Thomas A. Mendel
University of Virginia
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Publication
Featured researches published by Thomas A. Mendel.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Thomas A. Mendel; Erin B. D. Clabough; David S. Kao; Tatiana N. Demidova-Rice; Jennifer T. Durham; Brendan C. Zotter; Scott A. Seaman; Stephen M. Cronk; Elizabeth Rakoczy; Adam J. Katz; Ira M. Herman; Shayn M. Peirce; Paul Andrew Yates
Background Retinal vasculopathies, including diabetic retinopathy (DR), threaten the vision of over 100 million people. Retinal pericytes are critical for microvascular control, supporting retinal endothelial cells via direct contact and paracrine mechanisms. With pericyte death or loss, endothelial dysfunction ensues, resulting in hypoxic insult, pathologic angiogenesis, and ultimately blindness. Adipose-derived stem cells (ASCs) differentiate into pericytes, suggesting they may be useful as a protective and regenerative cellular therapy for retinal vascular disease. In this study, we examine the ability of ASCs to differentiate into pericytes that can stabilize retinal vessels in multiple pre-clinical models of retinal vasculopathy. Methodology/Principal Findings We found that ASCs express pericyte-specific markers in vitro. When injected intravitreally into the murine eye subjected to oxygen-induced retinopathy (OIR), ASCs were capable of migrating to and integrating with the retinal vasculature. Integrated ASCs maintained marker expression and pericyte-like morphology in vivo for at least 2 months. ASCs injected after OIR vessel destabilization and ablation enhanced vessel regrowth (16% reduction in avascular area). ASCs injected intravitreally before OIR vessel destabilization prevented retinal capillary dropout (53% reduction). Treatment of ASCs with transforming growth factor beta (TGF-β1) enhanced hASC pericyte function, in a manner similar to native retinal pericytes, with increased marker expression of smooth muscle actin, cellular contractility, endothelial stabilization, and microvascular protection in OIR. Finally, injected ASCs prevented capillary loss in the diabetic retinopathic Akimba mouse (79% reduction 2 months after injection). Conclusions/Significance ASC-derived pericytes can integrate with retinal vasculature, adopting both pericyte morphology and marker expression, and provide functional vascular protection in multiple murine models of retinal vasculopathy. The pericyte phenotype demonstrated by ASCs is enhanced with TGF-β1 treatment, as seen with native retinal pericytes. ASCs may represent an innovative cellular therapy for protection against and repair of DR and other retinal vascular diseases.
Stem Cells Translational Medicine | 2015
Stephen M. Cronk; Molly R. Kelly-Goss; H. Clifton Ray; Thomas A. Mendel; Kyle L. Hoehn; Anthony C. Bruce; Bijan K. Dey; Alexander M Guendel; Daniel Naveed Tavakol; Ira M. Herman; Shayn M. Peirce; Paul Andrew Yates
Diabetic retinopathy is characterized by progressive vascular dropout with subsequent vision loss. We have recently shown that an intravitreal injection of adipose‐derived stem cells (ASCs) can stabilize the retinal microvasculature, enabling repair and regeneration of damaged capillary beds in vivo. Because an understanding of ASC status from healthy versus diseased donors will be important as autologous cellular therapies are developed for unmet clinical needs, we took advantage of the hyperglycemic Akimba mouse as a preclinical in vivo model of diabetic retinopathy in an effort aimed at evaluating therapeutic efficacy of adipose‐derived stem cells (mASCs) derived either from healthy, nondiabetic or from diabetic mice. To these ends, Akimba mice received intravitreal injections of media conditioned by mASCs or mASCs themselves, subsequent to development of substantial retinal capillary dropout. mASCs from healthy mice were more effective than diabetic mASCs in protecting the diabetic retina from further vascular dropout. Engrafted ASCs were found to preferentially associate with the retinal vasculature. Conditioned medium was unable to recapitulate the vasoprotection seen with injected ASCs. In vitro diabetic ASCs showed decreased proliferation and increased apoptosis compared with healthy mASCs. Diabetic ASCs also secreted less vasoprotective factors than healthy mASCs, as determined by high‐throughput enzyme‐linked immunosorbent assay. Our findings suggest that diabetic ASCs are functionally impaired compared with healthy ASCs and support the utility of an allogeneic injection of ASCs versus autologous or conditioned media approaches in the treatment of diabetic retinopathy.
Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2012
Alyssa Catherine Taylor; Thomas A. Mendel; Katelyn Mason; Katherine E. Degen; Paul Andrew Yates; Shayn M. Peirce
PURPOSE EphB4 and ephrinB2 are known key regulators of retinal vascular development, but due to their capacity for bidirectional signaling, delineation of their individual roles in this process remains unclear. To better dissect out individual contributions, a model of proliferative retinopathy in mice with attenuated ephrinB2 reverse signaling was studied. It was hypothesized that endothelial ephrinB2 reverse signaling regulates hypoxia-induced capillary sprouting, as well as the pathologic formation of neovascular tufts in postnatal retinal microvascular networks. METHODS Genetically manipulated mice with attenuated ephrinB2 reverse signaling (ephrinB2(lacZ/+)), along with wild-type (WT) controls, were exposed to oxygen-induced retinopathy (OIR), a postnatal model of proliferative retinopathy. At peak disease (postnatal day 18), microvascular networks were analyzed to examine intraretinal revascularization, capillary sprouting, and pathologic neovascularization responses. EphB4 and phosphorylated ephrinB protein expression patterns along retinal microvessels were also assessed. RESULTS EphrinB2(lacZ/+) mice exhibited reduced hypoxia-induced revascularization (P ≤ 0.04) and reduced formation of neovascular tufts (P < 0.001), as compared with WT controls. Corresponding to the observed inhibition of retinal angiogenesis, ephrinB2(lacZ/+) retinas displayed an increased number of blind-ended capillary sprout tips (P < 0.02) and endothelial filopodial processes (P = 0.001). In WT and ephrinB2(lacZ/+) OIR-exposed retinas, ephrinB was confined to endothelial cells, with expression detected along angiogenic vascular processes including neovascular tufts and blind-ended capillary sprouts. CONCLUSIONS EphrinB2 reverse signaling is a regulator of key processes during retinal vascularization and controls pathologic retinal angiogenesis through direct effects on capillary sprouting and endothelial filopodia formation.
Neuro-Ophthalmology | 2016
Thomas A. Mendel; R. Rand Allingham; Henry Tseng; David A. Chesnutt
ABSTRACT Visual toxicities from ethambutol are rare but represent one of the few causes of non-glaucomatous and non-compressive bitemporal hemianopsia. The authors present a six-patient case series illustrating variable clinical presentation and reversibility of visual loss in patients treated with ethambutol for Mycobacterium avium complex, including four patients who presented with visual field defects suggestive of bitemporal hemianopsia. Two additional patients were being followed for glaucoma, developed visual field defects with ethambutol treatment, and subsequently recovered with cessation of drug. In patients being treated with ethambutol, reversible bitemporal hemianopsia was the most commonly noted presentation of ethambutol toxicity.
Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2012
Kenneth Tran; Thomas A. Mendel; Kristina Holbrook; Paul Andrew Yates
PLOS ONE | 2013
Thomas A. Mendel; Erin B. D. Clabough; David S. Kao; Tatiana N. Demidova-Rice; Jennifer T. Durham; Brendan C. Zotter; Scott A. Seaman; Stephen M. Cronk; Elizabeth Rakoczy; Adam J. Katz; Ira M. Herman; Shayn M. Peirce; Paul Andrew Yates
Archive | 2011
Paul Andrew Yates; Thomas A. Mendel; Kenneth Tran
Archive | 2015
Shayn M. Peirce-Cottler; Paul Andrew Yates; Thomas A. Mendel
Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2014
Molly R. Kelly-Goss; Thomas A. Mendel; Alexander M Guendel; Howard Ray; Shayn M. Peirce; Paul Andrew Yates
Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2014
Thomas A. Mendel; Stephen M. Cronk; Jaymes Beech; Alexander M Guendel; Shayn M. Peirce; Paul Andrew Yates