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Dive into the research topics where Rana A. K. Singh is active.

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Featured researches published by Rana A. K. Singh.


Nature Medicine | 2005

Re-engineered CD40 receptor enables potent pharmacological activation of dendritic-cell cancer vaccines in vivo

Brent A. Hanks; Jianghong Jiang; Rana A. K. Singh; Weitao Song; Michael J. Barry; Mary H Huls; Kevin M. Slawin; David M. Spencer

Modest clinical outcomes of dendritic-cell (DC) vaccine trials call for the refinement of DC vaccine design. Although many potential antigens have been identified, development of methods to enhance antigen presentation by DCs has lagged. We have engineered a potent, drug-inducible CD40 (iCD40) receptor that permits temporally controlled, lymphoid-localized, DC-specific activation. iCD40 is comprised of a membrane-localized cytoplasmic domain of CD40 fused to drug-binding domains. This allows it to respond to a lipid-permeable, high-affinity dimerizer drug while circumventing ectodomain-dependent negative-feedback mechanisms. These modifications permit prolonged activation of iCD40-expressing DCs in vivo, resulting in more potent CD8+ T-cell effector responses, including the eradication of previously established solid tumors, relative to activation of DCs ex vivo (P < 0.01), typical of most clinical DC protocols. In addition, iCD40-mediated DC activation exceeded that achieved by stimulating the full-length, endogenous CD40 receptor both in vitro and in vivo. Because iCD40 is insulated from the extracellular environment and can be activated within the context of an immunological synapse, iCD40-expressing DCs have a prolonged lifespan and should lead to more potent vaccines, perhaps even in immune-compromised patients.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2008

Substance Abuse Vaccines

Frank M. Orson; Berma M. Kinsey; Rana A. K. Singh; Yan Wu; Tracie J. Gardner; Thomas R. Kosten

Conventional substance‐abuse treatments have only had limited success for drugs such as cocaine, nicotine, methamphetamine, and phencyclidine. New approaches, including vaccination to block the effects of these drugs on the brain, are in advanced stages of development. Although several potential mechanisms for the effects of antidrug vaccines have been suggested, the most straightforward and intuitive mechanism involves binding of the drug by antibodies in the bloodstream, thereby blocking entry and/or reducing the rate of entry of the drug into the central nervous system. The benefits of such antibodies on drug pharmacodynamics will be influenced by both the quantitative and the qualitative properties of the antibodies. The sum of these effects will determine the success of the clinical applications of antidrug vaccines in addiction medicine. This review will discuss these issues and present the current status of vaccine development for nicotine, cocaine, methamphetamine, phencyclidine, and morphine.


Human Vaccines | 2009

Vaccines for Cocaine Abuse

Frank M. Orson; Berma M. Kinsey; Rana A. K. Singh; Yan Wu; Thomas R. Kosten

Treatments for cocaine abuse have been disappointingly ineffective, especially in comparison with those for some other abused substances. A new approach, using vaccination to elicit specific antibodies to block the access of cocaine to the brain, has shown considerable promise in animal models, and more recently in human trials. The mechanism of action for the antibody effect on cocaine is very likely to be the straightforward and intuitive result of the binding of the drug in circulation by antibodies, thereby reducing its entry into the central nervous system and thus its pharmacological effects. The effectiveness of such antibodies on drug pharmacodynamics is a function of both the quantitative and the qualitative properties of the antibodies, and this combination will determine the success of the clinical applications of anti-cocaine vaccines in helping addicts discontinue cocaine abuse. This review will discuss these issues and present the current developmental status of cocaine conjugate vaccines.


Journal of Immunology | 2004

Differential activation of ERK, p38, and JNK required for Th1 and Th2 deviation in myelin-reactive T cells induced by altered peptide ligand.

Rana A. K. Singh; Jingwu Z. Zhang

Autoreactive T cells can be induced by altered peptide ligands to switch Th1 and Th2 phenotypes. The underlying molecular mechanism is critical for understanding of activation of autoreactive T cells and development of novel therapeutic strategies for autoimmune conditions. In this study, we demonstrated that analog peptides of an immunodominant epitope of myelin basic protein (residues 83–99) with alanine substitution at Val86 and His88 had a unique partial agonistic property in the induction of Th1 or Th2 deviation in MBP83–99-reactive T cell clones typical of Th0 phenotype. The observed phenotypic switch involved differential activation of ERK, p38, and JNK MAPKs. More specifically, Th1 deviation induced by peptide 86V→A (86A) correlated with enhanced p38 and JNK activities, while Th2 deviation by peptide 88H→A (88A) was associated with up-regulated ERK activity and a basal level of p38 and JNK activity. Further characterization revealed that a specific inhibitor for ERK selectively prevented Th2 deviation of MBP83–99-specific T cells. Conversely, specific inhibitors for p38 and JNK blocked Th1 deviation in the same T cell preparations induced by peptide 86A. The findings have important implications in our understanding of regulation of ERK, p38, and JNK by altered peptide ligands and their role in cytokine regulation and phenotype switch of autoreactive T cells.


Expert Opinion on Biological Therapy | 2014

The future potential for cocaine vaccines

Frank M. Orson; Rongfu Wang; Stephen Brimijoin; Berma M. Kinsey; Rana A. K. Singh; Muthu Ramakrishnan; Helen Y. Wang; Thomas R. Kosten

Introduction: Addiction to cocaine is a major problem around the world, but especially in developed countries where the combination of wealth and user demand has created terrible social problems. Although only some users become truly addicted, those who are often succumb to a downward spiral in their lives from which it is very difficult to escape. From the medical perspective, the lack of effective and safe, non-addictive therapeutics has instigated efforts to develop alternative approaches for treatment, including anticocaine vaccines designed to block cocaine’s pharmacodynamic effects. Areas covered: This paper discusses the implications of cocaine pharmacokinetics for robust vaccine antibody responses, the results of human vaccine clinical trials, new developments in animal models for vaccine evaluation, alternative vaccine formulations and complementary therapy to enhance anticocaine effectiveness. Expert opinion: Robust anti-cocaine antibody responses are required for benefit to cocaine abusers, but since any reasonably achievable antibody level can be overcome with higher drug doses, sufficient motivation to discontinue use is also essential so that the relative barrier to cocaine effects will be appropriate for each individual. Combining a vaccine with achievable levels of an enzyme to hydrolyze cocaine to inactive metabolites, however, may substantially increase the blockade and improve treatment outcomes.


Chemical Biology & Drug Design | 2014

Hapten Optimization for Cocaine Vaccine with Improved Cocaine Recognition

Muthu Ramakrishnan; Berma M. Kinsey; Rana A. K. Singh; Thomas R. Kosten; Frank M. Orson

In the absence of any effective pharmacotherapy for cocaine addiction, immunotherapy is being actively pursued as a therapeutic intervention. While several different cocaine haptens have been explored to develop anticocaine antibodies, none of the hapten was successfully designed, which had a protonated tropane nitrogen as is found in native cocaine under physiological conditions, including the succinyl norcocaine (SNC) hapten that has been tested in phase II clinical trials. Herein, we discuss three different cocaine haptens: hexyl norcocaine (HNC), bromoacetamido butyl norcocaine (BNC), and succinyl butyl norcocaine (SBNC), each with a tertiary nitrogen structure mimicking that of native cocaine which could optimize the specificity of anticocaine antibodies for better cocaine recognition. Mice immunized with these haptens conjugated to immunogenic proteins produced high titre anticocaine antibodies. However, during chemical conjugation of HNC and BNC haptens to carrier proteins, the 2β methyl ester group is hydrolyzed, and immunizing mice with these conjugate vaccines in mice produced antibodies that bound both cocaine and the inactive benzoylecgonine metabolite. While in the case of the SBNC conjugate, vaccine hydrolysis of the methyl ester did not appear to occur, leading to antibodies with high specificity to cocaine over BE. Although we observed similar specificity with a SNC hapten, the striking difference is that SBNC carries a positive charge on the tropane nitrogen atom, and therefore, it is expected to have better binding of cocaine. The 50% cocaine inhibitory concentration (IC50) value for SBNC antibodies (2.8 μm) was significantly better than the SNC antibodies (9.4 μm) when respective hapten–BSA was used as a substrate. In addition, antibodies from both sera had no inhibitory effect from BE. In contrast to BNC and HNC, the SBNC conjugate was also found to be highly stable without any noticeable hydrolysis for several months at 4 °C and 2–3 days in pH 10 buffer at 37 °C.


Pharmacology, Biochemistry and Behavior | 2012

Dose-dependent changes in the locomotor responses to methamphetamine in BALB/c mice: low doses induce hypolocomotion.

Rana A. K. Singh; Therese A. Kosten; Berma M. Kinsey; Xiaoyun Shen; Angel Y. Lopez; Thomas R. Kosten; Frank M. Orson

The overall goal of the present study was to determine the effects of different doses of (+)-methamphetamine (meth) on locomotor activity of Balb/C mice. Four experiments were designed to test a wide range of meth doses in BALB/c female mice. In Experiment 1, we examined locomotor activity induced by an acute administration of low doses of meth (0.01 and 0.03mg/kg) in a 90-min session. Experiment 2 was conducted to test higher meth doses (0.3-10mg/kg). In Experiment 3, separate sets of mice were pre-treated with various meth doses once or twice (one injection/week) prior to a locomotor challenge with a low meth dose. Finally, in Experiment 4, we tested whether locomotor activation would be affected by pretreatment with a low or moderate dose of meth one month prior to the low meth dose challenge. Results show that low doses of meth induce hypolocomotion whereas moderate to high doses induce hyperlocomotion. Prior exposure to either one moderate or high dose of meth or to two, low doses of meth attenuated the hypolocomotor effect of a low meth dose one week later. This effect was also attenuated in mice tested one month after administration of a moderate meth dose. These results show that low and high doses of meth can have opposing effects on locomotor activity. Further, prior exposure to the drug leads to tolerance, rather than sensitization, of the hypolocomotor response to low meth doses.


Journal of Immunology | 1999

A Common TCR V-D-J Sequence in Vβ13.1 T Cells Recognizing an Immunodominant Peptide of Myelin Basic Protein in Multiple Sclerosis

Jian Hong; Ying C. Q. Zang; Maria V. Tejada-Simon; Milena Kozovska; Sufang Li; Rana A. K. Singh; Deye Yang; Victor M. Rivera; James K. Killian; Jingwu Z. Zhang


International Immunology | 2000

Aberrant T cell responses to myelin antigens during clinical exacerbation in patients with multiple sclerosis

Maria V. Tejada-Simon; Ying C. Q. Zang; Deye Yang; Jian Hong; Sufang Li; Rana A. K. Singh; Ella van den Berg-Loonen; James M. Killian; Victor M. Rivera; Jingwu Z. Zhang


Current Psychiatry Reports | 2007

The future of vaccines in the management of addictive disorders

Frank M. Orson; Berma M. Kinsey; Rana A. K. Singh; Yan Wu; Tracie J. Gardner; Thomas R. Kosten

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Berma M. Kinsey

Baylor College of Medicine

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Frank M. Orson

Baylor College of Medicine

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Thomas R. Kosten

Baylor College of Medicine

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Sufang Li

Baylor College of Medicine

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Victor M. Rivera

Baylor College of Medicine

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Yan Wu

Baylor College of Medicine

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Ying C. Q. Zang

Baylor College of Medicine

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Jingwu Z. Zhang

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Deye Yang

Baylor College of Medicine

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