Robin
G. Lorenz, M.D., Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Pathology
Phone:
205-934-0676
E-mail:
rlorenz@uab.edu
Dr. Lorenz received
her B.S. in biology from Stanford University and her M.D. and Ph.D. in
immunology from Washington University in St. Louis. She completed residency
in Clinical Pathology at Barnes-Jewish Hospital, while also doing
postdoctoral research in Gastrointestinal Biology at Washington University
in St. Louis. She then joined the Washington University faculty as an
Assistant Professor of Pathology and Medicine, where she also served as
Medical Director of the Joint Clinical Immunology Laboratory for
Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Children’s Hospitals and Associate Director of
the Laboratory Medicine Residency Training Program. Dr. Lorenz joined
the UAB Department of Pathology in 2002. She is currently Associate
Director of the Pathology Residency Training Program and Director of the
Summer in Biomedical
Sciences Undergraduate Research Program at UAB.
Dr. Lorenz’s
research focuses on the interaction between gastrointestinal mucosal cells
and luminal antigens. A major topic of investigation is the cellular
immune response to Helicobacter in a mouse model of gastric infection
and inflammation. This infection results in life-long colonization and
gastric inflammation and is involved in the pathogenesis of peptic ulcer
disease, gastric adenocarcinoma and
mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphoma. Her laboratory
established the essential role of the adaptive immune response in
Helicobacter-induced gastric pre-neoplastic lesions and is
characterizing the T cell response generated to the bacterium. The
second area of focus in her laboratory is the role of the intestinal
epithelium and innate immune responses in the development of inflammatory
bowel disease. We are investigating these interactions in a
spontaneous model of colonic inflammation that occurs in the absence of the
multidrug resistance protein 1a.
Selected Publications
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Lorenz,
R.G., and Gordon, J.I. Use of transgenic mice to study regulation of gene
expression in the parietal cell lineage of gastric units. J. Biol. Chem.
268: 26559-26570, 1993.
-
Guruge,
J.L., Falk, P.G., Lorenz, R.G., Dans, M., Wirth, H.P., Blaser, M.J., Berg, D.E.,
Gordon, J.I. Epithelial Attachment alters the outcome of Helicobacter pylori
infection. PNAS 95:3925-3930, 1998.
-
Roth,
K.A., Kapadia, S.B., Martin, S.M., and Lorenz, R.G. Cellular immune responses
are essential for the development of Helicobacter felis associated
gastric pathology. J. Immunol. 163:1490-1497, 1999.
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Newberry,
R.D., Stenson, W.F., and Lorenz, R.G. Cyclooxygenase-2 dependent arachidonic acid metabolites are essential modulators of the intestinal immune
response to dietary antigen. Nat. Med. 5:900-906, 1999 (Cover).
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McCracken, V.J.,
and Lorenz, R.G. The gastrointestinal ecosystem: A precarious alliance between
epithelium, immunity, and microbiota. Cell. Microbiol.
3:1-11, 2001.
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Newberry, R. D., McDonough, J .S., Stenson, W. F., and Lorenz, R. G. Spontaneous and continuous cycloxygenase-2 dependent prostaglandin E2 production by stromal
cells in the murine small intestine lamina propria: directing
the tone of the intestinal immune response. J. Immunol.
166:4465-4472, 2001.
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Newberry,
R.D., McDonough, J.S., Stenson, W.F., and Lorenz, R.G. Spontaneous and
continuous cycloxygenase-2 dependent prostaglandin E2 production by stromal
cells in the murine small intestine lamina propria: Directing the tone of the
intestinal immune response. J. Immunol. 166:4465-4472, 2001.
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Martin,
S.M., Mehta, I.K., Thomas, M.L., Yokoyama, W.M., and Lorenz, R.G. Development
of Intestinal Intraepithelial Lymphocytes, Natural Killer Cells, and Natural
Killer 1.1+ T cells in CD45 Deficient Mice. J. Immunol.
166:6066-6073, 2001.
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Dube,
P.H., Revell, P.A., Chaplin, D.D., Lorenz, R.G., Miller, V.L. A role for IL-1a
in inducing pathologic inflammation during bacterial infection. Proc. Natl.
Acad. Sci. USA. 98:10880-10885, 2001.
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Newberry,
R.D., McDonough, J.S. and Lorenz, R.G. Post-gestational lymphotoxin/lymphotoxin b receptor
interactions are essential for the presence of intestinal B-lymphocytes. J.
Immunol. 168:4988-4997, 2002.