VCCBH News


Hearts and Minds: Symposium Spotlights Cardiovascular-Brain Research

June 20, 2023 by Janet Essman Franz

The Vermont Center for Cardiovascular and Brain Health supports research by early-career scientists who are investigating the mysteries of the heart-brain connection. The researchers are sharing their findings at a symposium on June 15-16 at UVM’s Davis Center.

Osama Harraz holds a three-dimensional model of the Piezo1 protein, which senses frictional forces as blood moves through brain blood vessels.

The cardiovascular system and brain seem to work independently of each other, but growing evidence shows they are critically intertwined. Blood flowing through the body’s network of blood vessels nourishes and cleanses the brain, and factors that damage the heart or blood vessels can injure the brain and increase risks for developing dementia through Alzheimer’s and small vessel diseases of the brain.

In a state-of-the-art biomedical research center at the University of Vermont, a cadre of early career scientists is investigating the mysteries of the heart-brain connection. The researchers — experts in medicine, epidemiology, chemistry, pharmacology, molecular physiology, biophysics, rehabilitation and movement science, and more — shared their findings at the Vermont Center for Cardiovascular and Brain Health (VCCBH) symposium on June 15–16 at UVM’s Davis Center.

Established in 2020 with a $12 million, five-year National Institutes of Health Center of Biomedical Research Excellence (COBRE) grant, the projects cover a multitude of heart- and brain-health issues, including impacts of cardiovascular disease on brain motor function, brain blood flow, and cognitive decline. The VCCBH funding supports the work of researchers with labs in UVM's newly completed Firestone Medical Research Building and across the campus.

A unique aspect of the VCCBH is its emphasis on team-based, interdisciplinary mentorship from senior mentors and peer mentors. This structure also fosters a pipeline of 27 investigators who can replace project directors as they “graduate” from the center and establish their own, independent labs. Co-led by Mark Nelson, Ph.D., University Distinguished Professor and chair of pharmacology, and Mary Cushman, M.D., M.Sc., University Distinguished Professor and a vice chair of medicine, the goal of the center is to expand UVM’s research capacity and support early career investigators exploring cardiovascular and brain health.

“We support young investigators with pilot awards so that they grow the research mission with new grants, attract new students and postdoctoral fellows, and do cutting-edge research here in Vermont,” Nelson said. “We are developing the next generation of world-class researchers on major scientific and health issues. This is good for UVM, for the medical center, and for the community.”

The symposium provided a forum for the researchers to share their work with colleagues and to inspire promising young scientists. “It’s a showcase of the outstanding research being done at UVM on cardiovascular and brain health, with a focus on the next generation of researchers,” said Nelson. “Young people thinking about going into medicine, research, or the corporate world can see what’s going on here.”

Among the work presented was a project conducted by Osama Harraz, Ph.D., assistant professor of pharmacology, whose research focuses on the control of cerebral blood flow and vascular signaling. His presentation, titled “May the Force Be With You: Piezo1 and Cerebral Blood Flow Regulation,” will highlight the role of Piezo1, a protein that lives on the membranes of cells lining the blood vessels, in brain blood flow control. Named for the Greek word for “pressure,” Piezo1 is a receptor for frictional forces as the blood moves through the brain vasculature. Harraz collaborates with Ardem Patapoutian, Ph.D., a professor of neuroscience at Scripps Research and winner of the 2021 Nobel Prize in Medicine for the discovery of Piezo channel proteins. Harraz is interested in genetic mutations of Piezo1, especially among aging people of African descent. 

“One in three African Americans has a mutation of Piezo1, and African Americans have the highest prevalence of hypertension and cardiovascular disease. It makes us wonder if there’s a connection and a therapeutic approach that we can take to prevent disease,” Harraz said.

Harraz recently received a new, $2.9 million grant from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute to study Piezo1 in health and hypertension, which allows him to “graduate” from VCCBH and further establish his research program. He is currently recruiting junior investigators and lab personnel to join his team, which also studies Alzheimer’s disease with funding from the National Institute on Aging.

“I will run an independent lab at UVM – it’s such a great environment, and a collegial group of researchers,” said Harraz, adding that the VCCBH provides “a way for researchers with different backgrounds and interests to work together with a multidisciplinary approach, toward a common goal.”

Pilot grant recipients presenting their projects included Mansour Gergi, M.D., assistant professor of medicine and UVM Cancer Center member, who discussed cardiovascular care in cancer patients. The grant supports Gergi’s research evaluating risks for bleeding and clot formation in cancer patients with cardiovascular disease. “The funding from VCCBH provides me with protected time from clinical responsibilities, so I am able to conduct my research, evaluating whether a cancer diagnosis affects the decision of clinicians to continue blood thinners for cardiovascular indications,” Gergi said.

Pilot grant recipient, Matthew Caporizzo, Ph.D., assistant professor of molecular physiology and biophysics, presented his research investigating the molecular system that regulates diastolic function, the part of the heartbeat where the heart muscle relaxes and expands to fill with blood. Nearly all heart failure patients have some form of diastolic dysfunction, Caporizzo said.

“Our lab uses advanced techniques to characterize the stiffening of diseased hearts and determine the molecules responsible for stiffening in heart disease,” he said. “The VCCBH has been instrumental in helping me develop a new technique to relate changes in the heart's molecular structure to its relaxation and filling performance. … We are excited to test efficacy of new therapeutic approaches.”

Ten pipeline investigators presented their research in eight-minute “Flash Talks.” These included a project by Debora Kamin Mukaz, Ph.D., on “Residential Segregation and Risk of Hypertension in a Biracial Cohort.” Residential segregation refers to the geospatial manifestation of structural racism, or the separation of people into different living areas based on race or ethnicity. A postdoctoral fellow in the Department of Medicine, Mukaz explores links between residential segregation and unfavorable levels of biomarkers for inflammation and coagulation. These biomarkers may indicate hypertension, which is more likely among Black people than white people in the U.S. This research can inform changes that lead to better prevention measures, she said. “It’s a matter of justice. Ultimately, the goal is better policies to eliminate disparities in hypertension.”

The importance of diversity and inclusion in drug clinical trials was the topic of a keynote address by UVM alumnus Andra S. Stevenson, Ph.D.'01, M.P.H., a UVM undergraduate and doctoral alumnus and senior director of global medical affairs for Merck & Co., Inc.

“Lack of data from diverse populations may lead to overlooked differences. I want drugs I’m developing to work on everyone, but they may not. Research has found that some sex, race, and social determinants of health may contribute to outcomes,” Stevenson told the gathered crowd.

A science keynote address by David E. Clapham, M.D., Ph.D., group leader at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute Janelia Research Campus and professor of cardiovascular research and professor emeritus of neurobiology at Harvard Medical School, will highlight the function of smooth muscle, which regulates blood vessel tone and blood flow in the heart.

The symposium also included three poster sessions and a reception at the ECHO, Leahy Center for Lake Champlain in Burlington. 

Learn more about the Vermont Center for Cardiovascular and Brain Health.

View Vermont media coverage of the VCCBH symposium on NBC5.



Recent Stories and Publications Featuring VCCBH Members


Larner College of Medicine Dean's Newsletter, Accolades and Accomplishments

Posted October 23, 2024

In a recent paper published in Nature Communications titled “Endothelial Piezo1 Channel Mediates Mechano-Feedback Control of Brain Blood Flow,” Osama Harraz, Ph.D., Bloomfield Early Career Professor in Cardiovascular Research and assistant professor of pharmacology at the Robert Larner, M.D. College of Medicine, and his team of researchers from American and European institutions reveal that Piezo1, a lesser-understood protein, acts as a “brake” system, helping blood flow return to normal after neural activity.

The association of leptin and incident hypertension in the reasons for geographic and racial differences in stroke (REGARDS) cohort

Posted October 23, 2024

Leptin is an adipokine associated with obesity and with hypertension in animal models. Whether leptin is associated with hypertension independent of obesity is unclear. Relative to White adults, Black adults have higher circulating leptin concentration.

Assessing prenatal and early childhood social and environmental determinants of health in the HEALthy Brain and Child Development Study (HBCD)

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The HEALthy Brain and Child Development (HBCD) Study, a multi-site prospective longitudinal cohort study, will examine human brain, cognitive, behavioral, social, and emotional development beginning prenatally and planned through early childhood.

Health Watch: UVM researchers unlock secrets of brain blood flow in cognitive health

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Osama Harraz, Ph.D and his team of researchers at the University of Vermont’s Larner College of Medicine have made a breakthrough that could help in the effort to better understand the causes of dementia and how to stop it.

UVM at the Forefront of Stroke and Brain Health Research

Posted October 14, 2024

REGARDS Study Grant Renewed: UVM’s Continued Contributions to Research on Stroke Disparities by Race and Geography. Investigators at the Larner College of Medicine are receiving a $10.1 million multi-year grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to continue their 23-year program studying stroke and cognitive disorders in the United States.

Larner College of Medicine Dean's Newsletter, Accolades and Accomplishments

Posted October 2, 2024

Investigators at the Larner College of Medicine have received a $10.1 million multi-year grant from the National Institutes of Health to continue their work on the REGARDS project. The purpose of the project is to understand why those in some U.S. regions develop more strokes and Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Dementia than others, and why Black people develop more strokes than white people.

Larner College of Medicine Dean's Newsletter, Accolades and Accomplishments

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Mark Nelson, Ph.D., chair and University Distinguished Professor of pharmacology, gave the Björn Folkow Lecture at the 15th Mechanisms of Vasodilation/Endothelium-Dependent Hyperpolarization (MOVD/EDH) 2024 conference July 2–5 at Magdalen College in Oxford, United Kingdom.

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A collaborative research team co-led by investigators David Jangraw, Ph.D., M.S., and Denise Peters, Ph.D., D.P.T., PT, has been awarded the 2024 Armin Grams Memorial Research Award by the Center on Aging. 

Larner College of Medicine Dean's Newsletter, Accolades and Accomplishments

Posted July 10, 2024

Two Larner-affiliated researchers won their respective poster competitions at the Vermont Center for Cardiovascular and Brain Health symposium held June 6–7 at the University of Vermont’s Davis Center.

Movement of the endoplasmic reticulum is driven by multiple classes of vesicles marked by Rab-GTPases

Posted May 15, 2024

John Salogiannis, Ph.D., assistant professor of molecular physiology and biophysics, and members of his lab team—Allison (Morrissey) Langley, lab technician and Ph.D. candidate in cellular, molecular, and biomedical sciences; Sarah Abeling-Wang, lab research technician; and Erinn Wagner, UVM undergraduate biology major—have their first preprint*: “Movement of the endoplasmic reticulum is driven by multiple classes of vesicles marked by Rab-GTPases.” The team’s research is supported by an NIH Maximizing Investigators’ Research Award (MIRA or R35) for early-stage investigators.

The University of Vermont Center on Aging Newsletter

Posted May 2024

Katharine Cheung, M.D., Ph.D., M.Sc., interim director of the UVM Center on Aging, associate director for research, and assistant professor of medicine, and her mentee, medical student Susanna Schuler ’26, presented their research findings at the American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine State of the Science meeting on March 23 in Phoenix, Arizona.

Larner College of Medicine Dean's Newsletter, Accolades and Accomplishments

Posted March 6, 2024

A study by a nationwide collaborative group, including Larner scientists Mary Cushman, M.D., M.Sc., University of Vermont Distinguished Professor and co-director of the Vermont Center for Cardiovascular and Brain Health, Russell Tracy, Ph.D., University of Vermont Distinguished Professor and director of UVM’s Laboratory for Clinical Biochemistry Research, Margaret Doyle Ph.D., associate professor of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine and co-director of the Laboratory of Clinical Biochemistry, and Rebekah Boyle, M.S., was recently published in Nature Communications.

 

UVM Scientist Wins Chan Zuckerberg Initiative Grant to Tackle Neurodegenerative Diseases

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Larner College of Medicine scientist Osama Harraz, Ph.D., M.Sc., and his colleague from the University of Maryland (UMD), Thomas Longden, Ph.D., are recipients of a prestigious Collaborative Pairs Pilot Project Award from the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative’s (CZI) Neurodegeneration Challenge Network (NCDN).