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Improving transcapillary
transport by reducing interstitial fluid pressure
Principal Investigator: Ugur
Ozerdem
We have recently developed a
minimally invasive, biosensor-based, diagnostic surgical procedure
for measuring interstitial fluid pressure (IFP) in cancer. We
propose to apply this new diagnostic technique to elucidate the role
of contractile pericytes in IFP and transcapillary transport of
nanoparticles in tumors. Similar to isometric contraction of
skeletal muscle, neovascular pericytes generate contractile forces
not only on the vessel walls but also on interstitial fluid
entrapped within extracellular fibers, referred to as tissue gel. We
will test whether interstitial fluid pressure in cancer can be
reduced by interfering with pericytes to improve the convection of
nanoparticle based anti-cancer drugs. We will test whether
inhibition of pericytes results in a decrease in interstitial fluid
pressure due to decreasing compressive contractile forces elicited
by pericytes. We will test whether pericyte-NG2 proteoglycan
inhibition lowers IFP and improves convection from the plasma to the
interstitial space. We will quantify transcapillary transport by
using nanoparticles as tracers. We anticipate finding a higher
transcapillary convection of nanoparticles (simulating high
molecular weight anti-cancer drugs) and lower interstitial fluid
pressure in breast tumors when pericytes are inhibited. By combining
skills and disciplines in bioengineering, clinical physiology and
microvascular sciences this project will transform our
biosensor-based diagnostic procedure into a tangible diagnostic tool
for cancer patients. The use of ultraminiature transducer-tipped
catheters as cancer interstitial fluid pressure biosensors is
innovative in light of novel use of biosensors portfolio of National
Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering. The role of
compressive forces generated by pericytes within breast cancer
stroma has never been investigated; which makes this proposal
innovative in shedding light on the etiology of interstitial
hypertension, a significant clinical problem in breast cancer
therapy in terms of drug delivery.
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