| Literature DB >> 28775765 |
Qanita Bani Baker1, Gregory J Podgorski2,3, Elizabeth Vargis4, Nicholas S Flann5,6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The configuration of necrotic areas within the retinal pigmented epithelium is an important element in the progression of age-related macular degeneration (AMD). In the exudative (wet) and non-exudative (dry) forms of the disease, retinal pigment epithelial (RPE) cells respond to adjacent atrophied regions by secreting vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) that in turn recruits new blood vessels which lead to a further reduction in retinal function and vision. In vitro models exist for studying VEGF expression in wet AMD (Vargis et al., Biomaterials 35(13):3999-4004, 2014), but are limited in the patterns of necrotic and intact RPE epithelium they can produce and in their ability to finely resolve VEGF expression dynamics.Entities:
Keywords: Age-related macular degeneration; Auto-regulation; Micropatterning; Retinal pigment epithelial cells; Vascular endothelial growth factor
Year: 2017 PMID: 28775765 PMCID: PMC5540422 DOI: 10.1186/s13036-017-0063-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Eng ISSN: 1754-1611 Impact factor: 4.355
Fig. 1Patch configurations. The top row shows cropped images of the experimental patches of fluorescent fibronectin that was used to form the patches for cell growth. The white scale bars are 100μm. The bottom images show the simulated configurations of the cells (the blue circles). In all cases, patches occupied the same total area (1.131 mm2) that comprised 20% of the total simulation domain (2.4 mm × 2.4 mm.)
Model’s parameter descriptions
| Parameter | Value | Units | Description | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 5.8×10−11 | m2/s | Diffusion coefficient | [ |
|
| 1.0194 | 1/h | Max. growth rate for RPE cells | [ |
|
| 0.13 | pg/ml | Half saturation rate | [ |
|
| 0.09 | 1/h | Max. VEGF secretion rate | [ |
|
| 0.850 | unitless | Binding affinity | [ |
|
| 6.2996 |
| Cell division radius | [ |
Initial number of cells in each patch. These values match those used in the Vargis et al. study [1]
| PatchSize ( | Initial number of cells. |
|---|---|
| 100 | 15 |
| 200 | 74 |
| 300 | 189 |
| 400 | 351 |
Fig. 2VEGF expression is given as the concentration of VEGF per cell at the end of the cell culture study of Vargis et al. [1] (open bars) and the end of the 72 h simulation (closed bars). Error bars show one SD. a Experimental results, b Simulated results
Fig. 3Time course of VEGF expression measured in cell culture (panel a) and predicted by the model (panel b); Error bars show one SD). a Experimental results, b Simulated results
Fig. 4Effect of VEGF addition on the VEGF production [1]. The VEGF agonist (V a), not detectable in the VEGF assays, was added 20 h after the plating the cells. a Experimental results, b Simulated results
Fig. 5Distributions of VEGF over the course of model runs. Rows are different patch sizes, columns are time points. All figures are colored using the same scale and so may be compared directly
Fig. 6Prediction of VEGF produced by an inverted pattern of cell-containing and cell-free zones. a The inverse pattern illustrated for one cell-free region of diameter 400 μm. b VEGF expression per cell in inverted cell configurations. In these cases, the numbers refer to the diameters of cell-free circles arranged in the same pattern as in Fig. 1