Romuald Girard
University of Chicago
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Featured researches published by Romuald Girard.
Nature | 2017
Alan T. Tang; Jaesung Peter Choi; Jonathan J. Kotzin; Yiqing Yang; Courtney C. Hong; Nicholas Hobson; Romuald Girard; Hussein A. Zeineddine; Rhonda Lightle; Thomas Moore; Ying Cao; Robert Shenkar; Mei Chen; Patricia Mericko; Jisheng Yang; Li Li; Ceylan Tanes; Dmytro Kobuley; Urmo Võsa; Kevin J. Whitehead; Dean Y. Li; Lude Franke; Blaine L. Hart; Markus Schwaninger; Jorge Henao-Mejia; Leslie Morrison; Helen Kim; Issam A. Awad; Xiangjian Zheng; Mark L. Kahn
Cerebral cavernous malformations (CCMs) are a cause of stroke and seizure for which no effective medical therapies yet exist. CCMs arise from the loss of an adaptor complex that negatively regulates MEKK3–KLF2/4 signalling in brain endothelial cells, but upstream activators of this disease pathway have yet to be identified. Here we identify endothelial Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) and the gut microbiome as critical stimulants of CCM formation. Activation of TLR4 by Gram-negative bacteria or lipopolysaccharide accelerates CCM formation, and genetic or pharmacologic blockade of TLR4 signalling prevents CCM formation in mice. Polymorphisms that increase expression of the TLR4 gene or the gene encoding its co-receptor CD14 are associated with higher CCM lesion burden in humans. Germ-free mice are protected from CCM formation, and a single course of antibiotics permanently alters CCM susceptibility in mice. These studies identify unexpected roles for the microbiome and innate immune signalling in the pathogenesis of a cerebrovascular disease, as well as strategies for its treatment.
Stroke | 2017
Robert Shenkar; Changbin Shi; Cecilia Austin; Thomas R. Moore; Rhonda Lightle; Ying Cao; Lingjiao Zhang; Meijing Wu; Hussein A. Zeineddine; Romuald Girard; David A. McDonald; Autumn Rorrer; Carol J. Gallione; Peter Pytel; James K. Liao; Douglas A. Marchuk; Issam A. Awad
Background and Purpose— We sought to compare the effect of chronic treatment with commonly tolerated doses of Fasudil, a specific RhoA kinase (ROCK) inhibitor, and simvastatin (with pleiotropic effects including ROCK inhibition) on cerebral cavernous malformation (CCM) genesis and maturation in 2 models that recapitulate the human disease. Methods— Two heterozygous murine models, Ccm1+/−Msh2−/− and Ccm2+/−Trp53−/−, were treated from weaning to 4 to 5 months of age with Fasudil (100 mg/kg per day), simvastatin (40 mg/kg per day) or with placebo. Mouse brains were blindly assessed for CCM lesion burden, nonheme iron deposition (as a quantitative measure of chronic lesional hemorrhage), and ROCK activity. Results— Fasudil, but not simvastatin, significantly decreased mature CCM lesion burden in Ccm1+/−Msh2−/− mice, and in meta-analysis of both models combined, when compared with mice receiving placebo. Fasudil and simvastatin both significantly decreased the integrated iron density per mature lesion area in Ccm1+/−Msh2−/− mice, and in both models combined, compared with mice given placebo. ROCK activity in mature lesions of Ccm1+/−Msh2−/− mice was similar with both treatments. Fasudil, but not simvastatin, improved survival in Ccm1+/−Msh2−/− mice. Fasudil and simvastatin treatment did not affect survival or lesion development significantly in Ccm2+/−Trp53−/− mice alone, and Fasudil benefit seemed limited to males. Conclusions— ROCK inhibitor Fasudil was more efficacious than simvastatin in improving survival and blunting the development of mature CCM lesions. Both drugs significantly decreased chronic hemorrhage in CCM lesions. These findings justify the development of ROCK inhibitors and the clinical testing of commonly used statin agents in CCM.
Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism | 2015
Abdul Ghani Mikati; Omaditya Khanna; Lingjiao Zhang; Romuald Girard; Robert Shenkar; Xiaodong Guo; Akash Shah; Henrik B.W. Larsson; Huan Tan; Luying Li; Matthew S Wishnoff; Changbin Shi; Gregory A. Christoforidis; Issam A. Awad
Patients with the familial form of cerebral cavernous malformations (CCMs) are haploinsufficient for the CCM1, CCM2, or CCM3 gene. Loss of corresponding CCM proteins increases RhoA kinase-mediated endothelial permeability in vitro, and in mouse brains in vivo. A prospective case-controlled observational study investigated whether the brains of human subjects with familial CCM show vascular hyperpermeability by dynamic contrast-enhanced quantitative perfusion magnetic resonance imaging, in comparison with CCM cases without familial disease, and whether lesional or brain vascular permeability correlates with CCM disease activity. Permeability in white matter far (WMF) from lesions was significantly greater in familial than in sporadic cases, but was similar in CCM lesions. Permeability in WMF increased with age in sporadic patients, but not in familial cases. Patients with more aggressive familial CCM disease had greater WMF permeability compared to those with milder disease phenotype, but similar lesion permeability. Subjects receiving statin medications for routine cardiovascular indications had a trend of lower WMF, but not lesion, permeability. This is the first demonstration of brain vascular hyperpermeability in humans with an autosomal dominant disease, as predicted mechanistically. Brain permeability, more than lesion permeability, may serve as a biomarker of CCM disease activity, and help calibrate potential drug therapy.
American Journal of Neuroradiology | 2016
Huan Tan; Lingjiao Zhang; Abdul Ghani Mikati; Romuald Girard; Omaditya Khanna; Maged D. Fam; Tian Liu; Yi Wang; Robert R. Edelman; Gregory A. Christoforidis; Issam A. Awad
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Quantitative susceptibility mapping has been shown to assess iron content in cerebral cavernous malformations. In this study, our aim was to correlate lesional iron deposition assessed by quantitative susceptibility mapping with clinical and disease features in patients with cerebral cavernous malformations. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Patients underwent routine clinical scans in addition to quantitative susceptibility mapping on 3T systems. Data from 105 patients met the inclusion criteria. Cerebral cavernous malformation lesions identified on susceptibility maps were cross-verified by T2-weighted images and differentiated on the basis of prior overt hemorrhage. Mean susceptibility per cerebral cavernous malformation lesion (χ̄lesion) was measured to correlate with lesion volume, age at scanning, and hemorrhagic history. Temporal rates of change in χ̄lesion were evaluated in 33 patients. RESULTS: Average χ̄lesion per patient was positively correlated with patient age at scanning (P < .05, 4.1% change with each decade of life). Cerebral cavernous malformation lesions with prior overt hemorrhages exhibited higher χ̄lesion than those without (P < .05). Changes in χ̄lesion during 3- to 15-month follow-up were small in patients without new hemorrhage between the 2 scans (bias = −0.0003; 95% CI, −0.06–0.06). CONCLUSIONS: The study revealed a positive correlation between mean quantitative susceptibility mapping signal and patient age in cerebral cavernous malformation lesions, higher mean quantitative susceptibility mapping signal in hemorrhagic lesions, and minimum longitudinal quantitative susceptibility mapping signal change in clinically stable lesions. Quantitative susceptibility mapping has the potential to be a novel imaging biomarker supplementing conventional imaging in cerebral cavernous malformations. The clinical significance of such measures merits further study.
Biomarkers in Medicine | 2016
Romuald Girard; Omaditya Khanna; Robert Shenkar; Lingjiao Zhang; Meijing Wu; Michael Jesselson; Hussein A. Zeineddine; Anupriya Gangal; Maged D. Fam; Christopher C. Gibson; Kevin J. Whitehead; Dean Y. Li; James K. Liao; Changbin Shi; Issam A. Awad
AIM To correlate cerebral cavernous malformations (CCMs) disease aggressiveness with peripheral blood biomarkers hypothesized mechanistically. PATIENTS & METHODS A prospective case-control study enrolled 43 CCM patients, where 25-(OH) vitamin D, HDL and non-HDL cholesterol, CRP plasma levels and leukocyte ROCK activity were correlated with parameters of disease aggressiveness reflecting chronic and acute domains. RESULTS Patients with one or more features of chronically aggressive disease (early age at symptom onset, two or more symptomatic bleeds, high lesion burden) had significantly lower 25-(OH) vitamin D and non-HDL cholesterol levels in comparison to patients without these features. CONCLUSION Validation of these biomarkers and their potential treatment modulation may influence the clinical care of patients with CCM disease.
Journal of Neurosurgery | 2017
Romuald Girard; Maged D. Fam; Hussein A. Zeineddine; Huan Tan; Abdul Ghani Mikati; Changbin Shi; Michael Jesselson; Robert Shenkar; Meijing Wu; Ying Cao; Nicholas Hobson; Henrik B.W. Larsson; Gregory A. Christoforidis; Issam A. Awad
OBJECTIVE Vascular permeability and iron leakage are central features of cerebral cavernous malformation (CCM) pathogenesis. The authors aimed to correlate prospective clinical behavior of CCM lesions with longitudinal changes in biomarkers of dynamic contrast-enhanced quantitative permeability (DCEQP) and quantitative susceptibility mapping (QSM) assessed by MRI. METHODS Forty-six patients with CCMs underwent 2 or more permeability and/or susceptibility studies in conjunction with baseline and follow-up imaging and clinical surveillance during a mean 12.05 months of follow-up (range 2.4-31.27 months). Based on clinical and imaging features, cases/lesions were classified as stable, unstable, or recovering. Associated and predictive changes in quantitative permeability and susceptibility were investigated. RESULTS Lesional mean permeability and QSM values were not significantly different in stable versus unstable lesions at baseline. Mean lesional permeability in unstable CCMs with lesional bleeding or growth increased significantly (+85.9% change; p = 0.005), while mean permeability in stable and recovering lesions did not significantly change. Mean lesional QSM values significantly increased in unstable lesions (+44.1% change; p = 0.01), decreased slightly with statistical significance in stable lesions (-3.2% change; p = 0.003), and did not significantly change in recovering lesions. Familial cases developing new lesions during the follow-up period showed a higher background brain permeability at baseline (p = 0.001), as well as higher regional permeability (p = 0.003) in the area that would later develop a new lesion as compared with the homologous contralateral brain region. CONCLUSIONS In vivo assessment of vascular permeability and iron deposition on MRI can serve as objective and quantifiable biomarkers of disease activity in CCMs. This may be applied in natural history studies and may help calibrate clinical trials. The 2 techniques are likely applicable in other disorders of vascular integrity and iron leakage such as aging, hemorrhagic microangiopathy, and traumatic brain injury.
Journal of Neuroscience Methods | 2016
Romuald Girard; Hussein A. Zeineddine; Courtney P. Orsbon; Huan Tan; Thomas Moore; Nick Hobson; Robert Shenkar; Rhonda Lightle; Changbin Shi; Maged D. Fam; Ying Cao; Le Shen; April I. Neander; Autumn Rorrer; Carol J. Gallione; Alan T. Tang; Mark L. Kahn; Douglas A. Marchuk; Zhe-Xi Luo; Issam A. Awad
BACKGROUND Cerebral cavernous malformations (CCMs) are hemorrhagic brain lesions, where murine models allow major mechanistic discoveries, ushering genetic manipulations and preclinical assessment of therapies. Histology for lesion counting and morphometry is essential yet tedious and time consuming. We herein describe the application and validations of X-ray micro-computed tomography (micro-CT), a non-destructive technique allowing three-dimensional CCM lesion count and volumetric measurements, in transgenic murine brains. NEW METHOD We hereby describe a new contrast soaking technique not previously applied to murine models of CCM disease. Volumetric segmentation and image processing paradigm allowed for histologic correlations and quantitative validations not previously reported with the micro-CT technique in brain vascular disease. RESULTS Twenty-two hyper-dense areas on micro-CT images, identified as CCM lesions, were matched by histology. The inter-rater reliability analysis showed strong consistency in the CCM lesion identification and staging (K=0.89, p<0.0001) between the two techniques. Micro-CT revealed a 29% greater CCM lesion detection efficiency, and 80% improved time efficiency. COMPARISON WITH EXISTING METHOD Serial integrated lesional area by histology showed a strong positive correlation with micro-CT estimated volume (r(2)=0.84, p<0.0001). CONCLUSIONS Micro-CT allows high throughput assessment of lesion count and volume in pre-clinical murine models of CCM. This approach complements histology with improved accuracy and efficiency, and can be applied for lesion burden assessment in other brain diseases.
Journal of Neuroimmune Pharmacology | 2016
Changbin Shi; Robert Shenkar; Hussein A. Zeineddine; Romuald Girard; Maged D. Fam; Cecilia Austin; Thomas Moore; Rhonda Lightle; Lingjiao Zhang; Meijing Wu; Ying Cao; Murat Gunel; Angeliki Louvi; Autumn Rorrer; Carol J. Gallione; Douglas A. Marchuk; Issam A. Awad
Cerebral cavernous malformations (CCMs) are relatively common vascular malformations, characterized by increased Rho kinase (ROCK) activity, vascular hyper-permeability and the presence of blood degradation products including non-heme iron. Previous studies revealed robust inflammatory cell infiltration, selective synthesis of IgG, in situ antigen driven B-cell clonal expansion, and deposition of immune complexes and complement proteins within CCM lesions. We aimed to evaluate the impact of suppressing the immune response on the formation and maturation of CCM lesions, as well as lesional iron deposition and ROCK activity. Two murine models of heterozygous Ccm3 (Pdcd10), which spontaneously develop CCM lesions with severe and milder phenotypes, were either untreated or received anti-mouse BR3 to deplete B cells. Brains from anti-mouse BR3-treated mice exhibited significantly fewer mature CCM lesions and smaller lesions compared to untreated mice. B cell depletion halted the progression of lesions into mature stage 2 lesions but did not prevent their genesis. Non-heme iron deposition and ROCK activity was decreased in lesions of B cell depleted mice. This represents the first report of the therapeutic benefit of B-cell depletion in the development and progression of CCMs, and provides a proof of principle that B cells play a critical role in CCM lesion genesis and maturation. These findings add biologics to the list of potential therapeutic agents for CCM disease. Future studies would characterize the putative antigenic trigger and further define the mechanism of immune response in the lesions.
Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2017
Miguel Alejandro Lopez-Ramirez; Gregory J. Fonseca; Hussein A. Zeineddine; Romuald Girard; Thomas R. Moore; Angela Pham; Ying Cao; Robert Shenkar; Bart-Jan de Kreuk; Frederic Lagarrigue; Jack Lawler; Christopher K. Glass; Issam A. Awad; Mark H. Ginsberg
KRIT1 mutations are the most common cause of cerebral cavernous malformation (CCM). Acute Krit1 gene inactivation in mouse brain microvascular endothelial cells (BMECs) changes expression of multiple genes involved in vascular development. These changes include suppression of Thbs1, which encodes thrombospondin1 (TSP1) and has been ascribed to KLF2- and KLF4-mediated repression of Thbs1. In vitro reconstitution of TSP1 with either full-length TSP1 or 3TSR, an anti-angiogenic TSP1 fragment, suppresses heightened vascular endothelial growth factor signaling and preserves BMEC tight junctions. Furthermore, administration of 3TSR prevents the development of lesions in a mouse model of CCM1 (Krit1ECKO) as judged by histology and quantitative micro-computed tomography. Conversely, reduced TSP1 expression contributes to the pathogenesis of CCM, because inactivation of one or two copies of Thbs1 exacerbated CCM formation. Thus, loss of Krit1 function disables an angiogenic checkpoint to enable CCM formation. These results suggest that 3TSR, or other angiogenesis inhibitors, can be repurposed for TSP1 replacement therapy for CCMs.
Neurosurgery | 2018
Sean P. Polster; Ying Cao; Timothy J. Carroll; Kelly D. Flemming; Romuald Girard; Daniel F. Hanley; Nicholas Hobson; Helen Kim; James Koenig; Janne Koskimäki; Karen Lane; Jennifer J. Majersik; Nichol McBee; Leslie Morrison; Robert Shenkar; Agnieszka Stadnik; Richard E. Thompson; Joseph M. Zabramski; Hussein A. Zeineddine; Issam A. Awad
BACKGROUND Brain cavernous angiomas with symptomatic hemorrhage (CASH) are uncommon but exact a heavy burden of neurological disability from recurrent bleeding, for which there is no proven therapy. Candidate drugs to stabilize the CASH lesion and prevent rebleeding will ultimately require testing of safety and efficacy in multisite clinical trials. Much progress has been made in understanding the epidemiology of CASH, and novel biomarkers have been linked to the biological mechanisms and clinical activity in lesions. Yet, the ability to enroll and risk-stratify CASH subjects has never been assessed prospectively at multiple sites. Biomarkers and other outcomes have not been evaluated for their sensitivity and reliability, nor have they been harmonized across sites. OBJECTIVE To address knowledge gaps and establish a research network as infrastructure for future clinical trials, through the Trial Readiness grant mechanism, funded by National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke/National Institutes of Health. METHODS This project includes an observational cohort study to assess (1) the feasibility of screening, enrollment rates, baseline disease categorization, and follow-up of CASH using common data elements at multiple sites, (2) the reliability of imaging biomarkers including quantitative susceptibility mapping and permeability measures that have been shown to correlate with lesion activity, and (3) the rates of recurrent hemorrhage and change in functional status and biomarker measurements during prospective follow-up. EXPECTED OUTCOMES We propose a harmonized multisite assessment of enrollment rates of CASH, baseline features relevant to stratification in clinical trials, and follow-up assessments of functional outcomes in relation to clinical bleeds. We introduce novel biomarkers of vascular leak and hemorrhage, with firm mechanistic foundations, which have been linked to clinical disease activity. We shall test their reliability and validity at multiple sites, and assess their changes over time, with and without clinical rebleeds, hence their fitness as outcome instruments in clinical trials. DISCUSSION The timing cannot be more opportune, with therapeutic targets identified, exceptional collaboration among researchers and the patient community, along with several drugs ready to benefit from development of a path to clinical testing using this network in the next 5 years.