Andrea S. Gobin
University of Louisville
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Featured researches published by Andrea S. Gobin.
Journal of Biomechanical Engineering-transactions of The Asme | 2001
Robert S. Keynton; Mary M. Evancho; Rick L. Sims; Nancy V. Rodway; Andrea S. Gobin; Stanley E. Rittgers
The observation of intimal hyperplasia at bypass graft anastomoses has suggested a potential interaction between local hemodynamics and vascular wall response. Wall shear has been particularly implicated because of its known effects upon the endothelium of normal vessels and, thus, was examined as to its possible role in the development of intimal hyperplasia in arterial bypass graft distal anastomoses. Tapered (4-7 mm I.D.) e-PTFE synthetic grafts 6 cm long were placed as bilateral carotid artery bypasses in six adult, mongrel dogs weighing between 25 and 30 kg with distal anastomotic graft-to-artery diameter ratios (DR) of either 1.0 or 1.5. Immediately following implantation, simultaneous axial velocity measurements were made in the toe and artery floor regions in the plane of the anastomosis at radial increments of 0.35 mm, 0.70 mm, and 1.05 mm using a specially designed 20 MHz triple crystal ultrasonic wall shear rate transducer Mean, peak, and pulse amplitude wall shear rates (WSRs), their absolute values, the spatial and temporal wall shear stress gradients (WSSG), and the oscillatory shear index (OSI) were computed from these velocity measurements. All grafts were harvested after 12 weeks implantation and measurements of the degree of intimal hyperplasia (IH) were made along the toe region and the artery floor of the host artery in 1 mm increments. While some IH occurred along the toe region (8.35+/-23.1 microm) and was significantly different between DR groups (p<0.003), the greatest amount occurred along the artery floor (81.6+/-106.5 microm, mean +/- S.D.) (p < 0.001) although no significant differences were found between DR groups. Linear regressions were performed on the paired IH and mean, peak, and pulse amplitude WSR data as well as the absolute mean, peak, and pulse amplitude WSR data from all grafts. The mean and absolute mean WSRs showed a modest correlation with IH (r = -0.406 and -0.370, respectively) with further improvements seen (r = -0.482 and -0.445, respectively) when using an exponential relationship. The overall best correlation was seen against an exponential function of the OSI (r = 0.600). Although these correlation coefficients were not high, they were found to be statistically significant as evidenced by the large F-statistic obtained. Finally, it was observed that over 75 percent of the IH occurred at or below a mean WSR value of 100 s(-1) while approximately 92 percent of the IH occurred at or below a mean WSR equal to one-half that of the native artery. Therefore, while not being the only factor involved, wall shear (and in particular, oscillators wall shear) appears to provide a stimulus for the development of anastomotic intimal hyperplasia.
Biomacromolecules | 2012
Martin G. O’Toole; Richard M. Henderson; Patricia A. Soucy; Brigitte H. Fasciotto; Patrick J. Hoblitzell; Robert S. Keynton; William D. Ehringer; Andrea S. Gobin
Optimal curcumin delivery for medicinal applications requires a drug delivery system that both solubilizes curcumin and prevents degradation. To achieve this, curcumin has been encapsulated in submicrometer chitosan/Tween 20 particles via a benchtop spray-drying process. Spray-drying parameters have been optimized using a Taguchi statistical approach to minimize particle size and to favor spheroid particles with smooth surfaces, as evaluated with scanning electron microscopy (SEM) imaging. Nearly spherical particles with 285 ± 30 nm diameter and 1.21 axial ratio were achieved. Inclusion of curcumin in the spray-drying solution results in complete encapsulation of curcumin within the chitosan/Tween 20 particles. Release studies confirm that curcumin can be released completely from the particles over a 2 h period.
Biomacromolecules | 2011
Alex Michael Porter; Carolyn M. Klinge; Andrea S. Gobin
Angiogenesis is the process by which new blood vessels arise from the pre-existing vasculature. Human endothelial cells are known to be involved in three key cellular processes during angiogenesis: increased cell proliferation, degradation of the extracellular matrix during cell migration, and the survival of apoptosis. The above processes depend upon the presence of growth factors, such as vascular endothelial growth factor isoform 165 (VEGF(165)) that is released from the extracellular matrix as it is being degraded or secreted from activated endothelial cells. Thus, the goal of the current study is to develop a system with a backbone of polyethylene glycol (PEG) and grafted angiogenic signals to compare the initial angiogenic response of human umbilical vein endothelial cells (hUVEC) or human microvascular endothelial cells (hMEC). Adhesion ligands (PEG-RGDS) for cell attachment and PEG-modified VEGF(165) (PEG-VEGF(165)) are grafted into the hydrogels to encourage the angiogenic response. Our data suggest that our biomimetic system is equally effective in stimulating proliferation, migration, and survival of apoptosis in hMEC as compared to the response to hUVEC.
Biomacromolecules | 2016
Martin G. O'Toole; Patricia A. Soucy; Rajat Chauhan; Mandapati V. Ramakrishnam Raju; Dhruvina N. Patel; Betty M. Nunn; Megan A. Keynton; William D. Ehringer; Michael H. Nantz; Robert S. Keynton; Andrea S. Gobin
Curcumin is known to have immense therapeutic potential but is hindered by poor solubility and rapid degradation in solution. To overcome these shortcomings, curcumin has been conjugated to chitosan through a pendant glutaric anhydride linker using amide bond coupling chemistry. The hybrid polymer has been characterized by UV-visible, fluorescence, and infrared spectroscopies as well as zeta potential measurements and SEM imaging. The conjugation reactivity was confirmed through gel permeation chromatography and quantification of unconjugated curcumin. An analogous reaction of curcumin with glucosamine, a small molecule analogue for chitosan, was performed and the purified product characterized by mass spectrometry, UV-visible, fluorescence, and infrared spectroscopies. Conjugation of curcumin to chitosan has greatly improved curcumin aqueous solubility and stability, with no significant curcumin degradation detected after one month in solution. The absorbance and fluorescence properties of curcumin are minimally perturbed (λmax shifts of 2 and 5 nm, respectively) by the conjugation reaction. This conjugation strategy required use of one out of two curcumin phenols (one of the main antioxidant functional groups) for covalent linkage to chitosan, thus temporarily attenuating its antioxidant capacity. Hydrolysis-based release of curcumin from the polymer, however, is accompanied by full restoration of curcumins antioxidant potential. Antioxidant assays show that curcumin radical scavenging potential is reduced by 40% after conjugation, but that full antioxidant potential is restored upon hydrolytic release from chitosan. Release studies show that curcumin is released over 19 days from the polymer and maintains a concentration of 0.23 ± 0.12 μM curcumin/mg polymer/mL solution based on 1% curcumin loading on the polymer. Release studies in the presence of carbonic anhydrase, an enzyme with known phenolic esterase activity, show no significant difference from nonenzymatic release studies, implying that simple ester hydrolysis is the dominant release mechanism. Conjugation of curcumin to chitosan through a phenol ester modification provides improved stability and solubility to curcumin, with ester hydrolysis restoring the full antioxidant potential of curcumin.
American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 2011
Alex Michael Porter; Carolyn M. Klinge; Andrea S. Gobin
Angiogenesis is an important biological response known to be involved in many physiological and pathophysiological situations. Cellular responses involved in the formation of new blood vessels, such as increases in endothelial cell proliferation, cell migration, and the survival of apoptosis-inducing events, have been associated with vascular endothelial growth factor isoform 165 (VEGF(165)). Current research in the areas of bioengineering and biomedical science has focused on developing polyethylene glycol (PEG)-based systems capable of initiating and sustaining angiogenesis in vitro. However, a thorough understanding of how endothelial cells respond at the molecular level to VEGF(165) incorporated into these systems has not yet been established in the literature. The goal of the current study was to compare the upregulation of key intracellular proteins involved in angiogenesis in human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) and human microvascular endothelial cells (HMEC) seeded on PEG hydrogels containing grafted VEGF(165) and adhesion peptides Arg-Gly-Asp-Ser (RGDS). Our data suggest that the covalent incorporation of VEGF(165) into PEG hydrogels encourages the upregulation of signaling proteins responsible for increases in endothelial cell proliferation, cell migration, and the survival after apoptosis-inducing events.
ASME 2013 2nd Global Congress on NanoEngineering for Medicine and Biology | 2013
Patricia A. Soucy; William D. Ehringer; C. Klinge; H. Frieboes; Andrea S. Gobin
Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) accounts for ∼25% of breast cancer among premenopausal African-American and Latino women1. Curcumin (diferuloylmethane; CCM), a natural polyphenol extracted from turmeric, has chemopreventive and chemotherapeutic activity in various cancers 2,3 and inhibits growth and invasion of TNBC/basal-like MDA-MB-231 human breast cancer cells 4. CCM has been reported to affect all stages of tumor progression and metastases due to its interactions with multiple targets. We employ a novel approach utilizing both computational and experimental modeling to characterize and analyze TNBC and the 3D tumor microenvironment responses to albumin bound CCM particles (ACP) versus CCM alone.© 2013 ASME
Biomaterials | 2011
Scott M. Berry; Sean Warren; DeVonnah A Hilgart; Adam Thomas Schworer; Santosh Pabba; Andrea S. Gobin; Robert S. Cohn; Robert S. Keynton
Archive | 2009
Andrea S. Gobin
Archive | 2013
Tongalp H. Tezel; Andrea S. Gobin; Martin G. O'Toole
Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2013
Tongalp H. Tezel; Qun Zeng; Martin G. O'Toole; Andrea S. Gobin