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Description
In this work, a novel method is developed for making nano- and micro- fibrous hydrogels capable of preventing the rejection of implanted materials. This is achieved by either (1) mimicking the native cellular environment, to exert fine control over the cellular response or (2) acting as a protective barrier, to

In this work, a novel method is developed for making nano- and micro- fibrous hydrogels capable of preventing the rejection of implanted materials. This is achieved by either (1) mimicking the native cellular environment, to exert fine control over the cellular response or (2) acting as a protective barrier, to camouflage the foreign nature of a material and evade recognition by the immune system. Comprehensive characterization and in vitro studies described here provide a foundation for developing substrates for use in clinical applications. Hydrogel dextran and poly(acrylic acid) (PAA) fibers are formed via electrospinning, in sizes ranging from nanometers to microns in diameter. While "as-electrospun" fibers are continuous in length, sonication is used to fragment fibers into short fiber "bristles" and generate nano- and micro- fibrous surface coatings over a wide range of topographies. Dex-PAA fibrous surfaces are chemically modified, and then optimized and characterized for non-fouling and ECM-mimetic properties. The non-fouling nature of fibers is verified, and cell culture studies show differential responses dependent upon chemical, topographical and mechanical properties. Dex-PAA fibers are advantageously unique in that (1) a fine degree of control is possible over three significant parameters critical for modifying cellular response: topography, chemistry and mechanical properties, over a range emulating that of native cellular environments, (2) the innate nature of the material is non-fouling, providing an inert background for adding back specific bioactive functionality, and (3) the fibers can be applied as a surface coating or comprise the scaffold itself. This is the first reported work of dex-PAA hydrogel fibers formed via electrospinning and thermal cross-linking, and unique to this method, no toxic solvents or cross-linking agents are needed to create hydrogels or for surface attachment. This is also the first reported work of using sonication to fragment electrospun hydrogel fibers, and in which surface coatings were made via simple electrostatic interaction and dehydration. These versatile features enable fibrous surface coatings to be applied to virtually any material. Results of this research broadly impact the design of biomaterials which contact cells in the body by directing the consequent cell-material interaction.
ContributorsLouie, Katherine BoYook (Author) / Massia, Stephen P (Thesis advisor) / Bennett, Kevin (Committee member) / Garcia, Antonio (Committee member) / Pauken, Christine (Committee member) / Vernon, Brent (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2011
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Description
Gene manipulation techniques, such as RNA interference (RNAi), offer a powerful method for elucidating gene function and discovery of novel therapeutic targets in a high-throughput fashion. In addition, RNAi is rapidly being adopted for treatment of neurological disorders, such as Alzheimer's disease (AD), Parkinson's disease, etc. However, a major challenge

Gene manipulation techniques, such as RNA interference (RNAi), offer a powerful method for elucidating gene function and discovery of novel therapeutic targets in a high-throughput fashion. In addition, RNAi is rapidly being adopted for treatment of neurological disorders, such as Alzheimer's disease (AD), Parkinson's disease, etc. However, a major challenge in both of the aforementioned applications is the efficient delivery of siRNA molecules, plasmids or transcription factors to primary cells such as neurons. A majority of the current non-viral techniques, including chemical transfection, bulk electroporation and sonoporation fail to deliver with adequate efficiencies and the required spatial and temporal control. In this study, a novel optically transparent biochip is presented that can (a) transfect populations of primary and secondary cells in 2D culture (b) readily scale to realize high-throughput transfections using microscale electroporation and (c) transfect targeted cells in culture with spatial and temporal control. In this study, delivery of genetic payloads of different sizes and molecular characteristics, such as GFP plasmids and siRNA molecules, to precisely targeted locations in primary hippocampal and HeLa cell cultures is demonstrated. In addition to spatio-temporally controlled transfection, the biochip also allowed simultaneous assessment of a) electrical activity of neurons, b) specific proteins using fluorescent immunohistochemistry, and c) sub-cellular structures. Functional silencing of GAPDH in HeLa cells using siRNA demonstrated a 52% reduction in the GAPDH levels. In situ assessment of actin filaments post electroporation indicated a sustained disruption in actin filaments in electroporated cells for up to two hours. Assessment of neural spike activity pre- and post-electroporation indicated a varying response to electroporation. The microarray based nature of the biochip enables multiple independent experiments on the same culture, thereby decreasing culture-to-culture variability, increasing experimental throughput and allowing cell-cell interaction studies. Further development of this technology will provide a cost-effective platform for performing high-throughput genetic screens.
ContributorsPatel, Chetan (Author) / Muthuswamy, Jitendran (Thesis advisor) / Helms Tillery, Stephen (Committee member) / Jain, Tilak (Committee member) / Caplan, Michael (Committee member) / Vernon, Brent (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2012
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Description
Coronary heart disease (CHD) is the most prevalent cause of death worldwide. Atherosclerosis which is the condition of plaque buildup on the inside of the coronary artery wall is the main cause of CHD. Rupture of unstable atherosclerotic coronary plaque is known to be the cause of acute coronary syndrome.

Coronary heart disease (CHD) is the most prevalent cause of death worldwide. Atherosclerosis which is the condition of plaque buildup on the inside of the coronary artery wall is the main cause of CHD. Rupture of unstable atherosclerotic coronary plaque is known to be the cause of acute coronary syndrome. The composition of plaque is important for detection of plaque vulnerability. Due to prognostic importance of early stage identification, non-invasive assessment of plaque characterization is necessary. Computed tomography (CT) has emerged as a non-invasive alternative to coronary angiography. Recently, dual energy CT (DECT) coronary angiography has been performed clinically. DECT scanners use two different X-ray energies in order to determine the energy dependency of tissue attenuation values for each voxel. They generate virtual monochromatic energy images, as well as material basis pair images. The characterization of plaque components by DECT is still an active research topic since overlap between the CT attenuations measured in plaque components and contrast material shows that the single mean density might not be an appropriate measure for characterization. This dissertation proposes feature extraction, feature selection and learning strategies for supervised characterization of coronary atherosclerotic plaques. In my first study, I proposed an approach for calcium quantification in contrast-enhanced examinations of the coronary arteries, potentially eliminating the need for an extra non-contrast X-ray acquisition. The ambiguity of separation of calcium from contrast material was solved by using virtual non-contrast images. Additional attenuation data provided by DECT provides valuable information for separation of lipid from fibrous plaque since the change of their attenuation as the energy level changes is different. My second study proposed these as the input to supervised learners for a more precise classification of lipid and fibrous plaques. My last study aimed at automatic segmentation of coronary arteries characterizing plaque components and lumen on contrast enhanced monochromatic X-ray images. This required extraction of features from regions of interests. This study proposed feature extraction strategies and selection of important ones. The results show that supervised learning on the proposed features provides promising results for automatic characterization of coronary atherosclerotic plaques by DECT.
ContributorsYamak, Didem (Author) / Akay, Metin (Thesis advisor) / Muthuswamy, Jit (Committee member) / Akay, Yasemin (Committee member) / Pavlicek, William (Committee member) / Vernon, Brent (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2013
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Description
Aqueous solutions of temperature-responsive copolymers based on N-isopropylacrylamide (NIPAAm) hold promise for medical applications because they can be delivered as liquids and quickly form gels in the body without organic solvents or chemical reaction. However, their gelation is often followed by phase-separation and shrinking. Gel shrinking and water loss is

Aqueous solutions of temperature-responsive copolymers based on N-isopropylacrylamide (NIPAAm) hold promise for medical applications because they can be delivered as liquids and quickly form gels in the body without organic solvents or chemical reaction. However, their gelation is often followed by phase-separation and shrinking. Gel shrinking and water loss is a major limitation to using NIPAAm-based gels for nearly any biomedical application. In this work, a graft copolymer design was used to synthesize polymers which combine the convenient injectability of poly(NIPAAm) with gel water content controlled by hydrophilic side-chain grafts based on Jeffamine® M-1000 acrylamide (JAAm). The first segment of this work describes the synthesis and characterization of poly(NIPAAm-co-JAAm) copolymers which demonstrates controlled swelling that is nearly independent of LCST. The graft copolymer design was then used to produce a degradable antimicrobial-eluting gel for prevention of prosthetic joint infection. The resorbable graft copolymer gels were shown to have three unique characteristics which demonstrate their suitability for this application. First, antimicrobial release is sustained and complete within 1 week. Second, the gels behave like viscoelastic fluids, enabling complete surface coverage of an implant without disrupting fixation or movement. Finally, the gels degrade rapidly within 1-6 weeks, which may enable their use in interfaces where bone healing takes place. Graft copolymer hydrogels were also developed which undergo Michael addition in situ with poly(ethylene glycol) diacrylate to form elastic gels for endovascular embolization of saccular aneurysms. Inclusion of JAAm grafts led to weaker physical crosslinking and faster, more complete chemical crosslinking. JAAm grafts prolonged the delivery window of the system from 30 seconds to 220 seconds, provided improved gel swelling, and resulted in stronger, more elastic gels within 30 minutes after delivery.
ContributorsOverstreet, Derek (Author) / Caplan, Michael (Thesis advisor) / Massia, Stephen (Committee member) / Mclaren, Alexander (Committee member) / Vernon, Brent (Committee member) / McLemore, Ryan (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2012
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Description
Biosensors offer excellent diagnostic methods through precise quantification of bodily fluid biomarkers and could fill an important niche in diagnostic screening. The long term goal of this research is the development of an impedance immunosensor for easy-to-use, rapid, sensitive and selective simultaneously multiplexed quantification of bodily fluid disease biomarkers. To

Biosensors offer excellent diagnostic methods through precise quantification of bodily fluid biomarkers and could fill an important niche in diagnostic screening. The long term goal of this research is the development of an impedance immunosensor for easy-to-use, rapid, sensitive and selective simultaneously multiplexed quantification of bodily fluid disease biomarkers. To test the hypothesis that various cytokines induce empirically determinable response frequencies when captured by printed circuit board (PCB) impedance immunosensor surface, cyclic voltammetry (CV) and electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) methods were used to test PCB biosensors versus multiple cytokine biomarkers to determine limits of detection, background interaction and response at all sweep frequencies. Results indicated that sensors for cytokine Interleukin-12 (IL-12) detected their target over three decades of concentration and were tolerant to high levels of background protein. Further, the hypothesis that cytokine analytes may be rapidly detected via constant frequency impedance immunosensing without sacrificing undue sensitivity, CV, EIS, impedance-time (Zt) methods and modeling were used to test CHITM gold electrodes versus IL-12 over different lengths of time to determine limits of detection, detection time, frequency of response and consistent cross-platform sensor performance. Modeling and Zt studies indicate interrogation of the electrode with optimum frequency could be used for detection of different target concentrations within 90 seconds of sensor exposure and that interrogating the immunosensor with fixed, optimum frequency could be used for sensing target antigen. This informs usability of fixed-frequency impedance methods for biosensor research and particularly for clinical biosensor use. Finally, a multiplexing impedance immunosensor prototype for quantification of biomarkers in various body fluids was designed for increased automation of sample handling and testing. This enables variability due to exogenous factors and increased rapidity of assay with eased sensor fabrication. Methods were provided for simultaneous multiplexing through multisine perturbation of a sensor, and subsequent data processing. This demonstrated ways to observe multiple types of antibody-antigen affinity binding events in real time, reducing the number of sensors and target sample used in the detection and quantification of multiple biomarkers. These features would also improve the suitability of the sensor for clinical multiplex detection of disease biomarkers.
ContributorsFairchild, Aaron (Author) / La Belle, Jeffrey T (Thesis advisor) / Muthuswamy, Jitendran (Committee member) / Nagaraj, Vinay (Committee member) / Pizziconi, Vince (Committee member) / Vernon, Brent (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2012
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Description
Encapsulation is a promising technology to deliver cell-based therapies to patients safely and with reduced need for immunosuppression. Macroencapsulation devices are advantageous due to their ease of retrieval, and thus enhanced safety profile, relative to microencapsulation techniques. A major challenge in macroencapsulation device design is ensuring sufficient oxygen transport to

Encapsulation is a promising technology to deliver cell-based therapies to patients safely and with reduced need for immunosuppression. Macroencapsulation devices are advantageous due to their ease of retrieval, and thus enhanced safety profile, relative to microencapsulation techniques. A major challenge in macroencapsulation device design is ensuring sufficient oxygen transport to encapsulated cells, requiring high surface area-to-volume device geometries. In this work, a hydrogel injection molding biofabrication method was modified to design and generate complex three-dimensional macroencapsulation devices that have greater complexity in the z-axis. The rheological properties of diverse hydrogels were evaluated and used to perform computational flow modeling within injection mold devices to evaluate pressure regimes suitable for cell viability. 3D printed device designs were evaluated for the reproducibility of hydrogel filling and extraction. This work demonstrated that injection molding biofabrication to construct complex three-dimensional geometries is feasible in pressure regimes consistent with preserving cell viability. Future work will evaluate encapsulated cell viability after injection molding.
ContributorsBrowning, Blake (Author) / Weaver, Jessica D (Thesis advisor) / Vernon, Brent (Committee member) / Nikkhah, Mehdi (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
DNA methylation (DNAm) is an epigenetic mark with a critical role in regulating gene expression. Altered clinical states, including toxin exposure and viral infections, can cause aberrant DNA methylation in cells, which may persist during cell division. Current methods to study genome-wide methylome profiles of the cells require a long

DNA methylation (DNAm) is an epigenetic mark with a critical role in regulating gene expression. Altered clinical states, including toxin exposure and viral infections, can cause aberrant DNA methylation in cells, which may persist during cell division. Current methods to study genome-wide methylome profiles of the cells require a long processing time and are expensive. Here, a novel technique called Multiplexed Methylated DNA Immunoprecipitation Sequencing (Mx-MeDIP-Seq), which is amenable to automation. Up to 15 different samples can be combined into the same run of Mx-MeDIP-Seq, using only 25 ng of DNA per sample. Mx-MeDIP-Seq was used to study DNAm profiles of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) in two biologically distinct RNA viral infections with different modes of transmission, symptoms, and interaction with the host immune system: human immunodeficiency virus1 (HIV-1) and severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). Analysis of 90 hospitalized patients with SARS-CoV-2 and 57 healthy controls revealed that SARS-CoV-2 infection led to alterations in 920 methylated regions in PBMCs, resulting in a change in transcription that affects host immune response and cell survival. Analysis of publicly available RNA-Sequencing data in COVID-19 correlated with DNAm in several key pathways. These findings provide a mechanistic view toward further understanding of viral infections. Genome-wide DNAm changes post HIV-1-infection from 37 chronically ill patients compared to 17 controls revealed dysregulation of the actin cytoskeleton, which could contribute to the establishment of latency in HIV-1 infections. Longitudinal DNAm analysis identified several potentially protective and harmful genes that could contribute to disease suppression or progression.
ContributorsRidha, Inam (Author) / LaBaer, Joshua (Thesis advisor) / Murugan, Vel (Thesis advisor) / Plaisier, Christopher (Committee member) / Nikkhah, Mehdi (Committee member) / Vernon, Brent (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
Description
Cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) are the leading cause of mortality worldwide, causing nearly 25% of deaths in the United States. Despite the efforts to create in vitro models for the study and treatment of CVDs, these are still limited in their recapitulation of the heart tissue. Thus, the engineering of accurate

Cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) are the leading cause of mortality worldwide, causing nearly 25% of deaths in the United States. Despite the efforts to create in vitro models for the study and treatment of CVDs, these are still limited in their recapitulation of the heart tissue. Thus, the engineering of accurate cardiac models is imperative to gain more understanding and improve the outcome of CVDs. This Ph.D. dissertation focuses on the development and characterization of isogenic cardiac organoids derived from human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs). Additionally, the integration of chemical and biological cues for enriching their microenvironment and promoting their maturation state and function were studied. First, hiPSC-derived cardiac cells were utilized for the fabrication of multicellular spherical microtissues, namely isogenic cardiac organoids. The cellular composition and culture time of the engineered tissues were optimized to induce cellular aggregation and the formation of cell-cell interactions. Also, ribbon-like gold nanoparticles, namely gold nanoribbons (AuNRs), were synthesized, characterized, and biofunctionalized for their integration into the isogenic cardiac organoids. In-depth biological evaluation of the organoids showed enhanced cardiac maturation markers. Furthermore, a supplement-free cell culture regime was designed and evaluated for fabricating isogenic cardiac organoids. Mechanistic, cellular, and molecular-level studies demonstrated that the presence of hiPSC-derived cardiac fibroblasts (hiPSC-CFs) significantly improves the morphology and gene expression profile of the organoids. Electrophysiological-relevant features of the organoids, such as conduction velocity (CV), were further investigated utilizing a microelectrode array (MEA) platform. It was shown that MEA offers a simple, yet powerful approach to assessing electrophysiological responses of the tissues, where a trend in decreased CV was found due to the presence of hiPSC-CFs. Overall, this dissertation has a broad impact casting light on the development strategy and biological mechanisms that govern the formation and function of isogenic cardiac organoids. Moreover, this study presents two unique approaches to promote maturation of stem cell-derived cardiac organoids: 1) through the integration of novel biofunctionalized nanomaterials, and 2) through a cell culture regime, leading to enhanced function of the organoids. The proposed micro-engineered organoids have broad applications as physiologically relevant tissues for drug discovery, CVDs modeling, and regenerative medicine.
ContributorsPatino, Alejandra (Author) / Nikkhah, Medhi (Thesis advisor) / Blain-Christen, Jennifer (Committee member) / Kodibagkar, Vikram (Committee member) / Vernon, Brent (Committee member) / Zhu, Wuqiang (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
Cardiovascular diseases (CVDs), including myocardial infarction (MI), are the major cause of death globally. Considerable research has been devoted in recent years to developing in vitro cardiac tissue models utilizing human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) for regenerative medicine, disease modeling, and drug discovery applications. Notably, electroconductive hydrogel scaffolds have

Cardiovascular diseases (CVDs), including myocardial infarction (MI), are the major cause of death globally. Considerable research has been devoted in recent years to developing in vitro cardiac tissue models utilizing human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) for regenerative medicine, disease modeling, and drug discovery applications. Notably, electroconductive hydrogel scaffolds have shown great promise in the development of functional hiPSC-derived cardiac tissues for both in vitro and in vivo cardiac research. However, the underlying mechanism(s) by which these nanoparticles contribute to the function and fate of stem cell-derived cardiac tissues have not been fully investigated. To address these knowledge gaps, this Ph.D. dissertation focuses on the mechanistic analysis of the impact of nanoengineered electroconductive hydrogel scaffolds on 2D and 3D hiPSC-derived cardiac tissues. Specifically, within the first phase of the project, hydrogel scaffolds were nanoengineered using either electroconductive or non-conductive nanoparticles to dissect the role of electroconductivity features of gold nanorods (GNRs) in the functionality of isogenic 2D hiPSC-derived cardiac patches. Extensive biological and electrophysiological assessments revealed that, while biophysical cues from the presence of nanoparticles could potentially play a role in cardiac tissue development, electroconductivity cues played a major role in enhancing the functional maturation of hiPSC-derived cardiac tissues in 2D cell-seeded cardiac patches. This dissertation further describes the application of GNRs in developing a biomimetic 3D electroconductive Heart-on-a-chip (eHOC) model. The 3D eHOC model was then leveraged to comprehensively investigate the cellular and molecular responses of isogenic human cardiac tissues to the electroconductive microenvironment through single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNAseq), an aspect not addressed in previous studies. The enhanced functional maturation of the 3D eHOC was demonstrated through extensive tissue-level and molecular-level assays. It was revealed that the GNR-based electroconductive microenvironment contributes to cardiac tissue development through the enrichment of calcium handling and cardiac contractile pathways.Overall, these findings offer additional insights into the role of electroconductive hydrogel scaffolds in regulating the functionalities of hiPSC-derived cardiac tissues. Furthermore, the proposed 3D eHOC platform could also serve as a more physiologically representative model of the in vivo microenvironment for in vitro applications, such as drug testing and disease modeling studies.
ContributorsEsmaeili, Hamid (Author) / Nikkhah, Mehdi (Thesis advisor) / Migrino, Raymond (Committee member) / Zhu, Wuqiang (Committee member) / Vernon, Brent (Committee member) / Weaver, Jessica (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2024
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Description
Cardiovascular diseases are the number one cause of death worldwide. Cardiac biomarkers can provide objective and quantitative information to facilitate early diagnosis and guide treatment of cardiovascular diseases. Even though a variety of methods have been developed for cardiac biomarker detection, a point-of-care testing (POCT) for cardiac biomarkers with high

Cardiovascular diseases are the number one cause of death worldwide. Cardiac biomarkers can provide objective and quantitative information to facilitate early diagnosis and guide treatment of cardiovascular diseases. Even though a variety of methods have been developed for cardiac biomarker detection, a point-of-care testing (POCT) for cardiac biomarkers with high sensitivity, specificity and precision is still missing. To fulfil this unmet need, novel digital biosensing methods based on optical imaging and nanomaterials are developed in this dissertation for high-sensitivity POCT of cardiac biomarkers.First, a high-sensitivity and POC-compatible optical imaging-based digital immunoassay is developed for rapid detection of low-abundance biomarkers. This technology was established on a model analyte IL-6 and can be adapted to various other protein targets. The digital immunoassay was also utilized as the reference method for evaluating the digital nanobiosensors developed afterwards. Second, a microfluidic digital nanobiosensor (MDNB) is developed for POC-compatible detection of heart failure biomarker NT-proBNP from 7 µL of whole blood. Using the MDNB, detection in a clinically relevant concentration range was achieved with a 10-minute assay time. With a high potential utility in outpatient and possibly even home settings, the MDNB could become a POC device for decentralized detection of NT-proBNP to assist heart failure patient management. Lastly, the development of a digital immunogold-linked apta-sorbent assay (DILASA) for rapid high-sensitivity detection of heart attack biomarker cardiac troponin is introduced. Reliable detection of 10 ng/L cTnT in human plasma was achieved with a 15-minute assay time using DILASA. It is expected that with further optimization and development, DILASA will be a promising candidate approach for realizing a high-sensitivity POCT of cTnT.
ContributorsChen, Chao (Author) / Wang, Shaopeng (Thesis advisor) / Snozek, Christine (Committee member) / Pizziconi, Vincent (Committee member) / Vernon, Brent (Committee member) / Weaver, Jessica (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2024