9 research outputs found

    Human airway smooth muscle maintain in situ cell orientation and phenotype when cultured on aligned electrospun scaffolds

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    Human airway smooth muscle (HASM) contraction plays a central role in regulating airway resistance in both healthy and asthmatic bronchioles. In vitro studies that investigate the intricate mechanisms that regulate this contractile process are predominantly conducted on tissue culture plastic, a rigid, 2D geometry, unlike the 3D microenvironment smooth muscle cells are exposed to in situ. It is increasingly apparent that cellular characteristics and responses are altered between cells cultured on 2D substrates compared with 3D topographies. Electrospinning is an attractive method to produce 3D topographies for cell culturing as the fibers produced have dimensions within the nanometer range, similar to cells' natural environment. We have developed an electrospun scaffold using the nondegradable, nontoxic, polymer polyethylene terephthalate (PET) composed of uniaxially orientated nanofibers and have evaluated this topography's effect on HASM cell adhesion, alignment, and morphology. The fibers orientation provided contact guidance enabling the formation of fully aligned sheets of smooth muscle. Moreover, smooth muscle cells cultured on the scaffold present an elongated cell phenotype with altered contractile protein levels and distribution. HASM cells cultured on this scaffold responded to the bronchoconstrictor bradykinin. The platform presented provides a novel in vitro model that promotes airway smooth muscle cell development toward a more in vivo-like phenotype while providing topological cues to ensure full cell alignment

    Elevated CD16 expression by monocytes from patients with tumor necrosis factor receptor-associated periodic syndrome.

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    Tumor necrosis factor receptor-associated periodic syndrome (TRAPS) is an inherited autosomal-dominant autoinflammatory condition caused by mutations in the ectodomain of the 55-kd tumor necrosis factor (TNF) receptor superfamily 1A. Proinflammatory blood monocytes with the phenotype CD14+,CD16+,HLA-DR++ are a major source of TNF, and the number of such monocytes is increased during infection and inflammation. The aim of this study was to investigate whether the expression of circulating CD16+ monocytes is affected in patients with TRAPS. METHODS: Peripheral blood obtained from patients with TRAPS and healthy control subjects was stained with monoclonal antibodies to detect CD14++,CD16- monocytes and CD14+,CD16+ monocytes, using flow cytometry. Lipopolysaccharide-induced TNF production was measured by intracellular cytokine staining. Activation-induced shedding of CD16 was investigated by treating blood samples with phorbol myristate acetate. RESULTS: The level of CD16 expression by CD14+,CD16+ monocytes, but not their absolute number, was significantly elevated in patients with TRAPS, even though the patients were not experiencing clinically overt episodes of autoinflammation at the time of sampling. These findings are similar to those for the C-reactive protein levels and erythrocyte sedimentation rates in the same patients. The enhanced level of CD16 expression by monocytes from patients with TRAPS was not attributable to a defect in activation-induced shedding of CD16. The CD14+,CD16+ monocytes were the predominant source of TNF in both patients and healthy control subjects. CONCLUSION: The level of CD16 expression by monocytes was elevated in patients with TRAPS, as a feature of the underlying constitutive inflammation status

    Engineering Immunomodulatory Biomaterials To Tune the Inflammatory Response

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    Current state-of-the-art biomedical implants and tissue engineering methods promise technologies to improve or even restore the function of diseased organs. However, one of the biggest challenges to clinical success is the lack of functional integration. A series of cellular and molecular events following biomaterial implantation poses an important bottleneck for developing breakthrough solutions. With inflammation increasingly recognized as a crucial component influencing regeneration, immunomodulation or immuno-engineering has emerged as a potential solution to overcome this key challenge in regenerative medicine. We postulate possibilities to utilize biomaterial physicochemical modifications to modulate the host inflammatory response and develop strategies for effective biomaterial integration. Biomaterial-based immunomodulation strategies can significantly ameliorate the outcomes of medical implants and tissue engineering therapies

    Advances in fungal chemical genomics for the discovery of new antifungal agents

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    Current Strategies and Future Perspectives of Skin-on-a-Chip Platforms: Innovations, Technical Challenges and Commercial Outlook

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