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20 result(s) for "Allu, Srinivasa Rao"
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A small molecule compound with an indole moiety inhibits the main protease of SARS-CoV-2 and blocks virus replication
Except remdesivir, no specific antivirals for SARS-CoV-2 infection are currently available. Here, we characterize two small-molecule-compounds, named GRL-1720 and 5h, containing an indoline and indole moiety, respectively, which target the SARS-CoV-2 main protease (M pro ). We use VeroE6 cell-based assays with RNA-qPCR, cytopathic assays, and immunocytochemistry and show both compounds to block the infectivity of SARS-CoV-2 with EC 50 values of 15 ± 4 and 4.2 ± 0.7 μM for GRL-1720 and 5h, respectively. Remdesivir permitted viral breakthrough at high concentrations; however, compound 5h completely blocks SARS-CoV-2 infection in vitro without viral breakthrough or detectable cytotoxicity. Combination of 5h and remdesivir exhibits synergism against SARS-CoV-2. Additional X-ray structural analysis show that 5h forms a covalent bond with M pro and makes polar interactions with multiple active site amino acid residues. The present data suggest that 5h might serve as a lead M pro inhibitor for the development of therapeutics for SARS-CoV-2 infection. Here, using in vitro assays and structural analysis, the authors characterize the anti-SARS-CoV-2 properties of two small molcules, showing these to bind and target the virus main protease (M pro ), and to exhibit a synergistic antiviral effect when combined with remdesivir in vitro.
Tissue pO2 distributions in xenograft tumors dynamically imaged by Cherenkov-excited phosphorescence during fractionated radiation therapy
Hypoxia in solid tumors is thought to be an important factor in resistance to therapy, but the extreme microscopic heterogeneity of the partial pressures of oxygen (pO 2 ) between the capillaries makes it difficult to characterize the scope of this phenomenon without invasive sampling of oxygen distributions throughout the tissue. Here we develop a non-invasive method to track spatial oxygen distributions in tumors during fractionated radiotherapy, using oxygen-dependent quenching of phosphorescence, oxygen probe Oxyphor PtG4 and the radiotherapy-induced Cherenkov light to excite and image the phosphorescence lifetimes within the tissue. Mice bearing MDA-MB-231 breast cancer and FaDu head neck cancer xenografts show different pO 2 responses during each of the 5 fractions (5 Gy per fraction), delivered from a clinical linear accelerator. This study demonstrates subsurface in vivo mapping of tumor pO 2 distributions with submillimeter spatial resolution, thus providing a methodology to track response of tumors to fractionated radiotherapy. Hypoxia in solid tumors is an important factor in radiation therapy resistance, but partial pressures of oxygen in the tissue are heterogenous and difficult to measure. Here the authors develop Cherenkov excited phosphorescence imaging using oxygen probe Oxyphor PtG4 to spatially track oxygen distributions in tumors during fractionated radiotherapy.
Aerobic exercise reverses aging-induced depth-dependent decline in cerebral microcirculation
Aging is a major risk factor for cognitive impairment. Aerobic exercise benefits brain function and may promote cognitive health in older adults. However, underlying biological mechanisms across cerebral gray and white matter are poorly understood. Selective vulnerability of the white matter to small vessel disease and a link between white matter health and cognitive function suggests a potential role for responses in deep cerebral microcirculation. Here, we tested whether aerobic exercise modulates cerebral microcirculatory changes induced by aging. To this end, we carried out a comprehensive quantitative examination of changes in cerebral microvascular physiology in cortical gray and subcortical white matter in mice (3–6 vs. 19–21 months old), and asked whether and how exercise may rescue age-induced deficits. In the sedentary group, aging caused a more severe decline in cerebral microvascular perfusion and oxygenation in deep (infragranular) cortical layers and subcortical white matter compared with superficial (supragranular) cortical layers. Five months of voluntary aerobic exercise partly renormalized microvascular perfusion and oxygenation in aged mice in a depth-dependent manner, and brought these spatial distributions closer to those of young adult sedentary mice. These microcirculatory effects were accompanied by an improvement in cognitive function. Our work demonstrates the selective vulnerability of the deep cortex and subcortical white matter to aging-induced decline in microcirculation, as well as the responsiveness of these regions to aerobic exercise.
Therapies for the Treatment of Advanced/Metastatic Estrogen Receptor-Positive Breast Cancer: Current Situation and Future Directions
The hormone receptor-positive (HR+) type is the most frequently identified subtype of breast cancer. HR+ breast cancer has a more positive prognosis when compared to other subtypes, such as human epidermal growth factor protein 2-positive disorder and triple-negative disease. The advancement in treatment outcomes for advanced HR+ breast cancer has been considerably elevated due to the discovery of cyclin-dependent kinase 4/6 inhibitors and their combination effects with endocrine therapy. However, despite the considerable effectiveness of tamoxifen, a selective estrogen receptor modulator (SERMs), and aromatase inhibitors (AI), the issue of treatment resistance still presents a significant challenge for HR+ breast cancer. As a result, there is a focus on exploring new therapeutic strategies such as targeted protein degradation and covalent inhibition for targeting ERα. This article discusses the latest progress in treatments like oral selective ER degraders (SERDs), complete estrogen receptor antagonists (CERANs), selective estrogen receptor covalent antagonists (SERCAs), proteolysis targeting chimera (PROTAC) degraders, and combinations of CDK4/6 inhibitors with endocrine therapy. The focus is specifically on those compounds that have transitioned into phases of clinical development.
Orally Bioavailable Proteolysis-Targeting Chimeras: An Innovative Approach in the Golden Era of Discovering Small-Molecule Cancer Drugs
Proteolysis-targeting chimeras (PROTACs) are an emerging therapeutic modality that show promise to open a target space not accessible to conventional small molecules via a degradation-based mechanism. PROTAC degraders, due to their bifunctional nature, which is categorized as ‘beyond the Rule of Five’, have gained attention as a distinctive therapeutic approach for oral administration in clinical settings. However, the development of PROTACs with adequate oral bioavailability remains a significant hurdle, largely due to their large size and less than ideal physical and chemical properties. This review encapsulates the latest advancements in orally delivered PROTACs that have entered clinical evaluation as well as developments highlighted in recent scholarly articles. The insights and methodologies elaborated upon in this review could be instrumental in supporting the discovery and refinement of novel PROTAC degraders aimed at the treatment of various human cancers.
Implantable sensor for local Cherenkov-excited luminescence imaging of tumor pO2 during radiotherapy
Significance: The necessity to use exogenous probes for optical oxygen measurements in radiotherapy poses challenges for clinical applications. Options for implantable probe biotechnology need to be improved to alleviate toxicity concerns in human use and facilitate translation to clinical trial use. Aim: To develop an implantable oxygen sensor containing a phosphorescent oxygen probe such that the overall administered dose of the probe would be below the Federal Drug Administration (FDA)-prescribed microdose level, and the sensor would provide local high-intensity signal for longitudinal measurements of tissue pO2. Approach: PtG4, an oxygen quenched dendritic molecule, was mixed into an agarose matrix at 100  μM concentration, allowing for local injection into tumors at the total dose of 10 nmol per animal, forming a gel at the site of injection. Cherenkov-excited luminescence imaging (CELI) was used to acquire the phosphorescence and provide intratumoral pO2. Results: Although PtG4 does not form covalent bonds with agarose and gradually leaches out into the surrounding tissue, its retention time within the gel was sufficiently long to demonstrate the capability to measure intratumoral pO2 with the implantable gel sensors. The sensor’s performance was first evaluated in vitro in tissue simulation phantoms, and then the sensor was used to measure changes in oxygen in MDA-MB-231 tumors during hypofractionated radiotherapy. Conclusions: Our study demonstrates that implantable oxygen sensors in combination with CELI present a promising approach for quantifying oxygen changes during the course of radiation therapy and thus for evaluating the tumor response to radiation. By improving the design of the gel–probe composition in order to prevent leaching of the probe into the tissue, biosensors can be created that should allow longitudinal oxygen measurements in tumors by means of CELI while using FDA-compliant microdose levels of the probe and thus lowering toxicity concerns.
CHEX-seq detects single-cell genomic single-stranded DNA with catalytical potential
Genomic DNA (gDNA) undergoes structural interconversion between single- and double-stranded states during transcription, DNA repair and replication, which is critical for cellular homeostasis. We describe “CHEX-seq” which identifies the single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) in situ in individual cells. CHEX-seq uses 3’-terminal blocked, light-activatable probes to prime the copying of ssDNA into complementary DNA that is sequenced, thereby reporting the genome-wide single-stranded chromatin landscape. CHEX-seq is benchmarked in human K562 cells, and its utilities are demonstrated in cultures of mouse and human brain cells as well as immunostained spatially localized neurons in brain sections. The amount of ssDNA is dynamically regulated in response to perturbation. CHEX-seq also identifies single-stranded regions of mitochondrial DNA in single cells. Surprisingly, CHEX-seq identifies single-stranded loci in mouse and human gDNA that catalyze porphyrin metalation in vitro, suggesting a catalytic activity for genomic ssDNA. We posit that endogenous DNA enzymatic activity is a function of genomic ssDNA. The in situ single-stranded open chromatin landscape is dynamically regulated in single cells. In their efforts to understand brain cells’ functional dynamics and to complement the other single-cell chromatin approaches, the authors present a method named CHEX-seq (CHromatin EXposed).
Real-time tracking of brain oxygen gradients and blood flow during functional activation
Cerebral metabolic rate of oxygen ( ) consumption is a key physiological variable that characterizes brain metabolism in a steady state and during functional activation. We aim to develop a minimally invasive optical technique for real-time measurement of concurrently with cerebral blood flow (CBF). We used a pair of macromolecular phosphorescent probes with nonoverlapping optical spectra, which were localized in the intra- and extravascular compartments of the brain tissue, thus providing a readout of oxygen gradients between these two compartments. In parallel, we measured CBF using laser speckle contrast imaging. The method enables computation and tracking of during functional activation with high temporal resolution ( ). In contrast to other approaches, our assessment of does not require measurements of CBF or hemoglobin oxygen saturation. The independent records of intravascular and extravascular partial pressures of oxygen, CBF, and provide information about the physiological events that accompany neuronal activation, creating opportunities for dynamic quantification of brain metabolism.
Measurements of cerebral microvascular blood flow, oxygenation, and morphology in a mouse model of whole-brain irradiation-induced cognitive impairment by two-photon microscopy and optical coherence tomography: evidence for microvascular injury in the cerebral white matter
Whole-brain irradiation (WBI, also known as whole-brain radiation therapy) is a mainstay treatment modality for patients with multiple brain metastases. It is also used as a prophylactic treatment for microscopic tumors that cannot be detected by magnetic resonance imaging. WBI induces a progressive cognitive decline in ~ 50% of the patients surviving over 6 months, significantly compromising the quality of life. There is increasing preclinical evidence that radiation-induced injury to the cerebral microvasculature and accelerated neurovascular senescence plays a central role in this side effect of WBI. To better understand this side effect, male C57BL/6 mice were first subjected to a clinically relevant protocol of fractionated WBI (5 Gy, two doses per week, for 4 weeks). Nine months post the WBI treatment, we applied two-photon microscopy and Doppler optical coherence tomography to measure capillary red-blood-cell (RBC) flux, capillary morphology, and microvascular oxygen partial pressure (PO 2 ) in the cerebral somatosensory cortex in the awake, head-restrained, WPI-treated mice and their age-matched controls, through a cover-glass-sealed chronic cranial window. Thanks to the extended penetration depth with the fluorophore — Alexa680, measurements of capillary blood flow properties (e.g., RBC flux, speed, and linear density) in the cerebral subcortical white matter were enabled. We found that the WBI-treated mice exhibited a significantly decreased capillary RBC flux in the white matter. WBI also caused a significant reduction in capillary diameter, as well as a large (although insignificant) reduction in segment density at the deeper cortical layers (e.g., 600–700 μm), while the other morphological properties (e.g., segment length and tortuosity) were not obviously affected. In addition, we found that PO 2 measured in the arterioles and venules, as well as the calculated oxygen saturation and oxygen extraction fraction, were not obviously affected by WBI. Lastly, WBI was associated with a significant increase in the erythrocyte-associated transients of PO 2 , while the changes of other cerebral capillary PO 2 properties (e.g., capillary mean-PO 2 , RBC-PO 2 , and InterRBC-PO 2 ) were not significant. Collectively, our findings support the notion that WBI results in persistent cerebral white matter microvascular impairment, which likely contributes to the WBI-induced brain injury and cognitive decline. Further studies are warranted to assess the WBI-induced changes in brain tissue oxygenation and malfunction of the white matter microvasculature as well.
Aerobic exercise reverses aging-induced depth-dependent decline in cerebral microcirculation
Aging is a major risk factor for cognitive impairment. Aerobic exercise benefits brain function and may promote cognitive health in older adults. However, underlying biological mechanisms across cerebral gray and white matter are poorly understood. Selective vulnerability of the white matter to small vessel disease and a link between white matter health and cognitive function suggests a potential role for responses in deep cerebral microcirculation. Here, we tested whether aerobic exercise modulates cerebral microcirculatory changes induced by aging. To this end, we carried out a comprehensive quantitative examination of changes in cerebral microvascular physiology in cortical gray and subcortical white matter in mice (3-6 vs. 19-21 months old), and asked whether and how exercise may rescue age-induced deficits. In the sedentary group, aging caused a more severe decline in cerebral microvascular perfusion and oxygenation in deep (infragranular) cortical layers and subcortical white matter compared with superficial (supragranular) cortical layers. Five months of voluntary aerobic exercise partly renormalized microvascular perfusion and oxygenation in aged mice in a depth-dependent manner, and brought these spatial distributions closer to those of young adult sedentary mice. These microcirculatory effects were accompanied by an improvement in cognitive function. Our work demonstrates the selective vulnerability of the deep cortex and subcortical white matter to aging-induced decline in microcirculation, as well as the responsiveness of these regions to aerobic exercise.Competing Interest StatementThe authors have declared no competing interest.