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Dive into the research topics where Aditya N. Bade is active.

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Featured researches published by Aditya N. Bade.


Biomaterials | 2015

Pharmacodynamics of long-acting folic acid-receptor targeted ritonavir boosted atazanavir nanoformulations

Pavan Puligujja; Shantanu Balkundi; Lindsey M. Kendrick; Hannah M. Baldridge; James Hilaire; Aditya N. Bade; Prasanta K. Dash; Gang Zhang; Larisa Y. Poluektova; Santhi Gorantla; Xin Ming Liu; Tianlei Ying; Yang Feng; Yanping Wang; Dimiter S. Dimitrov; JoEllyn McMillan; Howard E. Gendelman

Long-acting nanoformulated antiretroviral therapy (nanoART) that targets monocyte-macrophages could improve the drugs half-life and protein-binding capacities while facilitating cell and tissue depots. To this end, ART nanoparticles that target the folic acid (FA) receptor and permit cell-based drug depots were examined using pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic (PD) tests. FA receptor-targeted poloxamer 407 nanocrystals, containing ritonavir-boosted atazanavir (ATV/r), significantly increased drug bioavailability and PD by five and 100 times, respectively. Drug particles administered to human peripheral blood lymphocyte reconstituted NOD.Cg-Prkdc(scid)Il2rg(tm1Wjl)/SzJ mice and infected with HIV-1ADA led to ATV/r drug concentrations that paralleled FA receptor beta staining in both the macrophage-rich parafollicular areas of spleen and lymph nodes. Drug levels were higher in these tissues than what could be achieved by either native drug or untargeted nanoART particles. The data also mirrored potent reductions in viral loads, tissue viral RNA and numbers of HIV-1p24+ cells in infected and treated animals. We conclude that FA-P407 coating of ART nanoparticles readily facilitates drug carriage and antiretroviral responses.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2017

Autophagy facilitates macrophage depots of sustained-release nanoformulated antiretroviral drugs

Divya Prakash Gnanadhas; Prasanta K. Dash; Brady Sillman; Aditya N. Bade; Zhiyi Lin; Diana L. Palandri; Nagsen Gautam; Yazen Alnouti; Harris A. Gelbard; JoEllyn McMillan; R. Lee Mosley; Benson Edagwa; Howard E. Gendelman; Santhi Gorantla

Long-acting anti-HIV products can substantively change the standard of care for patients with HIV/AIDS. To this end, hydrophobic antiretroviral drugs (ARVs) were recently developed for parenteral administration at monthly or longer intervals. While shorter-acting hydrophilic drugs can be made into nanocarrier-encased prodrugs, the nanocarrier encasement must be boosted to establish long-acting ARV depots. The mixed-lineage kinase 3 (MLK-3) inhibitor URMC-099 provides this function by affecting autophagy. Here, we have shown that URMC-099 facilitates ARV sequestration and its antiretroviral responses by promoting the nuclear translocation of the transcription factor EB (TFEB). In monocyte-derived macrophages, URMC-099 induction of autophagy led to retention of nanoparticles containing the antiretroviral protease inhibitor atazanavir. These nanoparticles were localized within macrophage autophagosomes, leading to a 4-fold enhancement of mitochondrial and cell vitality. In rodents, URMC-099 activation of autophagy led to 50-fold increases in the plasma drug concentration of the viral integrase inhibitor dolutegravir. These data paralleled URMC-099–mediated induction of autophagy and the previously reported antiretroviral responses in HIV-1–infected humanized mice. We conclude that pharmacologic induction of autophagy provides a means to extend the action of a long-acting, slow, effective release of antiretroviral therapy.


Journal of Neuroimmune Pharmacology | 2013

Improved Visualization of Neuronal Injury Following Glial Activation by Manganese Enhanced MRI

Aditya N. Bade; Biyun Zhou; Adrian A. Epstein; Santhi Gorantla; Larisa Y. Poluektova; Jiangtao Luo; Howard E. Gendelman; Michael D. Boska; Yutong Liu

Research directed at anatomical, integrative and functional activities of the central nervous system (CNS) can be realized through bioimaging. A wealth of data now demonstrates the utility of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) towards unraveling complex neural connectivity operative in health and disease. A means to improve MRI sensitivity is through contrast agents and notably manganese (Mn2+). The Mn2+ ions enter neurons through voltage-gated calcium channels and unlike other contrast agents such as gadolinium, iron oxide, iron platinum and imaging proteins, provide unique insights into brain physiology. Nonetheless, a critical question that remains is the brain target cells serving as sources for the signal of Mn2+ enhanced MRI (MEMRI). To this end, we investigated MEMRI’s abilities to detect glial (astrocyte and microglia) and neuronal activation signals following treatment with known inflammatory inducing agents. The idea is to distinguish between gliosis (glial activation) and neuronal injury for the MEMRI signal and as such use the agent as a marker for neural activity in inflammatory and degenerative disease. We now demonstrate that glial inflammation facilitates Mn2+ neuronal ion uptake. Glial Mn2+ content was not linked to its activation. MEMRI performed on mice injected intracranially with lipopolysaccharide was associated with increased neuronal activity. These results support the notion that MEMRI reflects neuronal excitotoxicity and impairment that can occur through a range of insults including neuroinflammation. We conclude that the MEMRI signal enhancement is induced by inflammation stimulating neuronal Mn2+ uptake.


Theranostics | 2018

Multimodal theranostic nanoformulations permit magnetic resonance bioimaging of antiretroviral drug particle tissue-cell biodistribution

Bhavesh D. Kevadiya; Christopher Woldstad; Brendan M. Ottemann; Prasanta K. Dash; Balasrinivasa R. Sajja; Benjamin G. Lamberty; Brenda Morsey; Ted Kocher; Rinku Dutta; Aditya N. Bade; Yutong Liu; Shannon Callen; Howard S. Fox; Siddappa N. Byrareddy; JoEllyn McMillan; Tatiana K. Bronich; Benson Edagwa; Michael D. Boska; Howard E. Gendelman

RATIONALE: Long-acting slow effective release antiretroviral therapy (LASER ART) was developed to improve patient regimen adherence, prevent new infections, and facilitate drug delivery to human immunodeficiency virus cell and tissue reservoirs. In an effort to facilitate LASER ART development, “multimodal imaging theranostic nanoprobes” were created. These allow combined bioimaging, drug pharmacokinetics and tissue biodistribution tests in animal models. METHODS: Europium (Eu3+)- doped cobalt ferrite (CF) dolutegravir (DTG)- loaded (EuCF-DTG) nanoparticles were synthesized then fully characterized based on their size, shape and stability. These were then used as platforms for nanoformulated drug biodistribution. RESULTS: Folic acid (FA) decoration of EuCF-DTG (FA-EuCF-DTG) nanoparticles facilitated macrophage targeting and sped drug entry across cell barriers. Macrophage uptake was higher for FA-EuCF-DTG than EuCF-DTG nanoparticles with relaxivities of r2 = 546 mM-1s-1 and r2 = 564 mM-1s-1 in saline, and r2 = 850 mM-1s-1 and r2 = 876 mM-1s-1 in cells, respectively. The values were ten or more times higher than what was observed for ultrasmall superparamagnetic iron oxide particles (r2 = 31.15 mM-1s-1 in saline) using identical iron concentrations. Drug particles were detected in macrophage Rab compartments by dual fluorescence labeling. Replicate particles elicited sustained antiretroviral responses. After parenteral injection of FA-EuCF-DTG and EuCF-DTG into rats and rhesus macaques, drug, iron and cobalt levels, measured by LC-MS/MS, magnetic resonance imaging, and ICP-MS were coordinate. CONCLUSION: We posit that these theranostic nanoprobes can assess LASER ART drug delivery and be used as part of a precision nanomedicine therapeutic strategy.


Molecular Neurobiology | 2016

Manganese-Enhanced Magnetic Resonance Imaging Reflects Brain Pathology During Progressive HIV-1 Infection of Humanized Mice

Aditya N. Bade; Santhi Gorantla; Prasanta K. Dash; Edward Makarov; Balasrinivasa R. Sajja; Larisa Y. Poluektova; Jiangtao Luo; Howard E. Gendelman; Michael D. Boska; Yutong Liu

Progressive human immunodeficiency viral (HIV) infection commonly leads to a constellation of cognitive, motor, and behavioral impairments. These are collectively termed HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders (HAND). While antiretroviral therapy (ART) reduces HAND severity, it does not affect disease prevalence. Despite decades of research, there remain no biomarkers for HAND and all potential comorbid conditions must first be excluded for a diagnosis to be made. To this end, we now report that manganese (Mn2+)-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (MEMRI) can reflect brain region-specific HIV-1-induced neuropathology in chronically virus-infected NOD/scid-IL-2Rγcnull humanized mice. MEMRI diagnostics mirrors the abilities of Mn2+ to enter and accumulate in affected neurons during disease. T1 relaxivity and its weighted signal intensity are proportional to Mn2+ activities in neurons. In 16-week virus-infected humanized mice, altered MEMRI signal enhancement was easily observed in affected brain regions. These included, but were not limited to, the hippocampus, amygdala, thalamus, globus pallidus, caudoputamen, substantia nigra, and cerebellum. MEMRI signal was coordinated with levels of HIV-1 infection, neuroinflammation (astro- and micro-gliosis), and neuronal injury. MEMRI accurately demonstrates the complexities of HIV-1-associated neuropathology in rodents that reflects, in measure, the clinical manifestations of neuroAIDS as it is seen in a human host.


Journal of Neuroscience Methods | 2015

Potential of N-acetylated-para-aminosalicylic acid to accelerate manganese enhancement decline for long-term MEMRI in rodent brain.

Aditya N. Bade; Biyun Zhou; JoEllyn McMillan; Prabagaran Narayanasamy; Ram S. Veerubhotla; Howard E. Gendelman; Michael D. Boska; Yutong Liu

BACKGROUND Manganese (Mn(2+))-enhanced MRI (MEMRI) is a valuable imaging tool to study brain structure and function in normal and diseased small animals. The brain retention of Mn(2+) is relatively long with a half-life (t1/2) of 51-74 days causing a slow decline of MRI signal enhancement following Mn(2+) administration. Such slow decline limits using repeated MEMRI to follow the central nervous system longitudinally in weeks or months. This is because residual Mn(2+) from preceding administrations can confound the interpretation of imaging results. We investigated whether the Mn(2+) enhancement decline could be accelerated thus enabling repeated MEMRI, and as a consequence broadens the utility of MEMRI tests. NEW METHODS We investigated whether N-acetyl-para-aminosalicylic acid (AcPAS), a chelator of Mn(2+), could affect the decline of Mn(2+) induced MRI enhancement in brain. RESULTS AND CONCLUSION Two-week treatment with AcPAS (200mg/kg/dose×3 daily) accelerated the decline of Mn(2+) induced enhancement in MRI. In the whole brain on average the enhancement declined from 100% to 17% in AcPAS treated mice, while in PBS controls the decline is from 100% to 27%. We posit that AcPAS could enhance MEMRI utility for evaluating brain biology in small animals. COMPARISON WITH EXISTING METHODS To the best of our knowledge, no method exists to accelerate the decline of the Mn(2+) induced MRI enhancement for repeated MEMRI tests.


Molecular Neurobiology | 2018

Nanoformulated Antiretroviral Therapy Attenuates Brain Metabolic Oxidative Stress

J. Rafael Montenegro-Burke; Christopher Woldstad; Mingliang Fang; Aditya N. Bade; JoEllyn McMillan; Benson Edagwa; Michael D. Boska; Howard E. Gendelman; Gary Siuzdak

Antiretroviral therapy (ART) restricts human immunodeficiency virus type one (HIV-1) replication and by so doing, improves the quality and longevity of life for infected people. Nonetheless, treatment can also lead to adverse clinical outcomes such as drug resistance and systemic adverse events. Both could be affected by long-acting slow effective release ART. Indeed, maintenance of sustained plasma drug levels, for weeks or months, after a single high-level dosing, could improve regimen adherence but, at the same time, affect systemic toxicities. Of these, the most troubling are those that affect the central nervous system (CNS). To address this, dolutegravir (Tivicay, DTG), a potent and durable HIV integrase inhibitor used effectively in combination ART was tested. Rodents were administered parenteral 45-mg/kg doses. DTG-associated changes in CNS homeostasis were assessed by measuring brain metabolic activities. After antiretroviral treatment, brain subregions were dissected and screened by mass spectrometry-based metabolomics. Metabolic drug-related dysregulation of energy and oxidative stress were readily observed within the cerebellum and frontal cortex following native drug administrations. Each was associated with alterations in neural homeostasis and depleted canonical oxidation protection pools that included glutathione and ascorbic acid. Surprisingly, the oxidative stress-related metabolites were completely attenuated when DTG was administered as nanoformulations. These data demonstrate the importance of formulation design in control of DTG or perhaps other antiretroviral drug-associated CNS events.


Journal of NeuroVirology | 2018

Persistent EcoHIV infection induces nigral degeneration in 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine-intoxicated mice

Katherine E. Olson; Aditya N. Bade; Krista L. Namminga; Mary Jane Potash; R. Lee Mosley; Larisa Y. Poluektova; David J. Volsky; Howard E. Gendelman

The widespread use of antiretroviral therapy for treatment of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infections has dramatically improved the quality and duration of life for HIV-positive individuals. Despite this success, HIV persists for the life of an infected person in tissue reservoirs including the nervous system. Thus, whether HIV exacerbates age-related brain disorders such as Parkinson’s disease (PD) is of concern. In support of this idea, HIV infection can be associated with motor and gait abnormalities that parallel late-stage manifestations of PD including dopaminergic neuronal loss. With these findings in hand, we investigated whether viral infection could affect nigrostriatal degeneration or exacerbate chemically induced nigral degeneration. We now demonstrate an additive effect of EcoHIV on dopaminergic neuronal loss and neuroinflammation induced by 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine intoxication. HIV-1-infected humanized mice failed to recapitulate these EcoHIV results suggesting species-specific neural signaling. The results demonstrate a previously undefined EcoHIV-associated neurodegenerative response that may be used to model pathobiological aspects of PD.


Neurotherapeutics | 2016

Manganese-Enhanced Magnetic Resonance Imaging for Detection of Vasoactive Intestinal Peptide Receptor 2 Agonist Therapy in a Model of Parkinson’s Disease

Katherine E. Olson; Aditya N. Bade; Charles R. Schutt; Jingdong Dong; Scott Shandler; Michael D. Boska; R. Lee Mosley; Howard E. Gendelman; Yutong Liu

Neuroprotective immunity is defined by transformation of T-cell polarity for therapeutic gain. For neurodegenerative disorders and specifically for Parkinson’s disease (PD), granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor or vasoactive intestinal peptide receptor 2 (VIPR2) agonists elicit robust anti-inflammatory microglial responses leading to neuronal sparing in 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP)-intoxicated mice. While neurotherapeutic potential was demonstrated for PD, there remain inherent limitations in translating these inventions from the laboratory to patients. One obstacle in translating such novel neurotherapeutics centers on the availability of suitable noninvasive methods to track disease progression and therapeutic efficacy. To this end, we developed manganese-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (MEMRI) assays as a way to track a linkage between glial activation and VIPR2 agonist (LBT-3627)-induced neuroprotective immunity for MPTP-induced nigrostriatal degeneration. Notably, LBT-3627-treated, MPTP-intoxicated mice show reduced MEMRI brain signal intensities. These changes paralleled reduced astrogliosis and resulted in sparing of nigral tyrosine hydroxylase neurons. Most importantly, the data suggest that MEMRI can be developed as a biomarker tool to monitor neurotherapeutic responses that are relevant to common neurodegenerative disorders used to improve disease outcomes.


Acta Biomaterialia | 2017

Development of europium doped core-shell silica cobalt ferrite functionalized nanoparticles for magnetic resonance imaging

Bhavesh D. Kevadiya; Aditya N. Bade; Christopher Woldstad; Benson Edagwa; JoEllyn McMillan; Balasrinivasa R. Sajja; Michael D. Boska; Howard E. Gendelman

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Howard E. Gendelman

University of Nebraska Medical Center

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JoEllyn McMillan

University of Nebraska Medical Center

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Benson Edagwa

University of Nebraska Medical Center

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Michael D. Boska

University of Nebraska Medical Center

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Santhi Gorantla

University of Nebraska Medical Center

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Yutong Liu

University of Nebraska Medical Center

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Prasanta K. Dash

University of Nebraska Medical Center

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Larisa Y. Poluektova

University of Nebraska Medical Center

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Balasrinivasa R. Sajja

University of Nebraska Medical Center

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Christopher Woldstad

University of Nebraska Medical Center

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