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Dive into the research topics where Ananth Annapragada is active.

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Featured researches published by Ananth Annapragada.


Journal of Controlled Release | 2003

Controlled targeting of liposomal doxorubicin via the folate receptor in vitro

Justin M. Saul; Ananth Annapragada; Jayaganesh V. Natarajan; Ravi V. Bellamkonda

Differential expression of folate receptor has been exploited to target liposomes to tumors. Astrogliomas express low folate receptor levels and are typically surrounded by normal cells expressing little or no folate receptors. While targeting cells with high over-expression of folate receptor (KB and HeLa) has been demonstrated, it is unclear whether targeting tumors expressing low levels of folate receptor is possible. In this study, it was demonstrated that optimizing the number of targeting ligands (folic acid) enables differential liposomal doxorubicin uptake in C6 glioma while sparing healthy cortical cells. By micellization of folate conjugates and their controlled insertion into pre-formed liposomes, tight control over the number of targeting ligands per liposome was demonstrated. Doxorubicin uptake in KB and C6 cells was dependent on the number of targeting ligands, while cortical cells showed increasing non-specific uptake with ligand number. Co-culture of C6 glioma with cortical cells confirmed preferential uptake in C6 glioma relative to cortical cells. A cell kill experiment showed that folate-targeted liposomal doxorubicin is cytotoxic and slows proliferation of KB and C6 cells with minimal effect on cortical cells. Therefore modulation of targeting ligand number enables significant differential uptake of doxorubicin in cells with low levels of folate receptor.


American Journal of Roentgenology | 2006

A liposomal nanoscale contrast agent for preclinical CT in mice

Srinivasan Mukundan; Ketan B. Ghaghada; Cristian T. Badea; Chen-Yu Kao; Laurence W. Hedlund; James M. Provenzale; G. Allan Johnson; Emmanuel Chen; Ravi V. Bellamkonda; Ananth Annapragada

OBJECTIVE The goal of this study was to determine if an iodinated, liposomal contrast agent could be used for high-resolution, micro-CT of low-contrast, small-size vessels in a murine model. MATERIALS AND METHODS A second-generation, liposomal blood pool contrast agent encapsulating a high concentration of iodine (83-105 mg I/mL) was evaluated. A total of five mice weighing between 20 and 28 g were infused with equivalent volume doses (500 microL of contrast agent/25 g of mouse weight) and imaged with our micro-CT system for intervals of up to 240 min postinfusion. The animals were anesthetized, mechanically ventilated, and vital signs monitored allowing for simultaneous cardiac and respiratory gating of image acquisition. RESULTS Initial enhancement of about 900 H in the aorta was obtained, which decreased to a plateau level of approximately 800 H after 2 hr. Excellent contrast discrimination was shown between the myocardium and cardiac blood pool (650-700 H). No significant nephrogram was identified, indicating the absence of renal clearance of the agent. CONCLUSION The liposomal-based iodinated contrast agent shows long residence time in the blood pool, very high attenuation within submillimeter vessels, and no significant renal clearance rendering it an effective contrast agent for murine vascular imaging using a micro-CT scanner.


Academic Radiology | 2003

Long-residence-time nano-scale liposomal iohexol for X-ray-based blood pool imaging.

Chen-Yu Kao; Eric A. Hoffman; Kenneth C. Beck; Ravi V. Bellamkonda; Ananth Annapragada

RATIONALE AND OBJECTIVES Although soluble nonionic iodine compounds with low systemic toxic effects have been developed for use in computed tomography (CT), they have short residence times of a few minutes or mere seconds-insufficient time for blood pool imaging, even with high-speed multi-detector row spiral CT. Moreover, potential renal toxic effects preclude repeated administration of these contrast agents during imaging, as well as their use in patients with compromised renal function. The objective of this study was to develop and evaluate a CT contrast agent for blood pool imaging that remains in the blood for more than 3 hours and that is relatively nontoxic to the kidneys. MATERIALS AND METHODS The authors assessed a liposomal iohexol formulation for its encapsulation efficiency in terms of milligrams of iodine per milliliter of lipid formulation and for its stability in phosphate buffer solution and in human plasma in vitro. Using a rabbit model, they also assessed the formulations in vivo stability, residence time, and enhancement of contrast on images of various organ systems. RESULTS The formulation, which contained 34.8 mg of iodine per milliliter of liposomal iohexol solution, remained stable in blood plasma both in vitro and in vivo, after injection into rabbit vasculature. An intravenous dose of 475 mg of iodine per kilogram of body weight produced contrast enhancement in the rabbit model of approximately 130 HU in the aorta and liver cortex and approximately 100 HU in the kidney cortex. Contrast enhancement was maintained for 3 hours after injection, and minimal clearance of the contrast agent via the kidneys was observed. CONCLUSION The liposomal iohexol formulation tested in this study had a sufficient residence time for blood pool imaging in a rabbit model. Future experiments with long-residence-time iohexol formulations may lead eventually to applications in cardiac imaging and in early tumor detection.


Radiology | 2009

Imaging Nanoprobe for Prediction of Outcome of Nanoparticle Chemotherapy by Using Mammography

Efstathios Karathanasis; Sankararaman Suryanarayanan; Sri R. Balusu; Kathleen M. McNeeley; Ioannis Sechopoulos; Andrew Karellas; Ananth Annapragada; Ravi V. Bellamkonda

PURPOSE To prospectively predict the effectiveness of a clinically used nanochemotherapeutic agent by detecting and measuring the intratumoral uptake of an x-ray contrast agent nanoprobe by using digital mammography. MATERIALS AND METHODS All animal procedures were approved by the institutional animal care and use committee. A long-circulating 100-nm-scale injectable liposomal probe encapsulating 155 mg/mL iodine was developed. Preliminary studies were performed to identify the agent dose that would result in adequate tumor enhancement without enhancement of the normal vasculature in rats. This dose was used to image a rat breast tumor (n = 14) intermittently for 3 days by using a digital mammography system; subsequently, the animals were treated with liposomal doxorubicin. The predictive capability of the probe was characterized by creating good- and bad-prognosis subgroups, on the basis of tumor enhancement found during imaging, and analyzing the tumor growth after treatment of the animals in these two subgroups. RESULTS A dose of 455 mg of iodine per kilogram of body weight was found to produce an undetectable signal from the blood while achieving enough intratumoral accumulation of the probe to produce adequate signal for detection. The good- and bad-prognosis subgroups demonstrated differential tumor growth rates (P < .003). An inverse linear relationship between the contrast enhancement rate constant during imaging and the tumor growth rate constant during treatment was found (slope = -0.576, R(2) = 0.838). CONCLUSION In this animal model, quantitative measurement of vascular permeability enabled prediction of therapeutic responsiveness of tumors to liposomal doxorubicin.


PLOS ONE | 2009

New Dual Mode Gadolinium Nanoparticle Contrast Agent for Magnetic Resonance Imaging

Ketan B. Ghaghada; Murali Ravoori; Divya Sabapathy; James A. Bankson; Vikas Kundra; Ananth Annapragada

Background Liposomal-based gadolinium (Gd) nanoparticles have elicited significant interest for use as blood pool and molecular magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) contrast agents. Previous generations of liposomal MR agents contained gadolinium-chelates either within the interior of liposomes (core-encapsulated gadolinium liposomes) or presented on the surface of liposomes (surface-conjugated gadolinium liposomes). We hypothesized that a liposomal agent that contained both core-encapsulated gadolinium and surface-conjugated gadolinium, defined herein as dual-mode gadolinium (Dual-Gd) liposomes, would result in a significant improvement in nanoparticle-based T1 relaxivity over the previous generations of liposomal agents. In this study, we have developed and tested, both in vitro and in vivo, such a dual-mode liposomal-based gadolinium contrast agent. Methodology/Principal Findings Three types of liposomal agents were fabricated: core-encapsulated, surface-conjugated and dual-mode gadolinium liposomes. In vitro physico-chemical characterizations of the agents were performed to determine particle size and elemental composition. Gadolinium-based and nanoparticle-based T1 relaxivities of various agents were determined in bovine plasma. Subsequently, the agents were tested in vivo for contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance angiography (CE-MRA) studies. Characterization of the agents demonstrated the highest gadolinium atoms per nanoparticle for Dual-Gd liposomes. In vitro, surface-conjugated gadolinium liposomes demonstrated the highest T1 relaxivity on a gadolinium-basis. However, Dual-Gd liposomes demonstrated the highest T1 relaxivity on a nanoparticle-basis. In vivo, Dual-Gd liposomes resulted in the highest signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and contrast-to-noise ratio in CE-MRA studies. Conclusions/Significance The dual-mode gadolinium liposomal contrast agent demonstrated higher particle-based T1 relaxivity, both in vitro and in vivo, compared to either the core-encapsulated or the surface-conjugated liposomal agent. The dual-mode gadolinium liposomes could enable reduced particle dose for use in CE-MRA and increased contrast sensitivity for use in molecular imaging.


Magnetic Resonance in Medicine | 2006

Long-circulating liposomal contrast agents for magnetic resonance imaging

Ananta Laxmi Ayyagari; Xiaodong Zhang; Ketan B. Ghaghada; Ananth Annapragada; Xiaoping Hu; Ravi V. Bellamkonda

Contrast‐enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (CE‐MRI) is a dynamic technique for imaging vasculature. However, the currently used gadolinium (Gd) chelates, such as Gd‐DTPA, restrict the time window for image acquisition due to their rapid elimination from blood and their rapid diffusion into the extravascular space, which prevents their use in steady‐state imaging, particularly for MR angiography (MRA). The goal of this study was to prepare long‐circulating polyethylene glycol‐bearing ((PEG)ylated) liposomes encapsulating Gd chelate, and characterize and demonstrate their utility for MRA. The liposomes were prepared by hydrating a mixture of lipids with gadodiamide (Omniscan®). The liposomes were sized down to around 100 nm by extruder and exhaustively dialysed to remove the unencapsulated gadodiamide. The Gd liposomes exhibited a significant sustained (>4 hr) contrast enhancement of the vasculature with improved spatial details in a rat model with little leakage relative to Gd‐DTPA controls as shown by MRI. We suggest that such long‐circulating liposomal formulations allow for high spatial resolution imaging without the confounding effects of clearance and extravascular diffusion of the agent complicating the data and image analysis. Magn Reson Med, 2006.


Expert Opinion on Drug Delivery | 2007

Antibiological barrier nanovector technology for cancer applications

Jason Sakamoto; Ananth Annapragada; Paolo Decuzzi; Mauro Ferrari

The advent of sophisticated drug delivery strategies for cancer applications has inundated the scientific and clinical community with new tactics and approaches such as molecular targeting, nanotechnology-based methods and personalised therapies. Unfortunately, the clinical impact has been moderate at best, falling significantly short from revolutionising existing chemotherapeutic methodologies. To this day, a cancer patient has a higher probability of receiving traditional systemically administered drugs than a more sophisticated targeted or nanotechnology-based therapeutic. This is not a reflection upon the novelty or quality of the technologies, but an indication of opportunity for a new approach that offers the realisation of the full potential of these scientific advances. This approach acknowledges the significance of the numerous biological barriers presented in the human body and their sequential nature. It is then recommended that computational mathematical tools are used to predict which nanovectors, surface modifications, therapeutic agents and penetration enhancers to use for a multi-stage drug delivery strategy. An approach where several stages of micro-/nano-vectors are nested within each other and delivered to overcome specific biological barriers to ultimately release a concentrated dose of a therapeutic payload at the intended lesion site. This novel, multi-stage strategy enables efficient localised delivery of chemotoxic drugs that may lead to significant improvements in therapy efficacy, reduced systemic toxicity and decreased total amount of injected drugs.


PLOS ONE | 2009

Tumor Vascular Permeability to a Nanoprobe Correlates to Tumor-Specific Expression Levels of Angiogenic Markers

Efstathios Karathanasis; Leslie Chan; Lohitash Karumbaiah; Kathleen M. McNeeley; Carl J. D'Orsi; Ananth Annapragada; Ioannis Sechopoulos; Ravi V. Bellamkonda

Background Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) receptor-2 is the major mediator of the mitogenic, angiogenic, and vascular hyperpermeability effects of VEGF on breast tumors. Overexpression of VEGF and VEGF receptor-2 is associated with the degree of pathomorphosis of the tumor tissue and unfavorable prognosis. In this study, we demonstrate that non-invasive quantification of the degree of tumor vascular permeability to a nanoprobe correlates with the VEGF and its receptor levels and tumor growth. Methodology/Principal Findings We designed an imaging nanoprobe and a methodology to detect the intratumoral deposition of a 100 nm-scale nanoprobe using mammography allowing measurement of the tumor vascular permeability in a rat MAT B III breast tumor model. The tumor vascular permeability varied widely among the animals. Notably, the VEGF and VEGF receptor-2 gene expression of the tumors as measured by qRT-PCR displayed a strong correlation to the imaging-based measurements of vascular permeability to the 100 nm-scale nanoprobe. This is in good agreement with the fact that tumors with high angiogenic activity are expected to have more permeable blood vessels resulting in high intratumoral deposition of a nanoscale agent. In addition, we show that higher intratumoral deposition of the nanoprobe as imaged with mammography correlated to a faster tumor growth rate. This data suggest that vascular permeability scales to the tumor growth and that tumor vascular permeability can be a measure of underlying VEGF and VEGF receptor-2 expression in individual tumors. Conclusions/Significance This is the first demonstration, to our knowledge, that quantitative imaging of tumor vascular permeability to a nanoprobe represents a form of a surrogate, functional biomarker of underlying molecular markers of angiogenesis.


Biomaterials | 2008

Multifunctional nanocarriers for mammographic quantification of tumor dosing and prognosis of breast cancer therapy

Efstathios Karathanasis; Leslie Chan; Sri R. Balusu; Carl J. D'Orsi; Ananth Annapragada; Ioannis Sechopoulos; Ravi V. Bellamkonda

Nanoscale therapeutic interventions are increasingly important elements in the portfolio of cancer therapeutics. The efficacy of nanotherapeutics is dictated, in part, by the access they have to tumors via the leaky tumor vasculature. Yet, the extent of tumor vessel leakiness in individual tumors varies widely resulting in a correspondingly wide tumor dosing and resulting range of responses to therapy. Here we report the design of a multifunctional nanocarrier that simultaneously encapsulates a chemotherapeutic and a contrast agent which enables a personalized nanotherapeutic approach for breast cancer therapy by permitting tracking of the nanocarrier distribution by mammography, a widely used imaging modality. Following systemic administration in a rat breast tumor model, imaging demonstrated a wide range of intratumoral deposition of the nanocarriers, indicating variable tumor vessel leakiness. Notably, specific tumors that exhibited high uptake of the nanocarrier as visualized by imaging were precisely the animals that responded best to the treatment as quantified by low tumor growth and prolonged survival.


Pediatric Radiology | 2014

Application of 3-D printing (rapid prototyping) for creating physical models of pediatric orthopedic disorders

Zbigniew Starosolski; J. Herman Kan; Scott D. Rosenfeld; Rajesh Krishnamurthy; Ananth Annapragada

Three-dimensional printing called rapid prototyping, a technology that is used to create physical models based on a 3-D computer representation, is now commercially available and can be created from CT or MRI datasets. This technical innovation paper reviews the specific requirements and steps necessary to apply biomedical 3-D printing of pediatric musculoskeletal disorders. We discuss its role for the radiologist, orthopedist and patient.

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Ketan B. Ghaghada

Boston Children's Hospital

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Ravi V. Bellamkonda

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Efstathios Karathanasis

Case Western Reserve University

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Rohan Bhavane

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

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Eric A. Tanifum

Boston Children's Hospital

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Eric A. Hoffman

University of Central Florida

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Ketankumar Ghaghada

University of Texas at Austin

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