Endothelial Cell Function Using a Tissue Engineered Blood Vessel Model: A Case Study of Cell-Cell Communication

Atherosclerosis is an inflammatory disease which develops focally in regions of the vasculature where there is dysfunction of endothelial cells modulated in part by shear stress from flowing blood. To address the clinical crisis of atherosclerosis, tissue engineering has focused on development of a...

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Main Author: Johnson, Tiffany Lynn
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Georgia Institute of Technology 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1853/10489
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spelling ndltd-GATECH-oai-smartech.gatech.edu-1853-104892013-01-07T20:14:00ZEndothelial Cell Function Using a Tissue Engineered Blood Vessel Model: A Case Study of Cell-Cell CommunicationJohnson, Tiffany LynnGap junctionConnexinTissue engineeringEndothelial cellsShear stressBlood vessel prosthesisVascular endotheliumConnexinsTissue engineeringGap junctions (Cell biology)AtherosclerosisAtherosclerosis is an inflammatory disease which develops focally in regions of the vasculature where there is dysfunction of endothelial cells modulated in part by shear stress from flowing blood. To address the clinical crisis of atherosclerosis, tissue engineering has focused on development of a living blood vessel substitute for use as a vascular graft in bypass surgery. Despite substantial progress in understanding the biological basis and developing clinical treatments for cardiovascular disease, critical challenges remain. As a novel strategy to improve understanding of basic human vascular biology and develop superior tissue engineered grafts, this dissertation combines the scientific and clinical approaches by using a tissue engineered blood vessel as a more physiologic in vitro model to study endothelial cell biology. Through the use of transcriptional profiling, results demonstrate significant changes in endothelial cell gene expression using the tissue engineered blood vessel model. Furthermore, the presence of a more physiologic substrate alters the cellular response to shear stress which is a critical mediator of vascular pathology. A case study of endothelial cell function in this system focuses on cell-cell communication through gap junctions. Endothelial cell connexins which form gap junctions are shown to be differentially regulated by substrate and shear stress. Moreover, gap junction communication between endothelial cells is modulated by the mechanical environment. Studies using RNA interference to knockdown expression of individual connexin isotypes demonstrate integrated regulation of connexins yet unique roles in endothelial cell function. Collectively, results exemplify the sensitivity of endothelial cell phenotype to substrate and shear stress and underline the importance of using more physiologic models in the study of basic cell biology.Georgia Institute of Technology2006-06-09T18:11:53Z2006-06-09T18:11:53Z2006-04-03Dissertation2817555 bytesapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1853/10489en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Gap junction
Connexin
Tissue engineering
Endothelial cells
Shear stress
Blood vessel prosthesis
Vascular endothelium
Connexins
Tissue engineering
Gap junctions (Cell biology)
Atherosclerosis
spellingShingle Gap junction
Connexin
Tissue engineering
Endothelial cells
Shear stress
Blood vessel prosthesis
Vascular endothelium
Connexins
Tissue engineering
Gap junctions (Cell biology)
Atherosclerosis
Johnson, Tiffany Lynn
Endothelial Cell Function Using a Tissue Engineered Blood Vessel Model: A Case Study of Cell-Cell Communication
description Atherosclerosis is an inflammatory disease which develops focally in regions of the vasculature where there is dysfunction of endothelial cells modulated in part by shear stress from flowing blood. To address the clinical crisis of atherosclerosis, tissue engineering has focused on development of a living blood vessel substitute for use as a vascular graft in bypass surgery. Despite substantial progress in understanding the biological basis and developing clinical treatments for cardiovascular disease, critical challenges remain. As a novel strategy to improve understanding of basic human vascular biology and develop superior tissue engineered grafts, this dissertation combines the scientific and clinical approaches by using a tissue engineered blood vessel as a more physiologic in vitro model to study endothelial cell biology. Through the use of transcriptional profiling, results demonstrate significant changes in endothelial cell gene expression using the tissue engineered blood vessel model. Furthermore, the presence of a more physiologic substrate alters the cellular response to shear stress which is a critical mediator of vascular pathology. A case study of endothelial cell function in this system focuses on cell-cell communication through gap junctions. Endothelial cell connexins which form gap junctions are shown to be differentially regulated by substrate and shear stress. Moreover, gap junction communication between endothelial cells is modulated by the mechanical environment. Studies using RNA interference to knockdown expression of individual connexin isotypes demonstrate integrated regulation of connexins yet unique roles in endothelial cell function. Collectively, results exemplify the sensitivity of endothelial cell phenotype to substrate and shear stress and underline the importance of using more physiologic models in the study of basic cell biology.
author Johnson, Tiffany Lynn
author_facet Johnson, Tiffany Lynn
author_sort Johnson, Tiffany Lynn
title Endothelial Cell Function Using a Tissue Engineered Blood Vessel Model: A Case Study of Cell-Cell Communication
title_short Endothelial Cell Function Using a Tissue Engineered Blood Vessel Model: A Case Study of Cell-Cell Communication
title_full Endothelial Cell Function Using a Tissue Engineered Blood Vessel Model: A Case Study of Cell-Cell Communication
title_fullStr Endothelial Cell Function Using a Tissue Engineered Blood Vessel Model: A Case Study of Cell-Cell Communication
title_full_unstemmed Endothelial Cell Function Using a Tissue Engineered Blood Vessel Model: A Case Study of Cell-Cell Communication
title_sort endothelial cell function using a tissue engineered blood vessel model: a case study of cell-cell communication
publisher Georgia Institute of Technology
publishDate 2006
url http://hdl.handle.net/1853/10489
work_keys_str_mv AT johnsontiffanylynn endothelialcellfunctionusingatissueengineeredbloodvesselmodelacasestudyofcellcellcommunication
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