Scott Swarbreck
University of Western Ontario
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Featured researches published by Scott Swarbreck.
Microcirculation | 2013
Dan Secor; Scott Swarbreck; Christopher G. Ellis; Michael D. Sharpe; Karel Tyml
Compromised perfusion of the capillary bed can lead to organ failure and mortality in sepsis. We have reported that intravenous injection of ascorbate inhibits platelet adhesion and plugging in septic capillaries. In this study, we hypothesized that ascorbate reduces aggregation of platelets and their surface expression of P‐selectin (a key adhesion molecule) in mice.
Journal of Surgical Research | 2014
Scott Swarbreck; Dan Secor; Christopher G. Ellis; Michael D. Sharpe; John X. Wilson; Karel Tyml
BACKGROUND Sepsis, a potential risk associated with surgery, leads to a systemic inflammatory response including the plugging of capillary beds. This plugging may precipitate organ failure and subsequent death. We have shown that capillary plugging can be reversed rapidly within 1 h by intravenous injection of ascorbate in mouse skeletal muscle. It is unknown whether, in parallel with this effect, ascorbate negatively affects the protective responses to sepsis involving the fibrinolytic and immune systems. We hypothesized that treatment with ascorbate for 1 h does not alter bacterial content, plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 (PAI-1), and neutrophil infiltration in lung, kidney, spleen, and liver (organs with high immune response) of septic mice. MATERIALS AND METHODS Sepsis was induced by feces injection into the peritoneum. Mice were injected intravenously with ascorbate at 6 h (10 mg/kg), and samples of peritoneal fluid, arterial blood, and organs collected at 7 h were subjected to analyses of bacterial content, PAI-1 messenger RNA and enzymatic activity, and myeloperoxidase (MPO) (a measure of neutrophil infiltration). RESULTS Sepsis increased bacterial content in all fluids and organs and increased PAI-1 messenger RNA and enzymatic activity in the lung and liver. Sepsis increased the myeloperoxidase level in the lung and liver, and lowered it in the spleen. Except for decreasing the bacterial content in blood, these responses to sepsis were not altered by ascorbate. CONCLUSIONS The rapid effect of ascorbate against capillary plugging in the septic mouse skeletal muscle is not accompanied by alterations in PAI-1 or myeloperoxidase responses in the organs with high immune response.
Blood Coagulation & Fibrinolysis | 2015
Scott Swarbreck; Dan Secor; Christopher G. Ellis; Michael D. Sharpe; John X. Wilson; Karel Tyml
The microcirculation during sepsis fails due to capillary plugging involving microthrombosis. We demonstrated that intravenous injection of ascorbate reduces this plugging, but the mechanism of this beneficial effect remains unclear. We hypothesize that ascorbate inhibits the release of the antifibrinolytic plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) from endothelial cells and platelets during sepsis. Microvascular endothelial cells and platelets were isolated from mice. Cells were cultured and stimulated with lipopolysaccharide (LPS), tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF&agr;), or thrombin (agents of sepsis), with/without ascorbate for 1–24 h. PAI-1 mRNA was determined by quantitative PCR. PAI-1 protein release into the culture medium was measured by ELISA. In platelets, PAI-1 release was measured after LPS, TNF&agr;, or thrombin stimulation, with/without ascorbate. In endothelial cells, LPS and TNF&agr; increased PAI-1 mRNA after 6–24 h, but no increase in PAI-1 release was observed; ascorbate did not affect these responses. In platelets, thrombin, but not LPS or TNF&agr;, increased PAI-1 release; ascorbate inhibited this increase at low extracellular pH. In unstimulated endothelial cells and platelets, PAI-1 is released into the extracellular space. Thrombin increases this release from platelets; ascorbate inhibits it pH-dependently. The data suggest that ascorbate promotes fibrinolysis in the microvasculature under acidotic conditions in sepsis.
Blood Coagulation & Fibrinolysis | 2014
Scott Swarbreck; Dan Secor; Fuyan Li; Peter L. Gross; Christopher G. Ellis; Sharpe; John X. Wilson; Karel Tyml
Plugging of the capillary bed in tissues correlates with organ failure during sepsis. In septic mouse skeletal muscle, we showed that blood in capillaries becomes hypercoagulable and that ascorbate injection inhibits capillary plugging. In the present study, we hypothesized that ascorbate promotes fibrinolysis, reversing this plugging. Sepsis in mice was induced by fecal injection into peritoneum. Mice were injected intravenously with a bolus of streptokinase (fibrinolytic agent) or ascorbate at 5–6 h. Both agents reversed capillary plugging in muscle at 7 h. Sepsis increased mRNA expression of urokinase plasminogen activator (u-PA) (profibrinolytic) and plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 (PAI-1) (antifibrinolytic) in muscle and liver homogenates at 7 h. Ascorbate did not affect u-PA mRNA in either tissue, but it inhibited PAI-1 mRNA in muscle, suggesting enhanced fibrinolysis in this tissue. However, ascorbate did not affect increased PAI-1 mRNA in the liver (dominant source of soluble PAI-1 in systemic blood). Consistently, ascorbate affected neither elevated PAI-1 protein/enzymatic activity in septic liver nor lowered plasmin antiplasmin level in septic blood. Furthermore, hypocoagulability of septic blood revealed by thrombelastography and thrombin-induced PAI-1 release from isolated platelets (ex-vivo model of sepsis) were not affected by ascorbate. Based on the PAI-1 protein data, the present study does not support the hypothesis that ascorbate promotes fibrinolysis in sepsis.
Blood Coagulation & Fibrinolysis | 2017
Dan Secor; Scott Swarbreck; Christopher G. Ellis; Sharpe; Qingping Feng; Karel Tyml
Plugging of the capillary bed can lead to organ failure and mortality in sepsis. We have reported that intravenous ascorbate injection reduces platelet adhesion to the capillary wall and capillary plugging in septic mice. Both platelet adhesion and capillary plugging require P-selectin, a key adhesion molecule. To elucidate the beneficial effect of ascorbate, we hypothesized that ascorbate reduces platelet-endothelial adhesion by reducing P-selectin surface expression in endothelial cells. We used mouse platelets, and monolayers of cultured microvascular endothelial cells (mouse skeletal muscle origin) stimulated with lipopolysaccharide, to examine platelet-endothelial adhesion. P-selectin mRNA expression in endothelial cells was determined by real-time PCR and P-selectin protein expression at the surface of these cells by immunofluorescence. Secretion of von Willebrand factor from cells into the supernatant (a measure of P-selectin-containing granule exocytosis) was determined by ELISA. Lipopolysaccharide (10 &mgr;g/ml, 1 h) increased platelet-endothelial adhesion. P-selectin-blocking antibody inhibited this adhesion. Lipopolysaccharide also increased P-selectin mRNA in endothelial cells, P-selectin expression at the endothelial surface, and von Willebrand factor secretion. Ascorbate pretreatment (100 &mgr;mol/l, 4 h) inhibited the increased platelet adhesion, surface expression of P-selectin, and von Willebrand factor secretion, but not the increase in P-selectin mRNA. The lipopolysaccharide-induced increase in platelet-endothelial adhesion requires P-selectin presence at the endothelial surface. Ascorbates ability to reduce this presence could be important in reducing both platelet adhesion to the capillary wall and capillary plugging in sepsis.
Journal of Vascular Research | 2015
Mohammad Siddiqui; Scott Swarbreck; Qing Shao; Dan Secor; Tianqing Peng; Dale W. Laird; Karel Tyml
Background: We discovered that lipopolysaccharide (LPS, an initiating factor in sepsis) and hypoxia-reoxygenation (H/R, a confounding factor) reduce electrical coupling between microvascular endothelial cells from wild-type (WT) but not Cx40-/- mice. Because Cx40 knockout could result in nonspecific effects, this discovery may not establish the causal relationship between Cx40 and reduced coupling. Using the same cell culture model, we aimed to address this uncertainty by using the rescue-of-function approach. Methods/Results: Electrical coupling between endothelial cells (hind-limb muscle origin) was determined by electrophysiology. LPS, H/R and concurrent LPS + H/R reduced coupling between WT but not Cx40-/- cells. The defect in Cx40-/- cells was rescued by ectopic expression of Cx40, after infecting the cells with adenovirus encoding Cx40. Cx40-/- cells were also engineered to express mutant Cx40 that lacked the carboxyl terminal domain beginning at residue 236 (Cx40Δ237-358) or 344 (Cx40Δ345-358). No response to inflammatory stimuli was observed in cells expressing either of these 2 mutants. Conclusion: Our data establish the causal relationship between Cx40 and reduced coupling and suggest that the 345-358 amino acid motif of the Cx40 carboxyl terminal is required for reduced coupling. Cx40 may participate in compromised conducted response in the microvasculature during sepsis.
American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2009
Rebecca L. McKinnon; Michael L. Bolon; Hong Xing Wang; Scott Swarbreck; Gerald M. Kidder; Alexander M. Simon; Karel Tyml
Critical Care | 2017
Karel Tyml; Scott Swarbreck; Cynthia Pape; Dan Secor; James Koropatnick; Qingping Feng; Ruud A. W. Veldhuizen; Sean E. Gill
Archive | 2015
Karel Tyml; Jingcheng Yu; Daniel Goldman; Christopher G. Ellis; Darcy Lidington; Fuyan Li; Kevin C. Doerschug; Angela Delsing; Gregory A. Schmidt; William G. Haynes; Alexander M. Simon; Rebecca L. McKinnon; Michael L. Bolon; Hong-Xing Wang; Scott Swarbreck; Gerald M. Kidder
Journal of Vascular Research | 2015
Michael A. Hill; Yoonjung Park; Xiuping Chen; Hanrui Zhang; Cuihua Zhang; Guodong Tie; Jinglian Yan; Julia A. Messina; Robert L. Raffai; Louis M. Messina; Han Jiang; Qian Xia; Shijie Xin; Yun Lun; Jianbo Song; Dianjun Tang; Xun Liu; Jiancong Ren; Zhiquan Duan; Jian Zhang; Mohammad Siddiqui; Scott Swarbreck; Qing Shao; Dan Secor; Tianqing Peng; Dale W. Laird; Karel Tyml; Jennifer E. McCallum; Amanda E. Mackenzie; Nina Divorty