Biomedical Sciences (BMS) Graduate Program
Admissions | Academic Program | Faculty | Events | Campuses & Facilities | The Bay Area | BMS Intranet | Students | Home

 

back to
BMS Faculty Directory
Theodora Mauro, MD
Ionic Fluxes Control keratinocyte Adhesion, Differentiation and Secretion
Selected Publications | Complete Publications


My laboratory research has focused on defining ion channels, antiporters and Ca2+ ATP'ases which direct normal keratinocyte differentiation, adhesion, motility and secretion. Our laboratory has combined patch-clamp, ion sensitive dyes, PIXE and molecular biology approaches to study both cellular function and determine the role of these structures in human disease. Most recently, in collaboration with Dr. Ervin Epstein's laboratory, we have identified the mutation and functional consequences of a mutation in a Ca2+ ATP'ase, ATP2C1, which causes an blistering skin condition known as Hailey-Hailey disease. We also study ways to apply information gleaned from our laboratory studies to the treatment of human skin disease, including non-healing skin ulcers, bullous skin disease, and diseases of the epidermal permeability barrier, including atopic dermatitis and aged skin.

Selected Publications

Mauro T, Bench G, Sidderas-Haddad E, Feingold K, Elias PM, Cullander C: Acute barrier perturbation abolishes the Ca2+ and K+ gradients in murine epidermis: quantitative measurements using PIXE. J Invest Dermatol: 111(6):1198-201, 1998

Oda Y, Imanzahrai A, Kwong A, Komuves L, Elias PM, Largman C, Mauro T. Epithelial sodium channels are upregulated during epidermal differentiation. J Invest Dermatol: 113 (5):796-801, 1999.

Hu Z, Bonifas JM, Beech J, Bench G, Shigihara T, Ikeda S, Mauro T, Epstein E. Mutations in the Ca2+ ATP'ase ATP2C1 cause Hailey-Hailey disease. Nature Genetics 24(1):61-65, 2000.


information last updated February 2003



Copyright © University of California San Francisco | Image Credits