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Dive into the research topics where Samantha McDonough is active.

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Featured researches published by Samantha McDonough.


Gene Therapy | 2010

A probasin promoter, conditionally replicating adenovirus that expresses the sodium iodide symporter (NIS) for radiovirotherapy of prostate cancer

Miguel A. Trujillo; Michael J. Oneal; Samantha McDonough; Rui Qin; John C. Morris

The sodium iodide symporter (NIS) directs the uptake and concentration of iodide in thyroid cells. We have extended the use of NIS-mediated radioiodine therapy to other types of cancer, we transferred and expressed the NIS gene into prostate, colon and breast cancer cells using adenoviral vectors. To improve vector efficiency we have developed a conditionally replicating adenovirus (CRAd) in which the E1a gene is driven by the prostate-specific promoter, Probasin and the cassette RSV promoter human NIScDNA-bGH polyA replaces the E3 region (CRAd Ad5PB_RSV-NIS). In vitro infection of the prostate cancer cell line LnCaP resulted in virus replication, cytolysis and release of infective viral particles. Conversely, the prostate cancer cell line PC-3 (androgen receptor negative) and the pancreatic cancer cell line Panc-1 were refractory to the viral cytopathic effect and did not support viral replication. Radioiodine uptake was readily measurable in LnCaP cells infected with Ad5PB_RSV-NIS 24 h post-infection, confirming NIS expression. In vivo, LnCaP tumor xenografts in nude-mice injected intratumorally with Ad5PB_RSV_NIS CRAd expressed NIS actively as evidenced by 99Tc uptake and imaging. Administration of therapeutic 131I after virus injection significantly increased survival probability in mice carrying xenografted LnCaP tumors compared with virotherapy alone. These data indicate that Ad5PB_RSV_NIS replication is stringently restricted to androgen-positive prostate cancer cells and results in effective NIS expression and uptake of radioiodine. This construct may allow multimodal therapy, combining cytolytic virotherapy with radioiodine treatment, to be developed as a novel treatment for prostate cancer.


Cancer Gene Therapy | 2012

Preclinical efficacy of the oncolytic measles virus expressing the sodium iodide symporter in iodine non-avid anaplastic thyroid cancer: a novel therapeutic agent allowing noninvasive imaging and radioiodine therapy.

Honey V. Reddi; P Madde; Samantha McDonough; Miguel A. Trujillo; John C. Morris; Rae Myers; Kah-Whye Peng; Stephen J. Russell; Bryan McIver; N L Eberhardt

Anaplastic thyroid cancer is an extremely aggressive disease resistant to radioiodine treatment because of loss of sodium iodide symporter (NIS) expression. To enhance prognosis of this fatal cancer, we validated the preclinical efficacy of measles virus (MV)-NIS, the vaccine strain of the oncolytic MV (MV-Edm), modified to include the NIS gene. Western blotting analysis confirmed that a panel of eight anaplastic thyroid cancer (ATC)-derived cell lines do not express NIS protein, but do express CD46, the MV receptor. In vitro cell death assays and in vivo xenograft studies demonstrate the oncolytic efficacy of MV-NIS in BHT-101 and KTC-3, ATC-derived cell lines. Radioactive iodine uptake along with single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT)-computed tomography imaging of KTC-3 xenografts after 99Tcm administration confirmed NIS expression in vitro and in vivo, respectively, after virus treatment. Adjuvant administration of RAI, to MV-NIS-treated KTC-3 tumors showed a trend for increased tumor cell killing. As current treatment for ATC is only palliative, and MV-NIS is currently Food and Drug Administration approved for human clinical trials in myeloma, our data indicate that targeting ATC with MV-NIS could prove to be a novel therapeutic strategy for effective treatment of iodine-resistant ATC and will expedite its testing in clinical trials for this aggressive disease.


Cancer Gene Therapy | 2013

Redifferentiation and induction of tumor suppressors miR-122 and miR-375 by the PAX8/PPARγ fusion protein inhibits anaplastic thyroid cancer: a novel therapeutic strategy.

Honey V. Reddi; C B Driscoll; Pranathi Madde; Dragana Milosevic; R M Hurley; Samantha McDonough; J Hallanger-Johnson; Bryan McIver; N L Eberhardt

Anaplastic thyroid cancer (ATC) is an aggressive, fatal disease unresponsive to traditional therapies, generating a need to develop effective therapies. The PAX8/PPARγ fusion protein (PPFP) has been shown to favorably modulate tumor growth in follicular thyroid cancer, prompting our evaluation of its efficacy to inhibit ATC cell and tumor growth in vitro and in vivo. PPFP was constitutively expressed in five ATC cell lines: BHT-101, FRO, C-643, KTC-2 and KTC-3, and inhibited cell growth in four of five cell lines and xenograft tumor growth in four of four cell lines. PPFP-mediated growth inhibition involved multiple mechanisms, including upregulation of miR-122 and miR-375, associated with decreased angiogenesis and AKT pathway inactivation, respectively. Also, PPFP expression resulted in marked increase of thyroid-specific marker transcripts, including PAX8, thyroid peroxidase (TPO), sodium iodide symporter (NIS) and thyroglobulin, to varying degrees by activating their respective promoters, suggesting that PPFP induced cellular redifferentiation. Functional studies demonstrate that increased NIS messenger RNA is not associated with increased 125I uptake. However, ectopic expression of wild-type NIS-induced perchlorate-sensitive iodine uptake, suggesting that endogenous NIS in ATC cell lines is defective. As current treatment for ATC is only palliative, overexpression of PPFP may offer a novel therapeutic strategy for the treatment of ATC.


PLOS ONE | 2007

Evidence for Positive Selection in the C-terminal Domain of the Cholesterol Metabolism Gene PCSK9 Based on Phylogenetic Analysis in 14 Primate Species

Keyue Ding; Samantha McDonough; Iftikhar J. Kullo

Background Cholesterol homeostasis is maintained through finely tuned mechanisms regulating intestinal absorption, hepatic biosynthesis and secretion as well as plasma clearance. Proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9 (PCSK9) is a secreted enzyme of the serine protease family that reduces cellular uptake of plasma low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol by promoting LDL receptor (LDL-R) degradation. Species-specific positive selection has been noted in the LDLR promoter, leading to differential expression of LDLR among primates. Whether PCSK9 experienced significant selective pressure to maintain a functional relationship with its target protein, LDL-R, is unknown. Methodology/Principal Findings We compiled the sequences of the coding regions of PCSK9 from 14 primate species in the clade of Hominoids, Old World monkeys and New World monkeys. To detect selective pressure at the protein level, the ratios of nonsynonymous/synonymous substitution rate (d N/d S) under different evolutionary models were calculated across the phylogeny of PCSK9. Maximum likelihood analyses of d N/d S ratios for the aligned coding region sequences among 14 primate species indicated that PCSK9 was subject to a strong functional constraint (i.e., purifying selection). However, positive selection was noted in the functional carboxyl-terminal (C-terminal) domain in many branches across the phylogeny, especially in the lineage leading to the orangutan. Furthermore, at least five positively selected amino acids were detected in this lineage using the branch-site model A. In a sliding-window analysis, several d N/d S peaks in the C-terminal domain in both the human and the orangutan branches were noted. Conclusions These results suggest that among primates, differential selective pressure has shaped evolutionary patterns in the functional domains of PCSK9, an important regulator of cholesterol homeostasis.


Gene Therapy | 2013

Viral dose, radioiodide uptake, and delayed efflux in adenovirus-mediated NIS radiovirotherapy correlates with treatment efficacy

Miguel A. Trujillo; Michael J. Oneal; Samantha McDonough; John C. Morris

We have constructed a prostate tumor-specific conditionally replicating adenovirus (CRAd), named Ad5PB_RSV-NIS, which expresses the human sodium iodine symporter (NIS) gene. LNCaP tumors were established in nude mice and infected with this CRAd to study tumor viral spread, NIS expression, and efficacy. Using quantitative PCR, we found a linear correlation between the viral dose and viral genome copy numbers recovered after tumor infection. Confocal microscopy showed a linear correlation between adenovirus density and NIS expression. Radioiodide uptake vs virus dose-response curves revealed that the dose response curve was not linear and displayed a lower threshold of detection at 107 vp (virus particles) and an upper plateau of uptake at 1011 vp. The outcome of radiovirotherapy was highly dependent upon viral dose. At 1010 vp, no significant differences were observed between virotherapy alone or radiovirotherapy. However, when radioiodide therapy was combined with virotherapy at a dose of 1011 vp, significant improvement in survival was observed, indicating a relationship between viral dose-response uptake and the efficacy of radiovirotherapy. The reasons behind the differences in radioiodide therapy efficacy can be ascribed to more efficient viral tumor spread and a decrease in the rate of radioisotope efflux. Our results have important implications regarding the desirable and undesirable characteristics of vectors for clinical translation of virus-mediated NIS transfer therapy.


Cancer Gene Therapy | 2012

A Steep Radioiodine Dose Response Scalable to Humans in Sodium Iodide Symporter (NIS) Mediated Radiovirotherapy for Prostate Cancer

Miguel A. Trujillo; Michael J. Oneal; Samantha McDonough; Rui Qin; John C. Morris

The sodium-iodide symporter (NIS) directs the uptake and concentration of iodide in thyroid cells. We have extended the use of NIS-mediated radioiodine therapy to prostate cancer. We have developed a prostate tumor specific conditionally replicating adenovirus that expresses hNIS (Ad5PB_RSV-NIS). For radiovirotherapy to be effective in humans, the radioiodine dose administered in the pre-clinical animal model should scale to the range of acceptable doses in humans. We performed 131I dose-response experiments aiming to determine the dose required in mice to achieve efficient radiovirotherapy. Efficacy was determined by measuring tumor growth and survival times. We observed that individual tumors display disparate growth rates that preclude averaging within a treatment modality indicating heterogeneity of growth rate. We further show that a statistic and stochastic approach must be used when comparing the effect of an anti-cancer therapy on a cohort of tumors. Radiovirotherapy improves therapeutic value over virotherapy alone by slowing the rate of tumor growth in a more substantial manner leading to an increase in survival time. We also show that the radioiodine doses needed to achieve this increase scaled well within the current doses used for treatment of thyroid cancer in humans.


Human Gene Therapy | 2012

Characterization of Infectivity-Enhanced Conditionally Replicating Adenovectors for Prostate Cancer Radiovirotherapy

Michael J. Oneal; Miguel A. Trujillo; Julia Davydova; Samantha McDonough; Masato Yamamoto; John C. Morris

Prostate cancer (PCa) is the second most commonly diagnosed and sixth leading cause of cancer death in American men and one for which no curative therapy exists after metastasis. To meet this need for novel therapies, our laboratory has previously generated conditionally replicating adenovirus (CRAd) vectors expressing the sodium iodide symporter (hNIS). This virus transduced PCa cells and induced functional NIS expression, allowing for noninvasive tumor imaging and combination therapy with radioiodide, referred to as radiovirotherapy. We have now generated two new modified vectors to further improve efficacy. Ad5/3PB-ADP-hNIS and Ad5/3PB-hNIS include a hybrid Ad5/3 fiber knob to improve transduction efficiency, and express NIS from the endogenous major late promoter to restrict NIS expression to target cells. Additionally, Ad5/3PB-ADP-hNIS includes the adenovirus death protein (ADP), which hastens the release of viral particles after assembly. These two vectors specifically induce radioisotope uptake, cytopathic effect, and viral replication in androgen receptor-expressing PCa cell lines with Ad5/3PB-ADP-hNIS showing earlier (131)I uptake and cytolysis at low multiplicity of infection. SPECT-CT imaging of xenograft tumors infected with Ad5/3PB-hNIS showed steady uptake, whereas infection with Ad5/3PB-ADP-hNIS led to increasing uptake, indicating viral spread. Radiovirotherapy of xenograft LNCaP tumors with Ad5/3PB-ADP-hNIS showed the most significant survival extension versus control tumors (p=0.001), but the benefit of radiovirotherapy was not statistically significant compared with virotherapy alone in this model. These results show the potential of Ad5/3PB-ADP-hNIS as a vector for treatment of prostate cancer.


Cancer Gene Therapy | 2013

Effect of increased viral replication and infectivity enhancement on radioiodide uptake and oncolytic activity of adenovirus vectors expressing the sodium iodide symporter

Michael J. Oneal; Miguel A. Trujillo; Julia Davydova; Samantha McDonough; Masato Yamamoto; John C. Morris

Our laboratory has investigated replicating adenovirus-human sodium iodide symporter (Ad-hNIS) vectors in a combinatorial oncolytic approach known as radiovirotherapy. However, hNIS-mediated iodide sequestration requires an intact cell membrane, and the enhancement of infectivity may alter the radioiodide accumulation in vivo. To assess these effects, we constructed Ad-NIS vectors expressing NIS from the major late promoter. Viral tropism was altered using a hybrid Ad5/3 fiber, and rates of viral spread altered through expression of the Ad death protein (ADP). The hybrid 5/3 fiber enhanced Ad-mediated cytolysis and radioisotope uptake in vitro. Replicating ADP-lacking viral vectors showed levels of uptake similar to non-replicating vectors that declined as cells lysed. ADP expression enhanced the rate of cell lysis and viral release, but reduced the peak and duration of radioiodide uptake. SPECT-computed tomography imaging showed the Ad5/3-noADP-hNIS vector induced significantly more isotope uptake than other vector structures, indicating that viral spread may not always make up for the reduced NIS expression as in our work with prostate cancer. These results indicate that replicating, infectivity-enhanced Ad-NIS vectors provide superior overall efficacy, but also indicate that the effect of replication speed requires tumor and model-specific testing.


ieee international symposium on medical measurements and applications | 2017

Experimental validation of an optofluidic platform for microbial single cell isolation and whole genome amplification for human microbiome applications

Yuguang Liu; Patricio Jeraldo; Samantha McDonough; Jin Jen; Robin Patel; Marina Walther-Antonio; Christopher Lambert; Bruce K. Gale

Single microbial cell genome sequencing is becoming a powerful tool for the discovery of the hidden genetic information valuable for many medical applications. One of the critical steps in single-cell genome sequencing is the physical isolation of individual cells from a highly diverse heterogeneous population. Amplifying the genome of a single microbial cell is another challenge due to the minute amount of DNA. Efforts have been directed in developing an optofluidic platform integrating advanced microscopy, optical tweezers and microfluidic technology for single cell isolation and genome amplification. Here, we investigate and evaluate the validity of this platform for single microbial cell genome amplification. The successful validation of this approach allows us to perform various single cell studies using this platform.


Pancreatology | 2013

Oncolytic adenovirus for imaging and treatment of pancreatic cancer

Julia Davydova; Miguel A. Trujillo; Michael J. Oneal; Samantha McDonough; Joohee Han; Selwyn M. Vickers; John C. Morris; Masato Yamamoto

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John C. Morris

Washington University in St. Louis

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Joohee Han

University of Minnesota

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