Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Michael R. Doran is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Michael R. Doran.


Cell Transplantation | 2010

Enhanced chondrogenic differentiation of human bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells in low oxygen environment micropellet cultures

Brandon D. Markway; Guak-Kim Tan; Gary Brooke; James E. Hudson; Justin J. Cooper-White; Michael R. Doran

Chondrogenesis of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) is typically induced when they are condensed into a single aggregate and exposed to transforming growth factor-β (TGF-β). Hypoxia, like aggregation and TGF-β delivery, may be crucial for complete chondrogenesis. However, the pellet dimensions and associated self-induced oxygen gradients of current chondrogenic methods may limit the effectiveness of in vitro differentiation and subsequent therapeutic uses. Here we describe the use of embryoid body-forming technology to produce microscopic aggregates of human bone marrow MSCs (BM-MSCs) for chondrogenesis. The use of micropellets reduces the formation of gradients within the aggregates, resulting in a more homogeneous and controlled microenvironment. These micropellet cultures (~170 cells/micropellet) as well as conventional pellet cultures (~2 × 105 cells/pellet) were chondrogenically induced under 20% and 2% oxygen environments for 14 days. Compared to conventional pellets under both environments, micropellets differentiated under 2% O2 showed significantly increased sulfated glycosaminoglycan (sGAG) production and more homogeneous distribution of proteoglycans and collagen II. Aggrecan and collagen II gene expressions were increased in pellet cultures differentiated under 2% O2 relative to 20% O2 pellets but 2% O2 micropellets showed even greater increases in these genes, as well as increased SOX9. These results suggest a more advanced stage of chondrogenesis in the micropellets accompanied by more homogeneous differentiation. Thus, we present a new method for enhancing MSC chondrogenesis that reveals a unique relationship between oxygen tension and aggregate size. The inherent advantages of chondrogenic micropellets over a single macroscopic aggregate should allow for easy integration with a variety of cartilage engineering strategies.


Biomaterials | 2010

Long term culture of human embryonic stem cells on recombinant vitronectin in ascorbate free media.

Andrew B.J. Prowse; Michael R. Doran; Justin J. Cooper-White; Fenny Chong; Trent P. Munro; Jane Fitzpatrick; Tung-Liang Chung; David N. Haylock; Peter P. Gray; Ernst J. Wolvetang

Human embryonic stem cells (hESC) are expected to provide revolutionary therapeutic applications and drug discovery technologies. In order for this to be achieved a reproducible, defined animal component free culture system is required for the scale-up production of undifferentiated hESC. In this work we have investigated the applicability of a recombinantly produced domain of human vitronectin as an extracellular matrix alternative to the common standards Geltrex or Matrigel. In addition we have validated an ascorbate free media capable of supporting CD30(low) populations of hESC through a multi-factorial analysis of bFGF and Activin A. The recombinant vitronectin domain combined with the ascorbate free media were capable of supporting 3 cell lines, MEL1, MEL2 and hES3 for 10 or more passages while maintaining hESC pluripotency markers and differentiation capacity. The culture method outlined here provides a platform for future investigation into growth factor and extracellular matrix effects on hESC maintenance prior to bioreactor scale-up.


Biotechnology and Bioengineering | 2012

Closed system isolation and scalable expansion of human placental mesenchymal stem cells.

Nicholas E. Timmins; M. Kiel; M. Günther; Celena Heazlewood; Michael R. Doran; Gary Brooke; Kerry Atkinson

Mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) are emerging as a leading cellular therapy for a number of diseases. However, for such treatments to become available as a routine therapeutic option, efficient and cost‐effective means for industrial manufacture of MSC are required. At present, clinical grade MSC are manufactured through a process of manual cell culture in specialized cGMP facilities. This process is open, extremely labor intensive, costly, and impractical for anything more than a small number of patients. While it has been shown that MSC can be cultivated in stirred bioreactor systems using microcarriers, providing a route to process scale‐up, the degree of numerical expansion achieved has generally been limited. Furthermore, little attention has been given to the issue of primary cell isolation from complex tissues such as placenta. In this article we describe the initial development of a closed process for bulk isolation of MSC from human placenta, and subsequent cultivation on microcarriers in scalable single‐use bioreactor systems. Based on our initial data, we estimate that a single placenta may be sufficient to produce over 7,000 doses of therapeutic MSC using a large‐scale process. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2012; 109:1817–1826.


Lab on a Chip | 2009

A novel multishear microdevice for studying cell mechanics

Lien Chau; Michael R. Doran; Justin J. Cooper-White

Shear stresses are known to influence the morphology, and even the fate, of many cell types, including endothelial, smooth muscle, and osteoblast cells. This paper describes a novel shear device for the study of cell mechanics. Unlike all other published shear devices, such as parallel-plate flow chambers, where a single shear stress is evaluated for a single input flow rate, the described device enables the simultaneous evaluation of 10 different shear stresses ranging over two orders of magnitude (0.7-130 dynes cm(-2), 0.07-13 Pa). Human umblical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) were exposed to the shear stress profiles provided by the device over a 20 h perfusion period, and the secretion level of von Willebrand factor (vWF) was investigated. Confirming previous studies, increasing shear resulted in increased vWF secretion. Furthermore, changes in cell morphology, including cell and nuclear size (area) and perimeter with shear, were analysed. HUVECs under shear stresses ranging from 1-3 dynes cm(-2) (0.1-0.3 Pa) showed similar vWF content, cell and nuclear size and perimeter to static cultures, while cells under shear stresses above 5 dynes cm(-2) (0.5 Pa) showed significantly higher vWF secretion and were at least 30% smaller in cell size. We also note that cells exposed to perfusion rates resulting in a shear stress of 0.7 dynes cm(-2) (0.07 Pa) showed significantly lower levels of vWF and were 35% smaller in size than those under static conditions. Overall, the results confirm the significant utility of this device to rapidly screen cellular responses to simultaneously imposed physiologically relevant ranges of shear stress.


Biotechnology Letters | 2012

Neural differentiation of mouse embryonic stem cells on conductive nanofiber scaffolds

Mahboubeh Kabiri; Masoud Soleimani; Iman Shabani; Kathryn Futrega; Naser Ghaemi; Hana Hanaee Ahvaz; Elahe Elahi; Michael R. Doran

Nerve tissue engineering requires suitable precursor cells as well as the necessary biochemical and physical cues to guide neurite extension and tissue development. An ideal scaffold for neural regeneration would be both fibrous and electrically conductive. We have contrasted the growth and neural differentiation of mouse embryonic stem cells on three different aligned nanofiber scaffolds composed of poly l-lactic acid supplemented with either single- or multi-walled carbon-nanotubes. The addition of the nanotubes conferred conductivity to the nanofibers and promoted mESC neural differentiation as evidenced by an increased mature neuronal markers expression. We propose that the conductive scaffold could be a useful tool for the generation of neural tissue mimics in vitro and potentially as a scaffold for the repair of neural defects in vivo.


Biomaterials | 2009

Nanoscale presentation of cell adhesive molecules via block copolymer self-assembly.

Peter A. George; Michael R. Doran; Tristan I. Croll; Trent P. Munro; Justin J. Cooper-White

Precise control over the nanoscale presentation of adhesion molecules and other biological factors represents a new frontier for biomaterials science. Recently, the control of integrin spacing and cellular shape has been shown to affect fundamental biological processes, such as differentiation and apoptosis. Here, we present the self-assembly of maleimide functionalised polystyrene-block-poly (ethylene oxide) copolymers as a simple, yet highly precise method for controlling the position of cellular adhesion molecules. By manipulating the phase separation of the functional PS-PEO block copolymer used in this study, via a simple blending technique, we alter the nanoscale (on PEO domains of 8-14 nm in size) presentation of the adhesion peptide, GRGDS, decreasing lateral spacing from 62 nm to 44 nm and increasing the number density from approximately 450 to approximately 900 islands per microm2. The results indicate that the spreading of NIH-3T3 fibroblasts increases as the spacing between domains of RGD binding peptides decreases. Further, the same functional PS-PEO surfaces have been utilised to immobilise, via a zinc chelating peptide sequence, poly-histidine tagged proteins and extracellular matrix (ECM) fragments. This method is seen as an ideal platform for investigations into the role of spatial arrangements of cell adhesion molecules and ECM molecules on cell function and, in particular, control of cell phenotype.


PLOS ONE | 2013

The Interplay between Chondrocyte Redifferentiation Pellet Size and Oxygen Concentration

Betul Kul Babur; Parisa Ghanavi; Peter A. Levett; William B. Lott; Travis J. Klein; Justin J. Cooper-White; Ross Crawford; Michael R. Doran

Chondrocytes dedifferentiate during ex vivo expansion on 2-dimensional surfaces. Aggregation of the expanded cells into 3-dimensional pellets, in the presence of induction factors, facilitates their redifferentiation and restoration of the chondrogenic phenotype. Typically 1×105–5×105 chondrocytes are aggregated, resulting in “macro” pellets having diameters ranging from 1–2 mm. These macropellets are commonly used to study redifferentiation, and recently macropellets of autologous chondrocytes have been implanted directly into articular cartilage defects to facilitate their repair. However, diffusion of metabolites over the 1–2 mm pellet length-scales is inefficient, resulting in radial tissue heterogeneity. Herein we demonstrate that the aggregation of 2×105 human chondrocytes into micropellets of 166 cells each, rather than into larger single macropellets, enhances chondrogenic redifferentiation. In this study, we describe the development of a cost effective fabrication strategy to manufacture a microwell surface for the large-scale production of micropellets. The thousands of micropellets were manufactured using the microwell platform, which is an array of 360×360 µm microwells cast into polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS), that has been surface modified with an electrostatic multilayer of hyaluronic acid and chitosan to enhance micropellet formation. Such surface modification was essential to prevent chondrocyte spreading on the PDMS. Sulfated glycosaminoglycan (sGAG) production and collagen II gene expression in chondrocyte micropellets increased significantly relative to macropellet controls, and redifferentiation was enhanced in both macro and micropellets with the provision of a hypoxic atmosphere (2% O2). Once micropellet formation had been optimized, we demonstrated that micropellets could be assembled into larger cartilage tissues. Our results indicate that micropellet amalgamation efficiency is inversely related to the time cultured as discreet microtissues. In summary, we describe a micropellet production platform that represents an efficient tool for studying chondrocyte redifferentiation and demonstrate that the micropellets could be assembled into larger tissues, potentially useful in cartilage defect repair.


PLOS ONE | 2014

3D Cultures of Prostate Cancer Cells Cultured in a Novel High-Throughput Culture Platform Are More Resistant to Chemotherapeutics Compared to Cells Cultured in Monolayer

Karen F. Chambers; Eman Mohamed Othman Mosaad; Pamela J. Russell; Judith A. Clements; Michael R. Doran

Despite monolayer cultures being widely used for cancer drug development and testing, 2D cultures tend to be hypersensitive to chemotherapy and are relatively poor predictors of whether a drug will provide clinical benefit. Whilst generally more complicated, three dimensional (3D) culture systems often better recapitulate true cancer architecture and provide a more accurate drug response. As a step towards making 3D cancer cultures more accessible, we have developed a microwell platform and surface modification protocol to enable high throughput manufacture of 3D cancer aggregates. Herein we use this novel system to characterize prostate cancer cell microaggregates, including growth kinetics and drug sensitivity. Our results indicate that prostate cancer cells are viable in this system, however some non-cancerous prostate cell lines are not. This system allows us to consistently control for the presence or absence of an apoptotic core in the 3D cancer microaggregates. Similar to tumor tissues, the 3D microaggregates display poor polarity. Critically the response of 3D microaggregates to the chemotherapeutic drug, docetaxel, is more consistent with in vivo results than the equivalent 2D controls. Cumulatively, our results demonstrate that these prostate cancer microaggregates better recapitulate the morphology of prostate tumors compared to 2D and can be used for high-throughput drug testing.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2012

3D mesenchymal stem/stromal cell osteogenesis and autocrine signalling.

Mahboubeh Kabiri; Betul Kul; William B. Lott; Kathryn Futrega; Parisa Ghanavi; Zee Upton; Michael R. Doran

Mesenchymal stem/stromal cells (MSC) are rapidly becoming a leading candidate for use in tissue regeneration, with first generation of therapies being approved for use in orthopaedic repair applications. Capturing the full potential of MSC will likely require the development of novel in vitro culture techniques and devices. Herein we describe the development of a straightforward surface modification of an existing commercial product to enable the efficient study of three dimensional (3D) human bone marrow-derived MSC osteogenic differentiation. Hundreds of 3D microaggregates, of either 42 or 168 cells each, were cultured in osteogenic induction medium and their differentiation was compared with that occurring in traditional two dimensional (2D) monolayer cultures. Osteogenic gene expression and matrix composition was significantly enhanced in the 3D microaggregate cultures. Additionally, BMP-2 gene expression was significantly up-regulated in 3D cultures at day 3 and 7 by approximately 25- and 30-fold, respectively. The difference in BMP-2 gene expression between 2D and 3D cultures was negligible in the more mature day 14 osteogenic cultures. These data support the notion that BMP-2 autocrine signalling is up-regulated in 3D MSC cultures, enhancing osteogenic differentiation. This study provides both mechanistic insight into MSC differentiation, as well as a platform for the efficient generation of microtissue units for further investigation or use in tissue engineering applications.


Lab on a Chip | 2009

A cell migration device that maintains a defined surface with no cellular damage during wound edge generation.

Michael R. Doran; Richard J. Mills; Anthony Parker; Kerry A. Landman; Justin J. Cooper-White

Studying the rate of cell migration provides insight into fundamental cell biology as well as a tool to assess the functionality of synthetic surfaces and soluble environments used in tissue engineering. The traditional tools used to study cell migration include the fence and wound healing assays. In this paper we describe the development of a microchannel based device for the study of cell migration on defined surfaces. We demonstrate that this device provides a superior tool, relative to the previously mentioned assays, for assessing the propagation rate of cell wave fronts. The significant advantage provided by this technology is the ability to maintain a virgin surface prior to the commencement of the cell migration assay. Here, the device is used to assess rates of mouse fibroblasts (NIH 3T3) and human osteosarcoma (SaOS2) cell migration on surfaces functionalized with various extracellular matrix proteins as a demonstration that confining cell migration within a microchannel produces consistent and robust data. The device design enables rapid and simplistic assessment of multiple repeats on a single chip, where surfaces have not been previously exposed to cells or cellular secretions.

Collaboration


Dive into the Michael R. Doran's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

William B. Lott

Queensland University of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kathryn Futrega

Queensland University of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kerry Atkinson

University of Queensland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gary Brooke

University of Queensland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Parisa Ghanavi

Queensland University of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Eman Mohamed Othman Mosaad

Queensland University of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Judith A. Clements

Queensland University of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Betul Kul Babur

Queensland University of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Michael Osiecki

Queensland University of Technology

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge