Sietse T. Braakman
Imperial College London
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Featured researches published by Sietse T. Braakman.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014
Darryl R. Overby; Enhua Zhou; Rocio Vargas-Pinto; Ryan M. Pedrigi; Rudolf Fuchshofer; Sietse T. Braakman; Ritika Gupta; Kristin Perkumas; Joseph M. Sherwood; Amir Vahabikashi; Quynh Dang; Jae Hun Kim; C. Ross Ethier; W. Daniel Stamer; Jeffrey J. Fredberg; Mark Johnson
Significance Glaucoma is a leading cause of blindness. The elevated intraocular pressure characteristic of many cases of glaucoma is attributable to increased resistance to aqueous humor outflow. However, the cause of this increased flow resistance has eluded investigators for over 140 y. Here we demonstrate that cells from the canal of Schlemm of glaucomatous eyes have altered gene expression and increased cytoskeletal stiffness that leads to reduced pore formation in these cells, likely accounting for increased outflow resistance associated with glaucoma. These findings thus establish that dysfunctional cytoskeletal mechanics may lie at the heart of this disease process and thereby motivate development of glaucoma therapeutics that target cell stiffness. Increased flow resistance is responsible for the elevated intraocular pressure characteristic of glaucoma, but the cause of this resistance increase is not known. We tested the hypothesis that altered biomechanical behavior of Schlemm’s canal (SC) cells contributes to this dysfunction. We used atomic force microscopy, optical magnetic twisting cytometry, and a unique cell perfusion apparatus to examine cultured endothelial cells isolated from the inner wall of SC of healthy and glaucomatous human eyes. Here we establish the existence of a reduced tendency for pore formation in the glaucomatous SC cell—likely accounting for increased outflow resistance—that positively correlates with elevated subcortical cell stiffness, along with an enhanced sensitivity to the mechanical microenvironment including altered expression of several key genes, particularly connective tissue growth factor. Rather than being seen as a simple mechanical barrier to filtration, the endothelium of SC is seen instead as a dynamic material whose response to mechanical strain leads to pore formation and thereby modulates the resistance to aqueous humor outflow. In the glaucomatous eye, this process becomes impaired. Together, these observations support the idea of SC cell stiffness—and its biomechanical effects on pore formation—as a therapeutic target in glaucoma.
Progress in Retinal and Eye Research | 2015
W. Daniel Stamer; Sietse T. Braakman; Enhua H. Zhou; C. Ross Ethier; Jeffrey J. Fredberg; Darryl R. Overby; Mark Johnson
Ocular hypertension in glaucoma develops due to age-related cellular dysfunction in the conventional outflow tract, resulting in increased resistance to aqueous humor outflow. Two cell types, trabecular meshwork (TM) and Schlemms canal (SC) endothelia, interact in the juxtacanalicular tissue (JCT) region of the conventional outflow tract to regulate outflow resistance. Unlike endothelial cells lining the systemic vasculature, endothelial cells lining the inner wall of SC support a transcellular pressure gradient in the basal to apical direction, thus acting to push the cells off their basal lamina. The resulting biomechanical strain in SC cells is quite large and is likely to be an important determinant of endothelial barrier function, outflow resistance and intraocular pressure. This review summarizes recent work demonstrating how biomechanical properties of SC cells impact glaucoma. SC cells are highly contractile, and such contraction greatly increases cell stiffness. Elevated cell stiffness in glaucoma may reduce the strain experienced by SC cells, decrease the propensity of SC cells to form pores, and thus impair the egress of aqueous humor from the eye. Furthermore, SC cells are sensitive to the stiffness of their local mechanical microenvironment, altering their own cell stiffness and modulating gene expression in response. Significantly, glaucomatous SC cells appear to be hyper-responsive to substrate stiffness. Thus, evidence suggests that targeting the material properties of SC cells will have therapeutic benefits for lowering intraocular pressure in glaucoma.
Experimental Eye Research | 2015
Sietse T. Braakman; A. Thomas Read; Darren W.-H. Chan; C. Ross Ethier; Darryl R. Overby
All aqueous humor draining through the conventional outflow pathway must cross the endothelium of Schlemms canal (SC), likely by passing through micron-sized transendothelial pores. SC pores are non-uniformly distributed along the inner wall endothelium, but it is unclear how the distribution of pores relates to the non-uniform or segmental distribution of aqueous humor outflow through the trabecular meshwork. It is hypothesized that regions in the juxtacanalicular tissue (JCT) with higher local outflow should coincide with regions of greater inner wall pore density compared to JCT regions with lower outflow. Three pairs of non-glaucomatous human donor eyes were perfused at 8xa0mmHg with fluorescent tracer nanospheres to decorate local patterns of outflow segmentation through the JCT. The inner wall was stained for CD31 and/or vimentin and imaged en face using confocal and scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Confocal and SEM images were spatially registered to examine the spatial relationship between inner wall pore density and tracer intensity in the underlying JCT. For each eye, tracer intensity, pore density (n) and pore diameter (D) (for both transcellular I and paracellular B pores) were measured in 4-7 regions of interest (ROIs; 50xa0×xa0150xa0μm each). Analysis of covariance was used to examine the relationship between tracer intensity and pore density, as well as the relationship between tracer intensity and three pore metrics (nD, nD(2) and nD(3)) that represent the local hydraulic conductivity of the outflow pathway as predicted by various hydrodynamic models. Tracer intensity in the JCT correlated positively with local pore density when considering total pores (pxa0=xa00.044) and paracellular B pores on their own (pxa0=xa00.016), but not transcellular I-pores on their own (pxa0=xa00.54). Local hydraulic conductivity as predicted by the three hydrodynamic models all showed a significant positive correlation with tracer intensity when considering total pores and B-pores (pxa0<xa00.0015 and pxa0<xa010(-4)) but not I-pores (pxa0>xa00.38). These data suggest that aqueous humor passes through micron-sized pores in the inner wall endothelium of SC. Paracellular B-pores appear to have a dominant contribution towards transendothelial filtration across the inner wall relative to transcellular I-pores. Impaired pore formation, as previously described in glaucomatous SC cells, may thereby contribute to greater outflow heterogeneity, outflow obstruction, and IOP elevation in glaucoma.
Experimental Eye Research | 2014
Sietse T. Braakman; Ryan M. Pedrigi; A. Thomas Read; James A.E. Smith; W. Daniel Stamer; C. Ross Ethier; Darryl R. Overby
The bulk of aqueous humor passing through the conventional outflow pathway must cross the inner wall endothelium of Schlemms canal (SC), likely through micron-sized transendothelial pores. SC pore density is reduced in glaucoma, possibly contributing to obstructed aqueous humor outflow and elevated intraocular pressure (IOP). Little is known about the mechanisms of pore formation; however, pores are often observed near dome-like cellular outpouchings known as giant vacuoles (GVs) where significant biomechanical strain acts on SC cells. We hypothesize that biomechanical strain triggers pore formation in SC cells. To test this hypothesis, primary human SC cells were isolated from three non-glaucomatous donors (aged 34, 44 and 68), and seeded on collagen-coated elastic membranes held within a membrane stretching device. Membranes were then exposed to 0%, 10% or 20% equibiaxial strain, and the cells were aldehyde-fixed 5xa0min after the onset of strain. Each membrane contained 3-4 separate monolayers of SC cells as replicates (Nxa0=xa034 total monolayers), and pores were assessed by scanning electron microscopy in 12 randomly selected regions (∼65,000xa0μm(2) per monolayer). Pores were identified and counted by four independent masked observers. Pore density increased with strain in all three cell lines (pxa0<xa00.010), increasing from 87xa0±xa036 pores/mm(2) at 0% strain to 342xa0±xa071 at 10% strain; two of the three cell lines showed no additional increase in pore density beyond 10% strain. Transcellular I-pores and paracellular B-pores both increased with strain (pxa0<xa00.038), however B-pores represented the majority (76%) of pores. Pore diameter, in contrast, appeared unaffected by strain (pxa0=xa00.25), having a mean diameter of 0.40xa0μm for I-pores (Nxa0=xa079 pores) and 0.67xa0μm for B-pores (Nxa0=xa0350 pores). Pore formation appears to be a mechanosensitive process that is triggered by biomechanical strain, suggesting that SC cells have the ability to modulate local pore density and filtration characteristics of the inner wall endothelium based on local biomechanical cues. The molecular mechanisms of pore formation and how they become altered in glaucoma may be studied inxa0vitro using stretched SC cells.
Experimental Eye Research | 2016
Sietse T. Braakman; James E. Moore; C. Ross Ethier; Darryl R. Overby
The majority of trabecular outflow likely crosses Schlemms canal (SC) endothelium through micron-sized pores, and SC endothelium provides the only continuous cell layer between the anterior chamber and episcleral venous blood. SC endothelium must therefore be sufficiently porous to facilitate outflow, while also being sufficiently restrictive to preserve the blood-aqueous barrier and prevent blood and serum proteins from entering the eye. To understand how SC endothelium satisfies these apparently incompatible functions, we examined how the diameter and density of SC pores affects retrograde diffusion of serum proteins across SC endothelium, i.e. from SC lumen into the juxtacanalicular tissue (JCT). Opposing retrograde diffusion is anterograde bulk flow velocity of aqueous humor passing through pores, estimated to be approximately 5xa0mm/s. As a result of this relatively large through-pore velocity, a mass transport model predicts that upstream (JCT) concentrations of larger solutes such as albumin are less than 1% of the concentration in SC lumen. However, smaller solutes such as glucose are predicted to have nearly the same concentration in the JCT and SC. In the hypothetical case that, rather than micron-sized pores, SC formed 65xa0nm fenestrae, as commonly observed in other filtration-active endothelia, the predicted concentration of albumin in the JCT would increase to approximately 50% of that in SC. These results suggest that the size and density of SC pores may have developed to allow SC endothelium to maintain the blood-aqueous barrier while simultaneously facilitating aqueous humor outflow.
American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2017
Mean Ghim; Paola Alpresa; Sung-Wook Yang; Sietse T. Braakman; Stephen G. Gray; Spencer J. Sherwin; Maarten van Reeuwijk; Peter D. Weinberg
Transport of macromolecules across vascular endothelium and its modification by fluid mechanical forces are important for normal tissue function and in the development of atherosclerosis. However, the routes by which macromolecules cross endothelium, the hemodynamic stresses that maintain endothelial physiology or trigger disease, and the dependence of transendothelial transport on hemodynamic stresses are controversial. We visualized pathways for macromolecule transport and determined the effect on these pathways of different types of flow. Endothelial monolayers were cultured under static conditions or on an orbital shaker producing different flow profiles in different parts of the wells. Fluorescent tracers that bound to the substrate after crossing the endothelium were used to identify transport pathways. Maps of tracer distribution were compared with numerical simulations of flow to determine effects of different shear stress metrics on permeability. Albumin-sized tracers dominantly crossed the cultured endothelium via junctions between neighboring cells, high-density lipoprotein-sized tracers crossed at tricellular junctions, and low-density lipoprotein-sized tracers crossed through cells. Cells aligned close to the angle that minimized shear stresses across their long axis. The rate of paracellular transport under flow correlated with the magnitude of these minimized transverse stresses, whereas transport across cells was uniformly reduced by all types of flow. These results contradict the long-standing two-pore theory of solute transport across microvessel walls and the consensus view that endothelial cells align with the mean shear vector. They suggest that endothelial cells minimize transverse shear, supporting its postulated proatherogenic role. Preliminary data show that similar tracer techniques are practicable in vivo.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Solutes of increasing size crossed cultured endothelium through intercellular junctions, through tricellular junctions, or transcellularly. Cells aligned to minimize the shear stress acting across their long axis. Paracellular transport correlated with the level of this minimized shear, but transcellular transport was reduced uniformly by flow regardless of the shear profile.
ASME 2012 Summer Bioengineering Conference, Parts A and B | 2012
Ryan M. Pedrigi; Ritika Gupta; Sietse T. Braakman; W. Daniel Stamer; C. Ross Ethier; Darryl R. Overby
Increased intraocular pressure (IOP) is the leading risk factor for glaucoma, but the mechanisms of IOP regulation during normalcy and disease are poorly understood. Considerable evidence suggests that Schlemm’s canal (SC) endothelial cells may influence IOP by regulating aqueous humor outflow via the formation of trans-endothelial pores. This study employs a biomimetic perfusion system to explore pore formation in SC cells in vitro. Our results show that pore formation increases with increasing pressure drop, occurs only when flow is directed basal-to-apical across the cell layer, and it is reduced in glaucomatous versus normal SC cell lines. These results suggest that pore formation is a biomechanically regulated process and they establish our system as the first in vitro model that captures a specific pathology associated with glaucoma.Copyright
Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2014
Sietse T. Braakman; W. Daniel Stamer; Darryl R. Overby
Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2017
Darryl R. Overby; Sietse T. Braakman; Alice Spenlehauer; Justino R Rodrigues; Carter Teal; A. Thomas Read; W. Daniel Stamer; C. Ross Ethier
Archive | 2015
Jeffrey J. Fredberg; Ben Fabry; Geoffrey N. Maksym; Stephanie A. Shore; Paul E. Moore; Mark Johnson; Jae Hun Kim; C. Ross Ethier; W. Daniel Stamer; Sietse T. Braakman; Ritika Gupta; Kristin Perkumas; Joseph M. Sherwood; R. Overby; Enhua H. Zhou; Rocio Vargas-Pinto; Ryan M. Pedrigi; Rudolf Fuchshofer; Cheng Chen; Jing Xie; Ravikumar Rajappa; Linhong Deng; Jeffrey Fredberg; Liu Yang