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CANCELED: Mitochondrial Control of Innate Immunity in Health and Disease

A. Phillip West, Ph.D.
**CANCELED**
Friday, September 06, 2019
11:45 am - 1:00 pm
A. Phillip West, Ph.D., Texas A&M University College of Medicine
Duke University Program in Environmental Health & Toxicology Fall Seminar Series (Pharm 847-S/ENV 847-S)

**DUE TO THE POTENTIAL IMPACT OF HURRICANE DORIAN, THIS SEMINAR HAS BEEN CANCELLED!**
Mitochondria are multi-faceted organelles integral to many processes including energy generation, programmed cell death, signal transduction, and immunity. Consequently, mitochondrial stress can drastically alter cell and tissue function and is increasingly implicated in aging, cardiovascular disease, neurodegeneration, cancer, and autoimmunity. Research in the West lab centers on defining how mitochondria regulate immune and inflammatory processes to influence human health and disease. The lab is particularly interested in characterizing how mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) stress and instability is sensed by the cGAS-STING DNA recognition machinery. Moreover, we aim to understand how the chronic engagement of this pathway sustains damaging inflammatory responses in multiple disease states.
In my seminar, I will discuss new mechanistic insight into mtDNA sensing by the innate immune system, and I will highlight our ongoing work to elucidate how the mtDNA-cGAS-STING signaling axis contributes to off-target inflammation and cardiotoxicity following anthracycline chemotherapeutic exposure.

Contact: Alexis Sharp