Dima Sheyn
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
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Publication
Featured researches published by Dima Sheyn.
Gene Therapy | 2008
Dima Sheyn; Nadav Kimelman-Bleich; Gadi Pelled; Yoram Zilberman; Dan Gazit; Zulma Gazit
Nonviral gene delivery is a promising, safe, therapeutic tool in regenerative medicine. This study is the first to achieve nonviral, ultrasound-based, osteogenic gene delivery that leads to bone tissue formation, in vivo. We hypothesized that direct in vivo sonoporation of naked DNA encoding for the osteogenic gene, recombinant human bone morphogenetic protein-9 (rhBMP-9) would induce bone formation. A luciferase plasmid (Luc), encoding rhBMP-9 or empty pcDNA3 vector mixed with microbubbles, was injected into the thigh muscles of mice. After injection, noninvasive sonoporation was applied. Luc activity was monitored noninvasively, and quantitatively using bioluminescence imaging in vivo, and found for 14 days with a peak expression on day 7. To examine osteogenesis in vivo, rhBMP-9 plasmid was sonoporated into the thigh muscles of transgenic mice that express the Luc gene under the control of a human osteocalcin promoter. Following rhBMP-9 sonoporation, osteocalcin-dependent Luc expression lasted for 24 days and peaked on day 10. Bone tissue was formed in the site of rhBMP-9 delivery, as was shown by micro-computerized tomography and histology. The sonoporation method was also compared with previously developed electrotransfer-based gene delivery and was found significantly inferior in its efficiency of gene delivery. We conclude that ultrasound-mediated osteogenic gene delivery could serve as a therapeutic solution in conditions requiring bone tissue regeneration after further development that will increase the transfection efficiency.
Stem Cells | 2008
Dima Sheyn; Gadi Pelled; Yoram Zilberman; Farahnaz Talasazan; Jonathan M. Frank; Dan Gazit; Zulma Gazit
Multiple factors alter intervertebral disc volume, structure, shape, composition, and biomechanical properties, often leading to low back pain. Spinal fusion is frequently performed to treat this problem. We recently published results of our investigation of a novel system of in vivo bone formation, in which we used nonvirally nucleofected human mesenchymal stem cells that overexpress a bone morphogenetic protein gene. We hypothesized that primary porcine adipose tissue‐derived stem cells (ASCs) nucleofected with plasmid containing recombinant human bone morphogenetic protein‐6 (rhBMP‐6) could induce bone formation and achieve spinal fusion in vivo. Primary ASCs were isolated from freshly harvested porcine adipose tissue. Overexpression of rhBMP‐6 was achieved ex vivo by using a nucleofection technique. Transfection efficiency was monitored by assessing a parallel transfection involving an enhanced green fluorescent protein reporter gene and flow cytometry analysis. rhBMP‐6 protein secreted by the cells was measured by performing an enzyme‐linked immunosorbent assay. Genetically engineered cells were injected into the lumbar paravertebral muscle in immunodeficient mice. In vivo bone formation was monitored by a quantitative microcomputed tomography (μCT). The animals were euthanized 5 weeks postinjection, and spinal fusion was evaluated using in vitro μCT and histological analysis. We found formation of a large bone mass adjacent to the lumbar area, which produced posterior spinal fusion of two to four vertebrae. Our data demonstrate that efficient bone formation and spinal fusion can be achieved using ex vivo, nonvirally transfected primary ASCs. These results could pave the way to a novel biological solution for spine treatment.
Advanced Drug Delivery Reviews | 2010
Dima Sheyn; Olga Mizrahi; Zulma Gazit; Gadi Pelled; Dan Gazit
Regenerative medicine appears to take as its patron, the Titan Prometheus, whose liver was able to regenerate daily, as the field attempts to restore lost, damaged, or aging cells and tissues. The tremendous technological progress achieved during the last decade in gene transfer methods and imaging techniques, as well as recent increases in our knowledge of cell biology, have opened new horizons in the field of regenerative medicine. Genetically engineered cells are a tool for tissue engineering and regenerative medicine, albeit a tool whose development is fraught with difficulties. Gene-and-cell therapy offers solutions to severe problems faced by modern medicine, but several impediments obstruct the path of such treatments as they move from the laboratory toward the clinical setting. In this review we provide an overview of recent advances in the gene-and-cell therapy approach and discuss the main hurdles and bottlenecks of this approach on its path to clinical trials and prospective clinical practice.
Biomaterials | 2009
Nadav Kimelman-Bleich; Gadi Pelled; Dima Sheyn; Ilan Kallai; Yoram Zilberman; Olga Mizrahi; Yamit Tal; Wafa Tawackoli; Zulma Gazit; Dan Gazit
A major hurdle to surmount in bone-tissue engineering is ensuring a sufficient oxygen supply to newly forming tissue to avoid cell death or delayed development of osteogenic features. We hypothesized that an oxygen-enriched hydrogel scaffold would enhance tissue-engineered bone formation in vivo. To test this, we used a well-characterized mesenchymal stem cell (MSC) line, Tet-off BMP2 MSC, whose cells were engineered to express recombinant human bone morphogenetic protein-2. Cells were suspended in hydrogel supplemented with perfluorotributylamine (PFTBA) and implanted subcutaneously in an ectopic site, a radial bone defect, or a lumbar paravertebral muscle (mouse model of spinal fusion) in C3H/HeN mice. For controls, we used cells suspended in the same gel without PFTBA. In the ectopic site, there were significant increases in bone formation (2.5-fold increase), cell survival, and osteocalcin activity in the PFTBA-supplemented groups. PFTBA supplementation significantly increased structural parameters of bone in radial bone defects and triggered a significant 1.4-fold increase in bone volume in the spinal fusion model. We conclude that synthetic oxygen carrier supplementation of tissue-engineered implants enhances ectopic bone formation and yields better bone quality and volume in bone-repair and spinal fusion models, probably due to increased cell survival.
Tissue Engineering Part A | 2008
Kuangshin Tai; Gadi Pelled; Dima Sheyn; Anna Bershteyn; Lin Han; Ilan Kallai; Yoram Zilberman; Christine Ortiz; Dan Gazit
Genetically modified mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs), overexpressing a BMP gene, have been previously shown to be potent inducers of bone regeneration. However, little was known of the chemical and intrinsic nanomechanical properties of this engineered bone. A previous study utilizing microcomputed tomography, back-scattered electron microscopy, energy-dispersive X-ray, nanoindentation, and atomic force microscopy showed that engineered ectopic bone, although similar in chemical composition and topography, demonstrated an elastic modulus range (14.6-22.1 GPa) that was less than that of the native bone (16.6-38.5 GPa). We hypothesized that these results were obtained due to the specific conditions that exist in an intramuscular ectopic implantation site. Here, we implanted MSCs overexpressing BMP-2 gene in an orthotopic site, a nonunion radial bone defect, in mice. The regenerated bone tissue was analyzed using the same methods previously utilized. The samples revealed high similarity between the engineered and native radii in chemical structure and elemental composition. In contrast to the previous study, nanoindentation data showed that, in general, the native bone exhibited a statistically similar elastic modulus values compared to that of the engineered bone, while the hardness was found to be marginally statistically different at 1000 muN and statistically similar at 7000 muN. We hypothesize that external loading, osteogenic cytokines and osteoprogenitors that exist in a fracture site could enhance the maturation of engineered bone derived from BMP-modified MSCs. Further studies should determine whether longer duration periods postimplantation would lead to increased bone adaptation.
Tissue Engineering Part A | 2010
Dima Sheyn; Gadi Pelled; Dvir Netanely; Eytan Domany; Dan Gazit
One proposed strategy for bone regeneration involves ex vivo tissue engineering, accomplished using bone-forming cells, biodegradable scaffolds, and dynamic culture systems, with the goal of three-dimensional tissue formation. Rotating wall vessel bioreactors generate simulated microgravity conditions ex vivo, which lead to cell aggregation. Human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs) have been extensively investigated and shown to possess the potential to differentiate into several cell lineages. The goal of the present study was to evaluate the effect of simulated microgravity on all genes expressed in hMSCs, with the underlying hypothesis that many important pathways are affected during culture within a rotating wall vessel system. Gene expression was analyzed using a whole genome microarray and clustering with the aid of the National Institutes of Healths Database for Annotation, Visualization and Integrated Discovery database and gene ontology analysis. Our analysis showed 882 genes that were downregulated and 505 genes that were upregulated after exposure to simulated microgravity. Gene ontology clustering revealed a wide variety of affected genes with respect to cell compartment, biological process, and signaling pathway clusters. The data sets showed significant decreases in osteogenic and chondrogenic gene expression and an increase in adipogenic gene expression, indicating that ex vivo adipose tissue engineering may benefit from simulated microgravity. This finding was supported by an adipogenic differentiation assay. These data are essential for further understanding of ex vivo tissue engineering using hMSCs.
Regenerative Medicine | 2009
Hadi Aslan; Dima Sheyn; Dan Gazit
Spine disorders and intervertebral disc degeneration are considered the main causes for the clinical condition commonly known as back pain. Spinal fusion by implanting autologous bone to produce bony bridging between the two vertebrae flanking the degenerated-intervertebral disc is currently the most efficient treatment for relieving the symptoms of back pain. However, donor-site morbidity, complications and the long healing time limit the success of this approach. Novel developments undertaken by regenerative medicine might bring more efficient and available treatments. Here we discuss the pros and cons of utilizing genetically engineered mesenchymal stem cells for inducing spinal fusion. The combination of the stem cells, gene and carrier are crucial elements for achieving optimal spinal fusion in both small and large animal models, which hopefully will lead to the development of clinical applications.
Essentials of Stem Cell Biology (Third Edition) | 2014
Zulma Gazit; Gadi Pelled; Dima Sheyn; Nadav Kimelman; Dan Gazit
Bone marrow (BM) was the first tissue described as a source of plastic-adherent, fibroblast-like cells that develops colony-forming unit fibroblasts (CFU-F) when seeded in tissue culture plates. These cells, originally designated stromal cells, elicited much attention, and the main goal of thousands of studies conducted with these cells was to find an ultimate pure cell population that could be further utilized for regenerative purposes. In these studies, cells were isolated using several methods that will be discussed later in this chapter and were given names such as MSCs (mesenchymal stem cells), mesenchymal progenitors, stromal stem cells, among others. Lately, a committee of the International Society for Cytotherapy suggested the name ‘multipotent mesenchymal stromal cells.’ However, most scientists refer to them simply as ‘MSCs.’
Handbook of Stem Cells (Second Edition) | 2013
Zulma Gazit; Gadi Pelled; Dima Sheyn; Nadav Kimelman; Dan Gazit
Bone marrow (BM) was the first tissue described as a source of plastic-adherent, fibroblast-like cells that develops colony-forming unit fibroblasts (CFU-F) when seeded in tissue culture plates. These cells, originally designated stromal cells, elicited much attention, and the main goal of thousands of studies conducted using these cells was to find an ultimate pure cell population that could be further utilized for regenerative purposes. In these studies, cells were isolated using several methods that will be discussed later in this chapter and were given names such as MSCs (mesenchymal stem cells), mesenchymal progenitors, stromal stem cells, among others. Lately, a committee of the International Society for Cytotherapy suggested the name “multipotent mesenchymal stromal cells”. However, most scientists have been referring to them simply as “MSCs.”
Tissue Engineering | 2006
Hadi Aslan; Yoram Zilberman; Vered Arbeli; Dima Sheyn; Yoav Matan; Meir Liebergall; Jin Zhong Li; Gregory A. Helm; Dan Gazit; Zulma Gazit