Andrew Bateman
Professor
Division of Endocrinology & Metabolism
McGill University
Canada
Biography
B.Sc. Imperial College of Science and Technology, University of London, (U.K.) Biochemistry 1981 Graduate Ph.D. Imperial College of Science and Technology, University of London, (U.K.) Biochemistry Supervisor Professor, Anne Dell, 1985 Thesis topic: Fast Atom Bombardment Mass Spectrometry in the Study of Naturally Occurring Peptides
Research Interest
I study communication between cells and its relationship to disease. Progranulin is a protein that is secreted by cells and instructs nearby cells to divide and to move. It also inhibits cell death caused by challenges such as starvation or chemotherapeutic drugs. There are many important roles for this molecule. It is over expressed in many cancers and renders cancer cells much more aggressive. Blocking progranulin may be a route to cancer therapy. Progranulin keeps nerve cells alive. Losing only one half of the brain’s progranulin levels by mutation causes frontotemporal dementia, a devastating degenerative brain disease. I wish to understand how progranulin protects the brain. Progranulin reduces inflammation. Its levels increase rapidly in injured tissues. We have shown that progranulin helps the wound repair process. This may help diabetics and others with chronic wounds that fail to heal properly.
Publications
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K. Songsrirote, Z. Li, D.Ashford, A. Bateman and J.Thomas-Oates. Development and Application of Mass Spectrometric Methods for the Analysis of Progranulin N-Glycosylation. Journal of Proteomics, 73:1479 (2010)
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Toh H, Chitramuthu BP, Bennett HPJ and Bateman A. "Structure, Function and Mechanism of Progranulin; The Brain and Beyond" J. Molecular Neuroscience 54, 538-48 (2011)
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Toh H, Cao M, Daniels E., Bateman A. Expression of the growth factor progranulin in endothelial cells influences growth and development of blood vessels: a novel mouse model. PLoS ONE 8(5): e64989. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0064989 (2013)