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Dive into the research topics where Ming Hsin Li is active.

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Featured researches published by Ming Hsin Li.


Chemical Communications | 2010

Light-controlled release of caged doxorubicin from folate receptor-targeting PAMAM dendrimer nanoconjugate

Seok Ki Choi; Thommey P. Thomas; Ming Hsin Li; Alina Kotlyar; Ankur Desai; James R. Baker

We report the synthesis and in vitro evaluation of folate receptor-targeted nanoconjugate that releases its therapeutic payload via a photochemical mechanism.


Biomacromolecules | 2012

Bifunctional PAMAM Dendrimer Conjugates of Folic Acid and Methotrexate with Defined Ratio

Hong Zong; Thommey P. Thomas; Kyung-Hoon Lee; Ankur Desai; Ming Hsin Li; Alina Kotlyar; Yuehua Zhang; Pascale R. Leroueil; Jeremy J. Gam; Mark M. Banaszak Holl; James R. Baker

Our group previously developed a multifunctional, targeted cancer therapeutic based on Generation 5 (G5) polyamidoamine (PAMAM) dendrimers. In those studies we conjugated the targeting molecule folic acid (FA) and the chemotherapeutic drug methotrexate (MTX) sequentially. This complex macromolecule was shown to selectively bind and kill KB tumor cells that overexpress folate receptor (FR) in vitro and in vivo. However, the multistep conjugation strategy employed in the synthesis of the molecule resulted in heterogeneous populations having differing numbers and ratios of the functionally antagonistic FA and MTX. This led to inconsistent and sometimes biologically inactive batches of molecules, especially during large-scale synthesis. We here resolved this issue by using a novel triazine scaffold approach that reduces the number of dendrimer conjugation steps required and allows for the synthesis of G5 conjugates with defined ratios of FA and MTX. Although an unoccupied γ-glutamyl carboxylate of FA has been previously suggested to be nonessential for FR binding, the functional requirement of an open α-carboxylate still remains unclear. In an attempt to also address this question, we have synthesized isomeric FA dendrimer conjugates (α-carboxyl or γ-carboxyl linked). Competitive binding studies revealed that both linkages have virtually identical affinity toward FR on KB cells. Our studies show that a novel bifunctional triazine-based conjugate G5-Triazine-γMTX-αFA with identical numbers of FA and MTX binds to FR through a polyvalent interaction and induces cytotoxicity in KB cells through FR-mediated cellular internalization, inducing higher toxicity as compared to conjugates synthesized by the multistep strategy. This work serves as a proof of concept for the development of bifunctional dendrimer conjugates that require a defined ratio of two functional molecules.


European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012

Dendrimer-based multivalent methotrexates as dual acting nanoconjugates for cancer cell targeting

Ming Hsin Li; Seok Ki Choi; Thommey P. Thomas; Ankur Desai; Kyung-Hoon Lee; Alina Kotlyar; Mark M. Banaszak Holl; James R. Baker

Cancer-targeting drug delivery can be based on the rational design of a therapeutic platform. This approach is typically achieved by the functionalization of a nanoparticle with two distinct types of molecules, a targeting ligand specific for a cancer cell, and a cytotoxic molecule to kill the cell. The present study aims to evaluate the validity of an alternative simplified approach in the design of cancer-targeting nanotherapeutics: conjugating a single type of molecule with dual activities to nanoparticles, instead of coupling a pair of orthogonal molecules. Herein we investigate whether this strategy can be validated by its application to methotrexate, a dual-acting small molecule that shows cytotoxicity because of its potent inhibitory activity against dihydrofolate reductase and that binds folic acid receptor, a tumor biomarker frequently upregulated on the cancer cell surface. This article describes a series of dendrimer conjugates derived from a generation 5 polyamidoamine (G5 PAMAM) presenting a multivalent array of methotrexate and also demonstrates their dual biological activities by surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy, a cell-free enzyme assay, and cell-based experiments with KB cancer cells.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

Design of riboflavin-presenting PAMAM dendrimers as a new nanoplatform for cancer-targeted delivery.

Thommey P. Thomas; Seok Ki Choi; Ming Hsin Li; Alina Kotlyar; James R. Baker

This communication describes the synthesis and in vitro biological evaluation of novel generation 5 PAMAM dendrimers conjugated with riboflavin as a targeting ligand. Cell-based experiments demonstrated that a dendrimer conjugated with riboflavin is able to undergo cellular binding and uptake in KB cells, and when the dendrimer is also conjugated with methotrexate, the riboflavin dendrimer conjugate can potently inhibit cell growth.


Photochemical and Photobiological Sciences | 2012

Photochemical release of methotrexate from folate receptor-targeting PAMAM dendrimer nanoconjugate

Seok Ki Choi; Thommey P. Thomas; Ming Hsin Li; Ankur Desai; Alina Kotlyar; James R. Baker

Nanoparticle (NP)-based targeted drug delivery involves cell-specific targeting followed by a subsequent therapeutic action from the therapeutic carried by the NP system. NPs conjugated with methotrexate (MTX), a potent inhibitor of dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) localized in cytosol, have been under investigation as a delivery system to target cancer cells to enhance the therapeutic index of methotrexate, which is otherwise non-selectively cytotoxic. Despite improved therapeutic activity from MTX-conjugated NPs in vitro and in vivo, the therapeutic action of these conjugates following cellular entry is poorly understood; in particular it is unclear whether the therapeutic activity requires release of the MTX. This study investigates whether MTX must be released from a nanoparticle in order to achieve the therapeutic activity. We report herein light-controlled release of methotrexate from a dendrimer-based conjugate and provide evidence suggesting that MTX still attached to the nanoconjugate system is fully able to inhibit the activity of its enzyme target and the growth of cancer cells.


Biomacromolecules | 2013

Paclitaxel-Conjugated PAMAM Dendrimers Adversely Affect Microtubule Structure through Two Independent Modes of Action

Erika Cline; Ming Hsin Li; Seok Ki Choi; Jeffrey F. Herbstman; Edgar Meyhofer; Georgios Skiniotis; James R. Baker; Ronald G. Larson; Nils G. Walter

Paclitaxel (Taxol) is an anticancer drug that induces mitotic arrest via microtubule hyperstabilization but causes side effects due to its hydrophobicity and cellular promiscuity. The targeted cytotoxicity of hydrophilic paclitaxel-conjugated polyamidoamine (PAMAM) dendrimers has been demonstrated in cultured cancer cells. Mechanisms of action responsible for this cytotoxicity are unknown, that is, whether the cytotoxicity is due to paclitaxel stabilization of microtubules, as is whether paclitaxel is released intracellularly from the dendrimer. To determine whether the conjugated paclitaxel can bind microtubules, we used a combination of ensemble and single microtubule imaging techniques in vitro. We demonstrate that these conjugates adversely affect microtubules by (1) promoting the polymerization and stabilization of microtubules in a paclitaxel-dependent manner, and (2) bundling preformed microtubules in a paclitaxel-independent manner, potentially due to protonation of tertiary amines in the dendrimer interior. Our results provide mechanistic insights into the cytotoxicity of paclitaxel-conjugated PAMAM dendrimers and uncover unexpected risks of using such conjugates therapeutically.


Molecules | 2013

DNA condensation by partially acetylated poly(amido amine) dendrimers: effects of dendrimer charge density on complex formation.

Shi Yu; Ming Hsin Li; Seok Ki Choi; James R. Baker; Ronald G. Larson

The ability of poly(amido amine) (or PAMAM) dendrimers to condense semiflexible dsDNA and penetrate cell membranes gives them great potential in gene therapy and drug delivery but their high positive surface charge makes them cytotoxic. Here, we describe the effects of partial neutralization by acetylation on DNA condensation using light scattering, circular dichroism, and single molecule imaging of dendrimer-DNA complexes combed onto surfaces and tethered to those surfaces under flow. We find that DNA can be condensed by generation-five (G5) dendrimers even when the surface charges are more than 65% neutralized, but that such dendrimers bind negligibly when an end-tethered DNA is stretched in flow. We also find that when fully charged dendrimers are introduced by flow to end-tethered DNA, all DNA molecules become equally highly coated with dendrimers at a rate that becomes very fast at high dendrimer concentration, and that dendrimers remain bound during subsequent flow of dendrimer-free buffer. These results suggest that the presence of dendrimer-free DNA coexisting with dendrimer-bound DNA after bulk mixing of the two in solution may result from diffusion-limited irreversible dendrimer-DNA binding, rather than, or in addition to, the previously proposed cooperative binding mechanism of dendrimers to DNA.


Bioconjugate Chemistry | 2017

Ligand Characteristics Important to Avidity Interactions of Multivalent Nanoparticles

Ming Hsin Li; Hong Zong; Pascale R. Leroueil; Seok Ki Choi; James R. Baker

Multivalent interactions involve the engagement of multiple ligand-receptor pairs and are important in synthetic biology as design paradigms for targeted nanoparticles (NPs). However, little is known about the specific ligand parameters important to multivalent interactions. We employed a series of oligonucleotides as ligands conjugated to dendrimers as nanoparticles, and used complementary oligonucleotides on a functionalized SPR surface to measure binding. We compared the effect of ligand affinity to ligand number on the avidity characteristics of functionalized NPs. Changing the ligand affinity, either by changing the temperature of the system or by substitution noncomplementary base pairs into the oligonucleotides, had little effect on multivalent interaction; the overall avidity, number of ligands required for avidity per particle, and the number of particles showing avidity did not significantly change. We then made NP conjugates with the same oligonucleotide using an efficient copper-free click chemistry that resulted in essentially all of the NPs in the population exceeding the threshold ligand value. The particles exceeding the threshold ligand number again demonstrated high avidity interactions. This work validates the concept of a threshold ligand valence and suggests that the number of ligands per nanoparticle is the defining factor in achieving high avidity interactions.


ACS Nano | 2014

Evaluating Binding Avidities of Populations of Heterogeneous Multivalent Ligand-Functionalized Nanoparticles

Ming Hsin Li; Seok Ki Choi; Pascale R. Leroueil; James R. Baker


Macromolecules | 2011

Specificity and Negative Cooperativity in Dendrimer–Oxime Drug Complexation

Seok Ki Choi; Pascale R. Leroueil; Ming Hsin Li; Ankur Desai; Hong Zong; Abraham Van Der Spek; James R. Baker

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Ankur Desai

University of Michigan

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Hong Zong

University of Michigan

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