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Physician Profile

412-692-7438 Phone
412-692-7016 Fax

Toni Darville, MD

Job Title Chief, Pediatric Infectious Diseases
Job Title Professor of Pediatrics and Immunology, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine
One Children's Hospital Drive
4401 Penn Ave., Suite Floor 9
Pittsburgh, PA 15224
412-692-7438 Phone
412-692-7016 Fax

Education and Training

Medical School:

1987 University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, AR
 

Residency:

1990 University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, AR
 

Fellowship:

1993 University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, AR

Memberships

  • Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Medical Fraternity
  • American Academy of Pediatrics, Fellow
  • Central Arkansas Pediatric Society
  • Arkansas Children’s Hospital Life Savers Society
  • Infectious Diseases Society of America
  • American Society for Microbiology
  • Chlamydia Basic Research Society, Founding Member
  • American Association of Immunologists
  • American Federation for Clinical Research
  • Society for Pediatric Research 
  • American Pediatric Society

Board Certifications

  • American Board of Pediatrics
  • Pediatric Infectious Diseases

Awards

    Undergraduate
  • 1983 Magna cum laude (G.P.A. 4.0), University of Arkansas at Fayetteville
  • President's Award for Academic Achievement
  • "Most Outstanding Female Senior Student"
  • Royal American Chemical Society Award
  • Phi Eta Sigma Honorary Society
    Graduate
  • Alpha Omega Alpha
  • Roberts Key for Graduating First in Class
  • Janet M. Glasglow Memorial Award-Top Female Medical Student
  • 1984-1987 Barton Scholarship for Academic Achievement
  • Hans G. Schlumberger Excellence in Pathology Award
  • John E. Whitney Annual Physiology Award
  • Commendation for Excellence in Neuroscience
  • 1983-1987 Commendation for Excellence in Clinical Correlates of Disease
    Postgraduate/Fellowship
  • 1989-1990 Chief Pediatric Resident, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences
  • 1991 First Annual Southern Society for Pediatric Research Travel Award
  • Pediatric Infectious Diseases Fellowship Award, Pediatric Infectious Diseases Society and Bristol-Myers Squibb Assistant Professorship
  • 1993, 1995-1999 Recipient of the Red Sash Award from the Senior Medical School Class
  • 1998 Pediatric Infectious Diseases Society Young Investigator Award
  • 1998-1999 Best Doctors in America: Central Region, Woodward and White
    Associate Professorship
  • 2000-2004 Recipient of the Red Sash Award from the Senior Medical School Class
  • Society of Pediatric Research Membership Status
  • 2000 Southern Society of Pediatric Research, President-elect
  • 2001 Southern Society of Pediatric Research, President
  • 2003 American Society for Microbiology, Section D, General Microbiology, Chair
  • 2003 Best Doctors in America: Consumers' Research Council of America
  • 2003, 2005  ACH Patient Satisfaction Award
  • 2004 Best Doctors of Central Arkansas: Consumers' Research Council of America
    Professorship
  • 2005-2006 Arkansas' Best Doctors
  • 2005-2010 Best Doctors in America: Consumers' Research Council of America
  • 2005, 2007, 2009 Recipient of the Red Sash Award from the Senior Medical School Class
  • 2007 Councilor, Chlamydia Basic Research Society

Publications

  • Prantner D, Darville T, Nagarajan UM. STING Is Critical for Induction of IFN-beta during Chlamydia muridarum infection. J Immunol. 2010 Jan 27. PubMedCentral - in process.
  • Prantner D, Darville T, Sikes JD, Andrews CW Jr, Brade H, Rank RG, Nagarajan UM. Critical role for interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta) during Chlamydia muridarum genital infection and bacterial replication-independent secretion of IL-1beta in mouse macrophages. Infect Immun. 2009 Dec; 77(12):5334-46. PMC2786476.
  • Kelly KA, Wiley D, Wiesmeier E, Briskin M, Butch A, Darville T: The combination of the gastrointestinal integrin (alpha4beta7) and selectin ligand enhances T cell migration to the reproductive tract during infection with Chlamydia trachomatis.  Am J Reprod Immunol. 2009 Apr 22. [Epub ahead of print] PMID: 19392980.

    View Dr. Darville's full list of publications from PubMed.

Research Interests

  • The ultimate goal of Dr. Darville's lab is to develop a vaccine to protect against chlamydial infection-induced sequelae of infertility and blindness, diseases of global societal and economic impact. The recent discovery of attenuated chlamydial strains has provided important tools useful for determining pathogen-specific virulence factors and host biomarkers of disease. In addition, studies indicate the attenuated chlamydial strains have strong potential as vaccine candidates.
  • Dr. Darville is actively examining innate immune receptors and signaling pathways stimulated by chlamydiae, and their role in generating a protective vs. pathogenic immune response. In vitro and animal model studies are used to determine signaling pathways important in the pathogenesis of disease due to Chlamydia trachomatis.
  • Dr. Darville's lab also has an interest in the role that chlamydial-induced host cell apoptosis plays in genital tract disease pathogenesis.
  • Dr. Darville is examining the role that novel cellular "danger signals" released from chlamydial infected cells, such as adenosine triphosphate (ATP) and high mobility group box 1 protein (HMGB1), have in the immune response and in disease pathogenesis.

Active Research Projects / Grants

  • Cell Death and Innate Immunity In Chlamydial Genital Infection
  • Development of live attenuated vaccines against chlamydial eye and genital tract disease
  • The UPMC Sexually Transmitted Infections Cooperative Research Center
  • TLR2 Ligands of Chlamydiae (Co-investigator)         
  • Rapid Tests for Chlamydia and Neglected Tropical Diseases (Co-investigator)  
Last Update
April 16, 2013
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Last Update
April 16, 2013
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