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Dive into the research topics where Alexandra E. Jantzen is active.

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Featured researches published by Alexandra E. Jantzen.


Biomaterials | 2011

The Biocompatibility of Titanium Cardiovascular Devices Seeded With Autologous Blood-Derived Endothelial Progenitor Cells: EPC-Seeded Antithrombotic Ti Implants

Hardean E. Achneck; Ryan M. Jamiolkowski; Alexandra E. Jantzen; Justin M. Haseltine; Whitney O. Lane; Jessica K. Huang; Lauren J. Galinat; Michael J. Serpe; Fu-Hsiung Lin; Madison Li; Amar Parikh; Liqiao Ma; Tao Chen; Bantayehu Sileshi; Carmelo A. Milano; Charles S. Wallace; Thomas Stabler; Jason D. Allen; George A. Truskey; Jeffrey H. Lawson

Implantable and extracorporeal cardiovascular devices are commonly made from titanium (Ti) (e.g. Ti-coated Nitinol stents and mechanical circulatory assist devices). Endothelializing the blood-contacting Ti surfaces of these devices would provide them with an antithrombogenic coating that mimics the native lining of blood vessels and the heart. We evaluated the viability and adherence of peripheral blood-derived porcine endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs), seeded onto thin Ti layers on glass slides under static conditions and after exposure to fluid shear stresses. EPCs attached and grew to confluence on Ti in serum-free medium, without preadsorption of proteins. After attachment to Ti for 15 min, less than 5% of the cells detached at a shear stress of 100 dyne / cm(2). Confluent monolayers of EPCs on smooth Ti surfaces (Rq of 10 nm), exposed to 15 or 100 dyne/cm(2) for 48 h, aligned and elongated in the direction of flow and produced nitric oxide dependent on the level of shear stress. EPC-coated Ti surfaces had dramatically reduced platelet adhesion when compared to uncoated Ti surfaces. These results indicate that peripheral blood-derived EPCs adhere and function normally on Ti surfaces. Therefore EPCs may be used to seed cardiovascular devices prior to implantation to ameliorate platelet activation and thrombus formation.


Biomaterials | 2011

Use of autologous blood-derived endothelial progenitor cells at point-of-care to protect against implant thrombosis in a large animal model.

Alexandra E. Jantzen; Whitney O. Lane; Shawn M. Gage; Ryan M. Jamiolkowski; Justin M. Haseltine; Lauren J. Galinat; Fu-Hsiung Lin; Jeffrey H. Lawson; George A. Truskey; Hardean E. Achneck

Titanium (Ti) is commonly utilized in many cardiovascular devices, e.g. as a component of Nitinol stents, intra- and extracorporeal mechanical circulatory assist devices, but is associated with the risk of thromboemboli formation. We propose to solve this problem by lining the Ti blood-contacting surfaces with autologous peripheral blood-derived late outgrowth endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs) after having previously demonstrated that these EPCs adhere to and grow on Ti under physiological shear stresses and functionally adapt to their environment under flow conditions ex vivo. Autologous fluorescently-labeled porcine EPCs were seeded at the point-of-care in the operating room onto Ti tubes for 30 min and implanted into the pro-thrombotic environment of the inferior vena cava of swine (n = 8). After 3 days, Ti tubes were explanted, disassembled, and the blood-contacting surface was imaged. A blinded analysis found all 4 cell-seeded implants to be free of clot, whereas 4 controls without EPCs were either entirely occluded or partially thrombosed. Pre-labeled EPCs had spread and were present on all 4 cell-seeded implants while no endothelial cells were observed on control implants. These results suggest that late outgrowth autologous EPCs represent a promising source of lining Ti implants to reduce thrombosis in vivo.


Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2012

Parallel-plate Flow Chamber and Continuous Flow Circuit to Evaluate Endothelial Progenitor Cells under Laminar Flow Shear Stress

Whitney O. Lane; Alexandra E. Jantzen; Tim A. Carlon; Ryan M. Jamiolkowski; Justin E. Grenet; Melissa M. Ley; Justin M. Haseltine; Lauren J. Galinat; Fu-Hsiung Lin; Jason D. Allen; George A. Truskey; Hardean E. Achneck

The overall goal of this method is to describe a technique to subject adherent cells to laminar flow conditions and evaluate their response to well quantifiable fluid shear stresses. Our flow chamber design and flow circuit (Fig. 1) contains a transparent viewing region that enables testing of cell adhesion and imaging of cell morphology immediately before flow (Fig. 11A, B), at various time points during flow (Fig. 11C), and after flow (Fig. 11D). These experiments are illustrated with human umbilical cord blood-derived endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs) and porcine EPCs. This method is also applicable to other adherent cell types, e.g. smooth muscle cells (SMCs) or fibroblasts. The chamber and all parts of the circuit are easily sterilized with steam autoclaving. In contrast to other chambers, e.g. microfluidic chambers, large numbers of cells (> 1 million depending on cell size) can be recovered after the flow experiment under sterile conditions for cell culture or other experiments, e.g. DNA or RNA extraction, or immunohistochemistry (Fig. 11E), or scanning electron microscopy. The shear stress can be adjusted by varying the flow rate of the perfusate, the fluid viscosity, or the channel height and width. The latter can reduce fluid volume or cell needs while ensuring that one-dimensional flow is maintained. It is not necessary to measure chamber height between experiments, since the chamber height does not depend on the use of gaskets, which greatly increases the ease of multiple experiments. Furthermore, the circuit design easily enables the collection of perfusate samples for analysis and/or quantification of metabolites secreted by cells under fluid shear stress exposure, e.g. nitric oxide (Fig. 12).


Journal of Biomedical Materials Research Part A | 2013

Surface Projections of Titanium Substrates Increase Antithrombotic Endothelial Function in Response to Shear Stress

Alexandra E. Jantzen; Hardean E. Achneck; George A. Truskey

Despite the therapeutic benefits of both mechanical circulatory assist devices and nitinol stents with titanium (Ti) outer surfaces, problems remain with thrombosis at the blood-contacting surface. Covering these surfaces with a layer of endothelium would mimic the native lining of the cardiovascular system, potentially decreasing thrombotic complications. Since surface topography is known to affect the phenotype of a seeded cell layer and since stents and ventricular assist devices exhibit surface protrusions, we tested the hypothesis that endothelial cells (ECs) have altered function on Ti surfaces with protrusions of 1.25, 3, and 5 μm height, compared with smooth Ti surfaces. ECs and nuclei were more aligned and ECs were more elongated on all patterned surfaces. Cell area was reduced on the 3 and 5 μm features. Expression of eNOS and COX2 was not altered by patterned surfaces, but expression of KLF-2 was higher on 1.25 and 5 μm features. Nitric oxide production following exposure to flow was higher on the 5 μm features. These results show that some antithrombogenic functions of ECs are significantly enhanced for ECs cultured on surface protrusions, and no functions are diminished, informing the future design of implant surfaces for endothelialization.


Regenerative Medicine | 2015

Increased yield of endothelial cells from peripheral blood for cell therapies and tissue engineering.

Ryan M. Jamiolkowski; Sa Do Kang; AnnMarie K Rodriguez; Justin M. Haseltine; Lauren J. Galinat; Alexandra E. Jantzen; Tim A. Carlon; Marcus D. Darrabie; Antonio Jose Luis Arciniegas; Jose Gabriel Mantilla; N. Rebecca Haley; Maria Noviani; Jason D. Allen; Thomas Stabler; James W Frederiksen; Oscar Alzate; Lukas G Keil; Siyao Liu; Fu-Hsiung Lin; George A. Truskey; Hardean E. Achneck

AIM Peripheral blood-derived endothelial cells (pBD-ECs) are an attractive tool for cell therapies and tissue engineering, but have been limited by their low isolation yield. We increase pBD-EC yield via administration of the chemokine receptor type 4 antagonist AMD3100, as well as via a diluted whole blood incubation (DWBI). MATERIALS & METHODS Porcine pBD-ECs were isolated using AMD3100 and DWBI and tested for EC markers, acetylated LDL uptake, growth kinetics, metabolic activity, flow-mediated nitric oxide production and seeded onto titanium tubes implanted into vessels of pigs. RESULTS DWBI increased the yield of porcine pBD-ECs 6.6-fold, and AMD3100 increased the yield 4.5-fold. AMD3100-mobilized ECs were phenotypically indistinguishable from nonmobilized ECs. In porcine implants, the cells expressed endothelial nitric oxide synthase, reduced thrombin-antithrombin complex systemically and prevented thrombosis. CONCLUSION Administration of AMD3100 and the DWBI method both increase pBD-EC yield.


Journal of Biomedical Materials Research Part B | 2016

Point-of-care seeding of nitinol stents with blood-derived endothelial cells.

Alexandra E. Jantzen; Maria Noviani; James S. Mills; Katherine M. Baker; Fu-Hsiung Lin; George A. Truskey; Hardean E. Achneck

Nitinol-based vascular devices, for example, peripheral and intracranial stents, are limited by thrombosis and restenosis. To ameliorate these complications, we developed a technology to promote vessel healing by rapidly seeding (QuickSeeding) autologous blood-derived endothelial cells (ECs) onto modified self-expanding nitinol stent delivery systems immediately before implantation. Several thousand micropores were laser-drilled into a delivery system sheath surrounding a commercial nitinol stent to allow for exit of an infused cell suspension. As suspension medium flowed outward through the micropores, ECs flowed through the delivery system attaching to the stent surface. The QuickSeeded ECs adhered to and spread on the stent surface following 24-h in vitro culture under static or flow conditions. Further, QuickSeeded ECs on stents that were deployed into porcine carotid arteries spread to endothelialize stent struts within 48 h (n = 4). The QuickSeeded stent struts produced significantly more nitric oxide in ex vivo flow circuits after 24 h, as compared to static conditions (n = 5). In conclusion, ECs QuickSeeded onto commercial nitinol stents within minutes of implantation spread to form a functional layer in vitro and in vivo, providing proof of concept that the novel QuickSeeding method with modified delivery systems can be used to seed functional autologous endothelium at the point of care.


Asaio Journal | 2016

Point-of-Care Rapid-Seeding Ventricular Assist Device with Blood-Derived Endothelial Cells to Create a Living Antithrombotic Coating.

Maria Noviani; Ryan M. Jamiolkowski; Justin E. Grenet; Qiuyu Lin; Tim A. Carlon; Le Qi; Alexandra E. Jantzen; Carmelo A. Milano; George A. Truskey; Hardean E. Achneck

The most promising alternatives to heart transplantation are left ventricular assist devices and artificial hearts; however, their use has been limited by thrombotic complications. To reduce these, sintered titanium (Ti) surfaces were developed, but thrombosis still occurs in approximately 7.5% of patients. We have invented a rapid-seeding technology to minimize the risk of thrombosis by rapid endothelialization of sintered Ti with human cord blood-derived endothelial cells (hCB-ECs). Human cord blood-derived endothelial cells were seeded within minutes onto sintered Ti and exposed to thrombosis-prone low fluid flow shear stresses. The hCB-ECs adhered and formed a confluent endothelial monolayer on sintered Ti. The exposure of sintered Ti to 4.4 dynes/cm2 for 20 hr immediately after rapid seeding resulted in approximately 70% cell adherence. The cell adherence was not significantly increased by additional ex vivo static culture of rapid-seeded sintered Ti before flow exposure. In addition, adherent hCB-ECs remained functional on sintered Ti, as indicated by flow-induced increase in nitric oxide secretion and reduction in platelet adhesion. After 15 day ex vivo static culture, the adherent hCB-ECs remained metabolically active, expressed endothelial cell functional marker thrombomodulin, and reduced platelet adhesion. In conclusion, our results demonstrate the feasibility of rapid-seeding sintered Ti with blood-derived hCB-ECs to generate a living antithrombotic surface.


Annals of Biomedical Engineering | 2013

Isolation of Functional Human Endothelial Cells from Small Volumes of Umbilical Cord Blood

Sa Do Kang; Tim A. Carlon; Alexandra E. Jantzen; Fu-Hsiung Lin; Melissa M. Ley; Jason D. Allen; Thomas Stabler; N. Rebecca Haley; George A. Truskey; Hardean E. Achneck


Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 2014

Abstract 47: Point-of-Care Seeded Blood-Derived Endothelial Cells Rapidly Endothelialize Nitinol Stent in a Pig Model of Personalized Cell Therapy

James S. Mills; Alexandra E. Jantzen; Katherine M. Baker; Fu-Hsiung Lin; George A. Truskey; Hardean E. Achneck


Circulation | 2010

Abstract 18140: Blood-Derived Endothelial Progenitor Cells (EPCs) Create Biocompatible Lining for Titanium Blood-Contacting Surfaces

Hardean E. Achneck; Ryan M. Jamiolkowski; Alexandra E. Jantzen; Madison Li; Justin M. Haseltine; Lauren J. Galinat; Jessica K. Huang; Whitney O. Lane; Fu-Hsiung Lin; Michael J. Serpe; Amar Parikh; Liqiao Ma; Bantayehu Sileshi; Tao Chen; Charles S. Wallace; Carmelo A. Milano; Thomas Stabler; Jason D. Allen; George A. Truskey; Jeffrey H. Lawson

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