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1.
JCI Insight ; 8(9)2023 05 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37014698

RESUMEN

Lipid regulation of ion channels is largely explored using in silico modeling with minimal experimentation in intact tissue; thus, the functional consequences of these predicted lipid-channel interactions within native cellular environments remain elusive. The goal of this study is to investigate how lipid regulation of endothelial Kir2.1 - an inwardly rectifying potassium channel that regulates membrane hyperpolarization - contributes to vasodilation in resistance arteries. First, we show that phosphatidylserine (PS) localizes to a specific subpopulation of myoendothelial junctions (MEJs), crucial signaling microdomains that regulate vasodilation in resistance arteries, and in silico data have implied that PS may compete with phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) binding on Kir2.1. We found that Kir2.1-MEJs also contained PS, possibly indicating an interaction where PS regulates Kir2.1. Electrophysiology experiments on HEK cells demonstrate that PS blocks PIP2 activation of Kir2.1 and that addition of exogenous PS blocks PIP2-mediated Kir2.1 vasodilation in resistance arteries. Using a mouse model lacking canonical MEJs in resistance arteries (Elnfl/fl/Cdh5-Cre), PS localization in endothelium was disrupted and PIP2 activation of Kir2.1 was significantly increased. Taken together, our data suggest that PS enrichment to MEJs inhibits PIP2-mediated activation of Kir2.1 to tightly regulate changes in arterial diameter, and they demonstrate that the intracellular lipid localization within the endothelium is an important determinant of vascular function.


Asunto(s)
Fosfatidilserinas , Canales de Potasio de Rectificación Interna , Canales de Potasio de Rectificación Interna/fisiología , Transducción de Señal , Vasodilatación/fisiología , Endotelio/metabolismo
2.
Sci Rep ; 10(1): 15808, 2020 09 25.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32978500

RESUMEN

Retinal diseases are frequently characterized by the accumulation of excessive scar tissue found throughout the neural retina. However, the pathophysiology of retinal fibrosis remains poorly understood, and the cell types that contribute to the fibrotic response are incompletely defined. Here, we show that myofibroblast differentiation of mural cells contributes directly to retinal fibrosis. Using lineage tracing technology, we demonstrate that after chemical ocular injury, Myh11+ mural cells detach from the retinal microvasculature and differentiate into myofibroblasts to form an epiretinal membrane. Inhibition of TGFßR attenuates Myh11+ retinal mural cell myofibroblast differentiation, and diminishes the subsequent formation of scar tissue on the surface of the retina. We demonstrate retinal fibrosis within a murine model of oxygen-induced retinopathy resulting from the intravitreal injection of adipose Myh11-derived mesenchymal stem cells, with ensuing myofibroblast differentiation. In this model, inhibiting TGFßR signaling does not significantly alter myofibroblast differentiation and collagen secretion within the retina. This work shows the complexity of retinal fibrosis, where scar formation is regulated both by TGFßR and non-TGFßR dependent processes involving mural cells and derived mesenchymal stem cells. It also offers a cautionary note on the potential deleterious, pro-fibrotic effects of exogenous MSCs once intravitreally injected into clinical patients.


Asunto(s)
Diferenciación Celular , Cicatriz/patología , Fibrosis/patología , Células Madre Mesenquimatosas/patología , Miofibroblastos/patología , Cadenas Pesadas de Miosina/metabolismo , Enfermedades de la Retina/patología , Animales , Células Cultivadas , Cicatriz/metabolismo , Femenino , Fibrosis/metabolismo , Masculino , Células Madre Mesenquimatosas/metabolismo , Ratones , Ratones Endogámicos C57BL , Miofibroblastos/metabolismo , Enfermedades de la Retina/metabolismo , Transducción de Señal
3.
Adv Skin Wound Care ; 33(8): 428-436, 2020 Aug.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32701253

RESUMEN

OBJECTIVE: Oxygen is essential to wound healing; therefore, accurate monitoring can guide clinical decisions. Clinical wound assessment is often subjective, and tools to monitor wound oxygen are typically expensive, indirect, and highly variable. This study demonstrates the utility of a novel, low-cost oxygen-sensing thin film for serial assessment of wound oxygenation. DESIGN: Dual-layer films were fabricated with boron oxygen-sensing nanoparticles (BNPs) impregnated into a chitosan-polycaprolactone layer for direct wound bed contact with a relatively oxygen impermeable calcium alginate surface layer. The BNPs are a dual-emissive difluoroboron ß-diketonate dye incorporated into poly(lactic acid) nanoparticles. Under UV excitation, the BNPs emit fluorescence based on concentration and oxygen-sensitive phosphorescence. The fluorescence/phosphorescence ratio is directly proportional to oxygen concentration. METHODS: A series of in vitro oxygen challenges and in vivo murine and porcine wound healing models were used to validate the utility of the film in sensing wound oxygenation. MAIN RESULTS: In vitro testing demonstrated the oxygen-sensing capability of the BNP film and its ability to shield ambient oxygen to isolate wound oxygen. In vivo testing demonstrated the ability of the film to accurately monitor relative oxygen changes in a murine wound over time, measuring a 22% fluorescence/phosphorescence increase during acute healing. CONCLUSIONS: This study presents a low-cost, noninvasive, direct, and serial oxygen mapping technology to detect spatial differences in wound oxygenation. Clinical use of the films has the potential to monitor wound healing trajectories and guide wound care decisions.


Asunto(s)
Compuestos de Boro/química , Colorantes Fluorescentes/química , Oxígeno/metabolismo , Poliésteres/química , Cicatrización de Heridas , Animales , Materiales Biocompatibles , Transporte Biológico , Técnicas Biosensibles/métodos , Humanos , Ácido Láctico/química , Espectrometría de Fluorescencia , Espectrofotometría Ultravioleta/métodos
4.
Diabetes ; 69(7): 1503-1517, 2020 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32321760

RESUMEN

Diabetic retinopathy is a potentially blinding eye disease that threatens the vision of one-ninth of patients with diabetes. Progression of the disease has long been attributed to an initial dropout of pericytes that enwrap the retinal microvasculature. Revealed through retinal vascular digests, a subsequent increase in basement membrane bridges was also observed. Using cell-specific markers, we demonstrate that pericytes rather than endothelial cells colocalize with these bridges. We show that the density of bridges transiently increases with elevation of Ang-2, PDGF-BB, and blood glucose; is rapidly reversed on a timescale of days; and is often associated with a pericyte cell body located off vessel. Cell-specific knockout of KLF4 in pericytes fully replicates this phenotype. In vivo imaging of limbal vessels demonstrates pericyte migration off vessel, with rapid pericyte filopodial-like process formation between adjacent vessels. Accounting for off-vessel and on-vessel pericytes, we observed no pericyte loss relative to nondiabetic control retina. These findings reveal the possibility that pericyte perturbations in location and process formation may play a role in the development of pathological vascular remodeling in diabetic retinopathy.


Asunto(s)
Retinopatía Diabética/etiología , Homeostasis , Hiperglucemia/patología , Pericitos/fisiología , Animales , Antígenos/análisis , Becaplermina/fisiología , Colágeno Tipo IV/análisis , Diabetes Mellitus Experimental/tratamiento farmacológico , Insulina/uso terapéutico , Factor 4 Similar a Kruppel , Factores de Transcripción de Tipo Kruppel/fisiología , Ratones , Ratones Endogámicos C57BL , Cadenas Pesadas de Miosina/análisis , Pericitos/efectos de los fármacos , Molécula-1 de Adhesión Celular Endotelial de Plaqueta/análisis , Proteoglicanos/análisis , Ribonucleasa Pancreática/fisiología , Estreptozocina
5.
Microcirculation ; 27(5): e12618, 2020 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32173962

RESUMEN

Alterations in vascular networks, including angiogenesis and capillary regression, play key roles in disease, wound healing, and development. The spatial structures of blood vessels can be captured through imaging, but effective characterization of network architecture requires both metrics for quantification and software to carry out the analysis in a high-throughput and unbiased fashion. We present Rapid Editable Analysis of Vessel Elements Routine (REAVER), an open-source tool that researchers can use to analyze high-resolution 2D fluorescent images of blood vessel networks, and assess its performance compared to alternative image analysis programs. Using a dataset of manually analyzed images from a variety of murine tissues as a ground-truth, REAVER exhibited high accuracy and precision for all vessel architecture metrics quantified, including vessel length density, vessel area fraction, mean vessel diameter, and branchpoint count, along with the highest pixel-by-pixel accuracy for the segmentation of the blood vessel network. In instances where REAVER's automated segmentation is inaccurate, we show that combining manual curation with automated analysis improves the accuracy of vessel architecture metrics. REAVER can be used to quantify differences in blood vessel architectures, making it useful in experiments designed to evaluate the effects of different external perturbations (eg, drugs or disease states).


Asunto(s)
Procesamiento de Imagen Asistido por Computador , Neovascularización Patológica/patología , Programas Informáticos , Animales , Ratones
6.
Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci ; 60(15): 5095-5103, 2019 12 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31826231

RESUMEN

Purpose: To establish Myh11 as a marker of a subset of corneal endothelial cells (CECs), and to demonstrate the feasibility of restoring the corneal endothelium with Myh11-lineage (Myh11-Lin[+]) adipose-derived stromal cells (ASCs). Methods: Intraperitoneal administration of tamoxifen and (Z)-4-hydroxytamoxifen eyedrops were used to trace the lineage of Myh11-expressing cells with the Myh11-Cre-ERT2-flox-tdTomato mouse model. Immunostaining and Western blot characterized marker expression and spatial distribution of Myh11-Lin(+) cells in the cornea, and administration of 5-ethynyl-2'-deoxyuridine labeled proliferating cells. ASCs were isolated from epididymal adipose Myh11+ mural cells and treated with cornea differentiation media to evaluate corneal endothelial differentiation potential. Differentiated ASCs were injected into the anterior chamber to test for incorporation into corneal endothelium following scratch injury. Results: A subset of CECs express Myh11, a marker previously thought restricted to only mural cells. Myh11-Lin(+) CECs marked a stable subpopulation of cells in the cornea endothelium. Myh11-Lin(+) ASCs undergo CEC differentiation in vitro and incorporate into injured corneal endothelium. Conclusions: Dystrophy and dysfunction of the corneal endothelium accounts for almost half of all corneal transplants, the maintenance of the cornea endothelium is poorly understood, and there are a lack of mouse models to study specific CEC populations. We establish a mouse model that can trace the cell fate of a subpopulation of CECs based on Myh11 expression. A subset of ASCs that share this Myh11 transcriptional lineage are capable of differentiating into CECs that can incorporate into injured corneal endothelium, revealing a potential cell source for creating engineered transplant material.


Asunto(s)
Adipocitos/trasplante , Distrofias Hereditarias de la Córnea/metabolismo , Trasplante de Córnea/métodos , Endotelio Corneal/metabolismo , Cadenas Pesadas de Miosina/metabolismo , Células del Estroma/trasplante , Animales , Recuento de Células , Diferenciación Celular , Células Cultivadas , Distrofias Hereditarias de la Córnea/patología , Distrofias Hereditarias de la Córnea/cirugía , Modelos Animales de Enfermedad , Endotelio Corneal/patología , Immunoblotting , Inmunohistoquímica , Ratones
7.
Front Physiol ; 10: 1389, 2019.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31780954

RESUMEN

Frigid temperatures of the Southern Ocean are known to be an evolutionary driver in Antarctic fish. For example, many fish have reduced red blood cell (RBC) concentration to minimize vascular resistance. Via the oxygen-carrying protein hemoglobin, RBCs contain the vast majority of the body's iron, which is known to be a limiting nutrient in marine ecosystems. Since lower RBC levels also lead to reduced iron requirements, we hypothesize that low iron availability was an additional evolutionary driver of Antarctic fish speciation. Antarctic Icefish of the family Channichthyidae are known to have an extreme alteration of iron metabolism due to loss of RBCs and two iron-binding proteins, hemoglobin and myoglobin. Loss of hemoglobin is considered a maladaptive trait allowed by relaxation of predator selection since extreme adaptations are required to compensate for the loss of oxygen-carrying capacity. However, iron dependency minimization may have driven hemoglobin loss instead of a random evolutionary event. Given the variety of functions that hemoglobin serves in the endothelium, we suspected the protein corresponding to the 3' truncated Hbα fragment (Hbα-3'f) that was not genetically excluded by icefish may still be expressed as a protein. Using whole mount confocal microscopy, we show that Hbα-3'f is expressed in the vascular endothelium of icefish retina, suggesting this Hbα fragment may still serve an important role in the endothelium. These observations support a novel hypothesis that iron minimization could have influenced icefish speciation with the loss of the iron-binding portion of Hbα in Hbα-3'f, as well as hemoglobin ß and myoglobin.

8.
Bioinformatics ; 35(3): 506-514, 2019 02 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30032263

RESUMEN

Motivation: Colocalization of structures in biomedical images can lead to insights into biological behaviors. One class of colocalization problems is examining an annular structure (disk-shaped such as a cell, vesicle or molecule) interacting with a network structure (vascular, neuronal, cytoskeletal, organellar). Examining colocalization events across conditions is often complicated by changes in density of both structure types, confounding traditional statistical approaches since colocalization cannot be normalized to the density of both structure types simultaneously. We have developed a technique to measure colocalization independent of structure density and applied it to characterizing intercellular colocation with blood vessel networks. This technique could be used to analyze colocalization of any annular structure with an arbitrarily shaped network structure. Results: We present the circular colocalization affinity with network structures test (CIRCOAST), a novel statistical hypothesis test to probe for enriched network colocalization in 2D z-projected multichannel images by using agent-based Monte Carlo modeling and image processing to generate the pseudo-null distribution of random cell placement unique to each image. This hypothesis test was validated by confirming that adipose-derived stem cells (ASCs) exhibit enriched colocalization with endothelial cells forming arborized networks in culture and then applied to show that locally delivered ASCs have enriched colocalization with murine retinal microvasculature in a model of diabetic retinopathy. We demonstrate that the CIRCOAST test provides superior power and type I error rates in characterizing intercellular colocalization compared to generic approaches that are confounded by changes in cell or vessel density. Availability and implementation: CIRCOAST source code available at: https://github.com/uva-peirce-cottler-lab/ARCAS. Supplementary information: Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.


Asunto(s)
Células Endoteliales/citología , Programas Informáticos , Células Madre/citología , Tejido Adiposo/citología , Animales , Células Cultivadas , Retinopatía Diabética , Procesamiento de Imagen Asistido por Computador , Ratones , Método de Montecarlo , Neuronas
10.
Microcirculation ; 26(5): e12520, 2019 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30548558

RESUMEN

Microvascular networks play key roles in oxygen transport and nutrient delivery to meet the varied and dynamic metabolic needs of different tissues throughout the body, and their spatial architectures of interconnected blood vessel segments are highly complex. Moreover, functional adaptations of the microcirculation enabled by structural adaptations in microvascular network architecture are required for development, wound healing, and often invoked in disease conditions, including the top eight causes of death in the Unites States. Effective characterization of microvascular network architectures is not only limited by the available techniques to visualize microvessels but also reliant on the available quantitative metrics that accurately delineate between spatial patterns in altered networks. In this review, we survey models used for studying the microvasculature, methods to label and image microvessels, and the metrics and software packages used to quantify microvascular networks. These programs have provided researchers with invaluable tools, yet we estimate that they have collectively attained low adoption rates, possibly due to limitations with basic validation, segmentation performance, and nonstandard sets of quantification metrics. To address these existing constraints, we discuss opportunities to improve effectiveness, rigor, and reproducibility of microvascular network quantification to better serve the current and future needs of microvascular research.


Asunto(s)
Angiografía , Microcirculación , Microvasos/diagnóstico por imagen , Modelos Cardiovasculares , Coloración y Etiquetado , Animales , Humanos
11.
Microcirculation ; 23(2): 95-121, 2016 Feb.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26614117

RESUMEN

Angiogenesis and lymphangiogenesis often occur in response to tissue injury or in the presence of pathology (e.g., cancer), and it is these types of environments in which macrophages are activated and increased in number. Moreover, the blood vascular microcirculation and the lymphatic circulation serve as the conduits for entry and exit for monocyte-derived macrophages in nearly every tissue and organ. Macrophages both affect and are affected by the vessels through which they travel. Therefore, it is not surprising that examination of macrophage behaviors in both angiogenesis and lymphangiogenesis has yielded interesting observations that suggest macrophages may be key regulators of these complex growth and remodeling processes. In this review, we will take a closer look at macrophages through the lens of angiogenesis and lymphangiogenesis, examining how their dynamic behaviors may regulate vessel sprouting and function. We present macrophages as a cellular link that spatially and temporally connects angiogenesis with lymphangiogenesis, in both physiological growth and in pathological adaptations, such as tumorigenesis. As such, attempts to therapeutically target macrophages in order to affect these processes may be particularly effective, and studying macrophages in both settings will accelerate the field's understanding of this important cell type in health and disease.


Asunto(s)
Linfangiogénesis , Macrófagos/metabolismo , Microcirculación , Neovascularización Fisiológica , Animales , Humanos , Inflamación/metabolismo , Inflamación/patología
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