Literature DB >> 24205448

A Biohybrid Device for the Systemic Control of Acute Inflammation.

Rami A Namas1, Maxim Mikheev, Jinling Yin, Patrick Over, Matthew Young, Gregory M Constantine, Ruben Zamora, Jörg Gerlach, Yoram Vodovotz.   

Abstract

Properly regulated inflammation facilitates recognition and reaction to injury or infection, but inadequate or overly robust inflammation can lead to disease. Sepsis is an inflammatory disease that accounts for nearly 10% of total U.S. deaths, costing more than $17 billion. Acute inflammation in sepsis may evolve too rapidly to be modulated appropriately, and we suggest that therapies should focus not on abolishing inflammation, but rather on attenuating the positive feedback cycle of inflammation/damage/inflammation. In Gram-negative sepsis, bacterial endotoxin causes inflammation and is driven and regulated by the cytokine tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α), which is, in turn, negatively regulated via its endogenous inhibitor, soluble TNF-α receptor (sTNFR). We generated stably gene-modified variants of human HepG2 hepatocytes, using lentiviral constructs coding for mouse sTNFR driven by the constitutive cytomegalovirus promoter, and seeded them in a scaled-down, experimental liver bioreactor. When connected to anesthetized, cannulated rats subjected to endotoxin infusion and maintained solely by the animals' circulation, this biohybrid device elevated circulating sTNFR, reduced the levels of TNF-α and other key inflammatory mediators, alleviated hypotension, and reduced circulating markers of organ damage. This novel class of biohybrid devices may bemodified for patient- and disease-specific application, and, thus, may represent a disruptive strategy that offers the potential for rational inflammation reprogramming.

Entities:  

Keywords:  biohybrid device; endotoxin; multiple organ dysfunction syndrome; sepsis; soluble tumor necrosis factor-alpha receptor 1; tumor necrosis factor alpha

Year:  2012        PMID: 24205448      PMCID: PMC3817839          DOI: 10.1089/dst.2012.0001

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Disrupt Sci Technol        ISSN: 2163-310X


  28 in total

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  3 in total

1.  Inflammation and Disease: Modelling and Modulation of the Inflammatory Response to Alleviate Critical Illness.

Authors:  Judy D Day; Chase Cockrell; Rami Namas; Ruben Zamora; Gary An; Yoram Vodovotz
Journal:  Curr Opin Syst Biol       Date:  2018-08-23

Review 2.  Insights into the Role of Chemokines, Damage-Associated Molecular Patterns, and Lymphocyte-Derived Mediators from Computational Models of Trauma-Induced Inflammation.

Authors:  Rami A Namas; Qi Mi; Rajaie Namas; Khalid Almahmoud; Akram M Zaaqoq; Othman Abdul-Malak; Nabil Azhar; Judy Day; Andrew Abboud; Ruben Zamora; Timothy R Billiar; Yoram Vodovotz
Journal:  Antioxid Redox Signal       Date:  2015-12-10       Impact factor: 8.401

3.  Reverse Engineering the Inflammatory "Clock": From Computational Modeling to Rational Resetting.

Authors:  Yoram Vodovotz
Journal:  Drug Discov Today Dis Models       Date:  2017-04-15
  3 in total

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