BS, PhD, FRSB
Senior Lecturer
- About
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- Email Address
- a.m.rajnicek@abdn.ac.uk
- Telephone Number
- +44 (0)1224 437514
- Office Address
- School/Department
- School of Medicine, Medical Sciences and Nutrition
Qualifications
- BSc Biology1984 - Marygrove College (Detroit, MI USA)
- PhD Developmental Biology1990 - Purdue University (W Lafayette, IN USA)Thesis title: Effects of electric fields on wound healing and directed neurite growth
Memberships and Affiliations
- Internal Memberships
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- Chair: School of Medicine, Medical Sciences and Nutrition, Staff Student Liaison Committee, Level 2 courses (2008-present)
- Senior Personal Tutor: School of Medicine ,Medical Sciences and Nutrition (2021-present)
- Co-lead, Co-founder: The IDEALL Group for Equality and Diversity (2016-2021)
- Member: Institute of Medical Sciences Equality, Diversity and Inclusion Committee (2016-present)
- Elected Member: University Senate (2012-2016; 2016-2020; 2023-2026)
- Member: Self Assessment Team, Institute of Medical Sciences Athena Swan Application (2015-2019)
- External Memberships
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Senior Journal Editor/Media Editor: Bioelectricity (2019-present)(https://home.liebertpub.com/publications/bioelectricity/647)
External examiner: Glasgow University, Molecular and Cellular Biology/Biotechnology/Bioengineering undergraduate degrees (2017-2021)
Fellow: Royal Society of Biology (FRSB)
Member: Society for Neuroscience
Member: British Society for Cell Biology
Member: Scottish Developmental Biology Group
Member: American Society for Cell Biology
Vice Chair: Gordon Research Conference on Bioelectrochemistry (2006)
Chair: Gordon Research Conference on Bioelectrochemistry (2008)
Board Member: Bioelectromagnetics Society (2008-2011)
Council Member: Bioelectrochemical Society (2009-2013)
Prizes and Awards
Yasuda Award for Excellence in Biomedical Research (Jan 2000) Society for Physical Regulation in Biology and Medicine.
- Research
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Research Overview
I am interested in the process by which cells use environmental conditions as guidance cues during development, wound healing and regeneration. My work has potential applications in tissue engineering and for devising clinical strategies to aid wound healing and nervous system repair.
Guiding cells by DC electric fields
Cells exist within a naturally-occuring electric field, which results from the normal ion transport properties of polarized epithelia. My research addresses the question of how cells use the electric field as a cue to direct cell migration and orientation.
Guiding cells by small substratum contours
The physical shape of the extracellular environment is usually not considered in the context of directional cell migration. However, cells migrate along parallel substratum features on the scale of tens to hundreds of nanometers, which mimic the size of naturally ocurring features (such as individual collagen fibrils or oriented neuronal fibers). I am interested in the process by which individual cells sense very small substratum features and how they translate the cues subsequently into directed migration.
Establishing a guidance heirarchy
Since electric fields and variation in substratum shape co-exist in vivo another interest is to determine the hierarchy of directional cues and the mechanisms that allow the cues to be selected/integrated by individual cells.
Rho GTPases and growth cone guidance by an electric field
The Rho GTPases Rac, Rho and Cdc42 regulate cytoskeletal dynamics spatially and therefore control cell shape and the direction of cell migration. We have shown that Rho GTPase-mediated cytoskeletal dynamics are essential for growth cone guidance by an electric field (Rajnicek et al., 2006 Journal of Cell Science 119:1723-1735; Rajnicek et al. 2006 Journal of Cell Science 119: 1736-45).
Current Research
Growth cone guidance by substratum grooves
Growth cones are exquititely sensitive to substratum features on the scale of tens of nanometers deep but not all types of growth cones respond in the same way to identical features. For example, embryonic rat hippocampal axons align at a right angle to a series of parallel grooves 130 nm deep and 1 um across but Xenopus spinal neuron growth cones migrate parallel to the same grooves. I am currently exploring the intracellular mechanisms growth cones use to detect small substratum features, including roles for Rho GTPases and the transcription factor Pax-6 (collaboration with Martin Collinson and Derryck Shewan, School of Medical Sciences, University of Aberdeen).
Guidance of epithelial cells by substratum nanotopograpy and electric fields is controlled by a rho/cdc42 switch
Cells migrating to re-epithelialise a wound in the cornea migrate over non-planar surfaces within the context of a wound-induced DC electric field. We have shown that corneal epithelial cells migrate parallel to nano-scale substratum grooves and that on planar quartz they migrate toward the cathode of a DC electric field. By simultaneously challenging corneal cells with co-presented substratum grooves and an electric field oriented orthogonally we determined that the electric field was a more potent directional cue and that a cdc42/rho switch controls electrical/contact guidance priority. This is relevant to the design of future therapies to aid wound healing as well as the basic mechanism for how cells sort/select/integrate simultaneous directonal guidance cues present in the normal extracellular environment.
Collaborations
Aberdeen- Prof Nieves Casan-Pastor, Dr W Huang, Dr D Shewan, Dr M Collinson, Dr H Wilson, Prof M Delibegovic
Funding and Grants
IMS Spinal Research Fund -PhD Studentship "Electrical Control of Nerve Cell Growth"
School of Medical Sciences -PhD Studentship "The transcription factor Pax6 and neuronal guidance" (with M Collinson and D Shewan)
European Commission Specific Targeted Research or Innovation Project - "Development of a Bioelectrochemical device for CNS repair" (NERBIOS) ~£220,000 (with C.D. McCaig)
BBSRC - Genetic control of epithelial cell migration and wound healing physiology (with M Collinson, C McCaig and M.Zhao) ~£643,000.
- Teaching
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Courses
Teaching Responsibilities
Course Coordinator:
AN4301- Developmental Neuroscience with Anatomy
PY4302- Developmental Neuroscience
AN4002/AN4003- Brain Function and Malfunction
BM3804- Neuroscience Research Topics
Non-course Teaching Responsibilities
Senior Personal Tutor for School of Medicine, Medical Sciences and Nutrition (undergraduates)
Personal Tutor and related pastoral care for undergraduates
Industrial Placement Tutor
Chair Level 2 undergraduate Staff Student Liaison Committee
- Publications
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Page 7 of 7 Results 61 to 67 of 67
Has electrical growth cone guidance found its potential?
Trends in Neurosciences, vol. 25, no. 7, pp. 354-359Contributions to Journals: Articles- [ONLINE] DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/S0166-2236(02)02174-4
The direction of neurite growth in a weak DC electric field depends on the substratum: Contributions of adhesivity and net surface charge
Developmental Biology, vol. 203, no. 2, pp. 412-423Contributions to Journals: Articles- [ONLINE] DOI: https://doi.org/10.1006/dbio.1998.9039
- [ONLINE] View publication in Scopus
Contact guidance of CNS neurites on grooved quartz: Influence of groove dimensions, neuronal age and cell type
Journal of Cell Science, vol. 110, no. 23, pp. 2905-2913Contributions to Journals: Articles- [ONLINE] View publication in Scopus
Guidance of CNS growth cones by substratum grooves and ridges: Effects of inhibitors of the cytoskeleton, calcium channels and signal transduction pathways
Journal of Cell Science, vol. 110, no. 23, pp. 2915-2924Contributions to Journals: Articles- [ONLINE] View publication in Scopus
Electric fields induce curved growth of Enterobacter cloacae, Escherichia coli, and Bacillus subtilis cells: Implications for mechanisms of galvanotropism and bacterial growth
Journal of Bacteriology, vol. 176, no. 3, pp. 702-713Contributions to Journals: Articles- [ONLINE] DOI: https://doi.org/10.1128/jb.176.3.702-713.1994
- [ONLINE] View publication in Scopus
Growing Nerves in an Electric Field
NeuroProtocols, vol. 4, pp. 134-141Contributions to Journals: Literature ReviewsBacterial galvanotropism: mechanisms and applications.
Science Progress, vol. 77 ( Pt 1-2), pp. 139-151Contributions to Journals: Review articles- [ONLINE] View publication in Scopus