Tracey Ann Rouault is an American
rheumatologist
Rheumatology (Greek ''ῥεῦμα'', ''rheûma'', flowing current) is a branch of medicine devoted to the diagnosis and management of disorders whose common feature is inflammation in the bones, muscles, joints, and internal organs. Rheumatolog ...
and
physician-scientist A physician-scientist is traditionally a holder of a medical degree and a doctor of philosophy also known as an MD-PhD. Compared to other clinicians, physician-scientists invest significant time and professional effort in scientific research an ...
who researches mammalian
iron-sulfur protein
Iron–sulfur proteins (or iron–sulphur proteins in British spelling) are proteins characterized by the presence of iron–sulfur clusters containing sulfide-linked di-, tri-, and tetrairon centers in variable oxidation states. Iron–sulfur c ...
s. Rouault is a senior investigator at the
and she heads the section on
human iron metabolism
Human iron metabolism is the set of chemical reactions that maintain human homeostasis of iron at the systemic and cellular level. Iron is both necessary to the body and potentially toxic. Controlling iron levels in the body is a critically impo ...
.
Life
Tracey Rouault completed bachelor's degree in biology at
Yale College
Yale College is the undergraduate college of Yale University. Founded in 1701, it is the original school of the university. Although other Yale schools were founded as early as 1810, all of Yale was officially known as Yale College until 1887, ...
, and earned a M.D. from
Duke University School of Medicine
The Duke University School of Medicine, commonly known as Duke Med, is the medical school of Duke University. It is located in the Collegiate Gothic-style West Campus of Duke University in Durham, North Carolina. The School of Medicine, along w ...
, after which she completed training in
internal medicine and
rheumatology
Rheumatology (Greek ''ῥεῦμα'', ''rheûma'', flowing current) is a branch of medicine devoted to the diagnosis and management of disorders whose common feature is inflammation in the bones, muscles, joints, and internal organs. Rheumatolog ...
at Duke University and became board certified in both specialties.
She came to the
National Institutes of Health
The National Institutes of Health, commonly referred to as NIH (with each letter pronounced individually), is the primary agency of the United States government
The federal government of the United States (U.S. federal government or U ...
(NIH) as a human genetics fellow in the
(NICHD), and was subsequently promoted to head of the section on human iron metabolism, and then to head of the metals biology and molecular medicine branch.
She was elected to the
American College of Physicians
The American College of Physicians (ACP) is a national organization of internists, who specialize in the diagnosis, treatment, and care of adults.Sokanu "What is an Internist?" Retrieved October 20, 2014 With 161,000 members, ACP is the largest ...
, received a distinguished alumnus award from
Duke Medical Center, and has twice received the NIH Director's Award for outstanding accomplishments in iron metabolism. Rouault's laboratory researches the regulation of mammalian iron metabolism.
Early work involved cloning and characterization of iron regulatory proteins 1 and 2 (IRPs), and elucidation of how these proteins sense cytosolic iron levels and regulate expression of iron metabolism genes. IRPs bind to RNA stem-loops known as iron-responsive elements (IREs) in transcripts that encode iron metabolism genes, including ferritin, transferrin receptor 1, ferroportin, HIF2 alpha, and several other transcripts.
IRP1 acquires an iron-sulfur cluster in iron-replete cells that prevents it from binding to IREs, and enables it to function as a cytosolic aconite.
The discovery of the iron-sulfur cluster in IRP1 led to studies of mechanisms of iron-sulfur cluster biogenesis, which resulted in characterization of a mammalian cysteine desulfurase, NFS1, a primary scaffold known as ISCU, a secondary scaffold known as NFU1, an NFS1 binding partner, ISD11, and a cochaperone known as HSC20.
Defective iron sulfur biogenesis causes several diseases, including Friedreich ataxia, and four new diseases that our group helped to discover and characterize, including ISCU myopathy, sideroblastic anemia from GLRX5 deficiency, and lactic acidosis caused by mutations in NFU1 and BOLA3.
The Rouault lab discovered that animals that lacked IRP2 developed adult-onset neurodegeneration with prominent motor neuron disease, and studies demonstrated that functional iron deficiency adversely affected mitochondrial function in neurons.
Her group collaborated to identify two human patients with IRP2 deficiency related neurodegenerative disease.
The lab also discovered several interesting phenotypes in mice that lack IRP1 that have relevance to human disease.
The group studies metabolic remodeling that occurs in kidney cancers caused by mutations in fumarate hydratase and succinate dehydrogenase, subunit B.
The metabolic remodeling extends to iron metabolism and iron sulfur protein activities.
Rouault's lab discovered that heme oxygenase 1 deficiency causes iron redistribution because lack of heme oxygenase 1 leads to death of erythrophagocytosing macrophages, and the lab is attempting to prevent disease in heme oxygenase deficient mice by performing bone marrow transplants and infusing macrophages exogenously to supply the mice with normal macrophages.
Rouault's group discovered that the Q248H mutation of ferroportin likely protects against malaria because it reduces iron contents of red cells and deprives malaria parasites of important nutrition.
This mutation is prevalent amongst African Americans, and it may explain some health disparities to which African Americans are predisposed.
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Rouault, Tracey
Living people
Year of birth missing (living people)
Place of birth missing (living people)
Yale College alumni
Duke University School of Medicine alumni
National Institutes of Health people
American medical researchers
American women medical researchers
Physician-scientists
21st-century American women physicians
21st-century American physicians
American rheumatologists
American internists
Women internists
Women rheumatologists