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Dive into the research topics where Hirak K. Patra is active.

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Featured researches published by Hirak K. Patra.


Carcinogenesis | 2014

Cell adhesion molecules and their relation to (cancer) cell stemness

Ensieh Farahani; Hirak K. Patra; Jaganmohan Reddy Jangamreddy; Iran Rashedi; Martha Kawalec; Rama Krishna Rao Pariti; Petros Batakis; Emilia Wiechec

Despite decades of search for anticancer drugs targeting solid tumors, this group of diseases remains largely incurable, especially if in advanced, metastatic stage. In this review, we draw comparison between reprogramming and carcinogenesis, as well as between stem cells (SCs) and cancer stem cells (CSCs), focusing on changing garniture of adhesion molecules. Furthermore, we elaborate on the role of adhesion molecules in the regulation of (cancer) SCs division (symmetric or asymmetric), and in evolving interactions between CSCs and extracellular matrix. Among other aspects, we analyze the role and changes of expression of key adhesion molecules as cancer progresses and metastases develop. Here, the role of cadherins, integrins, as well as selected transcription factors like Twist and Snail is highlighted, not only in the regulation of epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition but also in the avoidance of anoikis. Finally, we briefly discuss recent developments and new strategies targeting CSCs, which focus on adhesion molecules or targeting tumor vasculature.


European Journal of Phycology | 2012

Screening of different algae for green synthesis of gold nanoparticles

Hirak K. Patra; Anjan Kr. Dasgupta; Ruma Pal

The cyanobacteria Phormidium valderianum, P. tenue and Microcoleus chthonoplastes and the green algae Rhizoclonium fontinale, Ulva intestinalis, Chara zeylanica and Pithophora oedogoniana were exposed to hydrogen tetrachloroaurate solution and were screened for their suitability for producing nano‐gold. All three cyanobacteria genera and two of the green algae (Rhizoclonium fontinale and Ulva intestinalis) produced gold nanoparticles intracellularly, confirmed by purple colouration of the thallus within 72 h of treatment at 20°C. Extracted nanoparticle solutions were examined by UV‐vis spectroscopy, transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and X‐ray diffractometry (XRD). XRD confirmed the reduction of Au (III) to Au (0). UV‐vis spectroscopy and TEM studies indicated the production of nanoparticles having different shapes and sizes. Phormidium valderianum synthesized mostly spherical nanoparticles, along with hexagonal and triangular nanoparticles, at basic and neutral pHs (pH 9 and pH 7, respectively). Medicinally important gold nanorods were synthesized (together with gold nanospheres) only by P. valderianum at acidic pH (pH 5); this was initially determined by two surface plasmon bands in UV‐vis spectroscopy and later confirmed by TEM. Spherical to somewhat irregular particles were produced by P. tenue and Ulva intestinalis (TEM studies). The UV‐vis spectroscopy of the supernatant of other algal extracts indicated the formation of mostly spherical particles. Production of gold nanoparticles by algae is more ecofriendly than purely chemical synthesis. However, the choice of algae is important: Chara zeylanica and Pithophora oedogoniana were found to be unable to produce nanoparticles.


Nanomedicine: Nanotechnology, Biology and Medicine | 2011

Multistability in platelets and their response to gold nanoparticles

Suryyani Deb; Hirak K. Patra; Prabir Lahiri; Anjan Kr. Dasgupta; Kuntal Chakrabarti; Utpal Chaudhuri

UNLABELLED The nanoparticle (NP) response of platelets is shown to be critically dependent on extent of preactivation of platelets by an agonist like ADP. A transition from de-aggregatory to aggregatory state is triggered in the presence of gold NPs (AuNP) only in such critical conditions. Adhered and suspended platelets respond differentially to NPs. Preactivation in the adhered state induced by shear force explains such observation. The NP effect is associated with enhanced release reaction, tyrosine phosphorylation and CD62P expression level. Unlike cancer cells, whose response is maximal when NP size is optimal (within the range 50 - 70 nm), the platelet response monotonically increases with reduction of the AuNP size. The uptake study, using quenching of quinacrine hydrochloride fluorescence by AuNP, indicates that accumulation 18 nm AuNP is several-fold higher than the 68 nm AuNP. It is further shown that AuNP response can provide a simple measure for thrombotic risk associated with nano-drugs. FROM THE CLINICAL EDITOR Platelet aggregation can be triggered in the presence of gold nanoparticles (AuNP). Platelet response monotonically increases with reduction of the AuNP size. AuNP response can provide a simple measure for thrombotic risk associated with nano-drugs.


Advanced Healthcare Materials | 2014

MRI-Visual Order–Disorder Micellar Nanostructures for Smart Cancer Theranostics

Hirak K. Patra; Nisar Ul Khaliq; Thobias Romu; Emilia Wiechec; Magnus Borga; Anthony Turner; Ashutosh Tiwari

The development of MRI-visual order-disorder structures for cancer nanomedicine explores a pH-triggered mechanism for theragnosis of tumor hallmark functions. Superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (SPIONs) stabilized with amphiphilic poly(styrene)-b-poly(acrylic acid)-doxorubicin with folic acid (FA) surfacing are employed as a multi-functional approach to specifically target, diagnose, and deliver drugs via a single nanoscopic platform for cancer therapy. The functional aspects of the micellar nanocomposite is investigated in vitro using human breast SkBr3 and colon cancer HCT116 cell lines for the delivery, release, localization, and anticancer activity of the drug. For the first time, concentration-dependent T2 -weighted MRI contrast for a monolayer of clustered cancer cells is shown. The pH tunable order-disorder transition of the core-shell structure induces the relative changes in MRI contrast. The outcomes elucidate the potential of this material for smart cancer theranostics by delivering non-invasive real-time diagnosis, targeted therapy, and monitoring the course and response of the action before, during, and after the treatment regimen.


Nanomedicine: Nanotechnology, Biology and Medicine | 2012

Cancer cell response to nanoparticles: criticality and optimality

Hirak K. Patra; Anjan Kr. Dasgupta

A stochastic variation in size and electrical parameters is common in nanoparticles. Synthesizing gold nanoparticles with a varying range of size and zeta potential, we show that there is clustering at certain regions of hydrodynamic diameter and zeta potentials that can be classified using k-clustering technique. A cluster boundary was observed around 50 nm, a size known for its optimal response to cells. However, neither size nor zeta potential alone determined the optimal cellular response (e.g., percentage cell survival) induced by such nanoparticles. A complex interplay prevails between size, zeta potential, nature of surface functionalization, and extent of adhesion of the cell to a solid matrix. However, it follows that the ratio of zeta potential to surface area, which scales as the electrical field (by Gaussian law), serves as an appropriate indicator for optimal cellular response. The phase plot spanned by fractional survival and effective electric field (charge density) indicates a positive correlation between mean cell survival and the magnitude of the electric field. The phase plot spanned by fractional survival and effective electric field (charge density) associated with the nanosurface shows a bifurcation behavior. Wide variation of cell survival response is observed at certain critical values of the surface charge density, whereas in other ranges the cellular response is well behaved and more predictable. Existence of phase points near the critical region corresponds to wide fluctuation of nanoparticle-induced response, for small changes in the nanosurface property. Smaller nanoparticles with low zeta potential (e.g., those conjugated with arginine) can have such an attribute (i.e., higher electrical field strength), and eventually they cause more cell death. The study may help in optimal design of nanodrugs.


Trends in Biotechnology | 2014

The potential legacy of cancer nanotechnology: cellular selection

Hirak K. Patra; Anthony Turner

Overexpression of oncogenes or loss of tumour suppressors can transform a normal cell to a cancerous one, resulting in uncontrolled regulation of intracellular signalling pathways and immunity to stresses, which both pose therapeutic challenges. Conventional approaches to cancer therapy, although they are effective at killing cancer cells, may still fail due to inadequate biodistribution and unwanted side effects. Nanotechnology-based approaches provide a promising alternative, with the possibility of targeting cells at an early stage, during their transformation into cancer cells. This review considers techniques that specifically target those molecular changes, which begin in only a very small percentage of normal cells as they undergo transformation. These techniques are crucial for early-stage diagnosis and therapy.


Analytica Chimica Acta | 2009

Multimodal electrophoresis of gold nanoparticles: a real time approach.

Hirak K. Patra; Dwijit GuhaSarkar; Anjan Kr. Dasgupta

A real time multimodal data acquisition imaging setup is developed for the electrophoretic movement of plasmonic nanoparticles. Movement of the nanoparticles is recorded by time-lapse digital imaging at 8-megapixel resolutions. The analysis of the moving nanoparticle band is performed using threshold image and color extraction at respective time frames. The migration dynamics is sensitive to size, nature and the extent of the surface conjugation to the nanoparticle. The dynamics of color intensity of the nanoparticles is shown to be dependent on the extent of stabilization of nanoparticle (by a given agent). The stability of nanoparticle is determined by stationary nature and also the relative proportions of pixel intensities in respective color planes (R, G and B). Detergents stabilize nanoparticles in a concentration dependent fashion. In case of neutral polymers the extent of stabilization depends on the relative proportion of the polymer and also on the nature of the same, e.g., PEG (polyethylene glycol) at low concentration imparts higher stability as compared to PVP (polyvinylpyrilidone). The ascending or declining temporal dynamics of color profiles observed in case of citrate stabilized or amino acid conjugated nanoparticles, represent enrichment of plasmonic particles, or their diffusion resulting from loss of charge during migration. The higher dimensional imaging technique thus can be exploited for discriminating the nanoparticles on the basis of their migration behavior and their stability as reflected from color dynamics. The technique is applicable to other nano-sized colored objects, e.g. proteins like hemoglobin where the protein color has important clinical value.


Cancer Nanotechnology | 2011

Dual role of nanoparticles as drug carrier and drug

Hirak K. Patra; Anjan Kr. Dasgupta; Sounik Sarkar; Indranil Biswas; Arnab Chattopadhyay

The conventional chemotherapeutic agents used in the treatment of human malignancies are directed nonspecifically against both malignant and nonmalignant cells, often limiting their efficacy with having serious side effects. Recent development of drug delivery vehicles has opened up the possibility of targeted drug delivery systems with the potential of achieving maximum efficacy with minimal toxicity. The possibility of using a nanomaterial as a combinational drug component is intuitively evident as it would compensate the toxicity level by enhancing drug delivery efficiency. Additionally, cell-specific cytotoxicity (reported earlier by our group) of the nanovehicle itself may potentiate a more effective targeted cell killing. In this paper, we explore the possibility of using gold nanoparticles playing the dual role of an anticancer agent and a carrier of a chemotherapeutic drug. This is demonstrated using vincristine sulfate (VS), salt of an alkaloid often used in the treatment of multiple myeloma (MM), and U266 as a test MM cell line. The drug VS shows the expected G2-M-phase arrest of cells. Notably, bare gold nanoparticle shows arrest of the S phase cells that may be particularly important in case of slow-growing malignancies like MM where most of the cells remain in G1 phase of the cell cycle. The VS conjugated gold retains the activity of both gold nanoparticle and VS leading to a synergistic rise of the apoptotic cell population.


Archive | 2016

Advanced Materials Interfaces

Ashutosh Tiwari; Hirak K. Patra; Xuemei Wang

The modification of water/solid interfaces by adsorbed neutral or charged macromolecules is proved to provide an excellent environment for controlled protein loading and release. Advanced experimental methodologies that probe the structural details of planar interfaces at nanometer length scales are presented. The broad fields of polymers at interfaces and protein–polymer interactions in solutions are introduced as a lay ground for the central subject of proteins at polymer-modified interfaces. Important contributions to the literature are used as paradigms to highlight the main findings and open subjects in the field, and at the same time, the complementary use of experimental methods is illustrated. The different kinds of interactions of proteins with macromolecular layers of various conformations are broadly categorized, although the boundaries between cases are by no means strict.


Scientific Reports | 2015

On/off-switchable anti-neoplastic nanoarchitecture.

Hirak K. Patra; Roghayeh Imani; Jaganmohan Reddy Jangamreddy; Meysam Pazoki; Aleš Iglič; Anthony Turner; Ashutosh Tiwari

Throughout the world, there are increasing demands for alternate approaches to advanced cancer therapeutics. Numerous potentially chemotherapeutic compounds are developed every year for clinical trial and some of them are considered as potential drug candidates. Nanotechnology-based approaches have accelerated the discovery process, but the key challenge still remains to develop therapeutically viable and physiologically safe materials suitable for cancer therapy. Here, we report a high turnover, on/off-switchable functionally popping reactive oxygen species (ROS) generator using a smart mesoporous titanium dioxide popcorn (TiO2 Pops) nanoarchitecture. The resulting TiO2 Pops, unlike TiO2 nanoparticles (TiO2 NPs), are exceptionally biocompatible with normal cells. Under identical conditions, TiO2 Pops show very high photocatalytic activity compared to TiO2 NPs. Upon on/off-switchable photo activation, the TiO2 Pops can trigger the generation of high-turnover flash ROS and can deliver their potential anticancer effect by enhancing the intracellular ROS level until it crosses the threshold to open the ‘death gate’, thus reducing the survival of cancer cells by at least six times in comparison with TiO2 NPs without affecting the normal cells.

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Ruma Pal

University of Calcutta

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