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Federica del Monte MD, PhD

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Rank
  • Professor
College
  • College of Medicine
Department
  • Medicine
Academic Focus
  • Heart Failure
  • Neurodegenerative Diseases
  • Calcium
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Biography

Education and Positions

10/1986 - M.D. (summa cum laude) - Medicine and Surgery - University of Rome "Sapienza", Italy

07/1990 - Medical Specialties: (summa cum laude) - Cardiology - University of Rome "Sapienza", Italy

03/1996 - PhD - Physiology and pharmacology - Imperial College of Science and Technology, London (UK)

09/1989-08/1993 - Senior Registrar – Cardiology - Royal Brompton Hospital London (U.K.)

09/1993-01/1998 - Clinical and Research Fellow – Cardiology - Cardiovascular Surgery – University of Rome “Sapienza” Italy”

02/1998-12/1999 - Senior Scientist – Cardiology - Gwathmey Inc

02/1998-09/2000 - Post Doctoral Fellow – Cardiology - Harvard Medical School

02/2000-10/2003 - Instructor in Medicine – Cardiology - Harvard Medical School

10/2003-2014 - Assistant Professor - Medicine/Cardiology - Harvard Medical School

07/2010-06/2017 - Affiliate Faculty Member - Harvard Medical School

10/2011-06/2017 - Associate Member - Broad Institute

12/2013-date - Associate Professor - Medicine/Cardiology - Harvard Medical School

07/2017-date - Associate Professor - Medicine/Cardiology - Medical University of South Carolina

2017 - Associate Professor - Ralph H. Johnson VA Medical Center

07/2017-date - Director Christie’s Heart and Brain Program for Degenerative Diseases and Aging - Medicine/Cardiology - Medical University of South Carolina

01/02/2019-date - Faculty Member - College of Graduate Students Medical University of South Carolina                           

Research

Federica del Monte is a clinician-scientist, Associate Professor in Medicine in the Department of Medicine, Division of Cardiology at the Medical University of South Carolina, Director of the Christie’s Heart & Brain Program. This will represent the first program to study the mechanisms linking those two diseases either as a systemic or metastatic condition and to care for patients with Heart Failure and Alzheimer’s in the hospital. She is also Associate Professor of Medicine at the Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School in Boston where she developed her USA career over 20 years. She is an MD and Cardiology graduate from the University of Rome (Italy) and PhD graduate from the Imperial College of Science and Technology in London (UK).

Dr. del Monte’s lab focuses on basic cardiac muscle pathophysiology and translational research to understand the pathogenesis of cardiomyopathies and heart failure (HF) as an Alzheimer’s disease and for the discovery of novel therapies. The lab utilizes an interdisciplinary approach in-vitro and in-vivo physiology, molecular biology and imaging as well as biophysical and structural-chemistry approaches.

The early work from Dr. del Monte’s lab focused on Ca2+ homeostasis in the failing heart and gene therapy. For those studies, Dr. del Monte is a recognized leader in cardiomyocytes physiology and Ca2+ handling in animal models and human hearts. Dr. del Monte’s research has evolved towards cutting edge and innovative unexplored territories linking Alzheimer’s Disease and heart failure. The latest discoveries are recognized as a major breakthrough that opened a new era for the understanding of the pathogenesis of HF.

Dr. del Monte discovered, in dilated cardiomyopathy (iDCM), plaque and tangles-like protein aggregates similar to the pathological defects in Alzheimer Disease (AD). Since this first discovery the lab determined that Alzheimers Disease and cardiomyopathy share the same pathogenic defect changing the paradigm of the pathogenesis of iDCM. The lab characterized the cell response to misfolded proteins; identified genetic variants in common between iDCM and AD; purified and chemical characterized the composition of amyloid fibrils of cardiac plaques identifying an actin-polymerizing protein-Cofilin-2 to be comprised within the aggregates and characterized its role on cardiac function; identified how misfolded proteins exert their toxic effect and developed the new concept of metastatic transmissibility of pre-amyloid oligomers. In addition to identifying Alzheimer’s like plaques and tangles in the heart of patients with cardiomyopathy the lab determined that the heart of patients with primary diagnosis of Alzheimer’s contains Aβ deposits and present diastolic dysfunction. Given the commonality of the structure/function of misfolded proteins, the results obtained on cardiomyocytes can be translated to any cell, and studying the heart can provide insights for the detection of onset and progression of brain disorders using the heart as a window to the brain and offering a common therapeutic target for diseases affecting millions of people. More recent studies address the gene environment interaction and how air pollution aggravate the progression and severity of Alzheimer's pathology and dysfunction in the heart and brain. Our group also to aim to determine the mechanisms of tele-proteotoxicity and identifyed red blood cells derived EV as a vehicle to transmit Aβ pathology between organs with focus on the heart-to-brain axis.

Supporting activities for the cardiology division are mentoring students and fellows, from experience as reviewer for K08, K99-R00, R01 NIH grants. Dr. del Monte is also the Director of the human hearts biorepository at MUSC.