UHM medical researcher looks to the ocean to find a treatment for sepsis

University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa
Contact:
Tina Shelton, (808) 554-2586
Director of Communications, Office of Dean of Medicine
Posted: Dec 22, 2014

Dr. Felix Ikuomola at work in the UH Cancer Center's Matter Lab.
Dr. Felix Ikuomola at work in the UH Cancer Center's Matter Lab.

It's likely that you wouldn't have to ask too many of your acquaintances to learn that someone they loved died of sepsis. A complication of infection, sepsis is one of the leading causes of death in the world. Of the more than one million people diagnosed with sepsis each year in the United States, between 28 percent and 50 percent of them die. It is the tenth leading cause of death among elderly people, and it kills 30 percent of cancer patients.

Sepsis shock can deprive the organs of blood, triggering widespread organ failure and death. There is little medical personnel can do to help these patients. Currently the only treatment for sepsis is merely supportive in nature, including giving fluids and antibiotics.

Dr. Felix Ikuomola, a PhD candidate in Clinical Research at the John A. Burns School of Medicine (JABSOM) at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa and a Graduate Research Assistant at the University of Hawaiʻi Cancer Center, has received a $104,477 grant from the National Institutes of Health to fund research he hopes will put natural products from Hawai’i’s oceans to work blocking sepsis. He is working in the lab of his mentor, UH Cancer Center Assistant Professor Michelle Matter, who has NIH R01 (considered the "gold standard” of research grants) funding. Dr. Ikuomola’s diversity grant is a supplement to Dr. Matter’s research.

“My work in Dr. Matter’s lab involves screening small molecules, fungi and Hawaiian marine natural products for potential inhibitory function in endothelial cell permeability,” he explains.

An endothelial cell is a thin layer of structural and functional cells that covers the innermost part of blood and lymphatic vessels. Endothelial cells are responsible for many tissue responses including selective permeability of liquids and small chemicals, host-defense reactions to bacteria, repairs to injured cells, signaling between cells, cell proliferation, vascular smooth muscle tone, and cell migration to injured areas.

Injury or damage to endothelial cells result in breakdown in barrier function, causing widened pores in the vascular lining that allow cancer to spread, as well as sepsis, edema and other vascular life-threatening conditions.

Motivated by deaths close to him

Dr. Ikuomola, a U.S. citizen originally from Nigeria, is inspired to save lives because he has seen so many people lose their own struggle with disease, including members of his family. “While in Africa, I felt frustrated to see my patients – especially the surgical patients with sepsis – without any treatment options. If there had been a pro-endothelial cell barrier enhancing therapeutics, my patient’s lives could have been prolonged,” he said.

He points out that the same molecular endothelial permeability mechanism also has been implicated in Diabetes Mellitus and Hypertension, the two major leading causes of disease and death in Africans, African-Americans and Afro-Caribbeans. “For me, to be involved in vascular biology research is very personal, because when I was seven years old, I lost my beloved father to Hypertension-induced hemorrhagic stroke and cousins to diabetic coma. My patients and family have been the driving force for me to be involved in sepsis research,” said Dr. Ikuomola.

Why natural marine products?

His special interest is to understand, at the molecular level, how endothelial cells activate endothelial cell permeability to promote leakiness, and how these cells can also activate different pathways to promote endothelial cell barrier integrity and block leakiness. His work in Matter’s lab involves screening small molecules, Fungi and Hawaiian marine natural products to potentially inhibit function in endothelial cell permeability.

The complex structure and diversity of natural products plays major role in target-binding selectivity, protein interactions, specificity, and other bio-molecular activities. "We are very hopeful that these Hawaiian marine natural products will work in sepsis because the marine natural products are able to survive the harsh and salty conditions of the ocean and able to control and regulate their internal conditions," said Dr. Ikuomola. These marine natural products regulate their cells in such a way that they do not suffer from a hyper-permeability condition, which could have led to the uncontrollable influx of ocean water or efflux of cellular contents. "So, this property that maintains the cell integrity of the marine natural products is encouraging," he said.

Dr. Ikuomola is quick to thank those who have inspired and supported his work, and helped him receive the new grant. “I am very grateful to God; my wife Wendy; my mother; Dr. Rosanne Harrigan (JABSOM Director of Faculty Development); Dr. Michelle Matter; Dr. Joe Ramos; my colleagues at the UH Cancer Center Matter Lab; and the National Institutes of Health National Institute of General Medical Science for this diversity supplement grant,” he said.

References

Centers for Disease Prevention and Control. (2014b). Sepsis questions and answers. Retrieved from http://www.cdc.gov

Danai, P. A., Moss, M., Mannino, D. M., & Martin, G. S. (2006). The epidemiology of sepsis in patients with malignancy. Chest, 129(6), 1432-1440.

Griffiths, G. S., Grundl, M., Allen, III, J. S., & Matter, M. (2011). R-ras interacts with filamin A to maintain endothelial barrier function. J. Cell. Physiol., 226, 2287- 2296.

World-Sepsis-Day.org. (2014). Sepsis fact. Retrieved from http://www.world-sepsis-day.org

Recommended website: http://www.nigms.nih.gov/education/pages/factsheet_sepsis.aspx

For more information, visit: http://jabsom.hawaii.edu