Cellular and Molecular Pathology (CMP)
Graduate Training Program
 

Faculty and Their Research Interests

   Faculty Index

  BulletDr. Badylak
  BulletDr. Barak
  BulletDr. Becich
  BulletDr. D. Becker
  BulletDr. J. Becker
  BulletDr. Billiar
  BulletDr. Blair
  BulletDr. Bostwick
  BulletDr. Bostwick
  BulletDr. Chaillet
  BulletDr. Chang
  BulletDr. Chen
  BulletDr. Cheng
  BulletDr. Chu
  BulletDr. Clemens
  BulletDr. DeFrances
  BulletDr. Demetris
  BulletDr. Dong
  BulletDr. Donnenberg
  BulletDr. Fox
  BulletDr. Gandhi
  BulletDr. Giannoukakis
  BulletDr. Gnarra
  BulletDr. Grandis
  BulletDr. Hackam
  BulletDr. Hebda
  BulletDr. Huard
  BulletDr. Kaminski
  BulletDr. Klunk
  BulletDr. Kulich
  BulletDr. Lagasse
  BulletDr. Youhua Liu
  BulletDr. Lokshin
  BulletDr. Luo
  BulletDr. Mars
  BulletDr. Marra
  BulletDr. Michalopoulos
  BulletDr. Monga
  BulletDr. Nikiforov
  BulletDr. O'Keefe
  BulletDr. Oltvai
  BulletDr. Oury
  BulletDr. Pandrea
  BulletDr. Piganelli
  BulletDr. Robinson
  BulletDr. Rubin
  BulletDr. Siegfried
  BulletDr. Shapiro
  BulletDr. Stolz
  BulletDr. Strom
  BulletDr. Surti
  BulletDr. Tamama
  BulletDr. Tillman
  BulletDr. Vodovotz
  BulletDr. Vorp
  BulletDr. Wang
  BulletDr. Wells
  BulletDr. Wenzel
  BulletDr. Wiley
  BulletDr. Wu, C
  BulletDr. Yu
  BulletDr. Zarnegar


V-line
Yaacov Barak, Ph.D.
Associate Professor
PhD, The Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel, 1994
Email: baraky@mwri.magee.edu






Research Interest:

Dr. Barak's broad research themes are the placenta and adipose tissue. His lab has a particular interest in the developmental functions of the nuclear hormone receptors PPARgamma and PPARdelta - two key therapeutic targets in metabolic diseases, which also regulate distinct aspects of placental development and metabolism. Projects in the lab investigate the developmental and metabolic functions of both receptors in the placenta as well as the diverse functions of PPARgamma in the life cycle of adipocytes (fat cells), including differentiation, death and regeneration. The research methodology integrates a wide array of gene knockouts and knockins, histological, physiological and molecular phenotyping, studies of stem and progenitor cells, as well as permanent cell lines of both tissues and screens for target genes of both receptors.

Findings facilitated by these approaches have been spawning, in turn, downstream studies that are available as potential thesis projects for interested students. Broad project categories include:

  1. Functional analysis of PPARgamma and PPARdelta target genes in the placenta.
  2. Dissection of the integrated transcriptional regulation of prototypic target genes by PPARs and the associated network of transcription factors and cofactors.
  3. The roles of PPARgamma in the adipocyte life cycle: progenitor cells, adipogenesis, adipocyte death, regeneration and mechanisms of adipose tissue diseases, such as lipodystrophy and obesity/type II diabetes.
Key Publications

Barak Y, Sadovsky Y, Shalom-Barak T. 2008. PPAR signaling in placental development and function. PPAR Res. 2008:142082.

Kim S, Huang L-W, Snow KJ, Ablamunits V, Hasham MG, Young TH, Paulk AC, Richardson JE, Affourtit J, Shalom-Barak T, Bult CJ, Barak Y. 2007. A mouse model of conditional lipodystrophy. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 104:16627-16632.

Barak Y, Kim S. 2007. Genetic manipulations of PPARs: Effects on obesity and metabolic disease. PPAR Res, Vol. 2007:12781.

Shalom-Barak T, Nicholas JM, Wang Y, Zhang X, Ong ES, Young TH, Gendler SJ, Evans RM, Barak Y. 2004. PPARgamma controls Muc1 transcription in trophoblasts. Mol Cell Biol 24:10661-10669.

He W, Barak Y, Hevener A, Olson P, Liao D, Le J, Nelson M, Ong, E, Olefsky JM, Evans RM. 2003. Adipose-specific peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma knockout causes insulin resistance in fat and liver, but not in muscle. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 100:15712-15717.

Barak Y, Liao D, He W, Ong ES, Nelson MC, Olefsky JM, Boland R, Evans RM. 2002. Effects of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor delta on placentation, adiposity, and colorectal cancer. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 99:303-308.

Barak Y, Nelson MC, Ong ES, Jones YZ, Ruiz-Lozano P, Koder A, Chien KR, Evans RM. 1999. PPARgamma is required for placental, cardiac, and adipose tissue development. Mol Cell 4:585-595.



 

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