Jayanta R. Roy-Chowdhury, MD, MBBS
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Key Words: Liver, Inherited liver diseases; Cell and Gene Therapy
Our current focus is on developing cell and gene-based therapies for monogenic liver diseases, such as inherited hyperbilirubinemia (Crigler-Najjar syndrome, CN-1), a1 antitrypsin (AAT) deficiency, dyslipidemias and hemophilias A and B.
Subproject 1. Hepatocyte-based therapies for genetic liver diseases. To develop a minimally invasive alternative to liver transplantation, we are developing strategies to repopulate the liver by transplanted hepatocytes. To overcome the hurdles of inefficient hepatocyte engraftment and failure of transplanted hepatocytes to proliferate, we are evaluating targeted hepatic irradiation and mitotic stimulation of the transplanted hepatocytes. Regiospecific conformal hepatic irradiation (HIR) is being used to transiently disrupt the sinusoidal endothelial barrier, thereby enhancing initial engraftment. HIR makes the host hepatocytes in the irradiated region less mitotically competent. We are exploring different types of mitotic agents to stimulate the proliferation of the engrafted hepatocytes, which can competitively repopulate the host liver. We are also evaluating whether co-transplantation of liver sinusoidal endothelial cells can augment liver repopulation by hepatocytes. Our work was translated into the first successful hepatocyte transplantation in a CN-1 patient, and more recently in two patients with urea cycle disorders and one with phenyl ketonuria.
AAT deficiency (ATD) is one of the most common potentially lethal monogenic liver disorders in the West. In classic ATD, a mutant misfolded AAT (ATZ) tis secreted inefficiently and is retained within hepatocytes. Circulatory AAT deficiency leads to unrestrained neutrophil elastase activity in the lung, causing pulmonary emphysema, whereas ATZ accumulation within hepatocytes results liver disease. We showed that wildtype hepatocytes transplanted into transgenic mice expressing human ATZ competitively replace the host hepatocytes. Our current focus is to disrupt ATZ expression in a fraction of the hepatocyte mass by DNA break-enhanced homologous recombination in vivo, so that the gene-edited hepatocytes can repopulate the liver, thereby providing normal AAT and correcting the liver disease.
Subproject 2. Transplantation of endothelial cells to repopulate mutant liver endothelial cells (LSEC): LSECs are highly specialized endothelial cells that are important in maintaining liver architecture, as well as hepatocyte regeneration and function. In addition, these cells express coagulation factor VIII (the deficiency of which causes hemophilia A) and Von Willebrand factor. In ongoing work, we have found that intravenous infusion of LSECs following regional HIR results in engraftment of LSECs in the liver. Subsequent pharmacological stimulation of the LSECs results in regional liver repopulation by the transplanted cells. This procedure has cured the bleeding disorder in Factor VIII-deficient hemophilic mice.
In ongoing studies we are correcting the genetic lesions in mutant hepatocytes and LSECs, using CRISPR-cas or zinc finger nuclease-enhanced homologous recombination to generate phenotypically corrected for transplantation into animal models of inherited human liver diseases.
Credentials
Education & Training
- Medical Education
- Calcutta University, Calcutta University
- Residency
- Medical College Hospital, Royal College of Physicians, Edinburgh, Scotland, Nassau University Medical Center
- Fellowship
- Stony Brook University Hospital
Expertise
Specialties
- Hepatology
- Gastroenterology
Accepted Insurance
- 1199SEIU Benefit Funds
- Aetna
- Affinity by Molina Healthcare
- Amidacare
- Anthem BCBS
- Anthem BCBS Healthplus
- ArchCare
- CDPHP
Locations
- Primary LocationMontefiore Medical Park at 1575 Blondell1575 Blondell AvenueBronx, New York 10461-2601