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Dive into the research topics where Chandra S. Mayanil is active.

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Featured researches published by Chandra S. Mayanil.


Nanomedicine: Nanotechnology, Biology and Medicine | 2014

Convection-enhanced delivery of nanodiamond drug delivery platforms for intracranial tumor treatment

Guifa Xi; Erik Robinson; Barbara Mania-Farnell; Elio F. Vanin; Kyu Won Shim; Tsurubuchi Takao; Elise Victoria Allender; Chandra S. Mayanil; Marcelo B. Soares; Dean Ho; Tadanori Tomita

UNLABELLED This study examined a novel drug delivery system for treatment of malignant brain gliomas: DOX complexed with nanodiamonds (ND-Dox), and administered via convection-enhanced delivery (CED). Drug retention and toxicity were examined in glioma cell lines, and distribution, retention and toxicity were examined in normal rat parenchyma. Efficacy was assessed in a bioluminescence rodent tumor model. NDs markedly enhanced DOX uptake and retention in glioma cells. ND-Dox delivered via CED extended DOX retention and localized DOX toxicity in normal rodent parenchyma, and was significantly more efficient at killing tumor cells than uncomplexed DOX. Outcomes from this work suggest that CED of ND-Dox is a promising approach for brain tumor treatment. FROM THE CLINICAL EDITOR In this paper, nanodiamonds were utilized to enhance delivery of DOX in a preclinical glioma model using a convection-enhanced delivery method, demonstrating remarkably enhanced efficacy.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Folic Acid Remodels Chromatin on Hes1 and Neurog2 Promoters during Caudal Neural Tube Development

Shunsuke Ichi; Fabricio F. Costa; Jared M. Bischof; Hiromichi Nakazaki; Yueh Wei Shen; Vanda Boshnjaku; Saurabh Sharma; Barbara Mania-Farnell; David G. McLone; Tadanori Tomita; Marcelo B. Soares; Chandra S. Mayanil

The mechanism(s) behind folate rescue of neural tube closure are not well understood. In this study we show that maternal intake of folate prior to conception reverses the proliferation potential of neural crest stem cells in homozygous Splotch embryos (Sp−/−) via epigenetic mechanisms. It is also shown that the pattern of differentiation seen in these cells is similar to wild-type (WT). Cells from open caudal neural tubes of Sp−/− embryos exhibit increased H3K27 methylation and decreased expression of KDM6B possibly due to up-regulation of KDM6B targeting micro-RNAs such as miR-138, miR-148a, miR-185, and miR-339-5p. In our model, folate reversed these epigenetic marks in folate-rescued Sp−/− embryos. Using tissue from caudal neural tubes of murine embryos we also examined H3K27me2 and KDM6B association with Hes1 and Neurog2 promoters at embryonic day E10.5, the proliferative stage, and E12.5, when neural differentiation begins. In Sp−/− embryos compared with WT, levels of H3K27me2 associated with the Hes1 promoter were increased at E10.5, and levels associated with the Neurog2 promoter were increased at E12.5. KDM6B association with Hes1 and Neurog2 promoters was inversely related to H3K27me2 levels. These epigenetic changes were reversed in folate-rescued Sp−/− embryos. Thus, one of the mechanisms by which folate may rescue the Sp−/− phenotype is by increasing the expression of KDM6B, which in turn decreases H3K27 methylation marks on Hes1 and Neurog2 promoters thereby affecting gene transcription.


Developmental Biology | 2008

Key basic helix–loop–helix transcription factor genes Hes1 and Ngn2 are regulated by Pax3 during mouse embryonic development

Hiromichi Nakazaki; Anvesh C. Reddy; Barbara Mania-Farnell; Yueh Wei Shen; Shunsuke Ichi; Christopher McCabe; David George; David G. McLone; Tadanori Tomita; Chandra S. Mayanil

Pax3 is expressed early during embryonic development in spatially restricted domains including limb muscle, neural crest, and neural tube. Pax3 functions at the nodal point in melanocyte stem cell differentiation, cardiogenesis and neurogenesis. Additionally Pax3 has been implicated in migration and differentiation of precursor cell populations. Currently there are questions about how Pax3 regulates these diverse functions. In this study we found that in the absence of functional Pax3, as in Splotch embryos, the neural crest cells undergo premature neurogenesis, as evidenced by increased Brn3a positive staining in neural tube explants, in comparison with wild-type. Premature neurogenesis in the absence of functional Pax3 may be due to a change in the regulation of basic helix-loop-helix transcription factors implicated in proliferation and differentiation. Using promoter-luciferase activity measurements in transient co-transfection experiments and electro-mobility shift assays, we show that Pax3 regulates Hairy and enhancer of split homolog-1 (Hes1) and Neurogenin2 (Ngn2) by directly binding to their promoters. Chromatin immunoprecipitation assays confirmed that Pax3 bound to cis-regulatory elements within Hes1 and Ngn2 promoters. These observations suggest that Pax3 regulates Hes1 and Ngn2 and imply that it may couple migration with neural stem cell maintenance and neurogenesis.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000

Overexpression of murine Pax3 increases NCAM polysialylation in a human medulloblastoma cell line.

Chandra S. Mayanil; David George; Barbara Mania-Farnell; Christopher L. Bremer; David G. McLone; Eric G. Bremer

Polysialic acid (PSA) is a developmentally regulated carbohydrate found primarily on neural cell adhesion molecules (NCAM) in embryonic tissues. The majority of NCAM in adult tissues lacks this unique carbohydrate, but polysialylated NCAM (PSA-NCAM) is present in adult brain regions where neural regeneration persists and in some pediatric brain tumors such as medulloblastoma, which show greater propensity for leptomeningeal spread. Pax3, a developmentally regulated paired homeodomain transcription factor, is thought to be involved in the regulation of neural cell adhesion molecules. Overexpression of murine Pax3 into a human medulloblastoma cell line (DAOY) resulted in an increase in NCAM polysialylation and a 2–4-fold increase in α2,8-polysialyltransferase type II mRNA levels. No difference was observed in α2,8-polysialyltransferase type IV message. The addition of PSA to NCAM changed the adhesive behavior of these Pax3 transfectants. Transfectants expressing high PSA-NCAM show much less NCAM-dependent aggregation than those with less PSA-NCAM. In addition, Pax3 transfectants having high PSA-NCAM show heterophilic adhesion involving polysialic acid to heparan sulfate proteoglycan and agrin. These observations suggest that a developmentally regulated transcription factor, Pax3, could affect NCAM polysialylation and subsequently cell-cell and cell-substratum interaction.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 1982

Changes in monoamine oxidase activity in rat brain during alloxan diabetes.

Chandra S. Mayanil; S. M. I. Kazmi; Najma Zaheer Baquer

Abstract: The effect of alloxan diabetes on the activity of monoamine oxidase was studied in three regions of the rat brain at various time intervals after the onset of diabetes. It was observed that monoamine oxidase activity was decreased at early time intervals after diabetes, followed by a recovery in all three regions of the brain. A reversal of the effect was observed with insulin administration to the diabetic rats.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 1982

Na+,K+‐ATPase and Mg2+‐ATPase Activities in Different Regions of Rat Brain During Alloxan Diabetes

Chandra S. Mayanil; S. M. I. Kazmi; Najma Zaheer Baquer

Abstract: The effect of alloxan diabetes on the activities of Na+,K+‐ATPase and Mg2+‐ATPase was studied in three regions of rat brain at various time intervals after the onset of diabetes. It was observed that Na2+,K2+‐ATPase activity increased at early time intervals after diabetes, followed by a recovery to near control levels in all three regions of the brain. There was an overall increase in Mg2+‐ATPase activity in all the regions. A reversal of the effect was observed with insulin administration to the diabetic rats


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2011

Role of Pax3 acetylation in the regulation of Hes1 and Neurog2

Shunsuke Ichi; Vanda Boshnjaku; Yueh Wei Shen; Barbara Mania-Farnell; Sara C. Ahlgren; Sidanth Sapru; Nikhita Mansukhani; David G. McLone; Tadanori Tomita; Chandra S. Mayanil

Here we address how Pax3 regulates stem cell maintenance and neurogenesis during caudal neural tube development. Pax3 acetylation at lysine residues K437 and K475 results in down-regulation of Hes1 and up-regulation of Neurog2 expression.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Regulation of murine TGFβ2 by Pax3 during early embryonic development

Chandra S. Mayanil; Angela Pool; Hiromichi Nakazaki; Anvesh C. Reddy; Barbara Mania-Farnell; Beth Yun; David George; David G. McLone; Eric G. Bremer

Previously our laboratory identified TGFβ2 as a potential downstream target of Pax3 by utilizing microarray analysis and promoter data base mining (Mayanil, C. S. K., George, D., Freilich, L., Miljan, E. J., Mania-Farnell, B. J., McLone, D. G., and Bremer, E. G. (2001) J. Biol. Chem. 276, 49299-49309). Here we report that Pax3 directly regulates TGFβ2 transcription by binding to cis-regulatory elements within its promoter. Chromatin immunoprecipitation revealed that Pax3 bound to the cis-regulatory elements on the TGFβ2 promoter (GenBank™ accession number AF118263). Both TGFβ2 promoter-luciferase activity measurements in transient cotransfection experiments and electromobility shift assays supported the idea that Pax3 regulates TGFβ2 by directly binding to its cis-regulatory regions. Additionally, by using a combination of co-immunoprecipitation and chromatin immunoprecipitation, we show that the TGFβ2 cis-regulatory elements between bp 741-940 and bp 1012-1212 bind acetylated Pax3 and are associated with p300/CBP and histone deacetylases. The cis-regulatory elements between bp 741 and 940 in addition to associating with acetylated Pax3 and HDAC1 also associated with SIRT1. Whole mount in situ hybridization and quantitative real time reverse transcription-PCR showed diminished levels of TGFβ2 transcripts in Pax3-/- mouse embryos (whose phenotype is characterized by neural tube defects) as compared with Pax3+/+ littermates (embryonic day 10.0; 30 somite stage), suggesting that Pax3 regulation of TGFβ2 may play a pivotal role during early embryonic development.


Oncogene | 2016

CD133 and DNA-PK regulate MDR1 via the PI3K- or Akt-NF-κB pathway in multidrug-resistant glioblastoma cells in vitro

Guifa Xi; Erin Hayes; R Lewis; Shunsuke Ichi; Barbara Mania-Farnell; Kyu Won Shim; Tsurubuchi Takao; Elise Victoria Allender; Chandra S. Mayanil; Tadanori Tomita

Chemotherapy is an adjuvant treatment for glioblastomas, however, chemotherapy remains palliative because of the development of multidrug resistance (MDR). Following prolonged chemotherapy, MDR protein 1 (MDR1) and CD133 increase in recurrent glioblastomas. CD133 positive (CD133+) glioma cancer stem-like cells (GCSCs) markedly promote drug resistance and exhibit increased DNA damage repair capability; thus they have a key role in determining tumor chemosensitivity. Although CD133, DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PK), and MDR1 are elevated in CD133+ GCSCs, the relationship among these molecules has not been elucidated. In this study, MDR glioblastoma cell lines were created in response to prolonged doxorubicin chemotherapy. CD133, DNA-PK and MDR1 were markedly elevated in these cells. CD133 and DNA-PK may increase MDR1 via the phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase (PI3K)-Akt signal pathway. PI3K downstream targets Akt and nuclear factor (NF)-κB, which interacts with the MDR1 promoter, were also elevated in these cells. Downregulation of CD133 and DNA-PK by small interfering RNA, or inhibition of PI3K or Akt, decreased Akt, NF-κB and MDR1 expression. The results indicate that CD133 and DNA-PK regulate MDR1 through the PI3K- or Akt-NF-κB signal pathway. Consequently, a novel chemotherapeutic regimen targeting CD133 and DNA-PK in combination with traditional protocols may increase chemotherapeutic efficacy and improve prognosis for individuals who present with glioblastoma.


Stem Cells and Development | 2012

Fetal Neural Tube Stem Cells from Pax3 Mutant Mice Proliferate, Differentiate, and Form Synaptic Connections When Stimulated with Folic Acid

Shunsuke Ichi; Hiromichi Nakazaki; Vanda Boshnjaku; Ravneet Monny Singh; Barbara Mania-Farnell; Guifa Xi; David G. McLone; Tadanori Tomita; Chandra S. Mayanil

Although maternal intake of folic acid (FA) prevents neural tube defects in 70% of the population, the exact mechanism of prevention has not been elucidated. We hypothesized that FA affects neural stem cell (NSC) proliferation and differentiation. This hypothesis was examined in a folate-responsive spina bifida mouse model, Splotch (Sp(-/-)), which has a homozygous loss-of-function mutation in the Pax3 gene. Neurospheres were generated with NSCs from the lower lumbar neural tube of E10.5 wild-type (WT) and Sp(-/-) embryos, in the presence and absence of FA. In the absence of FA, the number of neurospheres generated from Sp(-/-) embryos compared with WT was minimal (P<0.05). Addition of FA to Sp(-/-) cultures increased the expression of a Pax3 downstream target, fgfr4, and rescued NSC proliferative potential, as demonstrated by a significant increase in neurosphere formation (P<0.01). To ascertain if FA affected cell differentiation, FA-stimulated Sp(-/-) neurospheres were allowed to differentiate in the continued presence or absence of FA. Neurospheres from both conditions expressed multi-potent stem cell characteristics and the same differentiation potential as WT. Further, multiple neurospheres from both WT and FA-stimulated Sp(-/-) cell cultures formed extensive synaptic connections. On the whole, FA-mediated rescue of neural tube defects in Sp(-/-) embryos promotes NSC proliferation at an early embryonic stage. FA-stimulated Sp(-/-) neurospheres differentiate and form synaptic connections, comparable to WT.

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David G. McLone

Children's Memorial Hospital

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Guifa Xi

Children's Memorial Hospital

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Paul A. Knepper

University of Illinois at Chicago

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