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Dive into the research topics where Maryam Tabrizian is active.

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Featured researches published by Maryam Tabrizian.


Biotechnology Letters | 2009

Delivery of recombinant bone morphogenetic proteins for bone regeneration and repair. Part A: Current challenges in BMP delivery

Ziyad S. Haidar; Reggie C. Hamdy; Maryam Tabrizian

Recombinant human bone morphogenetic proteins (rhBMPs) have been extensively investigated for developing therapeutic strategies aimed at the restoration and treatment of orthopaedic as well as craniofacial conditions. In this first part of the review, we discuss the rationale for the necessary use of carrier systems to deliver rhBMP-2 and rhBMP-7 to sites of bone tissue regeneration and repair. General requirements for growth factor delivery systems emphasizing the distinction between localized and release-controlled delivery strategies are presented highlighting the current limitations in the development of an effective rhBMP delivery system applicable in clinical bone tissue engineering.


Journal of Biomaterials Science-polymer Edition | 2005

Effect of experimental parameters on the formation of alginate–chitosan nanoparticles and evaluation of their potential application as DNA carrier

Kimberly L. Douglas; Maryam Tabrizian

This study introduces a new procedure to prepare alginate–chitosan nanoparticles and examines several experimental parameters in relation to their formation and characteristics. Using DLS and TEM analysis, nanoparticle formation was shown to be predominantly affected by the ratio of alginate to chitosan, the molecular weight of the biopolymers and the solution pH. We report a method that results in spherical particles with mean diameters ranging from 323 nm to 1.6 μm, depending on the preparation conditions. The smallest particles were formed using lower molecular weight polymers with pH between 5.0 and 5.6 and having an alginate/chitosan weight ratio of 1 : 1.5. We have shown that DNA can be loaded with 60% association efficiency. Our system demonstrates suitable size, loading and release characteristics for application in drug- and gene-delivery systems.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2016

Magneto-aerotactic bacteria deliver drug-containing nanoliposomes to tumour hypoxic regions

Ouajdi Felfoul; Mahmood Mohammadi; Samira Taherkhani; Dominic de Lanauze; Yong Zhong Xu; Dumitru Loghin; Sherief Essa; Sylwia Jancik; Daniel Houle; Michel Lafleur; Louis Gaboury; Maryam Tabrizian; Neila Kaou; Michael Atkin; Té Vuong; Gerald Batist; Nicole Beauchemin; Danuta Radzioch; Sylvain Martel

Oxygen depleted hypoxic regions in the tumour are generally resistant to therapies1. Although nanocarriers have been used to deliver drugs, the targeting ratios have been very low. Here, we show that the magneto-aerotactic migration behaviour2 of magnetotactic bacteria3, Magnetococcus marinus strain MC-14, can be used to transport drug-loaded nanoliposomes into hypoxic regions of the tumour. In their natural environment, MC-1 cells, each containing a chain of magnetic iron-oxide nanocrystals5, tend to swim along local magnetic field lines and towards low oxygen concentrations6 based on a two-state aerotactic sensing system2. We show that when MC-1 cells bearing covalently bound drug-containing nanoliposomes were injected near the tumour in SCID Beige mice and magnetically guided, up to 55% of MC-1 cells penetrated into hypoxic regions of HCT116 colorectal xenografts. Approximately 70 drug-loaded nanoliposomes were attached to each MC-1 cell. Our results suggest that harnessing swarms of microorganisms exhibiting magneto-aerotactic behaviour can significantly improve the therapeutic index of various nanocarriers in tumour hypoxic regions.


Biotechnology Letters | 2009

Delivery of recombinant bone morphogenetic proteins for bone regeneration and repair. Part B: Delivery systems for BMPs in orthopaedic and craniofacial tissue engineering.

Ziyad S. Haidar; Reggie C. Hamdy; Maryam Tabrizian

Localized and release-controlled delivery systems for the sustained expression of the biologic potency of rhBMPs are essential. A substantial number of biomaterials have been investigated thus far. Most fail after implantation or administration mainly due to either being too soft, difficult to control and/or stabilize mechanically. In the second part of this review, we review a representative selection of rhBMP-2 and rhBMP-7 carrier materials and delivery systems ranging from simple nano/microparticles to complex 3-D scaffolds in sites of orthopaedic and craniofacial bone regeneration and repair.


Biomaterials | 2002

Nitinol versus stainless steel stents: acute thrombogenicity study in an ex vivo porcine model.

Benjamin Thierry; Yahye Merhi; L. Bilodeau; C. Trépanier; Maryam Tabrizian

Acute and subacute stents thrombosis along with thrombus mediating neointimal proliferation within the stent struts remain major concerns in coronary stenting. Up to date, there is an obvious lack of data on the thrombogenicity of stent materials in physiological conditions. This study was performed to compare the relative thrombogenicity of nitinol versus stainless steel stents. Nitinol stents were laser cut to reproduce the exact geometry of the stainless steel Palmaz stents and tested in an ex vivo AV shunt porcine model under controlled conditions. Nitinol stents presented only small amounts of white and/or red thrombus principally located at the strut intersections while Palmaz stents clearly exhibited more thrombus. As a result, 125I-fibrin(ogen) adsorption and (111)I-platelets adhesion were significantly lower on nitinol than on stainless steel devices (36%, p = 0.03 for fibrin(ogen) and 63%, p = 0.01 for platelet). These results were confirmed by scanning electron observations showing different thrombus morphologies for nitinol and stainless steel. Along with the unique mechanical properties of nitinol, its promising haemocompatibility demonstrated in our study may promote their increasing use for both peripheral and coronary revascularization procedures.


Biosensors and Bioelectronics | 2009

Biochip functionalization using electrowetting-on-dielectric digital microfluidics for surface plasmon resonance imaging detection of DNA hybridization

Lidija Malic; Teodor Veres; Maryam Tabrizian

This work reports on a dynamically configurable micro-array surface plasmon resonance biochip platform. The platform comprises a digital electrowetting-on-dielectric (EWOD) microfluidic device tailored to surface plasmon resonance imaging (SPRi). We demonstrate its application for simultaneous immobilization of different DNA probes at the designated detection sites on-chip from sub-microL volume solutions in combination with multichannel label-free real-time detection of subsequent hybridization reactions. Successful on-chip DNA probe dilution and immobilization is also demonstrated using SPRi hybridization detection. Furthermore, active control of the immobilized probe density and orientation is achieved under an applied potential using the electric interface of the EWOD device. For low probe densities, under negative applied potential, the DNA hybridization efficiency is enhanced compared to passive probe immobilization, yielding a two-fold SPR signal increase within only 8min of hybridization. EWOD microfluidic platform coupled with SPRi promises to dramatically increase the speed of detection and quantification of biomolecular interactions while reducing reagent consumption. The proposed system would enable the development of high-throughput, rapid and ultrasensitive detection of biomolecules beyond DNA microarray applications.


Expert Opinion on Drug Delivery | 2010

Advances in using chitosan-based nanoparticles for in vitro and in vivo drug and gene delivery

Nicolas Duceppe; Maryam Tabrizian

Importance of the field: This review aims to provide an overview of state-of-the-art chitosan-based nanosized carriers for the delivery of therapeutic agents. Chitosan nanocarriers are smart delivery systems owing to the possibility of their property alterations with various approaches, which would confer them with the possibility of spatiotemporal delivery features. Areas covered in this review: The focus of this review is principally on those aspects that have not often been addressed in other reviews. These include the influence of physicochemical properties of chitosan on delivery mechanisms and chitosan modification with a variety of ligand moieties specific for cell surface receptors to increase recognition and uptake of nanocarriers into cells through receptor-mediated endocytosis. Multiple examples that demonstrate the advantages of chitosan-based nanocarriers over other delivery systems of therapeutic agents are highlighted. Particular emphasis is given to the alteration of material properties by functionalization or combination with other polymers for their specific applications. Finally, structural and experimental parameters influencing transfection efficiency of chitosan-based nanocarriers are presented for both in vitro and in vivo gene delivery. What the reader will gain: The readers will acquire knowledge of parameters influencing the properties of the chitosan-based nanocarriers for delivery of therapeutic agents (genetic material or drugs) in vitro and in vivo. They will get a better idea of the strategies to be adapted to tune the characteristics of chitosan and chitosan derivatives for specific delivery applications. Take home message: Chitosan is prone to chemical and physical modifications, and is very responsive to environmental stimuli such as temperature and pH. These features make chitosan a smart material with great potential for developing multifunctional nanocarrier systems to deliver large varieties of therapeutic agents administrated in multiple ways with reduced side effects.


Biomaterials | 2010

The effect of extracellular matrix components on the preservation of human islet function in vitro

Jamal Daoud; Maria Petropavlovskaia; Lawrence Rosenberg; Maryam Tabrizian

Human islet isolation leads to the loss of the ECM basement membrane which contributes to eventual apoptosis in vitro. The reestablishment of this environment is vital in understanding the mechanism of islet interaction with its surroundings in order to arrive at conditions favourable to islet culture in vitro. In this study, we investigated the effects of the main ECM components collagen I and IV, fibronectin, and laminin on human islet adhesion, survival, and functionality. Results have provided insight into integrin-mediated effects and behaviour. Collagen I/IV and fibronectin induced adhesion, while fibronectin was the only ECM protein capable of maintaining islet structural integrity and insulin content distribution. Furthermore, islet phenotype was eventually lost, but insulin gene expression was highest in islets cultured on collagen I and IV. However, insulin release was highest on fibronectin, along with a decrease in SUR1 expression, while glucose metabolism, along with GLUT2 and GCK expression, was highest on collagen I and IV surfaces. These findings provide a basis for the future establishment of a modified three-dimensional construct for the culture of human pancreatic islets in vitro.


Lab on a Chip | 2006

Enzymatically-generated fluorescent detection in micro-channels with internal magnetic mixing for the development of parallel microfluidic ELISA

Marc Herrmann; Teodor Veres; Maryam Tabrizian

The Enzyme-Linked Immuno-Sorbent Assay, or ELISA, is commonly utilized to quantify small concentrations of specific proteins for a large variety of purposes, ranging from medical diagnosis to environmental analysis and food safety. However, this technique requires large volumes of costly reagents and long incubation periods. The use of microfluidics permits one to specifically address these drawbacks by decreasing both the volume and the distance of diffusion inside the micro-channels. Existing microfluidic systems are limited by the necessary control of extremely low flow rates to provide sufficient time for the molecules to interact with each other by diffusion only. In this paper, we describe a new microfluidic design for the realization of parallel ELISA in stop-flow conditions. Magnetic beads were used both as a solid phase to support the formation of the reactive immune complex and to achieve a magnetic mixing inside the channels. In order to test the detection procedure, the formation of the immune complex was performed off-chip before the reactive beads were injected into the reaction chamber. Anti-streptavidin antibodies were quantified with low picomolar sensitivity (0.1-6.7 pM), a linear range of 2 orders of magnitude and good reproducibility. This work represents the first step toward a new platform for simple, highly effective and parallel microfluidic ELISA.


Biomaterials | 2009

Effect of genipin cross-linking on the cellular adhesion properties of layer-by-layer assembled polyelectrolyte films

Anna L. Hillberg; Christina Holmes; Maryam Tabrizian

Use of polyelectrolyte multi-layers as biomaterials for cell attachment has been limited due to their gel-like characteristics. Herein, we attempt to improve the cellular adhesion properties of multi-layer films, reduce their gel-like nature and rigidify them through chemical cross-linking with genipin; a natural and non-cytotoxic compound. Chitosan (CH), hyaluronan (HA) and alginate (Alg) were used to assemble [CH-HA]n CH and [CH-Alg]n CH films, and the effects of genipin cross-linking on the cell adhesion properties of these multi-layers were investigated. Atomic force microscopy (AFM) confirmed that cross-linking affected each of the films differently. Quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation (QCM-D) revealed that [CH-HA]10 CH films were very viscoelastic, with thicknesses in the range 350-450 nm, while [CH-Alg]10 CH films only grew to thicknesses of approximately 100 nm. These differences were a result of the different growth regimes of these two polyelectrolyte systems. Cell adhesion studies using MC3T3 pre-osteoblasts and rat fibroblastic skin cells, carried out on both films demonstrated vast differences in cell adhesion. [CH-HA]n CH cross-linked films proved to be highly non-adhesive for pre-osteoblasts and fibroblastic skin cells. Conversely, cross-linking [CH-Alg]n CH films was shown to dramatically improve pre-osteoblast and rat fibroblastic skin cell adhesion, especially for high bi-layer numbers and using higher concentrations of cross-linker.

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Reggie C. Hamdy

Shriners Hospitals for Children

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Teodor Veres

National Research Council

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Yahye Merhi

Montreal Heart Institute

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Alain Petit

Jewish General Hospital

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