Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where John A. Pugh is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by John A. Pugh.


Biomaterials | 2013

Multifunctional receptor-targeted nanocomplexes for the delivery of therapeutic nucleic acids to the Brain

Gavin D. Kenny; Alison Bienemann; Aristides D. Tagalakis; John A. Pugh; Katharina Welser; Frederick Campbell; Alethea B. Tabor; Helen C. Hailes; Steven S. Gill; Mark F. Lythgoe; Cameron W. McLeod; Edward White; Stephen L. Hart

Convection enhanced delivery (CED) is a method of direct injection to the brain that can achieve widespread dispersal of therapeutics, including gene therapies, from a single dose. Non-viral, nanocomplexes are of interest as vectors for gene therapy in the brain, but it is essential that administration should achieve maximal dispersal to minimise the number of injections required. We hypothesised that anionic nanocomplexes administered by CED should disperse more widely in rat brains than cationics of similar size, which bind electrostatically to cell-surface anionic moieties such as proteoglycans, limiting their spread. Anionic, receptor-targeted nanocomplexes (RTN) containing a neurotensin-targeting peptide were prepared with plasmid DNA and compared with cationic RTNs for dispersal and transfection efficiency. Both RTNs were labelled with gadolinium for localisation in the brain by MRI and in brain sections by LA-ICP-MS, as well as with rhodamine fluorophore for detection by fluorescence microscopy. MRI distribution studies confirmed that the anionic RTNs dispersed more widely than cationic RTNs, particularly in the corpus callosum. Gene expression levels from anionic formulations were similar to those of cationic RTNs. Thus, anionic RTN formulations can achieve both widespread dispersal and effective gene expression in brains after administration of a single dose by CED.


Journal of Analytical Atomic Spectrometry | 2011

A novel calibration strategy for analysis and imaging of biological thin sections by laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry

John A. Pugh; Alan G. Cox; Cameron W. McLeod; Josephine Bunch; B. Whitby; B. Gordon; T. Kalber; E. White

A novel calibration scheme for elemental analysis and imaging of biological thin sections by laser ablation ICP mass spectrometry is described. The procedure is based on spiking whole blood or blood serum with elemental standards (Sr, Gd, Pt), freezing the spiked aliquots in a customised block of CMC and sectioning by cryomicrotome. The approach is robust, convenient to implement and affords matrix matching of standards to samples in terms of chemistry and physical properties. Linear calibration and good method reproducibility was achieved with limits of detection at the ng g−1 level. Application to quantitative analysis and imaging of metallodrugs (Sr, Pt based) and MRI contrast agent (Gd based) was demonstrated.


Journal of Controlled Release | 2012

Lipid peptide nanocomplexes for gene delivery and magnetic resonance imaging in the brain

Michele J. Writer; Panagiotis G. Kyrtatos; Alison Bienemann; John A. Pugh; Andrew S. Lowe; Claudio Villegas-Llerena; Gavin D. Kenny; Edward White; Steven S. Gill; Cameron W. McLeod; Mark F. Lythgoe; Stephen L. Hart

Gadolinium-labelled nanocomplexes offer prospects for the development of real-time, non-invasive imaging strategies to visualise the location of gene delivery by MRI. In this study, targeted nanoparticle formulations were prepared comprising a cationic liposome (L) containing a Gd-chelated lipid at 10, 15 and 20% by weight of total lipid, a receptor-targeted, DNA-binding peptide (P) and plasmid DNA (D), which electrostatically self-assembled into LPD nanocomplexes. The LPD formulation containing the liposome with 15% Gd-chelated lipid displayed optimal peptide-targeted, transfection efficiency. MRI conspicuity peaked at 4 h after incubation of the nanocomplexes with cells, suggesting enhancement by cellular uptake and trafficking. This was supported by time course confocal microscopy analysis of transfections with fluorescently-labelled LPD nanocomplexes. Gd-LPD nanocomplexes delivered to rat brains by convection-enhanced delivery were visible by MRI at 6 h, 24 h and 48 h after administration. Histological brain sections analysed by laser ablation-inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS) confirmed that the MRI signal was associated with the distribution of Gd3 + moieties and differentiated MRI signals due to haemorrhage. The transfected brain cells near the injection site appeared to be mostly microglial. This study shows the potential of Gd-LPD nanocomplexes for simultaneous delivery of contrast agents and genes for real-time monitoring of gene therapy in the brain.


Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry | 2012

Elemental imaging of MRI contrast agents: benchmarking of LA-ICP-MS to MRI

John A. Pugh; Alan G. Cox; Cameron W. McLeod; Josephine Bunch; Michele J. Writer; Stephen L. Hart; Alison Bienemann; Edward White; Jimmy D. Bell

AbstractLaser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS) has been used to map the spatial distribution of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) contrast agents (Gd-based) in histological sections in order to explore synergies with in vivo MRI. Images from respective techniques are presented for two separate studies namely (1) convection enhanced delivery of a Gd nanocomplex (developmental therapeutic) into rat brain and (2) convection enhanced delivery, with co-infusion of Magnevist (commercial Gd contrast agent) and Carboplatin (chemotherapy drug), into pig brain. The LA technique was shown to be a powerful compliment to MRI not only in offering improved sensitivity, spatial resolution and signal quantitation but also in giving added value regarding the fate of administered agents (Gd and Pt agents). Furthermore simultaneous measurement of Fe enabled assignment of an anomalous contrast enhancement region in rat brain to haemorrhage at the infusion site. FigureGd contrast-enhanced MRI image (left) and LA-ICP-MS 157Gd elemental distribution (right) for pig brain hemisphere dosed via convection enhanced delivery.


Bioconjugate Chemistry | 2011

Synthesis and characterization of a theranostic vascular disrupting agent for in vivo MR imaging.

Tammy Kalber; Nazila Kamaly; Stephanie A. Higham; John A. Pugh; Josephine Bunch; Cameron W. McLeod; Andrew D. Miller; Jimmy D. Bell

Colchicine, a known tubulin binding agent and vascular disrupting agent, causes rapid vascular shut down and central necrosis in tumors. The binding of tubulin results in tubulin destabilization, with characteristic cell shape changes and inhibition of cell division, and results in cell death. A gadolinium(III) labeled derivative of colchicine (Gd·DOTA·Colchicinic acid) was synthesized and characterized as a theranostic agent (enabling simultaneous diagnostic/real time MRI contrast imaging). In vitro, Gd·DOTA·Colchicinic acid was shown to initiate cell changes characteristic of tubulin-destabilization in both OVCAR-3 and IGROV-1 ovarian carcinoma cell lines in vitro over a period of 24 h, while maintaining the qualities of the MR imaging tracer. In vivo, Gd·DOTA·Colchicinic acid (200 mg/kg) was shown to induce the formation of central necrosis, which was confirmed ex vivo by histology, in OVCAR-3 subcutaneous tumor xenografts, while simultaneously acting as an imaging agent to promote a significant reduction in the MR relaxation time T(1) (p < 0.05) of tumors 24 h post-administration. Morphological changes within the tumor which corresponded with areas derived from the formation of central necrosis were also present on MR images that were not observed for the same colchicine derivate that was not complexed with gadolinium that also presented with central necrosis ex vivo. However, Gd·DOTA·Colchicinic acid accumulation in the liver, as shown by changes in liver T(1) (p < 0.05), takes place within 2 h. The implication is that Gd·DOTA·Colchicinic acid distributes to tissues, including tumors, within 2 h, but enters tumor cells to lower T(1) times and promotes cell death over a period of up to 24 h. As the biodistribution/pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamics data provided here is similar to that of conventional colchicines derivatives, such combined data are a potentially powerful way to rapidly characterize the complete behavior of drug candidates in vivo.


NMR in Biomedicine | 2010

Manganese enhancement in non-CNS organs.

Li-Wen Lee; Po-Wah So; Anthony N. Price; James R.C. Parkinson; David J. Larkman; Jane Halliday; Simon M. Poucher; John A. Pugh; Alan G. Cox; Cameron W. McLeod; Jimmy D. Bell

Manganese‐enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (MEMRI) is a novel imaging technique capable of monitoring calcium influx, in vivo. Manganese (Mn2+) ions, similar to calcium ions (Ca2+), are taken up by activated cells where their paramagnetic properties afford signal enhancement in T1‐weighted MRI methodologies. In this study we have assessed Mn2+ distribution in mice using magnetization‐prepared rapid gradient echo (MP‐RAGE) based MRI, by measuring changes in T1–effective relaxation times (T1‐eff), effective R1‐relaxation rates (R1‐eff) and signal intensity (SI) profiles over time. The manganese concentration in the tissue was also determined using inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometry (ICP‐AES). Our results show a strong positive correlation between infused dose of MnCl2 and the tissue manganese concentration. Furthermore, we demonstrate a linear relationship between R1‐eff and tissue manganese concentration and tissue‐specific Mn2+ distribution in murine tissues following dose‐dependent Mn2+ administration. This data provides an optimized MnCl2 dose regimen for an MP‐RAGE based sequence protocol for specific target organs and presents a potential 3D MRI technique for in vivo imaging of Ca2+ entry during Ca2+‐dependent processes in a wide range of tissues. Copyright


Bioinformatics | 2015

An efficient TOF-SIMS image analysis with spatial correlation and alternating non–negativity-constrained least squares

Parham Aram; Lingli Shen; John A. Pugh; Seetharaman Vaidyanathan; Visakan Kadirkamanathan

MOTIVATION Advances in analytical instrumentation towards acquiring high-resolution images of mass spectrometry constantly demand efficient approaches for data analysis. This is particularly true of time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry imaging where recent advances enable acquisition of high-resolution data in multiple dimensions. In many applications, the distribution of different species from a sampled surface is spatially continuous in nature and a model that incorporates the spatial correlation across the surface would be preferable to estimations at discrete spatial locations. A key challenge here is the capability to analyse the high-resolution multidimensional data to extract relevant information reliably and efficiently. RESULTS We propose a framework based on alternating non-negativity-constrained least squares which accounts for the spatial correlation across the sample surface. The proposed method also decouples the computational complexity of the estimation procedure from the image resolution, which significantly reduces the processing time. We evaluate the performance of the algorithm with biochemical image datasets generated from mixture of metabolites.


Journal of Neuro-oncology | 2012

An evaluation of the safety and feasibility of convection-enhanced delivery of carboplatin into the white matter as a potential treatment for high-grade glioma

Edward White; Alison Bienemann; John A. Pugh; Emma Castrique; Marcella Wyatt; Hannah Taylor; Alan G. Cox; Cameron W. McLeod; Steven S. Gill


Molecular Imaging and Biology | 2010

Imaging of Gadolinium Spatial Distribution in Tumor Tissue by Laser Ablation Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometry

Nazila Kamaly; John A. Pugh; Tammy Kalber; Josephine Bunch; Andrew D. Miller; Cameron W. McLeod; Jimmy D. Bell


Molecular Imaging and Biology | 2011

A Low Molecular Weight Folate Receptor Targeted Contrast Agent for Magnetic Resonance Tumor Imaging

Tammy Kalber; Nazila Kamaly; Po-Wah So; John A. Pugh; Josephine Bunch; Cameron W. McLeod; Michael R. Jorgensen; Andrew D. Miller; Jimmy D. Bell

Collaboration


Dive into the John A. Pugh's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jimmy D. Bell

University of Westminster

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alan G. Cox

University of Sheffield

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Stephen L. Hart

UCL Institute of Child Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge