JOHNSON CITY (Feb. 10, 2021) – A summer research program at East Tennessee State University’s
Quillen College of Medicine led to an opportunity for medical students to gain COVID-19
research experience.
Dr. Donald Hoover, professor in the Department of Biomedical Sciences, mentored two
second-year medical students, Fulton Robinson and Ryan Mihealsick, during Quillen’s
Medical Student Summer Research Program held last summer. The students had the opportunity
to participate in the conception, planning, implementation and publication of research
focusing on cardiac morbidity and mortality related to COVID-19 infection.
Their mini-review, “Role of angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 and pericytes in cardiac
complications of COVID-19 infection,” appeared in the American Journal of Physiology
Heart and Circulatory Physiology.
The review focuses primarily on “mechanisms that contribute to acute cardiac injury
and dysfunction, which are common in patients with severe disease.” The paper also
includes some primary data showing that the SARS-CoV-2 receptor, ACE2, is expressed
by pericytes in human hearts. Pericytes have been identified recently as a major site
of ACE2 expression in the heart and vasculature, and viral infection of these cells
might contribute to cardiovascular injury in COVID-19.
“While hands-on research was not possible due to the pandemic, Ryan, Fulton, and I
took full advantage of the internet and Zoom technology to develop the topic and outline
for the review, search and discuss relevant literature, and collaborate on writing
and refining the manuscript,” Hoover said. “We also discussed the design of immunohistochemistry
experiments done in my laboratory and reviewed stained section jointly by Zoom. Working
on this project was a rewarding experience for all of us.”
The ETSU Center of Excellence in Inflammation, Infectious Disease, and Immunity supported
this research financially with the purchase of antibodies used in the study.
To learn more about Quillen College of Medicine, www.etsu.edu/com.