Publications by authors named "Tyler Lu"

Article Synopsis
  • Researchers observed that mice lacking a protein called CLEC2, which affects lymphatic function, develop lung issues similar to emphysema in COPD due to the formation of tertiary lymphoid organs (TLOs).
  • Blocking the formation of these TLOs with an anti-CD20 antibody in these mice partially prevented the progression of emphysema and revealed that TLOs contributed to increased autoantibodies.
  • The study also found that chronic exposure to cigarette smoke enlarged TLOs and was linked to more severe lung injury, and similar lymphatic changes were noted in lung tissues from COPD patients with emphysema, suggesting a connection between lymphatic dysfunction and autoimmune responses in lung disease.
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Article Synopsis
  • - The lymphatic system in the lungs helps maintain balance by draining fluids and managing immune cells, crucial for responding to lung injuries, particularly in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) linked to cigarette smoke exposure.
  • - Research indicates that cigarette smoke and increased thrombin can negatively affect lymphatic endothelial cells (LECs), leading to changes that promote inflammation and hinder normal blood flow and healing processes in COPD.
  • - Findings from cell culture and animal studies reveal that exposure to cigarette smoke extracts reduces important fibrinolytic activity in LECs, elevating inflammatory markers and prothrombotic pathways, highlighting the need for further investigation into LECs’ role in COPD.
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  • Schizophrenia (SCZ) is a complex neurodevelopmental disorder that typically shows symptoms in early adulthood, and research is now focusing on how vascular dysfunction contributes to the disease.
  • Using patient-derived induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs), researchers created 3D cerebral organoids to study SCZ neuropathology, discovering that SCZ organoids had a higher percentage of endothelial cells compared to healthy controls (CTRL).
  • The study found significant changes in gene expression related to blood vessel formation and permeability in SCZ endothelial cells, suggesting that the brain's microvascular cells might influence the development of SCZ by impacting the blood-brain barrier's function.
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Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) is a heterogeneous disease that is characterized by many clinical phenotypes. One such phenotype of COPD is defined by emphysema, pathogenic lung tertiary lymphoid organs (TLOs), and autoantibody production. We have previously shown that lymphatic dysfunction can cause lung TLO formation and lung injury in mice.

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Current dogma dictates that during adulthood, endothelial cells (ECs) are locked in an immutable stable homeostatic state. By contrast, herein we show that maintenance of EC fate and function are linked and active processes, which depend on the constitutive cooperativity of only two ETS-transcription factors (TFs) ERG and Fli1. While deletion of either Fli1 or ERG manifest subtle vascular dysfunction, their combined genetic deletion in adult EC results in acute vasculopathy and multiorgan failure, due to loss of EC fate and integrity, hyperinflammation, and spontaneous thrombosis, leading to death.

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The liver vascular network is patterned by sinusoidal and hepatocyte co-zonation. How intra-liver vessels acquire their hierarchical specialized functions is unknown. We study heterogeneity of hepatic vascular cells during mouse development through functional and single-cell RNA-sequencing.

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Brain microvascular endothelial cells (BMECs) possess unique properties that are crucial for many functions of the blood-brain-barrier (BBB) including maintenance of brain homeostasis and regulation of interactions between the brain and immune system. The generation of a pure population of putative brain microvascular endothelial cells from human pluripotent stem cell sources (iBMECs) has been described to meet the need for reliable and reproducible brain endothelial cells . Human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs), embryonic or induced, can be differentiated into large quantities of specialized cells in order to study development and model disease.

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Jak3 is the only non-promiscuous member of the Jak family of secondary messengers. Studies to date have focused on understanding and targeting the cell-autonomous role of Jak3 in immunity, while functional Jak3 expression outside the hematopoietic system remains largely unreported. We show that Jak3 is expressed in endothelial cells across hematopoietic and non-hematopoietic organs, with heightened expression in the bone marrow.

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Cells derived from pluripotent sources in vitro must resemble those found in vivo as closely as possible at both transcriptional and functional levels in order to be a useful tool for studying diseases and developing therapeutics. Recently, differentiation of human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs) into brain microvascular endothelial cells (ECs) with blood-brain barrier (BBB)-like properties has been reported. These cells have since been used as a robust in vitro BBB model for drug delivery and mechanistic understanding of neurological diseases.

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Although kidney parenchymal tissue can be generated in vitro, reconstructing the complex vasculature of the kidney remains a daunting task. The molecular pathways that specify and sustain functional, phenotypic and structural heterogeneity of the kidney vasculature are unknown. Here, we employ high-throughput bulk and single-cell RNA sequencing of the non-lymphatic endothelial cells (ECs) of the kidney to identify the molecular pathways that dictate vascular zonation from embryos to adulthood.

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The menisci are fibrocartilaginous tissues that are crucial to the load-sharing and stability of the knee, and when injured, these properties are compromised. Meniscus replacement scaffolds have utilized the circumferential alignment of fibers to recapitulate the microstructure of the native meniscus; however, specific consideration of size, shape, and morphology has been largely overlooked. The purpose of this study was to personalize the fiber-reinforcement network of a meniscus reconstruction scaffold.

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The development of effective therapies against brain metastasis is currently hindered by limitations in our understanding of the molecular mechanisms driving it. Here we define the contributions of tumour-secreted exosomes to brain metastatic colonization and demonstrate that pre-conditioning the brain microenvironment with exosomes from brain metastatic cells enhances cancer cell outgrowth. Proteomic analysis identified cell migration-inducing and hyaluronan-binding protein (CEMIP) as elevated in exosomes from brain metastatic but not lung or bone metastatic cells.

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The menisci transmit load by increasing the contact area and decreasing peak contact stresses on the articular surfaces. Meniscal lesions are among the most common orthopedic injuries, and resulting meniscectomies are associated with adverse polycaprolactone contact mechanics changes and, ultimately, an increased likelihood of osteoarthritis. Meniscus scaffolds were fabricated by 3D-printing a network of circumferential and radial filaments of resorbable polymer (poly(desaminotyrosyl-tyrosine dodecyl ester dodecanoate)) and infused with collagen-hyaluronan.

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The ability to generate hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) in vitro would have an immeasurable impact on many areas of clinical practice, including trauma, cancer, and congenital disease. In this protocol, we describe a stepwise approach that converts adult murine endothelial cells (ECs) to HSCs, termed 'reprogrammed ECs into hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells' (rEC-HSPCs). The conversion, which is achieved without cells transitioning through a pluripotent state, comprises three phases: induction, specification, and expansion.

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Purpose: Ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) during partial nephrectomy (PN) contributes to acute kidney injury (AKI), which is inaccurately assessed using existent clinical markers of renal function. We evaluated I/R-related changes in expression in hypoxia inducible factor 1α (HIF-1α) and toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4), within kidney tissue and peripheral blood leukocytes (PBL) in a porcine model of PN.

Materials And Methods: Three adult pigs each underwent unilateral renal hilar cross clamping for 180 min followed by a 15 min reperfusion.

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