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Dive into the research topics where James G.W. Smith is active.

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Featured researches published by James G.W. Smith.


Nature Materials | 2014

Materials for stem cell factories of the future

Adam D. Celiz; James G.W. Smith; Robert Langer; Daniel G. Anderson; David A. Winkler; David A. Barrett; Martyn C. Davies; Lorraine E. Young; Chris Denning; Morgan R. Alexander

Polymeric substrates are being identified that could permit translation of human pluripotent stem cells from laboratory-based research to industrial-scale biomedicine. Well-defined materials are required to allow cell banking and to provide the raw material for reproducible differentiation into lineages for large-scale drug-screening programs and clinical use. Yet more than 1 billion cells for each patient are needed to replace losses during heart attack, multiple sclerosis and diabetes. Producing this number of cells is challenging, and a rethink of the current predominant cell-derived substrates is needed to provide technology that can be scaled to meet the needs of millions of patients a year. In this Review, we consider the role of materials discovery, an emerging area of materials chemistry that is in large part driven by the challenges posed by biologists to materials scientists.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2016

Cardiomyocytes from human pluripotent stem cells: From laboratory curiosity to industrial biomedical platform☆

Chris Denning; Viola Borgdorff; James Crutchley; Karl S.A. Firth; Vinoj George; Spandan Kalra; Alexander Kondrashov; Minh Duc Hoang; Diogo Mosqueira; Asha K. Patel; Ljupcho Prodanov; Divya Rajamohan; William C. Skarnes; James G.W. Smith; Lorraine E. Young

Cardiomyocytes from human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs-CMs) could revolutionise biomedicine. Global burden of heart failure will soon reach USD


Advanced Materials | 2015

Discovery of a Novel Polymer for Human Pluripotent Stem Cell Expansion and Multilineage Differentiation

Adam D. Celiz; James G.W. Smith; Asha K. Patel; Andrew L. Hook; Divya Rajamohan; Vinoj George; Luke Flatt; Minal J. Patel; Vidana Epa; Taranjit Singh; Robert Langer; Daniel G. Anderson; Nicholas Denby Allen; David C. Hay; David A. Winkler; David A. Barrett; Martyn C. Davies; Lorraine E. Young; Chris Denning; Morgan R. Alexander

90bn, while unexpected cardiotoxicity underlies 28% of drug withdrawals. Advances in hPSC isolation, Cas9/CRISPR genome engineering and hPSC-CM differentiation have improved patient care, progressed drugs to clinic and opened a new era in safety pharmacology. Nevertheless, predictive cardiotoxicity using hPSC-CMs contrasts from failure to almost total success. Since this likely relates to cell immaturity, efforts are underway to use biochemical and biophysical cues to improve many of the ~ 30 structural and functional properties of hPSC-CMs towards those seen in adult CMs. Other developments needed for widespread hPSC-CM utility include subtype specification, cost reduction of large scale differentiation and elimination of the phenotyping bottleneck. This review will consider these factors in the evolution of hPSC-CM technologies, as well as their integration into high content industrial platforms that assess structure, mitochondrial function, electrophysiology, calcium transients and contractility. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Cardiomyocyte Biology: Integration of Developmental and Environmental Cues in the Heart edited by Marcus Schaub and Hughes Abriel.


European Heart Journal | 2018

CRISPR/Cas9 editing in human pluripotent stem cell-cardiomyocytes highlights arrhythmias, hypocontractility, and energy depletion as potential therapeutic targets for hypertrophic cardiomyopathy

Diogo Mosqueira; Ingra Mannhardt; Jamie R. Bhagwan; Katarzyna Lis-Slimak; Puspita Katili; Elizabeth Scott; Mustafa Hassan; Maksymilian Prondzynski; Stephen C. Harmer; Andrew Tinker; James G.W. Smith; Lucie Carrier; Philip M. Williams; Daniel J. Gaffney; Thomas Eschenhagen; Arne Hansen; Chris Denning

A scalable and cost‐effective synthetic polymer substrate that supports robust expansion and subsequent multilineage differentiation of human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs) with defined commercial media is presented. This substrate can be applied to common cultureware and used off‐the‐shelf after long‐term storage. Expansion and differentiation of hPSCs are performed entirely on the polymeric surface, enabling the clinical potential of hPSC‐derived cells to be realized.


Stem Cells and Development | 2018

Simplified Footprint-Free Cas9/CRISPR Editing of Cardiac-Associated Genes in Human Pluripotent Stem Cells

Alexander Kondrashov; Minh Duc Hoang; James G.W. Smith; Jamie R. Bhagwan; Gary Duncan; Diogo Mosqueira; Maria D. Barbadillo Muñoz; Nguyen T.N. Vo; Chris Denning

Abstract Aims Sarcomeric gene mutations frequently underlie hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM), a prevalent and complex condition leading to left ventricle thickening and heart dysfunction. We evaluated isogenic genome-edited human pluripotent stem cell-cardiomyocytes (hPSC-CM) for their validity to model, and add clarity to, HCM. Methods and results CRISPR/Cas9 editing produced 11 variants of the HCM-causing mutation c.C9123T-MYH7 [(p.R453C-β-myosin heavy chain (MHC)] in 3 independent hPSC lines. Isogenic sets were differentiated to hPSC-CMs for high-throughput, non-subjective molecular and functional assessment using 12 approaches in 2D monolayers and/or 3D engineered heart tissues. Although immature, edited hPSC-CMs exhibited the main hallmarks of HCM (hypertrophy, multi-nucleation, hypertrophic marker expression, sarcomeric disarray). Functional evaluation supported the energy depletion model due to higher metabolic respiration activity, accompanied by abnormalities in calcium handling, arrhythmias, and contraction force. Partial phenotypic rescue was achieved with ranolazine but not omecamtiv mecarbil, while RNAseq highlighted potentially novel molecular targets. Conclusion Our holistic and comprehensive approach showed that energy depletion affected core cardiomyocyte functionality. The engineered R453C-βMHC-mutation triggered compensatory responses in hPSC-CMs, causing increased ATP production and αMHC to energy-efficient βMHC switching. We showed that pharmacological rescue of arrhythmias was possible, while MHY7: MYH6 and mutant: wild-type MYH7 ratios may be diagnostic, and previously undescribed lncRNAs and gene modifiers are suggestive of new mechanisms.


Matrix Biology | 2018

The multifaceted roles of perlecan in fibrosis

Megan S. Lord; Fengying Tang; Jelena Rnjak-Kovacina; James G.W. Smith; James Melrose; John M. Whitelock

Modeling disease with human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs) is hindered because the impact on cell phenotype from genetic variability between individuals can be greater than from the pathogenic mutation. While “footprint-free” Cas9/CRISPR editing solves this issue, existing approaches are inefficient or lengthy. In this study, a simplified PiggyBac strategy shortened hPSC editing by 2 weeks and required one round of clonal expansion and genotyping rather than two, with similar efficiencies to the longer conventional process. Success was shown across four cardiac-associated loci (ADRB2, GRK5, RYR2, and ACTC1) by genomic cleavage and editing efficiencies of 8%–93% and 8%–67%, respectively, including mono- and/or biallelic events. Pluripotency was retained, as was differentiation into high-purity cardiomyocytes (CMs; 88%–99%). Using the GRK5 isogenic lines as an exemplar, chronic stimulation with the β-adrenoceptor agonist, isoprenaline, reduced beat rate in hPSC-CMs expressing GRK5-Q41 but not GRK5-L41; this was reversed by the β-blocker, propranolol. This shortened, footprint-free approach will be useful for mechanistic studies.


Biomaterials Science | 2014

Chemically diverse polymer microarrays and high throughput surface characterisation: a method for discovery of materials for stem cell culture†Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/c4bm00054dClick here for additional data file.

Adam D. Celiz; James G.W. Smith; Asha K. Patel; Robert Langer; Daniel G. Anderson; Dave Barrett; Lorraine E. Young; Martyn C. Davies; Chris Denning; Morgan R. Alexander

Perlecan, or heparan sulfate proteoglycan 2 (HSPG2), is a ubiquitous heparan sulfate proteoglycan that has major roles in tissue and organ development and wound healing by orchestrating the binding and signaling of mitogens and morphogens to cells in a temporal and dynamic fashion. In this review, its roles in fibrosis are reviewed by drawing upon evidence from tissue and organ systems that undergo fibrosis as a result of an uncontrolled response to either inflammation or traumatic cellular injury leading to an over production of a collagen-rich extracellular matrix. This review focuses on examples of fibrosis that occurs in lung, liver, kidney, skin, kidney, neural tissues and blood vessels and its link to the expression of perlecan in that particular organ system.


Biomaterials Science | 2014

Chemically diverse polymer microarrays and high throughput surface characterisation: a method for discovery of materials for stem cell culture

Adam D. Celiz; James G.W. Smith; Asha K. Patel; Robert Langer; Daniel G. Anderson; David A. Barrett; Lorraine E. Young; Martyn C. Davies; Chris Denning; Morgan R. Alexander

Chemically diverse polymer microarrays as a powerful screening tool for the discovery of new materials for a variety of applications.


Biomaterials Science | 2016

Identification of polymer surface adsorbed proteins implicated in pluripotent human embryonic stem cell expansion

Moamen Hammad; Wei Rao; James G.W. Smith; Daniel G. Anderson; Robert Langer; Lorraine E. Young; David A. Barrett; Martyn C. Davies; Chris Denning; Morgan R. Alexander


Regenerative Medicine | 2015

Scaling human pluripotent stem cell expansion and differentiation: are cell factories becoming a reality?

James G.W. Smith; Adam D. Celiz; Asha K. Patel; Robert D. Short; Morgan R. Alexander; Chris Denning

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Chris Denning

University of Nottingham

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Adam D. Celiz

University of Nottingham

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Asha K. Patel

University of Nottingham

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Daniel G. Anderson

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Robert Langer

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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