23 results on '"Santiswarup Singha"'
Search Results
2. Self-Reporting Theranostic: Nano Tool for Arterial Thrombosis
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Suryyani Deb, Mohammad Azharuddin, Sofia Ramström, Kanjaksha Ghosh, Santiswarup Singha, Thobias Romu, and Hirak Kumar Patra
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arterial thrombosis ,theranostics ,platelet aggregations ,MRI ,ReoPro ,Technology ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Arterial thrombosis (AT) originates through platelet-mediated thrombus formation in the blood vessel and can lead to heart attack, stroke, and peripheral vascular diseases. Restricting the thrombus growth and its simultaneous monitoring by visualisation is an unmet clinical need for a better AT prognosis. As a proof-of-concept, we have engineered a nanoparticle-based theranostic (combined therapy and monitoring) platform that has the potential to monitor and restrain the growth of a thrombus concurrently. The theranostic nanotool is fabricated using biocompatible super-paramagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (SPIONs) as a core module tethered with the anti-platelet agent Abciximab (ReoPro) on its surface. Our in vitro feasibility results indicate that ReoPro-conjugated SPIONS (Tx@ReoPro) can effectively prevent thrombus growth by inhibiting fibrinogen receptors (GPIIbIIIa) on the platelet surface, and simultaneously, it can also be visible through non-invasive magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for potential reporting of the real-time thrombus status.
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- 2023
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3. Increased yields and biological potency of knob-into-hole-based soluble MHC class II molecules
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Pau Serra, Nahir Garabatos, Santiswarup Singha, César Fandos, Josep Garnica, Patricia Solé, Daniel Parras, Jun Yamanouchi, Jesús Blanco, Meritxell Tort, Mireia Ortega, Yang Yang, Kristofor K. Ellestad, and Pere Santamaria
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Science - Abstract
Recombinant MHC class II molecules are instrumental in antigen-specific T-cell identification assays and showed efficacy as experimental medicines. Here, the authors engineer MHC class II molecules with species-specific knob-into-hole heteromerization domains, enabling a translatable purification process with improved stability, yields, and biological potency.
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- 2019
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4. Suppression of a broad spectrum of liver autoimmune pathologies by single peptide-MHC-based nanomedicines
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Channakeshava Sokke Umeshappa, Santiswarup Singha, Jesus Blanco, Kun Shao, Roopa Hebbandi Nanjundappa, Jun Yamanouchi, Albert Parés, Pau Serra, Yang Yang, and Pere Santamaria
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Science - Abstract
Immune response against tissue-specific antigens is a hallmark of autoimmunity. Here the authors show that a single autoantigen-based nanomedicine can ameliorate pathology in a broad range of liver autoimmunity models without impairing host defenses, suggesting organ-wide tolerization.
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- 2019
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5. Liver-specific T regulatory type-1 cells program local neutrophils to suppress hepatic autoimmunity via CRAMP
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Channakeshava Sokke Umeshappa, Patricia Solé, Bas G.J. Surewaard, Jun Yamanouchi, Saswat Mohapatra, Muhammad Myn Uddin, Robert Clarke, Mireia Ortega, Santiswarup Singha, Debajyoti Mondal, Yang Yang, Dario A.A. Vignali, Pau Serra, Paul Kubes, and Pere Santamaria
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primary biliary cholangitis ,autoimmune hepatitis ,T regulatory type-1 cells ,B regulatory cells ,myeloid-derived suppressor-like cells ,Interleukins ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Summary: Neutrophils with immunoregulatory properties, also referred to as type-2 neutrophils (N2), myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs), or tumor-associated neutrophils (TANs), comprise a heterogeneous subset of cells that arise from unknown precursors in response to poorly understood cues. Here, we find that, in several models of liver autoimmunity, pharmacologically induced, autoantigen-specific T regulatory type-1 (TR1) cells and TR1-cell-induced B regulatory (Breg) cells use five immunoregulatory cytokines to coordinately recruit neutrophils into the liver and program their transcriptome to generate regulatory neutrophils. The liver-associated neutrophils from the treated mice, unlike their circulating counterparts or the liver neutrophils of sick mice lacking antigen-specific TR1 cells, are proliferative, can transfer disease protection to immunocompromised hosts engrafted with pathogenic effectors, and blunt antigen-presentation and local autoimmune responses via cathelin-related anti-microbial peptide (CRAMP), a cathelicidin, in a CRAMP-receptor-dependent manner. These results, thus, identify antigen-specific regulatory T cells as drivers of tissue-restricted regulatory neutrophil formation and CRAMP as an effector of regulatory neutrophil-mediated immunoregulation.
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- 2021
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6. In vivo clearance of nanoparticles by transcytosis across alveolar epithelial cells.
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Pascal Detampel, Anutosh Ganguly, Sara Tehranian, Francis Green, Santiswarup Singha, Pere Santamaria, Ayodeji A Jeje, Clifford S Cho, Björn Petri, and Matthias W Amrein
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Nanoparticles in polluted air or aerosolized drug nanoparticles predominantly settle in the alveolar lung. Here, we describe a novel, highly effective pathway for the particles to cross the alveolar epithelium and reach the lymph and bloodstream. Amorphous silica nanoparticles, suspended in perfluorocarbon, were instilled into the lungs of mice for intravital microscopy. Particles formed agglomerates that settled on the alveolar wall, half of which were removed from the lung within 30 minutes. TEM histology showed agglomerates in stages of crossing the alveolar epithelium, in large compartments inside the epithelial cells and crossing the basal membrane into the interstitium. This pathway is consistent with published kinetic studies in rats and mice, using a host of (negatively) charged and polar nanoparticles.
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- 2019
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7. Inner-View of Nanomaterial Incited Protein Conformational Changes: Insights into Designable Interaction
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Arka Mukhopadhyay, Sankar Basu, Santiswarup Singha, and Hirak K. Patra
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Science - Abstract
Nanoparticle bioreactivity critically depends upon interaction between proteins and nanomaterials (NM). The formation of the “protein corona” (PC) is the effect of such nanoprotein interactions. PC has a wide usage in pharmaceuticals, drug delivery, medicine, and industrial biotechnology. Therefore, a detailed in-vitro, in-vivo, and in-silico understanding of nanoprotein interaction is fundamental and has a genuine contemporary appeal. NM surfaces can modify the protein conformation during interaction, or NMs themselves can lead to self-aggregations. Both phenomena can change the whole downstream bioreactivity of the concerned nanosystem. The main aim of this review is to understand the mechanistic view of NM-protein interaction and recapitulate the underlying physical chemistry behind the formation of such complicated macromolecular assemblies, to provide a critical overview of the different models describing NM induced structural and functional modification of proteins. The review also attempts to point out the current limitation in understanding the field and highlights the future scopes, involving a plausible proposition of how artificial intelligence could be aided to explore such systems for the prediction and directed design of the desired NM-protein interactions.
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- 2018
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8. A T follicular helper cell origin for T regulatory type 1 cells
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Patricia Solé, Jun Yamanouchi, Josep Garnica, Muhammad Myn Uddin, Robert Clarke, Joel Moro, Nahir Garabatos, Shari Thiessen, Mireia Ortega, Santiswarup Singha, Debajyoti Mondal, César Fandos, Julio Saez-Rodriguez, Yang Yang, Pau Serra, and Pere Santamaria
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Infectious Diseases ,Immunology ,Immunology and Allergy - Abstract
Chronic antigenic stimulation can trigger the differentiation of antigen-experienced CD4+ T cells into T regulatory type 1 (TR1) cells, a subset of interleukin-10-producing Treg cells that do not express FOXP3. The identities of the progenitor(s) and transcriptional regulators of this T-cell subset remain unclear. Here, we show that the peptide-major histocompatibility complex class II (pMHCII) monospecific immunoregulatory T-cell pools that arise in vivo in different genetic backgrounds in response to pMHCII-coated nanoparticles (pMHCII-NPs) are invariably comprised of oligoclonal subpools of T follicular helper (TFH) and TR1 cells with a nearly identical clonotypic composition but different functional properties and transcription factor expression profiles. Pseudotime analyses of scRNAseq data and multidimensional mass cytometry revealed progressive downregulation and upregulation of TFH and TR1 markers, respectively. Furthermore, pMHCII-NPs trigger cognate TR1 cell formation in TFH cell-transfused immunodeficient hosts, and T-cell-specific deletion of Bcl6 or Irf4 blunts both the TFH expansion and TR1 formation induced by pMHCII-NPs. In contrast, deletion of Prdm1 selectively abrogates the TFH-to-TR1 conversion. Bcl6 and Prdm1 are also necessary for anti-CD3 mAb-induced TR1 formation. Thus, TFH cells can differentiate into TR1 cells in vivo, and BLIMP1 is a gatekeeper of this cellular reprogramming event.
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- 2023
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9. Ubiquitous antigen-specific T regulatory type 1 cells variably suppress hepatic and extrahepatic autoimmunity
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Channakeshava Sokke Umeshappa, Jun Yamanouchi, Roopa Hebbandi Nanjundappa, Jacques Mbongue, Santiswarup Singha, Urs Christen, Kristofor K. Ellestad, Yang Yang, Kun Shao, Justin A Lee, Saswat Mohapatra, and Pere Santamaria
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0301 basic medicine ,Encephalomyelitis, Autoimmune, Experimental ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Cell ,Autoimmunity ,Inflammation ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Autoantigens ,T-Lymphocytes, Regulatory ,Epitope ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Antigen ,Mice, Inbred NOD ,medicine ,Animals ,Concise Communication ,Experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis ,Histocompatibility Antigens Class II ,General Medicine ,Immunotherapy ,medicine.disease ,3. Good health ,Hepatitis, Autoimmune ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Liver ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Cancer research ,medicine.symptom ,Reprogramming - Abstract
Peptide MHC class II–based (pMHCII-based) nanomedicines trigger the formation of multicellular regulatory networks by reprogramming autoantigen-experienced CD4(+) T cells into autoimmune disease–suppressing T regulatory type 1 (TR1) cells. We have shown that pMHCII-based nanomedicines displaying liver autoimmune disease–relevant yet ubiquitously expressed antigens can blunt various liver autoimmune disorders in a non–disease-specific manner without suppressing local or systemic immunity against infectious agents or cancer. Here, we show that such ubiquitous autoantigen-specific T cells are also awakened by extrahepatic tissue damage and that the corresponding TR1 progeny can suppress experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) and pancreatic β cell autoreactivity. In mice having EAE, nanomedicines displaying either ubiquitous or CNS-specific epitopes triggered the formation and expansion of cognate TR1 cells and their recruitment to the CNS-draining lymph nodes, sparing their liver-draining counterparts. Surprisingly, in mice having both liver autoimmunity and EAE, liver inflammation sequestered these ubiquitous or even CNS-specific TR1 cells away from the CNS, abrogating their antiencephalitogenic activity. In these mice, only the ubiquitous antigen-specific TR1 cells suppressed liver autoimmunity. Thus, the scope of antigen spreading in autoimmune disorders is larger than previously anticipated, involving specificities expected to be silenced by mechanisms of tolerance; the regulatory activity, but not the retention of autoreactive TR1 cells, requires local autoantigen expression.
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- 2020
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10. Extremely short bioavailability and fast pharmacodynamic effects of pMHC-based nanomedicines
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Muhammad Myn Uddin, Pau Serra, Debajyoti Mondal, Robert Clarke, César Fandos, Kristofor K. Ellestad, Santiswarup Singha, Nahir Garabatos, Pere Santamaria, Patricia Solé, and Yang Yang
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Autoimmune disease ,biology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Effector ,Proteolysis ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Biological Availability ,Endothelial Cells ,Protein Corona ,medicine.disease ,Autoantigens ,Bioavailability ,Flow cytometry ,Autoimmune Diseases ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Nanomedicine ,chemistry ,biology.protein ,medicine ,Biophysics ,Humans ,Antibody ,Iron oxide nanoparticles - Abstract
Nanoparticles (NPs) coated with autoimmune disease-relevant peptide-major histocompatibility complexes (pMHCs) can blunt autoimmune diseases by re-programming cognate effector T-lymphocytes into disease-suppressing regulatory T-cells, followed by massive expansion. Here, a method to quantify the absolute amounts of the active drug product is developed, to understand the relationship between bioavailability and pharmacodynamics. Incubation with plasma results in the formation of a protein corona that stabilizes the directional pMHC coat, shielding it from proteolysis or anti-drug antibody recognition, without any appreciable loss in biological potency. A quantitative method that harnesses these features indicates that the half-life of these compounds in the circulation and organs is an order of magnitude shorter (minutes vs. hours) than that measured using commonly-used semi-quantitative methods. Extensive transmission electron microscopy-based organ scanning and flow cytometry-based enumeration of pMHCII-NP capturing cells confirmed that these compounds are rapidly captured (within 1 min) by liver sinusoidal endothelial cells, Kupffer cells, splenic phagocytes and cognate T-cells, leading to a fast decline in the circulation. Therefore, the powerful pharmacodynamic effects of these compounds are dissociated from long bioavailability, implying a hit-and-run event. Collectively, these data provide a detailed view of the life-cycle of a nanoimmunomedicine, and suggest that the real half-lives of intact nanomedicines may be much shorter than those estimated using indirect approaches.
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- 2021
11. Nanoparticles for Immune Stimulation Against Infection, Cancer, and Autoimmunity
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Pere Santamaria, Kristofor K. Ellestad, Yang Yang, Kun Shao, and Santiswarup Singha
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General Physics and Astronomy ,Autoimmunity ,02 engineering and technology ,Computational biology ,Infections ,010402 general chemistry ,medicine.disease_cause ,01 natural sciences ,Autoimmune Diseases ,Immune system ,Antigen ,Neoplasms ,Animals ,Humans ,Immunologic Factors ,Medicine ,General Materials Science ,Autoimmune disease ,Flexibility (engineering) ,Drug Carriers ,business.industry ,General Engineering ,Cancer ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,medicine.disease ,3. Good health ,0104 chemical sciences ,Vaccination ,Nanoparticles ,Nanocarriers ,0210 nano-technology ,business - Abstract
Vaccination using nanocarrier-based delivery systems has recently emerged as a promising approach for meeting the continued challenge posed by infectious diseases and cancer. A diverse portfolio of nanocarriers of various sizes, compositions, and physical parameters have now been developed, and this diversity provides an opportunity for the rational design of vaccines that can mediate targeted delivery of various antigens and adjuvants or immune regulatory agents in ways unachievable with classical vaccination approaches. This flexibility allows control over the characteristics of vaccine-elicited immune responses such that they can be tailored to be effective in circumstances where classical vaccines have failed. Furthermore, the utility of nanocarrier-based immune modulation extends to the treatment of autoimmune disease where precisely targeted inhibition of immune responses is desirable. Clearly, the selection of appropriate nanocarriers, antigens, adjuvants, and other components underpins the efficacy of these nanoimmune interventions. Herein, we provide an overview of currently available nanocarriers of various types and their physical and pharmacological properties with the goal of providing a resource for researchers exploring nanomaterial-based approaches for immune modulation and identify some information gaps and unexplored questions to help guide future investigation.
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- 2018
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12. Peptide–MHC-based nanomedicines for autoimmunity function as T-cell receptor microclustering devices
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Pascal Detampel, Pau Serra, Anmar Khadra, Matthias Amrein, Warren C. W. Chan, Xavier Clemente-Casares, Jesús Blanco, Santiswarup Singha, Robert L. Tanguay, Qin Dai, Fayi Song, César Fandos, Roopa Hebbandi Nanjundappa, Shang Wan Liu, Patricia Solé, Channakeshava Sokke Umeshappa, Kun Shao, Yang Yang, Pere Santamaria, Susan Newbigging, Jun Yamanouchi, and Antonio Clemente
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0301 basic medicine ,Biomedical Engineering ,Autoimmunity ,Bioengineering ,medicine.disease_cause ,T-Lymphocytes, Regulatory ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,Mice, Inbred NOD ,In vivo ,Histocompatibility Antigens ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,General Materials Science ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Receptor ,Chemistry ,T-cell receptor ,Biological activity ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Ligand (biochemistry) ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics ,Histocompatibility ,Cell biology ,Nanomedicine ,030104 developmental biology ,Nanoparticles ,Peptides ,Function (biology) - Abstract
We have shown that nanoparticles (NPs) can be used as ligand-multimerization platforms to activate specific cellular receptors in vivo. Nanoparticles coated with autoimmune disease-relevant peptide-major histocompatibility complexes (pMHC) blunted autoimmune responses by triggering the differentiation and expansion of antigen-specific regulatory T cells in vivo. Here, we define the engineering principles impacting biological activity, detail a synthesis process yielding safe and stable compounds, and visualize how these nanomedicines interact with cognate T cells. We find that the triggering properties of pMHC-NPs are a function of pMHC intermolecular distance and involve the sustained assembly of large antigen receptor microclusters on murine and human cognate T cells. These compounds show no off-target toxicity in zebrafish embryos, do not cause haematological, biochemical or histological abnormalities, and are rapidly captured by phagocytes or processed by the hepatobiliary system. This work lays the groundwork for the design of ligand-based NP formulations to re-program in vivo cellular responses using nanotechnology.
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- 2017
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13. Suppression of a broad spectrum of liver autoimmune pathologies by single peptide-MHC-based nanomedicines
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Jesús Blanco, Channakeshava Sokke Umeshappa, Yang Yang, Pau Serra, Albert Parés, Pere Santamaria, Roopa Hebbandi Nanjundappa, Jun Yamanouchi, Kun Shao, and Santiswarup Singha
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Male ,Myeloid ,Autoimmune diseases ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Autoimmunity ,Autoimmune hepatitis ,medicine.disease_cause ,Autoantigens ,T-Lymphocytes, Regulatory ,Epitope ,Hepatitis ,Epitopes ,Mice ,0302 clinical medicine ,lcsh:Science ,0303 health sciences ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Malalties autoimmunitàries ,Liver Diseases ,Middle Aged ,3. Good health ,Nanomedicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Liver ,Cèl·lules T ,Peripheral tolerance ,Female ,Immunotherapy ,Pèptids ,Science ,T cells ,Major histocompatibility complex ,Article ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Autoimmune Diseases ,Cell Line ,Primary sclerosing cholangitis ,03 medical and health sciences ,Immune system ,Antigen ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Aged ,030304 developmental biology ,business.industry ,Histocompatibility Antigens Class II ,General Chemistry ,medicine.disease ,Disease Models, Animal ,Immunology ,biology.protein ,Nanoparticles ,lcsh:Q ,business ,Peptides ,030215 immunology - Abstract
Peptide-major histocompatibility complex class II (pMHCII)-based nanomedicines displaying tissue-specific autoantigenic epitopes can blunt specific autoimmune conditions by re-programming cognate antigen-experienced CD4+ T-cells into disease-suppressing T-regulatory type 1 (TR1) cells. Here, we show that single pMHCII-based nanomedicines displaying epitopes from mitochondrial, endoplasmic reticulum or cytoplasmic antigens associated with primary biliary cholangitis (PBC) or autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) can broadly blunt PBC, AIH and Primary Sclerosing Cholangitis in various murine models in an organ- rather than disease-specific manner, without suppressing general or local immunity against infection or metastatic tumors. Therapeutic activity is associated with cognate TR1 cell formation and expansion, TR1 cell recruitment to the liver and draining lymph nodes, local B-regulatory cell formation and profound suppression of the pro-inflammatory capacity of liver and liver-proximal myeloid dendritic cells and Kupffer cells. Thus, autoreactivity against liver-enriched autoantigens in liver autoimmunity is not disease-specific and can be harnessed to treat various liver autoimmune diseases broadly., Immune response against tissue-specific antigens is a hallmark of autoimmunity. Here the authors show that a single autoantigen-based nanomedicine can ameliorate pathology in a broad range of liver autoimmunity models without impairing host defenses, suggesting organ-wide tolerization.
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- 2019
14. In vivo clearance of nanoparticles by transcytosis across alveolar epithelial cells
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Pere Santamaria, Pascal Detampel, Matthias Amrein, Francis H. Y. Green, Sara Tehranian, Björn Petri, Clifford S. Cho, Santiswarup Singha, Anutosh Ganguly, and Ayodeji Jeje
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0301 basic medicine ,Intravital Microscopy ,Physiology ,010501 environmental sciences ,Kidney ,01 natural sciences ,Epithelium ,Diagnostic Radiology ,Mice ,White Blood Cells ,Fluorescence Microscopy ,Animal Cells ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Nanotechnology ,Electron Microscopy ,Alveolar Macrophages ,Alveolar Wall ,Fluorocarbons ,Microscopy ,Multidisciplinary ,Chemistry ,Radiology and Imaging ,Light Microscopy ,respiratory system ,Silicon Dioxide ,Pulmonary Imaging ,Trachea ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Physiological Parameters ,Transcytosis ,Engineering and Technology ,Medicine ,Female ,Anatomy ,Cellular Types ,Intravital microscopy ,Research Article ,Imaging Techniques ,Immune Cells ,Alveolar Epithelium ,Science ,Immunology ,Research and Analysis Methods ,03 medical and health sciences ,Diagnostic Medicine ,Administration, Inhalation ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Particle Size ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,A549 cell ,Blood Cells ,Lung ,Body Weight ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Kidney metabolism ,Epithelial Cells ,Cell Biology ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Biological Tissue ,030104 developmental biology ,A549 Cells ,Alveolar Epithelial Cells ,Biophysics ,Nanoparticles ,Transmission Electron Microscopy ,Spleen - Abstract
Nanoparticles in polluted air or aerosolized drug nanoparticles predominantly settle in the alveolar lung. Here, we describe a novel, highly effective pathway for the particles to cross the alveolar epithelium and reach the lymph and bloodstream. Amorphous silica nanoparticles, suspended in perfluorocarbon, were instilled into the lungs of mice for intravital microscopy. Particles formed agglomerates that settled on the alveolar wall, half of which were removed from the lung within 30 minutes. TEM histology showed agglomerates in stages of crossing the alveolar epithelium, in large compartments inside the epithelial cells and crossing the basal membrane into the interstitium. This pathway is consistent with published kinetic studies in rats and mice, using a host of (negatively) charged and polar nanoparticles.
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- 2019
15. Cooling Induced by Uphill Energy Transport in Plant Photosystems
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Maitrayee DasGupta, Koel Sen, Santiswarup Singha, Anjan Kr. Dasgupta, and Abhishek Bhattacharya
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Wavelength ,Materials science ,Photosystem II ,Chemical physics ,business.industry ,Thylakoid ,Thermal ,Botany ,business ,Absorption (electromagnetic radiation) ,Photosystem I ,Thermal energy ,Photosystem - Abstract
The uphill energy transfer in photosystems implies input energy at higher wavelength leading to energy output at lower wavelength. Briefly, energy is uphill transported from photosystem I (PSI) to photosystem II (PSII), the latter having a lower wavelength emission. This uphill energy transport involves absorption of thermal energy from the surroundings. While such cooling effects have been reported in laser systems we report for the first time a white light driven cooling in thylakoid suspension. The cooling of the surrounding medium by appropriate illumination was illustrated using thermal measurements. Again cooling is inhibited by agents like 3-(3,4-Dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea,that block the linear electron flow between the photocenters, implying a dependence of the cooling on interplay between such centers. Furthermore, it is possible to modulate the cooling pattern by addition of external agents like nanopaticles, some favoring further cooling (e.g., Ag nanoparticle) and some like Au or chlorophyll nanoparticles, showing insignificant or even reverse trends. Interestingly, the cooling is invariably associated with the 77K spectra of the thylakoid suspension. With reference to the dark control, an agent causing cooling always increases PSII to PSI ratio and vice versa i.e.,the uphill energy transport. Importantly, the cooling effect, apart from its import role in plant physiology can be exploited artificially for energy saving in post-harvest or food preservation.
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- 2017
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16. Nanoparticle-Based Immunotherapy for Cancer
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Pere Santamaria, Kun Shao, Xavier Clemente-Casares, Sue Tsai, Yang Yang, and Santiswarup Singha
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Cell type ,medicine.medical_treatment ,General Engineering ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Cancer ,Immunotherapy ,Biology ,medicine.disease ,Cancer Vaccines ,3. Good health ,Nanomedicine ,Immune system ,Antigen ,Cancer immunotherapy ,Immunity ,Neoplasms ,Immunology ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Nanoparticles ,General Materials Science ,Immunologic Surveillance ,Adjuvant - Abstract
The design of nanovaccines capable of triggering effective antitumor immunity requires an understanding of how the immune system senses and responds to threats, including pathogens and tumors. Equally important is an understanding of the mechanisms employed by tumor cells to evade immunity and an appreciation of the deleterious effects that antitumor immune responses can have on tumor growth, such as by skewing tumor cell composition toward immunologically silent tumor cell variants. The immune system and tumors engage in a tug-of-war driven by competition where promoting antitumor immunity or tumor cell death alone may be therapeutically insufficient. Nanotechnology affords a unique opportunity to develop therapeutic compounds than can simultaneously tackle both aspects, favoring tumor eradication. Here, we review the current status of nanoparticle-based immunotherapeutic strategies for the treatment of cancer, ranging from antigen/adjuvant delivery vehicles (to professional antigen-presenting cell types of the immune system) to direct tumor antigen-specific T-lymphocyte-targeting compounds and their combinations thereof.
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- 2014
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17. Design of Heat Shock-Resistant Surfaces to Prevent Protein Aggregation: Enhanced Chaperone Activity of Immobilized α-Crystallin
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Santiswarup Singha, Amitabha Sarkar, Sarita Roy, Anjan Kr. Dasgupta, Namrata Ray, and Bappaditya Chandra
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Hot Temperature ,Multiprotein complex ,Surface Properties ,Biomedical Engineering ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Fructose-bisphosphate aldolase ,Bioengineering ,Protein aggregation ,Protein Aggregates ,Structure-Activity Relationship ,Crystallin ,Fructose-Bisphosphate Aldolase ,Heat shock protein ,Lens, Crystalline ,Humans ,Structure–activity relationship ,alpha-Crystallins ,Heat-Shock Proteins ,Pharmacology ,Molecular Structure ,biology ,Chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Aldolase A ,Immobilized Proteins ,Biochemistry ,Drug Design ,biology.protein ,Glass ,sense organs ,Function (biology) ,Biotechnology - Abstract
α-Crystallin is a multimeric protein belonging to the family of small heat shock proteins, which function as molecular chaperones by resisting heat and oxidative stress induced aggregation of other proteins. We immobilized α-Crystallin on a self-assembled monolayer on glass surface and studied its activity in terms of the prevention of aggregation of aldolase. We discovered that playing with grafted protein density led to interesting variations in the chaperone activity of immobilized α-Crystallin. This result is in accordance with the hypothesis that dynamicity of subunits plays a vital role in the functioning of α-Crystallin and might be able to throw light on the structure-activity relationship. We showed that the chaperone activity of a certain number of immobilized α-Crystallins was superior compared to a solution containing an equivalent number of the protein and 10 times the number of the protein at temperatures >60 °C. The α-Crystallin grafted surfaces retained activity on reuse. This could also lead to the design of potent heat-shock resistant surfaces that can find wide applications in storage and shipping of protein based biopharmaceuticals.
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- 2014
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18. Gold Nanoparticle Induces Masking of Amines and Some Therapeutic Implications
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Himadri Datta, Santiswarup Singha, and Anjan Kr. Dasgupta
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Glycation End Products, Advanced ,Masking (art) ,Materials science ,Biomedical Engineering ,Metal Nanoparticles ,Nanoparticle ,Bioengineering ,Nanotechnology ,General Chemistry ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Ligand (biochemistry) ,Spectrometry, Fluorescence ,Crystallin ,Glycation ,Colloidal gold ,Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared ,Biophysics ,General Materials Science ,Gold ,alpha-Crystallins ,Amines ,Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy ,Spectroscopy - Abstract
Citrate capped gold nanoparticles (GNP) are effective in masking protein amines. The extent of such masking is quantified using Fourier Transform Infra Red (FTIR) spectroscopy. A strong correlation is shown to exist between a shift of amide-II peak intensity (1600-1500 cm(-1)) caused by GNP and the number of exposed amines in a given protein. The result is validated using eight different proteins. The expected out-come of such masking is inhibition of interaction between any external ligand and such amines. The prediction is validated using a simple non-enzymatic glycation of clinically important protein like crystallin.
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- 2011
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19. Anti-glycation activity of gold nanoparticles
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Jaydeep Bhattacharya, Santiswarup Singha, Anjan Kumar Dasgupta, and Himadri Datta
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Glycation End Products, Advanced ,Glycosylation ,Materials science ,Biomedical Engineering ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Bioengineering ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Anti glycation ,Glycation ,Animals ,Humans ,Nanotechnology ,General Materials Science ,alpha-Crystallins ,biology ,Fructose ,Biocompatible material ,Structural distribution ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Colloidal gold ,Chaperone (protein) ,biology.protein ,Nanoparticles ,Molecular Medicine ,Cattle ,Gold - Abstract
Anti-glycation activity of gold nanoparticles (GNPs) has been reported for the first time. Nonenzymatic glycation of alpha-crystallin leads to formation of cataract, or opaque aggregate of proteins. In this article we report prevention of glycation of alpha-crystallin by conjugation with GNPs. Formation of advanced glycosylic end products is prevented even if a strong glycating agent such as fructose is used. In addition, the nanoconjugation can provide some important information on the structural distribution of this dynamic chaperone protein. Because GNPs are biocompatible, their reported anti-glycation activity may have ophthalmological implications.
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- 2009
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20. Expanding antigen-specific regulatory networks to treat autoimmunity
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Smriti M. Agrawal, Michael B. Keough, Nahir Garabatos, Poornima Ambalavanan, César Fandos, Xavier Clemente-Casares, Sue Tsai, Thomas Stratmann, Jesús Blanco, Santiswarup Singha, Cristina Izquierdo, Pere Santamaria, Jinguo Wang, Anna Moore, V. Wee Yong, Pau Serra, Jun Yamanouchi, Eddie A. James, and Yang Yang
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Regulatory B cells ,Cellular differentiation ,T cell ,Transgene ,Population ,Antigen-Presenting Cells ,Autoimmunity ,Mice, Transgenic ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Autoantigens ,T-Lymphocytes, Regulatory ,03 medical and health sciences ,Mice ,0302 clinical medicine ,In vivo ,Mice, Inbred NOD ,medicine ,Prevalence ,Animals ,Humans ,education ,education.field_of_study ,B-Lymphocytes ,Multidisciplinary ,CD11 Antigens ,Histocompatibility Antigens Class II ,Cell Differentiation ,MHC restriction ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Nanomedicine ,Solubility ,Organ Specificity ,Immunology ,Cytokines ,Nanoparticles ,Female ,030215 immunology - Abstract
Regulatory T cells hold promise as targets for therapeutic intervention in autoimmunity, but approaches capable of expanding antigen-specific regulatory T cells in vivo are currently not available. Here we show that systemic delivery of nanoparticles coated with autoimmune-disease-relevant peptides bound to major histocompatibility complex class II (pMHCII) molecules triggers the generation and expansion of antigen-specific regulatory CD4(+) T cell type 1 (TR1)-like cells in different mouse models, including mice humanized with lymphocytes from patients, leading to resolution of established autoimmune phenomena. Ten pMHCII-based nanomedicines show similar biological effects, regardless of genetic background, prevalence of the cognate T-cell population or MHC restriction. These nanomedicines promote the differentiation of disease-primed autoreactive T cells into TR1-like cells, which in turn suppress autoantigen-loaded antigen-presenting cells and drive the differentiation of cognate B cells into disease-suppressing regulatory B cells, without compromising systemic immunity. pMHCII-based nanomedicines thus represent a new class of drugs, potentially useful for treating a broad spectrum of autoimmune conditions in a disease-specific manner.
- Published
- 2014
21. Nanoparticle-conjugated animal venom-toxins and their possible therapeutic potential
- Author
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Archita, Biswas, Aparna, Gomes, Jayeeta, Sengupta, Poulami, Datta, Santiswarup, Singha, Anjan Kr, Dasgupta, and Antony, Gomes
- Subjects
nano-particles ,nano-technology ,Venoms ,nano-medicine ,toxins ,Review Article ,complex mixtures ,therapeutic potential ,nano-conjugation - Abstract
Nano-medical approaches to develop drugs have attracted much attention in different arenas to design nanoparticle conjugates for better efficacy of the potential bio-molecules. A group of promising candidates of this category would be venom-toxins of animal origin of potential medicinal value. Traditional systems of medicine as well as folklores mention the use of venom-toxins for the treatment of various diseases. Research has led to scientific validation of medicinal applications of venoms-toxins and many active constituents derived from venoms-toxins are already in clinical use or under clinical trial. Nanomedicine is an emerging field of medicine where nanotechnology is used to develop molecules of nano-scale dimension, so that these molecules can be taken up by the cells more easily and have better efficacy, as compared to large molecules that may tend to get eliminated. This review will focus on some of the potential venoms and toxins along with nanoparticle conjugated venom-toxins of snakes, amphibians, scorpions and bees, etc., for possible therapeutic clues against emerging diseases.
- Published
- 2012
22. A size dependent folding contour for cytochrome C
- Author
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Ranjita GhoshMoulick, Shibsekhar Roy, Jaydeep Bhattacharya, Santiswarup Singha, and Anjan Kr. Dasgupta
- Subjects
Protein Folding ,Hemeprotein ,Cytochrome ,Protein Conformation ,Protein Renaturation ,Biophysics ,Heme ,Biochemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Dynamic light scattering ,Native state ,Scattering, Radiation ,Folding funnel ,Peroxidase ,Binding Sites ,biology ,Chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Cytochromes c ,Peptide Conformation ,Molecular Weight ,Crystallography ,biology.protein - Abstract
The paper describes an experimental construct of the folding route of the heme protein cytochrome-C. The construct highlights a slowing down near the nose of the folding funnel caused by the multiplicity of the energy traps near the native conformation created as a result of complex heme-peptide interaction. Interestingly the hydrodynamic size, the size heterogeneity and peroxidase activity serve as a triple measure of the distance of this near equilibrium departure from native conformation. Accordingly, the folding process is marked with a gradual and reversible reduction of mean hydrodynamic size, size heterogeneity and peroxidase activity (higher in unfolded state). The Dynamic Light Scattering based straightforward illustration of hydrodynamic size variation may serve as a model to slow folding observed in case of heme proteins, the heme itself serving as a natural facilitator for the native peptide conformation.
- Published
- 2005
23. Design of Heat Shock-Resistant Surfaces to PreventProtein Aggregation: Enhanced Chaperone Activity of Immobilized α-Crystallin.
- Author
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Namrata Ray, Sarita Roy, Santiswarup Singha, Bappaditya Chandra, AnjanKr. Dasgupta, and Amitabha Sarkar
- Published
- 2014
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