Madeline Kravitz's research while affiliated with University of Saint Joseph and other places

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Publications (3)


Protecting cardiomyocytes from hypoxia-reoxygenation injury, empaglifozin and liraglutide alone or in combination?
  • Article

March 2024

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1 Read

Journal of Basic and Clinical Physiology and Pharmacology

Francesca Amici

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Christian Ciarlo

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Jenine Abumusallam

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[...]

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Zhao Li

Objectives Empagliflozin, a sodium-dependent glucose co-transporter 2 (SGLT2) inhibitor, and liraglutide, a GLP-1 receptor (GLP-1R) agonist, are commonly recognized for their cardiovascular benefits in individuals with type 2 diabetes (T2D). In prior studies, we have demonstrated that both drugs, alone or in combination, were able to protect cardiomyocytes from injury induced by diabetes. Mechanistic investigations also suggested that the cardioprotective effect may be independent of diabetes In this study, we utilized a hypoxia-reoxygenation (H/R) model to investigate the cardiovascular benefits of SGLT2 inhibitor empagliflozin and GLP-1 receptor (GLP-1R) agonist liraglutide, both alone and in combination, in the absence of T2D. Our hypothesis was that empagliflozin and liraglutide, either individually or in combination, would demonstrate cardioprotective properties against H/R-induced injury, with an additive and/or synergistic effect anticipated from combination therapy. Methods In this study, the cardiac muscle cell line, HL-1 cells, were treated with vehicle, empagliflozin, liraglutide, or a combination of the two drugs. The cells were then subjected to a hypoxia-reoxygenation (H/R) protocol, consisting of 1 h of hypoxia followed by 24 h of reoxygenation. The effects of the treatments on cytotoxicity, oxidative stress, endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) activity, phospho-protein kinase C (PKC) beta and phospho-eNOS (Thr ⁴⁹⁵ ) expression were subsequently evaluated at the end of the treatments. Results We found that H/R increased cytotoxicity and reduces eNOS activity, empagliflozin, liraglutide or combination treatment attenuated some or all of these effects with the combination therapy showing the greatest improvement. Conclusions Empagliflozin, liraglutide or combination of these two have cardioprotective effect regardless of diabetes. Cardioprotective effects of SGLT2 inhibitor and GLP-1R agonist is additive and synergistic.

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Therapeutic and diagnostic applications of antisense peptide nucleic acids
  • Literature Review
  • Full-text available

December 2023

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35 Reads

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3 Citations

Molecular Therapy — Nucleic Acids

Peptide nucleic acids (PNAs) are synthetic nucleic acid analogs with a neutral N-(2-aminoethyl) glycine backbone. PNAs possess unique physicochemical characteristics such as increased resistance to enzymatic degradation, ionic strength and stability over a wide range of temperatures and pH, and low intrinsic electrostatic repulsion against complementary target oligonucleotides. PNA has been widely used as an antisense oligonucleotide (ASO). Despite the favorable characteristics of PNA, in comparison with other ASO technologies, the use of antisense PNA for novel therapeutics has lagged. This review provides a brief overview of PNA, its antisense mechanisms of action, delivery strategies, and highlights successful applications of PNA, focusing on anti-pathogenic, anti-neurodegenerative disease, anti-cancer, and diagnostic agents. For each application, several studies are discussed focusing on the different target sites of the PNA, design of different PNAs and the therapeutic outcome in different cell lines and animal models. Thereafter, persisting limitations slowing the successful integration of antisense PNA therapeutics are discussed in order to highlight actionable next steps in the development and optimization of PNA as an ASO.

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The Challenges and Opportunities in the Development of MicroRNA Therapeutics: A Multidisciplinary Viewpoint

November 2021

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68 Reads

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36 Citations

Cells

microRNAs (miRs) are emerging as attractive therapeutic targets because of their small size, specific targetability, and critical role in disease pathogenesis. However, <20 miR targeting molecules have entered clinical trials, and none progressed to phase III. The difficulties in miR target identification, the moderate efficacy of miR inhibitors, cell type-specific delivery, and adverse outcomes have impeded the development of miR therapeutics. These hurdles are rooted in the functional complexity of miR’s role in disease and sequence complementarity-dependent/-independent effects in nontarget tissues. The advances in understanding miR’s role in disease, the development of efficient miR inhibitors, and innovative delivery approaches have helped resolve some of these hurdles. In this review, we provide a multidisciplinary viewpoint on the challenges and opportunities in the development of miR therapeutics.

Citations (2)


... PNA (peptide nucleic acid) is a DNA mimic with high binding affinity to complementary DNA/RNA [7,8]. PNA molecules have been explored as therapeutic [9-15] and sensing [9,10,12,13,15,16] molecules. ...

Reference:

Detecting the FLJ22447 lncRNA in Ovarian Cancer with Cyclopentane-Modified FIT-PNAs (cpFIT-PNAs)
Therapeutic and diagnostic applications of antisense peptide nucleic acids

Molecular Therapy — Nucleic Acids

... MiRNAs are attractive targets for drug development due to their causal role in several diseases, small size, high stability, extended half-life in biological samples, and specific targetability. Also, they can be quantified with high levels of specificity and sensitivity at a low cost using common techniques like quantitative PCR [137,139]. Despite these traits, the poor effectiveness of miR therapies may be due to the fact that miRs have too many targets, are widely expressed, and have sequence complementarity-independent effects that might have negative consequences in both target and nontarget tissue [139][140][141]. ...

The Challenges and Opportunities in the Development of MicroRNA Therapeutics: A Multidisciplinary Viewpoint

Cells