Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Sherri A. McFarland is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Sherri A. McFarland.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Exploitation of Long-Lived 3IL Excited States for Metal–Organic Photodynamic Therapy: Verification in a Metastatic Melanoma Model

Richard Lincoln; Lars Kohler; Susan Monro; Huimin Yin; Mat Stephenson; Ruifa Zong; Abdellatif Chouai; Christopher Dorsey; Robie Hennigar; Randolph P. Thummel; Sherri A. McFarland

Members of a family of Ru(II)-appended pyrenylethynylene dyads were synthesized, characterized according to their photophysical and photobiological properties, and evaluated for their collective potential as photosensitizers for metal-organic photodynamic therapy. The dyads in this series possess lowest-lying (3)IL-based excited states with lifetimes that can be tuned from 22 to 270 μs in fluid solution and from 44 to 3440 μs in glass at 77 K. To our knowledge, these excited-state lifetimes are the longest reported for Ru(II)-based dyads containing only one organic chromophore and lacking terminal diimine groups. These excited states proved to be extremely sensitive to trace amounts of oxygen, owing to their long lifetimes and very low radiative rates. Herein, we demonstrate that (3)IL states of this nature are potent photodynamic agents, exhibiting the largest photocytotoxicity indices reported to date with nanomolar light cytotoxicities at very short drug-to-light intervals. Importantly, these new agents are robust enough to maintain submicromolar PDT in pigmented metastatic melanoma cells, where the presence of melanin in combination with low oxygen tension is known to compromise PDT. This activity underscores the potential of metal-organic PDT as an alternate treatment strategy for challenging environments such as malignant melanoma.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2010

Photobiological Activity of Ru(II) Dyads Based on (Pyren-1-yl)ethynyl Derivatives of 1,10-Phenanthroline

Susan Monro; John A. Scott; Abdellatif Chouai; Richard Lincoln; Ruifa Zong; Randolph P. Thummel; Sherri A. McFarland

Several mononuclear Ru(II) dyads possessing 1,10-phenanthroline-appended pyrenylethynylene ligands were synthesized, characterized, and evaluated for their potential in photobiological applications such as photodynamic therapy (PDT). These complexes interact with DNA via intercalation and photocleave DNA in vitro at submicromolar concentrations when irradiated with visible light (lambda(irr) > or = 400 nm). Such properties are remarkably sensitive to the position of the ethynylpyrenyl substituent on the 1,10-phenanthroline ring, with 3-substitution showing the strongest binding under all conditions and causing the most deleterious DNA damage. Both dyads photocleave DNA under hypoxic conditions, and this photoactivity translates well to cytotoxicity and photocytotoxicity models using human leukemia cells, where the 5- and 3-substituted dyads show photocytotoxicity at 5-10 microM and 10-20 microM, respectively, with minimal, or essentially no, dark toxicity at these concentrations. This lack of dark cytotoxicity at concentrations where significant photoactivity is observed emphasizes that agents with strong intercalating units, previously thought to be too toxic for phototherapeutic applications, should not be excluded from the arsenal of potential photochemotherapeutic agents under investigation.


Photodiagnosis and Photodynamic Therapy | 2013

Photodynamic inactivation of Staphylococcus aureus and methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus with Ru(II)-based type I/type II photosensitizers

Yaxal Arenas; Susan Monro; Ge Shi; Arkady Mandel; Sherri A. McFarland; Lothar Lilge

BACKGROUND The introduction of new disinfection and sterilization methods, such as antimicrobial photodynamic therapy, is urgently needed for the healthcare industry, in particular to address the pervasive problem of antibiotic resistance. This study evaluated the efficacy and the mechanisms of photodynamic antimicrobial chemotherapy (PACT), also known as photodynamic inactivation (PDI) of microorganisms, induced by novel Ru(II)-based photosensitizers against Staphylococcus aureus and methicillin-resistant S. aureus strains. METHODS The photodynamic antibacterial effects of a new class of Ru(II)-based photosensitizers (TLD1411 and TLD1433) were evaluated against a strain of S. aureus (ATCC 25923) and a methicillin-resistant strain of S. aureus (MRSA, ATCC 33592). Bacterial samples were dosed with a range of photosensitizer concentrations (0.3-12 μM) and exposed to 530 nm light (90J cm(-2)) in normoxic conditions (ambient atmosphere) and in hypoxic conditions (0.5% O2). RESULTS Both photosensitizers exerted photodynamic inactivation (PDI) of the microorganisms in normoxia, and this activity was observed in the nanomolar regime. TLD1411 and TLD1433 maintained this PDI potency under hypoxic conditions, with TLD1433 becoming even more active in the low-oxygen environment. CONCLUSION The observation of activity in hypoxia suggests that there exists an oxygen-independent, Type I photoprocess for this new class of compounds in addition to the typical Type II pathway mediated by singlet oxygen. The intrinsic positive charge of the Ru(II) metal combined with the oxygen independent activity demonstrated by this class of photosensitizers presents a new strategy for eradicating both gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria regardless of oxygenation level.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2014

Ru(II) dyads derived from 2-(1-pyrenyl)-1H-imidazo[4,5-f][1,10]phenanthroline: versatile photosensitizers for photodynamic applications.

Mat Stephenson; Christian Reichardt; Mitch Pinto; Maria Wächtler; Tariq Sainuddin; Ge Shi; Huimin Yin; Susan Monro; Eric Sampson; Benjamin Dietzek; Sherri A. McFarland

Combining the best attributes of organic photosensitizers with those of coordination complexes is an elegant way to achieve prolonged excited state lifetimes in Ru(II) dyads. Not only do their reduced radiative and nonradiative rates provide ample time for photosensitization of reactive oxygen species at low oxygen tension but they also harness the unique properties of (3)IL states that can act as discrete units or in concert with (3)MLCT states. The imidazo[4,5-f][1,10]phenanthroline framework provides a convenient tether for linking π-expansive ligands such as pyrene to a Ru(II) scaffold, and the stabilizing coligands can fine-tune the chemical and biological properties of these bichromophoric systems. The resulting dyads described in this study exhibited nanomolar light cytotoxicities against cancer cells with photocytotoxicity indices exceeding 400 for some coligands employed. This potency extended to bacteria, where concentrations as low as 10 nM destroyed 75% of a bacterial population. Notably, these dyads remained extremely active against biofilm with light photocytotoxicities against these more resistant bacterial populations in the 10-100 nM regime. The results from this study demonstrate the versatility of these highly potent photosensitizers in destroying both cancer and bacterial cells and expand the scope of compounds that utilize low-lying (3)IL states for photobiological applications.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2014

In vitro multiwavelength PDT with 3IL states: teaching old molecules new tricks.

Huimin Yin; Mat Stephenson; Jordan Gibson; Eric Sampson; Ge Shi; Tariq Sainuddin; Susan Monro; Sherri A. McFarland

The purpose of the present investigation was to ascertain whether (3)IL excited states with microsecond lifetimes are universally potent for photodynamic applications, and if these long-lived states are superior to their (3)MLCT counterparts as in vitro PDT agents. A family of blue-green absorbing, Ru(II)-based transition metal complexes derived from the π-expansive dppn ligand was prepared and characterized according to its photodynamic activity against HL-60 cells, and toward DNA in cell-free media. Complexes in this series that are characterized by low-energy and long-lived (3)IL excited states photocleaved DNA with blue, green, red, and near-IR light. This panchromatic photodynamic effect translated to in vitro multiwavelength photodynamic therapy (PDT) with red-light cytotoxicities as low as 1.5 μM (EC50) for the parent complex and 400 nM for its more lipophilic counterpart. This potency is similar to that achieved with Ru(II)-based dyads containing long-lived (3)IL excitons located on appended pyrenyl units, and appears to be a general property of sufficiently long-lived excited states. Moreover, the red PDT observed for certain members of this family was almost 5 times more potent than Photofrin with therapeutic indices 30 times greater. Related Ru(II) complexes having lowest-lying (3)MLCT states of much shorter duration (≤1 μs) did not yield DNA photodamage or in vitro PDT with red or near-IR light, nor did the corresponding Os(II) complex with a submicrosecond (3)IL excited state lifetime. Therefore, metal complexes that utilize highly photosensitizing (3)IL excited states, with suitably long lifetimes (≫ 1 μs), are well-poised to elicit PDT at wavelengths even where their molar extinction coefficients are very low (<100 M(-1) cm(-1)). Herein we demonstrate that such unexpected reactivity gives rise to very effective PDT in the typical therapeutic window (600-850 nm).


Inorganic Chemistry | 2016

Organometallic Ru(II) Photosensitizers Derived from π-Expansive Cyclometalating Ligands: Surprising Theranostic PDT Effects

Tariq Sainuddin; Julia McCain; Mitch Pinto; Huimin Yin; Jordan Gibson; Marc Hetu; Sherri A. McFarland

The purpose of the present study was to investigate the influence of π-expansive cyclometalating ligands on the photophysical and photobiological properties of organometallic Ru(II) compounds. Four compounds with increasing π conjugation on the cyclometalating ligand were prepared, and their structures were confirmed by HPLC, 1D and 2D (1)H NMR, and mass spectrometry. The properties of these compounds differed substantially from their Ru(II) polypyridyl counterparts. Namely, they were characterized by red-shifted absorption, very weak to no room temperature phosphorescence, extremely short phosphorescence state lifetimes (<10 ns), low singlet oxygen quantum yields (0.5-8%), and efficient ligand-centered fluorescence. Three of the metal complexes were very cytotoxic to cancer cells in the dark (EC50 values = 1-2 μM), in agreement with what has traditionally been observed for Ru(II) compounds derived from small C^N ligands. Surprisingly, the complex derived from the most π-expansive cyclometalating ligand exhibited no cytotoxicity in the dark (EC50 > 300 μM) but was phototoxic to cells in the nanomolar regime. Exceptionally large phototherapeutic margins, exceeding 3 orders of magnitude in some cases, were accompanied by bright ligand-centered intracellular fluorescence in cancer cells. Thus, Ru(II) organometallic systems derived from π-expansive cyclometalating ligands, such 4,9,16-triazadibenzo[a,c]napthacene (pbpn), represent the first class of potent light-responsive Ru(II) cyclometalating agents with theranostic potential.


Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry | 2013

Synthetic prodigiosenes and the influence of C-ring substitution on DNA cleavage, transmembrane chloride transport and basicity.

Soumya Rastogi; Estelle Marchal; Imam Uddin; Brandon R. Groves; Julie Colpitts; Sherri A. McFarland; Jeffery T. Davis; Alison Thompson

Analogues of the tripyrrolic natural product prodigiosin bearing an additional methyl and a carbonyl group at the C-ring were synthesised and evaluated. In vitro anticancer activity screening (NCI) and the study of modes of action (copper-mediated cleavage of double-stranded DNA and transmembrane transport of chloride anions) showed that the presence of the methyl group is not detrimental to activity. Furthermore, although the presence of an ester conjugated to the prodigiosene C-ring seems to decrease both pK(a) and chloride transport efficiency compared to the natural product, these analogues still exhibit a high rate of chloride transport. All analogues exhibit good in vitro anticancer activity and reduced toxicity compared to the natural product: compare an acute systemic toxicity of 100 mg kg(-1) in mice vs. 4 mg kg(-1) for prodigiosin, pointing towards a larger therapeutic window than for the natural product.


Organic Letters | 2010

Diverse DNA-cleaving capacities of the jadomycins through precursor-directed biosynthesis.

Kristal M. Cottreau; Colin Spencer; Jason R. Wentzell; Cathy L. Graham; Charles N. Borissow; David L. Jakeman; Sherri A. McFarland

Gel mobility assays were used to establish that some members of the jadomycin family of natural products act as DNA cleaving agents. Moreover, it was found that subtle structural changes generated through the use of precursor-directed biosynthesis lead to marked effects on the DNA-damaging properties of these glycosylated polyketide-derived natural products.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Eight-membered ring-containing jadomycins: implications for non-enzymatic natural products biosynthesis.

Andrew W. Robertson; Camilo F. Martinez-Farina; Deborah A. Smithen; Huimin Yin; Susan Monro; Alison Thompson; Sherri A. McFarland; Raymond T. Syvitski; David L. Jakeman

Jadomycin Oct (1) was isolated from Streptomyces venezuelae ISP5230 and characterized as a structurally unique eight-membered l-ornithine ring-containing jadomycin. The structure was elucidated through the semisynthetic derivatization of starting material via chemoselective acylation of the l-ornithine α-amino group using activated succinimidyl esters. Incorporation of 5-aminovaleric acid led to jadomycin AVA, a second eight-membered ring-containing jadomycin. These natural products illustrate the structural diversity permissible from a non-enzymatic step within a biosynthetic pathway and exemplifies the potential for discovery of novel scaffolds.


Journal of Natural Products | 2011

Jadomycins Derived from the Assimilation and Incorporation of Norvaline and Norleucine

Stephanie N. Dupuis; Thomas Veinot; Susan Monro; Susan E. Douglas; Raymond T. Syvitski; Kerry B. Goralski; Sherri A. McFarland; David L. Jakeman

Streptomyces venezuelae ISP5230 is recognized for the production of chloramphenicol and the jadomycin family of natural products. The jadomycins are angucycline natural products containing a unique oxazolone ring incorporating an amino acid present in the minimal culture media. Substitution of different amino acids results in products of varying biological activity. Analysis of cultures of S. venezuelae ISP5230 incubated with l- and d-norvaline and l- and d-norleucine indicated that only the d-configured amino acids were incorporated into the natural products. Subsequently, jadomycin DNV and jadomycin DNL were isolated and characterized (titers 4 and 9 mg L(-1), respectively). The compounds were evaluated in the National Cancer Institute cell line cancer growth inhibition and cytotoxicity screens, for antimicrobial activity against selected Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria, and as DNA-cleavage agents in vitro.

Collaboration


Dive into the Sherri A. McFarland's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Colin G. Cameron

University of North Carolina at Greensboro

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Wenfang Sun

North Dakota State University

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge