Description of Research Expertise
Dr. Brenner’s lab (www.brennerbioengineeringlab.com) engineers new technologies for the diseases of Pulmonary & Critical Care Medicine (PCCM). PCCM encompasses both diseases of the lungs and acute critical illnesses (ACIs), which means all acutely life-threatening diseases, such as ARDS, stroke, sepsis, & more.
Dr. Brenner’s lab engineers technologies ranging from the macro-scale (devices you can hold), all the way down to the nano-scale (smaller than cells). On the macro-scale, Dr. Brenner has spun out 3 funded medical device companies, including one with FDA approval, and his most recent one, RightAir (www.rightair.io/), is currently in clinical studies with its AIR-AD Vest to relieve shortness of breath in COPD patients.
The nano-scale is where Dr. Brenner’s lab spends most of their time, developing nanomedicine for acute critical illnesses (ACIs). ACIs are a huge class of diseases, accounting for costs that are 4% of the US GDP! Unfortunately, there are few if any disease-specific drugs, and the outcomes remain very poor.
In developing new approach for ACIs, it is notable that they all share 3 unique pharmacological challenges: 1) ACI patients are fragile, with multiple simultaneous organ systems perturbed, so they do not tolerate the off-target side effects of drugs (side effects in remote organs). 2) ACIs are heterogeneous, with multiple subgroups and cell types implicated, so therapy targeting a single pathway is unlikely to work. 3) These diseases are rapidly progressive, so each signaling pathway is active for only a short time window.
To solve these 3 pharmacological challenges and thereby create a platform technology for treating ACIs, the Brenner Lab has been developing VMNs (vascular-targeted, multi-drug-loaded nanocarriers). VMNs are ~100-nanometer drug carriers that when injected intravascularly concentrate strongly in the target organ, using a variety of targeting mechanisms explained below. By concentrating drugs in the diseased organ, VMNs eliminate the off-target side effects of cargo drugs, solving problem #1 above. By shuttling multiple drugs, they address multiple points of pathology, solving the heterogeneity problem (#2 above) and the issue that ACIs are rapidly progressive (#3). The lab chose vascular-targeting for VMNs because nearly all ACIs are vascular-oriented, with pathology largely residing in the blood vessels, in the form of inflammation, thrombosis, and ischemia. Additionally, intravascular access for infusing VMNs is easy in ACI patients, as they all have IVs, and it is common to put in intra-arterial (IA) catheters during procedures (e.g., for stroke and heart attack).
Dr. Brenner and his lab have created a number of targeting mechanisms for VMNs so that they can target any organ affected by ACIs, and address the VMNs to particular cell types. The first such technology, developed in the 1990s by Dr. Brenner’s former postdoc advisor and continued close collaborator, Dr. Vlad Muzykantov, involves conjugating to VMNs’ surface affinity moieties (e.g., antibodies and derivatives thereof) that bind to endothelial cells (see Dr. Brenner’s publications with PMIDs 28065731, 28304180). The second such technology Dr. Brenner co-developed is RBC-hitchhiking (RH), in which VMNs are adsorbed onto red blood cells, which facilitates transfer to the capillary endothelium, without needing antibodies (PMID 29992966). Combined with IA catheters, RH achieved the highest published levels of delivery to organs such as the kidney (for the ACI acute kidney injury) and brain (for treating stroke, where RH achieved >10x the brain delivery of the best prior technology). Finally, more recently, in unpublished work, the Brenner lab has developed a technology for targeting VMNs to resident leukocytes in organs affected by ACIs.
With this suite of targeting mechanisms, the Brenner lab is now identifying the optimal combinations of drugs to load into VMLs. The lab is interested in using computational techniques to predict the best drugs to load (PBPK modeling, network pharmacology), and then testing the drugs in multiple animal models of disease. The Brenner lab primarily uses rodent models, but in order to maximize translational potential, also employs large animal models (pigs) and even fresh, ex vivo human organs that have been rejected for transplant, usually because they are afflicted by the ACIs that are the lab’s focus (PMID 29992966). The goal is to develop VMNs for each ACI, and move them to patients by partnering with industry, which the Brenner lab already has done by forming a close collaboration with a pharmaceutical company in developing VMNs for ARDS.
Please join the Brenner lab in the fight, building technologies to defeat these terrible diseases!
Selected Publications
Zhicheng Wang, Sahil Kulkarni, Jia Nong, Marco Zamora, Alireza Ebrahimimojarad, Elizabeth Hood, Tea Shuvaeva, Michael Zaleski, Damodar Gullipalli, Emily Wolfe, Carolann Espy, Evguenia Arguiri, Yufei Wang, Oscar A Marcos-Contreras, Wenchao Song, Vladimir R Muzykantov, Jinglin Fu, Ravi Radhakrishnan, Jacob W Myerson, Jacob S Brenner: A percolation-type criticality threshold controls immune protein coating of surfaces Cell : 2025.
Serena Omo-Lamai, Yufei Wang, Manthan N. Patel, Eno-Obong Essien, Mengwen Shen, Aparajeeta Majumdar, Carolann Espy, Jichuan Wu, Breana Channer, Michael Tobin, Shruthi Murali, Tyler E. Papp, Rhea Maheshwari, Liuqian Wang, Liam S. Chase, Marco E. Zamora, Mariah L. Arral, Oscar A. Marcos-Contreras, Jacob W. Myerson, Christopher A. Hunter, Andrew Tsourkas, Vladimir Muzykantov, Igor Brodsky, Sunny Shin, Kathryn A. Whitehead, Peter Gaskill, Dennis Discher, Hamideh Parhiz, Jacob S. Brenner: Lipid Nanoparticle-Associated Inflammation is Triggered by Sensing of Endosomal Damage: Engineering Endosomal Escape without Side Effects Nature Nanotechnology (Impact Factor 39) : 2025.
Zaleski MH, Chase LS, Hood ED, Wang Z, Nong J, Espy CL, Zamora ME, Wu J, Morrell LJ, Muzykantov VR, Myerson JW, Brenner JS.: Conjugation Chemistry Markedly Impacts Toxicity and Biodistribution of Targeted Nanoparticles, Mediated by Complement Activation Adv Mater 11 : e2409945,2024.
Nong J, Gong X, Dang QM, Tiwari S, Patel M, Wu J, Hanna A, Park WJ, Atochina-Vasserman EN, Huang HT, Marcos-Contreras OA, Morris-Blanco KC, Miner JJ, Weissman D, Muzykantov VR, Gupta K, Issadore D, Myerson JW, Wang Z, Brenner JS.: Multi-stage-mixing to create a core-then-shell structure improves DNA-loaded lipid nanoparticles' transfection by orders of magnitude bioRxiv : 2024.
Zaleski MH, Omo-Lamai S, Nong J, Chase LS, Myerson JW, Glassman PM, Lee F, Reyes-Esteves S, Wang Z, Patel MN, Peshkova AD, Komatsu H, Axelsen PH, Muzykantov VR, Marcos-Contreras OA, Brenner JS.: Nanocarriers' repartitioning of drugs between blood subcompartments as a mechanism of improving pharmacokinetics, safety, and efficacy J Control Release 374 : 425-440,2024.
Wang Z, Kulkarni S, Nong J, Zamora M, Ebrahimimojarad A, Hood E, Shuvaeva T, Zaleski M, Gullipalli D, Wolfe E, Espy C, Arguiri E, Wang Y, Marcos-Contreras OA, Song W, Muzykantov VR, Fu J, Radhakrishnan R, Myerson JW, Brenner JS.: A percolation-type criticality threshold controls immune protein coating of surfaces bioRxiv : 2024.
Rubey KM, Freeman A, Mukhitov AR, Paris AJ, Lin SM, Rue R, Fazelinia H, Spruce LA, Roof J, Brenner JS, Heimall J, Krymskaya VP.: Neutrophil-avid nanocarrier uptake by STAT3 dominant-negative hyper-IgE syndrome patient neutrophils Life Sci Alliance 7 : e202402618,2024.
Greenwood JC, Talebi FM, Jang DH, Spelde AE, Gordon EK, Horak J, Acker MA, Kilbaugh TJ, Shofer FS, Augoustides JGT, Brenner JS, Muzykantov VR, Bakker J, Abella BS.: Anaerobic Lactate Production Is Associated With Decreased Microcirculatory Blood Flow and Decreased Mitochondrial Respiration Following Cardiovascular Surgery With Cardiopulmonary Bypass Crit Care Med 52 (8): 1239-1250,2024.
Patel MN, Tiwari S, Wang Y, O'Neill S, Wu J, Omo-Lamai S, Espy C, Chase LS, Majumdar A, Hoffman E, Shah A, Sárközy A, Katzen J, Pardi N, Brenner JS.: Enabling non-viral DNA delivery using lipid nanoparticles co-loaded with endogenous anti-inflammatory lipids bioRxiv : epub ahead of print,2024.
Anchordoquy T, Artzi N, Balyasnikova IV, Barenholz Y, La-Beck NM, Brenner JS, Chan WCW, Decuzzi P, Exner AA, Gabizon A, Godin B, Lai SK, Lammers T, Mitchell MJ, Moghimi SM, Muzykantov VR, Peer D, Nguyen J, Popovtzer R, Ricco M, Serkova NJ, Singh R, Schroeder A, Schwendeman AA, Straehla JP, Teesalu T, Tilden S, Simberg D.: Mechanisms and Barriers in Nanomedicine: Progress in the Field and Future Directions ACS Nano 18 (22): 13983-13999,2024.
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Academic Contact Information
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Phone: 215-662-2222