Randolph Corteling

Randolph Corteling
Reneuron

Doctor of Philosophy

About

40
Publications
11,134
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1,622
Citations

Publications

Publications (40)
Article
Full-text available
The International Society for Cell & Gene Therapy Scientific Signature Series event "Therapeutic Advances With Native and Engineered Human EVs" took place as part of the International Society for Cell & Gene Therapy 2022 Annual Meeting, held from May 4 to 7, 2022, in San Francisco, California, USA. This was the first signature series event on extra...
Article
Full-text available
The purification of extracellular vesicles (EVs) remains a major hurdle in the progression of fundamental research and the commercial application of EV-based products. In this study, we evaluated the potential of heparin affinity chromatography (HAC) to purify neural stem cell-derived EVs as part of a multistep process. Bind-elute chromatography, s...
Article
Full-text available
Myocardial infarction requires urgent reperfusion to salvage viable heart tissue. However, reperfusion increases infarct size further by promoting mitochondrial damage in cardiomyocytes. Exosomes from a wide range of different cell sources have been shown to activate cardioprotective pathways in cardiomyocytes, thereby reducing infarct size. Yet, i...
Article
Full-text available
Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are studied extensively as natural biomolecular shuttles and for their diagnostic and therapeutic potential. This exponential rise in interest has highlighted the need for highly robust and reproducible approaches for EV characterisation. Here we optimise quantitative nanomechanical tools and demonstrate the advantages...
Article
Full-text available
Huntington's disease (HD) is a devastating, autosomal-dominant neurodegenerative disease, for which there are currently no disease-modifying therapies. Clinical trials to replace the damaged striatal medium spiny neurons (MSNs) have been attempted in the past two decades but have met with only limited success. In this study, we investigated whether...
Article
Full-text available
Extracellular vesicles, in particular the subclass exosomes, are rapidly emerging as a novel therapeutic platform. However, currently very few clinical validation studies and no clearly defined manufacturing process exist. As exosomes progress towards the clinic for treatment of a vast array of diseases, it is important to define the engineering ba...
Article
Growing interest in extracellular vesicles (EVs, including exosomes and microvesicles) as therapeutic entities, particularly in stem cell-related approaches, has underlined the need for standardization and coordination of development efforts. Members of the International Society for Extracellular Vesicles and the Society for Clinical Research and T...
Article
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Chronic disability after stroke represents a major unmet neurological need. ReNeuron's development of a human neural stem cell (hNSC) therapy for chronic disability after stroke is progressing through early clinical studies. A Phase I trial has recently been published, showing no safety concerns and some promising signs of efficacy. A single arm Ph...
Article
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A successful strategy in regenerative medicine over the last decade has been the translation of stem cell therapy to repair diseased or damaged tissue in a wide range of indications, despite limited evidence attributing any therapeutic benefit to cell survival or differentiation. Recent findings, however, have demonstrated that the conditioned medi...
Article
CTX0E03 (CTX) is a clinical-grade human neural stem cell (hNSC) line that promotes angiogenesis and neurogenesis in a preclinical model of stroke and is now under clinical development for stroke disability. We evaluated the therapeutic activity of intramuscular CTX hNSC implantation in murine models of hindlimb ischemia for potential translation to...
Chapter
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In this chapter we propose sodium cellulose sulphate (SCS) as a prime candidate for clinical application of encapsulated cells and present data for uses of SCS encapsulation for the direct delivery of therapeutic antibodies and advanced approaches for stem cell therapy. We also provide a simple lab protocol allowing researchers to make capsules at...
Article
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Metastasis is one of the cancer hallmarks described by Hanahan and Weinberg. Emerging evidence shows that it requires interplays between cancer cells and micro-environmental biofactors. Indoleamine 3,5-dioxygenase-1 (IDO-1) produced by cancer, local lymph nodes, and satellite cells have been demonstrated as one of the biofactors. Aberrant IDO-1 act...
Chapter
Background The human neural stem cell line CTX0E03 was developed for the cell based treatment of chronic stroke disability. Derived from fetal cortical brain tissue, CTX0E03 is a clonal cell line that contains a single copy of the c-mycERTAM transgene delivered by retroviral infection. Under the conditional regulation by 4-hydroxytamoxifen (4-OHT),...
Article
Objective: Recently, the human conditionally immortalized neural stem cell (hNSC) line, CTX0E03, has received approval from the UK MHRA for treatment, by direct intracerebral implantation, of stable stroke disability in elderly patients. We report here for the first time that intramuscular injection of the CTX0E03 hNSC line into a mouse model of hi...
Article
Full-text available
The human neural stem cell line CTX0E03 was developed for the cell based treatment of chronic stroke disability. Derived from fetal cortical brain tissue, CTX0E03 is a clonal cell line that contains a single copy of the c-mycERTAM transgene delivered by retroviral infection. Under the conditional regulation by 4-hydroxytamoxifen (4-OHT), c-mycERTAM...
Article
Full-text available
Human neural stem cells offer the hope that a cell therapy treatment for Parkinson's disease (PD) could be made widely available. In this study, we describe two clonal human neural cell lines, derived from two different 10-week-old fetal mesencephalic tissues and immortalized with the c-mycER(TAM) transgene. Under the growth control of 4-hydroxytam...
Article
Full-text available
Uridine triphosphate (UTP) constricts cerebral arteries by activating transduction pathways that increase cytosolic [Ca(2+)] and myofilament Ca(2+) sensitivity. The signaling proteins that comprise these pathways remain uncertain with recent studies implicating a role for several G proteins. To start clarifying which G proteins enable UTP-induced v...
Article
Full-text available
This study sought to define whether inward rectifying K(+) (K(IR)) channels were modulated by vasoactive stimuli known to depolarize and constrict intact cerebral arteries. Using pressure myography and patch-clamp electrophysiology, initial experiments revealed a Ba(2+)-sensitive K(IR) current in cerebral arterial smooth muscle cells that was activ...
Article
This study examined whether inward rectifying K+ (KIR) channels facilitate cell-to-cell communication along skeletal muscle resistance arteries. With the use of feed arteries from the hamster retractor muscle, experiments examined whether KIR channels were functionally expressed and whether channel blockade attenuated the conduction of acetylcholin...
Article
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Evidence suggests that gender differences exist in the severity of many immunological diseases and their response to glucocorticosteroid treatment. In this report, we have used a murine model of ovalbumin-induced lung inflammation to address whether gender could affect the systemic response, airway inflammation and hyperreactivity and their respons...
Article
The extracellular matrix (ECM) influences a variety of cellular functions, including survival, adhesion molecule expression, differentiation, and migration. The ECM composition of the epithelial basement membrane is altered in asthmatics. In this study, we elucidate the major survival signals received by bronchial epithelial cells in vitro by study...
Article
Elevation of the intracellular free Ca(2+) concentration regulates many functional responses in airway smooth muscle, including contraction, proliferation, adhesion, and cell survival. This increase in calcium can be achieved by a release from internal stores (sarcoplasmic reticulum) and/or entry across the cell membrane from the extracellular envi...
Article
Both thrombin and tryptase have been shown to induce smooth muscle cell proliferation in vitro. We have used cultured primary guinea-pig tracheal smooth muscle in order to define pharmacologically the receptors involved in this effect. Tryptase, a protease-activated receptor (PAR)-2 agonist, induced DNA synthesis up to the second passage of the cel...
Article
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Evidence suggests that both the migration and activation of neutrophils into the airway is of importance in pathological conditions such as pulmonary emphysema. In the present study, we describe in vivo models of lung neutrophil infiltration and activation in mice and hamsters. BALB/c and C57BL/6 mice were intranasally treated with lipopolysacchari...
Article
Conflicting results have been reported about the role of Stat6 in allergen-induced airway inflammation. We have studied the influence of the allergen inhalation procedure on the inflammatory response using wild-type and Stat6-deficient mice generated on a C57BL/6 background. Animals were immunized i.p. on day 0 and 7 with ovalbumin (OVA) and then r...
Article
Full-text available
The frequency of mass bee attacks has dramatically increased in the Americas following the introduction and spread of the aggressive Africanized 'killer' bee (Apis mellifera scutellata). As yet no specific therapy is available, which led us to develop an ovine Fab-based antivenom as a potential new treatment. Sera from sheep immunized against the v...
Article
The frequency of mass bee attacks has dramatically increased in the Americas following the introduction and spread of the aggressive Africanized 'killer' bee (Apis mellifera scutellata). As yet no specific therapy is available, which led us to develop an ovine Fab-based antivenom as a potential new treatment. Sera from sheep immunized against the v...

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