Thomas C Doetschman

Thomas C Doetschman

Specialist, Embryonic Stem Cell Culture
Member of the General Faculty
Primary Department
Contact
(520) 626-4901

Work Summary

I am investigating a human connective tissue disorder in mice. I am also investigating the role of gut bacteria in colon cancer risk in both a mouse model of colon cancer and in humans with colon cancer.

Research Interest

Dr. Thomas Doetschman, PhD, Biochemistry & Biophysics, University of Connecticut, has been involved in cardiovascular research for over a decade through investigations into the cardiovascular roles of the three TGFβ ligands and FGF2 ligand isoforms in genetically engineered mice. These mice have determined that TGFβ2 plays major roles in heart and vascular development and for maintenance of valvular and large vessel integrity in the adult and that both the TGFβ1 and FGF2 are involved in adult heart disease.His work has also demonstrated roles of TGFβ in cancer and immunology. He found that a major function of TGFβ1 is to inhibit autoimmunity and to establish homeostatic balance between immune regulatory and inflammatory cells. He has shown that an imbalance in the latter is critical in the tumor suppressor function of TGFβ in the colon.Dr. Doetschman has also played an important role in the development of the mouse genetic engineering field. He has been responsible for the establishment of 3 mouse genetic engineering facilities, in Cincinnati OH, Singapore and the University of Arizona’s BIO5 Institute. Keywords: "Cancer", "Microbiome", "Mouse Genetic Engineering", "Connective Tissue Disorder"

Publications

Chikama, T., Hayashi, Y., Liu, C., Terai, N., Terai, K., Kao, C., Wang, L., Hayashi, M., Nishida, T., Sanford, P., Doetschman, T., & Kao, W. (2005). Characterization of tetracycline-inducible bitransgenic Krt12rtTA/+/tet-O-LacZ mice. Investigative Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, 46(6), 1966-1972.
Spicer, Z., Miller, M., Andringa, A., Riddle, T., Duffy, J., Doetschman, T., & Shull, G. (2000). Stomachs of mice lacking the gastric H,K-ATPase alpha -subunit have achlorhydria, abnormal parietal cells, and ciliated metaplasia.. J Biol Chem, 275(28), 21555-21565.
Samadder, P., Weng, N., Doetschman, T., Heimark, R. L., & Galbraith, D. W. (2016). Flow cytometry and single nucleus sorting for Cre-based analysis of changes in transcriptional states. Cytometry. Part A : the journal of the International Society for Analytical Cytology.

The organs of eukaryotic organisms comprise complex interspersions of cell types, whose different molecular activities, and corresponding cellular states, cooperate during development to produce the final, functional organ. Dysfunction of organs in disease, particularly oncogenesis, initiates with changes of state of a minor subset of cells. It therefore is hard to detect early molecular indicators of disease within an overwhelming background of normal cells. Flow cytometry and sorting provides a convenient way to purify minority subpopulations, if a specific fluorophore can be unambiguously and exclusively associated with this subpopulation. We have generated a number of transgenic mouse lines expressing a nuclear-localized version of the Green Fluorescent Protein (GFP), within which the production of a chimeric histone 2B-GFP protein occurs under the control of a constitutively-active, actin-derived promoter, separated by a Floxed-STOP sequence. In the presence of Cre recombinase, within F1 progeny of these mouse lines, excision of the STOP sequence activates transcription which results in the emergence of cells containing green fluorescent nuclei. We describe the characterization of these lines using a combination of microscopic imaging, flow cytometry and sorting, and Reverse-Transcription polymerase chain reaction of transcripts within single sorted nuclei isolated from tissue homogenates. These lines should be particularly useful for analysis of transcriptional changes in oncogenesis. © 2016 International Society for Advancement of Cytometry.

Risau, W., Sariola, H., Zerwes, H., Sasse, J., Ekblom, P., Kemler, R., & Doetschman, T. (1988). Vasculogenesis and angiogenesis in embryonic-stem-cell-derived embryoid bodies. Development, 102(3), 471-478.
Nakao, S., Maruyama, K., Zandi, S., Melhorn, M., Taher, M., Noda, K., Nusayr, E., Doetschman, T., & Hafezi-Moghadam, A. (2010). Lymphangiogenesis and angiogenesis: concurrence and/or dependence? Studies in inbred mouse strains. FASEB Journal, 24(2), 504-513.