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Dive into the research topics where Marianne Manchester is active.

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Featured researches published by Marianne Manchester.


Nature Medicine | 2006

Viral nanoparticles as tools for intravital vascular imaging.

John D. Lewis; Giuseppe Destito; Andries Zijlstra; Maria J. Gonzalez; James P. Quigley; Marianne Manchester; Heidi Stuhlmann

A significant impediment to the widespread use of noninvasive in vivo vascular imaging techniques is the current lack of suitable intravital imaging probes. We describe here a new strategy to use viral nanoparticles as a platform for the multivalent display of fluorescent dyes to image tissues deep inside living organisms. The bioavailable cowpea mosaic virus (CPMV) can be fluorescently labeled to high densities with no measurable quenching, resulting in exceptionally bright particles with in vivo dispersion properties that allow high-resolution intravital imaging of vascular endothelium for periods of at least 72 h. We show that CPMV nanoparticles can be used to visualize the vasculature and blood flow in living mouse and chick embryos to a depth of up to 500 μm. Furthermore, we show that the intravital visualization of human fibrosarcoma-mediated tumor angiogenesis using fluorescent CPMV provides a means to identify arterial and venous vessels and to monitor the neovascularization of the tumor microenvironment.


Bioconjugate Chemistry | 2010

Labeling Live Cells by Copper-Catalyzed Alkyne—Azide Click Chemistry

Vu Hong; Nicole F. Steinmetz; Marianne Manchester; M. G. Finn

The copper-catalyzed azide-alkyne cycloaddition (CuAAC) reaction, optimized for biological molecules in aqueous buffers, has been shown to rapidly label mammalian cells in culture with no loss in cell viability. Metabolic uptake and display of the azide derivative of N-acetylmannosamine developed by Bertozzi, followed by CuAAC ligation using sodium ascorbate and the ligand tris(hydroxypropyltriazolyl)methylamine (THPTA), gave rise to abundant covalent attachment of dye-alkyne reactants. THPTA serves both to accelerate the CuAAC reaction and to protect the cells from damage by oxidative agents produced by the Cu-catalyzed reduction of oxygen by ascorbate, which is required to maintain the metal in the active +1 oxidation state. This procedure extends the application of this fastest of azide-based bioorthogonal reactions to the exterior of living cells.


Biomacromolecules | 2003

Hybrid Virus−Polymer Materials. 1. Synthesis and Properties of PEG-Decorated Cowpea Mosaic Virus

Krishnaswami S. Raja; Qian Wang; Maria J. Gonzalez; Marianne Manchester; John E. Johnson; M. G. Finn

Cowpea mosaic virus was derivatized with poly(ethylene glycol) to give well-controlled loadings of polymer on the outer surface of the coat protein assembly. The resulting conjugates displayed altered densities and immunogenicities, consistent with the known chemical and biological properties of PEG. These studies make CPMV potentially useful as a tailored vehicle for drug delivery.


Journal of Virology | 2000

Evasion of Host Defenses by Measles Virus: Wild-Type Measles Virus Infection Interferes with Induction of Alpha/Beta Interferon Production

Denise Naniche; Annie Yeh; Danelle S. Eto; Marianne Manchester; Robert M. Friedman; Michael B. A. Oldstone

ABSTRACT Measles is a highly contagious disease currently responsible for over one million childhood deaths, particularly in the developing world. Since alpha/beta interferons (IFNs) are pivotal players both in nonspecific antiviral immunity and in specific cellular responses, their induction or suppression by measles virus (MV) could influence the outcome of a viral infection. In this study we compare the IFN induction and sensitivity of laboratory-passaged attenuated MV strains Edmonston and Moraten with those of recent wild-type viruses isolated and passaged solely on human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) or on the B958 marmoset B-cell line. We report that two PBMC-grown wild-type measles isolates and two B958-grown strains of MV induce 10- to 80-fold-lower production of IFN by phytohemagglutinin-stimulated peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) compared to Edmonston and Moraten strains of measles. Preinfection of PBL with these non-IFN-inducing MV isolates prevents Edmonston-induced but not double-stranded-RNA-induced IFN production. This suggests that the wild-type viruses can actively inhibit Edmonston-induced IFN synthesis and that this is not occurring by double-stranded RNA. Furthermore, the wild-type MV is more sensitive than Edmonston MV to the effect of IFN. MV is thus able to suppress the synthesis of the earliest mediator of antiviral immunity, IFN-α/β. This could have important implications in the virulence and spread of MV.


Journal of Virology | 2000

Clinical Isolates of Measles Virus Use CD46 as a Cellular Receptor

Marianne Manchester; Danelle S. Eto; Alexandra Valsamakis; Paloma B. Liton; Rafael Fernández-Muñoz; Paul A. Rota; William J. Bellini; Donald N. Forthal; Michael B. A. Oldstone

ABSTRACT Laboratory strains of measles viruses (MV), such as Edmonston and Halle, use the complement regulatory protein CD46 as a cell surface receptor. The receptor usage of clinical isolates of MV, however, remains unclear. Receptor usage by primary patient isolates of MV was compared to isolates that had been passaged on a variety of tissue culture cell lines. All of the isolates could infect cells in a CD46-dependent manner, but their tropism was restricted according to cell type (e.g., lymphocytes versus fibroblasts). The results indicate that patient isolates that have not been adapted to tissue culture cell lines use CD46 as a receptor. In addition, passaging primary MV patient isolates in B95-8 cells selected variants that had alternate receptor usage compared to the original isolate. Thus, changes in receptor usage by MV are dependent upon the cell type used for isolation. Furthermore, our results confirm the relevance of the CD46 receptor to natural measles infection.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2012

Metabolomics implicates altered sphingolipids in chronic pain of neuropathic origin

Gary J. Patti; Oscar Yanes; Leah P. Shriver; Jean-Phillipe Courade; Ralf Tautenhahn; Marianne Manchester; Gary Siuzdak

Neuropathic pain is a debilitating condition for which the development of effective treatments has been limited by an incomplete understanding of its chemical basis. We show by using untargeted metabolomics that sphingomyelin-ceramide metabolism is altered in the dorsal horn of rats with neuropathic pain and that the upregulated, endogenous metabolite N,N-dimethylsphingosine induces mechanical hypersensitivity in vivo. These results demonstrate the utility of metabolomics to implicate unexplored biochemical pathways in disease.


Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews-nanomedicine and Nanobiotechnology | 2011

Viral nanoparticles and virus-like particles: platforms for contemporary vaccine design.

Emily M. Plummer; Marianne Manchester

Abstract Current vaccines that provide protection against infectious diseases have primarily relied on attenuated or inactivated pathogens. Virus‐like particles (VLPs), comprised of capsid proteins that can initiate an immune response but do not include the genetic material required for replication, promote immunogenicity and have been developed and approved as vaccines in some cases. In addition, many of these VLPs can be used as molecular platforms for genetic fusion or chemical attachment of heterologous antigenic epitopes. This approach has been shown to provide protective immunity against the foreign epitopes in many cases. A variety of VLPs and virus‐based nanoparticles are being developed for use as vaccines and epitope platforms. These particles have the potential to increase efficacy of current vaccines as well as treat diseases for which no effective vaccines are available. WIREs Nanomed Nanobiotechnol 2011 3 174–196 DOI: 10.1002/wnan.119 This article is categorized under: 1 Therapeutic Approaches and Drug Discovery > Nanomedicine for Infectious Disease


Nano Letters | 2010

Hydrazone ligation strategy to assemble multifunctional viral nanoparticles for cell imaging and tumor targeting

Florence M. Brunel; John D. Lewis; Giuseppe Destito; Nicole F. Steinmetz; Marianne Manchester; Heidi Stuhlmann; Philip E. Dawson

Multivalent nanoparticle platforms are attractive for biomedical applications because of their improved target specificity, sensitivity, and solubility. However, their controlled assembly remains a considerable challenge. An efficient hydrazone ligation chemistry was applied to the assembly of Cowpea mosaic virus (CPMV) nanoparticles with individually tunable levels of a VEGFR-1 ligand and a fluorescent PEGylated peptide. The nanoparticles recognized VEGFR-1 on endothelial cell lines and VEGFR1-expressing tumor xenografts in mice, validating targeted CPMV as a nanoparticle platform in vivo.


PLOS Pathogens | 2009

Endothelial Targeting of Cowpea Mosaic Virus (CPMV) via Surface Vimentin

Kristopher J. Koudelka; Giuseppe Destito; Emily M. Plummer; Sunia A. Trauger; Gary Siuzdak; Marianne Manchester

Cowpea mosaic virus (CPMV) is a plant comovirus in the picornavirus superfamily, and is used for a wide variety of biomedical and material science applications. Although its replication is restricted to plants, CPMV binds to and enters mammalian cells, including endothelial cells and particularly tumor neovascular endothelium in vivo. This natural capacity has lead to the use of CPMV as a sensor for intravital imaging of vascular development. Binding of CPMV to endothelial cells occurs via interaction with a 54 kD cell-surface protein, but this protein has not previously been identified. Here we identify the CPMV binding protein as a cell-surface form of the intermediate filament vimentin. The CPMV-vimentin interaction was established using proteomic screens and confirmed by direct interaction of CPMV with purified vimentin, as well as inhibition in a vimentin-knockout cell line. Vimentin and CPMV were also co-localized in vascular endothelium of mouse and rat in vivo. Together these studies indicate that surface vimentin mediates binding and may lead to internalization of CPMV in vivo, establishing surface vimentin as an important vascular endothelial ligand for nanoparticle targeting to tumors. These results also establish vimentin as a ligand for picornaviruses in both the plant and animal kingdoms of life. Since bacterial pathogens and several other classes of viruses also bind to surface vimentin, these studies suggest a common role for surface vimentin in pathogen transmission.


Biomacromolecules | 2009

PEGylated viral nanoparticles for biomedicine: the impact of PEG chain length on VNP cell interactions in vitro and ex vivo.

Nicole F. Steinmetz; Marianne Manchester

PEGylation is an effective strategy for reducing biospecific interactions for pharmaceuticals. The plant virus Cowpea mosaic virus (CPMV) has been studied for potential nanobiomedical applications by virtue of its natural interactions with mammalian endothelial cells. To investigate the degree of PEGylation required to retarget CPMV-based formulations to other destinations, two CPMV-PEG formulations, CPMV-PEG1000 (P1) and CPMV-PEG2000 (P2) were tested. Modeling suggested that the PEG chains were displayed as flattened mushrooms on the particle with an estimated surface grafting area of 0.53% for P1 and 0.83% for P2. Only the P2 formulation effectively shielded the particles from interacting with cells or tissues, suggesting that either key interacting regions on the particle surface were blocked or that a sufficient hydration shell had been generated to inhibit cellular interactions. The large CPMV surface area available after PEGylation allows further attachment of imaging and therapeutic molecules to the particle to generate multifunctionality.

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Giuseppe Destito

Scripps Research Institute

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Nicole F. Steinmetz

Case Western Reserve University

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M. G. Finn

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Diane Thomas

Scripps Research Institute

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Pratik Singh

Scripps Research Institute

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Chris S. Rae

Scripps Research Institute

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Anette Schneemann

Scripps Research Institute

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