17 research outputs found
Regulatory Roles of Noncoding RNAs in the Progression of Gastrointestinal Cancers and Health Disparities
Annually, more than a million individuals are diagnosed with gastrointestinal (GI) cancers worldwide. With the advancements in radio- and chemotherapy and surgery, the survival rates for GI cancer patients have improved in recent years. However, the prognosis for advanced-stage GI cancers remains poor. Site-specific GI cancers share a few common risk factors; however, they are largely distinct in their etiologies and descriptive epidemiologic profiles. A large number of mutations or copy number changes associated with carcinogenesis are commonly found in noncoding DNA regions, which transcribe several noncoding RNAs (ncRNAs) that are implicated to regulate cancer initiation, metastasis, and drug resistance. In this review, we summarize the regulatory functions of ncRNAs in GI cancer development, progression, chemoresistance, and health disparities. We also highlight the potential roles of ncRNAs as therapeutic targets and biomarkers, mainly focusing on their ethnicity-/race-specific prognostic value, and discuss the prospects of genome-wide association studies (GWAS) to investigate the contribution of ncRNAs in GI tumorigenesis
Organ-Chip Models: Opportunities for Precision Medicine in Pancreatic Cancer
Pancreatic Ductal Adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is an expeditiously fatal malignancy with a five-year survival rate of 6–8%. Conventional chemotherapeutics fail in many cases due to inadequate primary response and rapidly developing resistance. This treatment failure is particularly challenging in pancreatic cancer because of the high molecular heterogeneity across tumors. Additionally, a rich fibro-inflammatory component within the tumor microenvironment (TME) limits the delivery and effectiveness of anticancer drugs, further contributing to the lack of response or developing resistance to conventional approaches in this cancer. As a result, there is an urgent need to model pancreatic cancer ex vivo to discover effective drug regimens, including those targeting the components of the TME on an individualized basis. Patient-derived three-dimensional (3D) organoid technology has provided a unique opportunity to study patient-specific cancerous epithelium. Patient-derived organoids cultured with the TME components can more accurately reflect the in vivo tumor environment. Here we present the advances in organoid technology and multicellular platforms that could allow for the development of “organ-on-a-chip” approaches to recapitulate the complex cellular interactions in PDAC tumors. We highlight the current advances of the organ-on-a-chip-based cancer models and discuss their potential for the preclinical selection of individualized treatment in PDAC
Cancer-on-a-Chip: Models for Studying Metastasis
The microfluidic-based cancer-on-a-chip models work as a powerful tool to study the tumor microenvironment and its role in metastasis. The models recapitulate and systematically simplify the in vitro tumor microenvironment. This enables the study of a metastatic process in unprecedented detail. This review examines the development of cancer-on-a-chip microfluidic platforms at the invasion/intravasation, extravasation, and angiogenesis steps over the last three years. The on-chip modeling of mechanical cues involved in the metastasis cascade are also discussed. Finally, the popular design of microfluidic chip models for each step are discussed along with the challenges and perspectives of cancer-on-a-chip models
Design, Synthesis, and Therapeutic Evaluation of Poly(acrylic acid)–tetraDOCA Conjugate as a Bile Acid Transporter Inhibitor
Regulation
of cholesterol and bile acid homeostasis has been attracting
attention as a pharmaceutical target for the treatment of diseases,
such as hypercholesterolaemia and type 2 diabetes. In recent years,
small bile acid analogues have been developed for the purpose of apical
sodium-dependent bile acid transporter (ASBT) inhibition. Here, we
designed a novel hydrophilic ASBT inhibitor using oligomeric bile
acid with a high affinity with ASBT. Polyacrylic acid–tetraDOCA
conjugates (PATD) have the ability to bind to ASBT in order to induce
hypocholesterolemic effects. Both the viability and the functionality
of PATD were evaluated in vitro, showing that PATDs were effective
in inhibiting the increases of cholesterol in the blood and oil in
the liver induced by high fat diet (HFD). The results indicated that
the newly developed biomaterials with oligomeric bile acids and a
hydrophilic polymer are potent therapeutic agents for hyperlipidemia
Nano-vesicle based anti-fungal formulation shows higher stability, skin diffusion, biosafety and anti- fungal efficacy in vitro
© 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. Opportunistic fungal infections are responsible for over 1.5 million deaths per year. This has created a need for highly effective antifungal medication to be as potent as possible. In this study, we improved the efficacy of a common over the counter (OTC) antifungal skin medication, miconazole, by encapsulating nano-molecules of the drug in cholesterol/sodium oleate nano-vesicles. These nano-vesicles were characterized to optimize their size, zeta potential, polydispersity index and encapsulation efficiency. Furthermore, these nano-vesicles were compared to a conventional miconazole-based commercially available cream to determine potential improvements via permeation through the stratum corneum, cytotoxicity, and antifungal capabilities. Our results found that the vesicle size was within the nano range (~300 nm), with moderate polydispersity and stability. When compared with the commercially available cream, Actavis, as well as free miconazole, the miconazole nano-vesicle formulation displayed enhanced fungal inhibition by a factor of three or more when compared to free miconazole. Furthermore, with smaller nanoparticle (NP) sizes, higher percentages of miconazole may be delivered, further enhancing the efficacy of miconazole’s antifungal capability. Cytotoxicity studies conducted with human dermal fibroblast cells confirm its biosafety and biocompatibility, as cell survival rate was observed to be twofold higher in nano-vesicle formulation than free miconazole. This formulation has the potential to treat fungal infections through increasing the retention time in the skin, improving the treatment approach, and by enhancing the efficacy via the use of nano-vesicles
Pulmonary-arterial-hypertension (PAH)-on-a-chip: fabrication, validation and application
Currently used animal and cellular models for pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) only partially recapitulate its pathophysiology in humans and are thus inadequate in reproducing the hallmarks of the disease, inconsistent in portraying the sex-disparity, and unyielding to combinatorial study designs. Here we sought to deploy the ingenuity of microengineering in developing and validating a tissue chip model for human PAH. We designed and fabricated a microfluidic device to emulate the luminal, intimal, medial, adventitial, and perivascular layers of a pulmonary artery. By growing three types of pulmonary arterial cells (PACs)-endothelial, smooth muscle, and adventitial cells, we recreated the PAH pathophysiology on the device. Diseased (PAH) PACs, when grown on the chips, moved of out their designated layers and created phenomena similar to the major pathologies of human PAH: intimal thickening, muscularization, and arterial remodeling and show an endothelial to mesenchymal transition. Flow-induced stress caused control cells, grown on the chips, to undergo morphological changes and elicit arterial remodeling. Our data also suggest that the newly developed chips can be used to elucidate the sex disparity in PAH and to study the therapeutic efficacy of existing and investigational anti-PAH drugs. We believe this miniaturized device can be deployed for testing various prevailing and new hypotheses regarding the pathobiology and drug therapy in human PAH
Absorption Mechanism of a Physical Complex of Monomeric Insulin and Deoxycholyl‑l‑lysyl-methylester in the Small Intestine
Currently, oral administration of
insulin still remains the best
option to avoid the burden of repeated subcutaneous injections and
to improve its pharmacokinetics. The objective of the present investigation
was to demonstrate the absorption mechanism of insulin in the physical
complexation of deoxycholyl-l-lysyl-methylester (DCK) for
oral delivery. The oral insulin/DCK complex was prepared by making
a physical complex of insulin aspart with DCK through ion-pair interaction
in water. For the cellular uptake study, fluorescein-labeled insulin
or DCK were prepared according to a standard protocol and applied
to Caco-2 or MDCK cell lines. For the PK/PD studies, we performed
intrajejunal administration of different formulation of insulin/DCK
complex to diabetic rats. The resulting insulin and DCK complex demonstrated
greatly enhanced lipophilicity as well as increased permeation across
Caco-2 monolayers. The immunofluorescence study revealed the distribution
of the complex in the cytoplasm of Caco-2 cells. Moreover, in the
apical sodium bile acid transporter (ASBT) transfected MDCK, the insulin/DCK
complex showed interaction with ASBT, and also demonstrated absorption
through passive diffusion. We could not find that any evidence of
endocytosis in relation to the uptake of insulin complex in vitro.
In the rat intestine model, the highest absorption of insulin complex
was observed in the jejunum at 1 h and then in the ileum at 2–4
h. In PK/PD study, the complex showed a similar PK profile to that
of SC insulin. Overall, the study showed that the effect of DCK on
enhancing the absorption of insulin resulted from transcellular processes
as well as bile acid transporter activity