A M Robida

Center for Chemical Genomics, Life Sciences Institute, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.

14 publications 1997 – 2026 ORCID

Research Overview

A M Robida is a researcher at the University of Michigan who identifies new drug candidates and disease mechanisms by screening existing medications against cancer and inflammatory diseases. His work has focused on finding drugs that kill multiple myeloma cancer cells by disrupting a cellular cleanup system called ERAD, discovering that omaveloxolone (RTA408) works even against drug-resistant tumors. He has also identified new treatment approaches for lymphomas by targeting immune cells that support cancer growth, and found that blocking a specific inflammatory pathway could treat rheumatoid arthritis.

Publications

Small molecule screening identifies cytotoxic endoplasmic reticulum-associated degradation inhibitors in multiple myeloma.

2026

Cell death & disease

Kropp EM, Matono S, Wang OY, Robida AM, Kandarpa M +6 more

Plain English
Researchers tested thousands of existing drugs to find new ways to kill multiple myeloma cancer cells, and discovered that a drug called RTA408 works by blocking a cellular cleanup system that myeloma cells depend on to survive. When RTA408 shuts down this cleanup system, cancer cells die through a specific mechanism involving the cell's outer membrane, and it kills even myeloma cells that have become resistant to current treatments. This finding could lead to a new treatment option for multiple myeloma patients who no longer respond to standard drugs.

View on PubMed

Identification of Omaveloxolone as An Endoplasmic Reticulum Associated Degradation Inhibitor That Induces Early Apoptotic Signaling in Multiple Myeloma.

2025

bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology

Kropp EM, Matono S, Wang OY, Robida AM, Kandarpa M +6 more

Plain English
Researchers tested thousands of existing drugs to find one that could block a cellular cleanup system called ERAD, and discovered that a drug called omaveloxolone (RTA408) does this effectively. When they applied this drug to multiple myeloma cancer cells—including ones that resist other treatments—it triggered the cancer cells to self-destruct by activating their internal death signals. This matters because multiple myeloma is currently incurable, and omaveloxolone could become a new treatment option, either alone or combined with existing drugs.

View on PubMed

Targeting Lymphoma-associated Macrophage Expansion via CSF1R/JAK Inhibition is a Therapeutic Vulnerability in Peripheral T-cell Lymphomas.

2022

Cancer research communications

Gao X, Kady N, Wang C, Abdelrahman S, Gann P +7 more

Plain English
Researchers discovered that certain immune cells called macrophages play a critical role in helping a deadly blood cancer called peripheral T-cell lymphoma grow, and that cancer cells actively recruit and sustain these macrophages. They found that a drug called pacritinib, which blocks two specific proteins (CSF1R and JAK), can effectively eliminate these protective macrophages and slow cancer progression in laboratory models. This discovery opens a new treatment pathway for patients with this aggressive cancer by targeting not just the cancer cells themselves, but the immune system's support network that keeps them alive.

View on PubMed

Soluble CD13 induces inflammatory arthritis by activating the bradykinin receptor B1.

2022

The Journal of clinical investigation

Tsou PS, Lu C, Gurrea-Rubio M, Muraoka S, Campbell PL +26 more

Plain English
Researchers discovered that a protein called CD13, which leaks into the bloodstream, causes inflammatory arthritis by activating a specific receptor (called B1R) on immune and joint cells. They found this receptor is overactive in rheumatoid arthritis patients and that blocking it with drugs stopped inflammation in both human tissue samples and mouse models of arthritis. This matters because it identifies a new drug target—blocking the B1R receptor—that could treat rheumatoid arthritis and possibly other inflammatory diseases without affecting other parts of the immune system.

View on PubMed

Characterisation of an epigenetically altered CD4(+) CD28(+) Kir(+) T cell subset in autoimmune rheumatic diseases by multiparameter flow cytometry.

2016

Lupus science & medicine

Strickland FM, Patel D, Khanna D, Somers E, Robida AM +4 more

Plain English
Researchers found a specific type of immune cell (a T cell with particular surface markers) that appears in patients with lupus and other autoimmune diseases; this cell type is abnormally activated and likely drives disease flares. The amount of these cells in lupus patients directly matched how severe their disease was at the time of testing. These abnormal cells could become a useful blood test to detect when lupus is active and might be a new target for treatments to prevent disease flares.

View on PubMed

Bimolecular fluorescence complementation analysis of inducible protein interactions: effects of factors affecting protein folding on fluorescent protein fragment association.

2009

Journal of molecular biology

Robida AM, Kerppola TK

Plain English
Researchers developed a technique to watch proteins interact inside living cells by using fluorescent protein fragments that glow when they stick together. They tested this technique using a system where two proteins only bind together when the drug rapamycin is added, and found that the glow appears within 10 minutes and gets much brighter over 8 hours—but the method can only detect when proteins come together, not when they separate. The study revealed that how well this technique works depends heavily on whether the fluorescent protein fragments can fold properly inside the cell, and that stress on the cell's protein-folding machinery interferes with detecting interactions. This matters because scientists use this technique to map where and when proteins interact in cells, so understanding its limitations helps them interpret their results correctly.

View on PubMed

Inflammatory prompts produce isoform-specific changes in the expression of leukotriene B(4) omega-hydroxylases in rat liver and kidney.

2003

FEBS letters

Kalsotra A, Cui X, Antonovic L, Robida AM, Morgan ET +1 more

Plain English
Researchers studied how the body's inflammatory response changes the levels of specific enzymes in the liver and kidneys that break down leukotriene B4, a chemical that controls inflammation. They found that different types of inflammatory triggers cause different changes to these enzymes—some reduce them while others increase them—suggesting the body uses multiple control systems depending on what kind of threat it's facing. This matters because understanding how inflammation alters these enzyme levels could help explain why people respond differently to infections and inflammatory diseases, and might point to new ways to treat these conditions.

View on PubMed

Expression of cytochromes P450 4F4 and 4F5 in infection and injury models of inflammation.

2003

Biochimica et biophysica acta

Cui X, Kalsotra A, Robida AM, Matzilevich D, Moore AN +4 more

Plain English
Researchers studied how two liver proteins (CYP 4F4 and 4F5) change during infections and brain injuries. They found that these proteins drop by 40-50% during infections, but after brain injury they first disappear and then come roaring back over the following two weeks. This matters because these proteins control inflammatory chemicals in the body—substances that cause swelling and pain. The initial drop after injury allows inflammation to happen (which is actually necessary for healing), but as the proteins return to normal levels, they shut down that inflammation so the body can repair itself and recover.

View on PubMed

Retroviral vectors applied to gene regulation studies.

2002

Methods in enzymology

Murphy TJ, Pavlath GK, Wang X, Boss V, Abbott KL +5 more

View on PubMed

Evidence that Galpha(q)-coupled receptor-induced interleukin-6 mRNA in vascular smooth muscle cells involves the nuclear factor of activated T cells.

2000

Molecular pharmacology

Abbott KL, Loss JR, Robida AM, Murphy TJ

Plain English
Researchers discovered that when certain receptors on blood vessel muscle cells are activated, they trigger the production of an immune signaling molecule called interleukin-6 (IL-6) through a specific protein called NFAT that normally works in immune cells. The activation happens quickly and can be partially blocked by a drug called cyclosporin A, which is used to suppress the immune system. This matters because IL-6 is involved in inflammation and blood vessel damage, so understanding how it's produced in blood vessel cells could lead to new ways to treat cardiovascular diseases and reduce inflammation-related complications.

View on PubMed

Cyclosporin A selectively inhibits mitogen-induced cyclooxygenase-2 gene transcription in vascular smooth muscle cells.

2000

Molecular pharmacology

Robida AM, Xu K, Ellington ML, Murphy TJ

Plain English
Researchers tested whether a drug called cyclosporin A (used to suppress immune systems) could block the production of COX-2, a protein that causes inflammation in blood vessel cells. They found that cyclosporin A successfully stopped COX-2 production when cells were triggered by certain growth signals, but only by preventing the cells from reading the COX-2 gene in the first place—not by interfering with the protein after it was made. This matters because it reveals exactly how cyclosporin A reduces inflammation, which could help doctors use the drug more effectively or design better anti-inflammatory treatments.

View on PubMed

Immediate-early MEK-1-dependent stabilization of rat smooth muscle cell cyclooxygenase-2 mRNA by Galpha(q)-coupled receptor signaling.

2000

The Journal of biological chemistry

Xu K, Robida AM, Murphy TJ

Plain English
Researchers found that when certain cell receptors are activated, they trigger a dramatic increase in COX-2 (a protein involved in inflammation) by using two different mechanisms: they slightly increase the rate at which the COX-2 gene is transcribed, but more importantly, they prevent the COX-2 messenger molecule from being broken down quickly once it's made. The team identified a specific 130-letter section in the COX-2 gene's instruction manual that acts as the "keep this around longer" signal, and they traced the control of this signal to a particular cellular pathway (p42/44 MAP kinases). This matters because it reveals how cells rapidly ramp up inflammation and other responses—they don't just turn genes on faster, they also keep the resulting messages intact longer—which has implications for understanding and potentially controlling inflammatory diseases.

View on PubMed

Differential regulation of vascular smooth muscle nuclear factor kappa-B by G alpha q-coupled and cytokine receptors.

2000

Journal of molecular and cellular cardiology

Abbott KL, Robida AM, Davis ME, Pavlath GK, Camden JM +2 more

Plain English
Researchers studied how two different types of cell signals—one from nucleotide receptors and one from inflammatory molecules—activate a protein called NF-kappaB that controls genes in blood vessel cells. They found that inflammatory molecules (IL-1 beta) are much more powerful at activating NF-kappaB than nucleotide signals are, even though both pathways can turn on this protein; additionally, the two pathways activate different sets of genes because nucleotide signals use other protein switches that inflammatory molecules don't. This matters because it explains why different types of cellular stress trigger different inflammatory responses, which could help doctors understand why some blood vessel diseases develop differently and potentially lead to more targeted treatments.

View on PubMed

The influence of chaotropic reagents on neuronal nitric oxide synthase and its flavoprotein module. Urea and guanidine hydrochloride stimulate NADPH-cytochrome c reductase activity of both proteins.

1997

Nitric oxide : biology and chemistry

Narayanasami R, Nishimura JS, McMillan K, Roman LJ, Shea TM +3 more

Plain English
Researchers exposed a brain enzyme called neuronal nitric oxide synthase to chemicals that unfold proteins, and found that these chemicals temporarily boosted the enzyme's ability to transfer electrons by 20-fold—an effect similar to what happens when a natural cellular activator called calmodulin turns the enzyme on. The boost occurred because the unfolding chemicals exposed hidden parts of the enzyme's structure that enhanced electron movement, though the enzyme's activity eventually returned to normal within an hour. This matters because it reveals how the shape of this enzyme controls its function, which could help scientists understand how the brain naturally regulates this enzyme and potentially develop new drugs that mimic its activation.

View on PubMed

Publication data sourced from PubMed . Plain-English summaries generated by AI. Not medical advice.