Dimitrios Moskofidis, MD/PhD
(Demetrius Moskophidis)
Professor, Medicine
Professor, Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
Professor, Graduate Studies
Member, Molecular Oncology & Biomarkers Program
Chaperone Biology & Metabolism Research Group
Jump to: Research Summary Research Interests Selected Publications Research Team
The Dimitrios Moskophidis Lab
Health Sciences Campus
1410 Laney-Walker Blvd., CN-3143, 51吃瓜黑料曝料, GA
(706) 721-8738
The scope of our research includes studies on immune regulation, microbial (viral) pathogenesis and inflammation as well as studies on protein homeostasis and molecular chaperone biology/function. These are areas of great medical importance and there is reasonable expectation that this research will continue to provide the rationale to develop novel strategies to prevent, and perhaps more effectively treat, viral infectious diseases as well as patients with cancer and with age-related neurodegenerative diseases.
The primary focus of research in my laboratory, over the past two decades, has been to investigate microbial (viral) pathogenesis and immunology/inflammation, as well as mechanisms of protein homeostasis and molecular chaperone biology. The specific research areas can be summarized as follows:
Function of molecular chaperones and heat shock transcription factors in mouse models of human diseases (cancer)
This research area involves the study of cellular processes via which molecular chaperones and heat shock transcription factors (HSFs) mediate the host response to environmental stress and the role of these processes in human diseases such as cancer. Using genetically manipulated (knock-in and knock-out) mouse models and employing metabolic, proteomic and genomic methods we probe the basic mechanisms, by which the HSP70 and HSP90 chaperone machineries, in the endoplasmic reticulum (GRP78, GRP170, SIL1, GRP94), cytoplasm (HSP70, HSC70, HSP25), and mitochondria (GRP75), impact the progression of human metabolic diseases, cancer and neurodegeneration. Our work provided proof-of-concept information to demonstrate that the ability of the evolutionary conserved Heat Shock Transcription factors (HSFs) and particularly HSF1 to promote malignant cell transformation resides in its ability to stimulate transcription of mRNAs that encode proteins regulating adaptive energetic and metabolic pathways. Targeting inactivation of HSF1 interferes with the anabolic malignant state and is an effective strategy for prevention and therapy of several cancer types. Notably, this important research is the result of a long-term collaboration with Dr. N. Mivechi at the Georgia Cancer Center.
Deciphering the fundamental mechanisms coordinating the immune response to acute versus persistent viral infections and the implications in cancer immune evasion
Persistent viral infections create conditions for long-term pathologic consequences in human populations. A specific focus of my laboratory has been to elucidate the mechanisms by which viruses persist and escape immune surveillance. This research is important for our understanding of viral pathogenesis and for the development of measures to control and eliminate such infections and the diseases they cause. Our have provided proof-of-concept that:
Jin X, Moskophidis D, Mivechi NF. (2023). . Methods Mol Biol. 2023;2693:81-94. PMID: 37540428.
Eroglu B, Jin X, Deane S, .ztu虉rk B, Ross OA, Moskophidis D*, Mivechi N.F.*. (2022). (*corresponding authors) Cell. Mol. Life Sci. 2022 Mar 21;79(4):198. PMID: 35313355.
Eroglu B, Pang J, Jin X, Xi C, Moskophidis D*, and Mivechi N.F.*. (2020). (*corresponding authors) Mol. Cancer Res. 18:463-476. PMID:31744878.
Cho W-H, Jin X, Pang J, Wang Y, Mivechi, N.F.*, and Moskophidis D*. (2019). (*corresponding authors). Mol. Cell. Biol. 39: e00391-18.
Jin X, Qiao A, Moskophidis D*, Mivechi N.F*. (2018). Mol. Cell. Biol. 38: e00095-18. (*corresponding authors).
Jin X, Eroglu B, Moskophidis D, Mivechi NF. (2018). Methods Mol Biol. 2018;1709:1-22. PMID: 29177647
Qiao, A., X. Jin, J. Pang, D. Moskophidis*, and Nahid F. Mivechi*. (2017). Journal Cell Biology 216: 723-741 (*corresponding authors).
Eroglu, B., M. Jin-Na, Y. Zhang, Szurek, E., D. Moskophidis, Ali Eroglu, and N.F. Mivechi. (2014). Dev. Biol. 386:448-460.
NIH 2 R01 CA132640, NIH 2 R01 CA062130, NIH 1 R01 AI55774.