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Dive into the research topics where Roger D. Kamm is active.

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Featured researches published by Roger D. Kamm.


Circulation | 1993

Distribution of circumferential stress in ruptured and stable atherosclerotic lesions. A structural analysis with histopathological correlation

George C. Cheng; Howard M. Loree; Roger D. Kamm; M C Fishbein; Richard T. Lee

Background. Although rupture of an atherosclerotic plaque is considered to be the cause of most acute coronary syndromes, the mechanism of plaque rupture is controversial. Methods and Results. To test the hypothesis that plaque rupture occurs at sites of high circumferential stress in the diseased vessel, the distribution of stress was analyzed in 24 coronary artery lesions. Histological specimens from 12 coronary artery lesions that caused lethal myocardial infarction were compared with those from 12 stable control lesions. A finite element model was used to calculate the stress distributions at a mean intraluminal pressure of 110 mm Hg. The maximum circumferential stress in plaques that ruptured was significantly higher than maximum stress in stable specimens (4,091±1,199 versus 1,444±485 mm Hg, p<0.0001). Twelve of 12 ruptured lesions had a total of 31 regions of stress concentration of more than 2,250 mm Hg (mean, 2.6±1.4 high stress regions per lesion); only one of 12 control lesions had a single stress concentration region of more than 2,250 mm Hg. In seven of 12 lethal lesions (58%), rupture occurred in the region of maximum circumferential stress; in 10 of the 12 lethal lesions (83%), rupture occurred in a region where computed stress was more than 2,250 mm Hg. Conclusions. These data suggest that concentrations of circumferential tensile stress in the atherosclerotic plaque may play an important role in plaque rupture and myocardial infarction. However, plaque rupture may not always occur at the region of highest stress, suggesting that local variations in plaque material properties contribute to plaque rupture. (Circulation 1993;87:1179‐1187)


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2004

Lamin A/C deficiency causes defective nuclear mechanics and mechanotransduction

Jan Lammerding; P. Christian Schulze; Tomosaburo Takahashi; Serguei Kozlov; Teresa Sullivan; Roger D. Kamm; Colin L. Stewart; Richard T. Lee

Mutations in the lamin A/C gene (LMNA) cause a variety of human diseases including Emery-Dreifuss muscular dystrophy, dilated cardiomyopathy, and Hutchinson-Gilford progeria syndrome. The tissue-specific effects of lamin mutations are unclear, in part because the function of lamin A/C is incompletely defined, but the many muscle-specific phenotypes suggest that defective lamin A/C could increase cellular mechanical sensitivity. To investigate the role of lamin A/C in mechanotransduction, we subjected lamin A/C-deficient mouse embryo fibroblasts to mechanical strain and measured nuclear mechanical properties and strain-induced signaling. We found that Lmna-/- cells have increased nuclear deformation, defective mechanotransduction, and impaired viability under mechanical strain. NF-kappaB-regulated transcription in response to mechanical or cytokine stimulation was attenuated in Lmna-/- cells despite increased transcription factor binding. Lamin A/C deficiency is thus associated with both defective nuclear mechanics and impaired mechanically activated gene transcription. These findings suggest that the tissue-specific effects of lamin A/C mutations observed in the laminopathies may arise from varying degrees of impaired nuclear mechanics and transcriptional activation.


Circulation | 2001

The Impact of Calcification on the Biomechanical Stability of Atherosclerotic Plaques

Hayden Huang; Renu Virmani; Hesham Younis; Allen P. Burke; Roger D. Kamm; Richard T. Lee

Background —Increased biomechanical stresses in the fibrous cap of atherosclerotic plaques contribute to plaque rupture and, consequently, to thrombosis and myocardial infarction. Thin fibrous caps and large lipid pools are important determinants of increased plaque stresses. Although coronary calcification is associated with worse cardiovascular prognosis, the relationship between atheroma calcification and stresses is incompletely described. Methods and Results —To test the hypothesis that calcification impacts biomechanical stresses in human atherosclerotic lesions, we studied 20 human coronary lesions with techniques that have previously been shown to predict plaque rupture locations accurately. Ten ruptured and 10 stable lesions derived from post mortem coronary arteries were studied using large-strain finite element analysis. Maximum stress was not correlated with percentage of calcification, but it was positively correlated with the percentage of lipid (P =0.024). When calcification was eliminated and replaced with fibrous plaque, stress changed insignificantly; the median increase in stress for all specimens was 0.1% (range, 0% to 8%;P =0.85). In contrast, stress decreased by a median of 26% (range, 1% to 78%;P =0.02) when lipid was replaced with fibrous plaque. Conclusions —Calcification does not increase fibrous cap stress in typical ruptured or stable human coronary atherosclerotic lesions. In contrast to lipid pools, which dramatically increase stresses, calcification does not seem to decrease the mechanical stability of the coronary atheroma.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Three-dimensional microfluidic model for tumor cell intravasation and endothelial barrier function

Ioannis K. Zervantonakis; Shannon K. Hughes-Alford; Joseph L. Charest; John Condeelis; Frank B. Gertler; Roger D. Kamm

Entry of tumor cells into the blood stream is a critical step in cancer metastasis. Although significant progress has been made in visualizing tumor cell motility in vivo, the underlying mechanism of cancer cell intravasation remains largely unknown. We developed a microfluidic-based assay to recreate the tumor-vascular interface in three-dimensions, allowing for high resolution, real-time imaging, and precise quantification of endothelial barrier function. Studies are aimed at testing the hypothesis that carcinoma cell intravasation is regulated by biochemical factors from the interacting cells and cellular interactions with macrophages. We developed a method to measure spatially resolved endothelial permeability and show that signaling with macrophages via secretion of tumor necrosis factor alpha results in endothelial barrier impairment. Under these conditions intravasation rates were increased as validated with live imaging. To further investigate tumor-endothelial (TC-EC) signaling, we used highly invasive fibrosarcoma cells and quantified tumor cell migration dynamics and TC-EC interactions under control and perturbed (with tumor necrosis factor alpha) barrier conditions. We found that endothelial barrier impairment was associated with a higher number and faster dynamics of TC-EC interactions, in agreement with our carcinoma intravasation results. Taken together our results provide evidence that the endothelium poses a barrier to tumor cell intravasation that can be regulated by factors present in the tumor microenvironment.


Lab on a Chip | 2009

Cell migration into scaffolds under co-culture conditions in a microfluidic platform

Seok Chung; Ryo Sudo; Peter Mack; Chen Rei Wan; Vernella Vickerman; Roger D. Kamm

Capillary morphogenesis is a complex cellular process that occurs in response to external stimuli. A number of assays have been used to study critical regulators of the process, but those assays are typically limited by the inability to control biochemical gradients and to obtain images on the single cell level. We have recently developed a new microfluidic platform that has the capability to control the biochemical and biomechanical forces within a three dimensional scaffold coupled with accessible image acquisition. Here, the developed platform is used to evaluate and quantify capillary growth and endothelial cell migration from an intact cell monolayer. We also evaluate the endothelial cell response when placed in co-culture with physiologically relevant cell types, including cancer cells and smooth muscle cells. This resulted in the following observations: cancer cells can either attract (MTLn3 cancer cell line) endothelial cells and induce capillary formation or have minimal effect (U87MG cancer cell line) while smooth muscle cells (10T 1/2) suppress endothelial activity. Results presented demonstrate the capabilities of this platform to study cellular morphogenesis both qualitatively and quantitatively while having the advantage of enhanced imaging and internal biological controls. Finally, the platform has numerous applications in the study of angiogenesis, or migration of other cell types including tumor cells, into a three-dimensional scaffold or across an endothelial layer under precisely controlled conditions of mechanical, biochemical and co-culture environments.


Nature | 2004

Mechanotransduction through growth-factor shedding into the extracellular space.

Daniel J. Tschumperlin; Guohao Dai; Ivan V. Maly; Tadashi Kikuchi; Lily H. Laiho; Anna McVittie; Kathleen J. Haley; Craig M. Lilly; Peter T. C. So; Douglas A. Lauffenburger; Roger D. Kamm; Jeffrey M. Drazen

Physical forces elicit biochemical signalling in a diverse array of cells, tissues and organisms, helping to govern fundamental biological processes. Several hypotheses have been advanced that link physical forces to intracellular signalling pathways, but in many cases the molecular mechanisms of mechanotransduction remain elusive. Here we find that compressive stress shrinks the lateral intercellular space surrounding epithelial cells, and triggers cellular signalling via autocrine binding of epidermal growth factor family ligands to the epidermal growth factor receptor. Mathematical analysis predicts that constant rate shedding of autocrine ligands into a collapsing lateral intercellular space leads to increased local ligand concentrations that are sufficient to account for the observed receptor signalling; direct experimental comparison of signalling stimulated by compressive stress versus exogenous soluble ligand supports this prediction. These findings establish a mechanism by which mechanotransduction arises from an autocrine ligand–receptor circuit operating in a dynamically regulated extracellular volume, not requiring induction of force-dependent biochemical processes within the cell or cell membrane.


Lab on a Chip | 2008

Design, fabrication and implementation of a novel multi-parameter control microfluidic platform for three-dimensional cell culture and real-time imaging

Vernella Vickerman; Jennifer T. Blundo; Seok Chung; Roger D. Kamm

New and more biologically relevant in vitro models are needed for use in drug development, regenerative medicine, and fundamental scientific investigation. While the importance of the extracellular microenvironment is clear, the ability to investigate the effects of physiologically relevant biophysical and biochemical factors is restricted in traditional cell culture platforms. Moreover, the versatility for multi-parameter manipulation, on a single platform, with the optical resolution to monitor the dynamics of individual cells or small population is lacking. Here we introduce a microfluidic platform for 3D cell culture in biologically derived or synthetic hydrogels with the capability to monitor cellular dynamics in response to changes in their microenvironment. Direct scaffold microinjection, was employed to incorporate 3D matrices into microfluidic devices. Our system geometry permits a unique window for studying directional migration, e.g. sprouting angiogenesis, since sprouts grow predominantly in the microscopic viewing plane. In this study, we demonstrate the ability to generate gradients (non-reactive solute), surface shear, interstitial flow, and image cells in situ. Three different capillary morphogenesis assays are demonstrated. Human adult dermal microvascular endothelial cells (HMVEC-ad) were maintained in culture for up to 7 days during which they formed open lumen-like structures which was confirmed with confocal microscopy and by perfusion with fluorescent microspheres. In the sprouting assay, time-lapse movies revealed cellular mechanisms and dynamics (filopodial projection/retraction, directional migration, cell division and lumen formation) during tip-cell invasion of underlying 3D matrix and subsequent lumen formation.


Nature Protocols | 2012

Microfluidic assay for simultaneous culture of multiple cell types on surfaces or within hydrogels

Yoojin Shin; Sewoon Han; Jessie S. Jeon; Kyoko Yamamoto; Ioannis K. Zervantonakis; Ryo Sudo; Roger D. Kamm; Seok Chung

This protocol describes a simple but robust microfluidic assay combining three-dimensional (3D) and two-dimensional (2D) cell culture. The microfluidic platform comprises hydrogel-incorporating chambers between surface-accessible microchannels. By using this platform, well-defined biochemical and biophysical stimuli can be applied to multiple cell types interacting over distances of <1 mm, thereby replicating many aspects of the in vivo microenvironment. Capabilities exist for time-dependent manipulation of flow and concentration gradients as well as high-resolution real-time imaging for observing spatial-temporal single-cell behavior, cell-cell communication, cell-matrix interactions and cell population dynamics. These heterotypic cell type assays can be used to study cell survival, proliferation, migration, morphogenesis and differentiation under controlled conditions. Applications include the study of previously unexplored cellular interactions, and they have already provided new insights into how biochemical and biophysical factors regulate interactions between populations of different cell types. It takes 3 d to fabricate the system and experiments can run for up to several weeks.


Biomaterials | 2002

Control of self-assembling oligopeptide matrix formation through systematic variation of amino acid sequence.

Michael R. Caplan; Elissa M. Schwartzfarb; Shuguang Zhang; Roger D. Kamm; Douglas A. Lauffenburger

In order to elucidate design principles for biocompatible materials that can be created by in situ transformation from self-assembling oligopeptides, we investigate a class of oligopeptides that can self-assemble in salt solutions to form three-dimensional matrices. This class of peptides possesses a repeated sequence of amino acid residues with the type: hydrophobic/negatively-charged/hydrophobic/positively-charged. We systematically vary three chief aspects of this sequence type: (1) the hydrophobic side chains: (2) the charged side-chains: and (3) the number of repeats. Employing a rheometric assay to judge matrix formation, we determine the critical concentration of NaCl salt solution required to drive transformation from viscous state to gel state. We find that increasing side-chain hydrophobicity decreases the critical salt concentration in accord with our previous validation of DLVO theory for explaining this self-assembly phenomenon Caplan et al. (Biomacromolecules 1 (2000) 627). Further, we find that increasing the number of repeats yields a biphasic dependence-first decreasing, then increasing, the critical salt concentration. We believe that this result is likely due to an unequal competition between a greater hydrophobic (favorable) effect and a greater entropic (unfavorable) effect as the peptide length is increased. Finally, we find that we can use this understanding to rationally alter the charged side-chains to create a self-assembling oligopeptide sequence that at pH 7 remains viscous in the absence of salt but gels in the presence of physiological salt concentrations, a highly useful property for technological applications.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001

Mechanical stress is communicated between different cell types to elicit matrix remodeling

Melody Swartz; Daniel J. Tschumperlin; Roger D. Kamm; Jeffrey M. Drazen

Tissue remodeling often reflects alterations in local mechanical conditions and manifests as an integrated response among the different cell types that share, and thus cooperatively manage, an extracellular matrix. Here we examine how two different cell types, one that undergoes the stress and the other that primarily remodels the matrix, might communicate a mechanical stress by using airway cells as a representative in vitro system. Normal stress is imposed on bronchial epithelial cells in the presence of unstimulated lung fibroblasts. We show that (i) mechanical stress can be communicated from stressed to unstressed cells to elicit a remodeling response, and (ii) the integrated response of two cell types to mechanical stress mimics key features of airway remodeling seen in asthma: namely, an increase in production of fibronectin, collagen types III and V, and matrix metalloproteinase type 9 (MMP-9) (relative to tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase-1, TIMP-1). These observations provide a paradigm to use in understanding the management of mechanical forces on the tissue level.

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Ascher H. Shapiro

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Mark Johnson

Northwestern University

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H. Harry Asada

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Jessie S. Jeon

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Douglas A. Lauffenburger

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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