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Featured researches published by Jyothi U. Menon.


Recent Patents on Biomedical Engineering | 2013

Design and Application of Magnetic-based Theranostic Nanoparticle Systems

Aniket S. Wadajkar; Jyothi U. Menon; Tejaswi Kadapure; Richard T. Tran; Jian Yang; Kytai T. Nguyen

Recently, magnetic-based theranostic nanoparticle (MBTN) systems have been studied, researched, and applied extensively to detect and treat various diseases including cancer. Theranostic nanoparticles are advantageous in that the diagnosis and treatment of a disease can be performed in a single setting using combinational strategies of targeting, imaging, and/or therapy. Of these theranostic strategies, magnetic-based systems containing magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs) have gained popularity because of their unique ability to be used in magnetic resonance imaging, magnetic targeting, hyperthermia, and controlled drug release. To increase their effectiveness, MNPs have been decorated with a wide variety of materials to improve their biocompatibility, carry therapeutic payloads, encapsulate/bind imaging agents, and provide functional groups for conjugation of biomolecules that provide receptor-mediated targeting of the disease. This review summarizes recent patents involving various polymer coatings, imaging agents, therapeutic agents, targeting mechanisms, and applications along with the major requirements and challenges faced in using MBTN for disease management.


Acta Biomaterialia | 2014

Electrospun biodegradable elastic polyurethane scaffolds with dipyridamole release for small diameter vascular grafts

Primana Punnakitikashem; Danh Truong; Jyothi U. Menon; Kytai T. Nguyen; Yi Hong

Acellular biodegradable small diameter vascular grafts (SDVGs) require antithrombosis, intimal hyperplasia inhibition and rapid endothelialization to improve the graft patency. However, current antithrombosis and antiproliferation approaches often conflict with endothelial cell layer formation on SDVGs. To address this limitation, biodegradable elastic polyurethane urea (BPU) and the drug dipyridamole (DPA) were mixed and then electrospun into a biodegradable fibrous scaffold. The BPU would provide the appropriate mechanical support, while the DPA in the scaffold would offer biofunctions as required above. We found that the resulting scaffolds had tensile strengths and strains comparable with human coronary artery. The DPA in the scaffolds was continuously released up to 91 days in phosphate buffer solution at 37 °C, with a low burst release within the first 3 days. Compared to BPU alone, improved non-thrombogenicity of the DPA-loaded BPU scaffolds was evidenced with extended human blood clotting time, lower TAT complex concentration, lower hemolysis and reduced human platelet deposition. The scaffolds with a higher DPA content (5 and 10%) inhibited proliferation of human aortic smooth muscle cell significantly. Furthermore, the DPA-loaded scaffolds had no adverse effect on human aortic endothelial cell growth, yet it improved their proliferation. The attractive mechanical properties and biofunctions of the DPA-loaded BPU scaffold indicate its potential as an acellular biodegradable SDVG for vascular replacement.


Journal of Biomedical Materials Research Part A | 2012

Effects of surfactants on the properties of PLGA nanoparticles

Jyothi U. Menon; Soujanya Kona; Aniket S. Wadajkar; Foram Desai; Anupama Vadla; Kytai T. Nguyen

The objective of this study was to investigate the physical characteristics of poly(D,L-lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) nanoparticles (NPs) coated with two surfactants, Pluronic or the commonly used polyvinyl alcohol (PVA); and determine their in vitro efficiency as drug carriers for cancer therapy. Free surfactant cytotoxicity results indicated that Pluronic F127 (PF127) was most cytocompatible among the Pluronics tested and hence chosen for coating PLGA NPs for further studies. Release studies using doxorubicin (DOX) as a drug model showed sustained release of DOX from both PVA- and PF127-coated PLGA NPs (PLGA-PVA and PLGA-PF127, respectively) over 28 days. Further, there was no significant difference in human dermal fibroblasts and human aortic smooth muscle cell survival when exposed to both types of NPs. Cellular uptake studies demonstrated that uptake of both nanoparticle types was dose-dependent for both prostate and breast cancer cells. However, these cancer cells internalized more PLGA-PF127 NPs than PLGA-PVA NPs. Moreover, studies showed that drug-loaded PLGA-PF127 NPs not only killed more cancer cells than drug-loaded PLGA-PVA NPs, but also overcame drug resistance in LNCaP, MDA-MB-231, and MDA-MB-468 cancer cells on re-exposure. These results indicate that PLGA-PF127 NPs can form a promising system that not only delivers anti-cancer drugs, but also overcomes drug resistance, which is prevalent in most cancer cells.


Acta Biomaterialia | 2014

Polymeric nanoparticles for pulmonary protein and DNA delivery

Jyothi U. Menon; Priya Ravikumar; Amruta Pise; Dipendra Gyawali; Connie C. W. Hsia; Kytai T. Nguyen

Polymeric nanoparticles (NPs) are promising carriers of biological agents to the lung due to advantages including biocompatibility, ease of surface modification, localized action and reduced systemic toxicity. However, there have been no studies extensively characterizing and comparing the behavior of polymeric NPs for pulmonary protein/DNA delivery both in vitro and in vitro. We screened six polymeric NPs: gelatin, chitosan, alginate, poly(lactic-co-glycolic) acid (PLGA), PLGA-chitosan and PLGA-poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG), for inhalational protein/DNA delivery. All NPs except PLGA-PEG and alginate were <300nm in size with a bi-phasic core compound release profile. Gelatin, PLGA NPs and PLGA-PEG NPs remained stable in deionized water, serum, saline and simulated lung fluid (Gambles solution) over 5days. PLGA-based NPs and natural polymer NPs exhibited the highest cytocompatibility and dose-dependent in vitro uptake, respectively, by human alveolar type-1 epithelial cells. Based on these profiles, gelatin and PLGA NPs were used to encapsulate plasmid DNA encoding yellow fluorescent protein (YFP) or rhodamine-conjugated erythropoietin (EPO) for inhalational delivery to rats. Following a single inhalation, widespread pulmonary EPO distribution persisted for up to 10days while increasing YFP expression was observed for at least 7days for both NPs. The overall results support both PLGA and gelatin NPs as promising carriers for pulmonary protein/DNA delivery.


International Journal of Pharmaceutics | 2014

Dual-responsive polymer-coated iron oxide nanoparticles for drug delivery and imaging applications.

Varsha Sundaresan; Jyothi U. Menon; Maham Rahimi; Kytai T. Nguyen; Aniket S. Wadajkar

We reported the synthesis and characterization of dual-responsive poly(N-isopropylacrylamide-acrylamide-chitosan) (PAC)-coated magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs) for controlled and targeted drug delivery and imaging applications. The PAC-MNPs size was about 150nm with 70% iron mass content and excellent superparamagnetic properties. PAC-MNPs loaded with anti-cancer drug doxorubicin showed dual-responsive drug release characteristics with the maximum release of drugs at 40°C (∼78%) than at 37°C (∼33%) and at pH of 6 (∼55%) than at pH of 7.4 (∼28%) after 21 days. Further, the conjugation of prostate cancer-specific R11 peptides increased the uptake of PAC-MNPs by prostate cancer PC3 cells. The dose-dependent cellular uptake of the nanoparticles was also significantly increased with the presence of 1.3T magnetic field. The nanoparticles demonstrated cytocompatibility up to concentrations of 500μg/ml when incubated over a period of 24h with human dermal fibroblasts and normal prostate epithelial cells. Finally, pharmacokinetic studies indicated that doxorubicin-loaded PAC-MNPs caused significant prostate cancer cell death at 40°C than at 37°C, thereby confirming the temperature-dependent drug release kinetics and in vitro therapeutic efficacy. Future evaluation of in vivo therapeutic efficacy of targeted image-guided cancer therapy using R11-PAC-MNPs will reinforce a significant impact of the multifunctional PAC-MNPs on the future drug delivery systems.


Journal of Biomedical Materials Research Part A | 2015

Polymeric nanoparticles for targeted radiosensitization of prostate cancer cells

Jyothi U. Menon; Vasu Tumati; Jer Tsong Hsieh; Kytai T. Nguyen; Debabrata Saha

One of the many issues of using radiosensitizers in a clinical setting is timing daily radiation treatments to coincide with peak drug concentration in target tissue. To overcome this deficit, we have synthesized a novel nanoparticle (NP) system consisting of poly (lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) NPs conjugated with prostate cancer cell penetrating peptide-R11 and encapsulated with a potent radio-sensitizer 8-dibenzothiophen-4-yl-2-morpholin-4-yl-chromen-4-one (NU7441) to allow prostate cancer-specific targeting and sustained delivery over 3 weeks. Preliminary characterization studies showed that the R11-conjugated NPs (R11-NU7441 NPs) had an average size of about 274 ± 80 nm and were stable for up to 5 days in deionized water and serum. The NPs were cytocompatible with immortalized prostate cells (PZ-HPV-7). Further, the particles showed a bi-phasic release of encapsulated NU7441 and were taken up by PC3 prostate cancer cells in a dose- and magnetic field-dependent manner while not being taken up in nonprostate cancer cell lines. In addition, R11-NU7441 NPs were effective radiation sensitizers of prostate cancer cell lines in vitro. These results thus demonstrate the potential of R11-conjugated PLGA NPs as novel platforms for targeted radiosensitization of prostate cancer cells.


Nanomedicine: Nanotechnology, Biology and Medicine | 2016

Nanoparticle facilitated inhalational delivery of erythropoietin receptor cDNA protects against hyperoxic lung injury.

Priya Ravikumar; Jyothi U. Menon; Primana Punnakitikashem; Dipendra Gyawali; Osamu Togao; Masaya Takahashi; Jianning Zhang; Jianfeng Ye; Orson W. Moe; Kytai T. Nguyen; Connie C. W. Hsia

UNLABELLED Our goals were to develop and establish nanoparticle (NP)-facilitated inhalational gene delivery, and to validate its biomedical application by testing the hypothesis that targeted upregulation of pulmonary erythropoietin receptor (EpoR) expression protects against lung injury. Poly-lactic-co-glycolic acid (PLGA) NPs encapsulating various tracers were characterized and nebulizated into rat lungs. Widespread NP uptake and distribution within alveolar cells were visualized by magnetic resonance imaging, and fluorescent and electron microscopy. Inhalation of nebulized NPs bearing EpoR cDNA upregulated pulmonary EpoR expression and downstream signal transduction (ERK1/2 and STAT5 phosphorylation) in rats for up to 21 days, and attenuated hyperoxia-induced damage in lung tissue based on apoptosis, oxidative damage of DNA, protein and lipid, tissue edema, and alveolar morphology compared to vector-treated control animals. These results establish the feasibility and therapeutic efficacy of NP-facilitated cDNA delivery to the lung, and demonstrate that targeted pulmonary EpoR upregulation mitigates acute oxidative lung damage. FROM THE CLINICAL EDITOR Acute lung injury often results in significant morbidity and mortality, and current therapeutic modalities have proven to be ineffective. In this article, the authors developed nanocarrier based gene therapy in an attempt to upregulate the expression of pulmonary erythropoietin receptor in an animal model. Inhalation delivery resulted in reduction of lung damage.


IEEE Transactions on Nanotechnology | 2013

Salt-Leaching Synthesis of Porous PLGA Nanoparticles

Azhar Ilyas; Muhymin Islam; Waseem Asghar; Jyothi U. Menon; Aniket S. Wadajkar; Kytai T. Nguyen; Samir M. Iqbal

Poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) nanoparticles are widely used for controlled delivery of bioactive agents in therapeutic applications. These nanoparticles show bioavailability, better encapsulation, controlled release, biocompatibility, and in vivo biodegradability. This paper reports a novel approach to synthesize porous PLGA nanoparticles and their use as controlled release vehicles. Bovine serum albumin (BSA) loaded PLGA nanoparticles (porous and nonporous) were synthesized using water-in-oil-in-water double emulsion method. Specifically, PLGA nanoparticles were prepared using chloroform and polyvinyl alcohol, and freeze drying was employed for the phase separation to obtain the nanoparticles. The porous nanoparticles were prepared through the salt-leaching process where sodium bicarbonate was used as an extractable porogen. In vitro drug release behavior of porous and nonporous nanoparticles was monitored over a period of 30 days. A much more enhanced BSA release was observed in case of porous polymeric nanoparticles when compared to nonporous nanoparticles. The characterization was done using laser scattering, zeta potential analysis, and scanning electron microscopy. The drug loading efficiencies for BSA in porous and nonporous PLGA nanoparticles were 65.50% and 77.59%, respectively. Over a period of 30 days, the cumulative BSA released from PLGA porous and nonporous nanoparticles were measured to be 87.41% and 59.91%, respectively. The synthesis of porous nanoparticles with this novel, rapid, and inexpensive method opens a new horizon of using a wide range of cheap and easily-accessible water-soluble salts that can be extracted through leaching process to introduce porous morphology on the nanoparticle surfaces. The porous nanoparticles can have useful applications in controlled drug delivery systems.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Dual-Drug Containing Core-Shell Nanoparticles for Lung Cancer Therapy

Jyothi U. Menon; Aneetta E. Kuriakose; Roshni Iyer; Elizabeth Hernandez; Leah Gandee; Shanrong Zhang; Masaya Takahashi; Zhang Zhang; Debabrata Saha; Kytai T. Nguyen

Late-stage diagnosis of lung cancer occurs ~95% of the time due to late manifestation of its symptoms, necessitating rigorous treatment following diagnosis. Existing treatment methods are limited by lack of specificity, systemic toxicity, temporary remission, and radio-resistance in lung cancer cells. In this research, we have developed a folate receptor-targeting multifunctional dual drug-loaded nanoparticle (MDNP) containing a poly(N-isopropylacrylamide)-carboxymethyl chitosan shell and poly lactic-co-glycolic acid (PLGA) core for enhancing localized chemo-radiotherapy to effectively treat lung cancers. The formulation provided controlled releases of the encapsulated therapeutic compounds, NU7441 - a potent radiosensitizer, and gemcitabine - an FDA approved chemotherapeutic drug for lung cancer chemo-radiotherapy. The MDNPs showed biphasic NU7441 release and pH-dependent release of gemcitabine. These nanoparticles also demonstrated good stability, excellent hemocompatibility, outstanding in vitro cytocompatibility with alveolar Type I cells, and dose-dependent caveolae-mediated in vitro uptake by lung cancer cells. In addition, they could be encapsulated with superparamagnetic iron oxide (SPIO) nanoparticles and visualized by MRI in vivo. Preliminary in vivo results demonstrated the low toxicity of these particles and their use in chemo-radiotherapy to effectively reduce lung tumors. These results indicate that MDNPs can potentially be used as nano-vehicles to provide simultaneous chemotherapy and radiation sensitization for lung cancer treatment.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2013

Optical tweezers based measurement of PLGA-NP interaction with prostate cancer cells

Thea Blesener; Argha Mondal; Jyothi U. Menon; Kytai T. Nguyen; Samarendra K. Mohanty

In order to quantify the binding capacities of polymeric, biodegradable and biocompatible poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) nanoparticles (NPs), conjugated with either R11 peptides or Folic Acid, the strength by detach from prostate cancer cells (PCCs) was measured via optical tweezers based measurements. Specific nanoparticle drug delivery eliminates the previously used diffuse, full-body application of potent cancer drugs by localizing drug delivery to malignant cells. Precise monitoring of NP position in the trap near the PCC membrane using a fluorescence imaging based method enabled calibration of the trap stiffness and subsequent force measurements. By defining the force with which the many diverse conjugates and coatings of different types of NPs bind the vast array of cancer cell types, chemotherapeutic drugs can be delivered in a specific manner with the optimal particle and corresponding conjugates. Further, and most significantly, the rupture force measurements will reveal whether or not targeted nanoparticles can overcome the force of blood attempting to pull the particle from designated cells. Our preliminary study revealed that the binding between PLGA-NPs and prostate cancer cells is enhanced by coating with folic acid or R11 peptides. These conjugates increase the force required to detach the particle thus allowing particles to overcome drag force of the blood in prostate capillary systems.

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Kytai T. Nguyen

University of Texas at Arlington

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Aniket S. Wadajkar

University of Texas at Arlington

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Debabrata Saha

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Jer Tsong Hsieh

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Masaya Takahashi

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Connie C. W. Hsia

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Dipendra Gyawali

University of Texas at Arlington

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Leah Gandee

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Primana Punnakitikashem

University of Texas at Arlington

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Priya Ravikumar

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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