7 research outputs found
Quantification of Available Ligand Density on the Surface of Targeted Liposomal Nanomedicines at the Single-Particle Level
Active targeting has been hailed
as one of the most promising strategies
to further enhance the therapeutic efficacy of liposomal nanomedicines.
Owing to the critical role of ligand density in mediating cellular
uptake and the intrinsic heterogeneity of liposomal formulations,
precise quantification of the surface ligand density on a single-particle
basis is of fundamental importance. In this work, we report a method
to simultaneously measure the particle size and the number of ligands
on the same liposomal nanoparticles by nanoflow cytometry. Then the
ligand density for each individual liposome can be determined. With
an analysis rate up to 10 000 particles per minute, a statistically
representative distribution of ligand density could be determined
in minutes. By utilizing fluorescently labeled recombinant receptors
as the detection probe against the conjugated ligands, only those
available for cell targeting can be exclusively detected. The influence
of ligand input, conjugation strategy, and the polyethylene glycol
spacer length on the available ligand density of folate-modified liposomes
was investigated. The correlation between the available ligand density
and cell targeting capability was assessed in a quantitative perspective
for liposomes modified with three different targeting moieties. The
optimal ligand density was determined to be 0.5–2.0, 0.7, and
0.2 ligand per 100 nm2 for folate-, transferrin-, and HER2-antibody-conjugated
liposomes, respectively. These optimal values agreed well with the
spike density of the natural counterparts, viruses. The as-developed
approach is generally applicable to a wide range of active-targeting
nanocarriers
Detection and Quantification of Bacterial Autofluorescence at the Single-Cell Level by a Laboratory-Built High-Sensitivity Flow Cytometer
Cellular autofluorescence can affect the sensitivity
of fluorescence
microscopic or flow cytometric assays by interfering with or even
precluding the detection of low-level specific fluorescence. Here
we developed a method to detect and quantify bacterial autofluorescence
in the green region of the spectrum at the single-cell level using
a laboratory-built high-sensitivity flow cytometer (HSFCM). The detection
of the very weak bacterial autofluorescence was confirmed by analyzing
polystyrene beads of comparable and larger size than bacteria in parallel.
Dithionite reduction and air re-exposure experiments verified that
the green autofluorescence mainly originates from endogenous flavins.
Bacterial autofluorescence was quantified by calibrating the fluorescence
intensity of nanospheres with known FITC equivalents, and autofluorescence
distribution was generated by analyzing thousands of bacterial cells
in 1 min. Among the eight bacterial strains tested, it was found that
bacterial autofluorescence can vary from 80 to 1400 FITC equivalents
per cell, depending on the bacterial species, and a relatively large
cell-to-cell variation in autofluorescence intensity was observed.
Quantitative measurements of bacterial autofluorescence provide a
reference for the background signals that can be expected with bacteria,
which is important in guiding studies of low-level gene expression
and for the detection of low-abundance biological molecules in individual
bacterial cells. This paper presents the first quantification of bacterial
autofluorescence in FITC equivalents
Discovery of Novel Heterotricyclic Compounds as DNA-Dependent Protein Kinase (DNA-PK) Inhibitors with Enhanced Chemosensitivity, Oral Bioavailability, and the Ability to Potentiate Cancer Immunotherapy
In this work, a novel series of heterotricyclic DNA-PK
inhibitors
were rationally designed, synthesized, and assessed for their biological
activity. In the DNA-PK biochemical assay, most compounds displayed
potent enzymatic activity, with IC50 values between 0.11
and 71.5 nM. Among them, SK10 exhibited the most potent
DNA-PK-inhibitory activity (IC50 = 0.11 nM). Studies of
the mechanism of action indicated that SK10 could lower
γH2A.X expression levels and demonstrate optimal synergistic
antiproliferative activity against Jurkat cells (IC50 =
25 nM) when combined with doxorubicin. Importantly, in CT26 and B16–F10
tumor-bearing mouse models, the combination therapies of SK10 with chemotherapeutic drug doxorubicin, a PD-L1 antibody, and SWS1 (a potent PD-L1 small-molecule inhibitor) demonstrated
superior synergistic anticancer and potential immunomodulatory effects.
Furthermore, SK10 possessed favorable in vivo pharmacokinetic
properties [e.g., oral bioavailability (F) = 31.8%].
Taken together, SK10 represents a novel heterotricyclic
DNA-PK inhibitor with antitumor immune effects and favorable pharmacokinetics
Discovery of Novel Heterotricyclic Compounds as DNA-Dependent Protein Kinase (DNA-PK) Inhibitors with Enhanced Chemosensitivity, Oral Bioavailability, and the Ability to Potentiate Cancer Immunotherapy
In this work, a novel series of heterotricyclic DNA-PK
inhibitors
were rationally designed, synthesized, and assessed for their biological
activity. In the DNA-PK biochemical assay, most compounds displayed
potent enzymatic activity, with IC50 values between 0.11
and 71.5 nM. Among them, SK10 exhibited the most potent
DNA-PK-inhibitory activity (IC50 = 0.11 nM). Studies of
the mechanism of action indicated that SK10 could lower
γH2A.X expression levels and demonstrate optimal synergistic
antiproliferative activity against Jurkat cells (IC50 =
25 nM) when combined with doxorubicin. Importantly, in CT26 and B16–F10
tumor-bearing mouse models, the combination therapies of SK10 with chemotherapeutic drug doxorubicin, a PD-L1 antibody, and SWS1 (a potent PD-L1 small-molecule inhibitor) demonstrated
superior synergistic anticancer and potential immunomodulatory effects.
Furthermore, SK10 possessed favorable in vivo pharmacokinetic
properties [e.g., oral bioavailability (F) = 31.8%].
Taken together, SK10 represents a novel heterotricyclic
DNA-PK inhibitor with antitumor immune effects and favorable pharmacokinetics
Discovery of Novel Heterotricyclic Compounds as DNA-Dependent Protein Kinase (DNA-PK) Inhibitors with Enhanced Chemosensitivity, Oral Bioavailability, and the Ability to Potentiate Cancer Immunotherapy
In this work, a novel series of heterotricyclic DNA-PK
inhibitors
were rationally designed, synthesized, and assessed for their biological
activity. In the DNA-PK biochemical assay, most compounds displayed
potent enzymatic activity, with IC50 values between 0.11
and 71.5 nM. Among them, SK10 exhibited the most potent
DNA-PK-inhibitory activity (IC50 = 0.11 nM). Studies of
the mechanism of action indicated that SK10 could lower
γH2A.X expression levels and demonstrate optimal synergistic
antiproliferative activity against Jurkat cells (IC50 =
25 nM) when combined with doxorubicin. Importantly, in CT26 and B16–F10
tumor-bearing mouse models, the combination therapies of SK10 with chemotherapeutic drug doxorubicin, a PD-L1 antibody, and SWS1 (a potent PD-L1 small-molecule inhibitor) demonstrated
superior synergistic anticancer and potential immunomodulatory effects.
Furthermore, SK10 possessed favorable in vivo pharmacokinetic
properties [e.g., oral bioavailability (F) = 31.8%].
Taken together, SK10 represents a novel heterotricyclic
DNA-PK inhibitor with antitumor immune effects and favorable pharmacokinetics
Discovery of Novel Heterotricyclic Compounds as DNA-Dependent Protein Kinase (DNA-PK) Inhibitors with Enhanced Chemosensitivity, Oral Bioavailability, and the Ability to Potentiate Cancer Immunotherapy
In this work, a novel series of heterotricyclic DNA-PK
inhibitors
were rationally designed, synthesized, and assessed for their biological
activity. In the DNA-PK biochemical assay, most compounds displayed
potent enzymatic activity, with IC50 values between 0.11
and 71.5 nM. Among them, SK10 exhibited the most potent
DNA-PK-inhibitory activity (IC50 = 0.11 nM). Studies of
the mechanism of action indicated that SK10 could lower
γH2A.X expression levels and demonstrate optimal synergistic
antiproliferative activity against Jurkat cells (IC50 =
25 nM) when combined with doxorubicin. Importantly, in CT26 and B16–F10
tumor-bearing mouse models, the combination therapies of SK10 with chemotherapeutic drug doxorubicin, a PD-L1 antibody, and SWS1 (a potent PD-L1 small-molecule inhibitor) demonstrated
superior synergistic anticancer and potential immunomodulatory effects.
Furthermore, SK10 possessed favorable in vivo pharmacokinetic
properties [e.g., oral bioavailability (F) = 31.8%].
Taken together, SK10 represents a novel heterotricyclic
DNA-PK inhibitor with antitumor immune effects and favorable pharmacokinetics
Discovery of Novel Heterotricyclic Compounds as DNA-Dependent Protein Kinase (DNA-PK) Inhibitors with Enhanced Chemosensitivity, Oral Bioavailability, and the Ability to Potentiate Cancer Immunotherapy
In this work, a novel series of heterotricyclic DNA-PK
inhibitors
were rationally designed, synthesized, and assessed for their biological
activity. In the DNA-PK biochemical assay, most compounds displayed
potent enzymatic activity, with IC50 values between 0.11
and 71.5 nM. Among them, SK10 exhibited the most potent
DNA-PK-inhibitory activity (IC50 = 0.11 nM). Studies of
the mechanism of action indicated that SK10 could lower
γH2A.X expression levels and demonstrate optimal synergistic
antiproliferative activity against Jurkat cells (IC50 =
25 nM) when combined with doxorubicin. Importantly, in CT26 and B16–F10
tumor-bearing mouse models, the combination therapies of SK10 with chemotherapeutic drug doxorubicin, a PD-L1 antibody, and SWS1 (a potent PD-L1 small-molecule inhibitor) demonstrated
superior synergistic anticancer and potential immunomodulatory effects.
Furthermore, SK10 possessed favorable in vivo pharmacokinetic
properties [e.g., oral bioavailability (F) = 31.8%].
Taken together, SK10 represents a novel heterotricyclic
DNA-PK inhibitor with antitumor immune effects and favorable pharmacokinetics
