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Dive into the research topics where Wilbur A. Lam is active.

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Featured researches published by Wilbur A. Lam.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2014

Factor XIII activity mediates red blood cell retention in venous thrombi

Maria M. Aleman; James R. Byrnes; Jianguo Wang; Reginald Tran; Wilbur A. Lam; Jorge Di Paola; Nigel Mackman; Jay L. Degen; Matthew J. Flick; Alisa S. Wolberg

Venous thrombi, fibrin- and rbc-rich clots triggered by inflammation and blood stasis, underlie devastating, and sometimes fatal, occlusive events. During intravascular fibrin deposition, rbc are thought to become passively trapped in thrombi and therefore have not been considered a modifiable thrombus component. In the present study, we determined that activity of the transglutaminase factor XIII (FXIII) is critical for rbc retention within clots and directly affects thrombus size. Compared with WT mice, mice carrying a homozygous mutation in the fibrinogen γ chain (Fibγ390-396A) had a striking 50% reduction in thrombus weight due to reduced rbc content. Fibrinogen from mice harboring the Fibγ390-396A mutation exhibited reduced binding to FXIII, and plasma from these mice exhibited delayed FXIII activation and fibrin crosslinking, indicating these residues mediate FXIII binding and activation. FXIII-deficient mice phenocopied mice carrying Fibγ390-396A and produced smaller thrombi with fewer rbc than WT mice. Importantly, FXIII-deficient human clots also exhibited reduced rbc retention. The addition of FXIII to FXIII-deficient clots increased rbc retention, while inhibition of FXIII activity in normal blood reduced rbc retention and produced smaller clots. These findings establish the FXIII-fibrinogen axis as a central determinant in venous thrombogenesis and identify FXIII as a potential therapeutic target for limiting venous thrombosis.


Nature Materials | 2014

Ultrasoft microgels displaying emergent platelet-like behaviours

Ashley C. Brown; Sarah E. Stabenfeldt; Byungwook Ahn; Riley T. Hannan; Kabir S. Dhada; Emily S. Herman; Victoria Stefanelli; Nina A. Guzzetta; Alexander Alexeev; Wilbur A. Lam; L. Andrew Lyon; Thomas H. Barker

Efforts to create platelet-like structures for the augmentation of haemostasis have focused solely on recapitulating aspects of platelet adhesion; more complex platelet behaviours such as clot contraction are assumed to be inaccessible to synthetic systems. Here, we report the creation of fully synthetic platelet-like particles (PLPs) that augment clotting in vitro under physiological flow conditions and achieve wound-triggered haemostasis and decreased bleeding times in vivo in a traumatic injury model. PLPs were synthesized by combining highly deformable microgel particles with molecular-recognition motifs identified through directed evolution. In vitro and in silico analyses demonstrate that PLPs actively collapse fibrin networks, an emergent behaviour that mimics in vivo clot contraction. Mechanistically, clot collapse is intimately linked to the unique deformability and affinity of PLPs for fibrin fibres, as evidenced by dissipative particle dynamics simulations. Our findings should inform the future design of a broader class of dynamic, biosynthetic composite materials.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Platelet mechanosensing of substrate stiffness during clot formation mediates adhesion, spreading, and activation

Yongzhi Qiu; Ashley C. Brown; David R. Myers; Yumiko Sakurai; Robert G. Mannino; Reginald Tran; Byungwook Ahn; Elaissa T. Hardy; Matthew F. Kee; Sanjay Kumar; Gang Bao; Thomas H. Barker; Wilbur A. Lam

Significance Platelets are cell fragments in the blood that initiate clot formation at the site of bleeding. Although the biological aspects of this process have been well characterized, whether platelets can detect and physiologically respond to the mechanical aspects of its local environment is unclear. Here, we show that platelets sense the stiffness of the underlying clot substrate, and increasing substrate stiffness increases platelet adhesion and spreading. Importantly, adhesion on stiffer substrates leads to higher levels of platelet activation. Mechanistically, we determined that Rac1, actin, and myosin activity mediate this process. This newfound capability of how platelets adjust their degree of activation based on the mechanical properties of their environment provides new insight into how clots are formed. As platelets aggregate and activate at the site of vascular injury to stem bleeding, they are subjected to a myriad of biochemical and biophysical signals and cues. As clot formation ensues, platelets interact with polymerizing fibrin scaffolds, exposing platelets to a large range of mechanical microenvironments. Here, we show for the first time (to our knowledge) that platelets, which are anucleate cellular fragments, sense microenvironmental mechanical properties, such as substrate stiffness, and transduce those cues into differential biological signals. Specifically, as platelets mechanosense the stiffness of the underlying fibrin/fibrinogen substrate, increasing substrate stiffness leads to increased platelet adhesion and spreading. Importantly, adhesion on stiffer substrates also leads to higher levels of platelet activation, as measured by integrin αIIbβ3 activation, α-granule secretion, and procoagulant activity. Mechanistically, we determined that Rac1 and actomyosin activity mediate substrate stiffness-dependent platelet adhesion, spreading, and activation to different degrees. This capability of platelets to mechanosense microenvironmental cues in a growing thrombus or hemostatic plug and then mechanotransduce those cues into differential levels of platelet adhesion, spreading, and activation provides biophysical insight into the underlying mechanisms of platelet aggregation and platelet activation heterogeneity during thrombus formation.


Stem cell reports | 2014

Actin Cytoskeletal Disruption following Cryopreservation Alters the Biodistribution of Human Mesenchymal Stromal Cells In Vivo

Raghavan Chinnadurai; Marco Garcia; Yumiko Sakurai; Wilbur A. Lam; Allan D. Kirk; Jacques Galipeau; Ian B. Copland

Summary Mesenchymal stromal cells have shown clinical promise; however, variations in treatment responses are an ongoing concern. We previously demonstrated that MSCs are functionally stunned after thawing. Here, we investigated whether this cryopreservation/thawing defect also impacts the postinfusion biodistribution properties of MSCs. Under both static and physiologic flow, compared with live MSCs in active culture, MSCs thawed from cryopreservation bound poorly to fibronectin (40% reduction) and human endothelial cells (80% reduction), respectively. This reduction correlated with a reduced cytoskeletal F-actin content in post-thaw MSCs (60% reduction). In vivo, live human MSCs could be detected in murine lung tissues for up to 24 hr, whereas thawed MSCs were undetectable. Similarly, live MSCs whose actin cytoskeleton was chemically disrupted were undetectable at 24 hr postinfusion. Our data suggest that post-thaw cryopreserved MSCs are distinct from live MSCs. This distinction could significantly affect the utility of MSCs as a cellular therapeutic.


Blood | 2015

Factor XIIIa-dependent retention of red blood cells in clots is mediated by fibrin α-chain crosslinking.

James R. Byrnes; Cedric Duval; Yiming Wang; Caroline E. Hansen; Byungwook Ahn; Micah J. Mooberry; Martha A. Clark; Jill M. Johnsen; Susan T. Lord; Wilbur A. Lam; Joost C. M. Meijers; Heyu Ni; Robert A. S. Ariëns; Alisa S. Wolberg

Factor XIII(a) [FXIII(a)] stabilizes clots and increases resistance to fibrinolysis and mechanical disruption. FXIIIa also mediates red blood cell (RBC) retention in contracting clots and determines venous thrombus size, suggesting FXIII(a) is a potential target for reducing thrombosis. However, the mechanism by which FXIIIa retains RBCs in clots is unknown. We determined the effect of FXIII(a) on human and murine clot weight and composition. Real-time microscopy revealed extensive RBC loss from clots formed in the absence of FXIIIa activity, and RBCs exhibited transient deformation as they exited the clots. Fibrin band-shift assays and flow cytometry did not reveal crosslinking of fibrin or FXIIIa substrates to RBCs, suggesting FXIIIa does not crosslink RBCs directly to the clot. RBCs were retained in clots from mice deficient in α2-antiplasmin, thrombin-activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor, or fibronectin, indicating RBC retention does not depend on these FXIIIa substrates. RBC retention in clots was positively correlated with fibrin network density; however, FXIIIa inhibition reduced RBC retention at all network densities. FXIIIa inhibition reduced RBC retention in clots formed with fibrinogen that lacks γ-chain crosslinking sites, but not in clots that lack α-chain crosslinking sites. Moreover, FXIIIa inhibitor concentrations that primarily block α-, but not γ-, chain crosslinking decreased RBC retention in clots. These data indicate FXIIIa-dependent retention of RBCs in clots is mediated by fibrin α-chain crosslinking. These findings expose a newly recognized, essential role for fibrin crosslinking during whole blood clot formation and consolidation and establish FXIIIa activity as a key determinant of thrombus composition and size.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Do-it-yourself in vitro vasculature that recapitulates in vivo geometries for investigating endothelial-blood cell interactions.

Robert G. Mannino; David R. Myers; Byungwook Ahn; Yichen Wang; Margo Rollins; Hope Gole; Angela S. Lin; Robert E. Guldberg; Don P. Giddens; Lucas H. Timmins; Wilbur A. Lam

Investigating biophysical cellular interactions in the circulation currently requires choosing between in vivo models, which are difficult to interpret due in part to the hemodynamic and geometric complexities of the vasculature; or in vitro systems, which suffer from non-physiologic assumptions and/or require specialized microfabrication facilities and expertise. To bridge that gap, we developed an in vitro “do-it-yourself” perfusable vasculature model that recapitulates in vivo geometries, such as aneurysms, stenoses, and bifurcations, and supports endothelial cell culture. These inexpensive, disposable devices can be created rapidly (<2 hours) with high precision and repeatability, using standard off-the-shelf laboratory supplies. Using these “endothelialized” systems, we demonstrate that spatial variation in vascular cell adhesion molecule (VCAM-1) expression correlates with the wall shear stress patterns of vascular geometries. We further observe that the presence of endothelial cells in stenoses reduces platelet adhesion but increases sickle cell disease (SCD) red blood cell (RBC) adhesion in bifurcations. Overall, our method enables researchers from all disciplines to study cellular interactions in physiologically relevant, yet simple-to-make, in vitro vasculature models.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Microenvironmental Geometry Guides Platelet Adhesion and Spreading: A Quantitative Analysis at the Single Cell Level

Ashley Kita; Yumiko Sakurai; David R. Myers; Ross Rounsevell; James Huang; Tae Joon Seok; Kyoungsik Yu; Ming C. Wu; Daniel A. Fletcher; Wilbur A. Lam

To activate clot formation and maintain hemostasis, platelets adhere and spread onto sites of vascular injury. Although this process is well-characterized biochemically, how the physical and spatial cues in the microenvironment affect platelet adhesion and spreading remain unclear. In this study, we applied deep UV photolithography and protein micro/nanostamping to quantitatively investigate and characterize the spatial guidance of platelet spreading at the single cell level and with nanoscale resolution. Platelets adhered to and spread only onto micropatterned collagen or fibrinogen surfaces and followed the microenvironmental geometry with high fidelity and with single micron precision. Using micropatterned lines of different widths, we determined that platelets are able to conform to micropatterned stripes as thin as 0.6 µm and adopt a maximum aspect ratio of 19 on those protein patterns. Interestingly, platelets were also able to span and spread over non-patterned regions of up to 5 µm, a length consistent with that of maximally extended filopodia. This process appears to be mediated by platelet filopodia that are sensitive to spatial cues. Finally, we observed that microenvironmental geometry directly affects platelet biology, such as the spatial organization and distribution of the platelet actin cytoskeleton. Our data demonstrate that platelet spreading is a finely-tuned and spatially-guided process in which spatial cues directly influence the biological aspects of how clot formation is regulated.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Cellular softening mediates leukocyte demargination and trafficking, thereby increasing clinical blood counts.

Meredith E. Fay; David R. Myers; Amit Kumar; Cory Turbyfield; Rebecca Byler; Kaci Crawford; Robert G. Mannino; Alvin Laohapant; Erika A. Tyburski; Yumiko Sakurai; Michael J. Rosenbluth; Neil A. Switz; Todd Sulchek; Michael D. Graham; Wilbur A. Lam

Significance Clinical hematologists have long known that antiinflammatory glucocorticoids such as dexamethasone and blood pressure-supporting catecholamines such as epinephrine cause leukocytes to demarginate from the vascular wall and microvasculature into the main circulation, significantly elevating the effective white blood cell count. Canonically, this has been attributed to down-regulation of adhesion molecules such as selectins, but we show that a purely mechanical phenomenon caused by leukocyte softening plays a major role as well. Our work provides an answer to an old hematological problem and reveals a mechanism in which the immune system simply alters leukocyte stiffness to regulate leukocyte trafficking. This has clinically relevant implications for the inflammatory process overall as well as for hematopoietic stem cell mobilization and homing. Leukocytes normally marginate toward the vascular wall in large vessels and within the microvasculature. Reversal of this process, leukocyte demargination, leads to substantial increases in the clinical white blood cell and granulocyte count and is a well-documented effect of glucocorticoid and catecholamine hormones, although the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. Here we show that alterations in granulocyte mechanical properties are the driving force behind glucocorticoid- and catecholamine-induced demargination. First, we found that the proportions of granulocytes from healthy human subjects that traversed and demarginated from microfluidic models of capillary beds and veins, respectively, increased after the subjects ingested glucocorticoids. Also, we show that glucocorticoid and catecholamine exposure reorganizes cellular cortical actin, significantly reducing granulocyte stiffness, as measured with atomic force microscopy. Furthermore, using simple kinetic theory computational modeling, we found that this reduction in stiffness alone is sufficient to cause granulocyte demargination. Taken together, our findings reveal a biomechanical answer to an old hematologic question regarding how glucocorticoids and catecholamines cause leukocyte demargination. In addition, in a broader sense, we have discovered a temporally and energetically efficient mechanism in which the innate immune system can simply alter leukocyte stiffness to fine tune margination/demargination and therefore leukocyte trafficking in general. These observations have broad clinically relevant implications for the inflammatory process overall as well as hematopoietic stem cell mobilization and homing.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2014

Disposable platform provides visual and color-based point-of-care anemia self-testing

Erika A. Tyburski; Scott Gillespie; William Stoy; Robert G. Mannino; Alexander Weiss; Alexa F. Siu; Rayford H. Bulloch; Karthik Thota; Anyela Cardenas; Wilena Session; Hanna Jean Khoury; Siobhán O’Connor; Silvia T. Bunting; Jeanne Boudreaux; Craig R. Forest; Manila Gaddh; Traci Leong; L. Andrew Lyon; Wilbur A. Lam

BACKGROUND Anemia, or low blood hemoglobin (Hgb) levels, afflicts 2 billion people worldwide. Currently, Hgb levels are typically measured from blood samples using hematology analyzers, which are housed in hospitals, clinics, or commercial laboratories and require skilled technicians to operate. A reliable, inexpensive point-of-care (POC) Hgb test would enable cost-effective anemia screening and chronically anemic patients to self-monitor their disease. We present a rapid, stand-alone, and disposable POC anemia test that, via a single drop of blood, outputs color-based visual results that correlate with Hgb levels. METHODS We tested blood from 238 pediatric and adult patients with anemia of varying degrees and etiologies and compared hematology analyzer Hgb levels with POC Hgb levels, which were estimated via visual interpretation using a color scale and an optional smartphone app for automated analysis. RESULTS POC Hgb levels correlated with hematology analyzer Hgb levels (r = 0.864 and r = 0.856 for visual interpretation and smartphone app, respectively), and both POC test methods yielded comparable sensitivity and specificity for detecting any anemia (n = 178) (<11 g/dl) (sensitivity: 90.2% and 91.1%, specificity: 83.7% and 79.2%, respectively) and severe anemia (n = 10) (<7 g/dl) (sensitivity: 90.0% and 100%, specificity: 94.6% and 93.9%, respectively). CONCLUSIONS These results demonstrate the feasibility of this POC color-based diagnostic test for self-screening/self-monitoring of anemia. TRIAL REGISTRATION Not applicable. FUNDING This work was funded by the FDA-funded Atlantic Pediatric Device Consortium, the Georgia Research Alliance, Childrens Healthcare of Atlanta, the Georgia Center of Innovation for Manufacturing, and the InVenture Prize and Ideas to Serve competitions at the Georgia Institute of Technology.


Nature Materials | 2017

Single-platelet nanomechanics measured by high-throughput cytometry

David R. Myers; Yongzhi Qiu; Meredith E. Fay; Michael Tennenbaum; Daniel Chester; Jonas Cuadrado; Yumiko Sakurai; Jong Baek; Reginald Tran; Jordan C. Ciciliano; Byungwook Ahn; Robert G. Mannino; Silvia T. Bunting; Carolyn M. Bennett; Michael Briones; Alberto Fernandez-Nieves; Michael L. Smith; Ashley C. Brown; Todd Sulchek; Wilbur A. Lam

Haemostasis occurs at sites of vascular injury, where flowing blood forms a clot, a dynamic and heterogeneous fibrin-based biomaterial. Paramount in the clot’s capability to stem haemorrhage are its changing mechanical properties, the major driver of which are the contractile forces exerted by platelets against the fibrin scaffold 1. However, how platelets transduce microenvironmental cues to mediate contraction and alter clot mechanics is unknown. This is clinically relevant, as overly softened and stiffened clots are associated with bleeding 2 and thrombotic disorders 3. Here, we report a high-throughput hydrogel based platelet-contraction cytometer that quantifies single-platelet contraction forces in different clot microenvironments. We also show that platelets, via the Rho/ROCK pathway, synergistically couple mechanical and biochemical inputs to mediate contraction. Moreover, highly contractile platelet subpopulations present in healthy controls are conspicuously absent in a subset of patients with undiagnosed bleeding disorders, and therefore may function as a clinical diagnostic biophysical biomarker.

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David R. Myers

University of California

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Yumiko Sakurai

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Byungwook Ahn

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Reginald Tran

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Todd Sulchek

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Meredith E. Fay

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Alexander Alexeev

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Caroline E. Hansen

Georgia Institute of Technology

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