PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Researchers step closer to custom-building new blood vessels

Vessels grown from pluripotent stem cells able to function inside mice

2013-07-17
(Press-News.org) Researchers at Johns Hopkins have coaxed stem cells into forming networks of new blood vessels in the laboratory, then successfully transplanted them into mice. The stem cells are made by reprogramming ordinary cells, so the new technique could potentially be used to make blood vessels genetically matched to individual patients and unlikely to be rejected by their immune systems, the investigators say. The results appear online this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

"In demonstrating the ability to rebuild a microvascular bed in a clinically relevant manner, we have made an important step toward the construction of blood vessels for therapeutic use," says Sharon Gerecht, Ph.D., an associate professor in the Johns Hopkins University Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, Physical Sciences–Oncology Center and Institute for NanoBioTechnology. "Our findings could yield more effective treatments for patients afflicted with burns, diabetic complications and other conditions in which vasculature function is compromised."

Gerecht's research group and others had previously grown blood vessels in the laboratory using stem cells, but barriers remain to efficiently producing the vessels and using them to treat patients.

For the current study, the group focused on streamlining the new growth process. Where other experiments used chemical cues to get stem cells to form cells of a single type, or to mature into a smorgasbord of cell types that the researchers would then sort through, graduate student Sravanti Kusuma devised a way to get the stem cells to form the two cell types needed to build new blood vessels — and only those types. "It makes the process quicker and more robust if you don't have to sort through a lot of cells you don't need to find the ones you do, or grow two batches of cells," she says.

A second difference from previous experiments was that instead of using adult stem cells derived from cord blood or bone marrow to construct the network of vessels, Gerecht's group teamed with Linzhao Cheng, Ph.D., a professor in the Institute for Cell Engineering, to use induced pluripotent stem cells as their starting point. Since this type of cell is made by reverse-engineering mature cells — from the skin or blood, for example — using it means that the resulting blood vessels could be tailor-made for specific patients, Kusuma says. "This is an elegant use of human induced pluripotent stem cells that can form multiple cell types within one kind of tissue or organ and have the same genetic background," Cheng says. "This study showed that in addition to being able to form blood cells and neural cells as previously shown, blood-derived human induced pluripotent stem cells can also form multiple types of vascular network cells."

To grow the vessels, the research team put the stem cells into a scaffolding made of a squishy material called hydrogel. The hydrogel was loaded with chemical cues that nudged the cells to organize into a network of recognizable blood vessels made up of cells that create the network and the type that support and give vessels their structure. This was the first time that blood vessels had been constructed from human pluripotent stem cells in synthetic material.

To learn whether the vessel-infused hydrogel would work inside a living animal, the group implanted it into mice. After two weeks, the lab-grown vessels had integrated with the mice's own vessels, and the hydrogel had begun to biodegrade and disappear as it had been designed to do. "That these vessels survive and function inside a living animal is a crucial step in getting them to medical application," Kusuma says.

One of the next steps, she says, will be to look more closely at the 3-D structures the lab-grown vessels form. Another will be to see whether the vessels can deliver blood to damaged tissues and help them recover.



INFORMATION:

The study was funded by the American Heart Association, the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (grant numbers F31HL112644, 2R01 HL073781 and R01 HL107938), the National Cancer Institute (grant number U54CA143868) and the National Science Foundation (grant number 1054415).

Other authors on the report were Yu-I Shen, Donny Hanjaya-Putra and Prashant Mali, all of The Johns Hopkins University.

Link to the PNAS article: http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2013/07/10/1306562110.abstract?sid=90ae5bc4-5a8e-41ec-be25-ec2c25923f9a

Related articles:

Steering Stem Cells to Become Two Different Building Blocks for New Blood Vessels: http://releases.jhu.edu/2012/12/20/steering-stem-cells-to-become-building-blocks-for-blood-vessels/

Researcher Seeks to Turn Stem Cells into Blood Vessels: http://www.jhu.edu/news/home09/feb09/gerecht.html

Linzhao Cheng on Making Stem Cells from a Patient's Blood Sample: http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/institute_cell_engineering/_includes/videos/Transcriptions/Cheng_txn.html



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

The right snack may aid satiety, weight loss

2013-07-17
CHICAGO—Healthy snacks that promote a feeling of fullness (satiety) may reduce the amount of food intake at subsequent meals and limit overall food consumption, according to a presentation today at the 2013 Institute of Food Technologists (IFT) Annual Meeting & Food Expo in Chicago®. "Appetite control is an area of weight management that is receiving increased attention as the food industry aims to provide consumers with foods that will keep them fuller for longer, reducing inter-meal hunger and overall energy intake," said Roberta Re, Ph.D., nutrition research manager ...

I can see clearly now -- A new method for rapid detection and identification of downy mildew in basil

2013-07-17
Downy mildew (Pernospora belbahrii Thines) is a relatively new disease to North America. First reported in 1933 in Uganda, downy mildew has spread rapidly across the globe. Early detection of downy mildew is crucial for control of the disease, which can devastate both greenhouse and field basil crops. However, the signs and symptoms of basil downy mildew can be difficult to differentiate from those caused by environmental stresses such as nutrient deficiency. As part of an ongoing project to develop downy mildew–resistant plants, researchers at The City University of New ...

Taste rules for kids and healthy food choices

2013-07-17
CHICAGO – Sweet and salty flavors, repeat exposure, serving size and parental behavior are the key drivers in children's food choices, according to a July 15 panel discussion at the 2013 Institute of Food Technologists (IFT) Annual Meeting & Food Expo® held at McCormick Place. A standing-room only crowd of more than 200 conference attendees heard new insights into how children choose the foods they eat, what their eating behaviors are and how the industry and parents can give children access to healthy food environments that shape those food choices. "Children's decision ...

CME To pass Earth, Messenger and Juno

2013-07-17
On July 16, 2013, at 12:09 a.m. EDT, the sun erupted with an Earth-directed coronal mass ejection or CME, a solar phenomenon that can send billions of tons of particles into space that can reach Earth one to three days later. These particles cannot travel through the atmosphere to harm humans on Earth, but they can affect electronic systems in satellites and on the ground. Experimental NASA research models, based on observations from NASA's Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory, show that the CME left the sun at speeds of around 560 miles per second, which is a fairly ...

Cancer survivors have more frequent and severe menopausal hot flashes

2013-07-17
CLEVELAND, Ohio (July 17, 2013)—Women who survive cancer have more frequent, severe, and troubling hot flashes than other women with menopausal symptoms, according to a study published online today in Menopause, the journal of The North American Menopause Society (NAMS). But surprisingly, the cancer survivors fare better psychologically and report a better quality of life than the women without cancer and have about the same levels of sexual activity and function. This is the first large-scale, clinic-based study to compare these groups of women using standard, validated ...

Newly discovered flux in the Earth may solve missing-mantle mystery

2013-07-17
CAMBRIDGE, MA -- It's widely thought that the Earth arose from violent origins: Some 4.5 billion years ago, a maelstrom of gas and dust circled in a massive disc around the sun, gathering in rocky clumps to form asteroids. These asteroids, gaining momentum, whirled around a fledgling solar system, repeatedly smashing into each other to create larger bodies of rubble — the largest of which eventually cooled to form the planets. Countless theories, simulations and geologic observations support such a scenario. But there remains one lingering mystery: If the Earth arose ...

Sex and BC East Asian teenagers

2013-07-17
A new study by University of British Columbia researchers shows that although 90 per cent of East Asian adolescents in British Columbia are not sexually active, those who are may engage in high-risk sexual behaviours. "Most East Asian-Canadian adolescents have not had sex, but among those who have, one in four used alcohol or drugs before sex last time, and one-third have had two or more partners," says Yuko Homma, lead author and a post-doctoral research fellow with UBC School of Nursing. "Nearly half the girls had not used a condom." "Since about half of these students ...

Archimedes new study shows health checks may lead to cost effective improvements in health

2013-07-16
San Francisco, CA, USA – Jul 15, 2013 – Archimedes Inc., a healthcare modeling company, today announced the results of a two-year long collaboration with Novo Nordisk A/S, a world leader in diabetes care, which evaluated the effects of standardized vascular health checks on expected health outcomes. The study, "A Standardized Vascular Disease Health Check in Europe: A Cost-Effectiveness Analysis," appearing in the July 15th issue of the peer-reviewed online journal PLOS ONE, showed that health check strategies assessing diabetes, hypertension, lipids and smoking over a ...

Protecting the body in good times and bad

2013-07-16
The nasty side effects of radiation and chemotherapy are well known: fatigue, hair loss and nausea, to name a few. Cancer treatment can seem as harsh as the disease because it can't differentiate healthy cells from cancerous cells, killing both. But what if there were a way to control or stop the growth of cancer cells without harming other cells? Brandeis biologist Michael T. Marr is one step closer to understanding how cells promote and inhibit protein synthesis — an essential part of cellular reproduction — during times of stress. His new paper, co-authored by ...

Novel study using new technologies outlines importance of California condor social groups

2013-07-16
The intricate social hierarchy of the California condor, an endangered species, is something that could not be studied until recently due to the severe reduction of this population in the wild. The first formal study on this species, based on remote video observation of reintroduced populations, indicates that the species has a complex system of interactions based on dominance. The study further indicates that, with the effect of human disturbance and lead poisoning removed from the equation, an individual bird that does not successfully integrate into the structure will ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New camera traps snap nearly three times more images of endangered Sumatran tigers than before

Survey: Nearly all Americans not aware midwives provide care beyond pregnancy, birth

Fearless frogs feast on deadly hornets

Fibulin-5: A potential marker for liver fibrosis detection

Development of 'OCTOID,' a soft robot that changes color and moves like an octopus

Marriage, emotional support may protect against obesity through brain-gut connection, study finds

High-speed all-optical neural networks empowered spatiotemporal mode multiplexing

High-energy-density barocaloric material could enable smaller, lighter solid-state cooling devices

Progresses on damped wave equations: Multi-wave Stability from partially degenerate flux

First discoveries from new Subaru Telescope program

Ultrafast laser shock straining in chiral chain 2D materials: Mold topology‑controlled anisotropic deformation

Socially aware AI helps autonomous vehicles weave through crowds without collisions

KAIST unveils cause of performance degradation in electric vehicle high-nickel batteries: "added with good intentions​

New ECU tool can help concussion patients manage fear and improve recovery 

People with diabetes face higher risk of sudden cardiac death

Breast density notification increases levels of confusion and anxiousness among women

K’gari’s world famous lakes could be at risk of drying

Airplane and hospital air is cleaner than you might think

Concern over harmful medical advice from social media influencers

Telling women as part of mammography screening that they have dense breasts may have unintended effects

Note- taking alone or combined with large language models helps students understand and remember better than large language models alone

Astronomers spot one of the largest spinning structures ever found in the Universe

Retinal organoid platform identifies biomarkers and affords genetic testing for retinal disease 

New roadmap reveals how everyday chemicals and microbes interact to fuel antimicrobial resistance

Scientists clarify how much metal in soil is “too much” for people and the environment​

Breakthrough pediatric kidney therapy emerges from U. Iowa research

Breakthrough iron-based magnetic material achieves major reduction in core loss

New design tackles heat challenges in high-power fiber lasers

Rapid fabrication of self-propelled, steerable magnetic microcatheters for precision medicine

Poor kidney health linked to higher levels of Alzheimer’s biomarkers in blood

[Press-News.org] Researchers step closer to custom-building new blood vessels
Vessels grown from pluripotent stem cells able to function inside mice