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Dive into the research topics where Stephanie E. Barrett is active.

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Featured researches published by Stephanie E. Barrett.


Journal of Controlled Release | 2014

Development of a liver-targeted siRNA delivery platform with a broad therapeutic window utilizing biodegradable polypeptide-based polymer conjugates.

Stephanie E. Barrett; Rob Burke; Marc T. Abrams; Carol Bason; Marina Busuek; Edward Carlini; Brian A. Carr; Louis S. Crocker; Haihong Fan; Robert M. Garbaccio; Erin N. Guidry; Jun H. Heo; Bonnie J. Howell; Eric Kemp; Robert A. Kowtoniuk; Andrew H. Latham; Anthony Leone; Michael Lyman; Rubina G. Parmar; Mihir Patel; Sergey Pechenov; Tao Pei; Nicole T. Pudvah; Conrad E. Raab; Sean Riley; Laura Sepp-Lorenzino; Sheri Smith; Eric Soli; Steven J. Staskiewicz; Melissa Stern

The greatest challenge standing in the way of effective in vivo siRNA delivery is creating a delivery vehicle that mediates a high degree of efficacy with a broad therapeutic window. Key structure-activity relationships of a poly(amide) polymer conjugate siRNA delivery platform were explored to discover the optimized polymer parameters that yield the highest activity of mRNA knockdown in the liver. At the same time, the poly(amide) backbone of the polymers allowed for the metabolism and clearance of the polymer from the body very quickly, which was established using radiolabeled polymers to demonstrate the time course of biodistribution and excretion from the body. The fast degradation and clearance of the polymers provided for very low toxicity at efficacious doses, and the therapeutic window of this poly(amide)-based siRNA delivery platform was shown to be much broader than a comparable polymer platform. The results of this work illustrate that the poly(amide) platform has a promising future in the development of a siRNA-based drug approved for human use.


Aaps Journal | 2015

Physicochemical and Formulation Developability Assessment for Therapeutic Peptide Delivery—A Primer

Annette Bak; Dennis Leung; Stephanie E. Barrett; Seth Forster; Ellen C. Minnihan; Andrew Leithead; James J. Cunningham; Nathalie Toussaint; Louis S. Crocker

Peptides are an important class of endogenous ligands that regulate key biological cascades. As such, peptides represent a promising therapeutic class with the potential to alleviate many severe disease states. Despite their therapeutic potential, peptides frequently pose drug delivery challenges to scientists. This review introduces the physicochemical, biophysical, biopharmaceutical, and formulation developability aspects of peptides pertinent to the drug discovery-to-development interface. It introduces the relevance of these properties with respect to the delivery modalities available for peptide pharmaceuticals, with the parenteral route being the most prevalent route of administration. This review also presents characterization strategies for oral delivery of peptides with the aim of illuminating developability issues with the drug candidate. A brief overview of other routes of administration, including inhaled, transdermal, and intranasal routes, is provided as these routes are generally preferred by patients over injectables. Finally, this review presents formulation techniques to mitigate some of the developability obstacles associated with peptide delivery. The authors emphasize opportunities for the thoughtful application of pharmaceutical science to the development of peptide drugs and to the general advancement of this promising class of pharmaceuticals.


Retrovirology | 2016

In vivo analysis of the effect of panobinostat on cell-associated HIV RNA and DNA levels and latent HIV infection

Perry Tsai; Guoxin Wu; Caroline E. Baker; William O. Thayer; Rae Ann Spagnuolo; Rosa I. Sanchez; Stephanie E. Barrett; Bonnie J. Howell; David J. Margolis; Daria J. Hazuda; Nancie M. Archin; J. Victor Garcia

BackgroundThe latent reservoir in resting CD4+ T cells presents a major barrier to HIV cure. Latency-reversing agents are therefore being developed with the ultimate goal of disrupting the latent state, resulting in induction of HIV expression and clearance of infected cells. Histone deacetylase inhibitors (HDACi) have received a significant amount of attention for their potential as latency-reversing agents.ResultsHere, we have investigated the in vitro and systemic in vivo effect of panobinostat, a clinically relevant HDACi, on HIV latency. We showed that panobinostat induces histone acetylation in human PBMCs. Further, we showed that panobinostat induced HIV RNA expression and allowed the outgrowth of replication-competent virus ex vivo from resting CD4+ T cells of HIV-infected patients on suppressive antiretroviral therapy (ART). Next, we demonstrated that panobinostat induced systemic histone acetylation in vivo in the tissues of BLT humanized mice. Finally, in HIV-infected, ART-suppressed BLT mice, we evaluated the effect of panobinostat on systemic cell-associated HIV RNA and DNA levels and the total frequency of latently infected resting CD4+ T cells. Our data indicate that panobinostat treatment resulted in systemic increases in cellular levels of histone acetylation, a key biomarker for in vivo activity. However, panobinostat did not affect the levels of cell-associated HIV RNA, HIV DNA, or latently infected resting CD4+ T cells.ConclusionWe have demonstrated robust levels of systemic histone acetylation after panobinostat treatment of BLT humanized mice; and we did not observe a detectable change in the levels of cell-associated HIV RNA, HIV DNA, or latently infected resting CD4+ T cells in HIV-infected, ART-suppressed BLT mice. These results are consistent with the modest effects noted in vitro and suggest that combination therapies may be necessary to reverse latency and enable clearance. Animal models will contribute to the progress towards an HIV cure.


Bioconjugate Chemistry | 2014

Improving the In Vivo Therapeutic Index of siRNA Polymer Conjugates through Increasing pH Responsiveness

Erin N. Guidry; Julie Farand; Arash Soheili; Craig A. Parish; Nancy J. Kevin; Brenda Pipik; Kathleen Calati; Nori Ikemoto; Jacob H. Waldman; Andrew H. Latham; Bonnie J. Howell; Anthony Leone; Robert M. Garbaccio; Stephanie E. Barrett; Rubina Parmar; Quang T. Truong; Bing Mao; Ian W. Davies; Steven L. Colletti; Laura Sepp-Lorenzino

Polymer based carriers that aid in endosomal escape have proven to be efficacious siRNA delivery agents in vitro and in vivo; however, most suffer from cytotoxicity due in part to a lack of selectivity for endosomal versus cell membrane lysis. For polymer based carriers to move beyond the laboratory and into the clinic, it is critical to find carriers that are not only efficacious, but also have margins that are clinically relevant. In this paper we report three distinct categories of polymer conjugates that improve the selectivity of endosomal membrane lysis by relying on the change in pH associated with endosomal trafficking, including incorporation of low pKa heterocycles, acid cleavable amino side chains, or carboxylic acid pH sensitive charge switches. Additionally, we determine the therapeutic index of our polymer conjugates in vivo and demonstrate that the incorporation of pH responsive elements dramatically expands the therapeutic index to 10-15, beyond that of the therapeutic index (less than 3), for polymer conjugates previously reported.


International Journal of Pharmaceutics | 2014

An in vivo evaluation of amphiphilic, biodegradable peptide copolymers as siRNA delivery agents

Stephanie E. Barrett; Marc T. Abrams; Rob Burke; Brian A. Carr; Louis S. Crocker; Robert M. Garbaccio; Bonnie J. Howell; Eric Kemp; Robert A. Kowtoniuk; Andrew H. Latham; Karen R. Leander; Anthony Leone; Mihir Patel; Sergey Pechenov; Nicole T. Pudvah; Sean Riley; Laura Sepp-Lorenzino; Eileen S. Walsh; J. Michael Williams; Steven L. Colletti

A series of amphiphilic, biodegradable polypeptide copolymers were prepared for the delivery of siRNA (short interfering ribonucleic acid). The molecular weight (or polymer chain length) of the linear polymer was controlled by reaction stoichiometry for the 11.5, 17.2, and 24.6 kDa polypeptides, and the highest molecular weight polypeptide was prepared using a sequential addition method to obtain a polypeptide having a molecular weight of 38.6 kDa. These polymers were used to prepare polymer conjugate systems designed to target and deliver an apolipoprotein B (ApoB) siRNA to hepatocyte cells and to help delineate the effect of polymer molecular weight or polymer chain length on siRNA delivery in vivo. A clear trend in increasing potency was found with increasing molecular weight of the polymers examined (at a constant polymer:siRNA (w/w) ratio), with minimal toxicity found. Furthermore, the biodegradability of these polymer conjugates was examined and demonstrates the potential of these systems as siRNA delivery vectors.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2016

Liver-Targeted SiRNA Delivery Using Biodegradable Poly(amide) Polymer Conjugates

Stephanie E. Barrett; Erin N. Guidry

The realization of polymer conjugate-based RNA delivery as a clinical modality requires the development and optimization of novel formulations. Although many literature examples of polymer conjugate-based SiRNA delivery systems exist, the protocols described herein represent a robust and facile way of screening any poly(amine)-based polymer system for SiRNA delivery. In this chapter, we describe the synthetic methods used to prepare poly(amide) polymers using a controlled polymerization method, as well as the preparation of the resulting targeted SiRNA polymer conjugates. In addition, detailed methods are provided for the characterization of the biodegradable poly(peptides) as well as the polymer conjugate that ensues.


Archive | 2011

Poly(amide) polymers for the delivery of oligonucleotides

Stephanie E. Barrett; Marina Busuek; Steven L. Colletti; Robert M. Garbaccio; Erin N. Guidry; Robert A. Kowtoniuk; Jing Liao; Craig A. Parish; Rubina Parmar; Tao Pei; Kevin M. Schlosser; David M. Tellers; Sandra C. Tobias; Quang T. Truong; Jacob H. Waldman; Weimin Wang; J. Michael Williams


Journal of Polymer Science Part A | 2014

Optimization of an α‐(Amino acid)‐N‐carboxyanhydride polymerization using the high vacuum technique: Examining the effects of monomer concentration, polymerization kinetics, polymer molecular weight, and monomer purity

Robert A. Kowtoniuk; Tao Pei; Caitlin M. DeAngelo; Jacob H. Waldman; Erin N. Guidry; J. Michael Williams; Robert M. Garbaccio; Stephanie E. Barrett


Archive | 2012

Poly(ornithine) homopolymers for the delivery of oligonucleotides

Stephanie E. Barrett; Robert M. Garbaccio; Robert A. Kowtoniuk; Weimin Wang; J. Michael Williams; Jing Liao; Tao Pei; Sandra C. Tobias


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2018

Extended-Duration MK-8591-Eluting Implant as a Candidate for HIV Treatment and Prevention

Stephanie E. Barrett; Ryan S. Teller; Seth Forster; Li Li; Megan A. Mackey; Daniel Skomski; Zhen Yang; Kerry L. Fillgrove; Gregory J. Doto; Sandra L. Wood; Jose Lebron; Jay A. Grobler; Rosa I. Sanchez; Zhen Liu; Bing Lu; Tao Niu; Li Sun; Marian E. Gindy

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