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Dive into the research topics where Michael Zakrewsky is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael Zakrewsky.


ACS Nano | 2013

Delivering Nanoparticles to Lungs while Avoiding Liver and Spleen through Adsorption on Red Blood Cells

Aaron C. Anselmo; Vivek Gupta; Blaine J. Zern; Daniel Pan; Michael Zakrewsky; Vladimir R. Muzykantov; Samir Mitragotri

Nanoparticulate drug delivery systems are one of the most widely investigated approaches for developing novel therapies for a variety of diseases. However, rapid clearance and poor targeting limit their clinical utility. Here, we describe an approach to harness the flexibility, circulation, and vascular mobility of red blood cells (RBCs) to simultaneously overcome these limitations (cellular hitchhiking). A noncovalent attachment of nanoparticles to RBCs simultaneously increases their level in blood over a 24 h period and allows transient accumulation in the lungs, while reducing their uptake by liver and spleen. RBC-adsorbed nanoparticles exhibited ∼3-fold increase in blood persistence and ∼7-fold higher accumulation in lungs. RBC-adsorbed nanoparticles improved lung/liver and lung/spleen nanoparticle accumulation by over 15-fold and 10-fold, respectively. Accumulation in lungs is attributed to mechanical transfer of particles from the RBC surface to lung endothelium. Independent tracing of both nanoparticles and RBCs in vivo confirmed that RBCs themselves do not accumulate in lungs. Attachment of anti-ICAM-1 antibody to the exposed surface of NPs that were attached to RBCs led to further increase in lung targeting and retention over 24 h. Cellular hitchhiking onto RBCs provides a new platform for improving the blood pharmacokinetics and vascular delivery of nanoparticles while simultaneously avoiding uptake by liver and spleen, thus opening the door for new applications.


Journal of Controlled Release | 2015

Shape and size-dependent immune response to antigen-carrying nanoparticles.

Sunny Kumar; Aaron C. Anselmo; Amrita Banerjee; Michael Zakrewsky; Samir Mitragotri

The immune system has evolved to recognize and respond to a wide variety of pathogens and produce distinct immune responses against diverse pathogenic structures. Despite remarkable advances, the general mechanisms by which the immune system differentiates the structure of antigen presenting particulates have yet to be elucidated. Using particles of various sizes and shapes, we assessed the role of morphological features of particles in antigen presentation and subsequent processing by the immune cells. Ovalbumin was used as a model antigen. Spherical polystyrene particles of 193 nm and 521 nm diameters were successfully stretched to form rod-shaped particles of 376 nm and 1530 nm in length, respectively. Ovalbumin conjugation to these different particle types was optimized to achieve ~50 μg of ovalbumin conjugation per mg of particle. In vivo immunization study results revealed that small spherical particles (193 nm in diameter) produced a Th1-biased response whereas rod-shaped particles (1530 nm in length) produced a Th2-biased response against ovalbumin. Among different particle types, smaller spherical (193 nm) particles generated stronger Th1 and Th2 immune responses compared to the other particle types. In vitro studies with dendritic cells indicated that spherical (193 nm) and rod (1530 nm) shaped particles were internalized by dendritic cells and delivered ovalbumin. These results provide evidence for size- and shape-dependent modulation of immune responses and this knowledge can be leveraged to rationally design and develop next generation vaccines against a wide range of pathogens.


Journal of Controlled Release | 2015

Peptides as skin penetration enhancers: mechanisms of action.

Sunny Kumar; Michael Zakrewsky; Ming Chen; Stefano Menegatti; John A. Muraski; Samir Mitragotri

Skin penetrating peptides (SPPs) have garnered wide attention in recent years and emerged as a simple and effective noninvasive strategy for macromolecule delivery into the skin. Although SPPs have demonstrated their potential in enhancing skin delivery, they are still evolving as a new class of skin penetration enhancers. Detailed studies elucidating their mechanisms of action are still lacking. Using five SPPs (SPACE peptide, TD-1, polyarginine, a dermis-localizing peptide and a skin penetrating linear peptide) and a model hydrophobic macromolecule (Cyclosporine A, CsA), herein we provide a mechanistic understanding of SPPs. To evaluate the mechanism and safety of SPPs, their effects on skin lipids, proteins and keratinocyte cells were evaluated. Three SPPs (SPACE, Polyarginine and TD-1) significantly enhanced CsA penetration into the skin. SPPs did not alter the skin lipid barrier as measured by skin resistance, transepidermal water loss (TEWL) and Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopic analysis. In contrast, SPPs interacted with skin proteins and induced changes in skin protein secondary structures (α-helices, β-sheet, random coils and turns), as evaluated by FTIR analysis and confirmed by in-silico docking. SPPs enhanced CsA skin penetration, via a transcellular pathway, enhancing its partitioning into keratin-rich corneocytes through concurrent binding of SPP with keratin and CsA. Interaction between SPP and keratin best correlated with measured CsA skin transport. Many SPPs appeared to be safe as shown by negligible effect on skin integrity, nominal skin irritation potential and cytotoxicity. Among the peptides tested, SPACE peptide was found to be least toxic to keratinocytes, and among the most effective at delivering CsA into the skin.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Ionic liquids as a class of materials for transdermal delivery and pathogen neutralization

Michael Zakrewsky; Katherine S. Lovejoy; Theresa L. Kern; Tarryn E. Miller; Vivian Le; Amber Nagy; Andrew M. Goumas; Rashi Iyer; Rico E. Del Sesto; Andrew T. Koppisch; David T. Fox; Samir Mitragotri

Significance Effective treatment of skin-based bacterial biofilms has been identified as a serious and unmet medical need. Biofilm-protected bacteria account for ∼80% of bacterial infections in humans and are 50–1,000 times more resistant to antibiotics than their planktonic counterparts. Biofilms in skin are further protected by the outermost layer of skin, the stratum corneum, which serves as a natural barrier to most therapeutics. Here, we present compelling evidence for exploiting ionic liquids (ILs) as an arsenal of materials both in a concerted effort to combat antibiotic-resistant bacterial biofilms in skin as well as for topical transdermal drug delivery. Our comprehensive strategy resulted in the identification of ILs that are effective at disrupting biofilms, neutralizing pathogens, and enhancing delivery of antibiotic into skin. Moreover, ILs did not show skin irritation that is typically associated with topical formulations. Biofilm-protected microbial infections in skin are a serious health risk that remains to be adequately addressed. The lack of progress in developing effective treatment strategies is largely due to the transport barriers posed by the stratum corneum of the skin and the biofilm. In this work, we report on the use of Ionic Liquids (ILs) for biofilm disruption and enhanced antibiotic delivery across skin layers. We outline the syntheses of ILs, analysis of relevant physicochemical properties, and subsequent neutralization effects on two biofilm-forming pathogens: Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Salmonella enterica. Further, the ILs were also examined for cytotoxicity, skin irritation, delivery of antibiotics through the skin, and treatment of biofilms in a wound model. Of the materials examined, choline-geranate emerged as a multipurpose IL with excellent antimicrobial activity, minimal toxicity to epithelial cells as well as skin, and effective permeation enhancement for drug delivery. Specifically, choline-geranate was comparable with, or more effective than, bleach treatment against established biofilms of S. enterica and P. aeruginosa, respectively. In addition, choline-geranate increased delivery of cefadroxil, an antibiotic, by >16-fold into the deep tissue layers of the skin without inducing skin irritation. The in vivo efficacy of choline-geranate was validated using a biofilm-infected wound model (>95% bacterial death after 2-h treatment). This work establishes the use of ILs for simultaneous enhancement of topical drug delivery and antibiotic activity.


Journal of Controlled Release | 2014

Topical delivery of siRNA into skin using SPACE-peptide carriers.

Ming Chen; Michael Zakrewsky; Vivek Gupta; Aaron C. Anselmo; Deborah H. Slee; John A. Muraski; Samir Mitragotri

Short-interfering RNAs (siRNAs) offer a potential tool for the treatment of skin disorders. However, applications of siRNA for dermatological conditions are limited by their poor permeation across the stratum corneum of the skin and low penetration into the skins viable cells. In this study, we report the use of SPACE-peptide in combination with a DOTAP-based ethosomal carrier system to enhance skin delivery of siRNA. A DOTAP-based SPACE Ethosomal System significantly enhanced siRNA penetration into porcine skin in vitro by 6.3±1.7-fold (p<0.01) with an approximately 10-fold (p<0.01) increase in epidermis accumulation of siRNA compared to that from an aqueous solution. Penetration of siRNA was also enhanced at the cellular level. Internalization of SPACE-peptide occurred in a concentration dependent manner marked by a shift in intracellular distribution from punctate spots to diffused cytoplasmic staining at a peptide concentration of 10mg/mL. In vitro delivery of GAPDH siRNA by SPACE peptide led to 83.3±3.0% knockdown relative to the control. In vivo experiments performed using female BALB/C mice also confirmed the efficacy of DOTAP-SES in delivering GAPDH-siRNA into skin. Topical application of DOTAP-SES on mice skin resulted in 63.2%±7.7% of GAPDH knockdown, which was significantly higher than that from GAPDH-siRNA PBS (p<0.05). DOTAP-SES formulation reported here may open new opportunities for cutaneous siRNA delivery.


PLOS ONE | 2016

The Effect of Polymeric Nanoparticles on Biocompatibility of Carrier Red Blood Cells.

Daniel Pan; Omayra Vargas-Morales; Blaine J. Zern; Aaron C. Anselmo; Vivek Gupta; Michael Zakrewsky; Samir Mitragotri; Vladimir R. Muzykantov

Red blood cells (RBCs) can be used for vascular delivery of encapsulated or surface-bound drugs and carriers. Coupling to RBC prolongs circulation of nanoparticles (NP, 200 nm spheres, a conventional model of polymeric drug delivery carrier) enabling their transfer to the pulmonary vasculature without provoking overt RBC elimination. However, little is known about more subtle and potentially harmful effects of drugs and drug carriers on RBCs. Here we devised high-throughput in vitro assays to determine the sensitivity of loaded RBCs to osmotic stress and other damaging insults that they may encounter in vivo (e.g. mechanical, oxidative and complement insults). Sensitivity of these tests is inversely proportional to RBC concentration in suspension and our results suggest that mouse RBCs are more sensitive to damaging factors than human RBCs. Loading RBCs by NP at 1:50 ratio did not affect RBCs, while 10–50 fold higher NP load accentuated RBC damage by mechanical, osmotic and oxidative stress. This extensive loading of RBC by NP also leads to RBCs agglutination in buffer; however, addition of albumin diminished this effect. These results provide a template for analyses of the effects of diverse cargoes loaded on carrier RBCs and indicate that: i) RBCs can tolerate carriage of NP at doses providing loading of millions of nanoparticles per microliter of blood; ii) tests using protein-free buffers and mouse RBCs may overestimate adversity that may be encountered in humans.


Journal of Controlled Release | 2016

DAFODIL: A novel liposome-encapsulated synergistic combination of doxorubicin and 5FU for low dose chemotherapy

Kathryn M. Camacho; Stefano Menegatti; Douglas R. Vogus; Anusha Pusuluri; Zoë Fuchs; Maria Jarvis; Michael Zakrewsky; Michael A. Evans; Renwei Chen; Samir Mitragotri

PEGylated liposomes have transformed chemotherapeutic use of doxorubicin by reducing its cardiotoxicity; however, it remains unclear whether liposomal doxorubicin is therapeutically superior to free doxorubicin. Here, we demonstrate a novel PEGylated liposome system, named DAFODIL (Doxorubicin And 5-Flurouracil Optimally Delivered In a Liposome) that inarguably offers superior therapeutic efficacies compared to free drug administrations. Delivery of synergistic ratios of this drug pair led to greater than 90% reduction in tumor growth of murine 4T1 mammary carcinoma in vivo. By exploiting synergistic ratios, the effect was achieved at remarkably low doses, far below the maximum tolerable drug doses. Our approach re-invents the use of liposomes for multi-drug delivery by providing a chemotherapy vehicle which can both reduce toxicity and improve therapeutic efficacy. This methodology is made feasible by the extension of the ammonium-sulfate gradient encapsulation method to nucleobase analogues, a liposomal entrapment method once conceived useful only for anthracyclines. Therefore, our strategy can be utilized to efficiently evaluate various chemotherapy combinations in an effort to translate more effective combinations into the clinic.


Advanced Healthcare Materials | 2016

De Novo Design of Skin-Penetrating Peptides for Enhanced Transdermal Delivery of Peptide Drugs

Stefano Menegatti; Michael Zakrewsky; Sunny Kumar; Joshua Sanchez De Oliveira; John A. Muraski; Samir Mitragotri

Skin-penetrating peptides (SPPs) are attracting increasing attention as a non-invasive strategy for transdermal delivery of therapeutics. The identification of SPP sequences, however, currently performed by experimental screening of peptide libraries, is very laborious. Recent studies have shown that, to be effective enhancers, SPPs must possess affinity for both skin keratin and the drug of interest. We therefore developed a computational process for generating and screening virtual libraries of disulfide-cyclic peptides against keratin and cyclosporine A (CsA) to identify SPPs capable of enhancing transdermal CsA delivery. The selected sequences were experimentally tested and found to bind both CsA and keratin, as determined by mass spectrometry and affinity chromatography, and enhance transdermal permeation of CsA. Four heptameric sequences that emerged as leading candidates (ACSATLQHSCG, ACSLTVNWNCG, ACTSTGRNACG, and ACSASTNHNCG) were tested and yielded CsA permeation on par with previously identified SPP SPACE (TM) . An octameric peptide (ACNAHQARSTCG) yielded significantly higher delivery of CsA compared to heptameric SPPs. The safety profile of the selected sequences was also validated by incubation with skin keratinocytes. This method thus represents an effective procedure for the de novo design of skin-penetrating peptides for the delivery of desired therapeutic or cosmetic agents.


Journal of Controlled Release | 2015

Nucleic acid delivery into skin for the treatment of skin disease: Proofs-of-concept, potential impact, and remaining challenges

Michael Zakrewsky; Sunny Kumar; Samir Mitragotri

Nucleic acids (NAs) hold significant potential for the treatment of several diseases. Topical delivery of NAs for the treatment of skin diseases is especially advantageous since it bypasses the challenges associated with systemic administration which suffers from enzymatic degradation, systemic toxicity and lack of targeting to skin. However, the skins protective barrier function limits the delivery of NAs into skin after topical application. Here, we highlight strategies for enhancing delivery of NAs into skin, and provide evidence that translation of topical NA therapies could have a transformative impact on the treatment of skin diseases.


Advanced Healthcare Materials | 2016

Choline and Geranate Deep Eutectic Solvent as a Broad-Spectrum Antiseptic Agent for Preventive and Therapeutic Applications

Michael Zakrewsky; Amrita Banerjee; Sanjana Apte; Theresa L. Kern; Mattie R. Jones; Rico E. Del Sesto; Andrew T. Koppisch; David T. Fox; Samir Mitragotri

Antiseptic agents are the primary arsenal to disinfect skin and prevent pathogens spreading within the host as well as into the surroundings; however the Food and Drug Administration published a report in 2015 requiring additional validation of nearly all current antiseptic agents before their continued use can be allowed. This vulnerable position calls for urgent identification of novel antiseptic agents. Recently, the ability of a deep eutectic, Choline And Geranate (CAGE), to treat biofilms of Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Salmonella enterica was demonstrated. Here it is reported that CAGE exhibits broad-spectrum antimicrobial activity against a number of drug-resistant bacteria, fungi, and viruses including clinical isolates of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Staphylococcus aureus, and Candida albicans as well as laboratory strains of Herpes Simplex Virus. Studies in human keratinocytes and mice show that CAGE affords negligible local or systemic toxicity, and an ≈180-14 000-fold improved efficacy/toxicity ratio over currently used antiseptic agents. Further, CAGE penetrates deep into the dermis and treats pathogens located in deep skin layers as confirmed by the ability of CAGE in vivo to treat Propionibacterium acnes infection. In combination, the results clearly demonstrate CAGE holds promise as a transformative platform antiseptic agent for preventive as well as therapeutic applications.

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Sunny Kumar

University of California

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Aaron C. Anselmo

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Stefano Menegatti

North Carolina State University

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Vivek Gupta

Keck Graduate Institute of Applied Life Sciences

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Andrew T. Koppisch

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Blaine J. Zern

University of Pennsylvania

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Daniel Pan

University of Pennsylvania

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