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Dive into the research topics where Cynthia L. Stokes is active.

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Featured researches published by Cynthia L. Stokes.


Journal of Theoretical Biology | 1991

Analysis of the roles of microvessel endothelial cell random motility and chemotaxis in angiogenesis

Cynthia L. Stokes; Douglas A. Lauffenburger

The growth of new capillary blood vessels, or angiogenesis, is a prominent component of numerous physiological and pathological conditions. An understanding of the co-ordination of underlying cellular behaviors would be helpful for therapeutic manipulation of the process. A probabilistic mathematical model of angiogenesis is developed based upon specific microvessel endothelial cell (MEC) functions involved in vessel growth. The model focuses on the roles of MEC random motility and chemotaxis, to test the hypothesis that these MEC behaviors are of critical importance in determining capillary growth rate and network structure. Model predictions are computer simulations of microvessel networks, from which questions of interest are examined both qualitatively and quantitatively. Results indicate that a moderate MEC chemotactic response toward an angiogenic stimulus, similar to that measured in vitro in response to acidic fibroblast growth factor, is necessary to provide directed vascular network growth. Persistent random motility alone, with initial budding biased toward the stimulus, does not adequately provide directed network growth. A significant degree of randomness in cell migration direction, however, is required for vessel anastomosis and capillary loop formation, as simulations with an overly strong chemotactic response produce network structures largely absent of these features. The predicted vessel extension rate and network structure in the simulations are quantitatively consistent with experimental observations of angiogenesis in vivo. This suggests that the rate of vessel outgrowth is primarily determined by MEC migration rate, and consequently that quantitative in vitro migration assays might be useful tools for the prescreening of possible angiogenesis activators and inhibitors. Finally, reduction of MEC speed results in substantial inhibition of simulated angiogenesis. Together, these results predict that both random motility and chemotaxis are MEC functions critically involved in determining the rate and morphology of new microvessel network growth.


Journal of Immunology | 2005

Effects of Bcl-2 Levels on Fas Signaling-Induced Caspase-3 Activation: Molecular Genetic Tests of Computational Model Predictions

Fei Hua; Melanie G. Cornejo; Michael H. Cardone; Cynthia L. Stokes; Douglas A. Lauffenburger

Fas-induced apoptosis is a critical process for normal immune system development and function. Although many molecular components in the Fas signaling pathway have been identified, a systematic understanding of how they work together to determine network dynamics and apoptosis itself has remained elusive. To address this, we generated a computational model for interpreting and predicting effects of pathway component properties. The model integrates current information concerning the signaling network downstream of Fas activation, through both type I and type II pathways, until activation of caspase-3. Unknown parameter values in the model were estimated using experimental data obtained from human Jurkat T cells. To elucidate critical signaling network properties, we examined the effects of altering the level of Bcl-2 on the kinetics of caspase-3 activation, using both overexpression and knockdown in the model and experimentally. Overexpression was used to distinguish among alternative hypotheses for inhibitory binding interactions of Bcl-2 with various components in the mitochondrial pathway. In comparing model simulations with experimental results, we find the best agreement when Bcl-2 blocks the release of cytochrome c by binding to both Bax and truncated Bid instead of Bax, truncated Bid, or Bid alone. Moreover, although Bcl-2 overexpression strongly reduces caspase-3 activation, Bcl-2 knockdown has a negligible effect, demonstrating a general model finding that varying the expression levels of signal molecules frequently has asymmetric effects on the outcome. Finally, we demonstrate that the relative dominance of type I vs type II pathways can be switched by varying particular signaling component levels without changing network structure.


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2016

Quantitative Assessment of Population Variability in Hepatic Drug Metabolism Using a Perfused Three-Dimensional Human Liver Microphysiological System.

Nikolaos Tsamandouras; Tomasz Kostrzewski; Cynthia L. Stokes; Linda G. Griffith; David J. Hughes; Murat Cirit

In this work, we first describe the population variability in hepatic drug metabolism using cryopreserved hepatocytes from five different donors cultured in a perfused three-dimensional human liver microphysiological system, and then show how the resulting data can be integrated with a modeling and simulation framework to accomplish in vitro–in vivo translation. For each donor, metabolic depletion profiles of six compounds (phenacetin, diclofenac, lidocaine, ibuprofen, propranolol, and prednisolone) were measured, along with metabolite formation, mRNA levels of 90 metabolism-related genes, and markers of functional viability [lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) release, albumin, and urea production]. Drug depletion data were analyzed with mixed-effects modeling. Substantial interdonor variability was observed with respect to gene expression levels, drug metabolism, and other measured hepatocyte functions. Specifically, interdonor variability in intrinsic metabolic clearance ranged from 24.1% for phenacetin to 66.8% for propranolol (expressed as coefficient of variation). Albumin, urea, LDH, and cytochrome P450 mRNA levels were identified as significant predictors of in vitro metabolic clearance. Predicted clearance values from the liver microphysiological system were correlated with the observed in vivo values. A population physiologically based pharmacokinetic model was developed for lidocaine to illustrate the translation of the in vitro output to the observed pharmacokinetic variability in vivo. Stochastic simulations with this model successfully predicted the observed clinical concentration-time profiles and the associated population variability. This is the first study of population variability in drug metabolism in the context of a microphysiological system and has important implications for the use of these systems during the drug development process.


Scientific Reports | 2018

Interconnected Microphysiological Systems for Quantitative Biology and Pharmacology Studies

Collin Edington; Wen Li Kelly Chen; Emily Geishecker; Timothy Kassis; Luis R. Soenksen; Brij M. Bhushan; Duncan Freake; Jared Kirschner; Christian Maass; Nikolaos Tsamandouras; Jorge Valdez; Christi D. Cook; Tom Parent; Stephen Snyder; Jiajie Yu; Emily Suter; Michael Shockley; Jason Velazquez; Jeremy J. Velazquez; Linda Stockdale; Julia P. Papps; Iris Lee; Nicholas Vann; Mario Gamboa; Matthew E. LaBarge; Zhe Zhong; Xin Wang; Laurie A. Boyer; Douglas A. Lauffenburger; Catherine Communal

Microphysiological systems (MPSs) are in vitro models that capture facets of in vivo organ function through use of specialized culture microenvironments, including 3D matrices and microperfusion. Here, we report an approach to co-culture multiple different MPSs linked together physiologically on re-useable, open-system microfluidic platforms that are compatible with the quantitative study of a range of compounds, including lipophilic drugs. We describe three different platform designs – “4-way”, “7-way”, and “10-way” – each accommodating a mixing chamber and up to 4, 7, or 10 MPSs. Platforms accommodate multiple different MPS flow configurations, each with internal re-circulation to enhance molecular exchange, and feature on-board pneumatically-driven pumps with independently programmable flow rates to provide precise control over both intra- and inter-MPS flow partitioning and drug distribution. We first developed a 4-MPS system, showing accurate prediction of secreted liver protein distribution and 2-week maintenance of phenotypic markers. We then developed 7-MPS and 10-MPS platforms, demonstrating reliable, robust operation and maintenance of MPS phenotypic function for 3 weeks (7-way) and 4 weeks (10-way) of continuous interaction, as well as PK analysis of diclofenac metabolism. This study illustrates several generalizable design and operational principles for implementing multi-MPS “physiome-on-a-chip” approaches in drug discovery.


Aaps Journal | 2017

Integrated Gut and Liver Microphysiological Systems for Quantitative In Vitro Pharmacokinetic Studies

Nikolaos Tsamandouras; Wen Li Kelly Chen; Collin Edington; Cynthia L. Stokes; Linda G. Griffith; Murat Cirit

Investigation of the pharmacokinetics (PK) of a compound is of significant importance during the early stages of drug development, and therefore several in vitro systems are routinely employed for this purpose. However, the need for more physiologically realistic in vitro models has recently fueled the emerging field of tissue-engineered 3D cultures, also referred to as organs-on-chips, or microphysiological systems (MPSs). We have developed a novel fluidic platform that interconnects multiple MPSs, allowing PK studies in multi-organ in vitro systems along with the collection of high-content quantitative data. This platform was employed here to integrate a gut and a liver MPS together in continuous communication, and investigate simultaneously different PK processes taking place after oral drug administration in humans (e.g., intestinal permeability, hepatic metabolism). Measurement of tissue-specific phenotypic metrics indicated that gut and liver MPSs can be fluidically coupled with circulating common medium without compromising their functionality. The PK of diclofenac and hydrocortisone was investigated under different experimental perturbations, and results illustrate the robustness of this integrated system for quantitative PK studies. Mechanistic model-based analysis of the obtained data allowed the derivation of the intrinsic parameters (e.g., permeability, metabolic clearance) associated with the PK processes taking place in each MPS. Although these processes were not substantially affected by the gut-liver interaction, our results indicate that inter-MPS communication can have a modulating effect (hepatic metabolism upregulation). We envision that our integrative approach, which combines multi-cellular tissue models, multi-MPS platforms, and quantitative mechanistic modeling, will have broad applicability in pre-clinical drug development.


CPT: Pharmacometrics & Systems Pharmacology | 2015

Physiome‐on‐a‐Chip: The Challenge of “Scaling” in Design, Operation, and Translation of Microphysiological Systems

Cynthia L. Stokes; Murat Cirit; Douglas A. Lauffenburger

Scaling of a microphysiological system (MPS) or physiome‐on‐a‐chip is arguably two interrelated, modeling‐based activities: on‐platform scaling and in vitro‐in vivo translation. This dual approach reduces the need to perfectly rescale and mimic in vivo physiology, an aspiration that is both extremely challenging and not substantively meaningful because of uncertain relevance of any specific physiological condition. Accordingly, this perspective offers a tractable approach for designing interacting MPSs and relating in vitro results to analogous context in vivo.


Biotechnology and Bioengineering | 2017

Integrated gut/liver microphysiological systems elucidates inflammatory inter-tissue crosstalk

Wen Li Kelly Chen; Collin Edington; Emily Suter; Jiajie Yu; Jeremy J. Velazquez; Jason Velazquez; Michael Shockley; Emma M. Large; Raman Venkataramanan; David J. Hughes; Cynthia L. Stokes; David L. Trumper; Murat Cirit; Linda G. Griffith; Douglas A. Lauffenburger

A capability for analyzing complex cellular communication among tissues is important in drug discovery and development, and in vitro technologies for doing so are required for human applications. A prominent instance is communication between the gut and the liver, whereby perturbations of one tissue can influence behavior of the other. Here, we present a study on human gut‐liver tissue interactions under normal and inflammatory contexts, via an integrative multi‐organ platform comprising human liver (hepatocytes and Kupffer cells), and intestinal (enterocytes, goblet cells, and dendritic cells) models. Our results demonstrated long‐term (>2 weeks) maintenance of intestinal (e.g., barrier integrity) and hepatic (e.g., albumin) functions in baseline interaction. Gene expression data comparing liver in interaction with gut, versus isolation, revealed modulation of bile acid metabolism. Intestinal FGF19 secretion and associated inhibition of hepatic CYP7A1 expression provided evidence of physiologically relevant gut‐liver crosstalk. Moreover, significant non‐linear modulation of cytokine responses was observed under inflammatory gut‐liver interaction; for example, production of CXCR3 ligands (CXCL9,10,11) was synergistically enhanced. RNA‐seq analysis revealed significant upregulation of IFNα/β/γ signaling during inflammatory gut‐liver crosstalk, with these pathways implicated in the synergistic CXCR3 chemokine production. Exacerbated inflammatory response in gut‐liver interaction also negatively affected tissue‐specific functions (e.g., liver metabolism). These findings illustrate how an integrated multi‐tissue platform can generate insights useful for understanding complex pathophysiological processes such as inflammatory organ crosstalk. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2017;114: 2648–2659.


Archive | 1990

Endothelial Cell Chemotaxis in Angiogenesis

Cynthia L. Stokes; Douglas A. Lauffenburger; Stuart K. Williams

A probabilistic model for angiogenesis was developed to investigate the possible role of microvessel endothelial cell (MEC) Chemotaxis in determining microvessel network morphology and growth rate. The model simulates developing microvessels, providing theoretical pictures of the networks. The cell at the tip of a growing capillary is hypothesized to guide the path of the capillary according to a model of single cell migration, using experimentally measured values for MEC speed and persistence time. The simulations demonstrate that random motility alone cannot account for the directional growth of vessels observed in vivo. A moderate chemotactic response, like that we have measured in acidic fibroblast growth factor (Stokes et al., 1990), is necessary to provide directional growth of vessels similar to that observed in vivo.


Journal of Cell Science | 1991

Migration of individual microvessel endothelial cells: stochastic model and parameter measurement.

Cynthia L. Stokes; Douglas A. Lauffenburger; Stuart K. Williams


Laboratory Investigation | 1990

CHEMOTAXIS OF HUMAN MICROVESSEL ENDOTHELIAL CELLS IN RESPONSE TO ACIDIC FIBROBLAST GROWTH FACTOR

Cynthia L. Stokes; Rupnick Ma; Stuart K. Williams; Douglas A. Lauffenburger

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Douglas A. Lauffenburger

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Murat Cirit

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Linda G. Griffith

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Christian Maass

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Collin Edington

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Michael Shockley

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Nikolaos Tsamandouras

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Wen Li Kelly Chen

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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