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Featured researches published by Adam T. Preslar.


ACS Nano | 2014

Gd(III)-labeled peptide nanofibers for reporting on biomaterial localization in vivo.

Adam T. Preslar; Giacomo Parigi; Mark T. McClendon; Samantha S. Sefick; Tyson J. Moyer; Chad R. Haney; Emily A. Waters; Keith W. MacRenaris; Claudio Luchinat; Samuel I. Stupp; Thomas J. Meade

Bioactive supramolecular nanostructures are of great importance in regenerative medicine and the development of novel targeted therapies. In order to use supramolecular chemistry to design such nanostructures, it is extremely important to track their fate in vivo through the use of molecular imaging strategies. Peptide amphiphiles (PAs) are known to generate a wide array of supramolecular nanostructures, and there is extensive literature on their use in areas such as tissue regeneration and therapies for disease. We report here on a series of PA molecules based on the well-established β-sheet amino acid sequence V3A3 conjugated to macrocyclic Gd(III) labels for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). These conjugates were shown to form cylindrical supramolecular assemblies using cryogenic transmission electron microscopy and small-angle X-ray scattering. Using nuclear magnetic relaxation dispersion analysis, we observed that thermal annealing of the nanostructures led to a decrease in water exchange lifetime (τm) of hundreds of nanoseconds only for molecules that self-assemble into nanofibers of high aspect ratio. We interpret this decrease to indicate more solvent exposure to the paramagnetic moiety on annealing, resulting in faster water exchange within angstroms of the macrocycle. We hypothesize that faster water exchange in the nanofiber-forming PAs arises from the dehydration and increase in packing density on annealing. Two of the self-assembling conjugates were selected for imaging PAs after intramuscular injections of the PA C16V3A3E3-NH2 in the tibialis anterior muscle of a murine model. Needle tracts were clearly discernible with MRI at 4 days postinjection. This work establishes Gd(III) macrocycle-conjugated peptide amphiphiles as effective tracking agents for peptide amphiphile materials in vivo over the timescale of days.


Nano Letters | 2016

Gd(III)-Dithiolane Gold Nanoparticles for T1-Weighted Magnetic Resonance Imaging of the Pancreas

Robert J. Holbrook; Nikhil Rammohan; Matthew W. Rotz; Keith W. MacRenaris; Adam T. Preslar; Thomas J. Meade

Pancreatic adenocarcinoma has a 5 year survival of approximately 3% and median survival of 6 months and is among the most dismal of prognoses in all of medicine. This poor prognosis is largely due to delayed diagnosis where patients remain asymptomatic until advanced disease is present. Therefore, techniques to allow early detection of pancreatic adenocarcinoma are desperately needed. Imaging of pancreatic tissue is notoriously difficult, and the development of new imaging techniques would impact our understanding of organ physiology and pathology with applications in disease diagnosis, staging, and longitudinal response to therapy in vivo. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) provides numerous advantages for these types of investigations; however, it is unable to delineate the pancreas due to low inherent contrast within this tissue type. To overcome this limitation, we have prepared a new Gd(III) contrast agent that accumulates in the pancreas and provides significant contrast enhancement by MR imaging. We describe the synthesis and characterization of a new dithiolane-Gd(III) complex and a straightforward and scalable approach for conjugation to a gold nanoparticle. We present data that show the nanoconjugates exhibit very high per particle values of r1 relaxivity at both low and high magnetic field strengths due to the high Gd(III) payload. We provide evidence of pancreatic tissue labeling that includes MR images, post-mortem biodistribution analysis, and pancreatic tissue evaluation of particle localization. Significant contrast enhancement was observed allowing clear identification of the pancreas with contrast-to-noise ratios exceeding 35:1.


Chemical Communications | 2014

Esterase-activated release of naproxen from supramolecular nanofibres

Martin Conda-Sheridan; Sungsoo S. Lee; Adam T. Preslar; Samuel I. Stupp

Nanofibre forming peptide amphiphiles were conjugated to naproxen through an esterase-sensitive linker. The amount of naproxen released, in the presence of enzymes, was influenced by the linker conjugating the drug to the supramolecular assembly. In vitro studies showed the anti-inflammatory activity of the released drug was maintained.


ACS Nano | 2016

19F Magnetic Resonance Imaging Signals from Peptide Amphiphile Nanostructures Are Strongly Affected by Their Shape

Adam T. Preslar; Faifan Tantakitti; Kitae Park; Shanrong Zhang; Samuel I. Stupp; Thomas J. Meade

Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is a noninvasive imaging modality that provides excellent spatial and temporal resolution. The most commonly used MR probes face significant challenges originating from the endogenous (1)H background signal of water. In contrast, fluorine MRI ((19)F MRI) allows quantitative probe imaging with zero background signal. Probes with high fluorine content are required for high sensitivity, suggesting nanoscale supramolecular assemblies containing (19)F probes offer a potentially useful strategy for optimum imaging as a result of improved payload. We report here on supramolecular nanostructures formed by fluorinated peptide amphiphiles containing either glutamic acid or lysine residues in their sequence. We identified molecules that form aggregates in water which transition from cylindrical to ribbon-like shape as pH increased from 4.5 to 8.0. Interestingly, we found that ribbon-like nanostructures had reduced magnetic resonance signal, whereas their cylindrical counterparts exhibited strong signals. We attribute this drastic difference to the greater mobility of fluorinated tails in the hydrophobic compartment of cylindrical nanostructures compared to lower mobility in ribbon-like assemblies. This discovery identifies a strategy to design supramolecular, self-assembling contrast agents for (19)F MRI that can spatially map physiologically relevant changes in pH using changes in morphology.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017

Injectable biomimetic liquid crystalline scaffolds enhance muscle stem cell transplantation

Eduard Sleep; Benjamin D. Cosgrove; Mark T. McClendon; Adam T. Preslar; Charlotte H. Chen; M. Hussain Sangji; Charles M. Rubert Pérez; Russell D. Haynes; Thomas J. Meade; Helen M. Blau; Samuel I. Stupp

Significance Most research aiming to achieve muscle regeneration focuses on the biology of “muscle stem cells,” but delivery methods that enhance transplantation efficiency of these cells are at early stages. We report on a liquid crystalline scaffold that encapsulates the cells and gels upon injection in vivo without requiring an external stimulus. As a unique structural feature, the scaffold contains nanofibers that align preferentially with surrounding natural muscle fibers. The biomimetic scaffold can have a stiffness that matches that of muscle, has great ability to retain growth factors, and has a biodegradation rate that is compatible with regeneration time scales. Most importantly, the scaffold enhances engraftment efficiency of the cells in injured muscle, and without injury when combined with growth factors. Muscle stem cells are a potent cell population dedicated to efficacious skeletal muscle regeneration, but their therapeutic utility is currently limited by mode of delivery. We developed a cell delivery strategy based on a supramolecular liquid crystal formed by peptide amphiphiles (PAs) that encapsulates cells and growth factors within a muscle-like unidirectionally ordered environment of nanofibers. The stiffness of the PA scaffolds, dependent on amino acid sequence, was found to determine the macroscopic degree of cell alignment templated by the nanofibers in vitro. Furthermore, these PA scaffolds support myogenic progenitor cell survival and proliferation and they can be optimized to induce cell differentiation and maturation. We engineered an in vivo delivery system to assemble scaffolds by injection of a PA solution that enabled coalignment of scaffold nanofibers with endogenous myofibers. These scaffolds locally retained growth factors, displayed degradation rates matching the time course of muscle tissue regeneration, and markedly enhanced the engraftment of muscle stem cells in injured and noninjured muscles in mice.


Bioconjugate Chemistry | 2017

Gd(III)-Gold Nanoconjugates Provide Remarkable Cell Labeling for High Field Magnetic Resonance Imaging

Nikhil Rammohan; Robert J. Holbrook; Matthew W. Rotz; Keith W. MacRenaris; Adam T. Preslar; Christiane E. Carney; Viktorie Reichova; Thomas J. Meade

In vivo cell tracking is vital for understanding migrating cell populations, particularly cancer and immune cells. Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging for long-term tracking of transplanted cells in live organisms requires cells to effectively internalize Gd(III) contrast agents (CAs). Clinical Gd(III)-based CAs require high dosing concentrations and extended incubation times for cellular internalization. To combat this, we have devised a series of Gd(III)-gold nanoconjugates (Gd@AuNPs) with varied chelate structure and nanoparticle-chelate linker length, with the goal of labeling and imaging breast cancer cells. These new Gd@AuNPs demonstrate significantly enhanced labeling compared to previous Gd(III)-gold-DNA nanoconstructs. Variations in Gd(III) loading, surface packing, and cell uptake were observed among four different Gd@AuNP formulations suggesting that linker length and surface charge play an important role in cell labeling. The best performing Gd@AuNPs afforded 23.6 ± 3.6 fmol of Gd(III) per cell at an incubation concentration of 27.5 μM-this efficiency of Gd(III) payload delivery (Gd(III)/cell normalized to dose) exceeds that of previous Gd(III)-Au conjugates and most other Gd(III)-nanoparticle formulations. Further, Gd@AuNPs were well-tolerated in vivo in terms of biodistribution and clearance, and supports future cell tracking applications in whole-animal models.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2017

Calcium-Induced Morphological Transitions in Peptide Amphiphiles Detected by 19F-Magnetic Resonance Imaging

Adam T. Preslar; Laura M. Lilley; Kohei Sato; Shanrong Zhang; Zer Keen Chia; Samuel I. Stupp; Thomas J. Meade

Misregulation of extracellular Ca2+ can indicate bone-related pathologies. New, noninvasive tools are required to image Ca2+ fluxes and fluorine magnetic resonance imaging (19F-MRI) is uniquely suited to this challenge. Here, we present three, highly fluorinated peptide amphiphiles that self-assemble into nanoribbons in buffered saline and demonstrate these nanostructures can be programmed to change 19F-NMR signal intensity as a function of Ca2+ concentration. We determined these nanostructures show significant reduction in 19F-NMR signal as nanoribbon width increases in response to Ca2+, corresponding to 19F-MR image intensity reduction. Thus, these peptide amphiphiles can be used to quantitatively image biologically relevant Ca2+ concentrations.


ACS Nano | 2015

Correction to Gd(III)-Labeled Peptide Nanofibers for Reporting on Biomaterial Localization in Vivo

Adam T. Preslar; Giacomo Parigi; Mark T. McClendon; Samantha S. Sefick; Tyson J. Moyer; Chad R. Haney; Emily A. Waters; Keith W. MacRenaris; Claudio Luchinat; Samuel I. Stupp; Thomas J. Meade

Page 7328. In Figure ​Figure2B2B, the leftmost panel is a cryogenic TEM image of PA2 rather than PA1. We include here a corrected panel for PA1. No conclusions or analysis in the work are affected by this correction. Figure 2B Image of PA1 nanofibers after thermal annealing. Scale bar is 200 nm.


Nano Letters | 2016

Nanodiamond-Gadolinium(III) Aggregates for Tracking Cancer Growth in Vivo at High Field

Nikhil Rammohan; Keith W. MacRenaris; Laura Moore; Giacomo Parigi; Daniel J. Mastarone; Lisa M. Manus; Laura M. Lilley; Adam T. Preslar; Emily A. Waters; Abigail Filicko; Claudio Luchinat; Dean Ho; Thomas J. Meade


Chemical Communications | 2016

Targeted delivery of gold nanoparticle contrast agents for reporting gene detection by magnetic resonance imaging

Luke F. Vistain; Matthew W. Rotz; Richa Rathore; Adam T. Preslar; Thomas J. Meade

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