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Featured researches published by Robert M. Straubinger.


Cell | 1983

Endocytosis of liposomes and intracellular fate of encapsulated molecules: Encounter with a low pH compartment after internalization in coated vesicles

Robert M. Straubinger; Keelung Hong; Daniel S. Friend; Demetrios Papahadjopoulos

We have compared the intracellular fate of several fluorescent probes and colloidal gold entrapped in negatively charged liposomes. Weakly acidic molecules (carboxyfluorescein) appear in the cytoplasm of CV-1 cells in 30 min; agents that raise lysosomal pH block this process. Highly charged molecules (calcein) and large molecules (FITC-dextran: 18 kd) remain confined to extra-or intracellular vesicles. Thin section electron micrographs show gold-containing liposomes bound to coated pits, in intracellular coated and uncoated vesicles, and in secondary lysosomes, including dense bodies. Free gold was not observed in the cytoplasm. We conclude that negatively charged liposomes are endocytosed and processed intracellularly by the coated vesicle pathway, and acidification of the endocytic vesicle, rather than liposome fusion, permits escape of certain molecules to the cytoplasm.


FEBS Letters | 1985

pH‐sensitive liposomes mediate cytoplasmic delivery of encapsulated macromolecules

Robert M. Straubinger; Nejat Düzgüneş; Demetrios Papahadjopoulos

Negatively charged liposomes are endocytosed by the coated vesicle system and accumulate in acidic intracellular vesicles. Liposomes that become unstable at acidic pH improve cytoplasmic delivery of membraneimpermeant macromolecules such as calcein (CAL) and FITC dextran (18 or 40 kDa). Oleic acid (OA): phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) (3:7 mole ratio) liposomes become permeable to CAL at pH < 7.0. Control liposomes of phosphatidylserine : PE or OA : phosphatidylcholine are stable at pH 4–8. OA:PE liposomes promote cytoplasmic delivery of encapsulated CAL to CV‐1 cells, as evidenced by the emergence of diffuse, cytoplasmic CAL fluorescence. Delivery requires metabolic energy and is partially inhibited by chloroquine or monensin, which raise the pH of intracellular vesicles.


Pharmaceutical Research | 1994

Novel Taxol Formulations: Preparation and Characterization of Taxol-Containing Liposomes

Amarnath Sharma; Robert M. Straubinger

Taxol is a promising anticancer agent under investigation for therapy of ovarian, breast, colon, and head and neck cancer. One problem associated with the administration of taxol is its low solubility in most pharmaceutically-acceptable solvents; the formulation used clinically contains Cremophor EL® (polyethoxylated castor oil) and ethanol as excipients, which cause serious adverse effects. To eliminate this vehicle and possibly improve the antitumor efficacy of taxol, we have formulated taxol in liposomes of various compositions. Liposome formulations containing taxol and phospholipid in the molar ratio 1:33 were prepared from phosphatidylglycerol (PG) and phosphatidylcholine (PC) (1:9 molar ratio), and were physically and chemically stable for more than 2 months at 4°C, or for 1 month at 20°C. A method of producing taxol-liposomes by lyophilization has been developed, by which large batches can be prepared reproducibly in a ‘pharmaceutically rational’ manner. Taxol-liposomes retained the growth-inhibitory activity of the free drug in vitro against a variety of tumor cell lines. In mice, taxol-liposomes were well-tolerated when given in bolus doses by both iv and ip routes. The Maximum Tolerated Dose (MTD) was >200 mg/kg; it exceeded that of free taxol, which had a MTD of 30 mg/kg by iv or 50 mg/kg by ip administration. Free taxol administered in the Cremophor vehicle was toxic at doses >30 mg/kg, as was the equivalent volume of vehicle without drug. Taxol-liposomes may prove to be useful not only for eliminating the toxic effects attributed to the Cremophor vehicle, but also for providing opportunities to widen the taxol therapeutic index through alterations in route and schedule of administration.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1998

Candidacidal Activity of Salivary Histatins IDENTIFICATION OF A HISTATIN 5-BINDING PROTEIN ON Candida albicans

Mira Edgerton; Svetlana E. Koshlukova; Thomas E. Lo; Brian G. Chrzan; Robert M. Straubinger; Periathamby Antony Raj

Candida albicans is the predominant species of yeast isolated from patients with oral candidiasis, which is frequently a symptom of human immunodeficiency virus infection and is a criterion for staging and progression of AIDS. Salivary histatins (Hsts) are potent in vitro antifungal agents and have great promise as therapeutic agents in humans with oral candidiasis. The molecular mechanisms by which Hsts kill yeast cells are not known. We report here, that unlike other antimicrobial proteins, Hsts do not display lytic activities to lipid membranes, measured by release and dequenching of the fluorescent dye calcein. Analysis of the magnitude and time course of Hst-induced calcein release from C. albicans cells further showed that loss of cell integrity was a secondary effect following cell death, rather than the result of primary disruption of the yeast cell membrane.125I-Hst 5 binding studies indicated that C. albicans expressed a class of saturable binding sites (K D = 1 μm), numbering 8.6 × 105 sites/cell. Both Hst 3 and Hst 4 competed for these binding sites with similar affinities, which is consistent with the micromolar concentration of Hsts required for candidacidal activity. Specific 125I-Hst 5 binding was not detected to C. albicans spheroplasts, which were 14-fold less susceptible to Hst 5 killing, compared with intact cells in candidacidal assays. In overlay experiments, 125I-Hst 5 bound to a 67-kDa protein detected in C. albicans whole cell lysates and crude membrane fractions, but not in the yeast cell wall fraction. Consistent with the overlay data, cross-linking of 125I-Hst 5 toC. albicans resulted in the appearance of a specific 73-kDa125I-Hst 5-containing complex that was not detected in the cell wall. 125I-Hst 5-binding protein of similar size was also observed in susceptible S. cerevisiae strain TI#20. This is the first description of Hst 5 binding sites on C. albicans which mediate cell killing and identification of a 67-kDa yeast Hst 5-binding protein. The binding characteristics of Hst 5 are in agreement with the observed potency of its biological effect and provide crucial information to the use of Hst 5 as a therapeutic agent. The presence of a specific C. albicans Hst 5-binding protein provides further insight into the potential mechanism of yeast killing and suggests a basis for differential activity between yeast killing and the nontoxic nature of Hsts to humans.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2009

A straightforward and highly efficient precipitation/on-pellet digestion procedure coupled with a long gradient nano-LC separation and Orbitrap mass spectrometry for label-free expression profiling of the swine heart mitochondrial proteome.

Xiaotao Duan; Rebecca Young; Robert M. Straubinger; Brian Page; Jin Cao; Hao Wang; Haoying Yu; John M. Canty; Jun Qu

For label-free expression profiling of tissue proteomes, efficient protein extraction, thorough and quantitative sample cleanup and digestion procedures, as well as sufficient and reproducible chromatographic separation, are highly desirable but remain challenging. However, optimal methodology has remained elusive, especially for proteomes that are rich in membrane proteins, such as the mitochondria. Here, we describe a straightforward and reproducible sample preparation procedure, coupled with a highly selective and sensitive nano-LC/Orbitrap analysis, which enables reliable and comprehensive expression profiling of tissue mitochondria. The mitochondrial proteome of swine heart was selected as a test system. Efficient protein extraction was accomplished using a strong buffer containing both ionic and nonionic detergents. Overnight precipitation was used for cleanup of the extract, and the sample was subjected to an optimized 2-step, on-pellet digestion approach. In the first step, the protein pellet was dissolved via a 4 h tryptic digestion under vigorous agitation, which nano-LC/LTQ/ETD showed to produce large and incompletely cleaved tryptic peptides. The mixture was then reduced, alkylated, and digested into its full complement of tryptic peptides with additional trypsin. This solvent precipitation/on-pellet digestion procedure achieved significantly higher and more reproducible peptide recovery of the mitochondrial preparation than observed using a prevalent alternative procedure for label-free expression profiling, SDS-PAGE/in-gel digestion (87% vs 54%). Furthermore, uneven peptide losses were lower than observed with SDS-PAGE/in-gel digestion. The resulting peptides were sufficiently resolved by a 5 h gradient using a nano-LC configuration that features a low-void-volume, high chromatographic reproducibility, and an LTQ/Orbitrap analyzer for protein identification and quantification. The developed method was employed for label-free comparison of the mitochondrial proteomes of myocardium from healthy animals versus those with hibernating myocardium. Each experimental group consisted of a relatively large number of animals (n = 10), and samples were analyzed in random order to minimize quantitative false-positives. With this approach, 904 proteins were identified and quantified with high confidence, and those mitochondrial proteins that were altered significantly between groups were compared with the results of a parallel 2D-DIGE analysis. The sample preparation and analytical strategy developed here represents an advancement that can be adapted to analyze other tissue proteomes.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 1995

Formulation and efficacy of liposome-encapsulated antibiotics for therapy of intracellular Mycobacterium avium infection.

Yu-Kyuong Oh; David E. Nix; Robert M. Straubinger

Mycobacterium avium is an intracellular pathogen that can invade and multiply within macrophages of the reticuloendothelial system. Current therapy is not highly effective. Particulate drug carriers that are targeted to the reticuloendothelial system may provide a means to deliver antibiotics more efficiently to M. avium-infected cells. We investigated the formulation of the antibiotics ciprofloxacin and azithromycin in liposomes and tested their antibacterial activities in vitro against M. avium residing within J774, a murine macrophage-like cell line. A conventional passive-entrapment method yielded an encapsulation efficiency of 9% for ciprofloxacin and because of aggregation mediated by the cationic drug, was useful only with liposomes containing < or = 50 mol% negatively charged phospholipid. In contrast, ciprofloxacin was encapsulated with > 90% efficiency, regardless of the content of negatively charged lipids, by a remote-loading technique that utilized both pH and potential gradients to drive drug into preformed liposomes. Both the cellular accumulation and the antimycobacterial activity of ciprofloxacin increased in proportion to the liposome negative charge; the maximal enhancement of potency was 43-fold in liposomes of distearoylphosphatidylglycerol-cholesterol (DSPG-Chol) (10:5). Azithromycin liposomes were prepared as a freeze-dried preparation to avoid chemical instability during storage, and drug could be incorporated at 33 mol% (with respect to phospholipid). Azithromycin also showed enhanced antimycobacterial effect in liposomes, and the potency increased in parallel to the moles percent of negatively charged lipids; azithromycin in DSPG-Chol (10:5) liposomes inhibited intracellular M. avium growth 41-fold more effectively than did free azithromycin. Thus, ciprofloxacin or azithromycin encapsulated in stable liposomes having substantial negative surface charge is superior to nonencapsulated drug in inhibition of M.avium growth within cultured macrophages and may provide more effective therapy of M.avium infections.


Journal of Liposome Research | 1988

An Improved Method for in Vivo Tracing and Imaging of Liposomes Using a Gallium 67-Deferoxamine Complex

Alberto Gabizon; John Hliberty; Robert M. Straubinger; David C. Price; Demetrios Papahadjopoulos

AbstractWe have developed a new method for tracing and imaging liposomes in vivo based on the encapsulation of a gallium 67-deferoxamine 67Ga-DF) complex in the liposomal water phase. This method combines several advantages over other published methods: extremely high affinity of 67Ga for DF, thus avoiding the problem of metal translocation to various plasma proteins; rapid renal clearance rate of67Ga-DF complex, thus minimizing the background of radioactivity in non-liposome-associated form; and use of67Ga, a readily available, short half-life gamma-emitter convenient for dosimetry and imaging, which can be efficiently loaded into preformed liposomes.


Aaps Pharmsci | 2003

Pharmacokinetics of paclitaxel-containing liposomes in rats.

Gerald J. Fetterly; Robert M. Straubinger

In animal models, liposomal formulations of paclitaxel possess lower toxicity and equal antitumor efficacy compared with the clinical formulation, Taxol. The goal of this study was to determine the formulation dependence of paclitaxel pharmacokinetics in rats, in order to test the hypothesis that altered biodistribution of paclitaxel modifies the exposure of critical normal tissues. Paclitaxel was administered intravenously in either multilamellar (MLV) liposomes composed of phosphatidylglycerol/phosphatidylcholine (L-pac) or in the Cremophor EL/ethanol vehicle used for the Taxol formulation (Cre-pac). The dose was 40 mg/kg, and the infusion time was 8 to 9 minutes. Animals were killed at various times, and pharmacokinetic parameters were determined from the blood and tissue distribution of paclitaxel. The area under the concentration vs time curve (AUC) for blood was similar for the 2 formulations (L-pac: 38.1±3.32 μg-h/mL; Cre-pac: 34.5±0.994 μg-h/mL), however, the AUC for various tissues was formulation-dependent. For bone marrow, skin, kidney, brain, adipose, and muscle tissue, the AUC was statistically higher for Cre-pac. For spleen, a tissue of the reticuloendothelial system that is important in the clearance of liposomes, the AUC was statistically higher for L-pac. Apparent tissue partition coefficients (Kp) also were calculated. For bone marrow, a tissue in which paclitaxel exerts significant toxicity, Kp was 5-fold greater for paclitaxel in Cre-pac. The data are consistent with paclitaxel release from circulating liposomes, but with efflux delayed sufficiently to retain drug to a greater extent in the central (blood) compartment and reduce penetration into peripheral tissues. These effects may contribute to the reduced toxicity of liposomal formulations of paclitaxel.


Cancer Letters | 1996

Paclitaxel-liposomes for intracavitary therapy of intraperitoneal P388 leukemia

Amarnath Sharma; Uma S. Sharma; Robert M. Straubinger

Paclitaxel, a recently approved antineoplastic agent, is cleared slowly from the peritoneal cavity after i.p. injection, and therefore appears to be promising for intracavitary therapy of malignancies confined to the peritoneal cavity. However the dose-limiting toxicity of Taxol, the clinical formulation of paclitaxel, was severe abdominal pain, likely caused by the excipients (Cremophor EL and ethanol) that are required to overcome low drug solubility. We tested the hypothesis that a liposome-based formulation could modulate paclitaxel toxicity independent of antitumor activity. The dose-dependence of toxicity and antitumor effect of paclitaxel liposomes was evaluated after i.p. administration against i.p. P388 leukemia. Liposomal paclitaxel showed antitumor activity similar to that of free paclitaxel (as Taxol), but was better tolerated by both healthy and tumor-bearing mice.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2001

Phospholipid-cationic lipid interactions: influences on membrane and vesicle properties.

Robert B. Campbell; Sathyamangalam V. Balasubramanian; Robert M. Straubinger

Liposomes composed of synthetic dialkyl cationic lipids and zwitterionic phospholipids such as dioleoylphosphatidylethanolamine have been studied extensively as vehicles for gene delivery, but the broader potentials of these cationic liposomes for drug delivery have not. An understanding of phospholipid-cationic lipid interactions is essential for rational development of this potential. We evaluated the effect of the cationic lipid DOTAP (N-[1-(2,3-dioleoyloxy)propyl]-N,N,N-trimethylammonium) on liposome physical properties such as size and membrane domain structure. DSC (differential scanning calorimetry) showed progressive decrease and broadening of the phase transition temperature of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) with increasing fraction of DOTAP, in the range of 0.4-20 mol%. Laurdan (6-dodecanolyldimethylamino-naphthalene), a fluorescent probe of membrane domain structure, showed that DOTAP and DPPC remained miscible at all ratios tested. DOTAP reduced the size of spontaneously-forming PC-containing liposomes, regardless of the acyl chain length and degree of saturation. The anionic lipid DOPG (dioleoylphosphatidylglycerol) had similar effects on DPPC membrane fluidity and size. However, DOTAP/DOPC (50/50) vesicles were taken up avidly by OVCAR-3 human ovarian tumor cells, in contrast to DOPG/DOPC (50/50) liposomes. Overall, DOTAP exerts potent effects on bilayer physical properties, and may provide advantages for drug delivery.

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