Panicos Shangaris
University College London
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Featured researches published by Panicos Shangaris.
British Medical Bulletin | 2013
Caterina Pipino; Panicos Shangaris; Elisa Resca; Silvia Zia; Jan Deprest; Nj Sebire; Anna L. David; Pascale V. Guillot; Paolo De Coppi
INTRODUCTION Both embryonic and adult tissues are sources of stem cells with therapeutic potential but with some limitations in the clinical practice such as ethical considerations, difficulty in obtaining and tumorigenicity. As an alternative, the placenta is a foetal tissue that can be obtained during gestation and at term, and it represents a reservoir of stem cells with various potential. SOURCES OF DATA We reviewed the relevant literature concerning the main stem cells that populate the placenta. AREAS OF AGREEMENT Recently, the placenta has become useful source of stem cells that offer advantages in terms of proliferation and plasticity when compared with adult cells and permit to overcome the ethical and safety concern inherent in embryonic stem cells. In addition, the placenta has the advantage of containing epithelia, haematopoietic and mesenchymal stem cells. These stem cells possess immunosuppressive properties and have the capacity of suppress in vivo inflammatory responses. AREAS OF CONTROVERSY Some studies describe a subpopulation of placenta stem cells expressing pluripotency markers, but for other studies, it is not clear whether pluripotent stem cells are present during gestation beyond the first few weeks. Particularly, the expression of some pluripotency markers such as SSEA-3, TRA-1-60 and TRA-1-81 has been reported by us, but not by others. GROWING POINTS Placenta stem cells could be of great importance after delivery for banking for autologous and allogeneic applications. The beneficial effects of these cells may be due to secretion of bioactive molecules that act through paracrine actions promoting beneficial effects. AREAS TIMELY FOR DEVELOPING RESEARCH Understanding the role of placenta stem cells during pregnancy and their paracrine actions could help in the study of some diseases that affect the placenta during pregnancy.
Biomaterials | 2013
Panagiotis Maghsoudlou; Fanourios Georgiades; Athanasios Tyraskis; Giorgia Totonelli; S Loukogeorgakis; Giuseppe Orlando; Panicos Shangaris; Peggy Lange; Jean-Marie Delalande; Alan J. Burns; Angelo Cenedese; Nj Sebire; Mark Turmaine; Brogan Guest; John F. Alcorn; Anthony Atala; Martin A. Birchall; Martin J. Elliott; Simon Eaton; Agostino Pierro; Thomas W. Gilbert; Paolo De Coppi
Tissue engineering of autologous lung tissue aims to become a therapeutic alternative to transplantation. Efforts published so far in creating scaffolds have used harsh decellularization techniques that damage the extracellular matrix (ECM), deplete its components and take up to 5 weeks to perform. The aim of this study was to create a lung natural acellular scaffold using a method that will reduce the time of production and better preserve scaffold architecture and ECM components. Decellularization of rat lungs via the intratracheal route removed most of the nuclear material when compared to the other entry points. An intermittent inflation approach that mimics lung respiration yielded an acellular scaffold in a shorter time with an improved preservation of pulmonary micro-architecture. Electron microscopy demonstrated the maintenance of an intact alveolar network, with no evidence of collapse or tearing. Pulsatile dye injection via the vasculature indicated an intact capillary network in the scaffold. Morphometry analysis demonstrated a significant increase in alveolar fractional volume, with alveolar size analysis confirming that alveolar dimensions were maintained. Biomechanical testing of the scaffolds indicated an increase in resistance and elastance when compared to fresh lungs. Staining and quantification for ECM components showed a presence of collagen, elastin, GAG and laminin. The intratracheal intermittent decellularization methodology could be translated to sheep lungs, demonstrating a preservation of ECM components, alveolar and vascular architecture. Decellularization treatment and methodology preserves lung architecture and ECM whilst reducing the production time to 3 h. Cell seeding and in vivo experiments are necessary to proceed towards clinical translation.
PLOS ONE | 2014
Vedanta Mehta; K Abi-Nader; Panicos Shangaris; S.W. Steven Shaw; Elisa Filippi; Elizabeth Benjamin; M Boyd; Donald Peebles; John Martin; Ian Zachary; Anna L. David
Background The normal development of the uteroplacental circulation in pregnancy depends on angiogenic and vasodilatory factors such as vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). Reduced uterine artery blood flow (UABF) is a common cause of fetal growth restriction; abnormalities in angiogenic factors are implicated. Previously we showed that adenovirus (Ad)-mediated VEGF-A165 expression in the pregnant sheep uterine artery (UtA) increased nitric oxide synthase (NOS) expression, altered vascular reactivity and increased UABF. VEGF-D is a VEGF family member that promotes angiogenesis and vasodilatation but, in contrast to VEGF-A, does not increase vascular permeability. Here we examined the effect of Ad.VEGF-DΔNΔC vector encoding a fully processed form of VEGF-D, on the uteroplacental circulation. Methods UtA transit-time flow probes and carotid artery catheters were implanted in mid-gestation pregnant sheep (n = 5) to measure baseline UABF and maternal haemodynamics respectively. 7–14 days later, after injection of Ad.VEGF-DΔNΔC vector (5×1011 particles) into one UtA and an Ad vector encoding β-galactosidase (Ad.LacZ) contralaterally, UABF was measured daily until scheduled post-mortem examination at term. UtAs were assessed for vascular reactivity, NOS expression and endothelial cell proliferation; NOS expression was studied in ex vivo transduced UtA endothelial cells (UAECs). Results At 4 weeks post-injection, Ad.VEGF-DΔNΔC treated UtAs showed significantly lesser vasoconstriction (Emax144.0 v/s 184.2, p = 0.002). There was a tendency to higher UABF in Ad.VEGF-DΔNΔC compared to Ad.LacZ transduced UtAs (50.58% v/s 26.94%, p = 0.152). There was no significant effect on maternal haemodynamics. An increased number of proliferating endothelial cells and adventitial blood vessels were observed in immunohistochemistry. Ad.VEGF-DΔNΔC expression in cultured UAECs upregulated eNOS and iNOS expression. Conclusions Local over-expression of VEGF-DΔNΔC in the UtAs of pregnant mid-gestation sheep reduced vasoconstriction, promoted endothelial cell proliferation and showed a trend towards increased UABF. Studies in cultured UAECs indicate that VEGF-DΔNΔC may act in part through upregulation of eNOS and iNOS.
Frontiers in Pharmacology | 2014
Durrgah L. Ramachandra; Steven Shaw; Panicos Shangaris; Stavros Loukogeorgakis; Pascale V. Guillot; Paolo De Coppi; Anna L. David
Congenital diseases are responsible for over a third of all pediatric hospital admissions. Advances in prenatal screening and molecular diagnosis have allowed the detection of many life-threatening genetic diseases early in gestation. In utero transplantation (IUT) with stem cells could cure affected fetuses but so far in humans, successful IUT using allogeneic hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs), has been limited to fetuses with severe immunologic defects and more recently IUT with allogeneic mesenchymal stem cell transplantation, has improved phenotype in osteogenesis imperfecta. The options of preemptive treatment of congenital diseases in utero by stem cell or gene therapy changes the perspective of congenital diseases since it may avoid the need for postnatal treatment and reduce future costs. Amniotic fluid stem (AFS) cells have been isolated and characterized in human, mice, rodents, rabbit, and sheep and are a potential source of cells for therapeutic applications in disorders for treatment prenatally or postnatally. Gene transfer to the cells with long-term transgenic protein expression is feasible. Recently, pre-clinical autologous transplantation of transduced cells has been achieved in fetal sheep using minimally invasive ultrasound guided injection techniques. Clinically relevant levels of transgenic protein were expressed in the blood of transplanted lambs for at least 6 months. The cells have also demonstrated the potential of repair in a range of pre-clinical disease models such as neurological disorders, tracheal repair, bladder injury, and diaphragmatic hernia repair in neonates or adults. These results have been encouraging, and bring personalized tissue engineering for prenatal treatment of genetic disorders closer to the clinic.
PLOS ONE | 2016
Panagiotis Maghsoudlou; Fanourios Georgiades; Holly Smith; Anna Milan; Panicos Shangaris; Luca Urbani; S Loukogeorgakis; Benedetta Lombardi; Giuseppe Mazza; Charlotte K. Hagen; Nj Sebire; Mark Turmaine; Simon Eaton; Alessandro Olivo; Jasminka Godovac-Zimmermann; Massimo Pinzani; Paul Gissen; Paolo De Coppi
Hepatic tissue engineering using decellularized scaffolds is a potential therapeutic alternative to conventional transplantation. However, scaffolds are usually obtained using decellularization protocols that destroy the extracellular matrix (ECM) and hamper clinical translation. We aim to develop a decellularization technique that reliably maintains hepatic microarchitecture and ECM components. Isolated rat livers were decellularized by detergent-enzymatic technique with (EDTA-DET) or without EDTA (DET). Histology, DNA quantification and proteomics confirmed decellularization with further DNA reduction with the addition of EDTA. Quantification, histology, immunostaining, and proteomics demonstrated preservation of extracellular matrix components in both scaffolds with a higher amount of collagen and glycosaminoglycans in the EDTA-DET scaffold. Scanning electron microscopy and X-ray phase contrast imaging showed microarchitecture preservation, with EDTA-DET scaffolds more tightly packed. DET scaffold seeding with a hepatocellular cell line demonstrated complete repopulation in 14 days, with cells proliferating at that time. Decellularization using DET preserves microarchitecture and extracellular matrix components whilst allowing for cell growth for up to 14 days. Addition of EDTA creates a denser, more compact matrix. Transplantation of the scaffolds and scaling up of the methodology are the next steps for successful hepatic tissue engineering.
Stem Cells | 2015
S.W. Steven Shaw; Michael P. Blundell; Caterina Pipino; Panicos Shangaris; Panagiotis Maghsoudlou; Durrgah L. Ramachandra; Fanos Georgiades; M Boyd; Adrian J. Thrasher; Christopher D. Porada; Graça Almeida-Porada; Po‐Jen Cheng; Anna L. David; Paolo De Coppi
Unmatched allogeneic in utero stem cell transplantation (IUSCT) produces poor engraftment unless the fetus has congenital immunodeficiency, probably because of maternal and fetal immune responses to injected cells. We studied the functional hematopoietic potential of transduced green fluorescent protein (GFP+) sheep amniotic fluid (AF) stem cells, before and after autologous IUSCT. CD34+ cells were selected from first trimester sheep AF, transduced overnight, and injected intravenously into NOD‐SCID‐gamma (NSG) mice. At 3 months, primary recipient bone marrow (BM) was injected into secondary NSG recipients. GFP+ cells were detected in the hematopoietic organs and peripheral blood of primary and secondary recipients at 3 months. Autologous IUSCT (transduced GFP+CD34+AF) was performed in fetal sheep. Six months postnatally, lamb BM was injected into secondary NSG recipients. GFP+ cells were detected in the peripheral blood of primary and secondary recipients. This confirms the hematopoietic potential of AF stem cells supporting the concept of autologous IUSCT to treat congenital hematopoietic disease. Stem Cells 2015;33:122–132
Scientific Reports | 2017
Laurence H. Jackson; Evangelia Vlachodimitropoulou; Panicos Shangaris; Thomas A. Roberts; Thomas M. Ryan; Adrienne E. Campbell-Washburn; Anna L. David; John Porter; Mark F. Lythgoe; Daniel J. Stuckey
β-thalassemia (βT) is a genetic blood disorder causing profound and life threatening anemia. Current clinical management of βT is a lifelong dependence on regular blood transfusions, a consequence of which is systemic iron overload leading to acute heart failure. Recent developments in gene and chelation therapy give hope of better prognosis for patients, but successful translation to clinical practice is hindered by the lack of thorough preclinical testing using representative animal models and clinically relevant quantitative biomarkers. Here we demonstrate a quantitative and non-invasive preclinical Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) platform for the assessment of βT in the γβ0/γβA humanized mouse model of βT. Changes in the quantitative MRI relaxation times as well as severe splenomegaly were observed in the heart, liver and spleen in βT. These data showed high sensitivity to iron overload and a strong relationship between quantitative MRI relaxation times and hepatic iron content. Importantly these changes preceded the onset of iron overload cardiomyopathy, providing an early biomarker of disease progression. This work demonstrates that multiparametric MRI is a powerful tool for the assessment of preclinical βT, providing sensitive and quantitative monitoring of tissue iron sequestration and cardiac dysfunction- parameters essential for the preclinical development of new therapeutics.
Archive | 2016
Panicos Shangaris; Anna L. David
The first human gene therapy trials began over 10 years ago, but in spite of continuous technological progress most clinical results have been disappointing. The reasons for this include difficulties in targeting the appropriate organ, a robust immune response to the therapy in adults and low level expression of the therapeutic gene product. Applying the therapy before birth may avoid these difficulties, and recent pre-clinical work has shown proof-of-principle for phenotypic cure of congenital disease in animal models using this approach. Selecting the right diseases for therapeutic intervention will be critical for clinical translation. Perinatal application of gene therapy has been proposed to be appropriate for life-threatening disorders, in which prenatal gene delivery maintains a clear advantage over cell transplantation or postnatal gene therapy and for which there are currently no satisfactory treatments available. Gene therapy could be applied directly to the fetus in utero. In the case of maternal pathology affecting the fetus such as occurs in uteroplacental insufficiency, a major cause of fetal growth restriction, gene therapy could be given to the mother. Combining stem cell transplantation (SCT) and gene therapy by transplanting the fetus with gene corrected autologous stem cells is an attractive proposition. This would avoid some of the issues of safety with regard to direct fetal vector injection, in particular the potential for germline gene transfer and untargeted fetal systemic vector delivery.
Pediatric Surgery International | 2014
Panagiotis Maghsoudlou; Daniel Ditchfield; Dorota H. K. Klepacka; Panicos Shangaris; Luca Urbani; S Loukogeorgakis; Simon Eaton; Paolo De Coppi
Blood | 2014
Stavros Loukogeorgakis; Enrica Bertin; Panicos Shangaris; Chiara Franzin; Aimee G Kim; Hojun Li; Martina Piccoli; Michela Pozzobon; Anna L. David; William H. Peranteau; Alan W. Flake; P De Coppi