Publications by authors named "Patrick McMullen"

Immune reactions to medical implants often lead to encapsulation by fibrotic tissue and impaired device function. This process is thought to initiate by protein adsorption, which enables immune cells to attach and mount an inflammatory response. Previously, several antifibrotic materials have been either designed to reduce protein adsorption or discovered via high-throughput screens (HTS) to favorably regulate inflammation.

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Lipid nanoparticles (LNPs) have great potential to enable inhaled delivery of mRNA to treat pulmonary diseases. However, this potential has been limited by the challenge of nebulizing the LNPs. Nebulization of LNPs can cause LNPs to aggregate and release encapsulated mRNA, limiting their delivery efficacy.

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Atrial fibrillation (AFib) and the risk of its lethal complications are propelled by fibrosis, which induces electrical heterogeneity and gives rise to reentry circuits. Atrial TREM2 macrophages secrete osteopontin (encoded by ), a matricellular signaling protein that engenders fibrosis and AFib. Here we show that silencing in TREM2 cardiac macrophages with an antibody-siRNA conjugate reduces atrial fibrosis and suppresses AFib in mice, thus offering a new immunotherapy for the most common arrhythmia.

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Article Synopsis
  • Achieving effective protein replacement therapy requires stable pharmacokinetic profiles and bioactive circulating proteins, which is usually addressed through PEGylation, but this is difficult for mRNA-based therapies.
  • The study introduces a genetically modified polypeptide, EKP, composed of glutamic acid, lysine, and proline, to improve pharmacokinetic properties in mRNA constructs, showing superhydrophilic characteristics and low immune response.
  • Results indicate that EKP fusion significantly prolongs the circulation half-life of proteins expressed from mRNA while maintaining their bioactivity, presenting a promising advancement for mRNA-based protein therapies.
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The gene encodes a transcription factor in which pathogenic variants have been associated with both isolated and syndromic congenital cataracts. We aim to review the variants in the C-terminal DNA-binding domain associated with non-syndromic congenital cataracts and describe a patient with a novel, disease-causing de novo missense variant. Published reports of C-terminal variants and their associated congenital cataracts and ophthalmic findings were reviewed.

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Proarrhythmic cardiotoxicity remains a substantial barrier to drug development as well as a major global health challenge. In vitro human pluripotent stem cell-based new approach methodologies have been increasingly proposed and employed as alternatives to existing in vitro and in vivo models that do not accurately recapitulate human cardiac electrophysiology or cardiotoxicity risk. In this study, we expanded the capacity of our previously established 3D human cardiac microtissue model to perform quantitative risk assessment by combining it with a physiologically based pharmacokinetic model, allowing a direct comparison of potentially harmful concentrations predicted in vitro to in vivo therapeutic levels.

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Toxicological risk assessment increasingly utilizes transcriptomics to derive point of departure (POD) and modes of action (MOA) for chemicals. One essential biological process that allows a single gene to generate several different RNA isoforms is called alternative splicing. To comprehensively assess the role of splicing dysregulation in toxicological evaluation and elucidate its potential as a complementary endpoint, we performed RNA-seq on A549 cells treated with five oxidative stress modulators across a wide dose range.

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Article Synopsis
  • The research included a review of 42 patients' medical charts, revealing that 93% exhibited eye problems, with issues like optic nerve/chorioretinal colobomas being the most common.
  • The study noted variability in eye conditions with no clear link to specific genetic variants, highlighting the need for more research to understand these associations better.
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Living microbial therapies have been proposed as a course of action for a variety of diseases. However, problematic interactions between the host immune system and the microbial organism present significant clinical concerns. Previously, we developed a genetically encoded superhydrophilic zwitterionic peptide, termed EKP, to mimic low-immunogenic zwitterionic materials, which have been used for the chemical modification of biologics such as protein and nucleic acid drugs to increase their in vivo circulation time and reduce their immunogenicity.

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The blood-brain barrier (BBB) restricts the systemic delivery of messenger RNAs (mRNAs) into diseased neurons. Although leucocyte-derived extracellular vesicles (EVs) can cross the BBB at inflammatory sites, it is difficult to efficiently load long mRNAs into the EVs and to enhance their neuronal uptake. Here we show that the packaging of mRNA into leucocyte-derived EVs and the endocytosis of the EVs by neurons can be enhanced by engineering leucocytes to produce EVs that incorporate retrovirus-like mRNA-packaging capsids.

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Antibodies against poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) have been found to be the culprit of side reactions and efficacy loss of a number of PEGylated drugs. Fundamental mechanisms of PEG immunogenicity and design principles for PEG alternatives still have not been fully explored. By using hydrophobic interaction chromatography (HIC) under varied salt conditions, we reveal the "hidden" hydrophobicity of those polymers which are generally considered as hydrophilic.

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Liver responses are the most common endpoints used as the basis for setting exposure standards. Liver hepatocytes play a vital role in biotransformation of xenobiotics, but non-parenchymal cells (NPCs) in the liver are also involved in certain liver responses. Development of in vitro systems that more faithfully capture liver responses to reduce reliance on animals is a major focus of New Approach Methodology (NAMs).

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The linkage of zwitterionic peptides containing alternating glutamic acid (E) and lysine (K) amino acids exhibits protective effects on protein drugs due to their high hydration capacity. Previously, short EK peptides covering the surface of a protein drug showed significant protective effects and low immunogenicity. However, for high-molecular-weight single-chain (HMWSC) zwitterionic peptides, the incorporation of structure-disrupting amino acids such as proline (P), serine (S), and glycine (G) is necessary to improve their protective ability.

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Current computational technologies hold promise for prioritizing the testing of the thousands of chemicals in commerce. Here, a case study is presented demonstrating comparative risk-prioritization approaches based on the ratio of surrogate hazard and exposure data, called margins of exposure (MoEs). Exposures were estimated using a U.

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Time, cost, ethical, and regulatory considerations surrounding in vivo testing methods render them insufficient to meet existing and future chemical safety testing demands. There is a need for the development of in vitro and in silico alternatives to replace traditional in vivo methods for inhalation toxicity assessment. Exposures of differentiated airway epithelial cultures to gases or aerosols at the air-liquid interface (ALI) can assess tissue responses and in vitro to in vivo extrapolation can align in vitro exposure levels with in-life exposures expected to give similar tissue exposures.

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Therapeutic proteins frequently need to be modified with high-molecular-weight molecules to improve their pharmacokinetic properties. The genetic linkage of therapeutic proteins to a high-molecular-weight zwitterionic peptide, termed EKP, offers a promising approach. As with any protein modification, EKP could impact the structural behavior and receptor binding properties of the linked therapeutic protein, thereby altering its bioactivity.

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Environmental factors play a substantial role in determining cardiovascular health, but data informing the risks presented by environmental toxicants is insufficient. In vitro new approach methodologies (NAMs) offer a promising approach with which to address the limitations of traditional in vivo and in vitro assays for assessing cardiotoxicity. Driven largely by the needs of pharmaceutical toxicity testing, considerable progress in developing NAMs for cardiotoxicity analysis has already been made.

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High-throughput (HT) to extrapolation (IVIVE) is an integral component in new approach method (NAM)-based risk assessment paradigms, for rapidly translating toxicity assay results into the context of exposure. When coupled with rapid exposure predictions, HT-IVIVE supports the use of HT assays for risk-based chemical prioritization. However, the reliability of prioritization based on HT bioactivity data and HT-IVIVE can be limited as the domain of applicability of current HT-IVIVE is generally restricted to intrinsic clearance measured primarily in pharmaceutical compounds.

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There is increasing interest in using modern 'omics technologies, such as whole transcriptome sequencing, to inform decisions about human health safety and chemical toxicity hazard. High throughput methodologies using in vitro assays offer a path forward in reducing or eliminating animal testing. However, many aspects of these technologies need assessment before they will gain the trust of regulators and the public as viable alternative test methods for human health and safety.

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The National Toxicology Program (NTP) reported that chronic exposure to varying dietary concentrations of 4-methylimidazole (4-MeI) increased lung tumors in female and male mice [1]. In this study, mice (male and female B6C3F1 mice) were either administered 4-MeI by oral gavage (0, 50, 100, 200, or 300 mg/kg/day) for 2 days or exposed for 5 and 28 days to 4-MeI in the diet (0, 150, 300, 1250, or 2500 ppm) and whole transcriptome (RNA-Sequencing) data from 4-MeI-exposed B6C3F1 mice to determine whether changes occurred in the target (lung) and nontarget (liver) tissues. This analysis was conducted to provide information with which to evaluate biological processes affected by exposure to 4-MeI, with a focus on identifying key events that could be used to propose a plausible mode of action (MoA) for mouse lung tumors [2].

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Shrub willows ( spp.) are emerging as a viable lignocellulosic, second-generation bioenergy crop with many growth characteristics favorable for marginal lands in New York State and surrounding areas. Willow rust, caused by members of the genus , is the most limiting disease of shrub willow in this region and remains extremely understudied.

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The National Toxicology Program (NTP) reported that chronic dietary exposure to 4-methylimidazole (4-MeI) increased the incidence of lung adenomas/carcinomas beyond the normally high spontaneous rate in B6C3F1 mice. To examine plausible modes of action (MoAs) for mouse lung tumors (MLTs) upon exposure to high levels of 4-MeI, and their relevance in assessing human risk, a systematic approach was used to identify and evaluate mechanistic data (in vitro and in vivo) in the primary and secondary literature, along with high-throughput screening assay data. Study quality, relevance, and activity of mechanistic data identified across the evidence-base were organized according to key characteristics of carcinogens (KCCs) to identify potential key events in known or novel MLT MoAs.

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spp. willow rust is the most serious disease of shrub willow bioenergy production in the northeastern United States. Recent phylogenetic studies have identified several spp.

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Inspired by the amino acid composition of natural protein surfaces, we developed a zwitterionic cloak containing multi-layers of short alternating glutamic acid and lysine (EK) peptides as a facile, highly effective and low-immunogenicity approach for the protection and delivery of biotherapeutics. Each EK layer grafted to proteins provides multiple times of new lysine reaction sites for the growth of subsequent EK layers. This unique design allows EK peptides to achieve high coating density on proteins, overcoming the limitation of traditional conjugation strategies that rely on the number of innate lysine groups.

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