Hendrik B. Sager
Harvard University
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Featured researches published by Hendrik B. Sager.
Nature Nanotechnology | 2014
James E. Dahlman; Carmen Barnes; Omar F. Khan; Aude Thiriot; Siddharth Jhunjunwala; Taylor E. Shaw; Yiping Xing; Hendrik B. Sager; Gaurav Sahay; Andrew Bader; Roman L. Bogorad; Hao Yin; Tim Racie; Yizhou Dong; Shan Jiang; Danielle Seedorf; Apeksha Dave; Kamaljeet Singh Sandhu; Matthew J. Webber; Tatiana Novobrantseva; Vera M. Ruda; Abigail K. R. Lytton-Jean; Christopher G. Levins; Brian T. Kalish; Dayna K. Mudge; Mario Perez; Ludmila Abezgauz; Partha Dutta; Lynelle Smith; Klaus Charisse
Dysfunctional endothelium contributes to more diseases than any other tissue in the body. Small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) can help in the study and treatment of endothelial cells in vivo by durably silencing multiple genes simultaneously, but efficient siRNA delivery has so far remained challenging. Here, we show that polymeric nanoparticles made of low-molecular-weight polyamines and lipids can deliver siRNA to endothelial cells with high efficiency, thereby facilitating the simultaneous silencing of multiple endothelial genes in vivo. Unlike lipid or lipid-like nanoparticles, this formulation does not significantly reduce gene expression in hepatocytes or immune cells even at the dosage necessary for endothelial gene silencing. These nanoparticles mediate the most durable non-liver silencing reported so far and facilitate the delivery of siRNAs that modify endothelial function in mouse models of vascular permeability, emphysema, primary tumour growth and metastasis.
Nature Medicine | 2014
Timo Heidt; Hendrik B. Sager; Gabriel Courties; Partha Dutta; Yoshiko Iwamoto; Alex Zaltsman; Constantin von zur Muhlen; Christoph Bode; Gregory L. Fricchione; John W. Denninger; Charles P. Lin; Claudio Vinegoni; Peter Libby; Filip K. Swirski; Ralph Weissleder; Matthias Nahrendorf
Exposure to psychosocial stress is a risk factor for many diseases, including atherosclerosis. Although incompletely understood, interaction between the psyche and the immune system provides one potential mechanism linking stress and disease inception and progression. Known cross-talk between the brain and immune system includes the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, which centrally drives glucocorticoid production in the adrenal cortex, and the sympathetic-adrenal-medullary axis, which controls stress-induced catecholamine release in support of the fight-or-flight reflex. It remains unknown, however, whether chronic stress changes hematopoietic stem cell activity. Here we show that stress increases proliferation of these most primitive hematopoietic progenitors, giving rise to higher levels of disease-promoting inflammatory leukocytes. We found that chronic stress induced monocytosis and neutrophilia in humans. While investigating the source of leukocytosis in mice, we discovered that stress activates upstream hematopoietic stem cells. Under conditions of chronic variable stress in mice, sympathetic nerve fibers released surplus noradrenaline, which signaled bone marrow niche cells to decrease CXCL12 levels through the β3-adrenergic receptor. Consequently, hematopoietic stem cell proliferation was elevated, leading to an increased output of neutrophils and inflammatory monocytes. When atherosclerosis-prone Apoe−/− mice were subjected to chronic stress, accelerated hematopoiesis promoted plaque features associated with vulnerable lesions that cause myocardial infarction and stroke in humans.
Nature Communications | 2014
Raphaël Duivenvoorden; Jun Tang; David P. Cormode; Aneta J. Mieszawska; David Izquierdo-Garcia; Canturk Ozcan; Maarten J. Otten; Neeha Zaidi; Mark E. Lobatto; Sarian M. van Rijs; Bram Priem; Emma L. Kuan; Catherine Martel; Bernd Hewing; Hendrik B. Sager; Matthias Nahrendorf; Gwendalyn J. Randolph; Erik S.G. Stroes; Valentin Fuster; Edward A. Fisher; Zahi A. Fayad; Willem J. M. Mulder
Inflammation is a key feature of atherosclerosis and a target for therapy. Statins have potent anti-inflammatory properties but these cannot be fully exploited with oral statin therapy due to low systemic bioavailability. Here we present an injectable reconstituted high-density lipoprotein (rHDL) nanoparticle carrier vehicle that delivers statins to atherosclerotic plaques. We demonstrate the anti-inflammatory effect of statin-rHDL in vitro and show this effect is mediated through inhibition of the mevalonate pathway. We also apply statin-rHDL nanoparticles in vivo in an apolipoprotein E-knockout mouse model of atherosclerosis and show they accumulate in atherosclerotic lesions where they directly affect plaque macrophages. Finally we demonstrate that a three-month low-dose statin-rHDL treatment regimen inhibits plaque inflammation progression, while a one-week high-dose regimen markedly decreases inflammation in advanced atherosclerotic plaques. Statin-rHDL represents a novel potent atherosclerosis nanotherapy that directly affects plaque inflammation.
Circulation Research | 2014
Timo Heidt; Gabriel Courties; Partha Dutta; Hendrik B. Sager; Matt Sebas; Yoshiko Iwamoto; Yuan Sun; Nicolas Da Silva; Peter Panizzi; Anja M. van der Laan; Filip K. Swirski; Ralph Weissleder; Matthias Nahrendorf
Rationale: Macrophages populate the steady-state myocardium. Previously, all macrophages were thought to arise from monocytes; however, it emerged that, in several organs, tissue-resident macrophages may self-maintain through local proliferation. Objective: Our aim was to study the contribution of monocytes to cardiac-resident macrophages in steady state, after macrophage depletion in CD11bDTR/+ mice and in myocardial infarction. Methods and Results: Using in vivo fate mapping and flow cytometry, we estimated that during steady state the heart macrophage population turns over in ≈1 month. To explore the source of cardiac-resident macrophages, we joined the circulation of mice using parabiosis. After 6 weeks, we observed blood monocyte chimerism of 35.3±3.4%, whereas heart macrophages showed a much lower chimerism of 2.7±0.5% (P<0.01). Macrophages self-renewed locally through proliferation: 2.1±0.3% incorporated bromodeoxyuridine 2 hours after a single injection, and 13.7±1.4% heart macrophages stained positive for the cell cycle marker Ki-67. The cells likely participate in defense against infection, because we found them to ingest fluorescently labeled bacteria. In ischemic myocardium, we observed that tissue-resident macrophages died locally, whereas some also migrated to hematopoietic organs. If the steady state was perturbed by coronary ligation or diphtheria toxin–induced macrophage depletion in CD11bDTR/+ mice, blood monocytes replenished heart macrophages. However, in the chronic phase after myocardial infarction, macrophages residing in the infarct were again independent from the blood monocyte pool, returning to the steady-state situation. Conclusions: In this study, we show differential contribution of monocytes to heart macrophages during steady state, after macrophage depletion or in the acute and chronic phase after myocardial infarction. We found that macrophages participate in the immunosurveillance of myocardial tissue. These data correspond with previous studies on tissue-resident macrophages and raise important questions on the fate and function of macrophages during the development of heart failure.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2014
Gabriel Courties; Timo Heidt; Matthew Sebas; Yoshiko Iwamoto; Derrick Jeon; Jessica Truelove; Benoit Tricot; Greg Wojtkiewicz; Partha Dutta; Hendrik B. Sager; Anna Borodovsky; Tatiana Novobrantseva; Boris Klebanov; Kevin Fitzgerald; Daniel G. Anderson; Peter Libby; Filip K. Swirski; Ralph Weissleder; Matthias Nahrendorf
OBJECTIVES The aim of this study was to test whether silencing of the transcription factor interferon regulatory factor 5 (IRF5) in cardiac macrophages improves infarct healing and attenuates post-myocardial infarction (MI) remodeling. BACKGROUND In healing wounds, the M1 toward M2 macrophage phenotype transition supports resolution of inflammation and tissue repair. Persistence of inflammatory M1 macrophages may derail healing and compromise organ functions. The transcription factor IRF5 up-regulates genes associated with M1 macrophages. METHODS Here we used nanoparticle-delivered small interfering ribonucleic acid (siRNA) to silence IRF5 in macrophages residing in MIs and in surgically-induced skin wounds in mice. RESULTS Infarct macrophages expressed high levels of IRF5 during the early inflammatory wound-healing stages (day 4 after coronary ligation), whereas expression of the transcription factor decreased during the resolution of inflammation (day 8). Following in vitro screening, we identified an siRNA sequence that, when delivered by nanoparticles to wound macrophages, efficiently suppressed expression of IRF5 in vivo. Reduction of IRF5 expression, a factor that regulates macrophage polarization, reduced expression of inflammatory M1 macrophage markers, supported resolution of inflammation, accelerated cutaneous and infarct healing, and attenuated development of post-MI heart failure after coronary ligation as measured by protease targeted fluorescence molecular tomography-computed tomography imaging and cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (p < 0.05). CONCLUSIONS This work identified a new therapeutic avenue to augment resolution of inflammation in healing infarcts by macrophage phenotype manipulation. This therapeutic concept may be used to attenuate post-MI remodeling and heart failure.
Cell | 2017
Maarten Hulsmans; Sebastian Clauss; Ling Xiao; Aaron D. Aguirre; Kevin R. King; Alan Hanley; William J. Hucker; Eike M. Wülfers; Gunnar Seemann; Gabriel Courties; Yoshiko Iwamoto; Yuan Sun; Andrej J. Savol; Hendrik B. Sager; Kory J. Lavine; Gregory A. Fishbein; Diane E. Capen; Nicolas Da Silva; Lucile Miquerol; Hiroko Wakimoto; Christine E. Seidman; Jonathan G. Seidman; Ruslan I. Sadreyev; Kamila Naxerova; Richard N. Mitchell; Dennis Brown; Peter Libby; Ralph Weissleder; Filip K. Swirski; Peter Kohl
Organ-specific functions of tissue-resident macrophages in the steady-state heart are unknown. Here, we show that cardiac macrophages facilitate electrical conduction through the distal atrioventricular node, where conducting cells densely intersperse with elongated macrophages expressing connexin 43. When coupled to spontaneously beating cardiomyocytes via connexin-43-containing gap junctions, cardiac macrophages have a negative resting membrane potential and depolarize in synchrony with cardiomyocytes. Conversely, macrophages render the resting membrane potential of cardiomyocytes more positive and, according to computational modeling, accelerate their repolarization. Photostimulation of channelrhodopsin-2-expressing macrophages improves atrioventricular conduction, whereas conditional deletion of connexin 43 in macrophages and congenital lack of macrophages delay atrioventricular conduction. In the Cd11bDTR mouse, macrophage ablation induces progressive atrioventricular block. These observations implicate macrophages in normal and aberrant cardiac conduction.
Circulation Research | 2016
Hendrik B. Sager; Maarten Hulsmans; Kory J. Lavine; Marina Beltrami Moreira; Timo Heidt; Gabriel Courties; Yuan Sun; Yoshiko Iwamoto; Benoit Tricot; Omar F. Khan; James E. Dahlman; Anna Borodovsky; Kevin Fitzgerald; Daniel G. Anderson; Ralph Weissleder; Peter Libby; Filip K. Swirski; Matthias Nahrendorf
RATIONALE Macrophages reside in the healthy myocardium, participate in ischemic heart disease, and modulate myocardial infarction (MI) healing. Their origin and roles in post-MI remodeling of nonischemic remote myocardium, however, remain unclear. OBJECTIVE This study investigated the number, origin, phenotype, and function of remote cardiac macrophages residing in the nonischemic myocardium in mice with chronic heart failure after coronary ligation. METHODS AND RESULTS Eight weeks post MI, fate mapping and flow cytometry revealed that a 2.9-fold increase in remote macrophages results from both increased local macrophage proliferation and monocyte recruitment. Heart failure produced by extensive MI, through activation of the sympathetic nervous system, expanded medullary and extramedullary hematopoiesis. Circulating Ly6C(high) monocytes rose from 64±5 to 108±9 per microliter of blood (P<0.05). Cardiac monocyte recruitment declined in Ccr2(-/-) mice, reducing macrophage numbers in the failing myocardium. Mechanical strain of primary murine and human macrophage cultures promoted cell cycle entry, suggesting that the increased wall tension in post-MI heart failure stimulates local macrophage proliferation. Strained cells activated the mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway, whereas specific inhibitors of this pathway reduced macrophage proliferation in strained cell cultures and in the failing myocardium (P<0.05). Steady-state cardiac macrophages, monocyte-derived macrophages, and locally sourced macrophages isolated from failing myocardium expressed different genes in a pattern distinct from the M1/M2 macrophage polarization paradigm. In vivo silencing of endothelial cell adhesion molecules curbed post-MI monocyte recruitment to the remote myocardium and preserved ejection fraction (27.4±2.4 versus 19.1±2%; P<0.05). CONCLUSIONS Myocardial failure is influenced by an altered myeloid cell repertoire.
Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2015
Partha Dutta; Friedrich Felix Hoyer; Lubov S. Grigoryeva; Hendrik B. Sager; Florian Leuschner; Gabriel Courties; Anna Borodovsky; Tatiana Novobrantseva; Vera M. Ruda; Kevin Fitzgerald; Yoshiko Iwamoto; Gregory R. Wojtkiewicz; Yuan Sun; Nicolas Da Silva; Peter Libby; Daniel G. Anderson; Filip K. Swirski; Ralph Weissleder; Matthias Nahrendorf
Dutta et al. show that targeting VACM-1 expression in splenic macrophages impairs extramedullary hematopoiesis, thus reducing inflammation in mouse ischemic heart and atherosclerotic plaques.
Circulation Research | 2015
Gabriel Courties; Fanny Herisson; Hendrik B. Sager; Timo Heidt; Yu-Xiang Ye; Ying Wei; Yuan Sun; Nicolas Severe; Partha Dutta; Jennifer Scharff; David T. Scadden; Ralph Weissleder; Filip K. Swirski; Michael A. Moskowitz; Matthias Nahrendorf
Rationale: The mechanisms leading to an expanded neutrophil and monocyte supply after stroke are incompletely understood. Objective: To test the hypothesis that transient middle cerebral artery occlusion (tMCAO) in mice leads to activation of hematopoietic bone marrow stem cells. Methods and Results: Serial in vivo bioluminescence reporter gene imaging in mice with tMCAO revealed that bone marrow cell cycling peaked 4 days after stroke (P<0.05 versus pre tMCAO). Flow cytometry and cell cycle analysis showed activation of the entire hematopoietic tree, including myeloid progenitors. The cycling fraction of the most upstream hematopoietic stem cells increased from 3.34%±0.19% to 7.32%±0.52% after tMCAO (P<0.05). In vivo microscopy corroborated proliferation of adoptively transferred hematopoietic progenitors in the bone marrow of mice with stroke. The hematopoietic system’s myeloid bias was reflected by increased expression of myeloid transcription factors, including PU.1 (P<0.05), and by a decline in lymphocyte precursors. In mice after tMCAO, tyrosine hydroxylase levels in sympathetic fibers and bone marrow noradrenaline levels rose (P<0.05, respectively), associated with a decrease of hematopoietic niche factors that promote stem cell quiescence. In mice with genetic deficiency of the &bgr;3 adrenergic receptor, hematopoietic stem cells did not enter the cell cycle in increased numbers after tMCAO (naive control, 3.23±0.22; tMCAO, 3.74±0.33, P=0.51). Conclusions: Ischemic stroke activates hematopoietic stem cells via increased sympathetic tone, leading to a myeloid bias of hematopoiesis and higher bone marrow output of inflammatory Ly6Chigh monocytes and neutrophils.
Science Advances | 2015
Jun Tang; Mark E. Lobatto; Laurien Hassing; Susanne E. M. van der Staay; Sarian M. van Rijs; Claudia Calcagno; Mounia S. Braza; Samantha Baxter; Francois Fay; Brenda L. Sanchez-Gaytan; Raphaël Duivenvoorden; Hendrik B. Sager; Yaritzy M Astudillo; Wei Sin Leong; Gert Storm; Carlos Pérez-Medina; Thomas Reiner; David P. Cormode; Gustav J. Strijkers; Erik S.G. Stroes; Filip K. Swirski; Matthias Nahrendorf; Edward A. Fisher; Zahi A. Fayad; Willem J. M. Mulder
Nanoparticle-based delivery of simvastatin inhibits plaque macrophage proliferation in apolipoprotein E–deficient mice. Inflammation drives atherosclerotic plaque progression and rupture, and is a compelling therapeutic target. Consequently, attenuating inflammation by reducing local macrophage accumulation is an appealing approach. This can potentially be accomplished by either blocking blood monocyte recruitment to the plaque or increasing macrophage apoptosis and emigration. Because macrophage proliferation was recently shown to dominate macrophage accumulation in advanced plaques, locally inhibiting macrophage proliferation may reduce plaque inflammation and produce long-term therapeutic benefits. To test this hypothesis, we used nanoparticle-based delivery of simvastatin to inhibit plaque macrophage proliferation in apolipoprotein E–deficient mice (Apoe−/−) with advanced atherosclerotic plaques. This resulted in the rapid reduction of plaque inflammation and favorable phenotype remodeling. We then combined this short-term nanoparticle intervention with an 8-week oral statin treatment, and this regimen rapidly reduced and continuously suppressed plaque inflammation. Our results demonstrate that pharmacologically inhibiting local macrophage proliferation can effectively treat inflammation in atherosclerosis.