Alfredo C. Criollo, Ph.D.

Sections

Alfredo C. Criollo, Ph.D.
Alfredo Criollo
Title
Assistant Professor
Department
Department of Basic and Communitarian Sciences
Institution
University of Chile
Address
943 Sergio Livingstone Pohlhammer
Independencia
City, ZIP
Santiago de Chile, 8380-492
Country
Chile
Phone
(214) 600-1413
Email
[email protected]
Website
http://jahlab.utsouthwestern.edu/index.shtml
Research field
Cell Biology
Award year
2012
Country of origin
Peru
Mentor name
Dr. Joseph A. Hill

Research

Cardiovascular diseases are the leading cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. In response to hypertension and stress, the heart develops a strong pathological hypertrophic growth, which offsets cardiac wall stress pointing towards heart failure. We and others have demonstrated that the activation of autophagy, a highly conserved lysosomal-mediated process of protein and organelle recycling, is required for the manifestation of hypertrophy. Nevertheless, the mechanism by which autophagy is activated during hypertrophy is not understood. The primary cilium is a protuberant membrane structure located at the surface of the cell membrane, which, in response to changes in the fluid flow or pressure can “bend” activating intracellular pathways, depending on cell type, tissue and stimuli. We propose that the “primary cilium” is a key player in the mechanotransduction of signals in the heart during pressure overload stress. The mechanosensory function of primary cilia in renal, nodal, and endothelial cells, as well as in embryonic heart, is mediated principally by polycystin-1 (PKD1) and polycystin-2 (PKD2) which are the products of the PKD genes. Reports have shown that mutations and dysfunction in PKD2 can trigger polycystic kidney disease, cardiovascular abnormalities, hypertension, intracranial aneurysms and left-right asymmetry aberrations. Evidence regarding the presence and function of the cilia in the heart is poor. Furthermore, the role of cilia and its functional protein PKD2 in the regulation of pathological hypertrophy and autophagy is completely unknown. Our work will determine how the cilia sense the overload stress in the heart and will investigate how autophagy can be regulated by cilia during hypertrophy. Our aim is that this work will provide promising new avenues for the prevention and treatment of heart disease.

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