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Browsing by Author "Verma, Priyanka"
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Item Endothelial Phospholipase Cγ2 Improves Outcomes of Diabetic Ischemic Limb Rescue Following VEGF Therapy(American Diabetes Association, 2022) Rustagi, Yashika; Abouhashem, Ahmed S.; Verma, Priyanka; Verma, Sumit S.; Hernandez, Edward; Liu, Sheng; Kumar, Manishekhar; Guda, Poornachander R.; Srivastava, Rajneesh; Mohanty, Sujit K.; Kacar, Sedat; Mahajan, Sanskruti; Wanczyk, Kristen E.; Khanna, Savita; Murphy, Michael P.; Gordillo, Gayle M.; Roy, Sashwati; Wan, Jun; Sen, Chandan K.; Singh, Kanhaiya; Medicine, School of MedicineTherapeutic vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) replenishment has met with limited success for the management of critical limb-threatening ischemia. To improve outcomes of VEGF therapy, we applied single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) technology to study the endothelial cells of the human diabetic skin. Single-cell suspensions were generated from the human skin followed by cDNA preparation using the Chromium Next GEM Single-cell 3' Kit v3.1. Using appropriate quality control measures, 36,487 cells were chosen for downstream analysis. scRNA-seq studies identified that although VEGF signaling was not significantly altered in diabetic versus nondiabetic skin, phospholipase Cγ2 (PLCγ2) was downregulated. The significance of PLCγ2 in VEGF-mediated increase in endothelial cell metabolism and function was assessed in cultured human microvascular endothelial cells. In these cells, VEGF enhanced mitochondrial function, as indicated by elevation in oxygen consumption rate and extracellular acidification rate. The VEGF-dependent increase in cell metabolism was blunted in response to PLCγ2 inhibition. Follow-up rescue studies therefore focused on understanding the significance of VEGF therapy in presence or absence of endothelial PLCγ2 in type 1 (streptozotocin-injected) and type 2 (db/db) diabetic ischemic tissue. Nonviral topical tissue nanotransfection technology (TNT) delivery of CDH5 promoter-driven PLCγ2 open reading frame promoted the rescue of hindlimb ischemia in diabetic mice. Improvement of blood flow was also associated with higher abundance of VWF+/CD31+ and VWF+/SMA+ immunohistochemical staining. TNT-based gene delivery was not associated with tissue edema, a commonly noted complication associated with proangiogenic gene therapies. Taken together, our study demonstrates that TNT-mediated delivery of endothelial PLCγ2, as part of combination gene therapy, is effective in diabetic ischemic limb rescue.Item Genome-wide DNA hypermethylation opposes healing in patients with chronic wounds by impairing epithelial-mesenchymal transition(The American Society for Clinical Investigation, 2022) Singh, Kanhaiya; Rustagi, Yashika; Abouhashem, Ahmed S.; Tabasum, Saba; Verma, Priyanka; Hernandez, Edward; Pal, Durba; Khona, Dolly K.; Mohanty, Sujit K.; Kumar, Manishekhar; Srivastava, Rajneesh; Guda, Poornachander R.; Verma, Sumit S.; Mahajan, Sanskruti; Killian, Jackson A.; Walker, Logan A.; Ghatak, Subhadip; Mathew-Steiner, Shomita S.; Wanczyk, Kristen E.; Liu, Sheng; Wan, Jun; Yan, Pearlly; Bundschuh, Ralf; Khanna, Savita; Gordillo, Gayle M.; Murphy, Michael P.; Roy, Sashwati; Sen, Chandan K.; Surgery, School of MedicineAn extreme chronic wound tissue microenvironment causes epigenetic gene silencing. An unbiased whole-genome methylome was studied in the wound-edge tissue of patients with chronic wounds. A total of 4,689 differentially methylated regions (DMRs) were identified in chronic wound-edge skin compared with unwounded human skin. Hypermethylation was more frequently observed (3,661 DMRs) in the chronic wound-edge tissue compared with hypomethylation (1,028 DMRs). Twenty-six hypermethylated DMRs were involved in epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT). Bisulfite sequencing validated hypermethylation of a predicted specific upstream regulator TP53. RNA-Seq analysis was performed to qualify findings from methylome analysis. Analysis of the downregulated genes identified the TP53 signaling pathway as being significantly silenced. Direct comparison of hypermethylation and downregulated genes identified 4 genes, ADAM17, NOTCH, TWIST1, and SMURF1, that functionally represent the EMT pathway. Single-cell RNA-Seq studies revealed that these effects on gene expression were limited to the keratinocyte cell compartment. Experimental murine studies established that tissue ischemia potently induces wound-edge gene methylation and that 5'-azacytidine, inhibitor of methylation, improved wound closure. To specifically address the significance of TP53 methylation, keratinocyte-specific editing of TP53 methylation at the wound edge was achieved by a tissue nanotransfection-based CRISPR/dCas9 approach. This work identified that reversal of methylation-dependent keratinocyte gene silencing represents a productive therapeutic strategy to improve wound closure.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.