Publications by authors named "Hannah Vaughan"

Targeted nanoparticles offer potential to selectively deliver therapeutics to cells; however, their subcellular fate following endocytosis must be understood to properly design mechanisms of drug release. Here we describe a nanoparticle platform and associated cell-based assay to observe lysosome trafficking of targeted nanoparticles in live cells. The nanoparticle platform utilizes two fluorescent dyes loaded onto PEG-poly(glutamic acid) and PEG-poly(Lysine) block co-polymers that also comprise azide reactive handles on PEG termini to attach antibody-based targeting ligands.

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Background & Aims: Acute diarrheal diseases are the second most common cause of infant mortality in developing countries. This is contributed to by lack of effective drug therapy that shortens the duration or lessens the volume of diarrhea. The epithelial brush border sodium (Na+)/hydrogen (H) exchanger 3 (NHE3) accounts for a major component of intestinal Na absorption and is inhibited in most diarrheas.

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Purpose: Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) has limited treatment options, and modest survival after systemic chemotherapy or procedures such as transarterial chemoembolization (TACE). There is therefore a need to develop targeted therapies to address HCC. Gene therapies hold immense promise in treating a variety of diseases, including HCC, though delivery remains a critical hurdle.

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Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) develops predominantly in the inflammatory environment of a cirrhotic liver caused by hepatitis, toxin exposure, or chronic liver disease. A targeted therapeutic approach is required to enable cancer killing without causing toxicity and liver failure. Poly(beta-amino-ester) (PBAE) nanoparticles (NPs) were used to deliver a completely CpG-free plasmid harboring mutant herpes simplex virus type 1 sr39 thymidine kinase (sr39) DNA to human HCC cells.

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There is great interest in developing gene therapies for many disease indications, including cancer. However, successful delivery of nucleic acids to tumor cells is a major challenge, and efficacy is difficult to predict. Cancer theranostics is an approach combining anti-tumor therapy with imaging or diagnostic capabilities, with the goal of monitoring successful delivery and efficacy of a therapeutic agent in a tumor.

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Despite initial promise, tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL)-based approaches to cancer treatment have yet to yield a clinically approved therapy, due to delivery challenges, a lack of potency, and drug resistance. To address these challenges, we have developed poly(beta-amino ester) (PBAE) nanoparticles (NPs), as well as an engineered cDNA sequence encoding a secretable TRAIL (sTRAIL) protein, to enable reprogramming of liver cancer cells to locally secrete TRAIL protein. We show that sTRAIL initiates apoptosis in transfected cells and has a bystander effect to non-transfected cells.

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Successful systemic gene delivery requires specific tissue targeting as well as efficient intracellular transfection. Increasingly, research laboratories are fabricating libraries of novel nanoparticles, engineering both new biomaterial structures and composition ratios of multicomponent systems. Yet, methods for screening gene delivery vehicles directly in vivo are often low-throughout, limiting the number of candidate nanoparticles that can be investigated.

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Nucleic acids are a promising type of therapeutic for the treatment of a wide range of conditions, including cancer, but they also pose many delivery challenges. For efficient and safe delivery to cancer cells, nucleic acids must generally be packaged into a vehicle, such as a nanoparticle, that will allow them to be taken up by the target cells and then released in the appropriate cellular compartment to function. As with other types of therapeutics, delivery vehicles for nucleic acids must also be designed to avoid unwanted side effects; thus, the ability of such carriers to target their cargo to cancer cells is crucial.

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Novel treatments for glioblastoma (GBM) are urgently needed, particularly those which can simultaneously target GBM cells' ability to grow and migrate. Herein, we describe a synthetic, bioreducible, biodegradable polymer that can package and deliver hundreds of siRNA molecules into a single nanoparticle, facilitating combination therapy against multiple GBM-promoting targets. We demonstrate that siRNA delivery with these polymeric nanoparticles is cancer-selective, thereby avoiding potential side effects in healthy cells.

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Despite our growing molecular-level understanding of glioblastoma (GBM), treatment modalities remain limited. Recent developments in the mechanisms of cell fate regulation and nanomedicine provide new avenues by which to treat and manage brain tumors via the delivery of molecular therapeutics. Here, we have developed bioreducible poly(β-amino ester) nanoparticles that demonstrate high intracellular delivery efficacy, low cytotoxicity, escape from endosomes, and promotion of cytosol-targeted environmentally triggered cargo release for miRNA delivery to tumor-propagating human cancer stem cells.

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Polymeric nanoparticles have tremendous potential to improve the efficacy of therapeutic cancer treatments by facilitating targeted delivery to a desired site. The physical and chemical properties of polymers can be tuned to accomplish delivery across the multiple biological barriers required to reach diverse subsets of cells. The use of biodegradable polymers as nanocarriers is especially attractive, as these materials can be designed to break down in physiological conditions and engineered to exhibit triggered functionality when at a particular location or activated by an external source.

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Article Synopsis
  • Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is a highly lethal cancer in the US, with a low 5-year survival rate (<20%), largely due to disease heterogeneity and inadequate treatments.
  • Gene therapy research is advancing to tackle issues related to poor therapy responses and delivery challenges, particularly with non-viral strategies using biodegradable nanoparticles for targeted gene delivery.
  • A specific PBAE nanoparticle formulation showed high transfection rates in various HCC cell lines without affecting healthy liver cells, demonstrating potential for effective and safe gene therapy in treating HCC.
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