Role of molecularly-cloned hematopoietic growth factors after acute high-dose radiation exposures

Author(s):  
Hillard M Lazarus ◽  
James O Armitage ◽  
Robert Peter Gale
2018 ◽  
Vol 115 (9) ◽  
pp. E2077-E2084 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yingchao Zhao ◽  
Pinan Liu ◽  
Na Zhang ◽  
Jie Chen ◽  
Lukas D. Landegger ◽  
...  

Neurofibromatosis type II (NF2) is a disease that needs new solutions. Vestibular schwannoma (VS) growth causes progressive hearing loss, and the standard treatment, including surgery and radiotherapy, can further damage the nerve. There is an urgent need to identify an adjunct therapy that, by enhancing the efficacy of radiation, can help lower the radiation dose and preserve hearing. The mechanisms underlying deafness in NF2 are still unclear. One of the major limitations in studying tumor-induced hearing loss is the lack of mouse models that allow hearing testing. Here, we developed a cerebellopontine angle (CPA) schwannoma model that faithfully recapitulates the tumor-induced hearing loss. Using this model, we discovered that cMET blockade by crizotinib (CRZ) enhanced schwannoma radiosensitivity by enhancing DNA damage, and CRZ treatment combined with low-dose radiation was as effective as high-dose radiation. CRZ treatment had no adverse effect on hearing; however, it did not affect tumor-induced hearing loss, presumably because cMET blockade did not change tumor hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) levels. This cMET gene knockdown study independently confirmed the role of the cMET pathway in mediating the effect of CRZ. Furthermore, we evaluated the translational potential of cMET blockade in human schwannomas. We found that human NF2-associated and sporadic VSs showed significantly elevated HGF expression and cMET activation compared with normal nerves, which correlated with tumor growth and cyst formation. Using organoid brain slice culture, cMET blockade inhibited the growth of patient-derived schwannomas. Our findings provide the rationale and necessary data for the clinical translation of combined cMET blockade with radiation therapy in patients with NF2.


2009 ◽  
pp. 402-411
Author(s):  
Heloisa P. Soares ◽  
Ambuj Kumar ◽  
Charles Bennett ◽  
Benjamin Djulbegovic

2001 ◽  
Vol 106 (4) ◽  
pp. 157-161 ◽  
Author(s):  
Domenico Ribatti ◽  
Angelo Vacca ◽  
Giuseppe De Falco ◽  
Roberto Ria ◽  
Luisa Roncali ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. 949-949
Author(s):  
Paola Neri ◽  
Li Ren ◽  
Kathy Gratton ◽  
Alex Klimowicz ◽  
Adnan Mansoor ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 949 Background: Integrin β7 (ITGB7) mRNA is detected in primary myeloma (MM) cells and its presence was correlated with maf gene activation. However, little is known about the role ITGB7 plays in MM. Methods and results: We have determined the expression of ITGB7 by flow cytometry in a large library of human MM cell lines and found it to be universily expressed, albeit at different levels. Similarly ITGB7 mRNA was detected by qRT-PCR in 25/27 samples of primary MM CD138+ cells. In order to better investigate the role of ITGB7 in MM adhesion, migration and survival we performed a loss-of-function analysis using the shRNA lentivirus system. Lentiviral transduction particles with validated ITGB7 shRNA, were transduced into three different MM cell lines (MM1S, INA-6 and H929) establishing stable clones with silenced ITGB7. Using adhesion assays we have demonstrated that ITGB7silenced cells are 40-50% less adherent to fibronectin (FN), E-cadherin (E-CDH) and BMSCs coated plates when compared to ITGB7positive cells (scrambeled shRNA), confirming the role ITGB7 in MM cell adhesion to stromal elements. In a transwell migration assay, ITGB7 silencing abrogated MM cells migration in response to SDF-1 gradient implicating ITGB7 in MM cells migration. Next, we investigated whether ITGB7 conferred a survival benefit to MM cells. By MTT assay ITGB7silenced cell are more sensitive to the cytotoxic effect of Bortezomib and Melphalan when cultured on regular plate and/or in the presence of FN and E-CDH, suggesting a role for ITGB7 in conferring drug resistance to MM cells through cell-adhesion dependent and independent mechanisms. Mechanistic studies have shown that ITGB7silenced cells have reduced NF-kB activity with reduced NFkB-p65 binding to the related consensus sequence and decreased nuclear phospho-p65 translocation was confirmed by immunofluorescence staining. In ELISA based assay ITGB7silenced cells co-cultured with BMSCs produced less cytokines and growth factors (VEGF, IL-6, TNF, IL-1, SDF1α) compared to ITGB7positive/BMSCs co-cultures confirming the role of ITGB7 in mediating MM cells intereaction with BMSCs altering the cytokines and growth factors produced by stromal cells. In order to investigate the signalling pathways downstream of ITGB7, ITGB7positive and ITGB7silenced INA-6 and MM1S cells were added into human FN coated plates and total RNA extracted and submitted to gene array profiling using the U133 Plus 2.0 Array. Several NF-kB regulated genes (TNF-α2, syndecan 4, IL-6, IL-8, CDK-6, Max) were downregulated and pathway analysis (Ingenuity Systems Software) identified several MM relevant pathways to be modulated by ITGB7 silencing; among them p53, integrin, IGF-1, IL-6 and VEGF signaling as well as cell cycle, apoptosis and the Wnt/β-catenin signalling pathways. Based on the in vitro data, we next investigated in vivo the effect of ITGB7 silencing on engraftment and homing of MM to bone marrow (BM), using a human plasmacytoma xenograft scid mouse model. ITGB7silenced cells grew mainly locally at the subcutaneous implantation site with delayed engraftment into the BM while ITGB7positive cells homed mostly into the BM, as indicated by the number of human CD138+ cells counted on femoral BM sections (14% in ITGB7positive vs. 4% in ITGB7silenced). In addition, tumor vessels density within the xenografted tumors, as assessed by CD31 staining, was significantly reduced in ITGB7silenced compared to ITGB7positive tumors (CD31 target area %: 4.1 vs 7.7 respectively). Lastly using myeloma tissue microarray (TMA) we have correlated ITGB7 expression with a significantly worse survival outcomes post high dose therapy and stem cell transplantation with a mTTP of 0.9 years in ITGB7 positive patients versus 2.6 years in negative cases (p<0.005). Conclusions: Taken together our results support a role for ITGB7 in MM cells migration, homing and survival and pave the way for a novel therapeutic approach targeting this molecule. Disclosures: Bahlis: Celgene: Honoraria, Speakers Bureau; OrthoBiotech: Honoraria, Speakers Bureau.


Blood ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 101 (4) ◽  
pp. 1329-1335 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaodong Xie ◽  
Rebecca J. Chan ◽  
Scott A. Johnson ◽  
Mark Starr ◽  
Jennifer McCarthy ◽  
...  

The role of thrombopoietin (Tpo) in promoting hematopoiesis has been extensively studied in late fetal, neonatal, and adult mice. However, the effects of Tpo on early yolk sac hematopoiesis have been largely unexplored. We examined whole embryos or the cells isolated from embryo proper and yolk sacs and identified both Tpo and c-mpl (Tpo receptor) mRNA transcripts in tissues as early as embryonic day 6.5 (E6.5). Presomite whole embryos and somite-staged yolk sac and embryo proper cells were plated in methylcellulose cultures and treated with selected hematopoietic growth factors in the presence or absence of Tpo. Tpo alone failed to promote colony-forming unit (CFU) formation. However, in the presence of other growth factors, Tpo caused a substantial dose-dependent reduction in primitive and definitive erythroid CFU growth in cultures containing E7.5 and E8.0 whole embryos and E8.25 to 9.5 yolk sac–derived cells. Meanwhile, Tpo treatment resulted in a substantial dose-dependent increase in CFU-mixed lineage (CFU-Mix) and CFU-megakaryocyte (CFU-Meg) formation in cultures containing cells from similar staged tissues. Addition of Tpo to cultures of sorted E9.5 yolk sac c-Kit+CD34+ hematopoietic progenitors also inhibited erythroid CFU growth but augmented CFU-Mix and CFU-Meg activity. Effects of Tpo on CFU growth were blocked in the presence of a monoclonal antibody with Tpo-neutralizing activity but not with control antibody. Thus, under certain growth factor conditions, Tpo directly inhibits early yolk sac erythroid CFU growth but facilitates megakaryocyte and mixed lineage colony formation.


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