Publications by authors named "William V Caufield"

The cellular plasticity of neuroblastoma is defined by a mixture of two major cell states, adrenergic (ADRN) and mesenchymal (MES), which may contribute to therapy resistance. However, how neuroblastoma cells switch cellular states during therapy remains largely unknown and how to eradicate neuroblastoma regardless of their cell states is a clinical challenge. To better understand the lineage switch of neuroblastoma in chemoresistance, we comprehensively defined the transcriptomic and epigenetic map of ADRN and MES types of neuroblastomas using human and murine models treated with indisulam, a selective RBM39 degrader.

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Vitamin D3 (VD3) induces intestinal CYP3A that metabolizes orally administered anti-leukemic chemotherapeutic substrates dexamethasone (DEX) and dasatinib potentially causing a vitamin-drug interaction. To determine the impact of VD3 status on systemic exposure and efficacy of these chemotherapeutic agents, we used VD3 sufficient and deficient mice and performed pharmacokinetic and anti-leukemic efficacy studies. Female C57BL/6J and hCYP3A4 transgenic VD3 deficient mice had significantly lower duodenal (but not hepatic) mouse Cyp3a11 and hCYP3A4 expression compared to VD3 sufficient mice, while duodenal expression of Mdr1a, Bcrp and Mrp4 were significantly higher in deficient mice.

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Clinical efficacy of the influenza antiviral baloxavir marboxil (baloxavir) is compromised by treatment-emergent variants harboring a polymerase acidic protein I38T (isoleucine-38-threonine) substitution. However, the fitness of I38T-containing influenza B viruses (IBVs) remains inadequately defined. After the pharmacokinetics of the compound were confirmed in ferrets, animals were injected subcutaneously with 8 mg/kg of baloxavir acid (BXA) at 24 h postinoculation with recombinant BXA-sensitive (BXA-, I38) or BXA-resistant (BXA-, I38T) B/Brisbane/60/2008 (Victoria lineage) virus.

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Qualification, preparation, and use of lipid compounds as analytical reference standards are daunting endeavors. The sheer vastness of the number of lipid compounds present in biological samples make it impossible to directly standardize each entity. Available lipid compounds chosen for preparation as standards are difficult to maintain as pure entities of stable concentration due to their physical and chemical interactions.

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