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Dive into the research topics where Ehsan Jabbarzadeh is active.

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Featured researches published by Ehsan Jabbarzadeh.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Induction of angiogenesis in tissue-engineered scaffolds designed for bone repair: A combined gene therapy–cell transplantation approach

Ehsan Jabbarzadeh; Trevor Starnes; Yusuf Khan; Tao Jiang; Anthony J. Wirtel; Meng Deng; Qing Lv; Lakshmi S. Nair; S.B. Doty; Cato T. Laurencin

One of the fundamental principles underlying tissue engineering approaches is that newly formed tissue must maintain sufficient vascularization to support its growth. Efforts to induce vascular growth into tissue-engineered scaffolds have recently been dedicated to developing novel strategies to deliver specific biological factors that direct the recruitment of endothelial cell (EC) progenitors and their differentiation. The challenge, however, lies in orchestration of the cells, appropriate biological factors, and optimal factor doses. This study reports an approach as a step forward to resolving this dilemma by combining an ex vivo gene transfer strategy and EC transplantation. The utility of this approach was evaluated by using 3D poly(lactide-co-glycolide) (PLAGA) sintered microsphere scaffolds for bone tissue engineering applications. Our goal was achieved by isolation and transfection of adipose-derived stromal cells (ADSCs) with adenovirus encoding the cDNA of VEGF. We demonstrated that the combination of VEGF releasing ADSCs and ECs results in marked vascular growth within PLAGA scaffolds. We thereby delineate the potential of ADSCs to promote vascular growth into biomaterials.


Annals of Biomedical Engineering | 2013

Carbon nanotube-poly(lactide-co-glycolide) composite scaffolds for bone tissue engineering applications.

Qingsu Cheng; Katy Rutledge; Ehsan Jabbarzadeh

Despite their indisputable clinical value, current tissue engineering strategies face major challenges in recapitulating the natural nano-structural and morphological features of native bone. The aim of this study is to take a step forward by developing a porous scaffold with appropriate mechanical strength and controllable surface roughness for bone repair. This was accomplished by homogenous dispersion of carbon nanotubes (CNTs) in a poly(lactide-co-glycolide) (PLGA) solution followed by a solvent casting/particulate leaching scaffold fabrication. Our results demonstrated that CNT/PLGA composite scaffolds possessed a significantly higher mechanical strength as compared to PLGA scaffolds. The incorporation of CNTs led to an enhanced surface roughness and resulted in an increase in the attachment and proliferation of MC3T3-E1 osteoblasts. Most interestingly, the in vitro osteogenesis studies demonstrated a significantly higher rate of differentiation on CNT/PLGA scaffolds compared to the control PLGA group. These results all together demonstrate the potential of CNT/PLGA scaffolds for bone tissue engineering as they possess the combined effects of mechanical strength and osteogenicity.


Journal of Biomedical Materials Research Part B | 2012

VEGF‐incorporated biomimetic poly(lactide‐co‐glycolide) sintered microsphere scaffolds for bone tissue engineering

Ehsan Jabbarzadeh; Meng Deng; Qing Lv; Tao Jiang; Yusuf Khan; Lakshmi S. Nair; Cato T. Laurencin

Regenerative engineering approaches utilizing biomimetic synthetic scaffolds provide alternative strategies to repair and restore damaged bone. The efficacy of the scaffolds for functional bone regeneration critically depends on their ability to induce and support vascular infiltration. In the present study, three-dimensional (3D) biomimetic poly(lactide-co-glycolide) (PLAGA) sintered microsphere scaffolds were developed by sintering together PLAGA microspheres followed by nucleation of minerals in a simulated body fluid. Further, the angiogenic potential of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF)-incorporated mineralized PLAGA scaffolds were examined by monitoring the growth and phenotypic expression of endothelial cells on scaffolds. Scanning electron microscopy micrographs confirmed the growth of bone-like mineral layers on the surface of microspheres. The mineralized PLAGA scaffolds possessed interconnectivity and a compressive modulus of 402 ± 61 MPa and compressive strength of 14.6 ± 2.9 MPa. Mineralized scaffolds supported the attachment and growth and normal phenotypic expression of endothelial cells. Further, precipitation of apatite layer on PLAGA scaffolds resulted in an enhanced VEGF adsorption and prolonged release compared to nonmineralized PLAGA and, thus, a significant increase in endothelial cell proliferation. Together, these results demonstrated the potential of VEGF-incorporated biomimetic PLAGA sintered microsphere scaffolds for bone tissue engineering as they possess the combined effects of osteointegrativity and angiogenesis.


Current Pharmaceutical Design | 2013

Strategies to Direct Angiogenesis within Scaffolds for Bone Tissue Engineering

Greg M. Harris; Katy Rutledge; Qingsu Cheng; James O. Blanchette; Ehsan Jabbarzadeh

There is a profound need for orthopaedic grafting strategies due to various trauma and musculoskeletal diseases. Tissue engineering offers a promising avenue to develop viable grafts for bone repair. The transfer of bone tissue engineering strategies to clinical applications is limited by the failure to adequately vascularize scaffolds after implantation. This review focuses on the natural processes for bone and vessel formation as well as the microenvironmental cues and microscale fabrication techniques to properly coordinate these events towards successful vascularization of tissue engineered scaffolds.


PLOS ONE | 2013

PLGA-Carbon Nanotube Conjugates for Intercellular Delivery of Caspase-3 into Osteosarcoma Cells

Qingsu Cheng; Marc-Olivier Blais; Greg M. Harris; Ehsan Jabbarzadeh

Cancer has arisen to be of the most prominent health care issues across the world in recent years. Doctors have used physiological intervention as well as chemical and radioactive therapeutics to treat cancer thus far. As an alternative to current methods, gene delivery systems with high efficiency, specificity, and safety that can reduce side effects such as necrosis of tissue are under development. Although viral vectors are highly efficient, concerns have arisen from the fact that viral vectors are sourced from lethal diseases. With this in mind, rod shaped nano-materials such as carbon nanotubes (CNTs) have become an attractive option for drug delivery due to the enhanced permeability and retention effect in tumors as well as the ability to penetrate the cell membrane. Here, we successfully engineered poly (lactic-co-glycolic) (PLGA) functionalized CNTs to reduce toxicity concerns, provide attachment sites for pro-apoptotic protein caspase-3 (CP3), and tune the temporal release profile of CP3 within bone cancer cells. Our results showed that CP3 was able to attach to functionalized CNTs, forming CNT-PLGA-CP3 conjugates. We show this conjugate can efficiently transduce cells at dosages as low as 0.05 μg/ml and suppress cell proliferation up to a week with no further treatments. These results are essential to showing the capabilities of PLGA functionalized CNTs as a non-viral vector gene delivery technique to tune cell fate.


Biomaterials | 2014

Carbon nanotube-based substrates for modulation of human pluripotent stem cell fate

Marina V. Pryzhkova; Indrat Aria; Qingsu Cheng; Greg M. Harris; Xingjie Zan; Morteza Gharib; Ehsan Jabbarzadeh

We investigated the biological response of human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs) cultured on a carbon nanotube (CNT) array-based substrate with the long term goal to direct hPSC germ layer specification for a wide variety of tissue engineering applications. CNT arrays were fabricated using a chemical vapor deposition system allowing for control over surface roughness and mechanical stiffness. Our results demonstrated that hPSCs readily attach to hydrophilized and extracellular matrix coated CNT arrays. hPSCs cultured as colonies in conditions supporting self-renewal demonstrated the morphology and marker expression of undifferentiated hPSCs. Conditions inducing spontaneous differentiation lead to hPSC commitment to all three embryonic germ layers as assessed by immunostaining and RT-PCR analysis. Strikingly, the physical characteristics of CNT arrays favored mesodermal specification of hPSCs. This is contradictory to the behavior of hPSCs on traditional tissue culture plastic which promotes the development of ectoderm. Altogether, these results demonstrate the potential of CNT arrays to be used in the generation of new platforms that allow for precise control of hPSC differentiation by tuning the characteristics of their physical microenvironment.


Current Angiogenesis (Discontinued) | 2012

Vascularization of Biomaterials for Bone Tissue Engineering: Current Approaches and Major Challenges

Ehsan Jabbarzadeh; James O. Blanchette; Tarek Shazly; Ali Khademhosseini; Gulden Camci-Unal; Cato T. Laurencin

Tissue engineering uses various approaches to restore bone loss and heal critical-size defects resulting from trauma, infection, tumor resection or other musculoskeletal diseases. The success of bone tissue engineering strategies critically depends on the extent of blood vessel infiltration into the scaffolds. It has been demonstrated that blood vessel invasion from the host tissue into scaffolds is limited to a depth of several hundred micrometers. Limited vessel perfusion restricts the formation of bone in central regions of the scaffold, leads to loss of cell viability in this region and ultimately does not support healing of the defect. This review addresses the importance of vascularization in bone tissue engineering, discusses the key factors regulating the process of angiogenesis, and provides an overview of current approaches to direct blood vessel formation in biomaterials.


Cell Transplantation | 2015

ASC Spheroid Geometry and Culture Oxygenation Differentially Impact Induction of Preangiogenic Behaviors in Endothelial Cells

Matthew L. Skiles; Brandon William Hanna; Lindsay Rucker; Allison Tipton; Aidan Brougham-Cook; Ehsan Jabbarzadeh; James O. Blanchette

Cell-based angiogenic therapies offer potential for the repair of ischemic injuries, while avoiding several of the limitations associated with material-based growth factor delivery strategies. Evidence supports that applying MSCs as spheroids rather than dispersed cells can improve retention and enhance therapeutic effect through increased secretion of angiogenic factors due to hypoxia. However, while spheroid culture appears to modulate MSC behavior, there has been little investigation of how major culture parameters that affect cellular oxygen tension, such as external oxygenation and culture size, impact the angiogenic potential of spheroids. We cultured equal numbers of adipose-derived stem cells (ASCs) as spheroids containing 10,000 (10k) or 60,000 (60k) cells each, in 20% and 2% oxygen. VEGF secretion varied among the sample groups, with 10k, 2% O2 spheroids exhibiting the highest production. Spheroid-conditioned media was applied to HUVEC monolayers, and proliferation was assessed. Spheroids of either size in 2% oxygen induced comparable proliferation compared to a 2 ng/ml VEGF control sample, while spheroids in 20% oxygen induced less proliferation. Spheroids were also applied in coculture with HUVEC monolayers, and induction of migration through a Transwell membrane was evaluated. Sixty thousand, 2% O2 spheroids induced similar levels of migration as VEGF controls, while 10k, 2% O2 spheroids induced significantly more. Ten thousand, 20% spheroids performed no better than VEGF-free controls. We conclude that the therapeutic ability of ASC spheroids to stimulate angiogenesis in endothelial cells is affected by both culture size and oxygenation parameters, suggesting that, while ASC spheroids offer potential in the treatment of injured and ischemic tissues, careful consideration of culture size in respect to in vivo local oxygen tension will be necessary for optimal results.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Deciphering the Combinatorial Roles of Geometric, Mechanical, and Adhesion Cues in Regulation of Cell Spreading

Greg M. Harris; Tarek Shazly; Ehsan Jabbarzadeh

Significant effort has gone towards parsing out the effects of surrounding microenvironment on macroscopic behavior of stem cells. Many of the microenvironmental cues, however, are intertwined, and thus, further studies are warranted to identify the intricate interplay among the conflicting downstream signaling pathways that ultimately guide a cell response. In this contribution, by patterning adhesive PEG (polyethylene glycol) hydrogels using Dip Pen Nanolithography (DPN), we demonstrate that substrate elasticity, subcellular elasticity, ligand density, and topography ultimately define mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) spreading and shape. Physical characteristics are parsed individually with 7 kilopascal (kPa) hydrogel islands leading to smaller, spindle shaped cells and 105 kPa hydrogel islands leading to larger, polygonal cell shapes. In a parallel effort, a finite element model was constructed to characterize and confirm experimental findings and aid as a predictive tool in modeling cell microenvironments. Signaling pathway inhibition studies suggested that RhoA is a key regulator of cell response to the cooperative effect of the tunable substrate variables. These results are significant for the engineering of cell-extra cellular matrix interfaces and ultimately decoupling matrix bound cues presented to cells in a tissue microenvironment for regenerative medicine.


Journal of Nanomedicine & Nanotechnology | 2014

Nanoengineered Platforms to Guide Pluripotent Stem Cell Fate

Katy Rutledge; Ehsan Jabbarzadeh

Tissue engineering utilizes cells, signaling molecules, and scaffolds towards creating functional tissue to repair damaged organs. Pluripotent stem cells (PSCs) are a promising cell source due to their ability to self-renewal indefinitely and their potential to differentiate into almost any cell type. Great strides have been taken to parse the physiological mechanisms by which PSCs respond to their microenvironment and commit to a specific lineage. The combination of physical cues and chemical factors is thought to have the most profound influence on stem cell behavior, therefore a major focus of tissue engineering strategies is scaffold design to incorporate these signals. One overlooked component of the in vivo microenvironment researchers attempt to recapitulate with three dimensional (3D) substrates is the nanoarchitecture formed by the fibrillar network of extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins. These nanoscale features have the ability to impact cell adhesion, migration, proliferation, and lineage commitment. Significant advances have been made in deciphering how these nanoscale cues interact with stem cells to determine phenotype, but much is still unknown as to how the interplay between physical and chemical signals regulate in vitro and in vivo cellular fate. This review dives deeper to investigate nanoscale platforms for engineering tissue, as well use the use of these nanotechnologies to drive pluripotent stem cell lineage determination.

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Greg M. Harris

University of South Carolina

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Qingsu Cheng

University of South Carolina

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Katy Rutledge

University of South Carolina

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James O. Blanchette

University of South Carolina

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Marc-Olivier Blais

University of South Carolina

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Marina V. Pryzhkova

University of South Carolina

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Lakshmi S. Nair

University of Connecticut

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Maria E. Piroli

University of South Carolina

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