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Completed NON-SBIR/STTR RPGS NIH (US)

ROS Mechanisms in BAV Aortopathy

$6.66M USD

Funder NATIONAL HEART, LUNG, AND BLOOD INSTITUTE
Recipient Organization University of Pittsburgh At Pittsburgh
Country United States
Start Date Jul 01, 2021
End Date Jun 30, 2025
Duration 1,460 days
Number of Grantees 1
Roles Principal Investigator
Data Source NIH (US)
Grant ID 10733581
Grant Description

PROJECT SUMMARY Ascending aortic aneurysmal disease is a major worldwide health problem. Bicuspid aortic valve (BAV)- associated aortopathy represents the largest subset of affected patients and this congenital anomaly is present in 1-2% of the general population. Current aortic diameter-based guidelines for surgical intervention stem from

a non-controlled extrapolation of natural history data that does not reflect patient-specific aortic catastrophe risk rendering under-treatment in some patients and over-treatment in others. This is largely because there is an incomplete understanding of what biological and biomechanical features are unique to BAV-associated

aortopathy or other degenerative aneurysms and how these insults potentiate aortic dissection. During the prior funding period, we uncovered several cellular, tissue architectural, and biomechanical-based features distinguishing BAV-associated aortopathy from that of degenerative aneurysms. We discovered that elevated

production of superoxide anion by medial smooth muscle cells, increased oxidative stress-induced cellular damages, and a biomechanical strength profile coupled with an anisotrophic collagen and elastin microarchitecture uniquely define the tissue microenvironment of the BAV aorta. In the next phase of the

project, we will elucidate how an interplay of mechanical and oxidative stress mediates ECM remodeling, determine where hypoxia comes into play, and how clinical imaging-derived metrics correspond to cellular and tissue aberrations in the BAV aorta. In a two-aim approach, we will test the central hypothesis that mechanical

forces- and local hypoxia-induced oxidative stress invokes differential ECM remodeling in BAV and TAV patients, and these insults can be correlated to patient-specific aortic wall indices that can be imaged, bundled and used to predict disease progression and/or aortic catastrophe. Aim 1's approach will employ our

established patient-specific 3D culture models to determine how mechanical stretch and low oxygen tension impact antioxidant response, free radical production, cellular oxidative damages, and influence ECM production, microarchitecture and degradation in BAV aorta-derived smooth muscle cells. In Aim 2,

quantification of local hypoxic effects, measures of oxidative cellular damages, ECM microarchitecture, and biochemical ECM composition will be regionally compared and then correlated with patient-specific wall shear stress measurements from 4D flow MRI, aortic wall morphometrics from dynamic ECG-gated CTA, and

distensibility metrics from echocardiography to develop a workable patient-specific multi-parameter imaging- based paradigm. Completion of this project phase will generate an aortic bio-map that profiles mechanical and oxidative stress-mediated ECM remodeling in BAV-associated aortopathy and will identify what in vivo bio-

imaging endpoints correlate with these tissue insults. A perceived deliverable is a set of building blocks for a workable multi-parameter computational model whose main output will be a patient specific aortic integrity score that more accurately identifies dissection risk for a given patient. This work will also reveal new

opportunities for the implementation of PET-based probes to non-invasively detect local aortic vulnerability and identify novel targets for medical therapeutic intervention.

All Grantees

University of Pittsburgh At Pittsburgh

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