Lasantha Gunasekara
University of Calgary
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Featured researches published by Lasantha Gunasekara.
American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2010
Dan Vockeroth; Lasantha Gunasekara; Matthias Amrein; Fred Possmayer; James F. Lewis; Ruud A. W. Veldhuizen
Mechanical ventilation may lead to an impairment of the endogenous surfactant system, which is one of the mechanisms by which this intervention contributes to the progression of acute lung injury. The most extensively studied mechanism of surfactant dysfunction is serum protein inhibition. However, recent studies indicate that hydrophobic components of surfactant may also contribute. It was hypothesized that elevated levels of cholesterol significantly contribute to surfactant dysfunction in ventilation-induced lung injury. Sprague-Dawley rats (n = 30) were randomized to either high-tidal volume or low-tidal volume ventilation and monitored for 2 h. Subsequently, the lungs were lavaged, surfactant was isolated, and the biophysical properties of this isolated surfactant were analyzed on a captive bubble surfactometer with and without the removal of cholesterol using methyl-beta-cyclodextrin. The results showed lower oxygenation values in the high-tidal volume group during the last 30 min of ventilation compared with the low-tidal volume group. Surfactant obtained from the high-tidal volume animals had a significant impairment in function compared with material from the low-tidal volume group. Removal of cholesterol from the high-tidal volume group improved the ability of the surfactant to reduce the surface tension to low values. Subsequent reconstitution of high-cholesterol values led to an impairment in surface activity. It is concluded that increased levels of cholesterol associated with endogenous surfactant represent a major contributor to the inhibition of surfactant function in ventilation-induced lung injury.
Journal of Cystic Fibrosis | 2017
Lasantha Gunasekara; Mustafa Al-Saiedy; Francis H. Y. Green; Ryan Pratt; Candice Bjornson; Ailian Yang; W. Michael Schoel; Ian Mitchell; Mary Brindle; Mark Montgomery; Elizabeth Keys; John Dennis; Grishma Shrestha; Matthias Amrein
BACKGROUND Airway surfactant is impaired in cystic fibrosis (CF) and associated with declines in pulmonary function. We hypothesized that surfactant dysfunction in CF is due to an excess of cholesterol with an interaction with oxidation. METHODS Surfactant was extracted from bronchial lavage fluid from children with CF and surface tension, and lipid content, inflammatory cells and microbial flora were determined. Dysfunctional surfactant samples were re-tested with a lipid-sequestering agent, methyl-β-cyclodextrin (MβCD). RESULTS CF surfactant samples were unable to sustain a normal low surface tension. MβCD restored surfactant function in a majority of samples.Mechanistic studies showed that the dysfunction was due to a combination of elevated cholesterol and an interaction with oxidized phospholipids and their pro-inflammatory hydrolysis products. CONCLUSION We confirm that CF patients have impaired airway surfactant function which could be restored with MβCD. These findings have implications for improving lung function and mitigating inflammation in patients with CF.
Military Medicine | 2018
Mustafa Al-Saiedy; Lasantha Gunasekara; Francis H. Y. Green; Ryan Pratt; Andrea Chiu; Ailian Yang; John Dennis; Cora Pieron; Candice Bjornson; Brent W. Winston; Matthias Amrein
Objectives Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is caused by many factors including inhalation of toxicants, acute barotrauma, acid aspiration, and burns. Surfactant function is impaired in ARDS and acute airway injury resulting in high surface tension with alveolar and small airway collapse, edema, hypoxemia, and death. In this study, we explore the mechanisms whereby surfactant becomes dysfunctional in ARDS and bronchiolitis and its repair with a cyclodextrin drug that sequesters cholesterol. Methods We used in vitro model systems, a mouse model of ARDS, and samples from patients with acute bronchiolitis. Surface tension was measured by captive bubble surfactometry. Results Patient samples showed severe surfactant inhibition even in the absence of elevated cholesterol levels. Surfactant was also impaired in ARDS mice where the cholesterol to phospholipid ratio (W/W%) was increased. Methyl-β-cyclodextrin (MβCD) restored surfactant function to normal in both human and animal samples. Model studies showed that the inhibition of surfactant was due to both elevated cholesterol and an interaction between cholesterol and oxidized phospholipids. MβCD was also shown to have anti-inflammatory effects. Conclusions Inhaled cyclodextrins have potential for the treatment of ARDS. They could be delivered in a portable device carried in combat and used following exposure to toxic gases and fumes or shock secondary to hemorrhage and burns.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2005
Lasantha Gunasekara; Samuel Schürch; W. Michael Schoel; Kaushik Nag; Zoya Leonenko; Michael Haufs; Matthias Amrein
Biophysical Journal | 2007
Zoya Leonenko; Simardeep Gill; Svetlana Baoukina; Luca Monticelli; Jana Doehner; Lasantha Gunasekara; Florian Felderer; Mathias Rodenstein; Lukas M. Eng; Matthias Amrein
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2008
Lasantha Gunasekara; W. Michael Schoel; Samuel Schürch; Matthias Amrein
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2010
Lasantha Gunasekara; Ryan Pratt; W. Michael Schoel; Sherrie Gosche; Elmar J. Prenner; Matthias Amrein
European Respiratory Journal | 2013
Ryan Pratt; Mustafa Al-Saiedy; Lasantha Gunasekara; Nikolay Todorov; Matthias Amrein
Archive | 2009
Matthias Amrein; Lasantha Gunasekara
Archive | 2017
Matthias Amrein; Lasantha Gunasekara; Ryan Pratt