Gene therapy, cell therapy and vaccine research have led to an increased use of qPCR/ddPCR in bioanalytical laboratories. CROs are progressively undertaking the development and validation of qPCR and ddPCR assays. Currently, however, there is limited regulatory guidance for the use of qPCR and a complete lack of any regulatory guidelines for the use of the newer ddPCR to support regulated bioanalysis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGene therapy, cell therapy and vaccine research have led to an increased need to perform cellular immunity testing in a regulated environment to ensure the safety and efficacy of these treatments. The most common method for the measurement of cellular immunity has been Enzyme-Linked Immunospot assays. However, there is a lack of regulatory guidance available discussing the recommendations for developing and validating these types of assays.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe 13 GCC Closed Forum for Bioanalysis was held in New Orleans, Louisiana, USA on April 5, 2019. This GCC meeting was organized to discuss the contents of the 2019 ICH M10 Bioanalytical Method Validation Draft Guideline published in February 2019 and consolidate the feedback of the GCC members. In attendance were 63 senior-level participants from eight countries representing 44 bioanalytical CRO companies/sites.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExpert Rev Proteomics
December 2004
This review intends to survey the traditional and current technologies in the depletion and subfractionation of plasma proteins for further analyses. The value of depletion aims to enrich low-abundant proteins by removing highly abundant proteins, such as albumin or immunoglobulin G, from plasma. With this approach, one can examine both the resulting high- and low-abundant protein fractions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlasma from different species is the most accessible and valuable source for biomarker discovery in clinical and animal samples. However, due to the high abundance of some proteins such as albumin and immunoglobulins, low-abundant proteins are often undetectable in proteomic analysis of plasma. We have established a plasma depletion scheme using chicken antibodies against various abundant proteins.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInhibitors of the MAP kinase p38 provide a novel approach for the treatment of osteoporosis, inflammatory disorders, and cancer. We have identified N-(3-tert-butyl-1-methyl-5-pyrazolyl)-N'-(4-(4-pyridinylmethyl)phenyl)urea as a potent and selective p38 kinase inhibitor in biochemical and cellular assays. This compound is orally active in two acute models of cytokine release (TNF-induced IL-6 and LPS-induced TNF) and a chronic model of arthritis (20-day murine collagen-induced arthritis).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIngestion of amniotic fluid and placenta by rats has been shown to enhance opioid-mediated antinociception but not affect the nonopioid-mediated antinociception produced by aspirin, suggesting specificity for opioid-mediated processes. However, enhancement by the active substance(s) in amniotic fluid and placenta (POEF, for placental opioid-enhancing factor) of antinociception produced by other nonopioid mechanisms has yet to be examined. The present experiments tested whether ingestion of amniotic fluid enhances the antinociception produced by nicotine injection.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDelineation of viable ischemic myocardium is an important problem in nuclear cardiology. To determine the feasibility of using a technetium-labeled nitroimidazole as an indicator of ischemic myocardium at risk of infarction, we characterized the distribution of a 2-nitroimidazole-derivatized PnAO ligand and its 99mTc complex, 99mTcO(PnAO)-1-CH2-(2NI) (BMS-181321) in the ischemic territory of the left anterior descending (LAD) coronary artery of the rabbit. In preliminary experiments, the performance of 14C-deoxyglucose (14C-2DG) and 14C-misonidazole was assessed relative to apparent regional relative myocardial blood flow (rMBF) indicated by 99mTc-teboroxime using double-label autoradiography in the rabbit LAD occlusion model.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe have investigated the possibility of using BATO complexes derivatized with the muscarinic acetylcholine receptor (mAChR) antagonist, quinuclidinyl benzilate (QNB), for mAChR imaging. The BATO complexes, TcCl(DMG)3B-QNB, were prepared using QNB derivatives containing a 4'-boronic acid substituent on one of the benzilic benzene rings (QNB-boronic acid). The QNB-boronic acid molecule has two chiral centers, and all four QNB-BATO stereoisomers were made and evaluated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe have developed a 99mTechnetium complex for imaging of hypoxic tissue (BMS-181321). Recently, another nitroimidazole derivative, based upon a bis(amine-phenol) ligand, was described in the patent literature. To compare this compound to BMS-181321, we have synthesized the ligand, prepared its 99mTc complex, and evaluated its performance in two in vitro assays of bioefficacy: membrane permeability and uptake in normoxic and anoxic cardiocytes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlabelled: In vitro transendothelial permeability was compared to in vivo rat single-pass cerebral extractions to evaluate which method would best estimate the blood-brain barrier (BBB) permeability of several SPECT imaging agents.
Method: Six 99mTc complexes and seven non-Tc complexes were tested in vitro using monolayers of primary bovine brain microvessel endothelial cells and in vivo using the rat single-pass cerebral extraction model. In vitro transendothelial permeability indices (PI) were determined by measuring the average percent of radioactivity traversing the monolayers as a function of time.
J Cereb Blood Flow Metab
September 1993
Autoradiograms obtained after middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO) in spontaneously hypertensive rats show that the 99mTc complex of a 2-nitroimidazole-derivatized propylene amine oxime (BMS-181321) is selectively retained in acutely ischemic brain before disruption of the blood-brain barrier (BBB), but not in the ischemic infarct. BMS-181321 is therefore a marker of ischemic tissue at risk of infarction and its uptake, unlike that of x-ray and magnetic resonance contrast agents, does not require disruption of the BBB. In keeping with this conclusion, we have found that the single-pass cerebral extraction fraction of BMS-181321 is 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe have compared apparent myocardial blood flow (MBFapparent) indicated by 99mTc-teboroxime, 96Tc-sestamibi and 201TI to true MBF indicated by radiolabeled microscopheres using a technique for the co-injection of four radionuclides in the same animal. Studies were performed using rats in a single-pass model to obtain global MBF and using dogs in a multiple-pass model to determine regional MBF. To provide a wide range of MBF, adenosine was administered intravenously and the left anterior descending coronary artery was then ligated in the dogs, or hypercapnia was induced by decreasing respiratory frequency in the rats.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAmniotic fluid and placenta contain a substance (POEF) that when ingested enhances opioid-mediated analgesia produced by several agents (morphine injection, vaginal/cervical stimulation, late pregnancy, footshock), but not that produced by aspirin injection. The present series of experiments employed quaternary naltrexone, an opioid antagonist that does not readily cross the blood-brain barrier, in conjunction with either peripheral or central administration of morphine, to determine whether amniotic-fluid ingestion (and therefore POEF ingestion) enhances opioid-mediated analgesia by affecting the central and/or peripheral actions of morphine. The results suggest that POEF affects only the central analgesic effects of morphine.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInherent cellular radiosensitivity in vitro has been shown to be a good predictor of human tumor response in vivo. In contrast, the importance of the intrinsic thermosensitivity of normal and neoplastic human cells as a factor in the responsiveness of human tumors to adjuvant hyperthermia has never been analyzed systematically. A comparison of thermal sensitivity and thermo-radiosensitization in four rodent and eight human-derived cell lines was made in vitro.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effect of polyamine depletion on the survival response of human lung carcinoma cells (A-549) to acute heating at 45 degrees C and its effect on the induction and decay of thermotolerance were investigated in exponential and plateau-phase cells. A 48-h exposure to 1 mM alpha-difluoromethylornithine (DFMO), an irreversible inhibitor of ornithine decarboxylase, was used to deplete intracellular levels of putrescine and spermidine. Inhibition of polyamine synthesis had no effect on the survival of exponential cells to heating at 45 degrees C, but slightly enhanced the killing of slowly proliferating plateau-phase cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA lung carcinoma cell line of human origin (A-549) cultured in vitro was used to investigate the cytotoxic effect of a range of bifunctional bioreductive drugs. The drugs tested consisted of nitroimidazoles or nitrofurans with terminal aziridine rings on the side chain and are designated RSU-1069, RSU-1164, RB-7040, RB-88716, and RB-88712. Measurements of the cytotoxicity in air demonstrated that methyl and alkyl addition to the aziridine ring reduced cell killing with progressive substitution of the alkylating moiety.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAmniotic fluid and placenta contain a substance (POEF, for Placental Opioid-Enhancing Factor) that, when ingested, enhances opioid-mediated analgesia in nonpregnant rats; ingestion of the substance by rats not experiencing opioid-mediated analgesia, however, does not produce analgesia. It is highly likely that periparturitional analgesia-enhancement is a significant benefit of ingestion of the afterbirth (placentophagia) during delivery. Here we report that prepartum ingestion of amniotic fluid (via orogastric infusion) does indeed enhance the endogenous-opioid-mediated analgesia evident at the end of pregnancy and during delivery; that the degree of enhancement is greater with 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThermotolerance was assayed under controlled conditions in normal and neoplastic human cells with the aim of identifying intrinsic differences in the acquisition of heat resistance. Carcinoma cells from colon (WIDR) and lung (A-549) were compared to fibroblasts (AG-1522) and primary explants of umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) in terms of their response to a 20 min heat shock at 45 degrees C. Single cell survival, heat shock protein (HSP) synthesis, and glutathione were studied as common endpoints.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMisonidazole (MISO) potentiates the cell killing effect of certain chemotherapy agents, but only under hypoxic conditions. The purpose of the present study was to define the range of oxygen concentrations over which chemosensitization by MISO takes place using mammalian cells cultured in vitro, and to compare this with the oxygen levels required for radiosensitization. V-79 hamster cells, attached to permanox dishes, were gassed with known concentrations of oxygen (less than 10 to 200,000 ppm) and treated with 1 and 5 mM MISO for 4 h previous to exposure to the chemotherapy agent, melphalan.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTrends Tech Contemp Dent Lab
December 1986
Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys
April 1986
A human lung and breast carcinoma cell line of epithelial origin (A-549 and MCF-7) were compared with a rodent fibroblast line (V-79) for their sensitivity to killing by X rays and heat, in addition, a correlation was sought between loss of endogenous thiols and thermosensitivity. Endogenous cellular thiols play a major role in many protective, enzymatic and synthetic processes in mammalian cells. Glutathione, a key non-protein thiol, not only protects against radiation and peroxide-induced damage, but is also a primary intracellular reductant.
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