Anakinra used late in the disease course led to a rapid and sustained improvement in clinical and biological inflammation. Our retrospective analysis did show neither a striking nor a rapid decrease of coronary dilatations and we cannot determine if anakinra itself had an effect on coronary artery dimensions.
Integrins are transmembrane proteins that allow cells to bind to their external environment. They are the primary regulators of cell-matrix interactions, with direct roles in cell motility and signaling, which in turn regulate numerous physiological processes. Under common experimental conditions, integrins tend to cluster for sturdy and effective binding to extra-cellular matrix molecules. These clusters often evolve into focal adhesions, which regulate downstream signaling. However, integrin clusters are more pronounced and have longer lifetimes in two-dimensional assays than in more realistic three-dimensional environments. While a number of models and theoretical approaches have focused on integrin binding and diffusion, the reasons for the differences between two- and three-dimensional clustering have remained elusive. In this study, we model an individual cluster attached to a two-dimensional collagen film and attached to collagen fibers of various sizes in three-dimensional matrices. We then discuss how our results explain differences in size and lifetime, and how they hint at reasons for other differences between the two environments. Further, we make predictions regarding the stability of clusters based on different overall intracellular conditions. Our results show good agreement with experiments and provide a quantitative basis for understanding how matrix dimensionality and structure regulate integrin behavior in environments that mimic in vivo conditions.
Background-A key mechanism responsible for atrial fibrillation is multiwavelet re-entry (MWR). We have previously demonstrated improved efficiency of ablation when lesions were placed in regions of high circuit-density. In this study, we undertook a quantitative assessment of the relative effect of ablation on the probability of MWR termination and the inducibility of MWR, as a function of lesion length and circuit-density overlap. Methods and Results-We used a computational model to simulate MWR in tissues with (and without) localized regions of decreased action potential duration and increased intercellular resistance. We measured baseline circuit-density and distribution. We then assessed the effect of various ablation lesion sets on the inducibility and duration of MWR as a function of ablation lesion length and overlap with circuit-density. Higher circuit-density reproducibly localized to regions of shorter wavelength. Ablation lines with high circuit-density overlap showed maximum decreases in duration of MWR at lengths equal to the distance from the tissue boundary to the far side of the high circuit-density region
During the epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT), polarized cells in the epithelium can undergo a transformation characterized by the loss of cell-cell junctions and increased migratory activity into nonpolarized invasive cells. These cells adopt a mesenchymal shape and migrate into the basal lamina. Such transitions have been observed in developmental processes and have been linked to cancer cell metastasis. Most experimental studies on EMT search for molecular markers indicating an epithelial or mesenchymal conformation, focussing on afferent signaling pathways received by cells undergoing this transformation; however, these approaches are unable to track mechanical changes in the cell and the possible role this plays in EMT. In order to address this gap in our understanding, we have used a quantitative approach to study population level effects of single cell changes typically occurring during EMT. We have developed a computational model making use of the advantages of both single cell migratory models and agent-based cell population models to study the effect of cellular molecular processes in EMT. The disruption of a cell sheet representing the epithelium over a dense extracellular matrix (ECM) is simulated using interaction forces between different cells and between cells and discrete fibers representing the ECM. In our study, two different parameters were varied: protrusion force magnitude and E-cadherin (cell-cell junction) concentration. The cell population was tracked for 3 days and the number of cells that leave the layer, the depth of invasion, and the percentage of initial number of cells that remain in the layer (a measure of epithelium disruption) were monitored. Our studies suggest that having a high protrusion force or a reduction in cell-cell attachments is enough to cause EMT. Our results also demonstrate that the morphological progression in membrane disruption has an effect on the number of cells becoming invasive, with epithelial layers broken into clusters hindering the further exodus of cells. The results reveal the quantitative interplay between two key parameters involved in EMT and suggest potential avenues for further exploration of a systems level understanding of EMT.
The goal of this study was to determine quantitative relationships between electrophysiologic parameters and the propensity of cardiac tissue to undergo atrial fibrillation. We used a computational model to simulate episodes of fibrillation, which we then characterized in terms of both their duration and the population dynamics of the electrical waves which drove them. Monte Carlo sampling revealed that episode durations followed an exponential decay distribution and wave population sizes followed a normal distribution. Half-lives of reentrant episodes increased exponentially with either increasing tissue area to boundary length ratio (A/BL) or decreasing action potential duration (APD), resistance (R) or capacitance (C). We found that the qualitative form of fibrillatory activity (e.g., multi-wavelet reentry (MWR) vs. rotors) was dependent on the ratio of resistance and capacitance to APD; MWR was reliably produced below a ratio of 0.18. We found that a composite of these electrophysiologic parameters, which we term the fibrillogenicity index (Fb = A/(BL*APD*R*C)), reliably predicted the duration of MWR episodes (r2 = 0.93). Given that some of the quantities comprising Fb are amenable to manipulation (via either pharmacologic treatment or catheter ablation), these findings provide a theoretical basis for the development of titrated therapies of atrial fibrillation.
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