scholarly journals Exposure to Bacteriophages T4 and M13 Increases Integrin Gene Expression and Impairs Migration of Human PC-3 Prostate Cancer Cells

Antibiotics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (10) ◽  
pp. 1202
Author(s):  
Swapnil Ganesh Sanmukh ◽  
Nilton J. Santos ◽  
Caroline Nascimento Barquilha ◽  
Sérgio Alexandre Alcantara dos Santos ◽  
Bruno Oliveira Silva Duran ◽  
...  

The interaction between bacteriophages and integrins has been reported in different cancer cell lines, and efforts have been undertaken to understand these interactions in tumor cells along with their possible role in gene alterations, with the aim to develop new cancer therapies. Here, we report that the non-specific interaction of T4 and M13 bacteriophages with human PC-3 cells results in differential migration and varied expression of different integrins. PC-3 tumor cells (at 70% confluence) were exposed to 1 × 107 pfu/mL of either lytic T4 bacteriophage or filamentous M13 bacteriophage. After 24 h of exposure, cells were processed for a histochemical analysis, wound-healing migration assay, and gene expression profile using quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR). qPCR was performed to analyze the expression profiles of integrins ITGAV, ITGA5, ITGB1, ITGB3, and ITGB5. Our findings revealed that PC-3 cells interacted with T4 and M13 bacteriophages, with significant upregulation of ITGAV, ITGA5, ITGB3, ITGB5 genes after phage exposure. PC-3 cells also exhibited reduced migration activity when exposed to either T4 or M13 phages. These results suggest that wildtype bacteriophages interact non-specifically with PC-3 cells, thereby modulating the expression of integrin genes and affecting cell migration. Therefore, bacteriophages have future potential applications in anticancer therapies.

Blood ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 110 (11) ◽  
pp. 394-394
Author(s):  
Marc J. Braunstein ◽  
Daniel R. Carrasco ◽  
Fabien Campagne ◽  
Piali Mukherjee ◽  
Kumar Sukhdeo ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: In multiple myeloma (MM), bone-marrow-derived endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs) contribute to tumor neoangiogenesis, and their levels covary with tumor mass and prognosis. Recent X-chromosome inactivation studies showed that EPCs are clonally restricted in MM. In addition, high-resolution array comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH) found that the genomes of EPCs and MM cells display similar chromosomal gains and losses in the same patient. In this study, we performed an integrative analysis of EPCs and tumor cells by genome-wide expression profiling, and applied a bioinformatics approach that leverages gene expression data from cancer datasets to mine MM gene pathways common to multiple tumor tissues and likely involved in MM pathogenesis. Methods: Confluent EPCs (>98% vWF/CD133/KDR+ and CD38−) were outgrown from 22 untreated MM patients’ bone marrow aspirates by adherence to laminin. The fractions enriched for tumor cells were >50% CD38+. For gene expression profiling, total RNA from EPCs, MM cells, and control HUVECs were hybridized to cDNA microarrays, and comparisons were made by analysis of variance. Results: Two sets of EPC gene profiles were of particular interest. The first contained genes that differ significantly between EPCs and HUVEC, but not between EPCs and tumor (Profile 1). We hypothesize that this profile is a consequence of the clonal identity previously reported between EPCs and tumor, and that a subset of these genes is largely responsible for MM progression. The second set of important EPC genes are differentially regulated compared both to HUVECs and to tumor cells (Profile 2). These genes may represent the profile of EPCs that are clonally diverse from tumor cells but nevertheless display common gene expression patterns with other cancers. Profile 2 genes may also represent genes that confer a predisposition to clonal transformation of EPCs. When genes in Profile 1 and Profile 2 were overlapped with published lists of cancer biomarkers, significant similarities (P<.05) were apparent. The largest overlaps were observed with the HM200 gene list, a list composed of 200 genes most consistently differentially expressed in human/mouse cancers (Campagne and Skrabanek, BMC Bioinformatics 2006). More than 80% of genes in either EPC profile have not been previously characterized in MM, but have been identified as cancer biomarkers in other cancer studies. These genes will be presented and discussed in the context of MM. Current studies are aimed at integrating Profile 1 and Profile 2 genes in each patient with chromosomal copy number abnormalities (CNAs) found in EPCs, and also with clinical stage and disease severity, in order to elucidate the pathogenic information that the profiles hold. Conclusions: The genomes of EPCs display ranges of overlap with tumor cells in MM, evidenced by gene expression profiles with varying similarity to those found in MM tumor cells. More importantly, MM EPC gene expression profiles, in contrast to normal endothelial cells, contain cancer biomarker genes in tumors not yet associated with MM. Results strongly support the concept that EPCs are an integral part of the neoplastic process in MM.


2015 ◽  
Vol 362 (1) ◽  
pp. 36-44 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wendy Onstenk ◽  
Anieta M. Sieuwerts ◽  
Marleen Weekhout ◽  
Bianca Mostert ◽  
Esther A. Reijm ◽  
...  

Cancers ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (7) ◽  
pp. 903 ◽  
Author(s):  
Florian Reinhardt ◽  
André Franken ◽  
Franziska Meier-Stiegen ◽  
Christiane Driemel ◽  
Nikolas H. Stoecklein ◽  
...  

Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) hold great promise with regard to prognosis, treatment optimization, and monitoring of breast cancer patients. Single CTC transcriptome profiling might help reveal valuable information concerning intra-patient heterogeneity relevant to therapeutic interventions. In this study, we combined Diagnostic Leukapheresis (DLA), which is a microfluidic enrichment using the ParsortixTM system, micromanipulation with CellCelectorTM and subsequent single cell multi-marker transcriptome profiling. First, a PCR panel consisting of 30 different endocrine resistance and phenotypic marker genes was validated for single cell profiling by using different breast cancer cell lines. Second, this panel was applied to characterize uncultured and cultured CTCs, which were enriched from a cryopreserved DLA product obtained from a patient suffering from metastatic breast cancer resistant to endocrine therapy. Gene expression profiles of both CTC populations uncovered inter CTC heterogeneity for transcripts, which are associated with response or resistance to endocrine therapy (e.g., ESR1, HER2, FGFR1). Hierarchical clustering revealed CTC subpopulations with different expressions of transcripts regarding the CTCs’ differential phenotypes (EpCAM, CD44, CD24, MYC, MUC1) and of transcripts involved in endocrine signaling pathways (FOXO, PTEN). Moreover, ER-positive CTCs exhibited significant higher expression of Cyclin D1, which might be relevant for CDK4/6 inhibitor therapies. Overall, gene expression profiles of uncultured and cultured CTCs resulted in a partly combined grouping. Our findings demonstrate that multi-marker RNA profiling of enriched single uncultured CTCs and cultured CTCs form cryopreserved DLA samples may provide important insights into intra-patient heterogeneity relevant for targeted therapies and therapy resistance.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nishat Fatima ◽  
Syed Shabihe Raza Baqri ◽  
Atrayee Bhattacharya ◽  
Nii Koney-Kwaku Koney ◽  
Kazim Husain ◽  
...  

Epigenetic regulation involves reversible changes in histones and DNA modifications that can be inherited without any changes in the DNA sequence. Dysregulation of normal epigenetic processes can lead to aberrant gene expression as observed in many diseases, notably cancer. Recent insights into the mechanisms of DNA methylation, histone modifications, and non-coding RNAs involved in altered gene expression profiles of tumor cells have caused a paradigm shift in the diagnostic and therapeutic approaches towards cancer. There has been a surge in search for compounds that could modulate the altered epigenetic landscape of tumor cells, and to exploit their therapeutic potential against cancers. Flavonoids are naturally occurring phenol compounds which are abundantly found among phytochemicals and have potentials to modulate epigenetic processes. Knowledge of the precise flavonoid-mediated epigenetic alterations is needed for the development of epigenetics drugs and combinatorial therapeutic approaches against cancers. This review is aimed to comprehensively explore the epigenetic modulations of flavonoids and their anti-tumor activities.


Author(s):  
Federica Moschella ◽  
Richard P. Catanzaro ◽  
Brygida Bisikirska ◽  
Ihor S. Sawczuk ◽  
Kyriakos P. Papadapoulos ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Corey M. Hudson ◽  
Gavin C. Conant

AbstractChanges in gene expression provide a valuable frame of reference for explaining the development and progression of cancer. Many tissue types radically alter their gene expression profile after becoming oncogenic. We evaluate this change in gene expression in 8 different cancer lines by comparing their expression profiles to that of their associated differentiated tissues as well as profiles for proliferative human embryonic stem cells. We find that, for non-proliferative tissues, the alterations in expression after oncogenesis result in a profile that is significantly more similar to the embryonic expression profile than to the original tissue profile. Wealso find that the lists of co-similar genes among embryonic and tumor cells are clustered within gene regulatory, protein interaction and metabolicnetworks. There is however little overlap in these lists between cancer lines and no pattern shared among all cancers in this analysis. We conclude that the manner in which cancers instantiate a proliferative pattern of expression following oncogenesis is diverse and we find no uniform proliferative program among the cancers in this analysis.


2006 ◽  
Vol 24 (18_suppl) ◽  
pp. 10769-10769
Author(s):  
M. M. Magbanua ◽  
J. E. Lang ◽  
J. Scott ◽  
J. R. Crothers ◽  
S. Federman ◽  
...  

10769 Background: Levels of circulating tumor cells (CTC) have prognostic and predictive significance in metastatic breast cancer. However, since CTCs are extremely rare, little is known about the actual phenotype of these cells. In order to characterize these cells, we performed cDNA microarray analyses of CTC isolated from peripheral blood (PB) of breast cancer patients. Methods: CTCs were directly isolated via immunomagnetic enrichment (IE) followed by fluorescence activated cell sorting (FACS). Total RNA was then subjected to two rounds of linear amplification and hybridized to cDNA microarrays (∼40,000 cDNAs). Validation studies used spiked BT474 cells. Clinical studies used PB (10–20 ml) from patients with metastatic breast cancer. Results: Rare spiked tumor cells (e.g., 320 cells in 10 mL PB) were efficiently recovered by IE/FACS (50% yield). Expression profiles of recovered cells, both by TaqMan of a 37 gene panel as well as by global gene expression analysis, matched that of BT474 cells in culture. In contrast, these profiles were clearly distinct from that of normal PB, ruling out significant contamination from blood elements. In clinical studies, IE/FACS isolated small numbers of CTCs (10–1000 cells). Expression profiles of CTCs were compared to that of normal blood, primary breast tumors, and normal epithelial samples. Unsupervised hierarchical clustering revealed that CTC profiles were readily distinguished from that of normal blood and normal epithelium; and further analysis revealed that CTC cluster with a subset of primary breast tumors, particularly the basal-like phenotype. Candidate genes associated with the CTC phenotype were also identified. Conclusions: We have developed and validated a method to isolate rare CTCs and profile them via cDNA microarray analysis. In addition, our gene expression analyses of CTC further provide evidence to the malignant nature of these cells. Further expression profiling of CTC may yield insights into their phenotype, pathophysiology and potential as biomarkers. [Table: see text]


2013 ◽  
Vol 31 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. 8515-8515
Author(s):  
Madhav V. Dhodapkar ◽  
Rachel Sexton ◽  
Sarah Waheed ◽  
Saad Zafar Usmani ◽  
Xenofon Dimitrios Papanikolaou ◽  
...  

8515 Background: Asymptomatic monoclonal gammopathies (AMG) are the most common plasma cell dyscrasia classified as either monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (MGUS) or asymptomatic multiple myeloma (AMM). Clinical outcome in AMGs can be highly variable and there is an unmet need to identify newer clinical, genomic and imaging parameters from prospective studies to guide patient management. Methods: We analyzed clinical, genomic and imaging data from AMG patients (n=334) enrolled in a prospective observational clinical trial (S0120) conducted under the auspices of SWOG. Baseline data from clinical variables, as well as gene expression profiles of purified tumor cells and the findings on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) were correlated with the risk of progression to symptomatic myeloma (MM) requiring therapy. Results: In addition to serum M spike, percent bone marrow plasma cells and the ratio of involved/uninvolved serum free light chains, the level of serum beta-2-microglobulin was associated with an increased risk of progression to clinical myeloma requiring therapy. Gene expression profiles (GEP) of purified tumor cells revealed that all of the known molecular GEP subtypes of human MM are also represented in the precursor phase. An increased risk score (> - 0.26) based on a 70-gene signature (GEP70) was an independent predictor of the risk of progression to clinical MM requiring therapy. The presence of focal lesions on MRI also conferred an increased risk of disease progression but was not independent of other clinical and genomic features. Conclusions: These data represent the first comprehensive evaluation of clinical, genomic and imaging features of AMGs in the context of a prospective US-cooperative group trial, and demonstrate that while all genetic subtypes of MM have a precursor phase, genetic signatures previously associated with high risk myeloma also predict the risk of progression to clinical malignancy requiring therapy. These findings suggest the need to integrate both clinical assessment of tumor bulk and genomic properties of tumor cells in the clinical management of these patients. Clinical trial information: NCT00900263.


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