401 results match your criteria: "Harvard-Massachusetts Institute of Technology Division of Health Sciences & Technology[Affiliation]"

Cargo Quantification of Functionalized DNA Origami for Therapeutic Application.

Small Methods

December 2024

Department of Cancer Biology, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, 02115, USA.

In recent years, notable advances in nanotechnology-based drug delivery have emerged. A particularly promising platform in this field is DNA origami-based nanoparticles, which offer highly programmable surfaces, providing precise control over the nanoscale spacing and stoichiometry of various cargo. These versatile particles are finding diverse applications ranging from basic molecular biology to diagnostics and therapeutics.

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Spinal motor neuron (MN) dysfunction is the cause of a number of clinically significant movement disorders. Despite the recent approval of gene therapeutics targeting these MN-related disorders, there are no viral delivery mechanisms that achieve MN-restricted transgene expression. In this study, chromatin accessibility profiling of genetically defined mouse MNs was used to identify candidate cis-regulatory elements (CREs) capable of driving MN-selective gene expression.

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Tea/Coffee Sustainable Nanoarchitectures Purify Wastewater.

Nano Lett

December 2024

Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305, United States.

Transforming spent coffee grounds and tea residues into valuable hierarchical porous materials presents a sustainable solution for environmental remediation due to the low cost, extensive availability, and versatile functionalized interface. Here, we systematically investigated tea polyphenol-mediated morphological transformation of spent coffee grounds to the synthesis of three-dimensional (3D) mesoporous metal-organic framework (MOF)-derived nanoarchitectured carbon composites. We adopted the sustainable cost-effective tea-coffee derivative to remove typical marine micropollutants, such as antibiotic wastewater, radioactive pollutants, and microplastics.

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Article Synopsis
  • Households are key locations for the spread of SARS-CoV-2, yet there's limited understanding of how the virus transmits, especially with different variants and prior immunity.
  • A study in the Boston area from March to July 2022 tracked 33 households, revealing that 58% of them reported a secondary case of COVID-19, with a secondary attack rate (SAR) of 39%.
  • Results showed that household contacts are at significant risk of infection within two weeks of exposure, influenced not only by the original infected person but also by higher community transmission rates.
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CRISPR guide RNA sequences deriving exactly from natural sequences may not perform optimally in every application. Here we implement and evaluate algorithms for designing maximally fit, artificial CRISPR-Cas13a guides with multiple mismatches to natural sequences that are tailored for diagnostic applications. These guides offer more sensitive detection of diverse pathogens and discrimination of pathogen variants compared with guides derived directly from natural sequences and illuminate design principles that broaden Cas13a targeting.

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Toward a Radically Simple Multi-Modal Nasal Spray for Preventing Respiratory Infections.

Adv Mater

November 2024

Center for Accelerated Medical Innovation, Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA, 02115, USA.

Nasal sprays for pre-exposure prophylaxis against respiratory infections show limited protection (20-70%), largely due to their single mechanism of action-either neutralizing pathogens or blocking their entry at the nasal lining, and a failure to maximize the capture of respiratory droplets, allowing them to potentially rebound and reach deeper airways. This report introduces the Pathogen Capture and Neutralizing Spray (PCANS), which utilizes a multi-modal approach to enhance efficacy. PCANS coats the nasal cavity, capturing large respiratory droplets from the air, and serving as a physical barrier against a broad spectrum of viruses and bacteria, while rapidly neutralizing them with over 99.

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Monitoring surgical nociception using multisensor physiological models.

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A

October 2024

Harvard-Massachusetts Institute of Technology Division of Health Sciences and Technology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139.

Article Synopsis
  • * Researchers collected a large dataset from 101 surgeries to analyze nociceptive stimuli and medication use, developing new models that can objectively measure surgical nociception more accurately than existing methods.
  • * Their findings suggest that the new models aligned well with known physiological responses to pain, representing progress toward establishing reliable, objective markers for monitoring surgical nociception during operations.
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Article Synopsis
  • Achieving ultra-long-term release of hydrophilic drugs (over six months) poses a challenge for existing long-acting injectables (LAIs), which often face issues like burst release and rapid drug diffusion due to their design.
  • A new injectable platform called ISCD, created using a methacrylated ultra-low molecular weight pre-polymer (polycaprolactone), addresses these issues by minimizing burst release and controlling water exchange through a dense mesh network.
  • Studies show that ISCD successfully delivers various hydrophilic drugs (including antiretrovirals and antibiotics) and enables co-delivery of multiple drugs, with the potential for improved adherence in chronic conditions while surpassing the one-month drug release standard of existing LA
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Cargo quantification of functionalized DNA origami for therapeutic application.

bioRxiv

August 2024

Department of Cancer Biology, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA.

In recent years, notable advances in nanotechnology-based drug delivery have emerged. A particularly promising platform in this field is DNA origami-based nanoparticles, which offer highly programmable surfaces, providing precise control over the nanoscale spacing and stoichiometry of various cargo. These versatile particles are finding diverse applications ranging from basic molecular biology to diagnostics and therapeutics.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Histopathology image evaluation is crucial for cancer diagnosis, but traditional AI methods struggle with generalizing across different imaging protocols and sample populations due to their specialized nature.
  • - The Clinical Histopathology Imaging Evaluation Foundation (CHIEF) model is introduced as a general-purpose, weakly supervised machine learning framework designed to systematically evaluate cancer by extracting diverse imaging features through two complementary pretraining methods.
  • - CHIEF, trained on over 60,000 whole-slide images from various sites, demonstrated improved performance over existing deep learning approaches by up to 36.1%, showing its effectiveness in adapting to diverse samples and enhancing digital pathology evaluations for cancer patients.
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Analysis of culture and RNA isolation methods for precision-cut liver slices from cirrhotic rats.

Sci Rep

July 2024

Wellman Center for Photomedicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Thier Research Building, MGH, 55 Blossom Street, Boston, MA, USA.

Precision-cut liver slices (PCLS) are increasingly used as a model to investigate anti-fibrotic therapies. However, many studies use PCLS from healthy animals treated with pro-fibrotic stimuli in culture, which reflects only the early stages of fibrosis. The effects of different culture conditions on PCLS from cirrhotic animals has not been well characterized and there is no consensus on optimal methods.

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Background: Compared with thin-strut durable-polymer drug-eluting stents (DP-DES), ultrathin-strut biodegradable-polymer sirolimus-eluting stents (BP-SES) improve stent-related clinical outcomes in patients undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). Reduced stent strut thickness is hypothesised to underlie these benefits, but this conjecture remains unproven.

Aims: We aimed to assess the impact of strut thickness on stent healing and clinical outcomes between ultrathin-strut and thin-strut BP-SES.

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Body size interacts with the structure of the central nervous system: A multi-center in vivo neuroimaging study.

bioRxiv

May 2024

Division of Clinical Behavioral Neuroscience, Department of Pediatrics, Masonic Institute for the Developing Brain, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA.

Article Synopsis
  • Clinical research typically requires careful study designs that account for variables like sex and age, but often overlooks body size factors like height and weight in neuroimaging studies.
  • This study analyzed data from 267 healthy adults to explore how body height and weight relate to various brain and spinal cord MRI metrics, finding significant correlations, especially with brain gray matter volume and cervical spinal cord area.
  • The results suggest that body size is an important biological variable that should be included in clinical neuroimaging study designs to enhance accuracy in understanding brain and spinal cord structures.
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Although impaired regeneration is important in many gastrointestinal diseases including ulcerative colitis (UC), the dynamics of mucosal regeneration in humans are poorly investigated. We have developed a model to study these processes in vivo in humans. Epithelial restitution (ER) and extracellular matrix (ECM) regulation after an experimental injury of the sigmoid colonic mucosa was assessed by repeated high-resolution endoscopic imaging, histological assessment, RNA sequencing, deconvolution analysis, and 16S rDNA sequencing of the injury niche microbiome of 19 patients with UC in remission and 20 control subjects.

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Fractional laser ablation is a technique developed in dermatology to induce remodeling of skin scars by creating a dense pattern of microinjuries. Despite remarkable clinical results, this technique has yet to be tested for scars in other tissues. As a first step toward determining the suitability of this technique, we aimed to (1) characterize the response to microinjuries in the healthy and cirrhotic liver, and (2) determine the underlying cause for any differences in response.

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Introduction: Exercise is recommended as an adjunct therapy in cancer, but its effectiveness varies. Our hypothesis is that the benefit depends on the exercise intensity.

Methods: We subjected mice to low intensity (Li), moderate intensity (Mi) or high intensity (Hi) exercise, or untrained control (Co) groups based on their individual maximal running capacity.

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Multivalent presentation of ligands often enhances receptor activation and downstream signalling. DNA origami offers a precise nanoscale spacing of ligands, a potentially useful feature for therapeutic nanoparticles. Here we use a square-block DNA origami platform to explore the importance of the spacing of CpG oligonucleotides.

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Current SARS-CoV-2 vaccines have demonstrated robust induction of neutralizing antibodies and CD4 T cell activation, however CD8 responses are variable, and the duration of immunity and protection against variants are limited. Here we repurposed our DNA origami vaccine platform, DoriVac, for targeting infectious viruses, namely SARS-CoV-2, HIV, and Ebola. The DNA origami nanoparticle, conjugated with infectious-disease-specific HR2 peptides, which act as highly conserved antigens, and CpG adjuvant at precise nanoscale spacing, induced neutralizing antibodies, Th1 CD4 T cells, and CD8 T cells in naïve mice, with significant improvement over a bolus control.

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An architecturally rational hemostat for rapid stopping of massive bleeding on anticoagulation therapy.

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A

January 2024

Center for Engineered Therapeutics, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115.

Hemostatic devices are critical for managing emergent severe bleeding. With the increased use of anticoagulant therapy, there is a need for next-generation hemostats. We rationalized that a hemostat with an architecture designed to increase contact with blood, and engineered from a material that activates a distinct and undrugged coagulation pathway can address the emerging need.

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The quantification and characterization of aggregated α-synuclein in clinical samples offer immense potential toward diagnosing, treating, and better understanding neurodegenerative synucleinopathies. Here, we developed digital seed amplification assays to detect single α-synuclein aggregates by partitioning the reaction into microcompartments. Using pre-formed α-synuclein fibrils as reaction seeds, we measured aggregate concentrations as low as 4 pg/mL.

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A diagnostic questionnaire for childbirth related posttraumatic stress disorder: a validation study.

Am J Obstet Gynecol

July 2024

Postpartum Traumatic Stress (Dekel) Laboratory, Division of Neuroscience, Department of Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA; Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, Boston MA. Electronic address:

Background: Labor and delivery can entail complications and severe maternal morbidities that threaten a woman's life or cause her to believe that her life is in danger. Women with these experiences are at risk for developing posttraumatic stress disorder. Postpartum posttraumatic stress disorder, or childbirth-related posttraumatic stress disorder, can become an enduring and debilitating condition.

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Resting-state functional MRI (rs-fMRI) is a popular technology that has enriched our understanding of brain and spinal cord functioning, including how different regions communicate (connectivity). But fMRI is an indirect measure of neural activity capturing blood hemodynamics. The hemodynamic response function (HRF) interfaces between the unmeasured neural activity and measured fMRI time series.

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