|
Internationally-known
scientist Agrees to Guide NephCure
via Advisory Panel
 |
Peter
Mundel, M.D. |
Peter Mundel,
M.D., an internationally-known investigator trying
to unlock the mystery of diseases that cause
a breakdown in the human kidney filter, has joined
the Scientific Advisory Board (SAB) of the NephCure
Foundation in its battle against kidney disease.
This was just announced during the ongoing celebrations
for the national Kidney Disease Awareness Month.
Now a professor
of medicine/nephrology at Mt. Sinai School of
Medicine in New York City, Dr. Mundel received
extensive medical training in his native Germany,
where he began attracting the attention of his
peers with numerous articles and lectures. In
2003, he received the prestigious “Young
Investigator Award” from the American Society
of Nephrology.
With the
addition of Dr. Mundel, the NephCure SAB now
consists of 10 highly respected scientist/researchers
whose work is crucial in the fight against idiopathic Nephrotic
Syndrome and focal segmental glomerulosclerosis,
or FSGS.
"Dr. Peter Mundel is a leading research scientist in the area of podocyte
biology.” said Dr. Lawrence Holzmanl, Chair of the SAB and Associate
Professor of Internal Medicine at the University of Michigan. “He has
published seminal contributions in this area and has been recognized widely
for this work. I'm thrilled that he has agreed to serve on Nephcure's SAB;
there is no doubt that he will provide valuable leadership to the organization."
A major focus
of Dr. Mundel’s laboratory is the makeup
and function of podocytes ,
key cells found in each of the one million separate
filtration units (glomerulus,
singular) packed into a single human kidney.
These extensions are called “foot processes” and
they coordinate with membranes in the blood vessel
walls to create extremely narrow slits (slit
diaphragm) through which blood wastes are filtered
for their eventual disposal through the urine.
Recently,
Dr. Mundel’s team has uncovered an “unanticipated
novel role” for a molecule called B7-1,
which under certain circumstances can disrupt
the podocyte filter and cause the leakage of
protein into the urine (proteinuria),
one of the symptoms of Nephrotic Syndrome. When
proteinuria continues unabated, it can cause
FSGS, or scarring of the kidney filter, which
often destroys the kidney and sends patients
into dialysis or kidney transplantation.
Dr. Mundel
states, “The observation that B7-1 in podocytes
may contribute to the pathogenesis of proteinuria
by disrupting the glomerular filter is very exciting
for us because it provides a novel molecular
target to tackle proteinuric kidney diseases”.
His lab is
currently working on four federally funded research
projects and he is the author or co-author of
86 original research articles. He has lectured
before prominent science groups throughout the
world, from Switzerland to Japan, and he is a
member of numerous scientific organizations,
including the American Society of Clinical Investigation,
and the American Society of Nephrology.
Founded
in 1999 by parents of children with idiopathic
Nephrotic Syndrome or FSGS the NephCure Foundation
has partnered with the federal government to
fund research seeking the cause and cure of
those conditions.
|