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About us Practical matters How to find us M. (Martina) Schmidt, Prof

Research interests

My research focus on clustered signaling pathways of molecular partners in defined subcellular compartments (signalosomes) that enables cells to exert highly specialized tasks. Actually, our goal for the future is to unravel the organization of the recently discovered signaling components within functional units by biochemical, molecular, cell biological methods, genetic and omic’s. Research is embedded in the field of integrative pharmacology and translational medicine. We have directed our attention to chronic inflammatory disorders, as evidence exist for a role of our signaling components (Epac, PLD, AKAP, cofilin) in smooth muscle cells, neuronal cells, immune cells as well as cardiomyocytes. Many devastating diseases, e.g. cancer, type-II diabetes mellitus, Alzheimers’s dementia, cardiovascular and airway diseases (heart failure, cardiac arrhythmia, developmental defects, asthma and COPD), and infection diseases are associated with defective or derailed signaling processes, and research into the control of these processes clearly is of great public and social importance as well. My research group integrates in vivo, ex vivo translational pharmacology, molecular (cell) biology. Novel techniques like microfluidics, precision cut lung slices and others.

 

Publications

Regulation of calcium signaling prevents neuronal death mediated by NIST DEP in xenoferroptotic cell death conditions

Targeting Epac2 and GluA3-containing AMPARs: a novel therapeutic strategy for Alzheimer’s disease

Analysis of Adverse Reactions Associated with the Use of Crataegus-Containing Herbal Products

Diesel exhaust particles alter mitochondrial bioenergetics and cAMP producing capacity in human bronchial epithelial cells

Dropout from exercise trials among cancer survivors: An individual patient data meta-analysis from the POLARIS study

Effects of Sodium Nitroprusside on Lipopolysaccharide-Induced Inflammation and Disruption of Blood–Brain Barrier

Effects of the P2X4 receptor antagonist BR11595 in a guinea pig model of chronic asthma

Novel crosstalk mechanisms between GluA3 and Epac2 in synaptic plasticity and memory in Alzheimer's disease

Novel SK channel positive modulators prevent ferroptosis and excitotoxicity in neuronal cells

Progression of brain cell death by pollutants: Focus on ferroptosis, Epac1, soluble adenylyl cyclase, PDE1, PDE3, and PDE4