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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Tsg-6 : an inducible mediator of paracrine anti-inflammatory and myeloprotective effects of adipose stem cells

Xie, Jie 29 January 2014 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI). / Tumor necrosis factor-induced protein 6 (TSG-6) has been shown to mitigate inflammation. Its presence in the secretome of adipose stem / stromal cells (ASC) and its role in activities of ASC have been overlooked. This thesis described for the first time the release of TSG-6 from ASC, and its modulation by endothelial cells. It also revealed that protection of endothelial barrier function was a novel mechanism underlying the anti-inflammatory activity of both ASC and TSG-6. Moreover, TSG-6 was found to inhibit mitogen-activated lymphocyte proliferation, extending the understanding of its pleiotropic effects on major cell populations involved in inflammation. Next, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISA) were established to quantify secretion of TSG-6 from human and murine ASC. To study the importance of TSG-6 to specific activities of ASC, TSG-6 was knocked down in human ASC by siRNA. Murine ASC from TSG-6-/- mice were isolated and the down-regulation of TSG-6 was verified by ELISA. The subsequent attempt to determine the efficacy of ASC in ameliorating ischemic limb necrosis and the role of TSG-6, however, was hampered by the highly variable ischemic tissue necrosis in the BALB/c mouse strain. Afterwards in a mouse model of cigarette smoking (CS), in which inflammation also plays an important role, it was observed, for the first time, that 3-day CS exposure caused an acute functional exhaustion and cell cycle arrest of hematopoietic progenitor cells; and that 7-week CS exposure led to marked depletion of phenotypic bone marrow stem and progenitor cells (HSPC). Moreover, a dynamic crosstalk between human ASC and murine host inflammatory signals was described, and specifically TSG-6 was identified as a necessary and sufficient mediator accounting for the activity of the ASC secretome to ameliorate CS-induced myelotoxicity. These results implicate TSG-6 as a key mediator for activities of ASC in mitigation of inflammation and protection of HSPC from the myelotoxicity of cigarette smoke. They also prompt the notion that ASC and TSG-6 might potentially play therapeutic roles in other scenarios involving myelotoxicity.
2

Differentiation and characterization of cell types associated with retinal degenerative diseases using human induced pluripotent stem cells

Gupta, Manav 31 July 2014 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) / Human induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells have the unique ability to differentiate into 200 or so somatic cell types that make up the adult human being. The use of human iPS cells to study development and disease is a highly exciting and interdependent field that holds great promise in understanding and elucidating mechanisms behind cellular differentiation with future applications in drug screening and cell replacement studies for complex and currently incurable cellular degenerative disorders. The recent advent of iPS cell technology allows for the generation of patient-specific cell lines that enable us to model the progression of a disease phenotype in a human in vitro model. Differentiation of iPS cells toward the affected cell type provides an unlimited source of diseased cells for examination, and to further study the developmental progression of the disease in vitro, also called the “disease-in-a-dish” model. In this study, efforts were undertaken to recapitulate the differentiation of distinct retinal cell affected in two highly prevalent retinal diseases, Usher syndrome and glaucoma. Using a line of Type III Usher Syndrome patient derived iPS cells efforts were undertaken to develop such an approach as an effective in vitro model for studies of Usher Syndrome, the most commonly inherited disorder affecting both vision and hearing. Using existing lines of iPS cells, studies were also aimed at differentiation and characterization of the more complex retinal cell types, retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) and astrocytes, the cell types affected in glaucoma, a severe neurodegenerative disease of the retina leading to eventual irreversible blindness. Using a previously described protocol, the iPS cells were directed to differentiate toward a retinal fate through a step-wise process that proceeds through all of the major stages of neuroretinal development. The differentiation process was monitored for a period of 70 days for the differentiation of retinal cell types and 150 days for astrocyte development. The different stages of differentiation and the individually derived somatic cell types were characterized by the expression of developmentally associated transcription factors specific to each cell type. Further approaches were undertaken to characterize the morphological differences between RGCs and other neuroretinal cell types derived in the process. The results of this study successfully demonstrated that Usher syndrome patient derived iPS cells differentiated to the affected photoreceptors of Usher syndrome along with other mature retinal cell types, chronologically analogous to the development of the cell types in a mature human retina. This study also established a robust method for the in vitro derivation of RGCs and astrocytes from human iPS cells and provided novel methodologies and evidence to characterize these individual somatic cell types. Overall, this study provides a unique insight into the application of human pluripotent stem cell biology by establishing a novel platform for future studies of in vitro disease modeling of the retinal degenerative diseases: Usher syndrome and glaucoma. In downstream applications of this study, the disease relevant cell types derived from human iPS cells can be used as tools to further study disease progression, drug screening and cell replacement strategies.

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