Matthew S. Palombo
Rutgers University
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Featured researches published by Matthew S. Palombo.
Current Medicinal Chemistry | 2008
Yashveer Singh; Matthew S. Palombo; Patrick J. Sinko
Anticancer drugs are often nonselective antiproliferative agents (cytotoxins) that preferentially kill dividing cells by attacking their DNA at some level. The lack of selectivity results in significant toxicity to noncancerous proliferating cells. These toxicities along with drug resistance exhibited by the solid tumors are major therapy limiting factors that result into poor prognosis for patients. Prodrug and conjugate design involves the synthesis of inactive drug derivatives that are converted to an active form inside the body and preferably at the site of action. Classical prodrug and conjugate design have focused on the development of prodrugs that can overcome physicochemical (e.g., solubility, chemical instability) or biopharmaceutical problems (e.g., bioavailability, toxicity) associated with common anticancer drugs. The recent targeted prodrug and conjugate design, on the other hand, hinge on the selective delivery of anticancer agents to tumor tissues thereby avoiding their cytotoxic effects on noncancerous cells. Targeting strategies have attempted to take advantage of low extracellular pH, elevated enzymes in tumor tissues, the hypoxic environment inside the tumor core, and tumor-specific antigens expressed on tumor cell surfaces. The present review highlights recent trends in prodrug and conjugate rationale and design for cancer treatment. The various approaches that are currently being explored are critically analyzed and a comparative account of the advantages and disadvantages associated with each approach is presented.
Annual Review of Pharmacology and Toxicology | 2014
Matthew S. Palombo; Manjeet Deshmukh; Daniel Myers; Jieming Gao; Zoltan Szekely; Patrick J. Sinko
Novel engineered nanomaterials (ENMs) are being developed to enhance therapy. The physicochemical properties of ENMs can be manipulated to control/direct biodistribution and target delivery, but these alterations also have implications for toxicity. It is well known that size plays a significant role in determining ENM effects since simply nanosizing a safe bulk material can render it toxic. However, charge, shape, rigidity, and surface modifications also have a significant influence on the biodistribution and toxicity of nanoscale drug delivery systems (NDDSs). In this review, NDDSs are considered in terms of platform technologies, materials, and physical properties that impart their pharmaceutical and toxicological effects. Moving forward, the development of safe and effective nanomedicines requires standardized protocols for determining the physical characteristics of ENMs as well as assessing their potential long-term toxicity. When such protocols are established, the remarkable promise of nanomedicine to improve the diagnosis and treatment of human disease can be fulfilled.
Journal of Drug Delivery Science and Technology | 2009
Matthew S. Palombo; Yashveer Singh; Patrick J. Sinko
Despite the wide variety of highly potent anti-HIV drugs that have been developed and made available in clinical practice over the years, eradication of HIV infection has not been achieved. Currently, HIV infection and AIDS are thought to be chronically treatable. HIV attacks host immune cells namely macrophages and CD4(+)T-cells and sequesters itself into sanctuary and reservoir sites such as the lymphoid tissues, testes, and brain. Initial drug delivery efforts with prodrugs and drug conjugates focused on improving the physicochemical (i.e. solubility), biopharmaceutic (i.e. absorption, metabolism), and pharmacokinetic (i.e. blood concentrations) properties of the parent drugs. Eradicating HIV, however, will require advanced drug delivery approaches in order to access and maintain effective drug concentrations for prolonged periods of time in sanctuary sites. The current review discusses prodrug/conjugate efforts, clinical successes and describes drug delivery challenges and approaches for eradicating HIV infection.
Biomaterials | 2009
Simi Gunaseelan; Shahriar Pooyan; Peiming Chen; Mahta Samizadeh; Matthew S. Palombo; Stanley Stein; Xiaoping Zhang; Patrick J. Sinko
In the current study, the design, synthetic feasibility and biochemical characterization of biodegradable peptidic PEG-based nanocarriers are described. The components were selected to influence the body elimination pathway upon nanocarrier biodegradation. Two prototypical nanocarriers were prepared using non-PEGylated and PEGylated peptidic cores [CH(3)CO-(Lys-betaAla-betaAla)(X)-Cys-CONH(2) (X=2, 4)]. A homodimeric nanocarrier with 4 copies of fluorescein-PEG5kDa was synthesized by linking two PEGylated peptidic cores (X=2) using a disulfide bond. A dual labeled heterodimeric nanocarrier with 2 copies of fluorescein-PEG5kDa and 4 copies of Texas Red was also synthesized. Optimum conditions for linking imaging agents, PEG, or a peptidic core to a peptidic core were determined. Significantly higher yields (69% versus 30%) of the PEGylated peptidic core were obtained by using 2 copies of beta-alanine as a spacer along with increasing DMSO concentrations, which resulted in reduced steric hindrance. Stoichiometric addition of the components was also demonstrated and found to be important for reducing polydispersity. Nanocarrier biodegradation was evaluated in simulated intracellular and extracellular/blood environments using 3 mm and 10 microm glutathione in buffer, respectively. The nanocarrier was 9-fold more stable in the extracellular environment. The results suggest selective intracellular degradation of the nanocarrier into components with known body elimination pathways.
European Journal of Pharmaceutics and Biopharmaceutics | 2018
In Heon Lee; Matthew S. Palombo; Xiaoping Zhang; Zoltan Szekely; Patrick J. Sinko
ABSTRACT The feasibility of utilizing the cell surface chemokine receptor CXCR4 for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) entry inhibition and as an intracellular portal for targeted drug delivery was evaluated. Novel DV3 ligands (1DV3, 2DV3, and 4DV3) were designed, synthesized and conjugated to various probes (fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) or biotin) and cargos with sizes ranging from 10 to 50nm (polyethylene glycol (PEG), streptavidin, and a polymeric nanoparticle). 4DV3 conjugated probes inhibited HIV‐1 entry into the CXCR4‐expressing reporter cell line TZM‐bl (IC50 at 553nM) whereas 1DV3 and 2DV3 did not. 4DV3 also inhibited binding of anti‐CXCR4 antibody 44,708 to TZM‐bl cells with nanomolar potency, while the small‐molecule CXCR4 antagonist AMD3100 did not. Molecular modeling suggested simultaneous binding of a single 4DV3 molecule to four CXCR4 molecules. Differences in CXCR4‐binding sites could explain the discrete inhibitory effects observed for 4DV3, the 44,708 antibody and AMD3100. In the Sup‐T1 cell chemotaxis assay, the 4DV3 ligand functioned as a CXCR4 allosteric enhancer. In addition, 4DV3 ligand‐conjugated cargos with sizes ranging from 10 to 50nm were taken up into CXCR4‐expressing Sup‐T1 and TZM‐bl cells, demonstrating that CXCR4 could serve as a drug delivery portal for nanocarriers. The uptake of 4DV3 functionalized nanocarriers combined with the allosteric interaction with CXCR4 suggests enhanced endocytosis occurs when 4DV3 is the targeting ligand. The current results indicate that 4DV3 might serve as a prototype for a new type of dual function ligand, one that acts as a HIV‐1 entry inhibitor and a CXCR4 drug delivery targeting ligand.
Protein and Peptide Letters | 2013
Donglin Liu; Xiaoping Zhang; Jieming Gao; Matthew S. Palombo; Dayuan Gao; Peiming Chen; Patrick J. Sinko
The current study clarifies the role of the Glycosaminoglycan (GAG)-binding domain of insulin-like growth factor binding protein-3 (IGFBP-3) in cell penetration. The cell penetration function of IGFBP-3 has been mapped to an 18-residue GAG-binding domain in the C-terminal region that mobilizes cellular uptake and nuclear localization of unrelated proteins. Uptake of KW-22, a 22-residue peptide that encompasses the 18-residue GAG-binding domain, and another IGFBP-3 peptide carrying a streptavidin protein cargo was investigated in Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells defective at several steps of biosynthesis of cell surface GAGs. The severity of GAG truncation was highly correlated to the impairment of uptake ranging from complete abrogation to only a partial reduction, suggesting that GAG-binding is required for uptake. The 18-residue GAG-binding domain consists of an 8-residue KK-8 basic sequence devoid of Arg and an adjacent 10-residue QR-10 sequence rich in Arg. Peptide mapping of uptake and GAG-binding activities within the KW-22 peptide showed that the 8-residue KK-8 basic peptide retained 80% of GAG-binding activity with no uptake activity while the 10-residue QR-10 peptide retained 53% of uptake activity and 18% of GAG-binding activity. This suggests that KK-8 carries out the majority of GAG-binding function while QR-10 carries out the majority of the cell entry function. To our knowledge, this is the first report of physical separation of the uptake and GAG-binding functions within a short cell penetrating peptide and may shed light on the general mechanism of uptake of Arg-rich CPPs and guide new design of Arg-rich CPP-assisted drug/gene delivery systems.
Archive | 2011
Patrick J. Sinko; Jieming Gao; Manjeet Deshmukh; Xiaoping Zhang; Matthew S. Palombo; Sherif Ibrahim
Drug Delivery and Translational Research | 2016
Mahta Samizadeh; Xiaoping Zhang; Simi Gunaseelan; Antoinette G. Nelson; Matthew S. Palombo; Daniel Myers; Yashveer Singh; Usha Ganapathi; Zoltan Szekely; Patrick J. Sinko
Archive | 2011
Patrick J. Sinko; Jieming Gao; Yashveer Singh; Xiaoping Zhang; Matthew S. Palombo; Stanley Stein
Archive | 2010
Patrick J. Sinko; Stanley Stein; Simi Gunaseelan; Shahriar Pooyan; Matthew S. Palombo; Xiaoping Zhang