Publications by authors named "Chorny M"

Unlabelled: Growth-plate (GP) injures in limbs and other sites can impair GP function and cause deceleration of bone growth, leading to progressive bone lengthening imbalance, deformities and/or physical discomfort, decreased motion and pain. At present, surgical interventions are the only means available to correct these conditions by suppressing the GP activity in the unaffected limb and/or other bones in the ipsilateral region. Here, we aimed to develop a pharmacologic treatment of GP growth imbalance that involves local application of nanoparticles-based controlled release of a selective retinoic acid nuclear receptor gamma (RARγ) agonist drug.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study explored the effects of palovarotene, a RARγ agonist, on existing osteochondromas using a mouse model, showing that higher doses effectively stopped tumor growth compared to a control group.
  • - Both systemic administration and nanoparticle-based local delivery of palovarotene kept the size of tumors stable, with significant reductions in tumor growth observed.
  • - Transcriptome and pathway analyses indicated that palovarotene activates the osteoarthritis pathway and specifically stimulates the Stat3 pathway in chondrocytes, suggesting a mechanism for its effectiveness against osteochondromas.
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The injury-triggered reocclusion (restenosis) of arteries treated with angioplasty to relieve atherosclerotic obstruction remains a challenge due to limitations of existing therapies. A combination of magnetic guidance and affinity-mediated arterial binding can pave the way to a new approach for treating restenosis by enabling efficient site-specific localization of therapeutic agents formulated in magnetizable nanoparticles (MNPs) and by maintaining their presence at the site of arterial injury throughout the vulnerability period of the disease. In these studies, we investigated a dual-targeted antirestenotic strategy using drug-loaded biodegradable MNPs, surface-modified with a fibrin-avid peptide to provide affinity for the injured arterial wall.

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Impaired endothelialization of endovascular stents has been established as a major cause of in-stent restenosis and late stent thrombosis. Attempts to enhance endothelialization of inner stent surfaces by pre-seeding the stents with endothelial cells in vitro prior to implantation are compromised by cell destruction during high-pressure stent deployment. Herein, we report on the novel stent endothelialization strategy of post-deployment seeding of biotin-modified endothelial cells to avidin-functionalized stents.

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Aliphatic polyesters are among materials most extensively used for producing biodegradable polymeric nanoparticles currently in development as delivery carriers and imaging agents for a range of biomedical applications. Their clinical translation requires robust particle labeling methodologies that allow reliably monitoring the fate of these formulations in complex biological environments. In the present study, a practical and versatile synthetic strategy providing conjugates of poly(D,L-lactide) representative of this class of polymers with BODIPY fluorophores varying in functional groups and excitation/emission maxima was investigated as a tool for making traceable nanoparticles.

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Percutaneous coronary interventions (PCI) are the mainstay for treatment of advanced coronary disease. A majority of PCI involve deployment of a stent in the affected vascular segment. This chapter introduces the concept of using stents as a platform for delivering gene therapies to the vasculature with the overarching aim of mitigating in-stent restenosis (ISR), late stent thrombosis (LST), and neoatherosclerosis (NA), a triad of delayed complications that reduce the overall success rate of PCI.

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Bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs) have been clinically applied for induction of bone formation in musculoskeletal disorders such as critical-sized bone defects, nonunions, and spinal fusion surgeries. However, the use of supraphysiological doses of BMP caused adverse events, which were sometimes life-threatening. Therefore, safer treatment strategies for bone regeneration have been sought for decades.

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High-risk solid tumors continue to pose a tremendous therapeutic challenge due to multidrug resistance. Biological mechanisms driving chemoresistance in high-risk primary and recurrent disease are distinct: in newly diagnosed patients, non-response to therapy is often associated with a higher level of tumor "stemness" paralleled by overexpression of the ABCG2 drug efflux pump, whereas in tumors relapsing after non-curative therapy, poor drug sensitivity is most commonly linked to the dysfunction of the tumor suppressor protein, p53. In this study, we used preclinical models of aggressive neuroblastoma featuring these characteristic mechanisms of primary and acquired drug resistance to experimentally evaluate a macromolecular prodrug of a structurally enhanced camptothecin analog, SN22, resisting ABCG2-mediated export, and glucuronidation.

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Despite the use of intensive multimodality therapy, the majority of high-risk neuroblastoma (NB) patients do not survive. Without significant improvements in delivery strategies, anticancer agents used as a first-line treatment for high-risk tumors often fail to provide clinically meaningful results in the settings of disseminated, recurrent, or refractory disease. By enhancing pharmacological selectivity, favorably shifting biodistribution, strengthening tumor cell killing potency, and overcoming drug resistance, nanocarrier-mediated delivery of topoisomerase I inhibitors of the camptothecin family has the potential to dramatically improve treatment efficacy and minimize side effects.

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Bioprosthetic heart valves (BHV) fabricated from glutaraldehyde-fixed heterograft tissue, such as bovine pericardium (BP), are widely used for treating heart valve disease, a group of disorders that affects millions. Structural valve degeneration (SVD) of BHV due to both calcification and the accumulation of advanced glycation end products (AGE) with associated serum proteins limits durability. We hypothesized that BP modified with poly-2-methyl-2-oxazoline (POZ) to inhibit protein entry would demonstrate reduced accumulation of AGE and serum proteins, mitigating SVD.

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Spatially and temporally controlled delivery of biologicals, including gene vectors, represents an unmet need for regenerative medicine and gene therapy applications. Here we describe a method of reversible attachment of serotype 2 adeno-associated viral vectors (AAV2) to metal surfaces. This technique enables localized delivery of the vector to the target cell population in vitro and in vivo with the subsequent effective transduction of cells adjacent to the metal substrate.

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Conventional treatment approaches fail to provide durable control over aggressive malignancies due to intrinsic or acquired drug resistance characteristic of high-risk disease. SN-38, a potent camptothecin analog specifically targeting DNA topoisomerase I cleavage complexes, has shown promise in preclinical studies against aggressive solid tumors. However, its clinical utility is limited by inadequate solubility in pharmaceutically acceptable vehicles and by poor chemical and metabolic stability.

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Magnetic guidance shows promise as a strategy for improving the delivery and performance of cell therapeutics. However, clinical translation of magnetically guided cell therapy requires cell functionalization protocols that provide adequate magnetic properties in balance with unaltered cell viability and biological function. Existing methodologies for characterizing cells functionalized with magnetic nanoparticles (MNP) produce aggregate results, both distorted and unable to reflect variability in either magnetic or biological properties within a preparation.

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Purpose: In a previous study, we demonstrated that the combination of fenretinide with lenalidomide, administered by a novel nanomicellar formulation (FLM), provided a strong antitumor effect in a neuroblastoma TrkB-expressing tumor. In this study, we tested the nanomicellar combination in an amplified neuroblastoma xenograft to assess its efficacy in different tumor genotypes and evaluate the interactions of the nanomicelles with the tumor cells.

Experimental Design: FLM was administered to mice bearing human NLF xenografts to evaluate its efficacy in comparison with the nanomicelles containing fenretinide alone (FM).

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Camptothecins are potent topoisomerase I inhibitors used to treat high-risk pediatric solid tumors, but they often show poor efficacy due to intrinsic or acquired chemoresistance. Here, we developed a multivalent, polymer-based prodrug of a structurally optimized camptothecin (SN22) designed to overcome key chemoresistance mechanisms. The ability of SN22 vs.

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Purpose: Currently >50% of high-risk neuroblastoma (NB) patients, despite intensive therapy and initial partial or complete response, develop recurrent NB due to the persistence of minimal residual disease (MRD) that is resistant to conventional antitumor drugs. Indeed, their low therapeutic index prevents drug-dose escalation and protracted administration schedules, as would be required for MRD treatment. Thus, more effective and less toxic therapies are urgently needed for the management of MRD.

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Article Synopsis
  • Researchers explored the use of RARγ agonists, like palovarotene, which have shown promise in reducing tumor size and inhibiting growth in chondrosarcoma through lab studies.
  • Immunohistochemical staining confirmed RARγ expression in human chondrosarcoma specimens, and both systemic and local treatments with RARγ agonists showed significant anti-tumor effects in preclinical models.
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Currently, <50% of high-risk pediatric solid tumors like neuroblastoma can be cured, and many survivors experience serious or life-threatening toxicities, so more effective, less toxic therapy is needed. One approach is to target drugs to tumors using nanoparticles, which take advantage of the enhanced permeability of tumor vasculature. SN38, the active metabolite of irinotecan (CPT-11), is a potent therapeutic agent that is readily encapsulated in polymeric nanoparticles.

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In-stent restenosis remains an important clinical problem in the era of drug eluting stents. Development of clinical gene therapy protocols for the prevention and treatment of in-stent restenosis is hampered by the lack of adequate local delivery systems. Herein we describe a novel stent-based gene delivery platform capable of providing local arterial gene transfer with adeno-associated viral (AAV) vectors.

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Increased susceptibility to thrombosis, neoatherosclerosis, and restenosis due to incomplete regrowth of the protective endothelial layer remains a critical limitation of the interventional strategies currently used clinically to relieve atherosclerotic obstruction. Rapid recovery of endothelium holds promise for both preventing the thrombotic events and reducing post-angioplasty restenosis, providing the rationale for developing cell delivery strategies for accelerating arterial reendothelialization. The successful translation of experimental cell therapies into clinically viable treatment modalities for restoring vascular endothelium critically depends on identifying strategies for enhancing the functionality of endothelial cells (EC) derived from high cardiovascular risk patients, the target group for the majority of angioplasty procedures.

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Remarkable progress has recently been made in the synthesis and characterization of engineered nanoparticles for imaging and treatment of cancers, resulting in several promising candidates in clinical trials. Despite these advances, clinical applications of nanoparticle-based therapeutic/imaging agents remain limited by biological, immunological, and translational barriers. In order to overcome the existing status quo in drug delivery, there is a need for open and frank discussion in the nanomedicine community on what is needed to make qualitative leaps toward translation.

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Studying the morphology of the arterial response to endovascular stent implantation requires embedding the explanted stented artery in rigid materials such as poly(methyl methacrylate) to enable sectioning through both the in situ stent and the arterial wall, thus maintaining the proper anatomic relationships. This is a laborious, time-consuming process. Moreover, the technical quality of stained plastic sections is typically suboptimal and, in some cases, precludes immunohistochemical analysis.

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Arterial injury and disruption of the endothelial layer are an inevitable consequence of interventional procedures used for treating obstructive vascular disease. The slow and often incomplete endothelium regrowth after injury is the primary cause of serious short- and long-term complications, including thrombosis, restenosis and neoatherosclerosis. Rapid endothelium restoration has the potential to prevent these sequelae, providing a rationale for developing strategies aimed at accelerating the reendothelialization process.

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Allergic diseases cause great impact on the health related quality of life in children and adolescents, resulting in increased school absenteeism and deficiencies in school performance. Although the bibliographic framework on allergic diseases is wide, in our country, there are no guidelines for proper management of the allergic child at school. It is necessary to establish guidelines for coordinated action among the educational community, the families, the pediatrician, the health team and governmental and non-governmental authorities.

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