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Dive into the research topics where Joseph C. Manarang is active.

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Featured researches published by Joseph C. Manarang.


Journal of Biomechanics | 2014

The influence of substrate elastic modulus on retinal pigment epithelial cell phagocytosis

Kieran S. Boochoon; Joseph C. Manarang; Joshua T. Davis; Alison M. McDermott; William J. Foster

To better understand if a complex process such as phagocytosis is influenced by substrate stiffness, we investigated the influence of substrate elastic modulus on phagocytosis in the retinal pigment epithelial (RPE) cell line ARPE-19. RPE cells lie on Bruchs membrane, directly under the retina, and phagocytose the shed photoreceptor outer segments. Bruchs membrane is known to increase in stiffness by an order of magnitude with age and thus, this study has potential relevance in explaining retinal changes in age-related macular degeneration. ARPE-19 cells were plated on laminin-coated polyacrylamide substrates of varying elastic modulus. After 14 days in culture, a solution of latex fluorescent beads suspended in PBS was placed in each well. After an incubation time of 4h, flow cytometry was performed to determine the number of cells that phagocytosed a bead. The number of ARPE-19 cells that phagocytosed a bead decreased continuously as a function of increasing substrate elastic modulus (p=0.0135), and this was found to be a linear relationship (slope=-0.03305 ± 0.01104, R2=0.4726 per 10,000 cells). Our results suggest that RPE cells display decreased phagocytosis when grown on firmer substrates, and thus, RPE cells in older eyes, in which Bruchs membrane is stiffer, may demonstrate decreased phagocytosis. Impaired phagocytosis by RPE cells may contribute to impaired metabolism of photoreceptor outer segments and to development of macular degeneration. Material stiffness may be a critical parameter in the development of neural therapies, including retinal prosthetics and stem cell therapies.


Contact Lens and Anterior Eye | 2015

Contact lens care solution killing efficacy against Acanthamoeba castellanii by in vitro testing and live-imaging

Satya S. Kolar; Joseph C. Manarang; Alan R. Burns; William Miller; Alison M. McDermott; Jan P.G. Bergmanson

In the past decade there has been an increased incidence of Acanthamoeba keratitis, particularly in contact lens wearers. The aim of this study was to utilize in vitro killing assays and to establish a novel, time-lapse, live-cell imaging methodology to demonstrate the efficacy of contact lens care solutions in eradicating Acanthamoeba castellanii (A. castellanii) trophozoites and cysts. Standard qualitative and quantitative in vitro assays were performed along with novel time-lapse imaging coupled with fluorescent dye staining that signals cell death. Quantitative data obtained demonstrated that 3% non-ophthalmic hydrogen peroxide demonstrated the highest percent killing at 87.4% corresponding to a 4.4 log kill. The other contact lens care solutions which showed a 72.9 to 29.2% killing which was consistent with 4.3-2.8 log reduction in trophozoite viability. Both analytical approaches revealed that polyquaternium/PHMB-based was the least efficacious in terms of trophicidal activity. The cysticidal activity of the solutions was much less than activity against trophozoites and frequently was not detected. Live-imaging provided a novel visual endpoint for characterizing the trophocidal activity of the care solutions. All solutions caused rapid rounding or pseudocyst formation of the trophozoites, reduced motility and the appearance of different morphotypes. Polyquaternium/alexidine-based and peroxide-based lens care system induced the most visible damage indicated by significant accumulation of debris from ruptured cells. Polyquaternium/PHMB-based was the least effective showing rounding of the cells but minimal death. These observations are in keeping with care solution biocides having prominent activity at the plasma membrane of Acanthamoeba.


European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2017

A unique mid-sequence linker used to multimerize the lipid-phosphatidylserine (PS) binding peptide-peptoid hybrid PPS1

Satya Prakash Shukla; Joseph C. Manarang; D. Gomika Udugamasooriya

Ligand multimerizations enhance the binding affinity towards cell surface biomarkers through their avidity effects. Typical linkers connect individual monomeric ligand moieties from one end (e.g., C- or N-terminus of a peptide) and exclusively target protein receptors. The lipid phosphatidylserine (PS) is normally present on the cytoplasmic side of the eukaryotic cell membrane, but in tumors and tumor endothelial cells, this negatively charged PS flips to the outer layer. We recently reported a PS binding peptide-peptoid hybrid (PPS1) that has distinct positively charged and hydrophobic residue-containing regions. The PPS1 monomer is inactive, and upon C-terminal dimerization (PPS1D1), it triggers cytotoxicity. In the current study, a unique series of PPS1 multimeric derivatives were synthesized by switching the linker from the C-terminus to an internal position. The unimportant fourth residue (N-lys) from the C-terminus was utilized to build the linker. The synthesis strategy was developed employing variations of (I) the linker size, (II) the number of positively charged residues, and (III) the number of hydrophobic regions. Cytotoxicity of these new derivatives on HCC4017 lung cancer cells showed that a minimum of two hydrophobic regions was important to retain the activity and that the shortest linker length was optimal for activity.


Current Eye Research | 2017

Expression of Antimicrobial Peptides by Uveal and Cutaneous Melanoma Cells and Investigation of Their Role in Tumor Cell Migration and Vasculogenic Mimicry

Joseph C. Manarang; Deborah C. Otteson; Alison M. McDermott

ABSTRACT Aims: Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) have been implicated in the pathogenesis of several cancers, although there is also evidence suggesting potential for novel, AMP-based antitumor therapies. Discerning potential roles of AMPs in tumor pathogenesis may provide valuable insight into the mechanisms of novel AMP-based antitumor therapy. Methods: mRNA expression of the AMPs α defensin (HNP-1); cathelicidin (LL-37); and β defensins (hBD-1, hBD-2, hBD-3, hBD-4) in human uveal and cutaneous melanoma cell lines, primary human uveal melanocytes, and primary human uveal melanoma cells was determined by reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction. An in vitro scratch assay and custom Matlab analysis were used to determine the AMP effects on melanoma cell migration. Last, the effect of specific AMPs on vasculogenic mimicry was determined by three-dimensional (3D) culture and light and fluorescence microscopy. Results: Low-to-moderate AMP transcript levels were detected, and these varied across the cells tested. Overall, LL-37 expression was increased while hBD-4 was decreased in most melanoma cell lines, compared to primary cultured uveal melanocytes. There was no observable influence of HNP-1 and LL-37 on tumor cell migration. Additionally, aggressive cutaneous melanoma cells grown in 3D cultures exhibited vasculogenic mimicry, although AMP exposure did not alter this process. Conclusions: Collectively, our data show that although AMP mRNA expression is variable between uveal and cutaneous melanoma cells, these peptides have little influence on major characteristics that contribute to tumor aggressiveness and progression.


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2014

Antimicrobial Peptides and Acanthamoeba: Peptide expression and anti-amoebicidal activity via time-lapse imaging

Joseph C. Manarang; Hasna Baidouri; Satya S. Kolar; Maria Luisa Mangoni; Alison M. McDermott


Contact Lens and Anterior Eye | 2013

A new in vitro, live-cell imaging methodology to assess efficacy of contact lens care solutions against acanthamoeba castellanii trophozoites

Jan P.G. Bergmanson; William L. Miller; Joseph C. Manarang; Satya S. Kolar; Alison M. McDermott; Alan R. Burns


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2012

The Influence of Substrate Elastic Modulus on Retinal Pigment Epithelial Cell Phagocytosis

Kieran S. Boochoon; Josh T. Davis; Joseph C. Manarang; Alison M. McDermott; William J. Foster


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2011

Apoptotic Pathways of Antimicrobial Peptide-Induced Death of Uveal Melanoma Cells

Joseph C. Manarang; Alan R. Burns; Alison M. McDermott


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2011

Substrate Elastic Modulus Influences Phagocytosis By Retinal Müller Cells

Peter K. Lam; Josh T. Davis; Joseph C. Manarang; Deborah C. Otteson; Alison M. McDermott; William J. Foster


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2010

Induction of Apoptosis in Ocular Tumor Cells

Joseph C. Manarang; R. Rodriguez; Alan R. Burns; Alison M. McDermott

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D. Gomika Udugamasooriya

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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