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Dive into the research topics where Moses Q. Wilks is active.

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Featured researches published by Moses Q. Wilks.


Cancer Research | 2013

An Essential Requirement for the SCAP/SREBP Signaling Axis to Protect Cancer Cells from Lipotoxicity

Kevin J. Williams; Joseph P. Argus; Yue Zhu; Moses Q. Wilks; Beth N. Marbois; Autumn G. York; Yoko Kidani; Alexandra L. Pourzia; David Akhavan; Dominique N. Lisiero; Evangelia Komisopoulou; Amy H. Henkin; Horacio Soto; Brian T. Chamberlain; Laurent Vergnes; Michael E. Jung; Jorge Z. Torres; Linda M. Liau; Heather R. Christofk; Robert M. Prins; Paul S. Mischel; Karen Reue; Thomas G. Graeber; Steven J. Bensinger

The sterol regulatory element-binding proteins (SREBP) are key transcriptional regulators of lipid metabolism and cellular growth. It has been proposed that SREBP signaling regulates cellular growth through its ability to drive lipid biosynthesis. Unexpectedly, we find that loss of SREBP activity inhibits cancer cell growth and viability by uncoupling fatty acid synthesis from desaturation. Integrated lipid profiling and metabolic flux analysis revealed that cancer cells with attenuated SREBP activity maintain long-chain saturated fatty acid synthesis, while losing fatty acid desaturation capacity. We traced this defect to the uncoupling of fatty acid synthase activity from stearoyl-CoA desaturase 1 (SCD1)-mediated desaturation. This deficiency in desaturation drives an imbalance between the saturated and monounsaturated fatty acid pools resulting in severe lipotoxicity. Importantly, replenishing the monounsaturated fatty acid pool restored growth to SREBP-inhibited cells. These studies highlight the importance of fatty acid desaturation in cancer growth and provide a novel mechanistic explanation for the role of SREBPs in cancer metabolism.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2014

Co-targeting of convergent nucleotide biosynthetic pathways for leukemia eradication

David Nathanson; Amanda L. Armijo; Michelle Tom; Zheng Li; Elizabeth Dimitrova; Wayne R. Austin; Julian Nomme; Dean O. Campbell; Lisa Ta; Thuc M. Le; Jason T. Lee; Ryan Darvish; Ari Gordin; Liu Wei; Hsiang I. Liao; Moses Q. Wilks; Colette Martin; Saman Sadeghi; Jennifer M. Murphy; Nidal Boulos; Michael E. Phelps; Kym F. Faull; Harvey R. Herschman; Michael E. Jung; Johannes Czernin; Arnon Lavie; Caius G. Radu

Co-targeting of both de novo and salvage pathways for dCTP biosynthesis shows efficacy in T-ALL and B-ALL.


Angewandte Chemie | 2015

Heat-Induced Radiolabeling of Nanoparticles for Monocyte Tracking by PET.

Marc D. Normandin; Hushan Yuan; Moses Q. Wilks; Howard H. Chen; Joseph M. Kinsella; Hoonsung Cho; Nicolas Guehl; Nader Absi‐Halabi; Seyed Mohammadreza Hosseini; Georges El Fakhri; David E. Sosnovik; Lee Josephson

Heat-induced radiolabeling (HIR) yielded (89) Zr-Feraheme (FH) nanoparticles (NPs) that were used to determine NP pharmacokinetics (PK) by positron emission tomography (PET). Standard uptake values indicated a fast hepatic uptake that corresponded to blood clearance, and a second, slow uptake process by lymph nodes and spleen. By cytometry, NPs were internalized by circulating monocytes and monocytes in vitro. Using an IV injection of HIR (89) Zr-FH (rather than in vitro cell labeling), PET/PK provided a view of monocyte trafficking, a key component of the immune response.


The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2014

Improved Modeling of In Vivo Kinetics of Slowly Diffusing Radiotracers for Tumor Imaging

Moses Q. Wilks; Scott Knowles; Anna M. Wu; Sung-Cheng Huang

Large-molecule tracers, such as labeled antibodies, have shown success in immuno-PET for imaging of specific cell surface biomarkers. However, previous work has shown that localization of such tracers shows high levels of heterogeneity in target tissues, due to both the slow diffusion and the high affinity of these compounds. In this work, we investigate the effects of subvoxel spatial heterogeneity on measured time–activity curves in PET imaging and the effects of ignoring diffusion limitation on parameter estimates from kinetic modeling. Methods: Partial differential equations (PDE) were built to model a radially symmetric reaction-diffusion equation describing the activity of immuno-PET tracers. The effects of slower diffusion on measured time–activity curves and parameter estimates were measured in silico, and a modified Levenberg–Marquardt algorithm with Bayesian priors was developed to accurately estimate parameters from diffusion-limited data. This algorithm was applied to immuno-PET data of mice implanted with prostate stem cell antigen–overexpressing tumors and injected with 124I-labeled A11 anti–prostate stem cell antigen minibody. Results: Slow diffusion of tracers in linear binding models resulted in heterogeneous localization in silico but no measurable differences in time–activity curves. For more realistic saturable binding models, measured time–activity curves were strongly dependent on diffusion rates of the tracers. Fitting diffusion-limited data with regular compartmental models led to parameter estimate bias in an excess of 1,000% of true values, while the new model and fitting protocol could accurately measure kinetics in silico. In vivo imaging data were also fit well by the new PDE model, with estimates of the dissociation constant (Kd) and receptor density close to in vitro measurements and with order of magnitude differences from a regular compartmental model ignoring tracer diffusion limitation. Conclusion: Heterogeneous localization of large, high-affinity compounds can lead to large differences in measured time–activity curves in immuno-PET imaging, and ignoring diffusion limitations can lead to large errors in kinetic parameter estimates. Modeling of these systems with PDE models with Bayesian priors is necessary for quantitative in vivo measurements of kinetics of slow-diffusion tracers.


Wound Repair and Regeneration | 2017

Mature B cells accelerate wound healing after acute and chronic diabetic skin lesions

Ruxandra F. Sîrbulescu; Chloe K. Boehm; Erin Soon; Moses Q. Wilks; Iulian Ilieş; Hushan Yuan; Ben Maxner; Nicolas Chronos; Charalambos Kaittanis; Marc D. Normandin; Georges El Fakhri; Dennis P. Orgill; Ann E. Sluder; Mark C. Poznansky

Chronic wounds affect 12–15% of patients with diabetes and are associated with a drastic decrease in their quality of life. Here, we demonstrate that purified mature naive B220+/CD19+/IgM+/IgD+ B cells improve healing of acute and diabetic murine wounds after a single topical application. B cell treatment significantly accelerated acute wound closure by 2–3 days in wild‐type mice and 5–6 days in obese diabetic mice. The treatment led to full closure in 43% of chronic diabetic wounds, as compared to only 5% in saline‐treated controls. Applying equivalent numbers of T cells or disrupted B cells failed to reproduce these effects, indicating that live B cells mediated pro‐healing responses. Topically applied B cell treatment was associated with significantly reduced scar size, increased collagen deposition and maturation, enhanced angiogenesis, and increased nerve growth into and under the healing wound. β‐III tubulin+ nerve endings in scars of wounds treated acutely with B cells showed increased relative expression of growth‐associated protein 43. The improved healing associated with B cell treatment was supported by significantly increased fibroblast proliferation and decreased apoptosis in the wound bed and edges, altered kinetics of neutrophil infiltration, as well as an increase in TGF‐β and a significant reduction in MMP2 expression in wound granulation tissue. Our findings indicate that the timeline and efficacy of wound healing can be experimentally manipulated through the direct application of mature, naive B cells, which effectively modify the balance of mature immune cell populations within the wound microenvironment and accelerate the healing process.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2017

Application of a Novel CD206+ Macrophage-Specific Arterial Imaging Strategy in HIV-Infected Individuals

Markella V. Zanni; Mabel Toribio; Moses Q. Wilks; Michael T. Lu; Tricia H. Burdo; Joshua Walker; Patrick Autissier; Borek Foldyna; Lauren Stone; Amanda Martin; Fred Cope; Bonnie Chandler Abbruzzese; Thomas J. Brady; Udo Hoffmann; Kenneth C. Williams; Georges El-Fakhri; Steven Grinspoon

Background The ability to noninvasively assess arterial CD206+ macrophages may lead to improved understanding of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-associated cardiovascular disease. Methods We trialed a novel macrophage-specific arterial imaging technique. Results We demonstrated colocalization between technetium Tc 99m tilmanocept (99mTc-tilmanocept) and CD206+ macrophages ex vivo. In vivo application of 99mTc-tilmanocept single-photon emission computed tomography/computed tomography revealed high-level 99mTc-tilmanocept uptake across 20.4% of the aortic surface volume among HIV-infected subjects, compared with 4.3% among non-HIV-infected subjects (P = .009). Among all subjects, aortic high-level 99mTc-tilmanocept uptake was related to noncalcified aortic plaque volume (r = 0.87; P = .003) on computed tomographic angiography, and this relationship held when we controlled for HIV status. Conclusion These first-in-human data introduce a novel macrophage-specific arterial imaging technique in HIV. Clinical Trials Registration NCT02542371.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Heat-induced-radiolabeling and click chemistry: A powerful combination for generating multifunctional nanomaterials.

Hushan Yuan; Moses Q. Wilks; Georges El Fakhri; Marc D. Normandin; Charalambos Kaittanis; Lee Josephson

A key advantage of nanomaterials for biomedical applications is their ability to feature multiple small reporter groups (multimodality), or combinations of reporter groups and therapeutic agents (multifunctionality), while being targeted to cell surface receptors. Here a facile combination of techniques for the syntheses of multimodal, targeted nanoparticles (NPs) is presented, whereby heat-induced-radiolabeling (HIR) labels NPs with radiometals and so-called click chemistry is used to attach bioactive groups to the NP surface. Click-reactive alkyne or azide groups were first attached to the nonradioactive clinical Feraheme (FH) NPs. Resulting “Alkyne-FH” and “Azide-FH” intermediates, like the parent NP, tolerated 89Zr labeling by the HIR method previously described. Subsequently, biomolecules were quickly conjugated to the radioactive NPs by either copper-catalyzed or copper-free click reactions with high efficiency. Synthesis of the Alkyne-FH or Azide-FH intermediates, followed by HIR and then by click reactions for biomolecule attachment, provides a simple and potentially general path for the synthesis of multimodal, multifunctional, and targeted NPs for biomedical applications.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Modulation of PICALM Levels Perturbs Cellular Cholesterol Homeostasis

Jacob L. Mercer; Joseph P. Argus; Donna Crabtree; Melissa M. Keenan; Moses Q. Wilks; Jen-Tsan Ashley Chi; Steven J. Bensinger; Catherine Lavau; Daniel S. Wechsler

PICALM (Phosphatidyl Inositol Clathrin Assembly Lymphoid Myeloid protein) is a ubiquitously expressed protein that plays a role in clathrin-mediated endocytosis. PICALM also affects the internalization and trafficking of SNAREs and modulates macroautophagy. Chromosomal translocations that result in the fusion of PICALM to heterologous proteins cause leukemias, and genome-wide association studies have linked PICALM Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms (SNPs) to Alzheimer’s disease. To obtain insight into the biological role of PICALM, we performed gene expression studies of PICALM-deficient and PICALM-expressing cells. Pathway analysis demonstrated that PICALM expression influences the expression of genes that encode proteins involved in cholesterol biosynthesis and lipoprotein uptake. Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry (GC-MS) studies indicated that loss of PICALM increases cellular cholesterol pool size. Isotopic labeling studies revealed that loss of PICALM alters increased net scavenging of cholesterol. Flow cytometry analyses confirmed that internalization of the LDL receptor is enhanced in PICALM-deficient cells as a result of higher levels of LDLR expression. These findings suggest that PICALM is required for cellular cholesterol homeostasis and point to a novel mechanism by which PICALM alterations may contribute to disease.


Nature Protocols | 2018

Heat-induced radiolabeling and fluorescence labeling of Feraheme nanoparticles for PET/SPECT imaging and flow cytometry

Hushan Yuan; Moses Q. Wilks; Marc D. Normandin; Georges El Fakhri; Charalambos Kaittanis; Lee Josephson

Feraheme (FH) nanoparticles (NPs) have been used extensively for treatment of iron anemia (due to their slow release of ionic iron in acidic environments). In addition, injected FH NPs are internalized by monocytes and function as MRI biomarkers for the pathological accumulation of monocytes in disease. We have recently expanded these applications by radiolabeling FH NPs for positron emission tomography (PET) or single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) imaging using a heat-induced radiolabeling (HIR) strategy. Imaging FH NPs using PET/SPECT has important advantages over MRI due to lower iron doses and improved quantitation of tissue NP concentrations. HIR of FH NPs leaves the physical and biological properties of the NPs unchanged and allows researchers to build on the extensive knowledge obtained about the pharmacokinetic and safety aspects of FH NPs. In this protocol, we present the step-by-step procedures for heat (120 °C)-induced bonding of three widely employed radiocations (89Zr4+ or 64Cu2+ for PET, and 111In3+ for SPECT) to FH NPs using a chelateless radiocation surface adsorption (RSA) approach. In addition, we describe the conversion of FH carboxyl groups into amines and their reaction with an N-hydroxysuccinimide (NHS) of a Cy5.5 fluorophore. This yields Cy5.5-FH, a fluorescent FH that enables the cells internalizing Cy5.5-FH to be examined using flow cytometry. Finally, we describe procedures for in vivo and ex vivo uptake of Cy5.5-FH by monocytes and for in vivo microPET/CT imaging of HIR-FH NPs. Synthesis of HIR-FH requires experience with working with radioactive cations and can be completed within <4 h. Synthesis of Cy5.5-FH NPs takes ∼17 h.


Bioconjugate Chemistry | 2015

Imaging PEG-Like Nanoprobes in Tumor, Transient Ischemia, and Inflammatory Disease Models

Moses Q. Wilks; Marc D. Normandin; Hushan Yuan; Hoonsung Cho; Yanyan Guo; Fanny Herisson; Cenk Ayata; Dustin Wooten; Georges El Fakhri; Lee Josephson

The iron chelator deferoxamine (DFO), approved for the treatment of iron overload, has been examined as a therapeutic in a variety of conditions which iron may exacerbate. To evaluate the potential of DFO-bearing PEG-like nanoprobes (DFO-PNs) as therapeutics, we determined their pharmacokinetics (PK) in normal mice, and imaged their accumulation in a tumor model and in models of transient brain ischemia and inflammation. DFO-PNs consist of a DFO, a Cy5.5, and PEG (5 kDa or 30 kDa) attached to Lys-Cys scaffold. Tumor uptake of a [(89)Zr]:DFO-PN(10) (30 kDa PEG, diameter 10 nm) was imaged by PET, surface fluorescence, and fluorescence microscopy. DFO-PN(10) was internalized by tumor cells (fluorescence microscopy) and by cultured cells (by FACS). [(89)Zr]:DFO-PN(4.3) (5 kDa PEG, diameter 4.3 nm) concentrated at incision generated inflammations but not at sites of transient brain ischemia. DFO-PNs are fluorescent, PK tunable forms of DFO that might be investigated as antitumor or anti-inflammatory agents.

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Anna M. Wu

University of California

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Koon-Pong Wong

University of California

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