T.J. Murphy, Ph.D.
  Associate Professor  
   
     
      Emory University School of Medicine  
      5031 Rollins Research Center  
      1510 Clifton Road  
      Atlanta, GA 30322-3090  
      Tel: 404-727-2467  
      Tel: 404-727-2466 (Lab)  
      Fax: 404-727-0365  
      medtjm@emory.edu  
         
      Ph.D., Pharmacology, University of Missouri-Columbia, 1988  
      Postdoctoral Fellow, Molecular Biology, NIH, 1988-1989  
        Postdoctoral Fellow, Molecular Biology, Division of Cardiology, Emory University, 1989-1991  
        Assistant Professor, Department of Medicine, Emory University, 1991-1993  
        Department of Pharmacology, Emory University, 1993 Jointly Instructor of Medicine  
    Research Interest:      
   
     
 
My group is interested in how vascular smooth muscle and endothelial cells, which play a crucial role in vascular pathogenesis, respond to diverse classes of extracellular stimuli that have been implicated in vascular disease progression. A handful of model genes are under study sharing the same general feature in that each is controlled by multiple classes of extracellular stimuli, such as hormones and autacoids, growth factors and cytokines. We emphasize the mechanisms involved in regulating these genes, and focus particularly on how these genes can coordinate cascades of information arising through activation of multiple signaling pathways. This represents an emerging general problem in cell biology that we define as signal discrimination: how cells make sense of the noise that is generated in extracellular and intracellular space. A specific problem under investigation is on the regulation of angiotensin II receptor mRNA stability as a model for post-transcriptional gene expression control. Another project focuses on the roles played by a multimeric transcriptional co-activator complex called NFAT in regulating the induction of a few immediate early gene targets in these cells.