Fabian Schreiber
RWTH Aachen University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Fabian Schreiber.
Science Translational Medicine | 2011
Oliver Soehnlein; Sarawuth Wantha; Sakine Simsekyilmaz; Yvonne Döring; Remco T.A. Megens; Sebastian F. Mause; Maik Drechsler; Ralf Smeets; Stefan Weinandy; Fabian Schreiber; Thomas Gries; Stefan Jockenhoevel; Martin Möller; Santosh Vijayan; Marc A. M. J. van Zandvoort; Birgitta Agerberth; Christine T. N. Pham; Richard L. Gallo; Tilman M. Hackeng; Elisa A. Liehn; Alma Zernecke; Doris Klee; Christian Weber
Cathelicidin-coated stents limit neointima formation. A Narrow Escape for Stents A heart-healthy diet may reduce your risk of atherosclerosis and heart attack, but what if the damage is already done? For severe cases of atherosclerosis, a cardiologist can implant a device called a stent to widen or even open a blocked artery. Ironically, however, stent implantation can activate an immune response, which leads to restenosis—a narrowing of the blood vessels that restricts flow. Stents that elute drugs such as antiproliferative or anti-inflammatory agents have decreased this risk, but at the same time, they increase the risk of blood clot formation. Now, Soehnlein et al. find that stents coated with an antimicrobial peptide produced by innate immune cells promote vascular healing. In an animal model of atherosclerosis, the authors observed that neutrophils could decrease vessel narrowing by secreting the antimicrobial peptide cathelicidin (mouse CRAMP, human LL-37). When deposited by neutrophils at the site of vascular injury, CRAMP recruited new blood vessel–producing cells and promoted the regrowth of vascular endothelial cells in damaged regions. The authors then translated this observation to clinically applicable technology by coating vascular stents with cathelicidin. Indeed, cathelicidin-coated stents reduced in-stent restenosis in their mouse model of atherosclerosis. Although it remains to be seen whether this effect will be reproduced in humans, cathelicidin coating may prevent stents from causing the very problem they’re supposed to treat and thus improve therapy for severe atherosclerosis. Percutaneous transluminal angioplasty with stent implantation is used to dilate arteries narrowed by atherosclerotic plaques and to revascularize coronary arteries occluded by atherothrombosis in myocardial infarction. Commonly applied drug-eluting stents release antiproliferative or anti-inflammatory agents to reduce the incidence of in-stent stenosis. However, these stents may still lead to in-stent stenosis; they also show increased rates of late stent thrombosis, an obstacle to optimal revascularization possibly related to endothelial recovery. Here, we examined the contribution of neutrophils and neutrophilic granule proteins to arterial healing after injury. We found that neutrophil-borne cathelicidin (mouse CRAMP, human LL-37) promoted reendothelization and thereby limited neointima formation after stent implantation. We then translated these findings to an animal model using a neutrophil-instructing, biofunctionalized, miniaturized Nitinol stent coated with LL-37. This stent reduced in-stent stenosis in a mouse model of atherosclerosis, suggesting that LL-37 may promote vascular healing after interventional therapy.
Artificial Organs | 2010
Ralf Borchardt; Peter Schlanstein; Jutta Arens; Roland Graefe; Fabian Schreiber; Thomas Schmitz-Rode; Ulrich Steinseifer
Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) is a well-established therapy for several lung and heart diseases in the field of neonatal and pediatric medicine (e.g., acute respiratory distress syndrome, congenital heart failure, cardiomyopathy). Current ECMO systems are typically composed of an oxygenator and a separate nonpulsatile blood pump. An oxygenator with an integrated pulsatile blood pump for small infant ECMO was developed, and this novel concept was tested regarding functionality and gas exchange rate. Pulsating silicone tubes (STs) were driven by air pressure and placed inside the cylindrical fiber bundle of an oxygenator to be used as a pump module. The findings of this study confirm that pumping blood with STs is a viable option for the future. The maximum gas exchange rate for oxygen is 48mL/min/L(blood) at a medium blood flow rate of about 300mL/min. Future design steps were identified to optimize the flow field through the fiber bundle to achieve a higher gas exchange rate. First, the packing density of the hollow-fiber bundle was lower than commercial oxygenators due to the manual manufacturing. By increasing this packing density, the gas exchange rate would increase accordingly. Second, distribution plates for a more uniform blood flow can be placed at the inlet and outlet of the oxygenator. Third, the hollow-fiber membranes can be individually placed to ensure equal distances between the surrounding hollow fibers.
PLOS ONE | 2016
Sakine Simsekyilmaz; Elisa A. Liehn; Stefan Weinandy; Fabian Schreiber; Remco T.A. Megens; Wendy Theelen; Ralf Smeets; Stefan Jockenhövel; Thomas Gries; Martin Möller; Doris Klee; Christian Weber; Alma Zernecke
Atherosclerotic lesions that critically narrow the artery can necessitate an angioplasty and stent implantation. Long-term therapeutic effects, however, are limited by excessive arterial remodeling. We here employed a miniaturized nitinol-stent coated with star-shaped polyethylenglycole (star-PEG), and evaluated its bio-functionalization with RGD and CXCL1 for improving in-stent stenosis after implantation into carotid arteries of mice. Nitinol foils or stents (bare metal) were coated with star-PEG, and bio-functionalized with RGD, or RGD/CXCL1. Cell adhesion to star-PEG-coated nitinol foils was unaltered or reduced, whereas bio-functionalization with RGD but foremost RGD/CXCL1 increased adhesion of early angiogenic outgrowth cells (EOCs) and endothelial cells but not smooth muscle cells when compared with bare metal foils. Stimulation of cells with RGD/CXCL1 furthermore increased the proliferation of EOCs. In vivo, bio-functionalization with RGD/CXCL1 significantly reduced neointima formation and thrombus formation, and increased re-endothelialization in apoE-/- carotid arteries compared with bare-metal nitinol stents, star-PEG-coated stents, and stents bio-functionalized with RGD only. Bio-functionalization of star-PEG-coated nitinol-stents with RGD/CXCL1 reduced in-stent neointima formation. By supporting the adhesion and proliferation of endothelial progenitor cells, RGD/CXCL1 coating of stents may help to accelerate endothelial repair after stent implantation, and thus may harbor the potential to limit the complication of in-stent restenosis in clinical approaches.
Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2013
Sakine Simsekyilmaz; Fabian Schreiber; Stefan Weinandy; Felix Gremse; Tolga Taha Sönmez; Elisa A. Liehn
Despite the considerable progress made in the stent development in the last decades, cardiovascular diseases remain the main cause of death in western countries. Beside the benefits offered by the development of different drug-eluting stents, the coronary revascularization bears also the life-threatening risks of in-stent thrombosis and restenosis. Research on new therapeutic strategies is impaired by the lack of appropriate methods to study stent implantation and restenosis processes. Here, we describe a rapid and accessible procedure of stent implantation in mouse carotid artery, which offers the possibility to study in a convenient way the molecular mechanisms of vessel remodeling and the effects of different drug coatings.
Journal of Biomedical Materials Research Part B | 2012
Mauricio Borinski; Christian Flege; Fabian Schreiber; Nicole Krott; Thomas Gries; Elisa A. Liehn; Rüdiger Blindt; Nikolaus Marx; Felix Vogt
Current stent system efficacy for the treatment of coronary artery disease is hampered by in-stent restenosis (ISR) rates of up to 20% in certain high-risk settings and by the risk of stent thrombosis, which is characterized by a high mortality rate. In theory, biodegradable vascular devices exhibit crucial advantages. Most absorbable implant materials are based on poly-L-lactic acid (PLLA) owing to its mechanical properties; however, PLLA might induce an inflammatory reaction in the vessel wall. Evaluation of biodegradable implant efficacy includes a long-term examination of tissue response; therefore, a simple in vivo tool for thorough biocompatibility and biodegradation evaluation would facilitate future stent system development. Rats have been used for the study of in vivo degradation processes, and stent implantation into the abdominal aorta of rats is a proven model for stent evaluation. Here, we report the transformation of the porcine double-stent animal model into the high-throughput rat abdominal aorta model. As genetic manipulation of rats was introduced recently, this novel method presents a powerful tool for future in vivo biodegradable candidate stent biocompatibility and biodegradation characterization in a reliable simple model of coronary ISR.
Tissue Engineering Part A | 2012
Stefan Weinandy; Lisanne Rongen; Fabian Schreiber; Christian Cornelissen; Thomas C. Flanagan; Andreas H. Mahnken; Thomas Gries; Thomas Schmitz-Rode; Stefan Jockenhoevel
Archive | 2012
Fabian Schreiber; Frank K. Ko; Kathrin Theelen; Hyun-Young Lee; Eric Schulte Südhoff; Thomas Gries
Autex Research Journal | 2010
Fabian Schreiber; Philipp Schuster; Mauricio Borinski; Felix Vogt; Rüdiger Blindt; Thomas Gries
Smarte Strukturen und Systeme | 2017
Hyunji Park; Fabian Schreiber; Kyung Chul Shin; Yves-Simon Gloy; Thomas Gries; Michael Min
Archive | 2014
Fabian Schreiber; Yves-Simon Gloy