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Featured researches published by Jianchuan Gao.


Circulation | 2002

Macrophage Depletion by Clodronate-Containing Liposomes Reduces Neointimal Formation After Balloon Injury in Rats and Rabbits

Haim D. Danenberg; Ilia Fishbein; Jianchuan Gao; Jukka Mönkkönen; Reuven Reich; Irith Gati; Evgeny Moerman; Gershon Golomb

Background—Inflammation is critical to vascular repair after mechanical injury. Excessive inflammation enhances neointimal formation and restenosis. We examined whether transient systemic inactivation of macrophages at the time of vascular intervention could attenuate the degree of expected restenosis. Methods and Results—Liposomal clodronate (LC) inhibited the growth of cultured macrophages but had no effect on endothelial or smooth muscle cells and suppressed neointimal hyperplasia in hypercholesterolemic rabbits and rats after intravenous administration of LC, with no adverse effects. LC treatment reduced the number of blood monocytes and decreased macrophage infiltration in the injured arteries as well as smooth muscle cell proliferation, interleukin-1&bgr; transcription, and production and matrix metalloproteinase-2 activity. Conclusions—Macrophages play a pivotal role in vascular repair after mechanical arterial injury. Systemic inactivation and depletion of monocytes and macrophages by LC reduce neointimal hyperplasia and restenosis.


Circulation | 2003

Liposomal Alendronate Inhibits Systemic Innate Immunity and Reduces In-Stent Neointimal Hyperplasia in Rabbits

Haim D. Danenberg; Gershon Golomb; Adam Groothuis; Jianchuan Gao; Hila Epstein; Rajesh V. Swaminathan; Philip Seifert; Elazer R. Edelman

Background—Innate immunity is of major importance in vascular repair. The present study evaluated whether systemic and transient depletion of monocytes and macrophages with liposome-encapsulated bisphosphonates inhibits experimental in-stent neointimal formation. Methods and Results—Rabbits fed on a hypercholesterolemic diet underwent bilateral iliac artery balloon denudation and stent deployment. Liposomal alendronate (3 or 6 mg/kg) was given concurrently with stenting. Monocyte counts were reduced by >90% 24 to 48 hours after a single injection of liposomal alendronate, returning to basal levels at 6 days. This treatment significantly reduced intimal area at 28 days, from 3.88±0.93 to 2.08±0.58 and 2.16±0.62 mm2. Lumen area was increased from 2.87±0.44 to 3.57±0.65 and 3.45±0.58 mm2, and arterial stenosis was reduced from 58±11% to 37±8% and 38±7% in controls, rabbits treated with 3 mg/kg, and rabbits treated with 6 mg/kg, respectively (mean±SD, n=8 rabbits/group, P <0.01 for all 3 parameters). No drug-related adverse effects were observed. Reduction in neointimal formation was associated with reduced arterial macrophage infiltration and proliferation at 6 days and with an equal reduction in intimal macrophage and smooth muscle cell content at 28 days after injury. Conversely, drug regimens ineffective in reducing monocyte levels did not inhibit neointimal formation. Conclusions—Systemic transient depletion of monocytes and macrophages, by a single liposomal bisphosphonates injection concurrent with injury, reduces in-stent neointimal formation and arterial stenosis in hypercholesterolemic rabbits.


Journal of Cardiovascular Pharmacology | 2003

Systemic depletion of macrophages by liposomal bisphosphonates reduces neointimal formation following balloon-injury in the rat carotid artery.

Haim D. Danenberg; Ilia Fishbein; Hila Epstein; Johannes Waltenberger; Evgeny Moerman; Jukka Mönkkönen; Jianchuan Gao; Irith Gathi; Reuven Reichi; Gershon Golomb

Objectives Macrophage depletion by liposomal clodronate inhibits neointimal formation after balloon-injury. The present study examined bisphosphonates (BPs) potency-effect relationship and the role of systemic versus local monocytes in vascular repair. Methods and Results Liposomal preparations of clodronate, pamidronate, alendronate, and ISA-13-1 inhibited RAW-264 macrophages growth in a dose-response manner. Administration to balloon-injured rats suppressed neointimal growth. Neointima to media ratio (N/M) at 14 days was reduced from 1.35 ± 0.22 (control) to 0.4 ± 0.1 and 0.9 ± 0.17 by liposomal alendronate (1.5 mg/kg, i.v.) and liposomal ISA-13-1 (15 mg/kg), respectively (n = 8–10, P < 0.05). Suppression of neointimal formation was preserved at 30 days. Subcutaneous administration of liposomal BP (LBP) was also effective in suppressing neointimal formation, while short local intraluminal application had no effect. Immunostaining for ED-1 and ED-2 revealed no resident macrophages in the arterial wall, and reduced macrophage infiltration in LBP-treated animals. Arterial PDGF-B chain and PDGF-&bgr; receptor activation were reduced in LBP-treated animals and up-regulation of the PDGF receptor was noted. Conclusions Systemic transient inactivation of monocytes and macrophages by LBPs reduced macrophage infiltration and neointimal formation in the rat carotid injury model. The findings demonstrate a BP potency-effect relationship, and highlight the role of circulating monocytes in vascular injury and repair.


Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences | 2009

Single and double emulsion manufacturing techniques of an amphiphilic drug in PLGA nanoparticles: formulations of mithramycin and bioactivity.

Einat Cohen-Sela; Shay Teitlboim; Michael Chorny; Nickolay Koroukhov; Haim D. Danenberg; Jianchuan Gao; Gershon Golomb

Formulation of hydrophilic compounds in nanoparticles is problematic due to their escape to the external aqueous phase. The certain amphiphilic nature of mithramycin, utilized clinically in cancer, makes its incorporation into nanoparticles an interesting challenge, elucidating the formulation factors of amphiphilics in nanoparticles. We hypothesized that mithramycin nanoparticles could provide more effective therapy of restenosis due to its antiproliferating and potential monocyte inhibition properties. The nanoprecipitation technique (designed for lipophilic compounds) was found preferable, with better encapsulation efficiency, than the emulsification solvent diffusion (ESD) technique (79.3 +/- 3.1% and 40.8 +/- 1.1%, respectively). The double emulsion solvent diffusion (DESD) method, designed for hydrophilic compounds, yielded similar encapsulation efficiency (80%). Nanoparticles size was, 110 +/- 36, 130 +/- 30, and 160 +/- 31 nm, ESD, nanoprecipitation, and DESD techniques, respectively. Mithramycin solution and in nanoparticles significantly inhibited RAW264 macrophages and smooth muscle cells in a dose-dependent relationship, and reduced the number of circulating monocytes in rabbits. However, no inhibition of restenosis was obtained in the rat carotid model following i.v. administration of mithramycin nanoparticles. It can be concluded that PLGA-based polymeric nanoparticles of mithramycin can be formulated by techniques suitable for lipophilic/hydrophilic compounds. The ineffectiveness in the rat restenosis model is probably due to the short depletion period of circulating monocytes and lack of arterial targeting.


Journal of Controlled Release | 2001

Local delivery of mithramycin restores vascular reactivity and inhibits neointimal formation in injured arteries and vascular grafts.

Ilia Fishbein; Ron Brauner; Michael Chorny; Jianchuan Gao; Xing Chen; Hillel Laks; Gershon Golomb

Arterial restenosis is responsible for the high failure rates of vascular reconstruction procedures. Local sustained drug delivery has shown promise in the prevention of restenosis. The drug release rate from mithramycin-loaded EVA matrices (0.1%) was evaluated, and their antirestenotic effect was studied in the rat carotid model and rabbit model of vascular grafts. The modulation of c-myc expression by mithramycin treatment was examined by immunohistochemistry in the rat carotid model. The proliferative response of injured rat arteries was studied by bromdeoxyuridine (BrdU) immunostaining. The impact of mithramycin treatment on vasomotor responses of the venous segments grafted into arterial circulation was studied ex vivo using vasoreactive compounds. Mithramycin was released exponentially from EVA matrices in PBS. Matrices co-formulated with PEG-4600 revealed enhanced release kinetics. The perivascular implantation of drug-loaded EVA-PEG matrices led to 50% reduction of neointimal formation, and reduced the c-myc expression and BrdU labeling in comparison to control implants. Decreased sensitivity of mithramycin-treated grafts to serotonin-induced vasoconstriction was observed. Local perivascular mithramycin treatment limits the functional alteration caused by the grafting of venous segments in high-pressure arterial environment, and potently inhibits stenosis secondary to grafting and angioplasty injury. The antirestenotic effect is associated with reduced c-myc expression and with subsequent decrease in SMC proliferation.


The Open Cardiovascular Medicine Journal | 2008

Predicting in vivo efficacy of potential restenosis therapies by cell culture studies: species-dependent susceptibility of vascular smooth muscle cells.

Hila Epstein; Laura Rabinovich; Shmuel Banai; Vicktoria Elazar; Jianchuan Gao; Michael Chorny; Haim D Danenebrg; Gershon Golomb

Although drug-eluting stents (DES) are successfully utilized for restenosis therapy, the development of local and systemic therapeutic means including nanoparticles (NP) continues. Lack of correlation between in vitro and in vivo studies is one of the major drawbacks in developing new drug delivery systems. The present study was designed to examine the applicability of the arterial explant outgrowth model, and of smooth muscle cells (SMC) cultures for prescreening of possible drugs. Elucidation of different species sensitivity (rat, rabbit, porcine and human) to diverse drugs (tyrphostins, heparin and bisphsophonates) and a delivery system (nanoparticles) could provide a valuable screening tool for further in vivo studies. The anticipated sensitivity ranking from the explant outgrowth model and SMC mitotic rates (porcine>rat>>rabbit>human) do not correlate with the observed relative sensitivity of those animals to antiproliferative therapy in restenosis models (rat≥rabbit>porcine>human). Similarly, the inhibitory profile of the various antirestenotic drugs in SMC cultures (rabbit>porcine>rat>>human) do not correlate with animal studies, the rabbit- and porcine-derived SMC being highly sensitive. The validity of in vitro culture studies for the screening of controlled release delivery systems such as nanoparticles is limited. It is suggested that prescreening studies of possible drug candidates for restenosis therapy should include both SMC cell cultures of rat and human, appropriately designed with a suitable serum.


Journal of Controlled Release | 2004

Delivery and expression of pDNA embedded in collagen matrices.

Hagit Cohen-Sacks; Victoria Elazar; Jianchuan Gao; Assaf Golomb; Hassan Adwan; Nikoly Korchov; Robert J. Levy; Martin R. Berger; Gershon Golomb


Biomaterials | 2005

Locally delivered nanoencapsulated tyrphostin (AGL-2043) reduces neointima formation in balloon-injured rat carotid and stented porcine coronary arteries

Shmuel Banai; Michael Chorny; S. David Gertz; Ilia Fishbein; Jianchuan Gao; Louise S. Perez; Galila Lazarovichi; Aviv Gazit; Alexander Levitzki; Gershon Golomb


Journal of Controlled Release | 2006

Alendronate-loaded nanoparticles deplete monocytes and attenuate restenosis.

Einat Cohen-Sela; Ohad Rosenzweig; Jianchuan Gao; Hila Epstein; Irith Gati; Reuven Reich; Haim D. Danenberg; Gershon Golomb


Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 2001

Formulation and Delivery Mode Affect Disposition and Activity of Tyrphostin-Loaded Nanoparticles in the Rat Carotid Model

Ilia Fishbein; Michael Chorny; Shmuel Banai; Alexander Levitzki; Haim D. Danenberg; Jianchuan Gao; Xing Chen; Evgeny Moerman; Irith Gati; Victoria Goldwasser; Gershon Golomb

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Gershon Golomb

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Haim D. Danenberg

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Hila Epstein

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Michael Chorny

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Irith Gati

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Shmuel Banai

Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center

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Ilia Fishbein

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Alexander Levitzki

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Einat Cohen-Sela

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Aviv Gazit

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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