Hariharan Thangarajah
Stanford University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Hariharan Thangarajah.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009
Hariharan Thangarajah; Dachun Yao; Edward I. Chang; Yubin Shi; Leila Jazayeri; Ivan N. Vial; Robert D. Galiano; Xue Liang Du; Raymon H. Grogan; Michael G. Galvez; Michael Januszyk; Michael Brownlee; Geoffrey C. Gurtner
Diabetes is associated with poor outcomes following acute vascular occlusive events. This results in part from a failure to form adequate compensatory microvasculature in response to ischemia. Since vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) is an essential mediator of neovascularization, we examined whether hypoxic up-regulation of VEGF was impaired in diabetes. Both fibroblasts isolated from type 2 diabetic patients, and normal fibroblasts exposed chronically to high glucose, were defective in their capacity to up-regulate VEGF in response to hypoxia. In vivo, diabetic animals demonstrated an impaired ability to increase VEGF production in response to soft tissue ischemia. This resulted from a high glucose-induced decrease in transactivation by the transcription factor hypoxia-inducible factor-1α (HIF-1α), which mediates hypoxia-stimulated VEGF expression. Decreased HIF-1α functional activity was specifically caused by impaired HIF-1α binding to the coactivator p300. We identify covalent modification of p300 by the dicarbonyl metabolite methylglyoxal as being responsible for this decreased association. Administration of deferoxamine abrogated methylglyoxal conjugation, normalizing both HIF-1α/p300 interaction and transactivation by HIF-1α. In diabetic mice, deferoxamine promoted neovascularization and enhanced wound healing. These findings define molecular defects that underlie impaired VEGF production in diabetic tissues and offer a promising direction for therapeutic intervention.
Stem Cells | 2009
Hariharan Thangarajah; Ivan N. Vial; Edwin Chang; Samyra El-ftesi; Michael Januszyk; Edward I. Chang; Josemaria Paterno; Evgenios Neofytou; Michael T. Longaker; Geoffrey C. Gurtner
Evolving evidence suggests a possible role for adipose stromal cells (ASCs) in adult neovascularization, although the specific cues that stimulate their angiogenic behavior are poorly understood. We evaluated the effect of hypoxia, a central mediator of new blood vessel development within ischemic tissue, on proneovascular ASC functions. Murine ASCs were exposed to normoxia (21% oxygen) or hypoxia (5%, 1% oxygen) for varying lengths of time. Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) secretion by ASCs increased as an inverse function of oxygen tension, with progressively higher VEGF expression at 21%, 5%, and 1% oxygen, respectively. Greater VEGF levels were also associated with longer periods in culture. ASCs were able to migrate towards stromal cell‐derived factor (SDF)‐1, a chemokine expressed by ischemic tissue, with hypoxia augmenting ASC expression of the SDF‐1 receptor (CXCR4) and potentiating ASC migration. In vivo, ASCs demonstrated the capacity to proliferate in response to a hypoxic insult remote from their resident niche, and this was supported by in vitro studies showing increasing ASC proliferation with greater degrees of hypoxia. Hypoxia did not significantly alter the expression of endothelial surface markers by ASCs. However, these cells did assume an endothelial phenotype as evidenced by their ability to tubularize when seeded with differentiated endothelial cells on Matrigel. Taken together, these data suggest that ASCs upregulate their proneovascular activity in response to hypoxia, and may harbor the capacity to home to ischemic tissue and function cooperatively with existing vasculature to promote angiogenesis. STEM CELLS 2009;27:266–274
Cell Cycle | 2010
Hariharan Thangarajah; Ivan N. Vial; Raymon H. Grogan; Dachun Yao; Yubin Shi; Michael Januszyk; Robert D. Galiano; Edward I. Chang; Michael G. Galvez; Jason P. Glotzbach; Victor W. Wong; Michael Brownlee; Geoffrey C. Gurtner
Diabetic wounds are a significant public health burden, with slow or non-healing diabetic foot ulcers representing the leading cause of non-traumatic lower limb amputation in developed countries. These wounds heal poorly as a result of compromised blood vessel formation in response to ischemia. We have recently shown that this impairment in neovascularization results from a high glucose-induced defect in transactivation of hypoxia-inducible factor-1α (HIF-1α), the transcription factor regulating vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) expression. HIF-1 dysfunction is the end result of reactive oxygen species-induced modification of its coactivator p300 by the glycolytic metabolite methylglyoxal. Use of the iron chelator-antioxidant deferoxamine (DFO) reversed these effects and normalized healing of humanized diabetic wounds in mice. Here, we present additional data demonstrating that HIF-1α activity, not stability, is impaired in the high glucose environment. We demonstrate that high glucose-induced impairments in HIF-1α transactivation persist even in the setting of constitutive HIF-1α protein overexpression. Further, we show that high glucose-induced hydroxylation of the C-terminal transactivation domain of HIF-1α (the primary pathway regulating HIF-1α/p300 binding) does not alter HIF-1α activity. We extend our study of DFO’s therapeutic efficacy in the treatment of impaired wound healing by demonstrating improvements in tissue viability in diabetic mice with DFO-induced increases in VEGF expression and vascular proliferation. Since DFO has been in clinical use for decades, the potential of this drug to treat a variety of ischemic conditions in humans can be evaluated relatively quickly.
Lymphatic Research and Biology | 2007
Edward I. Chang; Eric I. Chang; Hariharan Thangarajah; Cynthia Hamou; Geoffrey C. Gurtner
Hemangiomas are the most common tumor of infancy, and although the natural history of these lesions is well described, their etiology remains unknown. One current theory attributes the development of hemangiomas to placentally-derived cells; however, conclusive evidence to support a placental origin is lacking. While placental tissue and hemangiomas do share molecular similarities, it is possible that these parallels are the result of analogous responses of endothelial cells and vascular progenitors to similar environmental cues. Specifically, both tissue types consist of actively proliferating cells that exist within a low oxygen, high estrogen environment. The hypoxic environment leads to an upregulation of hypoxia inducible factor-1alpha (HIF-1alpha) responsive chemokines such as stromal cell derived factor-1alpha (SDF-1alpha) and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), both of which are known to promote the recruitment and proliferation of endothelial progenitor cells. Increased hormone levels in the postpartum period further potentiate the growth of these lesions. In this model, increased stabilization of HIF-1 in concert with increased levels of estrogen create a milieu that promotes new blood vessel development, ultimately contributing to the pathogenesis of infantile hemangiomas.
Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery | 2009
Shang A. Loh; Edward I. Chang; Michael G. Galvez; Hariharan Thangarajah; Samyra El-ftesi; Ivan N. Vial; Darius A. Lin; Geoffrey C. Gurtner
Background: Age-related impairments in wound healing are associated with decreased neovascularization, a process that is regulated by hypoxia-responsive cytokines, including stromal cell–derived factor (SDF)-1&agr;. Interleukin-1&bgr; is an important inflammatory cytokine involved in wound healing and is believed to regulate SDF-1&agr; expression independent of hypoxia signaling. Thus, the authors examined the relative importance of interleukin (IL)-1&bgr; and hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF)-1&agr; on SDF-1&agr; expression in aged wound healing. Methods: Young and aged mice (n = 4 per group) were examined for wound healing using a murine excisional wound model. Wounds were harvested at days 0, 1, 3, 5, and 7 for histologic analysis, immunohistochemistry, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, and Western blot. An engineered wild-type and mutated SDF luciferase reporter construct were used to determine HIF transactivation. Results: Aged mice demonstrated significantly impaired wound healing, reduced granulation tissue, and increased epithelial gap compared with young controls. Real-time polymerase chain reaction demonstrated reduced SDF-1&agr; levels in aged wounds that correlated with reduced CD31+ neovessels. Western blots revealed decreased HIF-1&agr; protein in aged wounds. However, both IL-1&bgr; and macrophage infiltrate were unchanged between young and aged animals. Using the wild-type and mutated SDF luciferase reporter construct in which the hypoxia response element was deleted, only young fibroblasts were able to respond to IL-1&bgr; stimulation, and this response was abrogated by mutating the HIF-binding sites. This suggests that HIF binding is essential for SDF-1 transactivation in response to both inflammatory and hypoxic stimuli. Conclusions: SDF-1&agr; deficiency observed during aged wound healing is attributable predominantly to decreased HIF-1&agr; levels rather than impaired IL-1&bgr; expression.
PLOS ONE | 2011
Jason P. Glotzbach; Michael Januszyk; Ivan N. Vial; Victor W. Wong; Alexander Gelbard; Tomer Kalisky; Hariharan Thangarajah; Michael T. Longaker; Stephen R. Quake; Gilbert Chu; Geoffrey C. Gurtner
An incomplete understanding of the nature of heterogeneity within stem cell populations remains a major impediment to the development of clinically effective cell-based therapies. Transcriptional events within a single cell are inherently stochastic and can produce tremendous variability, even among genetically identical cells. It remains unclear how mammalian cellular systems overcome this intrinsic noisiness of gene expression to produce consequential variations in function, and what impact this has on the biologic and clinical relevance of highly ‘purified’ cell subgroups. To address these questions, we have developed a novel method combining microfluidic-based single cell analysis and information theory to characterize and predict transcriptional programs across hundreds of individual cells. Using this technique, we demonstrate that multiple subpopulations exist within a well-studied and putatively homogeneous stem cell population, murine long-term hematopoietic stem cells (LT-HSCs). These subgroups are defined by nonrandom patterns that are distinguishable from noise and are consistent with known functional properties of these cells. We anticipate that this analytic framework can also be applied to other cell types to elucidate the relationship between transcriptional and phenotypic variation.
Diabetes | 2014
Michael Januszyk; Michael Sorkin; Jason P. Glotzbach; Ivan N. Vial; Zeshaan N. Maan; Robert C. Rennert; Dominik Duscher; Hariharan Thangarajah; Michael T. Longaker; Atul J. Butte; Geoffrey C. Gurtner
Diabetic vascular pathology is largely attributable to impairments in tissue recovery from hypoxia. Circulating progenitor cells have been postulated to play a role in ischemic recovery, and deficiencies in these cells have been well described in diabetic patients. Here, we examine bone marrow–derived mesenchymal progenitor cells (BM-MPCs) that have previously been shown to be important for new blood vessel formation and demonstrate significant deficits in the context of diabetes. Further, we determine that this dysfunction is attributable to intrinsic defects in diabetic BM-MPCs that are not correctable by restoring glucose homeostasis. We identify two transcriptionally distinct subpopulations that are selectively depleted by both type 1 and type 2 diabetes, and these subpopulations have provasculogenic expression profiles, suggesting that they are vascular progenitor cells. These results suggest that the clinically observed deficits in progenitor cells may be attributable to selective and irreversible depletion of progenitor cell subsets in patients with diabetes.
Wound Repair and Regeneration | 2011
Josemaria Paterno; Ivan N. Vial; Victor W. Wong; Kristine C. Rustad; Michael Sorkin; Yubin Shi; Kirit A. Bhatt; Hariharan Thangarajah; Jason P. Glotzbach; Geoffrey C. Gurtner
Although numerous factors are implicated in skin fibrosis, the exact pathophysiology of hypertrophic scarring remains unknown. We recently demonstrated that mechanical force initiates hypertrophic scar formation in a murine model, potentially enhancing cellular survival through Akt. Here, we specifically examined Akt‐mediated mechanotransduction in fibroblasts using both strain culture systems and our murine scar model. In vitro, static strain increased fibroblast motility, an effect blocked by wortmannin (a phosphoinositide‐3‐kinase/Akt inhibitor). We also demonstrated that high‐frequency cyclic strain was more effective at inducing Akt phosphorylation than low frequency or static strain. In vivo, Akt phosphorylation was induced by mechanical loading of dermal fibroblasts in both unwounded and wounded murine skin. Mechanically loaded scars also exhibited strong expression of α‐smooth muscle actin, a putative marker of pathologic scar formation. In vivo inhibition of Akt increased apoptosis but did not significantly abrogate hypertrophic scar development. These data suggest that although Akt signaling is activated in fibroblasts during mechanical loading of skin, this is not the critical pathway in hypertrophic scar formation. Future studies are needed to fully elucidate the critical mechanotransduction components and pathways which activate skin fibrosis.
JAMA Pediatrics | 2017
Danielle B. Cameron; Dionne A. Graham; Carly E. Milliren; Charity C. Glass; Christina Feng; Feroze Sidhwa; Hariharan Thangarajah; Matthew Hall; Shawn J. Rangel
Importance Practice variation is believed to be a driver of excess health care spending, although few objective data exist to guide the prioritization of comparative effectiveness research (CER) in pediatric surgery. Objective To identify high-priority general pediatric surgical procedures for CER on the basis of the following 2 complementary measures: the magnitude of interhospital cost variation as a surrogate for the need for and potential effect of CER at the patient level and the cumulative fiscal burden of this cost variation when considering the case volume from all hospitals as a surrogate for public health relevance. Design, Setting, and Participants This was a cohort study of patients undergoing 1 of the 30 most costly pediatric surgical operations at 45 children’s hospitals between January 1, 2014, and September 30, 2015. Cost data were extracted from the Pediatric Health Information System database and adjusted for differences in unit-based costing at the hospital level and for differences in case mix and disease severity at the patient level. Main Outcomes and Measures First, the width of the interquartile range (WIQR) of the adjusted procedure-specific median cost across hospitals. Second, the procedure-specific cost variation burden, which was calculated as the aggregate sum of absolute cost differences between the overall adjusted median cost derived from all patients treated at all hospitals and the adjusted cost of each individual patient treated at all hospitals. Results A total of 92 535 encounters were analyzed. The median number of encounters per hospital was 2011 (interquartile range [IQR], 1224-2619), and the median number of encounters per procedure was 610 (IQR, 442-2610). In the final cohort, 66.9% (n = 61 933) of the patients were male, and the median age was 7 years (IQR, 1.9-12.3 years). Cost variation at the hospital level was greatest for gastroschisis (WIQR,
American Journal of Emergency Medicine | 2012
Sean Sachdev; Hariharan Thangarajah; Judith Keddington
48 471; median,