Michael R. Mcdevitt
Kettering University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Michael R. Mcdevitt.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2011
Prabodhika R. Mallikaratchy; Alessandro Ruggiero; Jeffrey R. Gardner; Vitaly Kuryavyi; William F. Maguire; Mark L. Heaney; Michael R. Mcdevitt; Dinshaw J. Patel; David A. Scheinberg
Long-term survival still eludes most patients with leukemia and non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. No approved therapies target the hallmark of the B cell, its mIgM, also known as the B-cell receptor (BCR). Aptamers are small oligonucleotides that can specifically bind to a wide range of target molecules and offer some advantages over antibodies as therapeutic agents. Here, we report the rational engineering of aptamer TD05 into multimeric forms reactive with the BCR that may be useful in biomedical applications. Systematic truncation of TD05 coupled with modification with locked nucleic acids (LNA) increased conformational stability and nuclease resistance. Trimeric and tetrameric versions with optimized polyethyleneglycol (PEG) linker lengths exhibited high avidity at physiological temperatures both in vitro and in vivo. Competition and protease studies showed that the multimeric, optimized aptamer bound to membrane-associated human mIgM, but not with soluble IgM in plasma, allowing the possibility of targeting leukemias and lymphomas in vivo. The B-cell specificity of the multivalent aptamer was confirmed on lymphoma cell lines and fresh clinical leukemia samples. The chemically engineered aptamers, with significantly improved kinetic and biochemical features, unique specificity and desirable pharmacological properties, may be useful in biomedical applications.
Nucleic Acid Therapeutics | 2013
Prabodhika R. Mallikaratchy; Jeffery Gardner; Lars Ulrik R. Nordstrøm; Nicholas Veomett; Michael R. Mcdevitt; Mark L. Heaney; David A. Scheinberg
Monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) have naturally evolved as suitable, high affinity and specificity targeting molecules. However, the large size of full-length mAbs yields poor pharmacokinetic properties. A solution to this issue is the use of a multistep administration approach, in which the slower clearing mAb is administered first and allowed to reach the target site selectively, followed by administration of a rapidly clearing small molecule carrier of the cytotoxic or imaging ligand, which bears a cognate receptor for the mAb. Here, we introduce a novel pretargetable RNA based system comprised of locked nucleic acids (LNA) and 2O-Methyloligoribonucleotides (2OMe-RNA). The duplex shows fast hybridization, high melting temperatures, excellent affinity, and high nuclease stability in plasma. Using a prototype model system with rituximab conjugated to 2OMe-RNA (oligo), we demonstrate that LNA-based complementary strand (c-oligo) effectively hybridizes with rituximab-oligo, which is slowly circulating in vivo, despite the high clearance rates of c-oligo.
Archive | 2001
David A. Scheinberg; Dangshe Ma; Michael R. Mcdevitt; Paul Borchardt
Archive | 2006
David A. Scheinberg; Michael R. Mcdevitt; Debjit Chattopadhyay; Mark Reid Philips
Archive | 1999
David A. Scheinberg; Ronald D. Finn; Dangshe Ma; Michael R. Mcdevitt
Archive | 2012
David A. Scheinberg; Michael R. Mcdevitt; Carlos H. Villa; J. Justin Mulvey
Archive | 2003
George Sgouros; James Louis Thomas; David A. Scheinberg; Michael R. Mcdevitt; Stavroula Sofou
Archive | 1999
David A. Scheinberg; Dangshe Ma; Michael R. Mcdevitt; George Sgouros
Archive | 2003
David A. Scheinberg; Michael R. Mcdevitt; Rui-Rong Yuan
Archive | 2015
David A. Scheinberg; Peter Smith-Jones; Michael R. Mcdevitt; William F. Maguire