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BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH Mahalia S Desruisseaux Assistant Professor EDUCATION/TRAINING Queens College of the City University of New York, Queens, NY BA 05/96 Biology Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, Piscataway, NJ MD 05/00 Medicine North Shore University Hospital, Manhasset, NY Residency 06/03 Internal Medicine Montefiore Medical Center/Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY Fellowship 06/07 Infectious Diseases A. Personal Statement I have been working on a murine model of cerebral malaria since my fellowship at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine. My studies have led to some interesting discoveries for example, I was first to describe an increase in all the components of the endothelin pathway in the mouse model of cerebral malaria which was associated with a decrease in cerebral blood flow. Something which is observed in pediatric cerebral malaria and has been subsequently confirmed by others investigators. For the first time my laboratory has demonstrated that just as with humans, mice successfully treated with antimalarials sustain persistent cognitive deficits, something that is also observed in pediatric malaria. My investigations in this model of murine model of cerebral malaria will continue to enable to me to examine in detail the mechanisms leading to persistent cognitive deficits with cerebral malaria such as abnormal regulation of cellular signaling pathways. B. Positions and Honors Positions and Employment 2007 – 2009 Instructor, Pathology and Medicine, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY 2009 – present Assistant Professor, Pathology and Medicine, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY Other Experience and Professional Memberships 1996 – 2000 2000 – 2003 2004 – 2006 2002 – 2008 2006 – 2007 – 2009 - Member, Student National Medical Association Member, American College of Physicians Member, American Medical Association Member, Infectious Diseases Society of America Member, American Society for Microbiology Member, American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene American Reinvestment and Recovery Act RC1 Challenge grants, ad hoc reviewer 2009 2010 - Interdisciplinary Perspectives in Infectious Diseases, ad hoc reviewer Obesity, ad hoc reviewer Journal of Neuroparasitology, Associate editor American Journal of Pathology, ad hoc reviewer Malaria Journal, ad hoc reviewer Journal of Neuroimmunology, ad hoc reviewer Honors 1993 2003 2005 2006 2007 2009 Dr Pearl Foster Award for Outstanding Minority Women in Biology, Queens College Dr George M Jaffin Award for Research and Scholarly Activity, North Shore University Hospital IDSA ERF/NFID Colin L Powell Minority Postdoctoral Fellowship in Tropical Disease Research Department of Medicine annual research symposium award, Albert Einstein College of Medicine/ Montefiore Medical Center Burroughs-Wellcome Fund Career Awards for Medical Scientists (CAMS) AECOM Institute for Clinical and Translational Research (ICTR) career development award C. Selected Peer-reviewed Publications Most relevant to the current application 1. Kennan RP, Machado FS, Lee SC, Desruisseaux MS, Wittner M, Tsuji M, Tanowitz HB. Reduced Cerebral Blood Flow and N-Acetyl Aspartate in a Murine Model of Cerebral Malaria. Parasitology Research. 2005; 96:302-307. 2. Machado FS, Desruisseaux MS*, Nagajyothi, Kennan RP, Hetherington HP, Wittner M, Weiss LM, Lee SC, Scherer PE, Tsuji M, Tanowitz HB. Endothelin in a murine model of cerebral malaria. Experimental Biology and Medicine. 2006; 231:1176-1181. *co-first author 3. Desruisseaux MS, Tanowitz HB, Weiss LM, Mott A, Milner DA. Human Parasitic Disease in the context of the Blood-Brain Barrier – Effects, Interactions, and Transgressions. In: Blood-Brain Interfaces – From Ontogeny to Artificial Barriers. Dermietzel R, Spray D, Nedergaard M (Eds.) Wiley VCH. Weinheim. pp 671-696, 2006. 4. Desruisseaux MS, Gulinello M, Smith DN, Lee SC, Tsuji M, Weiss LM, Spray DC, Tanowitz HB. Cognitive dysfunction in mice infected with Plasmodium berghei ANKA. Journal of Infectious Diseases. 2008; 197:1621-1627. 5. Desruisseaux MS, Machado FS, Weiss LM, Tanowitz HB, Golightly LM. Cerebral malaria: a vasculopathy. American Journal of Pathology. 2010; 176:1075-1078. 6. Dai M, Reznik SE, Spray DC, Weiss LM, Tanowitz HB, Gulinello M, Desruisseaux MS. Persistent cognitive and motor deficits after successful antimalarial treatment in murine cerebral malaria. Microbes and Infection 2010; 12:1198-1207. Additional recent publications of importance to the field (in chronological order) 1. Desruisseaux M, Meyerhoff R, Arunabh T, Kaplan M. Diagnostic puzzlers: Chronic cough in a woman with HIV infection. The Journal of Respiratory Diseases. 2004; 25: 368-376. 2. Nagajyothi, Desruisseaux M, Bouzahzah B, Weiss LM, Andrade DDS, Factor SM, Scherer PE, Albanese C, Lisanti MP, Tanowitz HB. Cyclin and caveolin expression in an acute model of murine chagasic myocarditis. Cell Cycle. 2006; 5:107-112. 3. Hassan GS, Mukherjee S, Nagajyothi, Weiss LM, Petkova SB, de Almeida CJG, Huang H, Desruisseaux MS, Bouzahzah B, Pestell RG, Albanese C, Christ GJ, Lisanti MP, Tanowitz HB. Trypanosoma cruzi infection induces proliferation of vascular smooth muscle cells. Infection and Immunity. 2006; 74:152-159. 4. Bouzahzah B, Nagajyothi F, Desruisseaux MS, Krishnamachary M, Factor SM, Cohen A, Lisanti MP, Petkova SB, Pestell RG, Wittner W, Mukherjee S, Weiss LM, Linda A Jelicks LA, Albanese C, Tanowitz HB. Cell Cycle Regulatory Proteins in the Liver in Murine Trypanosoma Cruzi Infection. Cell cycle. 2006; 5:2396-2400. 5. Ashton AW, Mukherjee S, Nagajyothi F, Huang H, Braunstein VL, Desruisseaux MS, Factor SM, Lopez L, Berman JW, Wittner M, Scherer PE, Capra V, Coffman TM, Serhan CN, Gotlinger K, Wu KK, Weiss LM, Tanowitz HB. Thromboxane A2 is a key regulator of pathogenesis during Trypanosoma cruzi infection. Journal of Experimental Medicine. 2007; 204: 929-940. 6. Desruisseaux MS, Nagajyothi, Truijillo ME, Tanowitz HB, Scherer PE. Adipocyte, adipose tissue, and infectious disease. Infection and immunity. 2007; 75:1066-1078. 7. Nagajyothi F, Desruisseaux MS, Thiruvur N, Weiss LM, Braunstein VL, Albanese C, Teixeira MM, de Almeida CJ, Lisanti MP, Scherer PE, Tanowitz HB. Trypanosoma cruzi infection of cultured adipocytes results in an inflammatory phenotype. Obesity. 2008;16:1992-1997. 8. Nagajyothi F, Desruisseaux MS, Weiss LM, Chua S, Albanese C, Machado FS, Esper L, Lisanti MP, Teixeira MM, Scherer PE, Tanowitz HB. Chagas disease, adipose tissue and the metabolic syndrome. Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz. 2009;104 Suppl 1:219-225. 9. Nagajyothi F, Desruisseaux M, Jelicks LA, Machado F, Chua SC, Scherer P, Tanowitz HB. Perspectives on adipose tissue, Chagas disease and implications for the metabolic syndrome. Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Infectious Diseases. 2009;2009:824324. D. Research Support Ongoing Research Support Burroughs-Wellcome Fund Career Award for Medical Scientists 2007-2012 Neurological complications of cerebral malaria Role: PI Institute for Clinical and Translational Research (ICTR) Career Development Scholarship/ Institutional start-up fund 2009-2012 NIH/ NINDS 2011-2016 NS069577 Cerebral Malaria: Mechanisms of disease and neurological salvage Role: PI Completed Research Support NIH training grant in Mechanisms of Cardiovascular Diseases (Kitsis) 2005-2006 NIH/ NHLBI T32 HL-07675 Investigating the potential role of Endothelin in the vasculopathy of cerebral malaria Role: Research Fellow/Trainee IDSA ERF/NFID Colin L Powell Minority Postdoctoral Fellowship in Tropical Disease Research 2005-2006 Investigating the potential role of Endothelin in the vasculopathy of cerebral malaria Role: Research Fellow Neuroscience Fellowship in the Department of Neuroscience of the Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences. Albert Einstein College of Medicine/ State of New York, Office of Mental Health, Bronx Psychiatric Center. 2006-2008 Investigating potential adjunctive therapies that may abate the encephalopathy of cerebral malaria Role: research fellow