Browsing by Author "Tambuwala, Murtaza"
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- ItemBiomedical applications of three-dimensional bioprinted craniofacial tissue engineering(WILEY, 2022) Charbe, Nitin Bharat; Tambuwala, Murtaza; Palakurthi, Sushesh Srivatsa; Warokar, Amol; HronniC-JahjefendiC, Altijana; Bakshi, Hamid; Zacconi, Flavia C. M.; Mishra, Vijay; Khadse, Saurabh; Aljabali, Alaa A.; El-Tanani, Mohamed; Serrano-Aroca, Angel; Palakurthi, SrinathAnatomical complications of the craniofacial regions often present considerable challenges to the surgical repair or replacement of the damaged tissues. Surgical repair has its own set of limitations, including scarcity of the donor tissues, immune rejection, use of immune suppressors followed by the surgery, and restriction in restoring the natural aesthetic appeal. Rapid advancement in the field of biomaterials, cell biology, and engineering has helped scientists to create cellularized skeletal muscle-like structures. However, the existing method still has limitations in building large, highly vascular tissue with clinical application. With the advance in the three-dimensional (3D) bioprinting technique, scientists and clinicians now can produce the functional implants of skeletal muscles and bones that are more patient-specific with the perfect match to the architecture of their craniofacial defects. Craniofacial tissue regeneration using 3D bioprinting can manage and eliminate the restrictions of the surgical transplant from the donor site. The concept of creating the new functional tissue, exactly mimicking the anatomical and physiological function of the damaged tissue, looks highly attractive. This is crucial to reduce the donor site morbidity and retain the esthetics. 3D bioprinting can integrate all three essential components of tissue engineering, that is, rehabilitation, reconstruction, and regeneration of the lost craniofacial tissues. Such integration essentially helps to develop the patient-specific treatment plans and damage site-driven creation of the functional implants for the craniofacial defects. This article is the bird's eye view on the latest development and application of 3D bioprinting in the regeneration of the skeletal muscle tissues and their application in restoring the functional abilities of the damaged craniofacial tissue. We also discussed current challenges in craniofacial bone vascularization and gave our view on the future direction, including establishing the interactions between tissue-engineered skeletal muscle and the peripheral nervous system.
- ItemPCSK9 conjugated liposomes for targeted delivery of paclitaxel to the cancer cell: a proof-of-concept study(ELSEVIER FRANCE-EDITIONS SCIENTIFIQUES MEDICALES ELSEVIER, 2022) Charbe, Nitin Bharat; Lagos, Carlos F.; Ortiz, Cristian Andres Vilos; Tambuwala, Murtaza; Palakurthi, Sushesh Srivatsa; Zacconi, Flavia C. M.Ligand-based targeting of the receptors that are overexpressed explicitly on cancer cells represents an effective drug delivery approach to enhance the chemotherapeutic efficacy. Proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9 (PCSK9) which is a serine protease enzyme primarily produced by the liver cells, can potentially be used as a targeting ligand. PCSK9 binds to the LDL-r on hepatocytes' surface, leading to endocytosis and endosomal degradation. High LDL-r expression, which is believed to meet the higher demand of the cholesterol and phospholipids to build proliferating cancer cell membrane, ensures selective uptake of the PCSK9 conjugated liposomes. In the present work, the PCSK9 conjugated liposomal system was developed to deliver paclitaxel (PTX) to cancer cells. The protein was conjugated by EDC and NHS in a two-step coupling reaction to the li-posomes containing COOH-PEG2000-COOH lipid. Conjugation was confirmed by NMR, and liposomes were further characterized by SEM and zeta sizer. PCSK9-conjugated liposomes showed high encapsulation efficiency of 69.1% with a diameter of 90.0 & PLUSMN; 4.9 nm. Long-term stability (30 days) study (Zeta potential:-9.88) confirmed excellent constancy and significant drug retention (58.2%). Invitro cytotoxicity and targeting effi-ciency was explored using MTS assay in human embryonic kidney cells (HEK293), liver hepatocellular cells (HEPG2), and a human colon cancer cell line (HCT116) for 24 h. PCSK9 conjugated liposomes exhibited significantly higher growth inhibition than the unconjugated (control) liposomes in HCT116 cell line (p < 0.001). The novel PCSK9 conjugated liposomes presented potent and precise in vitro anticancer activity and, therefore, are suggested for the first time as a promising targeted delivery system for cancer treatment.