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Dive into the research topics where Taylor E. Kavanaugh is active.

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Featured researches published by Taylor E. Kavanaugh.


Advanced Materials | 2016

Porous Silicon and Polymer Nanocomposites for Delivery of Peptide Nucleic Acids as Anti-MicroRNA Therapies

Kelsey R. Beavers; Thomas A. Werfel; Tianwei Shen; Taylor E. Kavanaugh; Kameron V. Kilchrist; Jeremy W. Mares; Joshua S. Fain; Carrie B. Wiese; Kasey C. Vickers; Sharon M. Weiss; Craig L. Duvall

Self-assembled polymer/porous silicon nanocomposites overcome intracellular and systemic barriers for in vivo application of peptide nucleic acid (PNA) anti-microRNA therapeutics. Porous silicon (PSi) is leveraged as a biodegradable scaffold with high drug-cargo-loading capacity. Functionalization with a diblock polymer improves PSi nanoparticle colloidal stability, in vivo pharmacokinetics, and intracellular bioavailability through endosomal escape, enabling PNA to inhibit miR-122 in vivo.


Biomaterials | 2016

Fluorocoxib A loaded nanoparticles enable targeted visualization of cyclooxygenase-2 in inflammation and cancer.

Md. Jashim Uddin; Thomas A. Werfel; Brenda C. Crews; Mukesh K. Gupta; Taylor E. Kavanaugh; Philip J. Kingsley; Kelli L. Boyd; Lawrence J. Marnett; Craig L. Duvall

Cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) is expressed in virtually all solid tumors and its overexpression is a hallmark of inflammation. Thus, it is a potentially powerful biomarker for the early clinical detection of inflammatory disease and human cancers. We report a reactive oxygen species (ROS) responsive micellar nanoparticle, PPS-b-POEGA, that solubilizes the first fluorescent COX-2-selective inhibitor fluorocoxib A (FA) for COX-2 visualization in vivo. Pharmacokinetics and biodistribution of FA-PPS-b-POEGA nanoparticles (FA-NPs) were assessed after a fully-aqueous intravenous (i.v.) administration in wild-type mice and revealed 4-8 h post-injection as an optimal fluorescent imaging window. Carrageenan-induced inflammation in the rat and mouse footpads and 1483 HNSCC tumor xenografts were successfully visualized by FA-NPs with fluorescence up to 10-fold higher than that of normal tissues. The targeted binding of the FA cargo was blocked by pretreatment with the COX-2 inhibitor indomethacin, confirming COX-2-specific binding and local retention of FA at pathological sites. Our collective data indicate that FA-NPs are the first i.v.-ready FA formulation, provide high signal-to-noise in inflamed, premalignant, and malignant tissues, and will uniquely enable clinical translation of the poorly water-soluble FA compound.


Journal of Controlled Release | 2017

Combinatorial optimization of PEG architecture and hydrophobic content improves ternary siRNA polyplex stability, pharmacokinetics, and potency in vivo

Thomas A. Werfel; Meredith A. Jackson; Taylor E. Kavanaugh; Kellye C. Kirkbride; Martina Miteva; Todd D. Giorgio; Craig L. Duvall

&NA; A rationally‐designed library of ternary siRNA polyplexes was developed and screened for gene silencing efficacy in vitro and in vivo with the goal of overcoming both cell‐level and systemic delivery barriers. [2‐(dimethylamino)ethyl methacrylate] (DMAEMA) was homopolymerized or copolymerized (50 mol% each) with butyl methacrylate (BMA) from a reversible addition – fragmentation chain transfer (RAFT) chain transfer agent, with and without pre‐conjugation to polyethylene glycol (PEG). Both single block polymers were tested as core‐forming units, and both PEGylated, diblock polymers were screened as corona‐forming units. Ternary siRNA polyplexes were assembled with varied amounts and ratios of core‐forming polymers to PEGylated corona‐forming polymers. The impact of polymer composition/ratio, hydrophobe (BMA) placement, and surface PEGylation density was correlated to important outcomes such as polyplex size, stability, pH‐dependent membrane disruptive activity, biocompatibility, and gene silencing efficiency. The lead formulation, DB4‐PDB12, was optimally PEGylated not only to ensure colloidal stability (no change in size by DLS between 0 and 24 h) and neutral surface charge (0.139 mV) but also to maintain higher cell uptake (> 90% positive cells) than the most densely PEGylated particles. The DB4‐PDB12 polyplexes also incorporated BMA in both the polyplex core‐ and corona‐forming polymers, resulting in robust endosomolysis and in vitro siRNA silencing (˜ 85% protein level knockdown) of the model gene luciferase across multiple cell types. Further, the DB4‐PDB12 polyplexes exhibited greater stability, increased blood circulation time, reduced renal clearance, increased tumor biodistribution, and greater silencing of luciferase compared to our previously‐optimized, binary parent formulation following intravenous (i.v.) delivery. This polyplex library approach enabled concomitant optimization of the composition and ratio of core‐ and corona‐forming polymers (indirectly tuning PEGylation density) and identification of a ternary nanomedicine optimized to overcome important siRNA delivery barriers in vitro and in vivo. Graphical abstract Figure. No caption available.


ACS Nano | 2017

Zwitterionic Nanocarrier Surface Chemistry Improves siRNA Tumor Delivery and Silencing Activity Relative to Polyethylene Glycol

Meredith A. Jackson; Thomas A. Werfel; Elizabeth J. Curvino; Fang Yu; Taylor E. Kavanaugh; Samantha M. Sarett; Mary D. Dockery; Kameron V. Kilchrist; Ayisha N. Jackson; Todd D. Giorgio; Craig L. Duvall

Although siRNA-based nanomedicines hold promise for cancer treatment, conventional siRNA-polymer complex (polyplex) nanocarrier systems have poor pharmacokinetics following intravenous delivery, hindering tumor accumulation. Here, we determined the impact of surface chemistry on the in vivo pharmacokinetics and tumor delivery of siRNA polyplexes. A library of diblock polymers was synthesized, all containing the same pH-responsive, endosomolytic polyplex core-forming block but different corona blocks: 5 kDa (benchmark) and 20 kDa linear polyethylene glycol (PEG), 10 kDa and 20 kDa brush-like poly(oligo ethylene glycol), and 10 kDa and 20 kDa zwitterionic phosphorylcholine-based polymers (PMPC). In vitro, it was found that 20 kDa PEG and 20 kDa PMPC had the highest stability in the presence of salt or heparin and were the most effective at blocking protein adsorption. Following intravenous delivery, 20 kDa PEG and PMPC coronas both extended circulation half-lives 5-fold compared to 5 kDa PEG. However, in mouse orthotopic xenograft tumors, zwitterionic PMPC-based polyplexes showed highest in vivo luciferase silencing (>75% knockdown for 10 days with single IV 1 mg/kg dose) and 3-fold higher average tumor cell uptake than 5 kDa PEG polyplexes (20 kDa PEG polyplexes were only 2-fold higher than 5 kDa PEG). These results show that high molecular weight zwitterionic polyplex coronas significantly enhance siRNA polyplex pharmacokinetics without sacrificing polyplex uptake and bioactivity within tumors when compared to traditional PEG architectures.


Drug Delivery and Translational Research | 2016

Particle-based technologies for osteoarthritis detection and therapy

Taylor E. Kavanaugh; Thomas A. Werfel; Hongsik Cho; Karen A. Hasty; Craig L. Duvall

Osteoarthritis (OA) is a disease characterized by degradation of joints with the development of painful osteophytes in the surrounding tissues. Currently, there are a limited number of treatments for this disease, and many of these only provide temporary, palliative relief. In this review, we discuss particle-based drug delivery systems that can provide targeted and sustained delivery of imaging and therapeutic agents to OA-affected sites. We focus on technologies such as polymeric micelles and nano-/microparticles, liposomes, and dendrimers for their potential treatment and/or diagnosis of OA. Several promising studies are highlighted, motivating the continued development of delivery technologies to improve treatments for OA.


ACS Biomaterials Science & Engineering | 2017

Drug-Free ROS Sponge Polymeric Microspheres Reduce Tissue Damage from Ischemic and Mechanical Injury

Kristin P. O’Grady; Taylor E. Kavanaugh; Hongsik Cho; Hanrong Ye; Mukesh K. Gupta; Megan C. Madonna; Jinjoo Lee; Christine M. O’Brien; Melissa C. Skala; Karen A. Hasty; Craig L. Duvall

The inherent antioxidant function of poly(propylene sulfide) (PPS) microspheres (MS) was dissected for different reactive oxygen species (ROS), and therapeutic benefits of PPS-MS were explored in models of diabetic peripheral arterial disease (PAD) and mechanically induced post-traumatic osteoarthritis (PTOA). PPS-MS (∼1 μm diameter) significantly scavenged hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), hypochlorite, and peroxynitrite but not superoxide in vitro in cell-free and cell-based assays. Elevated ROS levels (specifically H2O2) were confirmed in both a mouse model of diabetic PAD and in a mouse model of PTOA, with greater than 5- and 2-fold increases in H2O2, respectively. PPS-MS treatment functionally improved recovery from hind limb ischemia based on ∼15-25% increases in hemoglobin saturation and perfusion in the footpads as well as earlier remodeling of vessels in the proximal limb. In the PTOA model, PPS-MS reduced matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) activity by 30% and mitigated the resultant articular cartilage damage. These results suggest that local delivery of PPS-MS at sites of injury-induced inflammation improves the vascular response to ischemic injury in the setting of chronic hyperglycemia and reduces articular cartilage destruction following joint trauma. These results motivate further exploration of PPS as a stand-alone, locally sustained antioxidant therapy and as a material for microsphere-based, sustained local drug delivery to inflamed tissues at risk of ROS damage.


Cancer Research | 2018

Selective mTORC2 Inhibitor Therapeutically Blocks Breast Cancer Cell Growth and Survival

Thomas A. Werfel; Shan Wang; Meredith A. Jackson; Taylor E. Kavanaugh; Meghan Morrison Joly; Linus Lee; Donna Hicks; Violeta Sanchez; Paula I Gonzalez-Ericsson; Kameron V. Kilchrist; Somtochukwu C Dimobi; Samantha M. Sarett; Dana M. Brantley-Sieders; Rebecca S. Cook; Craig L. Duvall

Small-molecule inhibitors of the mTORC2 kinase (torkinibs) have shown efficacy in early clinical trials. However, the torkinibs under study also inhibit the other mTOR-containing complex mTORC1. While mTORC1/mTORC2 combined inhibition may be beneficial in cancer cells, recent reports describe compensatory cell survival upon mTORC1 inhibition due to loss of negative feedback on PI3K, increased autophagy, and increased macropinocytosis. Genetic models suggest that selective mTORC2 inhibition would be effective in breast cancers, but the lack of selective small-molecule inhibitors of mTORC2 have precluded testing of this hypothesis to date. Here we report the engineering of a nanoparticle-based RNAi therapeutic that can effectively silence the mTORC2 obligate cofactor Rictor. Nanoparticle-based Rictor ablation in HER2-amplified breast tumors was achieved following intratumoral and intravenous delivery, decreasing Akt phosphorylation and increasing tumor cell killing. Selective mTORC2 inhibition in vivo, combined with the HER2 inhibitor lapatinib, decreased the growth of HER2-amplified breast cancers to a greater extent than either agent alone, suggesting that mTORC2 promotes lapatinib resistance, but is overcome by mTORC2 inhibition. Importantly, selective mTORC2 inhibition was effective in a triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) model, decreasing Akt phosphorylation and tumor growth, consistent with our findings that RICTOR mRNA correlates with worse outcome in patients with basal-like TNBC. Together, our results offer preclinical validation of a novel RNAi delivery platform for therapeutic gene ablation in breast cancer, and they show that mTORC2-selective targeting is feasible and efficacious in this disease setting.Significance: This study describes a nanomedicine to effectively inhibit the growth regulatory kinase mTORC2 in a preclinical model of breast cancer, targeting an important pathogenic enzyme in that setting that has been undruggable to date. Cancer Res; 78(7); 1845-58. ©2018 AACR.


Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2016

Sustained Administration of β-cell Mitogens to Intact Mouse Islets Ex Vivo Using Biodegradable Poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) Microspheres

Raymond C. Pasek; Taylor E. Kavanaugh; Craig L. Duvall; Maureen Gannon

The development of biomaterials has significantly increased the potential for targeted drug delivery to a variety of cell and tissue types, including the pancreatic β-cells. In addition, biomaterial particles, hydrogels, and scaffolds also provide a unique opportunity to administer sustained, controllable drug delivery to β-cells in culture and in transplanted tissue models. These technologies allow the study of candidate β-cell proliferation factors using intact islets and a translationally relevant system. Moreover, determining the effectiveness and feasibility of candidate factors for stimulating β-cell proliferation in a culture system is critical before moving forward to in vivo models. Herein, we describe a method to co-culture intact mouse islets with biodegradable compound of interest (COI)-loaded poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) microspheres for the purpose of assessing the effects of sustained in situ release of mitogenic factors on β-cell proliferation. This technique describes in detail how to generate PLGA microspheres containing a desired cargo using commercially available reagents. While the described technique uses recombinant human Connective tissue growth factor (rhCTGF) as an example, a wide variety of COI could readily be used. Additionally, this method utilizes 96-well plates to minimize the amount of reagents necessary to assess β-cell proliferation. This protocol can be readily adapted to use alternative biomaterials and other endocrine cell characteristics such as cell survival and differentiation status.


Biomaterials | 2015

ROS-Responsive Microspheres for On Demand Antioxidant Therapy in a Model of Diabetic Peripheral Arterial Disease

Kristin M. Poole; Christopher E. Nelson; Rucha V. Joshi; John R. Martin; Mukesh K. Gupta; Skylar C. Haws; Taylor E. Kavanaugh; Melissa C. Skala; Craig L. Duvall


Biomaterials | 2016

Hydrophobic interactions between polymeric carrier and palmitic acid-conjugated siRNA improve PEGylated polyplex stability and enhance in vivo pharmacokinetics and tumor gene silencing

Samantha M. Sarett; Thomas A. Werfel; Irene Chandra; Meredith A. Jackson; Taylor E. Kavanaugh; Madison E. Hattaway; Todd D. Giorgio; Craig L. Duvall

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Karen A. Hasty

University of Tennessee Health Science Center

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Hongsik Cho

University of Tennessee Health Science Center

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Melissa C. Skala

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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