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Dive into the research topics where Sandani Samarajeewa is active.

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Featured researches published by Sandani Samarajeewa.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Degradability of Poly(Lactic Acid)-Containing Nanoparticles: Enzymatic Access through a Cross-Linked Shell Barrier

Sandani Samarajeewa; Ritu Shrestha; Yali Li; Karen L. Wooley

Comparative studies of bulk samples of hydrolytically degradable poly(lactic acid) (PLA) vs core-shell block copolymer micelles having PLA cores revealed remarkable acceleration in the proteinase K enzymatic hydrolysis of the nanoparticulate forms and demonstrated that even with amidation-based shell cross-linking the core domain remained accessible. Kinetic analyses by (1)H NMR spectroscopy showed less than 20% lactic acid released from enzymatically catalyzed hydrolysis of poly(l-lactic acid) in bulk, whereas ca. 70% of the core degraded within 48 h for block copolymer micelles of poly(N-(acryloyloxy)succinimide-copolymer-N-acryloylmorpholine)-block-poly(L-lactic acid) (P(NAS-co-NAM)-b-PLLA), with only a slight reduction to ca. 50% for the shell cross-linked derivatives. Rigorous characterization measurements by NMR spectroscopy, fluorescence spectroscopy, dynamic light scattering, atomic force microscopy, and transmission electron microscopy were employed to confirm core excavation. These studies provide important fundamental understanding of the effects of nanoscopic dimensions on protein-polymer interactions and polymer degradability, which will guide the development of these degradable nanoconstructs to reach their potential for controlled release of therapeutics and biological clearance.


Biomaterials | 2012

Endosomal escape and siRNA delivery with cationic shell crosslinked knedel-like nanoparticles with tunable buffering capacities

Ritu Shrestha; Mahmoud Elsabahy; Stephanie Florez-Malaver; Sandani Samarajeewa; Karen L. Wooley

Cationic shell crosslinked knedel-like nanoparticles (cSCKs) have emerged as a highly efficient transfection agent for nucleic acids delivery. In this study, a new class of cSCKs with tunable buffering capacities has been developed by altering the amounts of histamines and primary amines incorporated into their crosslinked shell regions. The effect of histamine content of these nanoparticles with a hydrodynamic diameter of ca. 20 nm, on the siRNA-binding affinity, cytotoxicity, immunogenicity, and transfection efficiency was investigated. The modification of cSCKs with histamine was found to reduce the siRNA-binding affinity and cellular binding. On the other hand, it significantly reduced the toxicity and immunogenicity of the nanoparticles with subsequent increase in the transfection efficiency. In addition, escape from endosomes was facilitated by having two species of low and high pK(a)s (i.e. histamine and primary amine groups, respectively), as demonstrated by the potentiometric titration experiments and the effect of bafilomycin A1, an inhibitor of the endosomal acidification, on the transfection efficiency of cSCKs. Histamine modification of 15 mol% was a threshold, above which cSCKs with higher histamine content completely lost the ability to bind siRNA and to transfect cells. This study highlights the potential of histamine incorporation to augment the gene silencing activity of cationic nanoparticles, reduce their toxicity, and increase their biocompatibility, which is of particular importance in the design of nucleic acids delivery vectors.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Orthogonally dual-clickable Janus nanoparticles via a cyclic templating strategy.

Shiyi Zhang; Zhou Li; Sandani Samarajeewa; Guorong Sun; Chao Yang; Karen L. Wooley

Synthetic asymmetrical systems, Janus particles and patchy particles, are capable of undergoing hierarchical assembly processes that mimic those of Nature, to serve as switchable devices, optical probes, phase-transfer catalysts, and multifunctional drug carriers, each of which benefits from opposing surface patterns that behave differently. Production of nanometer-sized Janus particles that are equipped with efficient chemistries remains a challenge. A robust Janus-faced polymer nanoparticle framework that presents two orthogonally click-reactive surface chemistries has been generated by a recyclable strategy that involves reactive functional group transfer by templating against gold nanoparticle substrates. This anisotropic functionalization approach is compatible with a wide range of soft materials, providing Janus nanoparticles for the construction of dual-functionalized devices by accurately controlling chemical functionality at the nanoscopic level.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2009

Tin(IV) phosphonates: porous nanoparticles and pillared materials

Sharath R. Kirumakki; Jin Huang; Ayyappan Subbiah; Jiyong Yao; Adam Rowland; Brentley Smith; Atashi Mukherjee; Sandani Samarajeewa; Abraham Clearfield

Two types of tin(IV) phosphonates have been prepared; monophosphonates that form porous spherical aggregates and diphosphonates that form layered three-dimensional structures. The reaction of 4,4′-monophenyldiphosphonic acid with SnCl4·5H2O in a solvothermal reaction produces pillared layered porous materials with surface areas of 350–450 m2 g−1 and pore sizes in the 8–20 A range. The isotherms are type I in character. With biphenyldiphosphonic acid, preparation in water–alcohol solutions also yields porous pillared materials but the isotherms are type IV. The pores are somewhat larger and the pore distribution range is also larger. However, carrying out the reactions in DMSO–water or DMSO–alcohol, yields porous materials with type I isotherms. The use of spacer groups such as methyl, phenyl and phosphite were found to change the pore structure and/or to increase the surface area. The structure of these porous materials cannot be determined directly as they yield minimal X-ray powder patterns. However, the structure of Sn(O3PCH3)2 was determined from its powder pattern obtained from a sample treated hydrothermally at 220 °C for 30 days. The structure is indeed layered with pendant methyl groups forming a bilayer similar to the structure of zirconium phenylphosphonate. Using these structures to describe the porous pillared compounds led to a hypothesis of layer growth of these materials that explains their properties and their unique type of porosity. The usefulness of these porous materials resides in their ability to be functionalized to impart chemical reactivity.


Molecular Pharmaceutics | 2013

In vitro efficacy of paclitaxel-loaded dual-responsive shell cross-linked polymer nanoparticles having orthogonally degradable disulfide cross-linked corona and polyester core domains.

Sandani Samarajeewa; Ritu Shrestha; Mahmoud Elsabahy; Amolkumar Karwa; Ang Li; Ryan P. Zentay; James G. Kostelc; Richard B. Dorshow; Karen L. Wooley

Paclitaxel-loaded shell cross-linked polymeric nanoparticles having an enzymatically and hydrolytically degradable poly(lactic acid) core and a glutathione-responsive disulfide cross-linked poly(oligoethylene glycol)-containing corona were constructed in aqueous solution and investigated for their stimuli-responsive release of the embedded therapeutics and in vitro cytotoxicity. Paclitaxel release from the nanoparticles in PBS buffer was accelerated in the presence of glutathione at both pH 5.5 and pH 7.4, reaching ca. 65% cumulative drug release after 8 d, whereas only ca. 50% and 35% extents of release were observed in the absence of glutathione at pH 5.5 and pH 7.4, respectively. Enzyme-catalyzed hydrolysis of the nanoparticle core resulted in the degradation of ca. 30% of the poly(lactic acid) core to lactic acid within 12 h, with coincidently triggered paclitaxel release of ca. 37%, as opposed to only ca. 17% release from the uncatalyzed nanoparticles at pH 7.4. While empty nanoparticles did not show any inherent cytotoxicity at the highest tested concentrations, paclitaxel-loaded nanoparticles showed IC50 values that were similar to those of free paclitaxel at 72 h incubation with KB cells and were more efficacious at ca. 3-fold lower IC50 value (0.031 μM vs 0.085 μM) at 2 h of incubation. Against human ovarian adenocarcinoma cells, the paclitaxel-loaded nanoparticles exhibited a remarkable ca. 11-fold lower IC50 than a Taxol-mimicking formulation (0.0007 μM vs 0.008 μM) at 72 h of incubation. These tunable dual-responsive degradable nanoparticles show great promise for delivery of paclitaxel to tumor tissues, given their superior in vitro efficacies compared to that of free paclitaxel and Taxol-mimicking formulations.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Hierarchically Assembled Theranostic Nanostructures for siRNA Delivery and Imaging Applications

Ritu Shrestha; Mahmoud Elsabahy; Hannah Luehmann; Sandani Samarajeewa; Stephanie Florez-Malaver; Nam S. Lee; Michael J. Welch; Yongjian Liu; Karen L. Wooley

Dual functional hierarchically assembled nanostructures, with two unique functions of carrying therapeutic cargo electrostatically and maintaining radiolabeled imaging agents covalently within separate component building blocks, have been developed via the supramolecular assembly of several spherical cationic shell cross-linked nanoparticles clustered around a central anionic shell cross-linked cylinder. The shells of the cationic nanoparticles and the hydrophobic core domain of the anionic central cylindrical nanostructure of the assemblies were utilized to complex negatively charged nucleic acids (siRNA) and to undergo radiolabeling, respectively, for potential theranostic applications. The assemblies exhibited exceptional cell transfection and radiolabeling efficiencies, providing an overall advantage over the individual components, which could each facilitate only one or the other of the functions.


Chemical Communications | 2008

Sn(IV) phosphonates as catalysts in solvent-free Baeyer–Villiger oxidations using H2O2

Sharath R. Kirumakki; Sandani Samarajeewa; Robert Harwell; Atashi Mukherjee; Rolfe H. Herber; Abraham Clearfield

We have designed a new family of layered Sn(iv)phosphonate (SnPP) materials which are very efficient catalysts in the BV oxidation of aromatic aldehydes without any solvent and using aqueous H(2)O(2) (30%) as the oxidant.


Biomacromolecules | 2013

Degradable Cationic Shell Cross-Linked Knedel-like Nanoparticles: Synthesis, Degradation, Nucleic Acid Binding, and in Vitro Evaluation

Sandani Samarajeewa; Aida Ibricevic; Sean P. Gunsten; Ritu Shrestha; Mahmoud Elsabahy; Steven L. Brody; Karen L. Wooley

In this work, degradable cationic shell cross-linked knedel-like (deg-cSCK) nanoparticles were developed as an alternative platform to replace similar nondegradable cSCK nanoparticles that have been utilized for nucleic acids delivery. An amphiphilic diblock copolymer poly(acrylamidoethylamine)(90)-block-poly(DL-lactide)(40) (PAEA(90)-b-PDLLA(40)) was synthesized, self-assembled in aqueous solution, and shell cross-linked using a hydrolyzable cross-linker to afford deg-cSCKs with an average core diameter of 45 ± 7 nm. These nanoparticles were fluorescently labeled for in vitro tracking. The enzymatic- and hydrolytic-degradability, siRNA binding affinity, cell uptake and cytotoxicity of the deg-cSCKs were evaluated. Esterase-catalyzed hydrolysis of the nanoparticles resulted in the degradation of ca. 24% of the PDLLA core into lactic acid within 5 d, as opposed to only ca. 9% degradation from aqueous solutions of the deg-cSCK nanoparticles in the absence of enzyme. Cellular uptake of deg-cSCKs was efficient, while exhibiting low cytotoxicity with LD50 values of ca. 90 and 30 μg/mL in RAW 264.7 mouse macrophages and MLE 12 cell lines, respectively, ca. 5- to 6-fold lower than the cytotoxicity observed for nondegradable cSCK analogs. Additionally, deg-cSCKs were able to complex siRNA at an N/P ratio as low as 2, and were efficiently able to facilitate cellular uptake of the complexed nucleic acids.


Langmuir | 2014

Holistic assessment of covalently labeled core-shell polymeric nanoparticles with fluorescent contrast agents for theranostic applications.

Tiffany P. Gustafson; Young Hyo Lim; Jeniree A. Flores; Gyu Seong Heo; Fuwu Zhang; Shiyi Zhang; Sandani Samarajeewa; Jeffery E. Raymond; Karen L. Wooley

The successful development of degradable polymeric nanostructures as optical probes for use in nanotheranostic applications requires the intelligent design of materials such that their surface response, degradation, drug delivery, and imaging properties are all optimized. In the case of imaging, optimization must result in materials that allow differentiation between unbound optical contrast agents and labeled polymeric materials as they undergo degradation. In this study, we have shown that use of traditional electrophoretic gel-plate assays for the determination of the purity of dye-conjugated degradable nanoparticles is limited by polymer degradation characteristics. To overcome these limitations, we have outlined a holistic approach to evaluating dye and peptide-polymer nanoparticle conjugation by utilizing steady-state fluorescence, anisotropy, and emission and anisotropy lifetime decay profiles, through which nanoparticle-dye binding can be assessed independently of perturbations, such as those presented during the execution of electrolyte gel-based assays. This approach has been demonstrated to provide an overall understanding of the spectral signature-structure-function relationship, ascertaining key information on interactions between the fluorophore, polymer, and solvent components that have a direct and measurable impact on the emissive properties of the optical probe. The use of these powerful techniques provides feedback that can be utilized to improve nanotheranostics by evaluating dye emissivity in degradable nanotheranostic systems, which has become increasingly important as modern platforms transition to architectures intentionally reliant on degradation and built-in environmental responses.


Journal of Materials Chemistry B | 2013

Shell-crosslinked knedel-like nanoparticles induce lower immunotoxicity than their non-crosslinked analogs.

Mahmoud Elsabahy; Sandani Samarajeewa; Jeffery E. Raymond; Corrie Clark; Karen L. Wooley

The development of stable nanoparticles that can withstand the changing conditions experienced in a biological setting and also be of low toxicity and immunogenicity is of particular importance to address the problems associated with currently utilized nanotechnology-based therapeutics and diagnostics. The use of crosslinked nanoparticles continues to receive special impetus, due to their robust structure and high kinetic stability, and they have recently been shown to induce lower cytotoxicity than their non-crosslinked micellar counterparts. In the current study, poly(acrylamidoethylamine)-block-poly(DL-lactide) (PAEA90-b-PDLLA40) copolymers were synthesized, self-assembled in water to yield nanoscopic polymeric micelles, and the effects of decorating the micellar surface with poly(ethylene glycol) (i.e. PEGylation) and crosslinking the PAEA layer to varying extents on the physicochemical characteristics, cytotoxicity and immunotoxicity of the nanoparticles were studied. Herein, we report for the first time that crosslinking can efficiently reduce the immunotoxicity of polymeric nanomaterials. In addition, increasing the degree of crosslinking further reduced the accessibility of biomolecules to the core of the nanoparticles and decreased their cytotoxicity and immunotoxicity. It is also highlighted that crosslinking can be more efficient than PEGylation in reducing the immunotoxicity of nanomaterials. Shell-crosslinking of block copolymer micelles, therefore, is expected to advance their clinical development beyond the earlier known effects, and to broaden the implications in the field of nanomedicine.

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Yongjian Liu

Washington University in St. Louis

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Aida Ibricevic

Washington University in St. Louis

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