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Brett  R.  Blackman
Degree(s): Ph.D.
Graduate School: University of Pennsylvania
Primary Appointment: Assistant Professor of Biomedical Engineering
Research Interests:
Endothelial Cell Signaling, Mechanotransduction 2. Vascular remodeling and cardiovascular disease 3. Mechanobiology - Cellular transduction pathways sensitive to the biomechanical environment

Email Address: bb6w@virginia.edu


Biomedical Sciences Graduate Program(s)
  • Biomedical Engineering
  • Molecular Cell and Developmental Biology

  • Research Description

    In the cardiovascular system, mechanical forces play a significant role in regulating many biological and physiological functions. Vascular endothelial cells reside on the interior wall of blood vessels where they form a continuous lining of the cardiovascular system. As a result of the pulsatile nature of blood flow, these cells continuously encounter a complex distribution of forces (e.g., shear, hoop, axial, and normal stress) that are variable throughout the circulation and depend on the local geometry, elasticity of the vessel wall, peripheral resistance, and heart rate. Under physiological conditions, the endothelium is responsive to this diverse mechanical environment and plays an active role in the regulation of acute vascular responses (e.g., vascular reactivity, inflammation, coagulation) and the chronic maintenance of the homeostatic environment for resident tissues. Our laboratory is interested in identifying molecular mechanisms by which biomechanical forces, generated within the cardiovascular system, are sensed by vascular endothelial cells, and how this sensing regulates endothelial cell activity and phenotype. The importance of this research is motivated, in part, by achieving a basic understanding of how mechanical stresses exerted on the endothelium can modulate the cell's ability to adapt to local hemodynamic and biochemical stimuli under physiological and pathological conditions (e.g., heart disease, stroke, vascular remodeling). Current research projects are focused on identifying the basic cellular mechanisms of mechanotransduction (i.e., how an externally applied mechanical force activates intracellular biochemical signaling events) and understanding how the cell utilizes these mechanisms to sense distinct aspects of the flow environment. To investigate our hypotheses the lab uses several interdisciplinary approaches and tools in cell and molecular biology and engineering. We currently are using novel in vitro flow models capable of reproducing the dynamic flow conditions experienced in the human arterial and venous circulation and exposing them to vascular cells in culture. A microscope mounted model allows us to monitor these cells in real-time (phase/DIC/fluorescence) under unique and well-defined flow paradigms.


    Selected Publications
  • Blackman, BR, Garcia-Cardeña, G, Gimbrone, MA Jr. A new in vitro model to evaluate the differential responses of endothelial cells to simuated arterial-like shear stress waveforms. Journal of Biomechanical Engineering. 124(4): 397-407, 2002.
  • Garcia-Cardeña, G, Comander, J, Anderson, KR, Blackman, BR, Gimbrone, MA Jr. Biomechanical activation of vascular endothelium as a determinant of its functional phenotype. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 98(8):4478-85, 2001.
  • Blackman, BR, Thibault, LE, Barbee, KA. Selective modulation of endothelial cell [Ca2+]i response to flow by the onset rate of shear stress. Journal of Biomechanical Engineering. 122(3): 274-282, 2000.
  • PubMed Listings for this Faculty Member

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    Contact Information
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      Office Phone: +1 434-924-8080
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