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Dive into the research topics where Robert A. Hetz is active.

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Featured researches published by Robert A. Hetz.


Stem Cells Translational Medicine | 2013

Intravenous Multipotent Adult Progenitor Cell Therapy Attenuates Activated Microglial/Macrophage Response and Improves Spatial Learning After Traumatic Brain Injury

Supinder S. Bedi; Robert A. Hetz; Chelsea Thomas; Philippa Smith; Alex Olsen; Stephen Williams; Hasen Xue; Kevin R. Aroom; Karen S. Uray; Jason Hamilton; Robert W. Mays; Charles S. Cox

We previously demonstrated that the intravenous delivery of multipotent adult progenitor cells (MAPCs) after traumatic brain injury (TBI) in rodents provides neuroprotection by preserving the blood‐brain barrier and systemically attenuating inflammation in the acute time frame following cell treatment; however, the long‐term behavioral and anti‐inflammatory effects of MAPC administration after TBI have yet to be explored. We hypothesized that the intravenous injection of MAPCs after TBI attenuates the inflammatory response (as measured by microglial morphology) and improves performance at motor tasks and spatial learning (Morris water maze [MWM]). MAPCs were administered intravenously 2 and 24 hours after a cortical contusion injury (CCI). We tested four groups at 120 days after TBI: sham (uninjured), injured but not treated (CCI), and injured and treated with one of two concentrations of MAPCs, either 2 million cells per kilogram (CCI‐2) or 10 million cells per kilogram (CCI‐10). CCI‐10 rats showed significant improvement in left hind limb deficit on the balance beam. On the fifth day of MWM trials, CCI‐10 animals showed a significant decrease in both latency to platform and distance traveled compared with CCI. Probe trials revealed a significant decrease in proximity measure in CCI‐10 compared with CCI, suggesting improved memory retrieval. Neuroinflammation was quantified by enumerating activated microglia in the ipsilateral hippocampus. We observed a significant decrease in the number of activated microglia in the dentate gyrus in CCI‐10 compared with CCI. Our results demonstrate that intravenous MAPC treatment after TBI in a rodent model offers long‐term improvements in spatial learning as well as attenuation of neuroinflammation.


Journal of Neuroscience Methods | 2013

Immunomagnetic enrichment and flow cytometric characterization of mouse microglia

Supinder S. Bedi; Philippa Smith; Robert A. Hetz; Hasen Xue; Charles S. Cox

BACKGROUND The inflammatory response after a CNS injury is regulated by microglia/macrophages. Changes in the ratio of M1 classically activated pro-inflammatory cells versus M2 alternatively activated anti-inflammatory cells reveal the direction of the immune response. These cells are routinely identified and enumerated by morphology and cell-surface markers using immunohistochemistry. NEW METHOD We used a controlled cortical impact (CCI) mouse model for traumatic brain injury (TBI), then isolated microglia/macrophages from neural cell suspensions using magnetic beads conjugated to CD11b monoclonal antibody to obtain the entire myeloid population. Polarization states of CD11b(+)CD45(lo) microglia were evaluated by expression of M1 surface marker FcγRII/III and M2 surface marker CD206. RESULTS After TBI, we observed an increase in M1:M2 ratio in the ipsilateral hemisphere when compared to the contralateral side, indicating that 24h after CCI, a shift in microglia polarization occurs localized to the hemisphere of injury. Comparison with existing method(s): The major impetus for developing and refining the methods was the need to accurately quantify microglial activation states without reliance on manual morphometric counting of serial immunohistochemistry slides. Flow cytometric analysis of enriched cell suspensions provides quantitative measurement of microglial polarization states complementary to existing methods, but for entire populations of cells. CONCLUSIONS In summary, we used immunomagnetic beads to isolate myeloid cells from injured brain, then stained surface antigens to flow cytometrically identify and categorize microglia as either classically activated M1 or alternatively activated M2, generating a ratio of M1:M2 cells which is useful in studying attempts to reduce or redirect neuroinflammation.


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 2013

Autologous bone marrow mononuclear cells therapy attenuates activated microglial/macrophage response and improves spatial learning after traumatic brain injury.

Supinder S. Bedi; Peter A. Walker; Shinil K. Shah; Fernando Jimenez; Chelsea Thomas; Philippa Smith; Robert A. Hetz; Hasen Xue; Shibani Pati; Pramod K. Dash; Charles S. Cox

BACKGROUND Autologous bone marrow–derived mononuclear cells (AMNCs) have shown therapeutic promise for central nervous system insults such as stroke and traumatic brain injury (TBI). We hypothesized that intravenous injection of AMNC provides neuroprotection, which leads to cognitive improvement after TBI. METHODS A controlled cortical impact (CCI) rodent TBI model was used to examine blood-brain barrier (BBB) permeability, neuronal and glial apoptosis, as well as cognitive behavior. Two groups of rats underwent CCI with AMNC treatment (CCI-autologous) or without AMNC treatment (CCI-alone), consisting of 2 million AMNC per kilogram body weight harvested from the tibia and intravenously injected 72 hours after injury. CCI-alone animals underwent sham harvests and received vehicle injections. RESULTS Ninety-six hours after injury, AMNC significantly reduced the BBB permeability in injured animals, and there was an increase in apoptosis of proinflammatory activated microglia in the ipsilateral hippocampus. At 4 weeks after injury, we observed significant improvement in probe testing of CCI-Autologous group in comparison to CCI-Alone in the Morris Water Maze paradigm. CONCLUSION Our data demonstrate that the intravenous injection of AMNC after TBI leads to neuroprotection by preserving early BBB integrity, increasing activated microglial apoptosis and improving cognitive function.


Pediatric Critical Care Medicine | 2015

Autologous bone marrow mononuclear cells reduce therapeutic intensity for severe traumatic brain injury in children.

George P. Liao; Matthew T. Harting; Robert A. Hetz; Peter A. Walker; Shinil K. Shah; Christopher J. Corkins; Travis G. Hughes; Fernando Jimenez; Steven C. Kosmach; Mary Clare Day; KuoJen Tsao; Dean A. Lee; Laura L. Worth; James E. Baumgartner; Charles S. Cox

Objectives: The devastating effect of traumatic brain injury is exacerbated by an acute secondary neuroinflammatory response, clinically manifest as elevated intracranial pressure due to cerebral edema. The treatment effect of cell-based therapies in the acute post–traumatic brain injury period has not been clinically studied although preclinical data demonstrate that bone marrow–derived mononuclear cell infusion down-regulates the inflammatory response. Our study evaluates whether pediatric traumatic brain injury patients receiving IV autologous bone marrow–derived mononuclear cells within 48 hours of injury experienced a reduction in therapeutic intensity directed toward managing elevated intracranial pressure relative to matched controls. Design: The study was a retrospective cohort design comparing pediatric patients in a phase I clinical trial treated with IV autologous bone marrow–derived mononuclear cells (n = 10) to a control group of age- and severity-matched children (n = 19). Setting: The study setting was at Children’s Memorial Hermann Hospital, an American College of Surgeons Level 1 Pediatric Trauma Center and teaching hospital for the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston from 2000 to 2008. Patients: Study patients were 5–14 years with postresuscitation Glasgow Coma Scale scores of 5–8. Interventions: The treatment group received 6 million autologous bone marrow–derived mononuclear cells/kg body weight IV within 48 hours of injury. The control group was treated in an identical fashion, per standard of care, guided by our traumatic brain injury management protocol, derived from American Association of Neurological Surgeons guidelines. Measurements and Main Results: The primary measure was the Pediatric Intensity Level of Therapy scale used to quantify treatment of elevated intracranial pressure. Secondary measures included the Pediatric Logistic Organ Dysfunction score and days of intracranial pressure monitoring as a surrogate for length of neurointensive care. A repeated-measure mixed model with marginal linear predictions identified a significant reduction in the Pediatric Intensity Level of Therapy score beginning at 24 hours posttreatment through week 1 (p < 0.05). This divergence was also reflected in the Pediatric Logistic Organ Dysfunction score following the first week. The duration of intracranial pressure monitoring was 8.2 ± 1.3 days in the treated group and 15.6 ± 3.5 days (p = 0.03) in the time-matched control group. Conclusions: IV autologous bone marrow–derived mononuclear cell therapy is associated with lower treatment intensity required to manage intracranial pressure, associated severity of organ injury, and duration of neurointensive care following severe traumatic brain injury. This may corroborate preclinical data that autologous bone marrow–derived mononuclear cell therapy attenuates the effects of inflammation in the early post–traumatic brain injury period.


Stem Cells | 2017

Treatment of Severe Adult Traumatic Brain Injury Using Bone Marrow Mononuclear Cells

Charles S. Cox; Robert A. Hetz; George P. Liao; Benjamin M. Aertker; Linda Ewing-Cobbs; Jenifer Juranek; Sean I. Savitz; Margaret L. Jackson; Anna Romanowska-Pawliczek; Fabio Triolo; Pramod K. Dash; Claudia Pedroza; Dean A. Lee; Laura L. Worth; Imoigele P. Aisiku; Huimahn Alex Choi; John B. Holcomb; Ryan S. Kitagawa

Preclinical studies using bone marrow derived cells to treat traumatic brain injury have demonstrated efficacy in terms of blood–brain barrier preservation, neurogenesis, and functional outcomes. Phase 1 clinical trials using bone marrow mononuclear cells infused intravenously in children with severe traumatic brain injury demonstrated safety and potentially a central nervous system structural preservation treatment effect. This study sought to confirm the safety, logistic feasibility, and potential treatment effect size of structural preservation/inflammatory biomarker mitigation in adults to guide Phase 2 clinical trial design. Adults with severe traumatic brain injury (Glasgow Coma Scale 5–8) and without signs of irreversible brain injury were evaluated for entry into the trial. A dose escalation format was performed in 25 patients: 5 controls, followed 5 patients in each dosing cohort (6, 9, 12 ×106 cells/kg body weight), then 5 more controls. Bone marrow harvest, cell processing to isolate the mononuclear fraction, and re‐infusion occurred within 48 hours after injury. Patients were monitored for harvest‐related hemodynamic changes, infusional toxicity, and adverse events. Outcome measures included magnetic resonance imaging‐based measurements of supratentorial and corpus callosal volumes as well as diffusion tensor imaging‐based measurements of fractional anisotropy and mean diffusivity of the corpus callosum and the corticospinal tract at the level of the brainstem at 1 month and 6 months postinjury. Functional and neurocognitive outcomes were measured and correlated with imaging data. Inflammatory cytokine arrays were measured in the plasma pretreatment, posttreatment, and at 1 and 6 month follow‐up. There were no serious adverse events. There was a mild pulmonary toxicity of the highest dose that was not clinically significant. Despite the treatment group having greater injury severity, there was structural preservation of critical regions of interest that correlated with functional outcomes. Key inflammatory cytokines were downregulated. Treatment of severe, adult traumatic brain injury using an intravenously delivered autologous bone marrow mononuclear cell infusion is safe and logistically feasible. There appears to be a treatment signal as evidenced by central nervous system structural preservation, consistent with previous pediatric trial data. Inflammatory biomarkers are downregulated after cell infusion. Stem Cells 2016


Neurogastroenterology and Motility | 2013

Effects of traumatic brain injury on intestinal contractility.

Alex Olsen; Robert A. Hetz; Hasen Xue; Kevin R. Aroom; D. Bhattarai; E. Johnson; Supinder S. Bedi; Charles S. Cox; Karen S. Uray

Patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI) often suffer from gastrointestinal dysfunction including intolerance to enteral feedings. However, it is unclear how TBI affects small intestinal contractile activity. The purpose of this study was to determine if TBI affects intestinal smooth muscle function.


Cell Transplantation | 2016

Human Neural Stem Cell Transplantation-Mediated Alteration of Microglial/Macrophage Phenotypes after Traumatic Brain Injury.

Raymond J. Grill; Tiffany J. Dunn; Supinder S. Bedi; Javier Allende Labastida; Robert A. Hetz; Hasen Xue; Jason R. Thonhoff; Douglas S. DeWitt; Donald S. Prough; Charles S. Cox; Ping Wu

Neural stem cells (NSCs) promote recovery from brain trauma, but neuronal replacement is unlikely the sole underlying mechanism. We hypothesize that grafted NSCs enhance neural repair at least partially through modulating the host immune response after traumatic brain injury (TBI). C57BL/6 mice were intracerebrally injected with primed human NSCs (hNSCs) or vehicle 24 h after a severe controlled cortical impact injury. Six days after transplantation, brain tissues were collected for Western blot and immunohistochemical analyses. Observations included indicators of microglia/macrophage activation, M1 and M2 phenotypes, axonal injury detected by amyloid precursor protein (APP), lesion size, and the fate of grafted hNSCs. Animals receiving hNSC transplantation did not show significant decreases of brain lesion volumes compared to transplantation procedures with vehicle alone, but did show significantly reduced injury-dependent accumulation of APP. Furthermore, intracerebral transplantation of hNSCs reduced microglial activation as shown by a diminished intensity of Iba1 immunostaining and a transition of microglia/macrophages toward the M2 anti-inflammatory phenotype. The latter was represented by an increase in the brain M2/M1 ratio and increases of M2 microglial proteins. These phenotypic switches were accompanied by the increased expression of anti-inflammatory interleukin-4 receptor α and decreased proinflammatory interferon-γ receptor β. Finally, grafted hNSCs mainly differentiated into neurons and were phagocytized by either M1 or M2 microglia/macrophages. Thus, intracerebral transplantation of primed hNSCs efficiently leads host microglia/macrophages toward an anti-inflammatory phenotype that presumably contributes to stem cell-mediated neuroprotective effects after severe TBI in mice.


Journal of Surgical Research | 2014

Far-red tracer analysis of traumatic cerebrovascular permeability.

George P. Liao; Scott D. Olson; Daniel J. Kota; Robert A. Hetz; Philippa Smith; Supinder S. Bedi; Charles S. Cox

BACKGROUND Blood brain barrier (BBB) compromise is a key pathophysiological component of secondary traumatic brain injury characterized by edema and neuroinflammation in a previously immune-privileged environment. Current assays for BBB permeability are limited by working size, harsh extraction processes, suboptimal detection via absorbance, and wide excitation fluorescence spectra. In this study, we evaluate the feasibility of Alexa Fluor 680, a far-red dye bioconjugated to dextran, as an alternative assay to improve resolution and sensitivity. METHODS Alexa Fluor was introduced intravenously on the day of sacrifice to three groups: sham, controlled cortical impact (CCI), and CCI treated with a cell based therapy known to reduce BBB permeability. The brains were sectioned coronally and imaged using an infrared laser scanner to generate intensity plot profiles as well as signal threshold images to distinguish regions with varying degrees of permeability. RESULTS Linear plot profile analysis demonstrated greater signal intensity from CCI than treated rats at corresponding injury depths. Threshold analysis identified rims of signal at low + narrow threshold ranges. The integrated signals from a treatment group known to preserve the BBB were significantly less than the groups with CCI injury alone. There was no significant difference at high + wide signal intensity threshold ranges. CONCLUSIONS Alexa Fluor 680 infrared photodetection and image analysis can aid in detecting differential degrees of BBB permeability after traumatic brain injury and maybe particularly useful in demonstrating BBB preservation of at-risk regions in response to therapeutic agents.


Translational Stroke Research | 2012

Progenitor cells: therapeutic targets after traumatic brain injury.

Robert A. Hetz; Supinder S. Bedi; Scott D. Olson; Alex Olsen; Charles S. Cox

Traumatic brain injuries and their associated treatments carry high cost in both financial impact and morbidity to human life. Recent studies and trials present promising results in reducing secondary injury in the days and weeks following the primary insult. A number of studies, both pre-clinical and clinical, have found that different populations of stem/progenitor cells result in a reduction of inflammation, maintenance of the blood brain barrier, and an overall improved prognosis. The mechanism of action of these cellular therapies appears to rely upon the ability of the cells to influence microglia/macrophage phenotype and alter the state of the inflammatory response. The spleen has become an area of intense interest as an arena where therapeutic cells interact with reactive macrophages to cause system-level changes in immune activity. Additionally, the spleen enacts anti-inflammatory responses originating in the CNS, delivered through vagal activity with a recently described mechanism culminating in acetylcholine release. This review provides a summary of recent findings as to the mechanisms of action observed in current cellular therapies.


Stem Cells International | 2017

Tissue Engineering to Repair Diaphragmatic Defect in a Rat Model

George P. Liao; Yohan Choi; Kinga Vojnits; Hasen Xue; Kevin R. Aroom; Fanwei Meng; Haiying Pan; Robert A. Hetz; C. J. Corkins; T. G. Hughes; Fabio Triolo; Anthony Johnson; Kenneth J. Moise; Kevin P. Lally; Charles S. Cox; Yong Li

Tissue engineering is an emerging strategy for repairing damaged tissues or organs. The current study explored using decellularized rat diaphragm scaffolds combined with human amniotic fluid-derived multipotent stromal cells (hAFMSC) to provide a scaffold, stem cell construct that would allow structural barrier function during tissue ingrowth/regeneration. We created an innovative cell infusion system that allowed hAFMSC to embed into scaffolds and then implanted the composite tissues into rats with surgically created left-sided diaphragmatic defects. Control rats received decellularized diaphragm scaffolds alone. We found that the composite tissues that combined hAFMSCs demonstrated improved physiological function as well as the muscular-tendon structure, compared with the native contralateral hemidiaphragm of the same rat. Our results indicate that the decellularized diaphragm scaffolds are a potential support material for diaphragmatic hernia repair and the composite grafts with hAFMSC are able to accelerate the functional recovery of diaphragmatic hernia.

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Charles S. Cox

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

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Supinder S. Bedi

University of Texas at Austin

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Philippa Smith

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

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George P. Liao

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

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Hasen Xue

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

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Scott D. Olson

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

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Chelsea Thomas

University of Texas at Austin

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Peter A. Walker

University of Texas at Austin

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Alex Olsen

University of Texas at Austin

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