Academic Article Inhibition of NMU-induced mammary tumorigenesis by dietary soy.
Academic Article Selective interactions of Kruppel-like factor 9/basic transcription element-binding protein with progesterone receptor isoforms A and B determine transcriptional activity of progesterone-responsive genes in endometrial epithelial cells.
Academic Article Kruppel-like factor 9 is a negative regulator of ligand-dependent estrogen receptor alpha signaling in Ishikawa endometrial adenocarcinoma cells.
Academic Article Null mutation of Kruppel-like factor9/basic transcription element binding protein-1 alters peri-implantation uterine development in mice.
Academic Article Progesterone receptor transactivation of the secretory leukocyte protease inhibitor gene in Ishikawa endometrial epithelial cells involves recruitment of Kr?ppel-like factor 9/basic transcription element binding protein-1.
Academic Article Delayed parturition and altered myometrial progesterone receptor isoform A expression in mice null for Kr?ppel-like factor 9.
Academic Article Enhanced mammary progesterone receptor-A isoform activity in the promotion of mammary tumor progression by dietary soy in rats.
Academic Article Kr?ppel-like factor 9 and progesterone receptor coregulation of decidualizing endometrial stromal cells: implications for the pathogenesis of endometriosis.
Academic Article Direct interaction of the Kr?ppel-like family (KLF) member, BTEB1, and PR mediates progesterone-responsive gene expression in endometrial epithelial cells.
Concept Receptors, Progesterone
Academic Article Prolonged pregnancy in women is associated with myometrial expression of progesterone receptor co-regulator Kruppel-like factor 9
Academic Article Enhanced mammary progesterone receptor isoform activity in the promotion of mammary tumor progression by dietary soy in rats
Academic Article Delayed parturition and altered myometrial progesterone receptor isoform A expression in mice mull for Kruppel-like factor 9
Academic Article Expression of estrogen receptor (ER)-alpha and beta and progesterone receptor (PR) by porcine embryos suggests potential autocrine functions in development
Academic Article Delayed parturition and altered myometrial progesterone receptor isoform A expression in mice null for Kruppel-like factor 9
Academic Article Krüppel-like factor 9 and progesterone receptor co-regulation of decidualizing stromal cells: implications for the pathogenesis of endometriosis
Academic Article Induction of progesterone receptor isoform expression by Kruppel-like factor 9/basic transcription element binding protein 1 in the myometrium is associated with labor onset in mice
Academic Article Progesterone receptors and Sp/Kruppel-like family members in the uterine endometrium
Academic Article Direct interaction of the Kruppel-like Family (KLF) member, BTEB1 and Progesterone receptor mediates progesterone-responsive gene expression in endometrial epithelial cells
Academic Article Functional interactions of progesterone receptor and nonconcensus progesterone response elements in the control of uteroferrin gene transcription in the endometrium
Academic Article Enhanced progesterone receptor A expression by dietary soy in a hormone-dependent (NMU) model of rat mammary carcinogenesis: implications for tumor progression
Academic Article Progesterone receptor transactivation of the secretory leukocyte protease inhibitor gene in Ishikawa endometrial epithelial cells involves recruitment of Kruppel-like factor 9/basic transcription element binding protein-1
Academic Article Prolonged pregnancy in women is associated with attenuated myometrial expression of progesterone receptor co-regulator Kr?ppel-like Factor 9.
Academic Article Kr?ppel-Like Factor 13 Deficiency in Uterine Endometrial Cells Contributes to Defective Steroid Hormone Receptor Signaling but Not Lesion Establishment in a Mouse Model of Endometriosis.
Academic Article Notch-1 Signaling Activation and Progesterone Receptor Expression in Ectopic Lesions of Women With Endometriosis.
Grant Uteroferrin gene expression during development
Academic Article Metformin Promotes Anti-tumor Biomarkers in Human Endometrial Cancer Cells.
Academic Article Metformin regulation of progesterone receptor isoform-B expression in human endometrial cancer cells is glucose-dependent.

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  • Receptors Progesterone