Mihail Climov
Harvard University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Mihail Climov.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Vivek J. Srinivasan; Emiri T. Mandeville; Anil Can; Francesco Blasi; Mihail Climov; Ali Daneshmand; Jeong Hyun Lee; Esther Yu; Harsha Radhakrishnan; Eng H. Lo; Sava Sakadžić; Katharina Eikermann-Haerter; Cenk Ayata
Progress in experimental stroke and translational medicine could be accelerated by high-resolution in vivo imaging of disease progression in the mouse cortex. Here, we introduce optical microscopic methods that monitor brain injury progression using intrinsic optical scattering properties of cortical tissue. A multi-parametric Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT) platform for longitudinal imaging of ischemic stroke in mice, through thinned-skull, reinforced cranial window surgical preparations, is described. In the acute stages, the spatiotemporal interplay between hemodynamics and cell viability, a key determinant of pathogenesis, was imaged. In acute stroke, microscopic biomarkers for eventual infarction, including capillary non-perfusion, cerebral blood flow deficiency, altered cellular scattering, and impaired autoregulation of cerebral blood flow, were quantified and correlated with histology. Additionally, longitudinal microscopy revealed remodeling and flow recovery after one week of chronic stroke. Intrinsic scattering properties serve as reporters of acute cellular and vascular injury and recovery in experimental stroke. Multi-parametric OCT represents a robust in vivo imaging platform to comprehensively investigate these properties.
Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism | 2013
Jonghwan Lee; Harsha Radhakrishnan; Weicheng Wu; Ali Daneshmand; Mihail Climov; Cenk Ayata; David A. Boas
This paper describes a novel optical method for label-free quantitative imaging of cerebral blood flow (CBF) and intracellular motility (IM) in the rodent cerebral cortex. This method is based on a technique that integrates dynamic light scattering (DLS) and optical coherence tomography (OCT), named DLS–OCT. The technique measures both the axial and transverse velocities of CBF, whereas conventional Doppler OCT measures only the axial one. In addition, the technique produces a three-dimensional map of the diffusion coefficient quantifying nontranslational motions. In the DLS–OCT diffusion map, we observed high-diffusion spots, whose locations highly correspond to neuronal cell bodies and whose diffusion coefficient agreed with that of the motion of intracellular organelles reported in vitro in the literature. Therefore, the present method has enabled, for the first time to our knowledge, label-free imaging of the diffusion-like motion of intracellular organelles in vivo. As an example application, we used the method to monitor CBF and IM during a brief ischemic stroke, where we observed an induced persistent reduction in IM despite the recovery of CBF after stroke. This result supports that the IM measured in this study represent the cellular energy metabolism-related active motion of intracellular organelles rather than free diffusion of intracellular macromolecules.
Annals of Neurology | 2015
Katharina Eikermann-Haerter; Michal Arbel-Ornath; Nilufer Yalcin; Esther Yu; Kishore V. Kuchibhotla; Izumi Yuzawa; Eloise Hudry; Carli R. Willard; Mihail Climov; Fatmagul Keles; Arianna M. Belcher; Buse Sengul; Andrea Negro; Isaac A. Rosen; Andrea Arreguin; Michel D. Ferrari; Arn M. J. M. van den Maagdenberg; Brian J. Bacskai; Cenk Ayata
Migraine is among the most common and debilitating neurological conditions. Familial hemiplegic migraine type 1 (FHM1), a monogenic migraine subtype, is caused by gain‐of‐function of voltage‐gated CaV2.1 calcium channels. FHM1 mice carry human pathogenic mutations in the α1A subunit of CaV2.1 channels and are highly susceptible to cortical spreading depression (CSD), the electrophysiologic event underlying migraine aura. To date, however, the mechanism underlying increased CSD/migraine susceptibility remains unclear.
Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism | 2015
Vivek J. Srinivasan; Esther Yu; Harsha Radhakrishnan; Anil Can; Mihail Climov; Conor Leahy; Cenk Ayata; Katharina Eikermann-Haerter
Although microvascular dysfunction accompanies cognitive decline in aging, vascular dementia, and Alzheimers disease, tools to study microvasculature longitudinally in vivo are lacking. Here, we use Doppler optical coherence tomography (OCT) and angiography for noninvasive, longitudinal imaging of mice with chronic cerebral hypoperfusion for up to 1 month. In particular, we optimized the OCT angiography method to selectively image red blood cell (RBC)-perfused capillaries, leading to a novel way of assessing capillary supply heterogeneity in vivo. After bilateral common carotid artery stenosis (BCAS), cortical blood flow measured by Doppler OCT dropped to half of baseline throughout the imaged tissue acutely. Microscopic imaging of the capillary bed with OCT angiography further revealed local heterogeneities in cortical flow supply during hypoperfusion. The number of RBC-perfused capillaries decreased, leading to increased oxygen diffusion distances in the days immediately after BCAS. Linear regression showed that RBC-perfused capillary density declined by 0.3% for a drop in flow of 1 mL/100 g per minute, and decreases in RBC-perfused capillary density as high as 25% were observed. Taken together, these results demonstrate the existence of local supply heterogeneity at the capillary level even at nonischemic global flow levels, and demonstrate a novel imaging method to assess this heterogeneity.
Transplantation | 2016
Mihail Climov; Abraham J. Matar; Evan A. Farkash; Erika Medeiros; Jizeng Qiao; Edward Harrington; Ashley Gusha; Ahmad Al-Musa; David H. Sachs; Mark A. Randolph; Thomas J. Bollenbach; Christene A. Huang
Background Deficiency of autologous skin for reconstruction of severe wounds is a major problem in plastic surgery. Autologous substitutes can provide additional coverage, but due to the duration of production, treatment is significantly delayed. The allogeneic approach offers a potential of having an off-the-shelf solution for the immediate application. Methods In this study, we assess the engraftment and immunogenicity of allogeneic bilayered bioengineered skin prepared by a self-assembly method. Bioengineered skin has the potential immunological advantage of lacking passenger leukocytes including antigen-presenting cells. The skin constructs were transplanted across major histocompatibility complex (MHC) barriers in a porcine animal model. Animals received a second grafting of the same skin construct 7 weeks after the first set of grafts together with MHC-matched constructs to assess for clinical sensitization. Results All alloconstructs successfully engrafted with histologic evidence of neovascularization by day 4. Complete cellular rejection and tissue loss occurred by day 8 for most grafts. After the second application, accelerated rejection (<4 days) took place with the development of swine MHC-specific cytotoxic alloantibody. Conclusions These data demonstrate preclinically that self-assembled allogeneic constructs engraft and reject similar to allogeneic skin despite the absence of professional donor antigen-presenting cells.
Plastic and reconstructive surgery. Global open | 2016
Mihail Climov; Erika Medeiros; Evan A. Farkash; Jizeng Qiao; Cecile F. Rousseau; Shumin Dong; Agatha Zawadzka; Waldemar J. Racki; Ahmad Al-Musa; David H. Sachs; Mark A. Randolph; Christene A. Huang; Thomas J. Bollenbach
For patients with extensive burns or donor site scarring, the limited availability of autologous and the inevitable rejection of allogeneic skin drive the need for new alternatives. Existing engineered biologic and synthetic skin analogs serve as temporary coverage until sufficient autologous skin is available. Here we report successful engraftment of a self-assembled bilayered skin construct derived from autologous skin punch biopsies in a porcine model. Dermal fibroblasts were stimulated to produce an extracellular matrix and were then seeded with epidermal progenitor cells to generate an epidermis. Autologous constructs were grafted onto partial- and full-thickness wounds. By gross examination and histology, skin construct vascularization and healing were comparable to autologous skin grafts and were superior to an autologous bilayered living cellular construct fabricated with fibroblasts cast in bovine collagen. This is the first demonstration of spontaneous vascularization and permanent engraftment of a self-assembled bilayered bioengineered skin that could supplement existing methods of reconstruction.
Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery | 2013
Mihail Climov; Abraham J. Matar; Erika Medeiros; Jizeng Qiao; Evan A. Farkash; Raimon Duran-Struuck; Ashley Gusha; Edward Harrington; David H. Sachs; Mark A. Randolph; Thomas J. Bollenbach; Christene A. Huang
Transplantation | 2018
Christian Schuetz; Mihail Climov; Aarti R. Patil; Zhaouhui Wang; Alec Andrews Roy; Nalu Navarro-Alvarez; Abraham J. Matar; David H. Sachs; Raimon Duran-Struuck; Christene A. Huang
Plastic and reconstructive surgery. Global open | 2016
Hajime Matsumine; Kazuyuki Numakura; Satoshi Tsunoda; Huan Wang; Rui Matsumine; Mihail Climov; Giorgio Giatsidis; Vikas P. Sukhatme; Dennis P. Orgill
Biology of Blood and Marrow Transplantation | 2013
Raimon Duran-Struuck; Mihail Climov; Ashley Gusha; Edward Harrington; Abraham J. Matar; Rebecca L. Crepeau; Thomas R. Spitzer; David H. Sachs; Christene A. Huang