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Dive into the research topics where Sakkarapalayam M. Mahalingam is active.

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Featured researches published by Sakkarapalayam M. Mahalingam.


Bioconjugate Chemistry | 2013

Development of tumor-targeted near infrared probes for fluorescence guided surgery.

Lindsay E. Kelderhouse; Venkatesh Chelvam; Charity Wayua; Sakkarapalayam M. Mahalingam; Scott Poh; Sumith A. Kularatne; Philip S. Low

Complete surgical resection of malignant disease is the only reliable method to cure cancer. Unfortunately, quantitative tumor resection is often limited by a surgeons ability to locate all malignant disease and distinguish it from healthy tissue. Fluorescence-guided surgery has emerged as a tool to aid surgeons in the identification and removal of malignant lesions. While nontargeted fluorescent dyes have been shown to passively accumulate in some tumors, the resulting tumor-to-background ratios are often poor, and the boundaries between malignant and healthy tissues can be difficult to define. To circumvent these problems, our laboratory has developed high affinity tumor targeting ligands that bind to receptors that are overexpressed on cancer cells and deliver attached molecules selectively into these cells. In this study, we explore the use of two tumor-specific targeting ligands (i.e., folic acid that targets the folate receptor (FR) and DUPA that targets prostate specific membrane antigen (PSMA)) to deliver near-infrared (NIR) fluorescent dyes specifically to FR and PSMA expressing cancers, thereby rendering only the malignant cells highly fluorescent. We report here that all FR- and PSMA-targeted NIR probes examined bind cultured cancer cells in the low nanomolar range. Moreover, upon intravenous injection into tumor-bearing mice with metastatic disease, these same ligand-NIR dye conjugates render receptor-expressing tumor tissues fluorescent, enabling their facile resection with minimal contamination from healthy tissues.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014

Identification of the first inhibitor of the GBP1:PIM1 interaction. Implications for the development of a new class of anticancer agents against paclitaxel resistant cancer cells.

Mirko Andreoli; Marco Persico; Ajay Kumar; Nausicaa Orteca; Vineet Kumar; Antonella Pepe; Sakkarapalayam M. Mahalingam; Antonio E. Alegria; Lella Petrella; Laima Sevciunaite; Alessia Camperchioli; Marisa Mariani; Antonio Di Dato; Ettore Novellino; Giovanni Scambia; Sanjay V. Malhotra; Cristiano Ferlini; Caterina Fattorusso

Class III β-tubulin plays a prominent role in the development of drug resistance to paclitaxel by allowing the incorporation of the GBP1 GTPase into microtubules. Once in the cytoskeleton, GBP1 binds to prosurvival kinases such as PIM1 and initiates a signaling pathway that induces resistance to paclitaxel. Therefore, the inhibition of the GBP1:PIM1 interaction could potentially revert resistance to paclitaxel. A panel of 44 4-azapodophyllotoxin derivatives was screened in the NCI-60 cell panel. The result is that 31 are active and the comparative analysis demonstrated specific activity in paclitaxel-resistant cells. Using surface plasmon resonance, we were able to prove that NSC756093 is a potent in vitro inhibitor of the GBP1:PIM1 interaction and that this property is maintained in vivo in ovarian cancer cells resistant to paclitaxel. Through bioinformatics, molecular modeling, and mutagenesis studies, we identified the putative NSC756093 binding site at the interface between the helical and the LG domain of GBP1. According to our results by binding to this site, the NSC756093 compound is able to stabilize a conformation of GBP1 not suitable for binding to PIM1.


Molecular Imaging and Biology | 2016

Predicting Response to Therapy for Autoimmune and Inflammatory Diseases Using a Folate Receptor-Targeted Near-Infrared Fluorescent Imaging Agent

Lindsay E. Kelderhouse; Sakkarapalayam M. Mahalingam; Philip S. Low

PurposeAlthough current therapies for many inflammatory/autoimmune diseases are effective, a significant number of patients still exhibit only partial or negligible responses to therapeutic intervention. Since prolonged use of an inadequate therapy can result in both progressive tissue damage and unnecessary expense, methods to identify nonresponding patients are necessary.ProceduresFour murine models of inflammatory disease (rheumatoid arthritis, ulcerative colitis, pulmonary fibrosis, and atherosclerosis) were induced, treated with anti-inflammatory agents, and evaluated for inflammatory response. The mice were also injected intraperitoneally with OTL0038, a folate receptor-targeted near-infrared dye that accumulates in activated macrophages at sites of inflammation. Uptake of OTL0038 in inflamed lesions was then correlated with clinical measurements of disease severity.ResultsOTL0038 accumulated at sites of inflammation in all four animal models. More importantly, changes in lesion-associated OTL0038 preceded changes in clinical symptoms in mice treated with all anti-inflammatory drugs examined.ConclusionOTL0038 has the ability to predict responses to multiple therapies in four murine models of inflammation.


Molecular Pharmaceutics | 2015

Prediction of Response to Therapy for Autoimmune/Inflammatory Diseases Using an Activated Macrophage-Targeted Radioimaging Agent.

Lindsay E. Kelderhouse; Meridith T. Robins; Katelyn E. Rosenbalm; Emily K. Hoylman; Sakkarapalayam M. Mahalingam; Philip S. Low

The ability to select patients who will respond to therapy is especially acute for autoimmune/inflammatory diseases, where the costs of therapies can be high and the progressive damage associated with ineffective treatments can be irreversible. In this article we describe a clinical test that will rapidly predict the response of patients with an autoimmune/inflammatory disease to many commonly employed therapies. This test involves quantitative assessment of uptake of a folate receptor-targeted radioimaging agent ((99m)Tc-EC20) by a subset of inflammatory macrophages that accumulate at sites of inflammation. Murine models of four representative inflammatory diseases (rheumatoid arthritis, inflammatory bowel disease, pulmonary fibrosis, and atherosclerosis) show markedly decreased uptake of (99m)Tc-EC20 in inflamed lesions upon initiation of successful therapies, but no decrease in uptake upon administration of ineffective therapies, in both cases long before changes in clinical symptoms can be detected. This predictive capability should reduce costs and minimize morbidities associated with failed autoimmune/inflammatory disease therapies.


Bioconjugate Chemistry | 2017

Evaluation of a Centyrin-Based Near-Infrared Probe for Fluorescence-Guided Surgery of Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor Positive Tumors

Sakkarapalayam M. Mahalingam; Vadim Dudkin; Shalom Goldberg; Donna Klein; Fang Yi; Sunil Singhal; Karyn O’Neil; Philip S. Low

Tumor-targeted near-infrared fluorescent dyes have the potential to improve cancer surgery by enabling surgeons to locate and resect more malignant lesions where good visualization tools are required to ensure complete removal of malignant tissue. Although the tumor-targeted fluorescent dyes used in humans to date have been either small organic molecules or high molecular weight antibodies, low molecular weight protein scaffolds have attracted significant attention because they penetrate solid tumors almost as efficiently as small molecules, but can be infinitely mutated to bind almost any antigen. Here we describe the use of a 10 kDa protein scaffold, a Centyrin, to target a near-infrared fluorescent dye to tumors that overexpress the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) for fluorescence-guided surgery (FGS). We have developed and optimized the dose and time required for imaging small tumor burdens with minimal background fluorescence in real-time fluorescence-guided surgery of EGFR-expressing tumor xenografts in murine models. We demonstrate that the Centyrin-near-infrared dye conjugate (CNDC) binds selectively to human EGFR+ cancer cells with an EC50 of 2 nM, localizes to EGFR+ tumor xenografts in athymic nude mice and that uptake of the dye in xenografts is significantly reduced when EGFR are blocked by preinjection of excess unlabeled Centyrin. Taken together, these data suggest that CNDCs can be used for intraoperative identification and surgical removal of EGFR-expressing lesions and that Centyrins targeted to other tumor-specific antigens should prove similarly useful in fluorescence guided surgery of cancer. In addition, we demonstrate that the CNDC is detected in the NIR region of the spectrum and can be utilized for fluorescence-guided surgery (FGS). In addition, we propose that with its eventual complete clearance from EGFR-negative tissues and its quantitative retention in the tumor mass for >24 h, a Centyrin-targeted NIR dye should provide excellent tumor contrast when injected at least 6-8 h before initiation of cancer surgery in human patients.


Bioconjugate Chemistry | 2018

Carbonic Anhydrase IX-Targeted Near-Infrared Dye for Fluorescence Imaging of Hypoxic Tumors

Sakkarapalayam M. Mahalingam; Haiyan Chu; Xin Liu; Christopher P. Leamon; Philip S. Low

Use of tumor-targeted fluorescence dyes to help surgeons identify otherwise undetected tumor nodules, decrease the incidence of cancer-positive margins, and facilitate localization of malignant lymph nodes has demonstrated considerable promise for improving cancer debulking surgery. Unfortunately, the repertoire of available tumor-targeted fluorescent dyes does not permit identification of all cancer types, raising the need to develop additional tumor-specific fluorescent dyes to ensure localization of all malignant lesions during cancer surgeries. By comparing the mRNA levels of the hypoxia-induced plasma membrane protein carbonic anhydrase IX (CA IX) in 13 major human cancers with the same mRNA levels in corresponding normal tissues, we document that CA IX constitutes a nearly universal marker for the design of tumor-targeted fluorescent dyes. Motivated by this expression profile, we synthesize two new CA IX-targeted near-infrared (NIR) fluorescent imaging agents and characterize their physical and biological properties both in vitro and in vivo. We report that conjugation of either acetazolamide or 6-aminosaccharin (i.e., two CA-IX-specific ligands) to the NIR fluorescent dye, S0456, via an extended phenolic spacer creates a brightly fluorescent dye that binds CA IX with high affinity and allows rapid visualization of hypoxic regions of solid tumors at depths >1 cm beneath a tissue surface. Taken together, these data suggest that a CA IX-targeted NIR dye can constitute a useful addition to a cocktail of tumor-targeted NIR dyes designed to image all human cancers.


ACS Omega | 2018

Targeting of a Photosensitizer to the Mitochondrion Enhances the Potency of Photodynamic Therapy

Sakkarapalayam M. Mahalingam; Josue D. Ordaz; Philip S. Low

Photodynamic therapy (PDT) involves use of a photosensitizer, whose activation with light leads to the production of singlet oxygen (SOS), generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), and initiation of associated cell toxicity. Because a cell’s mitochondria constitute sites where oxygen levels are high, ROS can be readily produced, and apoptosis is commonly initiated. Therefore, an ideal PDT agent might be a potent photosensitizer that could naturally accumulate in mitochondria. Although a number of mitochondria-targeting moieties, including triphenylphosphine, guanidinium, and bisguanidium, have been identified, a quantitative comparison of their efficacies in targeting mitochondria has not been performed. In this study, we have prepared triphenylphosphine, guanidinium, and bisguanidium derivatives of the FDA-approved PDT agent verteporfin (Visudyne, benzoporphyrin derivative-monoacid ring A: BPD-MA) and compared their abilities to induce the intracellular perturbations common to potent PDT agents. Cellular parameters examined included subcellular localization of the verteporfin, real-time monitoring of SOS production, quantitation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation, analysis of mitochondria and chromatin integrity, characterization of cytoskeletal disruption and evaluation of cytochrome C release as a measure of apoptosis. An analysis of these parameters demonstrates that the triphenylphosphine derivative (0323) has better mitochondria-targeting efficacy, SOS production, and mitochondria membrane toxicity than either unmodified verteporfin or its guanidinium derivatives. Consistent with this potency, 0323 also induced the most prominent mitochondria swelling, actin depolymerization, pyknosis, and cytochrome C release. We conclude that triphenylphosphine has a better mitochondria-targeting moiety than guanidinium or bis-guanidinium and those PDT photosensitizers with improved cytotoxicities can be prepared by conjugating a mitochondria-targeting moiety to the desired photosensitizer.


Archive | 2013

Synthesis and composition of amino acid linking groups conjugated to compounds used for the targeted imaging of tumors

Philip Stewart Low; Sumith A. Kularatne; Sakkarapalayam M. Mahalingam


Molecular Pharmaceutics | 2018

Intra-operative ureter visualization using a novel near infrared fluorescent dye

Sakkarapalayam M. Mahalingam; Fernando Dip; Marco Castillo; Mayank Roy; Steven D. Wexner; Raul J. Rosenthal; Philip S. Low


Cancer Research | 2018

Abstract 3571: Use of a universal CAR T cell plus bispecific adapters to eradicate antigenically heterogeneous tumors

Yong Gu Lee; Isaac S. Marks; Madduri Srinivasarao; Ananda Kumar Kanduluru; Sakkarapalayam M. Mahalingam; Haiyan Chu; Philip S. Low

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