Please search for your last name

no photo
Usl Umbria1
Cardiology
Inserm UMR1148
Laboratory for Vascular Translational Science (LVTS)
no photo
HOSPITAL UNIVERSITARIO MIGUEL SERVET
INTERNAL MEDICINE
no photo
Boston University Aram V. Chobanian & Edward Avedisian School of Medicine
Physiology & Biophysics
no photo
Zhongda Hospital
School of Medicine, Southeast University
no photo
University of Oxford
Nuffield Department of Population Health
no photo
southeast university
southeast university
University of Bristol
Bristol Medical School
Professor Jason Johnson is a British Heart Foundation Senior Research Fellow and leads the Laboratory of Cardiovascular Pathology at the University of Bristol. He has a long-standing interest in the pathophysiology of numerous cardiovascular pathologies including atherosclerosis, aortic aneurysms, and restenosis. His studies include a marriage of basic science and translational cardiovascular research with the goal of facilitating the development and deployment of novel therapies to combat the aforementioned cardiovascular diseases, alongside the identification of potential biomarkers of disease progression. Since gaining his PhD in 2005, Professor Johnson’s research has underpinned the dogma that not all matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) play detrimental roles in atherosclerotic plaque progression. Moreover, he has aided the identification of a macrophage phenotype (under the control of GM-CSF) which is characterised by high MMP-12 and MMP-14 protein expression alongside low TIMP-3 levels. Further work has also identified a novel node of microRNA regulation within GM-CSF macrophages, highlighting several potential new therapeutic avenues, including miR-181b inhibition and the selective inhibition of MMP-12. Collectively, these studies have made a major contribution to understanding the role of matrix metalloproteinases and macrophage heterogeneity in atherosclerotic plaque progression. Supporting studies in human aneurysm samples and pertinent pre-clinical in vivo models has reaffirmed the notion that the proteolytic profile of macrophage subsets predicts aneurysm development and progression. These findings are now being tested in a novel ex vivo human model of aneurysm that will hopefully supplant the requirement for animal studies.
no photo
no photo
Korea University Anam Hospital
Cardiology
no photo
University Hospital at the Technische Universität Dresden
Dept. of Internal Medicine III