Publications by authors named "Carl Beigie"

High mortality in pancreatic cancer (PDAC) and triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) highlight the need to capitalize on nanoscale-design advantages for multifunctional diagnostics and therapies. DNA/RNA-therapies can provide potential breakthroughs, however, to date, there is no FDA-approved systemic delivery system to solid tumors. Here, we report a Janus-nanoparticle (jNP)-system with modular targeting, payload-delivery, and targeted-imaging capabilities.

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Mcl-1 is a pro-apoptotic BH3 protein family member similar to Bcl-2 and Bcl-xL. Overexpression of Mcl-1 is often seen in various tumors and allows cancer cells to evade apoptosis. Here we report the discovery and optimization of a series of non-natural peptide Mcl-1 inhibitors.

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Microbubbles have been used in ultrasound-assisted drug delivery to help target solid tumors via blood vessels in vivo; however, studies to understand the phenomena at the cellular level and to optimize parameters for ultrasound or microbubbles in vivo are challenging and expensive to perform. Here, we utilize microfluidic microvessels-on-a-chip that enable visualization of microbubble/ultrasound-dependent drug delivery to microvasculature. When exposed to pulsed ultrasound, microbubbles perfused through microvessels-on-a-chip were observed to stably oscillate.

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There is a critical need to formulate stable micron-sized oil droplets as hydrophobic drug carriers for efficient drug encapsulation, long-term storage, and sustained drug release. Microfluidic methods were developed to maximize the stability of micron-sized, oil-in-water (o/w) emulsions for potential use in drug delivery, using doxorubicin-loaded triacetin oil as a model hydrophobic drug formulation. Initial experiments examined multiple flow conditions for the dispersed (oil) and continuous (liposome aqueous) phases in a microfluidic device to establish the parameters that influenced droplet size.

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