BACKGROUND: Transplant vasculopathy remains a difficult therapeutic problem, resulting in the majority of late cardiac graft losses. This chronic vascular disease is thought to be triggered by alloantigen-dependent and alloantigen-independent inflammatory factors. Despite improved 1-year survival, the incidence of transplant vasculopathy has not improved with current immunosuppressive protocols. Highly effective strategies have evolved in the large DNA viruses that shield infecting viruses from host inflammatory responses. Serp-1 is a secreted myxoma virus anti-inflammatory serine proteinase inhibitor. Serp-1 inhibits plasminogen activators in a manner similar to plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI-1), a vascular protein that plays a pivotal regulatory role in vascular wound healing. In this study, we tested the ability of purified Serp-1 protein to ameliorate posttransplant vasculopathy after rat aortic allograft surgery. METHODS AND RESULTS: Serp-1 protein or controls were infused into 98 rats immediately after segmental aortic allograft transplantation. After either late (28 days, 64 rats) or early (12 to 48 hours, 24 rats) follow-up, transplanted aortic segments were harvested for morphological and immunohistochemical analysis. Significant reductions in intimal plaque growth (P<0.002) and mononuclear cell invasion (P<0.033) were detected after Serp-1 infusion at nanogram doses. Serp-1 reduced early macrophage (P<0.0016) and nonspecific lymphocyte (P<0.0179) invasion into medial and adventitial layers and inhibited associated depletion of medial smooth muscle cells (P<0.0006). CONCLUSIONS: Infusion of a viral anti-inflammatory serpin, Serp-1, significantly reduces early inflammatory responses and later luminal occlusion in a rat aortic allograft model.
BACKGROUND:Transplant vasculopathy remains a difficult therapeutic problem, resulting in the majority of late cardiac graft losses. This chronic vascular disease is thought to be triggered by alloantigen-dependent and alloantigen-independent inflammatory factors. Despite improved 1-year survival, the incidence of transplant vasculopathy has not improved with current immunosuppressive protocols. Highly effective strategies have evolved in the large DNA viruses that shield infecting viruses from host inflammatory responses. Serp-1 is a secreted myxoma virus anti-inflammatory serine proteinase inhibitor. Serp-1 inhibits plasminogen activators in a manner similar to plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI-1), a vascular protein that plays a pivotal regulatory role in vascular wound healing. In this study, we tested the ability of purified Serp-1 protein to ameliorate posttransplant vasculopathy after rat aortic allograft surgery. METHODS AND RESULTS:Serp-1 protein or controls were infused into 98 rats immediately after segmental aortic allograft transplantation. After either late (28 days, 64 rats) or early (12 to 48 hours, 24 rats) follow-up, transplanted aortic segments were harvested for morphological and immunohistochemical analysis. Significant reductions in intimal plaque growth (P<0.002) and mononuclear cell invasion (P<0.033) were detected after Serp-1 infusion at nanogram doses. Serp-1 reduced early macrophage (P<0.0016) and nonspecific lymphocyte (P<0.0179) invasion into medial and adventitial layers and inhibited associated depletion of medial smooth muscle cells (P<0.0006). CONCLUSIONS: Infusion of a viral anti-inflammatory serpin, Serp-1, significantly reduces early inflammatory responses and later luminal occlusion in a rat aortic allograft model.
Authors: Hao Chen; Donghang Zheng; Jennifer Davids; Mee Yong Bartee; Erbin Dai; Liying Liu; Lyubomir Petrov; Colin Macaulay; Robert Thoburn; Eric Sobel; Richard Moyer; Grant McFadden; Alexandra Lucas Journal: Methods Enzymol Date: 2011 Impact factor: 1.600
Authors: Donghang Zheng; Hao Chen; Mee Y Bartee; Jennifer Williams; Jennifer A Davids; David A Lomas; Grant McFadden; Alexandra R Lucas Journal: J Cancer Sci Ther Date: 2013-08-19
Authors: Hao Chen; Sriram Ambadapadi; Dara Wakefield; Meeyong Bartee; Jordan R Yaron; Liqiang Zhang; Stephanie A Archer-Hartmann; Parastoo Azadi; Michelle Burgin; Chad Borges; Donghang Zheng; Kevin Ergle; Vishnu Muppala; Sufi Morshed; Kenneth Rand; William Clapp; Amanda Proudfoot; Alexandra Lucas Journal: Sci Rep Date: 2018-09-07 Impact factor: 4.379
Authors: Liqiang Zhang; Jordan R Yaron; Amanda M Tafoya; Sarah E Wallace; Jacquelyn Kilbourne; Shelley Haydel; Kaushal Rege; Grant McFadden; Alexandra R Lucas Journal: J Clin Med Date: 2019-10-04 Impact factor: 4.241
Authors: Qiuyun Guo; Jordan R Yaron; John W Wallen; Kyle F Browder; Ryan Boyd; Tien L Olson; Michelle Burgin; Peaches Ulrich; Emily Aliskevich; Lauren N Schutz; Petra Fromme; Liqiang Zhang; Alexandra R Lucas Journal: Front Cardiovasc Med Date: 2021-02-16
Authors: Jordan R Yaron; Sriram Ambadapadi; Liqiang Zhang; Ramani N Chavan; Scott A Tibbetts; Shahar Keinan; Arvind Varsani; Juan Maldonado; Simona Kraberger; Amanda M Tafoya; Whitney L Bullard; Jacquelyn Kilbourne; Alison Stern-Harbutte; Rosa Krajmalnik-Brown; Barbara H Munk; Erling O Koppang; Efrem S Lim; Alexandra R Lucas Journal: Sci Rep Date: 2020-02-11 Impact factor: 4.379