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Farokhzad, Omid

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Farokhzad

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Omid

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Farokhzad, Omid

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Now showing 1 - 10 of 26
  • Publication

    Poly(ethylene glycol) with Observable Shedding

    (Wiley-Blackwell, 2010) Gao, Weiwei; Langer, Robert; Farokhzad, Omid

    A novel FRET-bearing poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) conjugate fluoresces at 520 nm when it is cleaved off from nanoparticles (NPs). When the NPs were targeted to cancer cell lines, the reducing redox of the endosomal compartment caused disulfide bond cleavage and shedding of the PEG layer. The fluorescence emission can be suppressed by N-ethylmaleimide to inhibit disulfide cleavage and restored by dithiothreitol, a disulfide cleavage reagent, indicating a direct correlation between fluorescence emission and PEG shedding.

  • Publication

    ChemoRad nanoparticles: a novel multifunctional nanoparticle platform for targeted delivery of concurrent chemoradiation

    (Future Medicine Ltd, 2010) Wang, Andrew Z; Yuet, Kai; Zhang, Liangfang; Gu, Frank X; Huynh-Le, Minh; Radovic-Moreno, Aleksandar F; Kantoff, Philip; Bander, Neil H; Langer, Robert; Farokhzad, Omid

    Aim: The development of chemoradiation – the concurrent administration of chemotherapy and radiotherapy – has led to significant improvements in local tumor control and survival. However, it is limited by its high toxicity. In this study, we report the development of a novel NP (nanoparticle) therapeutic, ChemoRad NP, which can deliver biologically targeted chemoradiation.

    Method: A biodegradable and biocompatible lipid–polymer hybrid NP that is capable of delivering both chemotherapy and radiotherapy was formulated.

    Results: Using docetaxel, indium111 and yttrium90 as model drugs, we demonstrated that the ChemoRad NP can encapsulate chemotherapeutics (up to 9% of NP weight) and radiotherapeutics (100 mCi of radioisotope per gram of NP) efficiently and deliver both effectively. Using prostate cancer as a disease model, we demonstrated the targeted delivery of ChemoRad NPs and the higher therapeutic efficacy of ChemoRad NPs.

    Conclusion: We believe that the ChemoRad NP represents a new class of therapeutics that holds great potential to improve cancer treatment.

  • Publication

    Synthesis and in vitro evaluation of a multifunctional and surface-switchable nanoemulsion platform

    (Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC), 2013) Gianella, Anita; Mieszawska, Aneta J.; Hoeben, Freek J. M.; Janssen, Henk M.; Jarzyna, Peter A.; Cormode, David P.; Costa, Kevin D.; Rao, Satish; Farokhzad, Omid; Langer, Robert; Fayad, Zahi A.; Mulder, Willem J. M.

    We present a multifunctional nanoparticle platform that has targeting moieties shielded by a matrix metalloproteinase-2 (MMP2) cleavable PEG coating. Upon incubation with MMP2 this surface-switchable coating is removed and the targeting ligands become available for binding. The concept was evaluated in vitro using the biotin and αvβ3-integrin-specific RGD-peptide functionalized nanoparticles.

  • Publication

    Adjuvant-carrying synthetic vaccine particles augment the immune response to encapsulated antigen and exhibit strong local immune activation without inducing systemic cytokine release

    (Elsevier BV, 2014) Ilyinskii, Petr O.; Roy, Christopher J.; O’Neil, Conlin P.; Browning, Erica A.; Pittet, Lynnelle A.; Altreuter, David H.; Alexis, Frank; Tonti, Elena; Shi, Jinjun; Basto, Pamela A.; Iannacone, Matteo; Radovic-Moreno, Aleksandar F.; Langer, Robert; Farokhzad, Omid; von Andrian-Werburg, Ulrich; Johnston, Lloyd P.M.; Kishimoto, Takashi Kei

    Augmentation of immunogenicity can be achieved by particulate delivery of an antigen and by its co-administration with an adjuvant. However, many adjuvants initiate strong systemic inflammatory reactions in vivo, leading to potential adverse events and safety concerns. We have developed a synthetic vaccine particle (SVP) technology that enables co-encapsulation of antigen with potent adjuvants. We demonstrate that co-delivery of an antigen with a TLR7/8 or TLR9 agonist in synthetic polymer nanoparticles results in a strong augmentation of humoral and cellular immune responses with minimal systemic production of inflammatory cytokines. In contrast, antigen encapsulated into nanoparticles and admixed with free TLR7/8 agonist leads to lower immunogenicity and rapid induction of high levels of inflammatory cytokines in the serum (e.g., TNF-α and IL-6 levels are 50- to 200-fold higher upon injection of free resiquimod (R848) than of nanoparticle-encapsulated R848). Conversely, local immune stimulation as evidenced by cellular infiltration of draining lymph nodes and by intranodal cytokine production was more pronounced and persisted longer when SVP-encapsulated TLR agonists were used. The strong local immune activation achieved using a modular self-assembling nanoparticle platform markedly enhanced immunogenicity and was equally effective whether antigen and adjuvant were co-encapsulated in a single nanoparticle formulation or co-delivered in two separate nanoparticles. Moreover, particle encapsulation enabled the utilization of CpG oligonucleotides with the natural phosphodiester backbone, which are otherwise rapidly hydrolyzed by nucleases in vivo. The use of SVP may enable clinical use of potent TLR agonists as vaccine adjuvants for indications where cellular immunity or robust humoral responses are required.

  • Publication

    A mucosal vaccine against Chlamydia trachomatis generates two waves of protective memory T cells

    (American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), 2015) Stary, Georg; Olive, A; Radovic-Moreno, A. F.; Gondek, D.; Alvarez, David; Basto, P. A.; Perro, M.; Vrbanac, Vladimir; Tager, Andrew Martin; Shi, Jinjun; Yethon, J. A.; Farokhzad, Omid; Langer, Robert; Starnbach, Michael; von Andrian-Werburg, Ulrich

    Genital Chlamydia trachomatis (Ct) infection induces protective immunity that depends on interferon-γ producing CD4 T-cells. By contrast, mucosal exposure to ultraviolet light (UV)-inactivated Ct (UV-Ct) generated regulatory T-cells that exacerbated subsequent Ct infection. We show that mucosal immunization with UV-Ct complexed with charge-switching synthetic adjuvant particles (cSAP) elicited long-lived protection in conventional and humanized mice. UV-Ct-cSAP targeted immunogenic uterine CD11b+CD103− dendritic cells (DCs), whereas UV-Ct accumulated in tolerogenic CD11b−CD103+ DCs. Regardless of vaccination route, UV-Ct-cSAP induced systemic memory T-cells, but only mucosal vaccination induced effector T-cells that rapidly seeded uterine mucosa with resident memory T-cells (TRM). Optimal Ct clearance required both TRM seeding and subsequent infection-induced recruitment of circulating memory T-cells. Thus, UV-Ct-cSAP vaccination generated two synergistic memory T-cell subsets with distinct migratory properties.

  • Publication

    The use of charge-coupled polymeric microparticles and micromagnets for modulating the bioavailability of orally delivered macromolecules

    (Elsevier BV, 2008) Teply, Benjamin A.; Tong, Rong; Jeong, Seok Y.; Luther, Gaurav; Sherifi, Ines; Yim, Christopher H.; Khademhosseini, Ali; Farokhzad, Omid; Langer, Robert; Cheng, Jianjun

    Protein drugs have low bioavailability after oral administration, which is due in part to fast transit of the drugs or drug delivery vehicles through the gastrointestinal tract. Increasing the time that the drugs spend in the intestine after dosing would allow for greater absorption and increased bioavailability. We developed a formulation strategy that can be used to prolong intestinal retention of drug delivery vehicles without substantial alterations to current polymeric encapsulation strategies. A model drug, insulin, was encapsulated in negatively-charged poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) microparticles, and the microparticles were subsequently mixed with positively-charged micromagnets, whose size will prevent them from being absorbed. Stable complexes formed through electrostatic interaction. The complexes were effectively immobilized in vitro in a model of the mouse small intestine by application of an external magnetic field. Mice that were gavaged with radio-labeled complexes and fitted with a magnetic belt retained 32.5% of the 125I-insulin in the small intestine compared with 5.4% for the control group 6 hours after administration (p=0.005). Furthermore, mice similarly gavaged with complexes encapsulating insulin (120 Units/kg) exhibited long-term glucose reduction in the groups with magnetic belts. The corresponding bioavailability of insulin was 5.11% compared with 0.87% for the control group (p=0.007).

  • Publication

    Parallel microfluidic synthesis of size-tunable polymeric nanoparticles using 3D flow focusing towards in vivo study

    (Elsevier BV, 2014) Lim, Jong-Min; Bertrand, Nicolas; Valencia, Pedro M.; Rhee, Minsoung; Langer, Robert; Jon, Sangyong; Farokhzad, Omid; Karnik, Rohit

    Microfluidic synthesis of nanoparticles (NPs) can enhance the controllability and reproducibility in physicochemical properties of NPs compared to bulk synthesis methods. However, applications of microfluidic synthesis are typically limited to in vitro studies due to low production rates. Herein, we report the parallelization of NP synthesis by 3D hydrodynamic flow focusing (HFF) using a multilayer microfluidic system to enhance the production rate without losing the advantages of reproducibility, controllability, and robustness. Using parallel 3D HFF, polymeric poly(lactide-co-glycolide)-b-polyethyleneglycol (PLGA-PEG) NPs with sizes tunable in the range of 13–150 nm could be synthesized reproducibly with high production rate. As a proof of concept, we used this system to perform in vivo pharmacokinetic and biodistribution study of small (20 nm diameter) PLGA-PEG NPs that are otherwise difficult to synthesize. Microfluidic parallelization thus enables synthesis of NPs with tunable properties with production rates suitable for both in vitro and in vivo studies.

  • Publication

    Transepithelial Transport of Fc-Targeted Nanoparticles by the Neonatal Fc Receptor for Oral Delivery

    (American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), 2013) Pridgen, E. M.; Alexis, F.; Kuo, Timothy Ting-Chang; Levy-Nissenbaum, E.; Karnik, R.; Blumberg, Richard; Langer, Robert; Farokhzad, Omid

    Nanoparticles are poised to have a tremendous impact on the treatment of many diseases, but their broad application is limited because currently they can only be administered by parenteral methods. Oral administration of nanoparticles is preferred but remains a challenge because transport across the intestinal epithelium is limited. Here, we show that nanoparticles targeted to the neonatal Fc receptor (FcRn), which is known to mediate the transport of IgG antibodies across epithelial barriers, are efficiently transported across the intestinal epithelium using both in vitro and in vivo models. In mice, orally administered FcRn-targeted nanoparticles crossed the intestinal epithelium and reached systemic circulation with a mean absorption efficiency of 13.7%*h compared with only 1.2%*h for non-targeted nanoparticles. In addition, targeted nanoparticles containing insulin as a model nanoparticle-based therapy for diabetes were orally administered at a clinically relevant insulin dose of 1.1 U/kg and elicited a prolonged hypoglycemic response in wild-type mice. This effect was abolished in FcRn knockout mice, indicating the enhanced nanoparticle transport was due specifically to FcRn. FcRn-targeted nanoparticles may have a major impact on the treatment of many diseases by enabling drugs currently limited by low bioavailability to be efficiently delivered though oral administration.

  • Publication

    Synthesis of Polymer–Lipid Nanoparticles for Image-Guided Delivery of Dual Modality Therapy

    (American Chemical Society (ACS), 2013) Mieszawska, Aneta J.; Kim, YongTae; Gianella, Anita; van Rooy, Inge; Priem, Bram; Labarre, Matthew P.; Ozcan, Canturk; Cormode, David P.; Petrov, Artiom; Langer, Robert; Farokhzad, Omid; Fayad, Zahi A.; Mulder, Willem J. M.

    For advanced treatment of diseases such as cancer, multi component, multi functional nanoparticles hold great promise. In the current study we report the synthesis of a complex nanoparticle (NP) system with dual drug loading as well as diagnostic properties. To that aim we present a methodology where chemically modified poly(lactic co glycolic) acid (PLGA) polymer is formulated into a polymer lipid NP that contains a cytotoxic drug doxorubicin (DOX) in the polymeric core and an anti angiogenic drug sorafenib (SRF) in the lipidic corona. The NP core also contains gold nanocrystals (AuNCs) for imaging purposes and cyclodextrin molecules to maximize the DOX encapsulation in the NP core. In addition, a near infrared (NIR) Cy7 dye was incorporated in the coating. To fabricate the NP we used a microfluidics based technique that offers unique NP synthesis conditions, which allowed for encapsulation and fine tuning of optimal ratios of all the NP components. NP phantoms could be visualized with computed tomography (CT) and near infrared (NIR) fluorescence imaging. We observed timed release of the encapsulated drugs, with fast release of the corona drug SRF and delayed release of a core drug DOX. In tumor bearing mice intravenously administered NPs were found to accumulate at the tumor site by fluorescence imaging.

  • Publication

    Engineering of lipid-coated PLGA nanoparticles with a tunable payload of diagnostically active nanocrystals for medical imaging

    (Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC), 2012) Mieszawska, Aneta J.; Gianella, Anita; Cormode, David P.; Zhao, Yiming; Meijerink, Andries; Langer, Robert; Farokhzad, Omid; Fayad, Zahi A.; Mulder, Willem J. M.

    Polylactic-co-glycolic acid (PLGA) based nanoparticles are biocompatible and biodegradable and therefore have been extensively investigated as therapeutic carriers. Here, we engineered diagnostically active PLGA nanoparticles that incorporate high payloads of nanocrystals into their core for tunable bioimaging features. We accomplished this through esterification reactions of PLGA to generate polymers modified with nanocrystals. The PLGA nanoparticles formed from modified PLGA polymers that were functionalized with either gold nanocrystals or quantum dots exhibited favorable features for computed tomography and optical imaging, respectively.