- Browse by Author
Browsing by Author "Bhasme, Pramod"
Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
Results Per Page
Sort Options
Item Identification of a physiologic vasculogenic fibroblast state to achieve tissue repair(Springer Nature, 2023-02-28) Pal, Durba; Ghatak, Subhadip; Singh, Kanhaiya; Abouhashem, Ahmed Safwat; Kumar, Manishekhar; El Masry, Mohamed S.; Mohanty, Sujit K.; Palakurti, Ravichand; Rustagi, Yashika; Tabasum, Saba; Khona, Dolly K.; Khanna, Savita; Kacar, Sedat; Srivastava, Rajneesh; Bhasme, Pramod; Verma, Sumit S.; Hernandez, Edward; Sharma, Anu; Reese, Diamond; Verma, Priyanka; Ghosh, Nandini; Gorain, Mahadeo; Wan, Jun; Liu, Sheng; Liu, Yunlong; Castro, Natalia Higuita; Gnyawali, Surya C.; Lawrence, William; Moore, Jordan; Perez, Daniel Gallego; Roy, Sashwati; Yoder, Mervin C.; Sen, Chandan K.; Surgery, School of MedicineTissue injury to skin diminishes miR-200b in dermal fibroblasts. Fibroblasts are widely reported to directly reprogram into endothelial-like cells and we hypothesized that miR-200b inhibition may cause such changes. We transfected human dermal fibroblasts with anti-miR-200b oligonucleotide, then using single cell RNA sequencing, identified emergence of a vasculogenic subset with a distinct fibroblast transcriptome and demonstrated blood vessel forming function in vivo. Anti-miR-200b delivery to murine injury sites likewise enhanced tissue perfusion, wound closure, and vasculogenic fibroblast contribution to perfused vessels in a FLI1 dependent manner. Vasculogenic fibroblast subset emergence was blunted in delayed healing wounds of diabetic animals but, topical tissue nanotransfection of a single anti-miR-200b oligonucleotide was sufficient to restore FLI1 expression, vasculogenic fibroblast emergence, tissue perfusion, and wound healing. Augmenting a physiologic tissue injury adaptive response mechanism that produces a vasculogenic fibroblast state change opens new avenues for therapeutic tissue vascularization of ischemic wounds.Item Swine Model of Biofilm Infection and Invisible Wounds(MyJove Corporation, 2023-06-16) El Masry, Mohamed; Bhasme, Pramod; Mathew-Steiner, Shomita S.; Smith, Jessica; Smeenge, Thomas; Roy, Sashwati; Sen, Chandan K.; Surgery, School of MedicineBiofilm infection is a major contributor to wound chronicity. The establishment of clinically relevant experimental wound biofilm infection requires the involvement of the host immune system. Iterative changes in the host and pathogen during the formation of such clinically relevant biofilm can only occur in vivo. The swine wound model is recognized for its advantages as a powerful pre-clinical model. There are several reported approaches for studying wound biofilms. In vitro and ex vivo systems are deficient in terms of the host immune response. Short-term in vivo studies involve acute responses and, thus, do not allow for biofilm maturation, as is known to occur clinically. The first long-term swine wound biofilm study was reported in 2014. The study recognized that biofilm-infected wounds may close as determined by planimetry, but the skin barrier function of the affected site may fail to be restored. Later, this observation was validated clinically. The concept of functional wound closure was thus born. Wounds closed but deficient in skin barrier function may be viewed as invisible wounds. In this work, we seek to report the methodological details necessary to reproduce the long-term swine model of biofilm-infected severe burn injury, which is clinically relevant and has translational value. This protocol provides detailed guidance on establishing an 8 week wound biofilm infection using P. aeruginosa (PA01). Eight full-thickness burn wounds were created symmetrically on the dorsum of domestic white pigs, which were inoculated with (PA01) at day 3 post-burn; subsequently, noninvasive assessments of the wound healing were conducted at different time points using laser speckle imaging (LSI), high-resolution ultrasound (HUSD), and transepidermal water loss (TEWL). The inoculated burn wounds were covered with a four-layer dressing. Biofilms, as established and confirmed structurally by SEM at day 7 post-inoculation, compromised the functional wound closure. Such an adverse outcome is subject to reversal in response to appropriate interventions.