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Moving beyond hype: Could one-two treatment restore damaged heart muscle? – University of Wisconsin-Madison

Heart attacks can cause immediate death. But in survivors, the blockage of blood flow can kill so many heart muscle cells that heart failure can follow months or years afterwards. Heart disease is the leading cause of hospital admission and death in the United States.

A heart attack causes a loss of muscle and leaves the heart with a scar that does not contract and so impairs the hearts pumping function, says Tim Kamp, a professor of medicine who is co-leader of a new grant designed to attack two roadblocks that have stymied efforts to restore heart muscle with muscle cells grown from stem cells.

Kamp, who directs the Stem Cell and Regenerative Medicine Center at the University of WisconsinMadison, says, Everybody involved in treating these patients knows that this scarring often leads to a continual decline in heart function with heart failure and even death.

The UWMadison researchers used approved surgical devices to locate the damaged heart muscle, and then injected the supportive matrix and committed cardiac muscle cells. The circle outlines target zone established before surgery; black dots show the sites that were injected in this mouse study. Amish Raval, work performed at UWMadison in collaboration with Biologics Delivery Systems.

Sixteen percent of men, and 22 percent of women, develop heart failure after myocardial infarction heart attack. Coronary artery disease the category that includes stoppage of blood flow causes one in seven deaths in the United States.

Adult stem cell injections seemed a logical way to form new heart muscle cells and repair the damaged muscle. But in dozens of experiments, the cells either washed out of the heart or failed to develop into the specialized muscle cells the cardiomyocytes that power cardiac contractions. The benefits were mixed, modest at best, says Kamp.

After years of preliminary investigations, however, Kamp and Amish Raval, a professor of cardiology, researcher and entrepreneur, hope that a combination of two cutting-edge approaches would use a fabric-like material to prevent wash-out and successfully implant cardiomyocytes to damaged hearts.

Aided by a Regenerative Medicine Innovation Project grant from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, part of the National Institutes of Health, the two will lead a group to test that idea in pigs over two years.

Having committed cells could be a major advance, Raval says. The first stem-cells therapies started with cells that I call the model T. Now, we are moving to the Buick. The cells originate as induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) a relative of embryonic stem cells that is based on reprogramming adult cells.

Two Madison-based businesses, and sources at the University of WisconsinMadison, also helped to fund the research. Fujifilm Cellular Dynamics Inc., one of the largest commercial sources of stem cell products, produces the committed cardiac progenitor cells that will be tested. These committed cells are ready to transform themselves into cardiomyocytes.

Fujifilm bought CDI, a company whose founders included Kamp and UWMadison stem cell pioneer James Thomson, but the operations remain in Madison. Kamp has no ownership position but is a consultant for the company.

Raval is a founder and board chair of the second commercial supporter, Cellular Logistics, Inc., which makes a freeze-dried matrix from the same proteins that naturally holds cardiomyocytes in place in the heart. The material is called extracellular matrix (ECM) because it scaffolds cells from the outside.

When the heart pumps, internal pressures often eject would-be replacement cells through lymph channels and blood vessels. Ravals group has already shown in mice that injecting extracellular matrix proteins along with new cells creates mechanical restraints that avoid the wash-out problem.

The extra-cellular matrix to be used in the NIH grant at UWMadison helped retain stem cells (yellow dots) in a pig heart. When similar cells (blue) were injected without the matrix, the cells spilled out of the heart muscle through the needle track and lymph channels.Eric Schmuck and Amish Raval, work performed at UWMadison. Eric Schmuck and Amish Raval, work performed at UWMadison

The injected scaffold may have another advantage for regenerating muscle after heart attack, Kamp notes. The ECM replenishes the scarred area to become more hospitable to the replacement cardiomyocytes. The effect may be based on chemical and mechanical signaling between the ECM and the regenerating cells.

Pigs hearts are quite close to human hearts in size and structure. The grant will cover tests on four groups of 12 pigs each following myocardial infarction:

If the combination is effective, Raval adds, We plan to proceed toward a Food and Drug Administration application for an investigational new drug, which would allow us to begin human trials.

With the passion and concern of a working cardiac surgeon, Raval says those trials would focus on patients who have not been helped by the best medical management we know today and they are not candidates for heart transplant or mechanical assist devices. The only other option is palliative or hospice care.

As Raval notes, More people are surviving heart attacks, and thats great. But many are left with a scar in the heart muscle a dead zone. That scar can enlarge, and the damage can spread. So we are seeing an increasing number of patients with heart failure. Thats why we are moving forward with this project.

This research is being funded by NIH grant 1U01HL148690-01.

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Moving beyond hype: Could one-two treatment restore damaged heart muscle? - University of Wisconsin-Madison

Conjugated polymers optically regulate the fate of endothelial colony-forming cells – Science Advances

Abstract

The control of stem and progenitor cell fate is emerging as a compelling urgency for regenerative medicine. Here, we propose a innovative strategy to gain optical control of endothelial colony-forming cell fate, which represents the only known truly endothelial precursor showing robust in vitro proliferation and overwhelming vessel formation in vivo. We combine conjugated polymers, used as photo-actuators, with the advantages offered by optical stimulation over current electromechanical and chemical stimulation approaches. Light modulation provides unprecedented spatial and temporal resolution, permitting at the same time lower invasiveness and higher selectivity. We demonstrate that polymer-mediated optical excitation induces a robust enhancement of proliferation and lumen formation in vitro. We identify the underlying biophysical pathway as due to light-induced activation of TRPV1 channel. Altogether, our results represent an effective way to induce angiogenesis in vitro, which represents the proof of principle to improve the outcome of autologous cell-based therapy in vivo.

In recent years, organic semiconductors have emerged as highly promising materials in biotechnology, thanks to several key-enabling features. Differently from silicon-based electronics, they support both electronic and ionic charge transport (1); they can be easily functionalized with specific excitation and sensing capabilities (24); and they are solution processable, soft, and conformable (5). They are highly biocompatible, being suitable for in vivo implantation and long-term operation, as recently reported for many different applications, including electrocorticography, precise delivery of neurotransmitters, electrocardiography, deep brain stimulation, and spinal cord injury (69). An important, distinctive feature of organic semiconductors is their sensitivity to the visible and near-infrared light. Recently, our and other groups have exploited it for optical modulation of cell electrophysiological activity, by using conjugated polymers and organic molecules as exogenous light-sensitive actuators (1012). Interesting applications have been reported in the field of artificial visual prosthesis (5), photothermal excitation or inhibition of cellular activity (13, 14), and modulation of animal behavior (15).

In this framework, the opportunity to use polymer-based phototransduction mechanisms to regulate the very early stages of living cell development has been very scarcely considered (16, 17). The possibility to selectively and precisely regulate a number of cell processes, such as adhesion, differentiation, proliferation, and migration, would be key to regenerative medicine and drug screening. The presently dominant approaches to reliably regulate stem and progenitor cell fate for regenerative purposes mainly rely on the use of chemical cues. However, irreversibility and lack of spatial selectivity represent important limitations of these methods. Whenever targeting in vivo applications, one must face the major, unsolved problem of diffusion of neurotrophic molecules by the conventional intravenous or oral routes. In addition, the therapeutic outcome of autologous cell-based therapy is often impaired by low engraftment, survival, and poor integration of stem cells within the environment of the targeted tissue. Other stimuli, mainly consisting of mechanical and electrical cues, were recently reported to have some notable effects, and recent advances in nanotechnology and material science enabled versatile, robust, and larger-scale modulation of the cell fate. In particular, carbon-based materials and conjugated polymers led to interesting results (18). However, their distinctive visible light absorption was never exploited in optically driven techniques.

Use of light actuation has been proposed either by viral transfer of light-sensitive proteins, by optogenetics tools, or by absorption of endogenously expressed light-sensitive moieties, based on low lightlevel therapies (1921). In the first case, interesting results were obtained (22); however, this approach bears all the drawbacks related to the need for viral gene transfer. Photobiomodulation led to interesting outputs as well, but overall efficiency is hampered by the limited absorption of light-responsive molecules endogenously expressed in living cells.

In this work, we propose to couple the use of conjugated polymers with visible light excitation to gain optical control of cell fate. We focus our attention on endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs) and, in particular, on endothelial colony-forming cells (ECFCs), which are currently considered the bona fide best surrogate of EPCs (23). ECFCs are mobilized from the bone marrow and vascular stem cell niche to reconstruct the vascular network destroyed by an ischemic insult and to restore local blood perfusion (24). ECFCs may be easily harvested from peripheral blood, display robust clonogenic potential, exhibit tube-forming capacity in vitro, and generate vessel-like structures in vivo (24, 25), thereby representing a promising candidate for autologous cell-based therapy of ischemic disorders (24). Manipulating the signaling pathways that drive ECFC proliferation, migration, differentiation, and tubulogenesis could represent a reliable strategy to improve the regenerative outcome of therapeutic angiogenesis in the harsh microenvironment of an ischemic tissue, such as the infarcted heart (24, 25). Intracellular Ca2+ signals play a crucial role in stimulating ECFC proliferation and tubulogenesis by promoting the nuclear translocation of the Ca2+-sensitive nuclear transcription factor B (NF-B) (2628). It has, therefore, been suggested that intracellular Ca2+ signaling could be targeted to boost the regenerative potential of autologous ECFCs for regenerative purposes (29). For the above-mentioned reasons, ECFCs represent a valuable test bed model for assessing the possibility to exploit the visible light sensitivity of conjugated polymers to gain touchless, optical modulation of cell proliferation and function.

In this framework, we demonstrate that polymer-mediated optical excitation during the first steps of ECFC growth leads to a robust enhancement of both proliferation and tubulogenesis through the optical modulation of the Ca2+-permeable transient receptor potential vanilloid 1 (TRPV1) channel and NF-Bmediated gene expression. Our results represent, to the best of our knowledge, the first report on the use of polymer photoexcitation for the in vitro modulation of ECFC fate and function, thereby representing the proof of principle to obtain direct control of progenitor cell fate.

Figure 1A shows a sketch of the bio/polymer interface developed for obtaining optical control of ECFC proliferation and network formation, together with the polymer chemical structure and the optical absorption spectrum. The material of choice for light absorption and phototransduction is a workhorse organic semiconductor, widely used in photovoltaic and photodetection applications, namely, regioregular poly(3-hexyl-thiophene) (P3HT) (6). It is characterized by a broad optical absorption spectrum, in the blue-green visible region, peaking at 520 nm. P3HT outstanding biocompatibility properties have been reported in a number of different systems, both in vitro and in vivo, including astrocytes (30), primary neurons and brain slices (14), and invertebrate models of Hydra vulgaris (15). Chronical implantation of P3HT-based devices in the rat subretinal space did not show substantial inflammatory reactions up to 6 months in vivo (10). Here, polymer thin films (approximate thickness, 150 nm) have been deposited by spin coating on top of polished glass substrates, as detailed in Materials and Methods. Both polymer-coated and glass substrates have been thermally sterilized (120C, 2 hours), coated with fibronectin, and, lastly, used as light-sensitive and control cell culturing substrates, respectively. ECFCs have been isolated from peripheral blood samples of human volunteers and seeded on top of polymer and glass substrates.

(A) P3HT polymer optical absorption spectrum. Insets show the chemical structure of the conjugated polymer and a sketch of the polymer device used for cell optical activation. ECFCs are cultured on top of P3HT thin films, deposited on glass substrates. (B) ECFC viability at fixed time points after plating (24, 48, and 72 hours). Cell cultures were kept in dark conditions at controlled temperature (37C) and fixed CO2 levels (5%). No statistically significant difference was observed between the glass and polymer substrates at any fixed time point (unpaired Students t test). (C) Experimental setup and optical excitation protocol for evaluation of polymer-mediated cell photoexcitation effects on cell fate. Polymer and control samples are positioned within a sterilized, home-designed petri holder. Light scattering effects are completely screened. The geometry and the photoexcitation protocol have been implemented to minimize overheating effects and to keep the overall extracellular bath temperature fairly unaltered. Thirty-millisecond-long green light pulses are followed by 70 ms in dark condition.

ECFC proliferation on polymer substrates has been primarily assessed in dark conditions at three different time points, namely, 24, 48, and 72 hours after plating (Fig. 1B). Polymer-coated samples, while showing from the very beginning a slightly lower number of cells as compared with control substrates, exhibit a proliferation rate fully similar to cells plated on glass substrates (slope of the linear fitting is 0.034 0.003, R2 = 0.99 and 0.034 0.005, R2 = 0.96 for control and P3HT polymer samples, respectively).

Once assessed that the P3HT polymer surface represents a nicely biocompatible substrate for ECFC seeding and proliferation in the dark, we moved to investigate the effect of polymer photoexcitation. In more detail, to evaluate the effect of optical stimulation on cell proliferation and network formation, we continuously shined light for the whole temporal window required for cell growth, and we realized an ad hoc system suitable for operation within the cell incubator. The experimental configuration and the excitation protocol are schematically represented in Fig. 1C. Optical excitation is provided by a light-emitting diode (LED) source, with maximum emission wavelength at 525 nm, incident from the substrate side. The choice of the protocol, continuously administered to the cell cultures during early seeding and proliferation stages, has been mainly dictated by the need to avoid overheating effects, with possible negative outcomes on the overall cell culture viability. On the basis of these considerations, we opted for a protocol based on 30-ms excitation pulses, followed by a 70-ms dark condition, at a photoexcitation density of 40 mW/cm2. The whole protocol is continuously repeated for a minimum of 4 up to 36 hours, depending on the type of functional assay, at controlled temperature (37C) and CO2 levels (5%).

The temporally precise and spatially localized measurement of the temperature variation upon polymer photoexcitation at the polymer/cell interface (i.e., within the cell cleft) is not straightforward because it requires the use of localized, submicrometer probes with a fast response time. However, according to the heat diffusion equation, we expect that dissipation occurs within a few milliseconds, following exponential decrease dynamics (14). Moreover, we used the well-known method of the calibrated pipette (31) to characterize the temperature variation dynamics within the extracellular bath volume, defined by the cylinder with the base area corresponding to the light spot size and the height of about 1 m. This choice is a good approximation of the overall volume occupied by a single ECFC cell; thus, it provides a realistic estimation of the average heating experienced by the cell (fig. S1A). We observe that temperature variation closely follows short optical pulse dynamics, reaching a maximum temperature at the end of the 30-ms illumination period, quickly followed by an almost complete thermal relaxation to the basal temperature during the 70-ms-long dark period. We conclude that our polymer-based system provides a highly spatially and temporally resolved method for optical excitation, making it possible, in perspective, to selectively target single cells and even cell subcompartments. Upon prolonged illumination (hours), one should also consider possible overheating effects of the whole extracellular medium volume. The average temperature of the bath for the entire duration of the long-term experiment was measured by a thermocouple immersed in the medium. Data show that an equilibrium situation is established after 5 hours and that the absolute temperature of the bath is increased by about 1.5 (fig. S1B). The adopted prolonged excitation protocol does not negatively affect overall cell culture viability (see below).

Figure 2 reports specific effects mediated by P3HT substrates and visible light stimulation on ECFC proliferation. ECFCs were plated in the presence of EGM-2 medium to facilitate the adhesion to the substrate. After 12 hours, the medium was switched to EBM-2 supplemented with 2% fetal bovine serum, and the cells were subjected to the long-term lighting protocol for 36 hours at controlled temperature (37C) and CO2 levels (5%). Under these conditions, ECFCs seeded on P3HT and subjected to light stimulation undergo a significant increase in proliferation rate, as compared with the control condition, i.e., to cells also seeded on P3HT polymer substrates but kept in dark conditions for the whole duration of the experiment (+158% versus P3HT dark; P < 0.05). No statistically significant difference in proliferation was observed among cells seeded on glass, whether they were subjected to optical excitation or not (Fig. 2A).

(A) Relative variation of the proliferation rate of ECFCs subjected to long-term optical excitation seeded on both bare glass and P3HT thin films, together with corresponding control samples kept in dark conditions. Cell proliferation was measured after 36 hours of culture in the presence of EBM-2 supplemented with 2% fetal calf serum. (B) Relative variation of the proliferation rate of ECFCs subjected to long-term optical excitation seeded on P3HT in the absence (CTRL) and presence of 10 M capsazepine (CPZ), 10 M ruthenium red (RR), 20 M RN-1734 (RN-1734), and 30 M BAPTA-AM (BAPTA). The results are represented as the means standard error of the mean (SEM) of three different experiments conducted on cells harvested from three different donors. The significance of differences was evaluated with one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) coupled with Tukey (A) or Dunnetts (B) post hoc test. *P < 0.05.

Recent evidence demonstrated an interesting correlation between processes key to ECFC vascular regeneration, including proliferation and network formation, and activation of TRPV1 channels, which are expected to be endogenously expressed in ECFCs (32). In addition, we recently reported that polymer photoexcitation leads to selective TRPV1 activation in transfected human embryonic kidney (HEK) cell models (33). Therefore, we were prompted to evaluate whether the increase in cell proliferation is distinctively determined by a polymer-mediated photoactivation of the TRPV1 channel. To this goal, we preliminarily checked the actual expression of the TRPV1 channel in the ECFC models by carrying out electrophysiology experiments in patch-clamp configuration. Methods and results are extensively discussed in the Supplementary Materials (fig. S2 and related description). Briefly, the expression of the TRPV1 channel was confirmed, as well as the capability to selectively excite its activity through localized polymer excitation at high optical power density. To establish whether the TRPV1 channel also has a role in the observed increase in cell proliferation upon polymer excitation, we performed the experiments under light illumination upon administration of a highly specific TRPV1 antagonist [capsazepine (CPZ), 10 M], an aspecific TRPV channel inhibitor [ruthenium red (RR), 10 M], and a selective antagonist of a different temperature-sensitive channel, TRPV4, which is also endogenously expressed in ECFCs (RN-1734, 20 M) (34) (Fig. 2B). TRPV1 inactivation by CPZ and RR results in a relative, strong reduction in cell proliferation by 51 and 30%, respectively, as compared with untreated cells. Conversely, in the case of RN-1734 treatment, the proliferation increase due to polymer photoexcitation is completely unaltered.

As mentioned earlier, intracellular Ca2+ signaling has been reported to drive ECFC proliferation (26, 28). To further investigate whether TRPV1-mediated extracellular Ca2+ entry mediates the proangiogenic response to light illumination, we pretreated ECFCs with [1,2-Bis(2-aminophenoxy)ethane-N,N,N,N-tetraacetic acid tetrakis(acetoxymethyl ester) BAPTA-AM] (30 M), a membrane-permeable buffer of intracellular Ca2+ levels (26, 28). BAPTA-AM is widely used to prevent the increase in intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) induced by extracellular stimuli and inhibits the downstream Ca2+-dependent processes. For instance, BAPTA-AM represents the most suitable tool to prevent the activation of Ca2+-sensitive decoders residing within tens of nanometers from the inner pore of plasmalemmal Ca2+ channels (35). It was recently reported that, in the absence of Ca2+-mobilizing growth factors, it does not impair the low rate of ECFC growth (27). Here, however, BAPTA-AM clearly reduced the light-driven proliferation increase, thus confirming that TRPV1 stimulates ECFCs through an increase in [Ca2+]i (Fig. 2B).

We further examined the physiological outcome of chronic light stimulation by carrying out a tube formation assay within an extracellular matrix protein-based scaffold, which is a surrogate of the basement membrane extracellular matrix. This assay recapitulates many steps of the angiogenic process, including adhesion, migration, protease activity, and tubule formation (27, 28). ECFCs were plated in the presence of EBM-2 medium supplemented with 2% fetal calf serum and subjected to the long-term lighting protocol for 8 hours at controlled levels of temperature and CO2. Control experiments carried out in dark conditions, either onto glass (see Fig. 3A for a representative optical image) or onto polymer substrates (Fig. 3C), as well as control experiments carried out upon photoexcitation of cells seeded on glass substrates (Fig. 3B), do not show remarkable differences. Conversely, ECFC cultures subjected to polymer-mediated optical excitation clearly tend to assemble into an extended bidimensional capillary-like network (Fig. 3D). Cell cultures were monitored up to 24 hours after illumination onset, but results were comparable to observations reported here, after 8 hours of illumination. This qualitative observation is fully confirmed by quantitative morphological analysis (27). As depicted in the sketch of Fig. 3E, we quantitatively evaluated the main features typical of the capillary-like network formation and, in particular, the number of master segments (Fig. 3F), master junctions (Fig. 3G), and meshes (Fig. 3H). In all cases, a notable, statistically relevant difference is observed between cells subjected to polymer-mediated optical excitation and controls. Within the same considered temporal window, the combined use of polymer substrates and visible light stimuli does not lead to sizable toxicity effects or delays in cell proliferation. Conversely, it leads to enhanced cell proliferation (Fig. 2) and allows the achievement of the formation of a more extended and mature tubular network (Fig. 3).

(A to D) Representative images of in vitro tubular networks of ECFCs subjected to long-term optical excitation seeded on both bare glass and P3HT, as well as on corresponding control samples in dark conditions. Cultures were observed up to 24 hours, but their appearance did not substantially change after pictures were taken after 8-hour culture. Scale bars, 250 m. (E) Sketch representing the main features typical of the capillary-like network that were considered for the topologic analysis. Number of master segments (F), master junctions (G), and meshes (H) analyzed in the different conditions. The results are represented as the means SEM of three different experiments conducted on cells harvested from three different donors. The significance of differences was evaluated with one-way ANOVA coupled with Tukey post hoc test. **P < 0.01 and ***P < 0.001.

As evidenced for the proliferation rate, the TRPV1 channel activation emerges to play also a fundamental role in tubulogenesis (Fig. 4). The TRPV1 pharmacological blockade with the specific inhibitor CPZ deterministically leads to a marked reduction in network formation (Fig. 4A). Upon CPZ administration, a statistically significant decrease in the relative variation of the number of master segments (Fig. 4E), master junctions (Fig. 4F), and meshes (Fig. 4G) is observed. In line with the results shown in Figs. 2 and 3, RR administration resulted in a less marked but still sizable reduction in the tubular network (Fig. 4, B and E to G), probably due to the minor specificity toward TRPV1, while the protubular effect of light remained fully unaltered in the presence of the TRPV4 inhibitor RN-1734 (Fig. 4, C and E to G). Notably, the treatment with BAPTA-AM (30 M), which affected ECFC proliferation, was able to prevent also in vitro tubulogenesis, thus corroborating the key role of intracellular Ca2+ signaling in the proangiogenic response to light illumination (Fig. 4, D and E to G). Control measurements carried out in dark conditions on polymer substrates upon the considered pharmacological treatments do not show any relevant effect (fig. S4, A to C). Overall, this evidence supports the notion that TRPV1 stimulates ECFC proliferation and network formation and demonstrates that optical excitation, properly mediated by biocompatible polymer substrates, positively affects ECFC fate by spatially and temporally selective activation of the TRPV1 channel.

(A to D) Representative optical images of in vitro tubular network of ECFCs subjected to long-term optical excitation seeded either on bare glass or on P3HT thin films and treated respectively with CPZ (A), RR (B), RN-1734 (C), and BAPTA-AM (D). Scale bars, 250 m. (E to G) Relative variation of number of master segments (E), master junctions (F), and meshes (G) of ECFCs subjected to long-term optical excitation seeded on P3HT in the absence [control (CTRL)] and presence of 10 M CPZ, 10 M RR, 20 M RN-1734 (RN-1734), and 30 M BAPTA-AM (BAPTA). The results are represented as the means SEM of three different experiments conducted on cells harvested from three different donors. The significance of differences was evaluated with one-way ANOVA coupled with Dunnetts post hoc test. *P < 0.05 and **P < 0.01.

We now turn our attention to elucidating the possible mechanisms leading to optically enhanced tubulogenesis, through TRPV1 channel activation, upon prolonged polymer excitation.

Reliable optical modulation of the cell activity mediated by polymer photoexcitation has been reported in several, previous reports, both in vitro, at the level of single cells, and in vivo, at the level of the whole animal, as evidenced by behavioral studies on both invertebrate and vertebrate models. Three different photostimulation mechanisms, active at the polymer/cell interface, have been proposed so far. These include (i) the creation of an interface capacitance, i.e., of a localized electric field, possibly affecting the cell membrane potential (11); (ii) photothermal processes, establishing a localized temperature increase upon polymer photoexcitation (13, 36); and (iii) photoelectrochemical reactions, mainly oxygen reduction processes, leading to a local variation of extracellular and/or intracellular pH (33) and sizable production of reactive oxygen species (ROS), at a nontoxic concentration, and intracellular calcium modulation (37).

In electrophysiological experiments, carried out at a photoexcitation density higher than the one used in chronic stimulation by about two orders of magnitude, we clearly observe TRPV1 excitation, corresponding however to a small variation of the cell membrane potential, in the order of a few millivolts (Supplementary Materials). Thus, upon much lower light intensity, the effects of either direct photothermal channel activation and of photocapacitive charging are expected to be negligible. To further corroborate this hypothesis, we carry out control experiments aimed at disentangling photoelectrical from photothermal transduction processes.

First, we use a different material as a cell-seeding substrate, characterized by optical absorption and heat conductivity similar to the ones typical of P3HT (13) but fully electrically inert (i.e., unable to sustain electronic charge generation upon photoexcitation). The material of choice is a photoresist (MicroPosit S1813). S1813 thin films are realized by spin coating, and deposition parameters are optimized to obtain optical absorbance values similar to the semiconducting polymer samples at the considered excitation wavelength. The capability of photoresist substrates to sustain ECFC proliferation was successfully assessed in a control measurement, obtaining fully comparable results with respect to the P3HT substrates (Fig. 5A). The functional effect eventually driven by photoresist optical excitation on tubulogenesis was then investigated by using the same experimental conditions and analysis technique previously adopted for polymer and glass substrates (Fig. 5B). Data show that long-term photoresist excitation does not lead to sizable enhancement of the cellular network formation, thus pointing out that a purely photothermal effect does not play a major role in boosting the tubulogenesis process at variance with semiconducting polymer substrates. In a complementary experiment, we directly assessed the occurrence of photoelectrochemical reactions at the polymer/extracellular bath interface by measuring ROS production. We previously demonstrated that P3HT polymer thin films exposed to saline electrolytes sustain efficient light-triggered charge generation and charge transfer processes, giving rise to photoelectrochemical reactions (38, 39). Moreover, we also reported that P3HT nanoparticles are efficiently internalized within the cytosol of secondary line cell models (HEK-293) and that their photoexcitation leads to the production of ROS and subsequent intracellular calcium modulation (15, 37). However, the actual capability to sustain photoelectrochemical reactions in the specific experimental conditions used in this work (polymer film deposition conditions, sterilization process, prolonged exposure to specific cellular growth medium in an incubating environment, prolonged exposure to a light excitation protocol, light wavelength, pulses duty cycle, and power density) was never assessed. In particular, direct measurement of intracellular ROS was never carried out in the presence of polymer thin films. To this goal, we realized ECFC cultures on top of polymer and glass control substrates, and we exposed them to the same optical stimulation protocol previously used in the tubulogenesis assay. ROS production was then evaluated by means of a fluorescence experiment based on the use of the well-known ROS probe 2,7-dichlorodihydrofluorescein diacetate (H2DCF-DA) (Fig. 5C). Results show that light induces an increase in ROS production both on glass and polymer substrates. Relative percentage variation amounts to +34 and +200%, respectively, thus pointing out that polymer surface photocatalytic activity plays a major role in the phototransduction phenomenon.

(A) An electrically insulating, thermally conducting material (photoresist) is successfully used as an ECFC seeding substrate. (B) Photoresist long-term photoexcitation does not lead to sizable enhancement in tubulogenesis parameters. (C) Evaluation of intracellular ROS production following long-term photoexcitation protocol of ECFC cultures on polymer and glass substrates (glass dark, n = 629; glass light, n = 656; P3HT dark, n = 686; and P3HT light, n = 583). For each panel, the results are represented as the means SEM of three different experiments conducted on cells harvested from three different donors. The significance of differences was evaluated with unpaired Students t test (A and B) or one-way ANOVA coupled with Tukey post hoc test (C). ***P < 0.001.

Altogether, data in Fig. 5 indicate that photoelectrochemical reactions induced by light at the interface between the organic semiconducting polymer and the extracellular bath play a key role in triggering the observed enhancement in cell network formation through indirect activation of the TRPV1 channel. The occurrence of faradaic phenomena at the polymer/bath interface may give rise to material degradation effects. The photostability of the polymer substrates was carefully checked by optical absorption, photoluminescence, and Raman spectra measurements. By treating the samples with the same experimental protocol used for cell tubulogenesis assays (photoexcitation density, pulses frequency, overall exposure duration, temperature, and humidity levels), no sign of irreversible polymer degradation was observed, as compared with nonilluminated samples (fig. S5).

The Ca2+-sensitive transcription factor NF-B might provide the missing link between the influx of Ca2+ through TRPV1 and the increase in proliferation and tubulogenesis observed in ECFCs upon photostimulation (26). We therefore monitored the nuclear translocation of the cytoplasmic p65 NF-B subunit via immunofluorescence staining and mRNA levels of a number of genes induced during tubulogenesis in an NF-Bdependent manner (26, 40) (Fig. 6). Our data indicate that ECFCs seeded on polymer and subjected to light stimulation have a significantly enhanced p65 NF-B nuclear translocation compared with the control conditions consisting of cells also seeded on P3HT but kept in dark conditions (+35% versus P3HT dark; P < 0.05; Fig. 6, A and B), and seeded on bare glass (+28% versus glass dark; P < 0.05; Fig. 6B). No differences were observed between samples seeded on glass, whether they were subjected to optical excitation or not (fig. S6).

ECFCs seeded on P3HT samples and glass controls are subjected to long-term photostimulation protocol. Corresponding control samples are kept in dark conditions. After photostimulation, p65 NF-B nuclear translocation (A and B) and mRNA levels of tubulogenic/angiogenic genes that have been shown to be activated downstream of NF-B (C) are evaluated. (A) Representative images of immunofluorescence staining showing p65 NF-B (green) nuclear translocation. Cell nuclei are detected by 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) (blue). Scale bars, 50 m. (B) Quantitative evaluation of p65 NF-B nuclear translocation, as evidenced by colocalization experiments. Results are expressed as means SEM of the relative percentage of p65 nucleipositively stained cells to the total number of cells (glass dark, n = 151; glass light, n = 125; P3HT dark, n = 147; and P3HT light, n = 159). Ten fields per condition are analyzed. Data are obtained from two different experiments conducted on cells harvested from two different donors. (C) mRNA levels of intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (ICAM1), selectin E (SELE), and matrix metalloproteinases (MMP1, MMP2, and MMP9) are quantified by real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Data are expressed as means SEM of percentage variation with respect to cells grown in the dark (n = 6). The significance of differences was evaluated with unpaired Students t test (C) or one-way ANOVA coupled with Tukey post hoc test (B). *P < 0.05 and **P < 0.01.

In addition, we have checked the expression of nine genes whose expression is known to be induced in endothelial cells during tubulogenesis/angiogenesis in an NF-Bdependent manner. We considered intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (ICAM1); vascular adhesion molecule 1 (VCAM1); selectin E (SELE), matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) 1, 2, and 9; vascular endothelial growth factor A (VEGFA); cyclooxygenase 2 (COX2, PTGS2); and cyclin D1 (CCND1) (40). Of these, five are significantly up-regulated by light exposure in cells grown on P3HT substrates, namely, ICAM1 (+90% versus P3HT dark; P < 0.05), SELE (+1119%; P < 0.01), MMP1 (+242%; P < 0.01), MMP2 (+467%; P < 0.05), and MMP9 (+458%; P < 0.05) (Fig. 6C). Conversely, VCAM1, VEGFA, PTGS2, and CCND1 do not show relevant variation upon light stimulation (fig. S7A). Light excitation on cells grown on bare glass substrates does not show any significant effect as compared with control samples in dark conditions (fig. S7B).

Therapeutic angiogenesis via autologous EPC transplantation represents a promising strategy to preserve or, at least, partially restore cardiac function after myocardial infarction (24, 41). Nevertheless, the regenerative outcome of EPC-based therapies in preclinical studies was rather disappointing and did not lead to sufficient neovascularization of the ischemic heart (41). This led to the proposal to boost their angiogenic activity by using emerging technologies, including tissue engineering of vascular niches, pharmacological preconditioning, or genetic and epigenetic reprogramming (42). ECFCs are regarded among the most suitable EPC subtypes to induce therapeutic angiogenesis and cardiac regeneration due to their high clonal proliferative potential and ability to assemble into capillary-like structures (23, 24). In addition, they can be easily isolated and expanded from the peripheral blood of patients and healthy donors. It has recently been suggested that their angiogenic activity could be boosted by targeting the intracellular Ca2+ toolkit (29). Here, we target ECFCs by adopting a fully different approach, i.e., by exploiting visible light as a modulation trigger and by the use of a thiophene-based conjugated polymer as the exogenous, light-responsive actuator. We demonstrate that photoexcitation of the organic material deterministically leads to robustly enhanced proliferation and tubulogenesis. Pharmacological assays, supported by electrophysiology experiments, allow the identification of TRPV1 selective excitation as a key player in the molecular pathway leading to macroscopic outcomes, as observed by quantitative analysis of the angiogenic response.

All data unambiguously show that polymer photoexcitation leads to selective activation of the TRPV1 channel, which has recently been shown to be expressed and drive angiogenesis in human ECFCs (32). TRPV1 is a polymodal Ca2+-permeable channel that integrates multiple chemical and physical cues to sense major changes in the local microenvironment of most mammalian cells (43). TRPV1 is activated by either noxious heat (>42C) and acidic solutions (pH < 6.5), whereas mild acidification (pH 6.3) of the extracellular milieus sensitizes TRPV1 to heat stimulation and results in channel activation at temperature thresholds (30 to 32C) well below the normal one (43). ROS production is also expected to further contribute to TRPV1 activation, as previously reported in mouse coronary endothelial cells (44), in which hydrogen peroxide elicits a depolarizing inward current at negative holding potentials. Likewise, ROS may stimulate TRPV1 to depolarize the membrane potential, thereby triggering trains of action potentials in airway C fibers (45, 46).

On the basis of measurements carried out in cells seeded on the photoresist substrate, as well as on direct evaluation of a limited, local temperature increase upon light stimuli during the long-term photoexcitation protocol, we infer that the excitation of the TRPV1 channel through direct photothermal transduction is not the predominant process leading to enhanced tubulogenesis.

We have previously demonstrated that polymer photoexcitation leads to generation of faradaic current, to electron transfer reactions at the polymer/electrolyte interface, and to sizable intracellular enhancement of ROS (37, 38). Briefly, optical excitation of P3HT polymer thin films leads to photoexcited species (Eq. 1), namely, singlets and charge states, which react with the oxygen dissolved in the cell medium, thus reducing oxygen (Eq. 2)P3HT+hP3HT*(1)P3HT*+O2P3HT++O2(2)

The superoxide further evolves, leading to the generation of different ROS and, lastly, ending up with hydrogen peroxide production. It has been reported that extracellular H2O2 can cross the plasma membrane through aquaporin AQP3, thereby triggering intracellular ROS signaling (47, 48). In line with our previous results, we have demonstrated here that intracellular ROS enhancement does occur in ECFCs upon photoexcitation of polymer thin films, thus contributing to TRPV1 activation.

Altogether, the evidence supports the hypothesis of a transduction mechanism mainly governed by photoelectrochemical reactions. Moreover, these same observations could explain why TRPV4, which is also expressed in ECFCs (34), is not sensitive to optical modulation. Although TRPV4 is activated by moderate heat (24 to 38C), it is supposed to be inhibited by local pH variation, although this is still a matter of debate (49, 50).

On the one hand, the role attributed in the phototransduction mechanism to the capability of the polymer to generate and transport electronic charges, as well as to its photocatalytic activity in an aqueous environment, clearly implies the need for a biocompatible, visible lightresponsive, semiconducting material. This excludes any possible implementation of the reported technique by using a thermally conducting, electrically insulating plastic substrate. Suitable cell-seeding materials have to be selected and developed within the wide arena of organic semiconducting polymers. On the other hand, the key role played by ROS raises additional issues about material photostability, cell viability, and overall safety and reliability of the technique. We extensively verified that the main polymer optoelectronic properties are not substantially altered by the exposure to light and to incubating conditions. From the biological point of view, it is very well known that high ROS levels can induce highly toxic effects and, finally, lead to cell death. We notice, however, that the established photoactivation protocol (illuminator geometry and air flow, light photoexcitation density, duty cycle, and repetition rate) has been implemented to avoid any detrimental effect. Accordingly, no toxicity effects were detected for the overall duration of the experiments, as proven by the robust increase in ECFC proliferation and tubulogenesis exposed to light. This observation is consistent with the emerging notion that appropriate ROS levels can exert a signaling role and control angiogenesis in endothelial cells (51).

The biophysical mechanisms whereby the photoactivation of TRPV1 stimulates in vitro angiogenesis in ECFCs deserve a more detailed discussion as well. Earlier work showed that TRPV1 stimulates proliferation and tube formation in vascular endothelial cells by mediating extracellular Ca2+ entry. The following increase in intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) leads to the recruitment of several downstream Ca2+-dependent decoders, such as endothelial nitric oxide synthase and Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) (52). Recently, TRPV1 was found to induce also proliferation and tube formation in ECFCs by mediating the uptake of the endocannabinoid anandamide (32). This study, however, did not investigate whether TRPV1 activation was per se able to stimulate ECFCs by engaging Ca2+-dependent pathways. Intracellular Ca2+ signaling is a crucial determinant of ECFC fate and behavior (2628). Accordingly, light-induced ECFC proliferation and tube formation were markedly reduced by the pharmacological blockade of TRPV1-mediated Ca2+ entry with CPZ and RR and by preventing the subsequent increase in [Ca2+]i with BAPTA-AM. This finding endorses the view that optical excitation stimulates ECFCs through TRPV1-mediated extracellular Ca2+ entry, and we suggest here that this occurs via downstream activation of transcriptional factor NF-B. NF-B has previously been shown to stimulate cell proliferation and tubulogenesis in endothelial cells (53, 54) and in hepatocytes (55). Our group has shown that NF-B triggers the transcriptional program underlying the angiogenic response to extracellular Ca2+ entry in ECFCs (26). Moreover, NF-B activation in response to extracellular stimulation and Ca2+ entry through TRPV1 has also been demonstrated (56, 57). Under resting conditions, NF-B is retained in the cytoplasm by the complex with the inhibitory protein IB. An increase in [Ca2+]i results in IB degradation by ubiquitination, which is triggered upon the Ca2+-dependent phosphorylation of IB. As a consequence, the p65 NF-B subunit is released from IB inhibition and translocates into the nucleus (58) where it induces the expression of multiple proangiogenic genes (40). Consistently, we found that optical excitation significantly boosted the nuclear translocation of p65 in ECFCs cultured on the conjugated polymer compared with those not exposed to light. Robust up-regulation of several angiogenic genes, such as ICAM, SELE, MMP1, MMP2, and MMP9, which are under NF-Bdependent transcriptional control, was also consequently observed. Intriguingly, NF-B also mediates VEGFA-induced gene expression and angiogenesis in vascular endothelial cells (59, 60) through an increase in [Ca2+]i (61). These observations strongly hint at NF-B as the Ca2+-sensitive decoder that translates optical excitation into an angiogenic response in human ECFCs interfaced with the light-sensitive conjugated polymer.

Overall, our findings represent the proof of principle that optical modulation may be successfully exploited to directly control the fate of a progenitor cell population, i.e., ECFCs, which has been shown to support revascularization of ischemic tissues. The in vitro activation of ECFC angiogenic activity is made possible by the use of a biocompatible, light-sensitive polymer as the phototransduction element.

The combined use of optical excitation and organic polymer technology can open interesting perspectives for several different reasons. First, the use of light modulation allows unprecedented spatial and temporal resolution to be achieved in a fully reversible way. Light temporal and spatial patterns can be specifically designed and adapted to different in vitro cell models, allowing ideally endless combinations of possibilities, to finely tune overall output in cell proliferation and network formation. The demonstrated technology is minimally invasive, allows for massive parallelization of experiments, and can be virtually implemented in any cell therapy model in a straightforward way. In addition, the use of different polymers, with lower energy gap and in the form of nanobeads, may pave the way to the optical enhancement of therapeutic angiogenesis in vivo. Further work is needed to understand whether the pattern and/or intensity of the illumination protocol may be adjusted to further boost the angiogenic response. For instance, the optical excitation protocol consisted of 30-ms-long light pulses that were delivered at 1 Hz for 4 (tubulogenesis) up to 36 (proliferation) hours. This is likely to result in oscillations in [Ca2+]i, which are known to deliver the most instructive signal for ECFCs to undergo angiogenesis by inducing the nuclear translocation of the p65 NF-B subunit (26). As the frequency of intracellular Ca2+ oscillations can be artificially manipulated to regulate NF-Bdependent gene expression in virtually any cell type (62), we envisage an additional layer of specificity and control that could be exploited to further improve the angiogenic response to optical excitation. Future work will also be devoted to assess the outcome of optical modulation on patient-derived ECFCs. One of the main hurdles associated to autologous cell-based therapy is the impairment of the angiogenic activity of EPCs, including ECFCs harvested from cardiovascular patients (29). The therapeutic translation of our findings will require the demonstration that light-induced TRPV1 activation boosts angiogenesis also in ECFCs derived from individuals affected by severe cardiovascular disorders, such as hypertension, atherosclerosis, and heart failure. In this view, the combination of organic semiconductors and genetic manipulation to increase endogenous TRPV1 expression could be sufficient to restore the reparative phenotype of autologous ECFCs from cardiovascular patients.

Regioregular P3HT (99.995% purity; Mn 54,000 to 75,000 molecular weight) was purchased from Sigma-Aldrich and used without any further purification. The samples for cell cultures were prepared by spin coating on a square 18 mm by 18 mm glass (VWR International) substrates carefully rinsed in subsequent ultrasonic baths of ultrapure water, acetone, and isopropanol. P3HT solution was prepared in chlorobenzene at a final P3HT concentration of 20 g/liter and spin coated on the cleaned substrates with a two-step recipe: (i) 3 s at 800 rpm and (ii) 60 s at 1600 rpm. Polymer film thickness is about 150 nm.

Microposit S1813 photoresist was purchased from Shipley and used without any further purification. Photoresist thin films were prepared by spin coating on cleaned substrates with a two-step recipe: (i) 3 min at 300 rpm and (ii) 30 s at 2600 rpm. Parameters were adjusted to obtain homogeneous films and similar optical absorbance to the one of the polymer thin films, at the same excitation wavelength used in the long-term stimulation protocol (see below). All films were thermally treated in an oven at 120C for 2 hours for annealing and sterilization. To promote adhesion, samples were coated with fibronectin (from bovine plasma; Sigma-Aldrich) at a concentration of 2 mg/ml in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) for at least 30 min at 37C and then rinsed with PBS.

ECFCs were isolated from peripheral blood and expanded as shown elsewhere (26). Blood samples (40 ml) collected in EDTA-containing tubes were obtained from healthy male human volunteers aged from 28 to 38 years. The Institutional Review Board at Istituto di Ricovero e Cura a Carattere Scientifico Policlinico San Matteo Foundation in Pavia approved all protocols and specifically approved this study. Informed written consent was obtained according to the Declaration of Helsinki of 1975 as revised in 2008. We focused on the so-called ECFCs, a subgroup of EPCs that are found in the CD34+ CD45 fraction of circulating mononuclear cells (MNCs), exhibit robust proliferative potential, and form capillary-like structures in vitro (23). To isolate ECFCs, MNCs were obtained from peripheral blood by density gradient centrifugation on lymphocyte separation medium for 30 min at 400g and washed twice in EBM-2 with 2% fetal calf serum. A median of 36 106 MNCs (range, 18 to 66) was plated on fibronectin-coated culture dishes (BD Biosciences) in the presence of the endothelial cell growth medium EGM-2 MV (Lonza) containing endothelial basal medium (EBM-2), 5% fetal bovine serum (FBS), recombinant human (rh) EGF, rhVEGF, recombinant human Fibroblast Growth Factor-Basic (rhFGF-B), recombinant human Insulin-like Growth Factor-1 (rhIGF-1), ascorbic acid, and heparin and maintained at 37C in 5% CO2 and humidified atmosphere. Nonadherent cells were discarded after 2 days, and thereafter, medium was changed three times a week. The outgrowth of ECFCs from adherent MNCs was characterized by the formation of a cluster of cobblestone-shaped cells. That ECFC-derived colonies belonged to the endothelial lineage was confirmed by staining with anti-CD31, anti-CD105, anti-CD144, anti-CD146, antivon Willebrand factor, anti-CD45, and anti-CD14 monoclonal antibodies and by assessment of capillary-like network formation in the in vitro tube formation assay.

For our experiments, we have mainly used endothelial cells obtained from early-passage ECFCs (P2-4, which roughly encompasses a 15- to 18-day period) with the purpose to avoid, or maximally reduce, any potential bias due to cell differentiation. However, to make sure that the phenotype of the cells did not change throughout the experiments, in the preliminary experiments, we tested the immunophenotype of ECFCs at different passages, and we found no differences. We also tested whether functional differences occurred when early (P2) and late (P6)passage ECFCs were used by testing the in vitro capacity of capillary network formation in a Cultrex assay and found no differences between early- and late-passage ECFC-derived cells (data not shown).

Electrophysiological recordings were performed using a patch-clamp setup (Axopatch 200B; Axon Instruments) coupled to an inverted microscope (Nikon Eclipse Ti). ECFCs were measured in whole-cell configuration with freshly pulled glass pipettes (3 to 6 M), filled with the following intracellular solution: 12 mM KCl, 125 mM K-gluconate, 1 mM MgCl2, 0.1 mM CaCl2, 10 mM EGTA, 10 mM Hepes, and 10 mM ATP (adenosine 5-triphosphate)Na2. The extracellular solution contained the following: 135 mM NaCl, 5.4 mM KCl, 5 mM Hepes, 10 mM glucose, 1.8 mM CaCl2, 1 mM MgCl2. Only single cells were selected for recordings. Acquisition was performed with the pCLAMP 10 software (Axon Instruments). Membrane currents were low pass filtered at 2 kHz and digitized with a sampling rate of 10 kHz (Digidata 1440 A; Molecular Devices). Data were analyzed with Clampfit (Axon Instruments) and Origin 8.0 (OriginLab Corporation).

For optical excitation of the polymer, a homemade petri cell culture illuminator, compatible with the use within the cell incubator, was designed and implemented. Its design included a black spacer made by fused filament fabrication, both to minimize overheating effects in the extracellular bath and to avoid unwanted light scattering/diffusion effects and cross-talk between different specimens. Optical excitation was provided by a green LED system, whose duty cycle, repetition rate, and intensity were set through a custom-made control circuit, comprising a microcontroller, a digital-to-analog converter, and an analog LED driver. The driver was connected to five green LEDs (SMB1N-525V-02; Roithner LaserTechnik GmbH, Vienna, Austria), with maximum emission wavelength at 525 nm, each carrying a collimator lens reducing the emission angle to 22. This way, up to five 3.5-cm petri dishes can be simultaneously treated with a homogeneous photoexcitation density of 40 mW/cm2. The long-term optical excitation protocol adopted for cell fate modulation consists of 30-ms-long pulses, followed by 70-ms-long dark conditions, continuously repeated for a minimum of 4 up to 36 hours in the case of tubulogenesis and proliferation assays, respectively.

Growth dynamics were evaluated by plating a total of 5 103 ECFC-derived cells into 10-mm fibronectin-treated cloning cylinders (5 104/cm2) in the presence of EGM-2 MV medium to facilitate the adhesion. After 12 hours, the medium was switched to EBM-2 supplemented with 2% fetal calf serum. For the pharmacological treatment, one of compounds was added to the medium: BAPTA (30 M), CPZ (10 M), RN-1734 (20 M), or RR (10 M). Cultures were incubated at 37C (in 5% CO2 and humidified atmosphere), and cell growth was assessed after 36 hours since the beginning of the long-term illumination protocol. At this point, cells were recovered by trypsinization from all the dishes, and the cell number was assessed by counting in a hemocytometer. Preliminary experiments showed no unspecific or toxic effect for each agent when used at these concentrations. Each assay was repeated in triplicate.

ECFC-derived cells from early-passage (P2 to P4) cultures were obtained by trypsinization and resuspended in EBM-2 supplemented with 2% FBS. EPC-derived cells (10 103) per well were plated in Cultrex basement membrane extract (Trevigen Inc., Gaithersburg, MD, USA) 10-mm fibronectin-treated cloning cylinders. Plates were then incubated at 37C, 5% CO2, and capillary network formation was assessed starting from 4 to 24 hours later. At least three different sets of cultures were performed every experimental point. Quantification of tubular structures was performed after 8 hours of incubation by measuring the total length of structures per field with the aid of the ImageJ software (National Institutes of Health, USA; http://rsbweb.nih.gov/ij/). To evaluate the role of TRPV1, the same protocol was repeated in the presence of the following drugs: BAPTA (30 M), CPZ (10 M), RN-1734 (20 M), or RR (10 M).

H2DCF-DA (Sigma-Aldrich) was used for the intracellular detection of ROS. ECFCs were seeded onto polymer and control substrates and subjected to the same photoexcitation protocol used for the in vitro tube formation assay. Immediately after the end of the protocol, cell cultures were incubated with the ROS probe for 30 min. After careful washout of the excess probe from the extracellular medium, the fluorescence of the probe was recorded (excitation/emission wavelengths, 490/520 nm; integration time, 70 ms for H2DCF-DA) with an inverted microscope (Nikon Eclipse Ti) equipped with an Analog-WDM Camera (CoolSNAP MYO, Teledyne Photometrics). To minimize the effects of the spectral overlap between the polymer absorption and emission spectra, and the probe emission, samples were turned upside down by using a homemade chamber with a 500-m-thick channel filled with extracellular medium. Variation of fluorescence intensity was evaluated over regions of interest covering single-cell areas, and reported values represent the average over multiple cells. See figure captions for additional details about statistical analysis. Image processing was carried out with ImageJ and subsequently analyzed with Origin 8.0.

Two sets of P3HT thin films (n = 12) were prepared as described above. The optical absorbance, the emission, and the Raman spectrum were measured immediately after fabrication. Then, all samples were exposed to ECFC growth medium (EBM-2 supplemented with 2% FBS) and incubated at 37C, 5% CO2 for 24 hours. The first set was taken in dark conditions (n = 6), and the second one was treated with the same optical excitation protocol used in the tubulogenesis assays (n = 6). After incubation, absorption, emission, and Raman spectrum were measured again in the same conditions as before. Absorption spectra were recorded by using a spectrophotometer (PerkinElmer Lambda 1040) in transmission mode. Photoluminescence spectra were acquired by using a Jobin-Yvon spectrofluorometer; the excitation wavelength was set at the polymer absorption peak wavelength (530 nm). Resonant Raman spectra were recorded by using visible light excitation at 532 nm (HORIBA Jobin-Yvon HR800 micro-Raman spectrometer system). Laser power intensity on the sample was kept at values lower than 0.03 mW to avoid laser-induced sample degradation. Spectra were typically recorded in the region 600 to 2000 cm1 and were calibrated against the 520.5 cm1 line of an internal silicon wafer. The signal-to-noise ratio was enhanced by repeated acquisitions (100). The measurements were conducted at room temperature (RT), and the resulting spectral resolution was 0.4 cm1.

To examine NF-B p65 subunit translocation into the nucleus in the individual ECFCs, the coverslips were fixed with 4% formaldehyde in PBS (20 min at RT) and permeabilized with 0.1% Triton X-100 in PBS (7 min at RT). Primary rabbit polyclonal anti-p65 antibody (Santa Cruz Biotechnology, catalog no. Sc-372) was applied at a final dilution of 1:100 for 1 hour at 37C in a humidified chamber. After three washes with PBS, secondary chicken anti-rabbit Alexa(488)-conjugated antibody (1:200; Invitrogen, catalog no. A-21441) was applied for 1 hour at RT. After washing (three times in PBS), nuclei were counterstained with 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole, dihydrochloride (DAPI; 1:5000 dilution in PBS; 20 min at RT; Invitrogen, catalog no. D1306). Last, the coverslips with cells were mounted on microscope glass slides using Fluoroshield mount medium (Sigma, catalog no. F6182). Fluorescence images were taken with the same fluorescence microscope used for the electrophysiology experiments, using standard DAPI and fluorescein isothiocyanate filters set for the acquisition of DAPI and Alexa(488) fluorescence emission, respectively.

Cells were lysed in 0.5 ml of TRI Reagent (Sigma, catalog no. T9424), and total RNA was extracted according to the manufacturers protocol. One microgram of total RNA was retrotranscribed using SensiFAST cDNA Synthesis Kit (Bioline, London, UK, catalog no. BIO-65054). Real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was performed using iTaq qPCR master mix according to the manufacturers instructions (Bio-Rad, Segrate, Italy, catalog no. 1725124) on a SFX96 Real-Time System (Bio-Rad). As a control, S18 ribosomal subunit was used, whose expression did not change across the conditions. For each gene, Ct was calculated by using the formula Ct = 2^(Ct(gene) Ct(S18)). The data are expressed as a percentage variation between P3HT light and glass light conditions and P3HT dark and glass dark samples, respectively. Sequences of oligonucleotide primers are listed in table S1.

The significance of differences was evaluated with unpaired Students t test or one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) coupled with Tukey or Dunnetts post hoc test, as appropriate. Data are represented as means standard error of the mean (SEM). P < 0.05 was considered statistically significant. Statistical analysis was performed using the GraphPad Prism 7 software (GraphPad Software Inc., La Jolla, CA).

Supplementary material for this article is available at http://advances.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/5/9/eaav4620/DC1

Fig. S1. Local and global evaluation of the extracellular bath temperature.

Fig. S2. TRPV1 is endogenously expressed in ECFCs, and it is efficiently activated by polymer photostimulation.

Fig. S3. Current clamp measurements in HEK-293 cells.

Fig. S4. Pharmacological study on ECFCs seeded on polymer substrates in the darkEvaluation of effect on tubulogenesis.

Fig. S5. Polymer photostability.

Fig. S6. p65 NF-B nuclear translocation is unaltered in ECFCs seeded on glass subjected to light-induced photostimulation.

Fig. S7. mRNA levels of proangiogenic genes downstream of NF-B signaling.

Table S1. List of oligonucleotide primers used for real-time PCR.

This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial license, which permits use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, so long as the resultant use is not for commercial advantage and provided the original work is properly cited.

Acknowledgments: We gratefully thank I. Abdel Aziz for the characterization of the homemade petri cell culture illuminator used for long-term optical excitation and P. Falvo for the constructive criticism of the manuscript and the helpful scientific discussions. Funding: This work was jointly supported by the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Unions Horizon 2020 research and innovation program LINCE, grant agreement no. 803621 (M.R.A.), the EU Horizon 2020 FETOPEN-2018-2020 Programme LION-HEARTED, grant agreement no. 828984 (F.L., F.M., and M.R.A.), the Italian Ministry of Education, University and Research (MIUR): Dipartimenti di Eccellenza Program (20182022)Department of Biology and Biotechnology L. Spallanzani, University of Pavia (F.M.), and Fondo Ricerca Giovani from the University of Pavia (F.M.). Author contributions: F.L., F.M., and M.R.A. planned the experiments. F.L. carried out the experimental measurements (electrophysiology, short- and long-term photoexcitation, evaluation of effects on proliferation, tubulogenesis, and ROS production). V.R. provided the ECFC models, took care of the cell cultures, and contributed to the tubulogenesis and proliferation experiments. G.T. prepared the polymer samples. A.D. designed, realized, and optimized the experimental setup for the long-term photoexcitation. L.T. and D.L. carried out the immunofluorescence and real-time PCR assays. P.C. contributed to the methodological discussion about gene expression. F.L. and M.R.A. wrote the main manuscript, with help from F.M. All authors contributed to the data interpretation and approved the final manuscript. Competing interests: The authors declare that they have no competing interests. Data and materials availability: All data needed to evaluate the conclusions in the paper are present in the paper and/or the Supplementary Materials. Additional data related to this paper may be requested from the authors.

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Conjugated polymers optically regulate the fate of endothelial colony-forming cells - Science Advances

New insights into heart’s healing capacity – Baylor College of Medicine News

A group of researchers at Baylor College of Medicine, the Texas Heart Institute and the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston reveals today in the journal Genes & Development new insights into the recently discovered healing capacity of the heart involving the Hippo cellular pathway. The group previously reported that inactivating the Hippo pathway in the adult murine heart promoted cardiac muscle regeneration after injury, opening the possibility of developing promising heart failure therapies.

In this study, the researchers discovered that inactivating the Hippo pathway in cardiac fibroblasts, non-muscle heart cells intertwined with cardiac muscle cells, promoted cardiac fibrosis and adversely effected cardiac function. These results highlight the need for targeting the Hippo pathway specifically in cardiac muscle cells, and not in cardiac fibroblasts, for safe and effective heart failure therapy.

Heart failure remains the leading cause of mortality in the U.S., and one of the interests of my lab is to develop ways to heal heart muscle by studying cellular pathways involved in heart development and regeneration, said corresponding author Dr. James F. Martin, professor and Vivian L. Smith Chair in Regenerative Medicine atBaylor and director of theCardiomyocyte Renewal Lab at the Texas Heart Institute.

During a heart attack, blood stops flowing into the heart; without oxygen, part of the heart muscle dies. The heart muscle does not regenerate; instead it replaces dead tissue with a scar, made from cells called fibroblasts. If there is too much scarring, the heart progressively weakens; a large proportion of people who had a severe heart attack will develop heat failure and scarring in the heart.

In previous studies, Martin and his colleagues discovered that inactivating the Hippo signaling pathway in adult murine hearts triggered cardiac muscle cell regeneration after heart attack. These findings raised hope for the development of promising heart failure therapies involving the Hippo pathway.

In the current study, Martin and his colleagues further investigated the Hippo pathway in the adult murine heart, this time focusing on its role in cardiac fibroblasts, non-muscle cells that are closely associated with cardiac muscle cells. The researchers conducted a number of basic studies, including single cell sequencing experiments that provided a high level of resolution to their analyses.

We inactivated the Hippo pathway in resting adult hearts that did not have any injury and observed that the fibroblasts became activated; they proliferated and developed into myofibroblasts, a major cell type that appears in heart tissues after an injury, Martin said.

Mouse hearts with a deficient Hippo pathway in cardiac fibroblasts spontaneously developed cardiac fibrosis, even without injury, which resulted in severe heart dysfunction, said co-first author Dr. Yang Xiao, who was a postdoctoral fellow in the Martin lab during this project. This and other evidence indicated that the Hippo pathway is required to restrain cardiac fibrosis; Hippo is important for maintaining the fibroblasts in their resting state.

In addition, the researchers found that inactivating the Hippo pathway also triggered a molecular cascade resulting in an inflammatory response that was mediated by Yap, a molecule that regulates a number of molecular pathways.

We know that Hippo and Yap work together. Hippo acts like a brake for Yap, so when we took away Hippo, Yap remained active and regulated the expression of important signaling molecules that talk to macrophages and other immune cells luring them into the heart, Martin said.

The researchers believe they have identified important insights into heart function. Their findings inform about the genetic pathways that are important for maintaining the fibroblasts in their resting state.

Other contributors to this work include co-first author Matthew C. Hill, Lele Li, Vaibhav Deshmukh, Thomas J. Martin and Jun Wang. The authors are affiliated with one or more of the following institutions: Baylor College of Medicine, the Texas Heart Institute and the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston.

This study was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health (DE023177, HL127717, HL130804, HL118761; F31HL136065; K01DE026561); American Heart Association (14SDG19840000), Vivian L. Smith Foundation, State of Texas funding, Fondation LeDucq Transatlantic Networks of Excellence in Cardiovascular Research (14CVD01) Defining the genomic topology of atrial fibrillation. Further support was provided by Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities Research Center grant number 1U54 HD083092 from the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development and the Mouse Phenotyping Core at Baylor College of Medicine (U54 HG006348).

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New insights into heart's healing capacity - Baylor College of Medicine News

Meet Noveel Pandya: Indian multi-millionaire whose stem cell venture project is the talk of town – Gulf News

At 34, Noveel Pandya is an aspiring billionaire who has made it big right here in the UAE. Image Credit: Atiq-ur-Rehman / Gulf News

Dubai: At 34, Noveel Pandya is a billionaire who has made it big right here in the UAE. While it would bealright to say he is more blessed than others his father, Narendra Pandya, ran an established business in the UAE before Noveel started Noveel is attempting to makea mark withhis own venture,Bioscience Clinic Middle East.

Senior Pandya runs a successful business House of Chemicals (HOC) - as a distributor of specialty and commodity chemicals for key suppliers especially in businesses such as oil drilling, refineries, gas plants, lubricant plants, water treatment for desalination plants and sewage treatment.

Pandya,Noveels father,also started another company BDH with an expertise in supply, installation, commissioning and maintenance of all laboratory equipment and furniture.

We are pretty much the turnkey laboratory projects expert, said Noveel, in an interview with Gulf News at his house in Emirates Hills.

But Noveels babyBioscience Clinic Middle East a center offering regenerative medicine and personalised autologous cell therapies brings him much pride and cheer. Premium services of the company include cryopreservation and expansion of cells used for anti-aging treatments, aesthetic and plastic surgery, wound care and for dermatological imperfections.

Starting from the bottom up

With a family-run business, it was perhaps a given for Noveel to become a businessman himself and run his fathers mantle.

But this was not achievedbefore he had to work his way up to the top.

In fact I started from bottom low. There was no way my father was going to have me take over peoples jobs in the company who had put in years of hard work. So there was a huge process of learning one that taught me humility and gratitude for the people who are part of our team, he said.

Noveels father came to work in the UAE in the early 70s. He said, From the stories I hear from him - there were many challenges and struggles he faced. In fact, lots of people who came with him to work in the UAE returned home.

It wasn't handed on a platter

Before jumping to the conclusion that he had it all easy,Noveel had to prove his capabilities just like any employee of the firm and had to work his way up the ladder.

There was no way my father was going to let me work above all those people who had put in so many years of service. From 2007 until 2011 it was all about learning and observation.

Take this: From the time Noveel completed his MBA in London in 2011 to join the family, he has helped the family business grow by a 100 per cent year on year.

Noveel said, BDH for example was making Dh35 million in 2007, but today, it is making over Dh140 million.

As for his own venture, there is massive potential for Bioscience Clinic Middle East as the stem cell venture business for the MENA region is tipped to be around two million dollars.

According to a report published in April 2019, the global stem cell market size is expected to reach $15.63 billion by 2025.

Today, we have little competition in the MENA region, so as you can see, there is a massive potential to grow.

Reverse-aging with stem cell therapy

Noveel said typically a client would reach out to a clinic to undergo a full scan and evaluation. A consultation with specialised doctors follows. Once the evaluation is done and the patient passes the test to become a candidate for the stem cell venture project, the doctor executes a plan to extract fat from the persons body.

This fat stores stem cells and we extract it from the fat. We have advanced technology in place to do the job for this. The stem cells derived are stored in vials and frozen, he explained.

The stem cells are multiplied to a couple of hundred million or sometimes a billion in order to produce the required volume.

Noveel said: When the stem cells are frozen they stop the ageing process of the cells. This means it effectively helps reverse-age a person. If someone at the age of 30 comes to us and asks us to freeze their cells. We do it. The person can always come back ten or 15 years later to rejuvenate their skin, hair or any part of their body. Just imagine at 45 or 50, this person wants to rejuvenate their skin. What we will do is inject their cells which were frozen when they were 30. When these cells are injected, they will leave the person with a skin looking as young as 30.

Stem cell therapy is said to be the most natural way to rejuvenate your skin, body and cells. The concept is called autologous which means it is your own cells which go into your body - not that of siblings or parents. Basically it is your own cells which are injected to the body and it is the most natural way to rejuvenate your body and skin.

How long does it take for the body to rejuvenate?

It depends on the body type, the persons lifestyle, food habits and more. This can take from a couple of weeks to a whole month. Remember, this is not an overnight fix. In fact treatments that come with overnight fixes can be very dangerous. Anything that has a drastic effect on your body is not good at all, explained Noveel.

We have seen fine lines or wrinkles disappearing in seven to 15 days after the cells were injected. The effect of the cell injected can last up to a year or over a year. But it all depends on the body type. Remember, your body can never reject your own cells it always accepts its cells.

Our clients are people from the age 18 and above. People who use alternative treatments come to us. I had a 63-year-old man come in from India saying they wanted their stem cells extracted.

Screening process

When a person comes there is a screening process that goes in. Upon successfully passing the screening process, other factors expel candidates like those who are typically heavy smokers or people with certain existing medical conditions. If a client has a virus present in the body, that would drastically effect the quality of cells. If the quality of cells we get right in the beginning is poor the effect will not be desirable for them. Similarly, if the person is diagnosed with some STDs, certain terminal illness, we do not recommend them to store their cells.

Package cost

An initial package offered by Bioscience Clinic Middle East is close to Dh15,000 which includes a consultation, cell extraction, one year storage of stem cells and application. The application can be used anytime. One is not forced to use it immediately.

We are the only business in the region offering such services, Noveel claimed.

Business investment

Noveel said he invested 5 million euros in Bioscience Clinic Middle East.

This money went in for the facilitation of the lab, the treatment, and consultation, hiring skilled professionals and setting up class clean rooms for storing stem cells. Remember we are talking about a niche industry and a very niche product. The investment is for this.

Challenges as a millennial

There is a definite need to make an effort to be heard. Sometimes we are not taken seriously and that is the only challenge I see for myself today. But never give up. Keep dreaming and have the zest to grow. Patience is a virtue that we millennials need to build. Success does not come overnight. For example, my break-even did not happen for long. But I kept at my dreams and went after my goals. This is critical, Noveel said

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Meet Noveel Pandya: Indian multi-millionaire whose stem cell venture project is the talk of town - Gulf News

BlueRock Therapeutics to Present at 2019 Cell & Gene Meeting on the Mesa – BioSpace

CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Sept. 25, 2019 /PRNewswire/ --BlueRock Therapeutics, today announced that Emile Nuwaysir, Ph.D., Chief Executive Officer of BlueRock and Vice Chairman of the Alliance for Regenerative Medicine (ARM), will present at the Cell & Gene Meeting on the Mesa, to be held Oct. 2-4 in Carlsbad, Calif.

The following are specific details regarding BlueRock's participation at the conference:Event: BlueRock Therapeutics Company PresentationDate: Wednesday, Oct. 2Time: 11:45 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. PDTLocation: Cognate Bioservices Ballroom,Park Hyatt Aviara Resort, 7100 Aviara Resort Dr., Carlsbad, CA 92011

Event: Panel: Cell and Gene Therapy for Neurological Product IndicationsDate: Wednesday, Oct. 2Time: 4:00 - 5:00 p.m. PDTLocation: BlueRock Therapeutics Ballroom, Park Hyatt Aviara Resort, 7100 Aviara Resort Dr., Carlsbad, CA 92011

A live video webcast of all company presentations and workshops will be available at: http://www.meetingonthemesa.com/webcast and will also be published on the conference website shortly after the event.

Organized by the Alliance for Regenerative Medicine, the Cell & Gene Meeting on the Mesa is a three-day conference featuring more than 80 dedicated company presentations by leading public and private companies, highlighting technical and clinical achievements over the past 12 months in the areas of cell therapy, gene therapy, gene editing, tissue engineering, and broader regenerative medicine technologies, as well as over 100 panelists and featured speakers.

About BlueRock Therapeutics BlueRock Therapeutics, a wholly-owned and independently operated subsidiary of Bayer AG, is a leading engineered cell therapy company with a mission to develop regenerative medicines for intractable diseases. BlueRock Therapeutics'CELL+GENE platform harnesses the power of cells for new medicines across neurology, cardiology and immunology indications. BlueRock Therapeutics' cell differentiation technology recapitulates the cell's developmental biology to produce authentic cell therapies, which are further engineered for additional function. Utilizing these cell therapies to replace damaged or degenerated tissue brings the potential to restore or regenerate lost function. BlueRock's culture is defined by scientific innovation, highest ethical standards and an urgency to bring transformative treatments to all who would benefit. For more information, visit http://www.bluerocktx.com.

Company Contact:Candice Ellis, 978-879-7273Associate Director, Investor Relations and Corporate Communicationscellis@bluerocktx.com

Media Contacts: David Schull or Maggie BellerRusso Partners, LLC(646) 942-5631Maggie.beller@russopartnersllc.com

View original content to download multimedia:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/bluerock-therapeutics-to-present-at-2019-cell--gene-meeting-on-the-mesa-300925107.html

SOURCE BlueRock Therapeutics

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BlueRock Therapeutics to Present at 2019 Cell & Gene Meeting on the Mesa - BioSpace

Novel CAR T-cell therapy for leukaemia and lymphoma targets BAFF-R – Drug Target Review

Scientists in the US have developed a promising new CAR T-cell therapy that targets the BAFF-R protein, which has demonstrated superior cancer destruction to existing FDA-approved CAR-T therapies.

The first CAR T-cell therapy targeting the B cell-activating factor receptor on cancerous cells, eradicated CD19-targeted therapy-resistant human leukaemia and lymphoma cells in animal models, according to research by theCity of Hope.

The new therapy will be used in a clinical trial next year for patients who relapsed after CD19 immunotherapy treatments and may also be potentially used as a first-line of CAR T-cell therapy treatment.

An estimated 20 to 30 percent of leukaemia and lymphoma patients who achieve remission after receiving CD19 CAR-T therapy will relapse after a few years. The effectiveness of the CAR-T cells that target the CD19 protein on cancerous B cells begins to wane and the cancer returns.This new therapy offers a possible solution for such patients.

One major obstacle to current CAR-T therapy is that in up to a third of these patients, the tumour is actually smart and comes back because it has learned how to no longer express the target thats recognised by the original immunotherapy, saidLarry Kwak, MD, PhD, vice president and deputy director of City of Hopes comprehensive cancer center and the studys principal author, who leads the research with Hong Qin, PhD, a research professor in City of Hopes Department of Hematology & Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation.

To combat that, City of Hope research has found a new, and potentially more effective, target for CAR T-cell therapy against B cell leukaemias and lymphomas. We plan to open a clinical trial next year using the BAFF-R CAR T-cell therapy.

This new treatment could change the face of leukaemia and lymphoma treatment in the US and worldwide, added Kwak, the Dr Michael Friedman Professor in Translational Medicine.

CAR T-cell therapy involves taking a patients T cells from the bloodstream. The immune cells are then genetically engineered in a laboratory to recognise and attack a specific cancer-associated protein, such as BAFF-R, before being reintroduced into the patients bloodstream, whereupon they begin destroying tumour cells.

For this study, animal models with CD19 therapy-resistant human-tumours (including Burkitt, mantel cell, and other non-Hodgkins lymphoma subtypes and acute lymphoblastic leukaemia) received BAFF-R CAR-T therapy. Remarkable tumour regression and prolonged survival were observed after treatment with these CAR-T cells. In animal models with human Burkitt lymphoma, BAFF-R CAR-T therapy achieved a cure (complete tumour regression with 100 percent long-term survival) after a single treatment.

Tumour samples from patients who relapsed after receiving CD19-targeted immunotherapy (blinatumomab) were also investigated. The study demonstrated that BAFF-R CAR-T cells were consistently active against these tumours, whereas CD19 CAR-T cells had greatly diminished responses to each patients relapse tumour compared to the pre-therapy samples.

We did a head-to-head comparison of two new therapies and our data showed that our BAFF-R CAR-T therapy actually did a better job than FDA-approved CD19 CAR-T therapies, Qinsaid. If these results continue, we will pursue BAFF-R CAR-T therapy as a kind of frontline CAR-T therapy treatment for lymphoma and leukaemia patients.

City of Hope plans to open a clinical trial next year using the BAFF-R CAR T-cell therapy for B cell leukaemia and lymphoma patients who have relapsed after receiving CD19 CAR T-cell therapies or blinatumomab.

This research was published inScience Translational Medicine.

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Novel CAR T-cell therapy for leukaemia and lymphoma targets BAFF-R - Drug Target Review

PolarityTE Selected to Present at 2019 Cell & Gene Meeting on the Mesa – Business Wire

SALT LAKE CITY--(BUSINESS WIRE)--PolarityTE, Inc. (Nasdaq: PTE), a biotechnology company developing and commercializing regenerative tissue products and biomaterials, today announced that Nikolai Sopko, MD, PhD, Chief Scientific Officer of PolarityTE, was selected to present at the annual Cell & Gene Meeting on the Mesa, which will be held from October 2-4, 2019 in Carlsbad, California. Dr. Sopko will discuss the Companys R&D pipeline and highlight the progress made thus far with the Companys first clinically available product, SkinTE, an autologous, homologous human cellular and tissue-based product designed to regenerate full-thickness, functional skin for use in wounds, traumas, and burns.

PolarityTE is scheduled to present on October 3rd from 9:45-10am PST in the Cognate Bioservices Ballroom, Park Hyatt Aviara Resort.

A live video webcast of all company presentations will be available at: http://www.meetingonthemesa.com/webcast and will also be published on the conference website shortly after the event. Please visit http://www.meetingonthemesa.com for full information on the conference, including registration.

Organized by the Alliance for Regenerative Medicine, the Cell & Gene Meeting on the Mesa is a three-day conference featuring more than 80 dedicated company presentations by leading public and private companies, highlighting technical and clinical achievements over the past 12 months in the areas of cell therapy, gene therapy, gene editing, tissue engineering, and broader regenerative medicine technologies, as well as over 100 panelists and featured speakers.

About PolarityTE

PolarityTE is focused on transforming the lives of patients by discovering, designing and developing a range of regenerative tissue products and biomaterials for the fields of medicine, biomedical engineering and material sciences. Rather than manufacturing with synthetic and foreign materials within artificially engineered environments, PolarityTE manufactures products from the patient's own tissue and uses the patient's own body to support the regenerative process. From a small piece of healthy autologous tissue, the company creates an easily deployable, dynamic and self-propagating product designed to regenerate the target tissues. PolarityTE's innovative method is intended to promote and accelerate growth of the patient's tissues to undergo a form of effective regenerative healing. Learn more at http://www.PolarityTE.com Welcome to the Shift.

About SkinTE

SkinTE is a human cellular and tissue-based product derived from a patient's own skin intended for the repair, reconstruction, and replacement of skin tissue. SkinTE has been proven to regrow skin over exposed bone, muscle, joint and tendon and has been used to treat a variety of skin defects, including burns, wounds, traumatic injuries, surgical reconstruction, scars, and failed skin grafts or conventional treatments for wounds and burns.

SkinTE is intended to be used by physicians or other appropriate healthcare providers for homologous uses of skin tissues/integument. Patients who have suffered from an event, disease, process or acquired deficit that results in the functional loss or void of skin/integument systems can receive SkinTE as an adjunct and/or in place of split-thickness skin grafting, full-thickness grafting, temporizing skin coverage and/or skin substitute products. SkinTE is for autologous use only. Aseptic technique during harvest and deployment of SkinTE is mandatory. SkinTE is marketed as an HCT/P regulated by the FDA solely under Section 361 of the Public Health Service Act and 21 CFR 1271.

Forward Looking Statements

Certain statements contained in this release are "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. They are generally identified by words such as "believes," "may," "expects," "anticipates," "intend," "plan," "will," "would," "should" and similar expressions. Readers should not place undue reliance on such forward-looking statements, which are based upon the Company's beliefs and assumptions as of the date of this release. The Company's actual results could differ materially due to risk factors and other items described in more detail in the "Risk Factors" section of the Company's Annual Reports and other filings with the SEC (copies of which may be obtained at http://www.sec.gov). Subsequent events and developments may cause these forward-looking statements to change. The Company specifically disclaims any obligation or intention to update or revise these forward-looking statements as a result of changed events or circumstances that occur after the date of this release, except as required by applicable law.

POLARITYTE, the POLARITYTE logo, WHERE SELF REGENERATES SELF, WELCOME TO THE SHIFT, and SKINTE are trademarks or registered trademarks of PolarityTE, Inc.

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PolarityTE Selected to Present at 2019 Cell & Gene Meeting on the Mesa - Business Wire

Natera Sees Foundation Medicine Deal as "Additive" to Other Cancer Monitoring Opportunities – GenomeWeb

NEW YORK Natera's recent deal with Foundation Medicine to develop personalized cancer monitoring assays will allow it to piggyback on the Roche subsidiary's dominant market share in tumor genomic profiling to establish its Signatera test for use in advanced cancer patients, while continuing to pursue other opportunities for the test on its own.

Foundation Medicine, on the other hand, is banking on Natera's technology and expertise in circulating tumor DNA analysis to bring monitoring assays to patients more quickly than it could on its own.

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Natera Sees Foundation Medicine Deal as "Additive" to Other Cancer Monitoring Opportunities - GenomeWeb

Don’t Be Shy About Asking to Remain in the Hospital – Sickle Cell Anemia News

One of the best feelings in the world is cutting a hospital bracelet.

Cutting a hospital bracelet can symbolize a fresh start. Youve been discharged from the hospital. You are feeling like the best version of yourself happy, relaxed, optimistic, and ready to prove that sickle cell cant keep you down.

However, sometimes I feel like hospital bracelets are cut prematurely.

I was admitted to the hospital Sept. 13 because of a vaso-occlusive crisis. I had pain in my arms, my back, and my legs. I was taking oral morphine, dihydrocodeine, and acetaminophen every four hours. I wouldve been arrested if I had been caught driving in that state.

It was frustrating, because every time the medications wore off, the pain was just as intense as it was before I was admitted. The pain wasnt getting better. In fact, the pain was getting worse, which meant the medicine just kept coming.

Days passed. It got to the point where every doctor, nurse, and consultant suggested I leave the hospital, as I could use the same painkillers at home. I declined each time.

I hate going to the hospital so much that I treat it as a last resort. You know its serious if I take myself to the emergency room. I need help that I cant sufficiently give myself.

My floor was full of elderly patients with cancer-related complications. There were three other women in my room who looked unwell. I was uncomfortable speaking to them and seeing the type of treatments they needed. The environment didnt promote positive thoughts, but I insisted on staying.

I sat in the emergency room for hours and was admitted because I was feeling sick. I didnt intend on leaving until I felt better, yet the constant suggestions made me feel like I was wasting National Health Service resources. I couldnt help but wonder if someone needed my bed more than me.

I was discharged Sept. 17, and I honestly regret not staying in the hospital. The pain is just as intense and Ive seriously considered going back.

This is just to encourage all you sickle cell warriors to stay put. If youre not feeling well enough to be discharged, you have every right to stay. You know your body best. If you feel awkward about advocating for yourself, speak to a friend or family member who can effectively relay the importance of staying in the hospital to the appropriate healthcare professionals.

***

Note: Sickle Cell Anemia News is strictly a news and information website about the disease. It does not provide medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. This content is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have read on this website. The opinions expressed in this column are not those of Sickle Cell Anemia News or its parent company, BioNews Services, and are intended to spark discussion about issues pertaining to sickle cell anemia.

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Don't Be Shy About Asking to Remain in the Hospital - Sickle Cell Anemia News

Silencing of TAZ inhibits the motility of hepatocellular carcinoma cel | CMAR – Dove Medical Press

Wei Zhou,1,2,* Jiachun Weng,1,* Keyan Wu,1,2,* Xiao Xu,1,* Hui Wang,1,* Jing Zhang,3,* Chengxue Zhao,1 Jie Yang,1 Yu Zhang,1,4,5 Weigan Shen1,4,5

1Department of Cell Biology, School of Medicine of Yangzhou University, Yangzhou, Peoples Republic of China; 2Department of Internal Medicine, Affiliated Hospital of Yangzhou University, Yangzhou, Peoples Republic of China; 3Department of Internal Medicine, Northern Jiangsu Peoples Hospital Affiliated to Yangzhou University, Yangzhou, Peoples Republic of China; 4Jiangsu Co-Innovation Center for Prevention and Control of Important Animal Infectious Diseases and Zoonoses, Yangzhou University, Yangzhou, Peoples Republic of China; 5Jiangsu Key Laboratory of Integrated Traditional Chinese and Western Medicine for Prevention and Treatment of Senile Diseases, Yangzhou University, Yangzhou, Peoples Republic of China

*These authors contributed equally to this work

Correspondence: Yu Zhang; Weigan ShenDepartment of Cell Biology, School of Medicine of Yangzhou University, No. 136 Middle Jiangyang Street, Yangzhou 225009, Jiangsu, Peoples Republic of ChinaTel +86 05 148 797 8875Fax +86 05 148 734 1733Email yzzy10182001@aliyun.com; shenweigan@hotmail.com

Purpose: The aim of the present study was to investigate the effect of knockdown and knockout of the transcriptional co-activator with PDZ-binding motif (TAZ) on the migration, invasion and autophagy of the hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) cell lines, as well as the functional connection between the autophagy and cell migratory processes induced by loss of TAZ in HCC cell lines.Methods: HCC cell lines SMMC-7721 and SK-HEP1 stably knockdown and knockout of TAZ were established by the lentiviral-mediated TAZ knockdown and knockout approaches. Reverse transcription-quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction and Western blotting were performed to examine the expression of TAZ and indicated genes in downstream pathways in HCC cell lines. Transwell assay and autophagic flux assay were used to evaluate the effect of TAZ knockdown and knockout on the motility and the autophagy of HCC cell lines.Results: We initially found that TAZ exhibited highly abundant and was expressed predominantly in HCC cell lines with different spontaneous metastatic potential. Through performing loss-of-function assays, we demonstrated that both TAZ knockdown and knockout promoted HCC cell autophagy and reduced HCC cell migration, invasion and epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition. In addition, autophagy inhibition in TAZ knockdown and knockout SMMC-7721 and SK-HEP1 cells in the presence of 3-methyladenine or chloroquine partially abrogated the migratory and invasive ability induced by TAZ knockdown and knockout.Conclusion: Our findings indicated that loss of TAZ in HCC cells suppressed cell motility probably via altering the autophagy, suggesting that TAZ emerges as an important target in regulating cell motility and autophagy in HCC cells, and blocking TAZ may be a novel therapeutic strategy against HCC.

Keywords: TAZ, autophagy, migration, invasion, hepatocellular carcinoma

This work is published and licensed by Dove Medical Press Limited. The full terms of this license are available at https://www.dovepress.com/terms.php and incorporate the Creative Commons Attribution - Non Commercial (unported, v3.0) License.By accessing the work you hereby accept the Terms. Non-commercial uses of the work are permitted without any further permission from Dove Medical Press Limited, provided the work is properly attributed. For permission for commercial use of this work, please see paragraphs 4.2 and 5 of our Terms.

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Silencing of TAZ inhibits the motility of hepatocellular carcinoma cel | CMAR - Dove Medical Press