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1.
Biochem Biophys Rep ; 7: 56-62, 2016 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28955889

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Identification of wound-specific markers would represent an important step toward damaged tissue detection and targeted delivery of biologically important materials to injured sites. Such delivery could minimize the amount of therapeutic materials that must be administered and limit potential collateral damage on nearby normal tissues. Yet, biological markers that are specific for injured tissue sites remain elusive. METHODS: In this study, we have developed an immunohistological approach for identification of protein epitopes specifically exposed in wounded tissue sites. RESULTS: Using ex-vivo tissue samples in combination with fluorescently-labeled antibodies we show that actin, an intracellular cytoskeletal protein, is specifically exposed upon injury. The targetability of actin in injured sites has been demonstrated in vivo through the specific delivery of anti-actin conjugated particles to the wounded tissue in a lethal rat model of grade IV liver injury. CONCLUSIONS: These results illustrate that identification of injury-specific protein markers and their targetability for specific delivery is feasible. GENERAL SIGNIFICANCE: Identification of wound-specific targets has important medical applications as it could enable specific delivery of various products, such as expression vectors, therapeutic drugs, hemostatic materials, tissue healing, or scar prevention agents, to internal sites of penetrating or surgical wounds regardless of origin, geometry or location.

2.
Biochem Biophys Rep ; 2: 143-152, 2015 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29124156

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Genetically modified organisms (GMOs) have numerous biomedical, agricultural and environmental applications. Development of accurate methods for the detection of GMOs is a prerequisite for the identification and control of authorized and unauthorized release of these engineered organisms into the environment and into the food chain. Current detection methods are unable to detect uncharacterized GMOs, since either the DNA sequence of the transgene or the amino acid sequence of the protein must be known for DNA-based or immunological-based detection, respectively. METHODS: Here we describe the application of an epigenetics-based approach for the detection of mammalian GMOs via analysis of chromatin structural changes occurring in the host nucleus upon the insertion of foreign or endogenous DNA. RESULTS: Immunological methods combined with DNA next generation sequencing enabled direct interrogation of chromatin structure and identification of insertions of various size foreign (human or viral) DNA sequences, DNA sequences often used as genome modification tools (e.g. viral sequences, transposon elements), or endogenous DNA sequences into the nuclear genome of a model animal organism. CONCLUSIONS: The results provide a proof-of-concept that epigenetic approaches can be used to detect the insertion of endogenous and exogenous sequences into the genome of higher organisms where the method of genetic modification, the sequence of inserted DNA, and the exact genomic insertion site(s) are unknown. GENERAL SIGNIFICANCE: Measurement of chromatin dynamics as a sensor for detection of genomic manipulation and, more broadly, organism exposure to environmental or other factors affecting the epigenomic landscape are discussed.

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