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Dive into the research topics where Jacob M. Berlin is active.

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Featured researches published by Jacob M. Berlin.


ACS Nano | 2014

Neural Stem Cell-Mediated Intratumoral Delivery of Gold Nanorods Improves Photothermal Therapy

Rachael Mooney; Luella Roma; Donghong Zhao; Desiree Van Haute; Elizabeth Garcia; Seung U. Kim; Alexander J. Annala; Karen S. Aboody; Jacob M. Berlin

Plasmonic photothermal therapy utilizes biologically inert gold nanorods (AuNRs) as tumor-localized antennas that convert light into heat capable of eliminating cancerous tissue. This approach has lower morbidity than surgical resection and can potentially synergize with other treatment modalities including chemotherapy and immunotherapy. Despite these advantages, it is still challenging to obtain heating of the entire tumor mass while avoiding unnecessary collateral damage to surrounding healthy tissue. It is therefore critical to identify innovative methods to distribute an effective concentration of AuNRs throughout tumors without depositing them in surrounding healthy tissue. Here we demonstrate that AuNR-loaded, tumor-tropic neural stem cells (NSCs) can be used to improve the intratumoral distribution of AuNRs. A simple UV–vis technique for measuring AuNR loading within NSCs was established. It was then confirmed that NSC viability is unimpaired following AuNR loading and that NSCs retain AuNRs long enough to migrate throughout tumors. We then demonstrate that intratumoral injections of AuNR-loaded NSCs are more efficacious than free AuNR injections, as evidenced by reduced recurrence rates of triple-negative breast cancer (MDA-MB-231) xenografts following NIR exposure. Finally, we demonstrate that the distribution of AuNRs throughout the tumors is improved when transported by NSCs, likely resulting in the improved efficacy of AuNR-loaded NSCs as compared to free AuNRs. These findings highlight the advantage of combining cellular therapies and nanotechnology to generate more effective cancer treatments.


ACS Nano | 2010

Effective drug delivery, in vitro and in vivo, by carbon-based nanovectors noncovalently loaded with unmodified Paclitaxel.

Jacob M. Berlin; Ashley D. Leonard; Tam T. Pham; Daisuke Sano; Daniela C. Marcano; Shayou Yan; Stefania Fiorentino; Zvonimir L. Milas; Dmitry V. Kosynkin; B. Katherine Price; Rebecca Lucente-Schultz; Xiaoxia Wen; M. Gabriela Raso; Suzanne L. Craig; Hai T. Tran; Jeffrey N. Myers; James M. Tour

Many new drugs have low aqueous solubility and high therapeutic efficacy. Paclitaxel (PTX) is a classic example of this type of compound. Here we show that extremely small (<40 nm) hydrophilic carbon clusters (HCCs) that are PEGylated (PEG-HCCs) are effective drug delivery vehicles when simply mixed with paclitaxel. This formulation of PTX sequestered in PEG-HCCs (PTX/PEG-HCCs) is stable for at least 20 weeks. The PTX/PEG-HCCs formulation was as effective as PTX in a clinical formulation in reducing tumor volumes in an orthotopic murine model of oral squamous cell carcinoma. Preliminary toxicity and biodistribution studies suggest that the PEG-HCCs are not acutely toxic and, like many other nanomaterials, are primarily accumulated in the liver and spleen. This work demonstrates that carbon nanomaterials are effective drug delivery vehicles in vivo when noncovalently loaded with an unmodified drug.


Energy and Environmental Science | 2011

Engineered nanoparticles for hydrocarbon detection in oil-field rocks

Jacob M. Berlin; Jie Yu; Wei Lu; Erin E. Walsh; Lunliang Zhang; Ping Zhang; Wei Chen; Amy T. Kan; Michael S. Wong; Mason B. Tomson; James M. Tour

Polyvinyl alcohol functionalized oxidized carbon black efficiently carries a hydrophobic compound through a variety of oil-field rock types and releases the compound when the rock contains hydrocarbons.


ACS Nano | 2011

Noncovalent functionalization of carbon nanovectors with an antibody enables targeted drug delivery

Jacob M. Berlin; Tam T. Pham; Daisuke Sano; Khalid Amanali Mohamedali; Daniela C. Marcano; Jeffrey N. Myers; James M. Tour

Current chemotherapeutics are characterized by efficient tumor cell-killing and severe side effects mostly derived from off-target toxicity. Hence targeted delivery of these drugs to tumor cells is actively sought. We previously demonstrated that poly(ethylene glycol)-functionalized carbon nanovectors are able to sequester paclitaxel, a widely used hydrophobic cancer drug, by simple physisorption and thereby deliver the drug for killing of cancer cells. The cell-killing when these drug-loaded carbon nanoparticles were used was equivalent to when a commercial formulation of paclitaxel was used. Here we show that by further mixing the drug-loaded nanoparticles with Cetuximab, a monoclonal antibody that recognizes the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), paclitaxel is preferentially targeted to EGFR+ tumor cells in vitro. This supports progressing to in vivo studies. Moreover, the construct is unusual in that all three components are assembled through noncovalent interactions. Such noncovalent assembly could enable high-throughput screening of drug/antibody combinations.


Journal of Neurosurgery | 2013

Biocompatibility of pristine graphene for neuronal interface: Laboratory investigation

Deshdeepak Sahni; Andrew Jea; Javier A. Mata; Daniela C. Marcano; Ahilan Sivaganesan; Jacob M. Berlin; Claudio E. Tatsui; Zhengzong Sun; Thomas G. Luerssen; Shiyun Meng; Thomas A. Kent; James M. Tour

OBJECT Graphene possesses unique electrical, physical, and chemical properties that may offer significant potential as a bioscaffold for neuronal regeneration after spinal cord injury. The purpose of this investigation was to establish the in vitro biocompatibility of pristine graphene for interface with primary rat cortical neurons. METHODS Graphene films were prepared by chemical vapor deposition on a copper foil catalytic substrate and subsequent apposition on bare Permanox plastic polymer dishes. Rat neuronal cell culture was grown on graphene-coated surfaces, and cell growth and attachment were compared with those on uncoated and poly-d-lysine (PDL)-coated controls; the latter surface is highly favorable for neuronal attachment and growth. Live/dead cell analysis was conducted with flow cytometry using ethidium homodimer-1 and calcein AM dyes. Lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) levels-indicative of cytotoxicity-were measured as markers of cell death. Phase contrast microscopy of active cell culture was conducted to assess neuronal attachment and morphology. RESULTS Statistically significant differences in the percentage of live or dead neurons were noted between graphene and PDL surfaces, as well as between the PDL-coated and bare surfaces, but there was little difference in cell viability between graphene-coated and bare surfaces. There were significantly lower LDH levels in the graphene-coated samples compared with the uncoated ones, indicating that graphene was not more cytotoxic than the bare control surface. According to phase contrast microscopy, neurons attached to the graphene-coated surface and were able to elaborate long, neuritic processes suggestive of normal neuronal metabolism and morphology. CONCLUSIONS Further use of graphene as a bioscaffold will require surface modification that enhances hydrophilicity to increase cellular attachment and growth. Graphene is a nanomaterial that is biocompatible with neurons and may have significant biomedical applications.


Future Oncology | 2014

Neural stem cells improve intracranial nanoparticle retention and tumor-selective distribution

Rachael Mooney; Yiming Weng; Revathiswari Tirughana-Sambandan; Valerie Valenzuela; Soraya Aramburo; Elizabeth Garcia; Zhongqi Li; Margarita Gutova; Alexander J. Annala; Jacob M. Berlin; Karen S. Aboody

AIM The purpose of this work is to determine if tumor-tropic neural stem cells (NSCs) can improve the tumor-selective distribution and retention of nanoparticles (NPs) within invasive brain tumors. MATERIALS & METHODS Streptavidin-conjugated, polystyrene NPs are surface-coupled to biotinylated human NSCs. These NPs are large (798 nm), yet when conjugated to tropic cells, they are too large to passively diffuse through brain tissue or cross the blood-tumor barrier. NP distribution and retention was quantified 4 days after injections located either adjacent to an intracerebral glioma, in the contralateral hemisphere, or intravenously. RESULTS & CONCLUSION In all three in vivo injection paradigms, NSC-coupled NPs exhibited significantly improved tumor-selective distribution and retention over free-NP suspensions. These results provide proof-of-principle that NSCs can facilitate the tumor-selective distribution of NPs, a platform useful for improving intracranial drug delivery.


ACS Nano | 2012

Noncovalent Assembly of Targeted Carbon Nanovectors Enables Synergistic Drug and Radiation Cancer Therapy in Vivo

Daisuke Sano; Jacob M. Berlin; Tam T. Pham; Daniela C. Marcano; David Valdecanas; Ge Zhou; Luka Milas; Jeffrey N. Myers; James M. Tour

Current chemotherapeutics are characterized by efficient tumor cell-killing and severe side effects mostly derived from off-target toxicity. Hence targeted delivery of these drugs to tumor cells is actively sought. In an in vitro system, we previously demonstrated that targeted drug delivery to cancer cells overexpressing epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR+) can be achieved by poly(ethylene glycol)-functionalized carbon nanovectors simply mixed with a drug, paclitaxel, and an antibody that binds to the epidermal growth factor receptor, cetuximab. This construct is unusual in that all three components are assembled through noncovalent interactions. Here we show that this same construct is effective in vivo, enhancing radiotherapy of EGFR+ tumors. This targeted nanovector system has the potential to be a new therapy for head and neck squamous cell carcinomas, deserving of further preclinical development.


Immunotherapy | 2013

The future of CpG immunotherapy in cancer.

Behnam Badie; Jacob M. Berlin

Progress of ‘free’ CpG DNA oligonucleotides containing unmethylated deoxycytidylyl-deoxyguanosine dinucleotides are commonly referred to as CpGs. The unmethylated CG sequence is characteristic of bacterial DNA. CpGs stimulate mammalian immune cells through recognition by Toll-like receptor (TLR)9 [1]. Unlike many other TLRs, TLR9 is not found on the surface of cells, but is initially localized in the endoplasmic reticulum and is then found colocalized with CpGs in lysosomes following stimulation. TLR9 stimulation by CpGs initiates the production of cytokines and can lead to both the destruction of nearby antigens and the induction of memory T cells against those antigens. This cascade has been exploited to use CpGs as potent immunostimulatory agents for both innate and specific immunity. In particular, CpGs stabilized with phosphorothioate backbones have demonstrated excellent activity in experimental models against allergies, viral infections and cancer. This editorial will focus on the use of CpGs in cancer immunotherapy.


Journal of Neurotrauma | 2013

Design of Poly(ethylene Glycol)-Functionalized Hydrophilic Carbon Clusters for Targeted Therapy of Cerebrovascular Dysfunction in Mild Traumatic Brain Injury

Daniela C. Marcano; Brittany R. Bitner; Jacob M. Berlin; Jane Jarjour; Juhye M. Lee; Aakash Jacob; Roderic H. Fabian; Thomas A. Kent; James M. Tour

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) involves the elaboration of oxidative stress that causes cerebrovascular dysfunction, including impairment of autoregulation of cerebral blood flow. Currently, there is no clinically effective antioxidant treatment for these pathologies. Most currently available antioxidants act through mechanisms in which the antioxidant either transfers the radical or requires regeneration, both of which are impaired in the toxic post-TBI environment. We previously reported that single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) and ultrashort SWCNTs possess antioxidant activity, and their characteristics suggest that radical annihilation is the major mechanism. We have now developed a biologically compatible class of carbon-based nanovectors, poly(ethylene glycol)-functionalized hydrophilic carbon clusters (PEG-HCCs) that can be further functionalized with antibodies, and hence show promise as targeted drug delivery platforms. Here we report that PEG-HCCs possess innate antioxidant activity and can be rapidly targeted via an antibody to the P-selectin antigen in a model of injured cultured brain endothelial cells. One immediate application of this therapy is to vascular dysfunction that accompanies TBI and worsens outcome in the face of systemic hypotension. These in vitro results support the need for further investigation in animal models.


ACS Nano | 2012

Antibody-targeted nanovectors for the treatment of brain cancers

Martyn A. Sharpe; Daniela C. Marcano; Jacob M. Berlin; Marsha A. Widmayer; David S. Baskin; James M. Tour

Introduced here is the hydrophilic carbon clusters (HCCs) antibody drug enhancement system (HADES), a methodology for cell-specific drug delivery. Antigen-targeted, drug-delivering nanovectors are manufactured by combining specific antibodies with drug-loaded poly(ethylene glycol)-HCCs (PEG-HCCs). We show that HADES is highly modular, as both the drug and antibody component can be varied for selective killing of a range of cultured human primary glioblastoma multiforme. Using three different chemotherapeutics and three different antibodies, without the need for covalent bonding to the nanovector, we demonstrate extreme lethality toward glioma, but minimal toxicity toward human astrocytes and neurons.

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Karen S. Aboody

City of Hope National Medical Center

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Rachael Mooney

City of Hope National Medical Center

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Desiree Van Haute

City of Hope National Medical Center

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Jeffrey N. Myers

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Thomas A. Kent

Baylor College of Medicine

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Wei Lu

University of Michigan

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Daisuke Sano

Yokohama City University

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Alexander J. Annala

City of Hope National Medical Center

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