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Featured researches published by Nir I. Nativ.


American Journal of Transplantation | 2012

Liver Defatting: An Alternative Approach to Enable Steatotic Liver Transplantation

Nir I. Nativ; Timothy J. Maguire; Gabriel Adam Yarmush; D. L. Brasaemle; Scot D. Henry; James V. Guarrera; Francois Berthiaume; Martin L. Yarmush

Macrovesicular steatosis in greater than 30% of hepatocytes is a significant risk factor for primary graft nonfunction due to increased sensitivity to ischemia reperfusion (I/R) injury. The growing prevalence of hepatic steatosis due to the obesity epidemic, in conjunction with an aging population, may negatively impact the availability of suitable deceased liver donors. Some have suggested that metabolic interventions could decrease the fat content of liver grafts prior to transplantation. This concept has been successfully tested through nutritional supplementation in a few living donors. Utilization of deceased donor livers, however, requires defatting of explanted organs. Animal studies suggest that this can be accomplished by ex vivo warm perfusion in a time scale of a few hours. We estimate that this approach could significantly boost the size of the donor pool by increasing the utilization of steatotic livers. Here we review current knowledge on the mechanisms whereby excessive lipid storage and macrosteatosis exacerbate hepatic I/R injury, and possible approaches to address this problem, including ex vivo perfusion methods as well as metabolically induced defatting. We also discuss the challenges ahead that need to be addressed for clinical implementation.


Liver Transplantation | 2014

Elevated sensitivity of macrosteatotic hepatocytes to hypoxia/reoxygenation stress is reversed by a novel defatting protocol.

Nir I. Nativ; Gabriel Yarmush; Ashley So; Jeffery Barminko; Timothy J. Maguire; Rene Schloss; Francois Berthiaume; Martin L. Yarmush

Macrosteatotic livers exhibit elevated intrahepatic triglyceride (TG) levels in the form of large lipid droplets (LDs), reduced adenosine triphosphate (ATP) levels, and elevated reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels, and this contributes to their elevated sensitivity to ischemia/reperfusion injury during transplantation. Reducing macrosteatosis in living donors through dieting has been shown to improve transplant outcomes. Accomplishing the same feat for deceased donor grafts would require ex vivo exposure to potent defatting agents. Here we used a rat hepatocyte culture system exhibiting a macrosteatotic LD morphology, elevated TG levels, and an elevated sensitivity to hypoxia/reoxygenation (H/R) to test for such agents and ameliorate H/R sensitivity. Macrosteatotic hepatocyte preconditioning for 48 hours with a defatting cocktail that was previously developed to promote TG catabolism reduced the number of macrosteatotic LDs and intracellular TG levels by 82% and 27%, respectively, but it did not ameliorate sensitivity to H/R. Supplementation of this cocktail with l‐carnitine, together with hyperoxic exposure, yielded a similar reduction in the number of macrosteatotic LDs and a 57% reduction in intrahepatic TG storage, likely by increasing the supply of acetyl coenzyme A to mitochondria, as indicated by a 70% increase in ketone body secretion. Furthermore, this treatment reduced ROS levels by 32%, increased ATP levels by 27% (to levels near those of lean controls), and completely abolished H/R sensitivity as indicated by approximately 85% viability after H/R and the reduction of cytosolic lactate dehydrogenase release to levels seen in lean controls. Cultures maintained for 48 hours after H/R were approximately 83% viable and exhibited superior urea secretion and bile canalicular transport in comparison with untreated macrosteatotic cultures. In conclusion, these findings show that the elevated sensitivity of macrosteatotic hepatocytes to H/R can be overcome by defatting agents, and they suggest a possible route for the recovery of discarded macrosteatotic grafts. Liver Transpl 20:1000–1011, 2014.


Biotechnology and Bioengineering | 2014

Fractional factorial design to investigate stromal cell regulation of macrophage plasticity

Jeffrey Barminko; Nir I. Nativ; Rene Schloss; Martin L. Yarmush

Understanding the regulatory networks which control specific macrophage phenotypes is essential in identifying novel targets to correct macrophage mediated clinical disorders, often accompanied by inflammatory events. Since mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) have been shown to play key roles in regulating immune functions predominantly via a large number of secreted products, we used a fractional factorial approach to streamline experimental evaluation of MSC mediated inflammatory macrophage regulation. Our macrophage reprogramming metrics, human bone marrow MSC attenuation of macrophage pro‐inflammatory M1 TNFα secretion and simultaneous enhanced expression of the M2 macrophage marker, CD206, were used as analysis endpoints. Objective evaluation of a panel of MSC secreted mediators indicated that PGE2 alone was sufficient in facilitating macrophage reprogramming, while IL4 only provided partial reprogramming. Inhibiting stromal cell PGE2 secretion with Indomethacin, reversed the macrophage reprogramming effect. PGE2 reprogramming was mediated through the EP4 receptor and indirectly through the CREB signaling pathway as GSK3 specific inhibitors induced M1 macrophages to express CD206. This reprogramming pathway functioned independently from the M1 suppression pathway, as neither CREB nor GSK3 inhibition reversed PGE2 TNF‐α secretion attenuation. In conclusion, fractional factorial experimental design identified stromal derived PGE2 as the factor most important in facilitating macrophage reprogramming, albeit via two unique pathways. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2014;111: 2239–2251.


Metabolites | 2016

Metabolic Flux Distribution during Defatting of Steatotic Human Hepatoma (HepG2) Cells

Gabriel Yarmush; Lucas Santos; Joshua Yarmush; Srivathsan Koundinyan; Mubasher Saleem; Nir I. Nativ; Rene Schloss; Martin L. Yarmush; Timothy J. Maguire; Francois Berthiaume

Methods that rapidly decrease fat in steatotic hepatocytes may be helpful to recover severely fatty livers for transplantation. Defatting kinetics are highly dependent upon the extracellular medium composition; however, the pathways involved are poorly understood. Steatosis was induced in human hepatoma cells (HepG2) by exposure to high levels of free fatty acids, followed by defatting using plain medium containing no fatty acids, or medium supplemented with a cocktail of defatting agents previously described before. We measured the levels of 28 extracellular metabolites and intracellular triglyceride, and fed the data into a steady-state mass balance model to estimate strictly intracellular fluxes. We found that during defatting, triglyceride content decreased, while beta-oxidation, the tricarboxylic acid cycle, and the urea cycle increased. These fluxes were augmented by defatting agents, and even more so by hyperoxic conditions. In all defatting conditions, the rate of extracellular glucose uptake/release was very small compared to the internal supply from glycogenolysis, and glycolysis remained highly active. Thus, in steatotic HepG2 cells, glycolysis and fatty acid oxidation may co-exist. Together, these pathways generate reducing equivalents that are supplied to mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation.


Journal of Hepatology | 2013

Rat hepatocyte culture model of macrosteatosis: Effect of macrosteatosis induction and reversal on viability and liver-specific function

Nir I. Nativ; Gabriel Yarmush; Alvin I. Chen; David Xu Dong; Scot D. Henry; James V. Guarrera; Kenneth M. Klein; Tim Maguire; Rene Schloss; Francois Berthiaume; Martin L. Yarmush

BACKGROUND & AIMS A common cause of liver donor ineligibility is macrosteatosis. Recovery of such livers could enhance donor availability. Living donor studies have shown diet-induced reduction of macrosteatosis enables transplantation. However, cadaveric liver macrosteatotic reduction must be performed ex vivo within hours. Towards this goal, we investigated the effect of accelerated macrosteatosis reduction on hepatocyte viability and function using a novel system of macrosteatotic hepatocytes. METHODS Hepatocytes isolated from lean Zucker rats were cultured in a collagen sandwich, incubated for 6 days in fatty acid-supplemented medium to induce steatosis, and then switched for 2 days to medium supplemented with lipid metabolism promoting agents. Intracellular lipid droplet size distribution and triglyceride, viability, albumin and urea secretion, and bile canalicular function were measured. RESULTS Fatty acid-supplemented medium induced microsteatosis in 3 days and macrosteatosis in 6 days, the latter evidenced by large lipid droplets dislocating the nucleus to the cell periphery. Macrosteatosis significantly impaired all functions tested. Macrosteatosis decreased upon returning hepatocytes to standard medium, and the rate of decrease was 4-fold faster with supplemented agents, yielding 80% reduction in 2 days. Viability of macrosteatosis reduced hepatocytes was similar to control lean cells. Accelerated macrosteatotic reduction led to faster recovery of urea secretion and bile canalicular function, but not of albumin secretion. CONCLUSIONS Macrosteatosis reversibly decreases hepatocyte function and supplementary agents accelerate macrosteatosis reduction and some functional restoration with no effect on viability. This in vitro model may be useful to screen agents for macrosteatotic reduction in livers before transplantation.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2015

Mesenchymal stromal cells reverse hypoxia-mediated suppression of α-smooth muscle actin expression in human dermal fibroblasts

Renea Faulknor; Melissa A. Olekson; Nir I. Nativ; Mehdi Ghodbane; Francois Berthiaume

During wound healing, fibroblasts deposit extracellular matrix that guides angiogenesis and supports the migration and proliferation of cells that eventually form the scar. They also promote wound closure via differentiation into α-smooth muscle actin (SMA)-expressing myofibroblasts, which cause wound contraction. Low oxygen tension typical of chronic nonhealing wounds inhibits fibroblast collagen production and differentiation. It has been suggested that hypoxic mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) secrete factors that promote wound healing in animal models; however, it is unclear whether these factors are equally effective on the target cells in a hypoxic wound environment. Here we investigated the impact of MSC-derived soluble factors on the function of fibroblasts cultured in hypoxic fibroblast-populated collagen lattices (FPCLs). Hypoxia alone significantly decreased FPCL contraction and α-SMA expression. MSC-conditioned medium restored hypoxic FPCL contraction and α-SMA expression to levels similar to normoxic FPCLs. SB431542, an inhibitor of transforming growth factor-β1 (TGF-β1)-mediated signaling, blocked most of the MSC effect on FPCL contraction, while exogenous TGF-β1 at levels similar to that secreted by MSCs reproduced the MSC effect. These results suggest that TGF-β1 is a major paracrine signal secreted by MSCs that can restore fibroblast functions relevant to the wound healing process and that are impaired in hypoxia.


northeast bioengineering conference | 2014

Defatting heptocytes under flow

Joshua Yarmush; Gabriel Yarmush; Nir I. Nativ; Francois Berthiaume

There is a critical shortage of transplantable livers in both the US and the world. One method to increase the donor pool is to develop methodology to recondition extended criteria donor grafts, a large portion of which are moderate to severe macrosteatotic livers. Transplantation of these livers often leads to primary nonfunction caused by an increased susceptibility to the effects of ischemia reperfusion injury that result from the harvesting, transportation, and transplantation of the liver. Our lab has developed a novel cocktail of defatting reagents that can, over a period of two days, render hepatocytes lean and with good cell viability and function. Despite this accomplishment, in order to be feasibly performed in a clinical setting, the defatting process must be completed in a matter of hours. The current project focuses on understanding the differences between defatting in a static versus flow environment and then using this information to develop the ideal parameters for defatting whole organs. Our hypothesis in the current work is that using flow and the appropriate defatting agents, steatotic hepatocytes can be defatted in a clinically relevant time of hours, without decreasing cell viability or function. In order to test this hypothesis, a perfusion reactor was constructed which holds microscope slides that can be seeded with fatty hepatocytes. Perfusion of defatting media was performed at different flow rates over a six hour period. Results showed that within a six hour period, significant defatting (as compared to static cultures) was observed at both 2.0 and 4.0 ml/min as indicated by oil red O staining. Current experiments are focused on further evaluation of hepatocyte viability and function (e.g. albumin, urea, and cytochrome P450 function). These types of parametric experiments will form the basis for future perfusions with whole organs from obese rats.


Liver Transplantation | 2014

Automated image analysis method for detecting and quantifying macrovesicular steatosis in hematoxylin and eosin-stained histology images of human livers.

Nir I. Nativ; Alvin I. Chen; Gabriel Yarmush; Scot D. Henry; Jay H. Lefkowitch; Kenneth M. Klein; Timothy J. Maguire; Rene Schloss; James V. Guarrera; Francois Berthiaume; Martin L. Yarmush


Biomechanics and Modeling in Mechanobiology | 2017

CFD assessment of the effect of convective mass transport on the intracellular clearance of intracellular triglycerides in macrosteatotic hepatocytes

Gabriel Yarmush; Lucas Santos; Joshua Yarmush; Srivathsan Koundinyan; Mubasher Saleem; Nir I. Nativ; Martin L. Yarmush; Francois Berthiaume; Timothy J. Maguire; Chris Guaghan


Archive | 2013

AUTOMATED HIGH-CONTENT IMAGE ANALYSIS SYSTEM AND METHODS AND USES THEREOF

Martin L. Yarmush; Tim Maguire; Nir I. Nativ; Gabriel Adam Yarmush; Alvin I. Chen; Francois Berthiaume; David Xu Dong

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Scot D. Henry

Columbia University Medical Center

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Kenneth M. Klein

University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey

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