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MBI PhD Oral Defense

Time: 3pm
Date: Tuesday, 27 November 2018
Venue: NUS Faculty of Engineering, E4-04-03

Supervisors: Prof Pakorn Kanchanawong (Main supervisor)

Dissecting the role of topographical cues in endothelialization process

by Azita GORJI, Kanchanawong Group

A major challenge in the treatment of cardiovascular disease is graft failure due to late endothelialization of small synthetic vascular grafts.  Although several biochemical and mechanical strategies have been applied to promote endothelialization of the graft surfaces, enhancement of implant endothelialization has been limited. The integrity of Endothelial Cells (ECs) monolayer is crucial for endothelialization, but the understanding of the crosstalk between surface modification and cell-cell connectivity is still limited.  Toward a more effective approach to enhance endothelialization, in this thesis a combined strategy making use of both topographical features and biochemical perturbations was investigated. The effect of micron-scale anisotropic topography on ECs behaviors is analyzed in conjunction with pharmacological perturbations of EC junctions regulators. We identified a protein tyrosine phosphatase, PTP1B, as a potent regulator of ECs junction stability. Our results showed that PTP1B inhibition synergized with grating topographies to modulate EC adherens junction’s rearrangement resulting in global EC monolayer sheet orientation, connectivity and migration. Our data suggest utilizing grating topographies and PTP1B inhibitor together as a possible platform to enhance endothelialization of vascular grafts.

 

**Please note the examination following the seminar is closed-door**

 

 

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About the National University of Singapore

About NUSA leading global university centred in Asia, NUS is Singapore's flagship university, offering a global approach to education and research with a focus on Asian perspectives and expertise.

About the Mechanobiology Institute, National University of Singapore

About MBIOne of four Research Centres of Excellence at NUS, MBI is working to identify, measure and describe how the forces for motility and morphogenesis are expressed at the molecular, cellular and tissue level.
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