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Human Nutrition: a Brief Overview
Nutrition is central to treatment and
prevention of many human diseases. This division participates in
investigator-initiated research, teaching and service, and provides a
focus for human nutrition within this academic medical center.
The division occupies the third floor of
Ewing Hall, where it provides ~4,000 square feet of laboratory space,
specialized equipment and faculty offices.
Faculty and staff.
Eight nutrition faculty members (five in the tenure track) have primary
appointments in PMCH and have offices within the division. Seven faculty
with primary appointments in other departments have cross appointments in
PMCH through the division. In the past 15 years, 3 tenure track faculty
have left or retired (Wallwork, Ganther, Alcock). Two tenure track
faculty transferred to Human Nutrition from another division and one was
recruited. Over the same time period four nontenure track faculty were
appointed and have left (Lynn, Vadhanavikit, Goeger, Egger) and two were
appointed and are still active.
Faculty with primary appointments:
Karl E.
Anderson, M.D., Professor & Division Director
Richard M.
Carroll, Ph.D., Associate Professor
Chul Lee,
Ph.D., Associate Professor
Lee-Jane Lu, Ph.D.,
Professor
Wolfgang Maret,
Ph.D., Associate Professor
V.M. Sadagopa Ramanujam, Ph.D., Associate
Professor
Harold
H. Sandstead, M.D., Professor
Faculty with cross appointments:
Christopher J.
Frederickson, Ph.D., Adjunct Professor, Anatomy & Neurosciences
C. Lawrence Kien, M.D.,
Professor, Pediatrics
Gordon L. Klein, M.D.,
Professor, Pediatrics
Phillip G. Lee, Ph.D.,
Associate Professor, Human Biological Chemistry & Genetics
Kimberlee M. Matalon,
Ph.D., Clinical Associate Professor, Pediatrics
Karen E.M. Szauter, M.D.,
Assistant Professor, Internal Medicine
Robert, R. Wolfe, Ph.D.,
Professor, Surgery
Staff currently includes an
administrative secretary supported by the department and a senior
secretary supported jointly by the division and the department. Ten
research staff (research assistants and study coordinators) are supported
by grants or other external funding. Three of these are supported by Drs.
Anderson and Lee and seven by Dr. Lu. Dr. Maret is currently seeking two
research laboratory workers. A graduate student (Yafei Huang) is pursuing
dissertation research with Dr. Lu. Other graduate education activities
are described below.
Medical School Teaching.
Drs. Carroll and Ramanujam teach extensively in the Integrated Medical
Curriculum (IMC) as lecturers and small group facilitators, especially in
the GI-Nutrition course. Others (Anderson, Lee, Lu and Sandstead)
contribute to this effort. Dr. Anderson served as co-director of the
GI-Nutrition course for 3 years. Drs. Carroll and Ramanujam serve on
course committees and on committees that review student performance in the
IMC. Dr. Anderson teaches students and residents at the bedside as an
attending in Internal Medicine for several months per year.
Graduate School Teaching and Mentoring.
All nutrition faculty have appointments in the graduate school and
contribute to teaching graduate students. The Curriculum in Human
Nutrition (Richard M. Carroll, Ph.D., Coordinator) has graduated five
students since 1996 (William Durham, Dec. 2000; Cathy Weikart-Yeckel; Dec.
2001; Wenjun Martini, Dec. 1998; Bettina Mittendorfer, May 1999; Steven
Sparks, Aug. 1996), all of whom did their dissertation with Dr. Wolfe. A
current student (Carwyn Sharp) is also doing his dissertation under Dr.
Wolfe, and another (David Barr) and also plans to
do so. Yafei Huang is doing dissertation research with Dr. Lu, and a
student entering the BBSC this fall plans to work with Dr. Maret. The
faculty offer a course in Basic and Applied Nutrition, which is required
for students in the Human Nutrition Curriculum. They also contribute to a
joint Research Design course offered for students in Human Nutrition,
Clinical Science and Environmental Toxicology.
The Clinical Science Program
(director Karl E. Anderson, M.D.), is partially supported by a K30
grant. This program provides graduate training (Ph.D. or M.S.) for M.D.s
and others with a career interest in clinical research. Since its
inception in 2000 the Program has grown to an enrollment of 16, with two
graduates. The Herzog Foundation has provided an endowment to partially
support students in this program. This was among the first graduate
programs in the U.S. to offer a Ph.D. degree for clinical investigators.
Dr. Anderson also directs the course Clinical Research: Tools and
Techniques. A number of nutrition and other PMCH faculty contribute to
these programs.
Post-doctoral training has been provided
to a number of junior scientists. For example,
Katsuhiko Yokoi, MD trained
with Dr. Sandstead and is now a professor and department head at a medical
school in Japan.
Funded research.
External grants awarded to primary nutrition faculty that were active
since 1998 totaled $12.4M (direct costs $8.9M). Additional research funding has been brought in by
Drs. Ramanujam, Serfass and Lee through the Nutrition Assessment
Laboratory and the Porphyria Laboratory, which operate as a service center
for research collaborations as well as service.
Research areas.
Research, which involves human subjects and laboratory models, has focused
primarily on essential trace metals, soy and isoflavones for prevention of
breast cancer, and disorders of heme metabolism. Faculty are recognized
internationally for expertise in these areas. Division research is
inter-disciplinary and commonly involves human subjects. The PMCH
department has for a number of years been the first or second major user
of the General Clinical Research Center, due mostly to research conducted
by this division.
Trace metals.
Zinc nutriture was found to influence cognition of normal young women and
Mexican-American children in the US and of children in China, in
randomized, double blind controlled studies (Sandstead, Ramanujam and
others). Zinc status was assessed in premenopausal women by zinc kinetic
studies using stable zinc isotopes and inductively coupled plasma mass
spectroscopy (ICPMS). Neuropsychologic testing was in collaboration with
James Penland, Ph.D. at the USDA Agricultural Research Service Human
Nutrition Research Center in Grand Forks, North Dakota. The findings have
implications for millions of children world wide who subsist on diets with
limited bioavailable zinc, and for women in and children in the US who
consume diets low in both zinc and iron.
Serfass is recognized internationally for
his expertise in ICPMS and its application to biological effects of trace
metals. He has studied iron absorption in human infants in collaboration
with investigators in Iowa. He is currently characterizing, with NIH
support, a novel iron binding protein he discovered in human milk.
Maret, a recent addition to the faculty
from Harvard Medical School, studies the role of metallothionin in the
cellular uptake, distribution and storage of zinc, and how it plays a role
in the regulatory functions of zinc and the control of the cellular redox
state. His work is funded by NIH and also in part by a collaboration with
Dr. Fredrickson, of Neurobiotex in Galveston.
Ramanujam and Alcock have studied toxic
effects of metals, including lead and mercury. They studied levels of
mercury in pregnant women eating seafood in Galveston and surrounding
communities, and levels of metals in breast milk. In addition, they
examined levels of multiple metals in porpoises in Galveston Bay.
Ramanujam studied amounts of uranium, thorium and lead in multiple soil
samples from a uranium mining area near San Antonio. Ramanjam has studied
the inhalation toxicity of benzene and metabolism of soy isoflavones. He
is currently studying mercury in teeth of children with autism. These
studies were funded through external grants, UTMB intramural grants,
collaborations, or through the service center.
Soy feeding and breast cancer risk.
Lu and colleagues have been studying the effects of soy feeding in women
for more than 10 years, with funding from NIH, US Army, and the American
Institute for Cancer Research. She found that soy, when fed as a
replacement for 15% of energy intake, lowers ovarian hormone levels in
women by 20 to 45%. This degree of reduction is similar to hormonal
differences between populations of women with high and low risks for
breast cancer. Her result is applicable to 79% of US population and has
significant public health implication for breast cancer prevention. She
also found that soy isoflavones modulate tumor necrosis factor-alpha, an
inflammatory cytokine, and may modulate the immune system. Two ongoing
randomized double-blind placebo controlled clinical trials aims to
determine if soy affects breast density and bone mineral density, and will
assess whether effects are mediated by isoflavones or soy proteins. Yafei
Huang is working as a graduate student with Dr. Lu to develop protein
markers in serum and nipple aspirates that may be useful for early breast
cancer detection and prevention, and is supported by a pre-doctoral
fellowship from the US Army.
Human porphyrias.
These diverse conditions are due to specific enzyme deficiencies and are
affected by nutritional factors and drugs. Anderson, Lee and colleagues
comprise the only major research group to focus on new approaches to
treatment and prevention, and factors that influence susceptibility, such
as vitamin C deficiency. Treatments studied have included GnRH analogues
to prevent premenstrual exacerbations of acute porphyrias, erythropoietin
for porphyria cutanea tarda (PCT) when associated with end stage renal
disease, intravenous heme and tin mesoporphyrin for treatment of acute
porphyrias, and hydroxychloroquine for treatment of PCT. The group is
currently studying treatment with a recombinant human enzyme to replace
the deficient enzyme in acute intermittent porphyria. New treatment
studies, clinical consultation and diagnostic testing available through
The Porphyrin Laboratory have made UTMB a major referral center for
patients with these uncommon and complex disorders. Better delivery of
advice to patients is being studied using telemedicine.
Service.
Faculty have participated in educational activities in the community.
This has included mentoring of high school students and teachers during
research experiences at UTMB and judging in science fairs. Participation
in the Summer Undergraduate Research Program (SURP) has led to the
recruitment of graduate students to UTMB. The Porphyrin Laboratory
is a major resource in the US and internationally for diagnosis and
assessment of human porphyrias. The laboratory is part of the UTMB
clinical laboratories, and is partially supported by research grants,
donations and fees charged for testing. The Nutrition Assessment
Laboratory has provided reliable testing for heavy metals (e.g. lead,
mercury) in human samples, soil and other samples. Faculty also actively
participated in grants review for NIH, DOD, FDA, VA, private foundations
and others.
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