David D. Dickey
University of Iowa
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Publication
Featured researches published by David D. Dickey.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009
Katherine J. D. A. Excoffon; James T. Koerber; David D. Dickey; Matthew J. Murtha; Shaf Keshavjee; Brian K. Kaspar; Joseph Zabner; David V. Schaffer
Respiratory viruses evolve to maintain infectivity levels that permit spread yet prevent host and virus extinction, resulting in surprisingly low infection rates. Respiratory viruses harnessed as gene therapy vectors have illustrated this limitation. We used directed evolution in an organotypic human airway model to generate a highly infectious adeno-associated virus. This virus mediated gene transfer more than 100-fold better than parental strains and corrected the cystic fibrosis epithelial Cl− transport defect. Thus, under appropriate selective pressures, viruses can evolve to be more infectious than observed in nature, a finding that holds significant implications for designing vectors for gene therapy and for understanding emerging pathogens.
Science Translational Medicine | 2013
Philip N. Sanders; Olha M. Koval; Omar A. Jaffer; Anand M. Prasad; Thomas R. Businga; Jason A. Scott; Patrick J. Hayden; Elizabeth D. Luczak; David D. Dickey; Chantal Allamargot; Alicia K. Olivier; David K. Meyerholz; Alfred J. Robison; Danny G. Winder; Timothy S. Blackwell; Ryszard Dworski; David Sammut; Brett A. Wagner; Garry R. Buettner; Robert M. Pope; Francis J. Miller; Megan E. Dibbern; Hans Michael Haitchi; Peter J. Mohler; Peter H. Howarth; Joseph Zabner; Joel N. Kline; Isabella M. Grumbach; Mark E. Anderson
Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase (CaMKII) transduces oxidative stress into asthma-related diseases. A Breath of Fresh Air for Asthma Patients Reactive oxygen species (ROS) have a bad reputation, and rightly so. They’ve been implicated in contributing to a wide swath of diseases, including coronary heart disease, cancer, and asthma. Indeed, asthma is an increasing public health burden—affecting 8.5% of the population in the United States alone. Now Sanders et al. find that oxidative activation of the Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase (ox-CaMKII) may respond to ROS in lung epithelium and contribute to asthma pathogenesis. The authors observed that asthma patients have enhanced activation of ox-CaMKII in bronchial epithelium, which increases in response to inhaled antigen. Then they looked in two different mouse models of allergic asthma to examine the mechanistic connection. They found that blocking CaMKII either genetically or with a small-molecule inhibitor could alleviate ROS-mediated asthma progression. These data suggest that blocking CaMKII could be a new therapeutic strategy for asthma patients. Increased reactive oxygen species (ROS) contribute to asthma, but little is known about the molecular mechanisms connecting increased ROS with characteristic features of asthma. We show that enhanced oxidative activation of the Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase (ox-CaMKII) in bronchial epithelium positively correlates with asthma severity and that epithelial ox-CaMKII increases in response to inhaled allergens in patients. We used mouse models of allergic airway disease induced by ovalbumin (OVA) or Aspergillus fumigatus (Asp) and found that bronchial epithelial ox-CaMKII was required to increase a ROS- and picrotoxin-sensitive Cl− current (ICl) and MUC5AC expression, upstream events in asthma progression. Allergen challenge increased epithelial ROS by activating NADPH oxidases. Mice lacking functional NADPH oxidases due to knockout of p47 and mice with epithelial-targeted transgenic expression of a CaMKII inhibitory peptide or wild-type mice treated with inhaled KN-93, an experimental small-molecule CaMKII antagonist, were protected against increases in ICl, MUC5AC expression, and airway hyperreactivity to inhaled methacholine. Our findings support the view that CaMKII is a ROS-responsive, pluripotent proasthmatic signal and provide proof-of-concept evidence that CaMKII is a therapeutic target in asthma.
Methods | 2016
David D. Dickey; Paloma H. Giangrande
A critical challenge for treating cancer is the early identification of those patients who are at greatest risk of developing metastatic disease. The number of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) in cancer patients has recently been shown to be a valuable (and non-invasively accessible) diagnostic indicator of the state of metastatic disease. CTCs are rare cancer cells found in the blood circulation of cancer patients believed to provide a means of diagnosing the likelihood for metastatic spread and assessing response to therapy in advanced, as well as early stage disease settings. Numerous technical efforts have been made to reliably detect and quantify CTCs, but the development of a universal assay has proven quite difficult. Notable challenges for developing a broadly useful CTC-based diagnostic assay are the development of easy-to-operate methods that (1) are sufficiently sensitive to reliably detect the small number of CTCs that are present in the circulation and (2) can capture the molecular heterogeneity of tumor cells. In this review, we describe recent progress towards the application of synthetic oligonucleotide aptamers as promising, novel, robust tools for the isolation and detection of CTCs. Advantages and challenges of the aptamer approach are also discussed.
JCI insight | 2016
Benjamin Steines; David D. Dickey; Jamie Bergen; Katherine J. D. A. Excoffon; John R. Weinstein; Xiaopeng Li; Ziying Yan; Mahmoud H. Abou Alaiwa; Viral Shah; Drake C. Bouzek; Linda S. Powers; Nicholas D. Gansemer; Lynda S. Ostedgaard; John F. Engelhardt; David A. Stoltz; Michael J. Welsh; Patrick L. Sinn; David V. Schaffer; Joseph Zabner
The physiological components that contribute to cystic fibrosis (CF) lung disease are steadily being elucidated. Gene therapy could potentially correct these defects. CFTR-null pigs provide a relevant model to test gene therapy vectors. Using an in vivo selection strategy that amplifies successful capsids by replicating their genomes with helper adenovirus coinfection, we selected an adeno-associated virus (AAV) with tropism for pig airway epithelia. The evolved capsid, termed AAV2H22, is based on AAV2 with 5 point mutations that result in a 240-fold increased infection efficiency. In contrast to AAV2, AAV2H22 binds specifically to pig airway epithelia and is less reliant on heparan sulfate for transduction. We administer AAV2H22-CFTR expressing the CF transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) cDNA to the airways of CF pigs. The transduced airways expressed CFTR on ciliated and nonciliated cells, induced anion transport, and improved the airway surface liquid pH and bacterial killing. Most gene therapy studies to date focus solely on Cl- transport as the primary metric of phenotypic correction. Here, we describe a gene therapy experiment where we not only correct defective anion transport, but also restore bacterial killing in CFTR-null pig airways.
Methods | 2016
Xiaojun Xu; David D. Dickey; Shi-Jie Chen; Paloma H. Giangrande
RNA aptamers represent an emerging class of biologics that can be easily adapted for personalized and precision medicine. Several therapeutic aptamers with desirable binding and functional properties have been developed and evaluated in preclinical studies over the past 25years. However, for the majority of these aptamers, their clinical potential has yet to be realized. A significant hurdle to the clinical adoption of this novel class of biologicals is the limited information on their secondary and tertiary structure. Knowledge of the RNAs structure would greatly facilitate and expedite the post-selection optimization steps required for translation, including truncation (to reduce costs of manufacturing), chemical modification (to enhance stability and improve safety) and chemical conjugation (to improve drug properties for combinatorial therapy). Here we describe a structural computational modeling methodology that when coupled to a standard functional assay, can be used to determine key sequence and structural motifs of an RNA aptamer. We applied this methodology to enable the truncation of an aptamer to prostate specific membrane antigen (PSMA) with great potential for targeted therapy that had failed previous truncation attempts. This methodology can be easily applied to optimize other aptamers with therapeutic potential.
Molecular Therapy | 2016
William H. Thiel; Carla Esposito; David D. Dickey; Justin P. Dassie; Matthew E. Long; Joshua Adam; Jennifer Streeter; Brandon M. Schickling; Maysam Takapoo; Katie S. Flenker; Julia Klesney-Tait; Vittorio de Franciscis; Francis J. Miller; Paloma H. Giangrande
Inhibition of vascular smooth muscle cell (VSMC) proliferation by drug eluting stents has markedly reduced intimal hyperplasia and subsequent in-stent restenosis. However, the effects of antiproliferative drugs on endothelial cells (EC) contribute to delayed re-endothelialization and late stent thrombosis. Cell-targeted therapies to inhibit VSMC remodeling while maintaining EC health are necessary to allow vascular healing while preventing restenosis. We describe an RNA aptamer (Apt 14) that functions as a smart drug by preferentially targeting VSMCs as compared to ECs and other myocytes. Furthermore, Apt 14 inhibits phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/protein kinase-B (PI3K/Akt) and VSMC migration in response to multiple agonists by a mechanism that involves inhibition of platelet-derived growth factor receptor (PDGFR)-β phosphorylation. In a murine model of carotid injury, treatment of vessels with Apt 14 reduces neointimal formation to levels similar to those observed with paclitaxel. Importantly, we confirm that Apt 14 cross-reacts with rodent and human VSMCs, exhibits a half-life of ~300 hours in human serum, and does not elicit immune activation of human peripheral blood mononuclear cells. We describe a VSMC-targeted RNA aptamer that blocks cell migration and inhibits intimal formation. These findings provide the foundation for the translation of cell-targeted RNA therapeutics to vascular disease.Inhibition of vascular smooth muscle cell (VSMC) proliferation by drug eluting stents has markedly reduced intimal hyperplasia and subsequent in-stent restenosis. However, the effects of antiproliferative drugs on endothelial cells (EC) contribute to delayed re-endothelialization and late stent thrombosis. Cell-targeted therapies to inhibit VSMC remodeling while maintaining EC health are necessary to allow vascular healing while preventing restenosis. We describe an RNA aptamer (Apt 14) that functions as a smart drug by preferentially targeting VSMCs as compared to ECs and other myocytes. Furthermore, Apt 14 inhibits phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/protein kinase-B (PI3K/Akt) and VSMC migration in response to multiple agonists by a mechanism that involves inhibition of platelet-derived growth factor receptor (PDGFR)-β phosphorylation. In a murine model of carotid injury, treatment of vessels with Apt 14 reduces neointimal formation to levels similar to those observed with paclitaxel. Importantly, we confirm that Apt 14 cross-reacts with rodent and human VSMCs, exhibits a half-life of ~300 hours in human serum, and does not elicit immune activation of human peripheral blood mononuclear cells. We describe a VSMC-targeted RNA aptamer that blocks cell migration and inhibits intimal formation. These findings provide the foundation for the translation of cell-targeted RNA therapeutics to vascular disease.
Methods of Molecular Biology | 2016
David D. Dickey; Gregory S. Thomas; Justin P. Dassie; Paloma H. Giangrande
RNA aptamers are single-stranded RNA oligos that represent a powerful emerging technology with potential for treating numerous diseases. More recently, cell-targeted RNA aptamers have been developed for delivering RNA interference (RNAi) modulators (siRNAs and miRNAs) to specific diseased cells (e.g., cancer cells or HIV infected cells) in vitro and in vivo. However, despite initial promising reports, the broad application of this aptamer delivery technology awaits the development of methods that can verify and confirm delivery of aptamers to the cytoplasm of target cells where the RNAi machinery resides. We recently developed a functional assay (RIP assay) to confirm cellular uptake and subsequent cytoplasmic release of an RNA aptamer which binds to a cell surface receptor expressed on prostate cancer cells (PSMA). To assess cytoplasmic delivery, the aptamer was chemically conjugated to saporin, a ribosome inactivating protein toxin that is toxic to cells only when delivered to the cytoplasm (where it inhibits the ribosome) by a cell-targeting ligand (e.g., aptamer). Here, we describe the chemistry used to conjugate the aptamer to saporin and discuss a gel-based method to verify conjugation efficiency. We also detail an in vitro functional assay to confirm that the aptamer retains function following conjugation to saporin and describe a cellular assay to measure aptamer-mediated saporin-induced cytotoxicity.
Journal of Gene Medicine | 2012
David D. Dickey; Katherine J. D. A. Excoffon; Krista R. Young; Kalpaj R. Parekh; Joseph Zabner
In airway epithelia, the kinetics of recombinant adeno‐associated virus (AAV) transgene expression is slow. This has negative practical implications for research, as well as for translation into therapy. The DNA minor groove‐binding agent Hoechst‐33342 has been shown to enhance AAV transgene expression. In the present study, we investigated the mechanism of Hoechst‐related augmentation of AAV‐mediated transgene expression.
Molecular therapy. Nucleic acids | 2017
Sven Kruspe; David D. Dickey; Kevin T. Urak; Giselle N. Blanco; Matthew Miller; Karen C. Clark; Elliot Burghardt; Wade R. Gutierrez; Sneha Phadke; Sukriti Kamboj; Timothy Ginader; Brian J. Smith; Sarah K. Grimm; James Schappet; Howard Ozer; Alexandra Thomas; James O McNamara; Carlos Hou Fai Chan; Paloma H. Giangrande
A challenge for circulating tumor cell (CTC)-based diagnostics is the development of simple and inexpensive methods that reliably detect the diverse cells that make up CTCs. CTC-derived nucleases are one category of proteins that could be exploited to meet this challenge. Advantages of nucleases as CTC biomarkers include: (1) their elevated expression in many cancer cells, including cells implicated in metastasis that have undergone epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition; and (2) their enzymatic activity, which can be exploited for signal amplification in detection methods. Here, we describe a diagnostic assay based on quenched fluorescent nucleic acid probes that detect breast cancer CTCs via their nuclease activity. This assay exhibited robust performance in distinguishing breast cancer patients from healthy controls, and it is rapid, inexpensive, and easy to implement in most clinical labs. Given its broad applicability, this technology has the potential to have a substantive impact on the diagnosis and treatment of many cancers.
Journal of Gene Medicine | 2012
David D. Dickey; Katherine Jda Excoffon; Krista R. Young; Kalpaj R. Parekh; Joseph Zabner
In airway epithelia, the kinetics of recombinant adeno‐associated virus (AAV) transgene expression is slow. This has negative practical implications for research, as well as for translation into therapy. The DNA minor groove‐binding agent Hoechst‐33342 has been shown to enhance AAV transgene expression. In the present study, we investigated the mechanism of Hoechst‐related augmentation of AAV‐mediated transgene expression.