42 research outputs found
HIF1α drives chemokine factor pro-tumoral signaling pathways in acute myeloid leukemia
Approximately 80% of patients diagnosed with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) die as a consequence of failure to eradicate the tumor from the bone marrow microenvironment. We have recently shown that stroma-derived interleukin-8 (IL-8) promotes AML growth and survival in the bone marrow in response to AML-derived macrophage migration inhibitory factor (MIF). In the present study we show that high constitutive expression of MIF in AML blasts in the bone marrow is hypoxia-driven and, through knockdown of MIF, HIF1α and HIF2α, establish that hypoxia supports AML tumor proliferation through HIF1α signaling. In vivo targeting of leukemic cell HIF1α inhibits AML proliferation in the tumor microenvironment through transcriptional regulation of MIF, but inhibition of HIF2α had no measurable effect on AML blast survival. Functionally, targeted inhibition of MIF in vivo improves survival in models of AML. Here we present a mechanism linking HIF1α to a pro-tumoral chemokine factor signaling pathway and in doing so, we establish a potential strategy to target AML
Hypoxia-resistant profile implies vulnerability of cancer stem cells to physiological agents, which suggests new therapeutic targets.
Role and task allocation framework for Multi-Robot Collaboration with latent knowledge estimation
In this work a novel framework for modeling role and task allocation in Cooperative Heterogeneous Multi‐Robot Systems (CHMRSs) is presented. This framework encodes a CHMRS as a set of multidimensional relational structures (MDRSs). This set of structure defines collaborative tasks through both temporal and spatial relations between processes of heterogeneous robots. These relations are enriched with tensors which allow for geometrical reasoning about collaborative tasks. A learning schema is also proposed in order to derive the components of each MDRS. According to this schema, the components are learnt from data reporting the situated history of the processes executed by the team of robots. Data are organized as a multirobot collaboration treebank (MRCT) in order to support learning. Moreover, a generative approach, based on a probabilistic model, is combined together with nonnegative tensor decomposition (NTD) for both building the tensors and estimating latent knowledge. Preliminary evaluation of the performance of this framework is performed in simulation with three heterogeneous robots, namely, two Unmanned Ground Vehicles (UGVs) and one Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV)
Productive Parvovirus B19 Infection of Primary Human Erythroid Progenitor Cells at Hypoxia Is Regulated by STAT5A and MEK Signaling but not HIFα
Human parvovirus B19 (B19V) causes a variety of human diseases. Disease outcomes of bone marrow failure in patients with high turnover of red blood cells and immunocompromised conditions, and fetal hydrops in pregnant women are resulted from the targeting and destruction of specifically erythroid progenitors of the human bone marrow by B19V. Although the ex vivo expanded erythroid progenitor cells recently used for studies of B19V infection are highly permissive, they produce progeny viruses inefficiently. In the current study, we aimed to identify the mechanism that underlies productive B19V infection of erythroid progenitor cells cultured in a physiologically relevant environment. Here, we demonstrate an effective reverse genetic system of B19V, and that B19V infection of ex vivo expanded erythroid progenitor cells at 1% O2 (hypoxia) produces progeny viruses continuously and efficiently at a level of approximately 10 times higher than that seen in the context of normoxia. With regard to mechanism, we show that hypoxia promotes replication of the B19V genome within the nucleus, and that this is independent of the canonical PHD/HIFα pathway, but dependent on STAT5A and MEK/ERK signaling. We further show that simultaneous upregulation of STAT5A signaling and down-regulation of MEK/ERK signaling boosts the level of B19V infection in erythroid progenitor cells under normoxia to that in cells under hypoxia. We conclude that B19V infection of ex vivo expanded erythroid progenitor cells at hypoxia closely mimics native infection of erythroid progenitors in human bone marrow, maintains erythroid progenitors at a stage conducive to efficient production of progeny viruses, and is regulated by the STAT5A and MEK/ERK pathways
Cancer stem cell metabolism
Cancer is now viewed as a stem cell disease. There is still no consensus on the metabolic characteristics of cancer stem cells, with several studies indicating that they are mainly glycolytic and others pointing instead to mitochondrial metabolism as their principal source of energy. Cancer stem cells also seem to adapt their metabolism to microenvironmental changes by conveniently shifting energy production from one pathway to another, or by acquiring intermediate metabolic phenotypes. Determining the role of cancer stem cell metabolism in carcinogenesis has become a major focus in cancer research, and substantial efforts are conducted towards discovering clinical targets
Semantically-Informed Coordinated Multirobot Exploration of Relevant Areas in Search and Rescue Settings
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Severe hypoxia enhances the formation of erythroid bursts from human cord blood cells and the maintenance of BFU-E in vitro
Incubation in severe hypoxia (1% oxygen) increased the number of erythroid bursts generated from full-term CD34+, or premature mononucleated, human cord blood (CB) cells, in semisolid cultures containing stem cell factor (SCF), interleukin (IL)-3 and erythropoietin (EPO). Severe hypoxia also enhanced the maintenance of erythroid burst-forming units (BFU-E) in CB cell liquid cultures. These positive effects of hypoxia on the maintenance and cloning efficiency of BFU-E did not extend to the other progenitors assayed. Hypoxia, on the other hand, markedly reduced the size and level of hemoglobinization of bursts and, in liquid cultures, suppressed the growth factor-stimulated numerical increase in BFU-E and inhibited the expression of CD36, a marker of erythroid colony-forming units and maturing erythroid precursors. However, when transferred to clonal assays incubated in air, cells from liquid cultures incubated in hypoxia or in air generated fully expanded and hemoglobinized bursts, suggesting that in hypoxia the clonogenic potential of BFU-E was maintained and the development of erythroid clones reversibly inhibited. These results indicate that hypoxia inversely regulates two subsequent phases of erythropoiesis, i.e., it enhances the maintenance of BFU-E and the early development of erythroid clones but inhibits the terminal expansion and maturation of these clones. The cloning of CB cells selected for CD34 positivity, when compared with that of the total population of mononucleated CB cells, revealed that the early development of erythroid bursts was either hypoxia-enhanced or hypoxia-insensitive, reflecting the existence of two different types of BFU-E. Hypoxia-enhanced BFU-E are relatively immature, are maintained in hypoxia but not in air, and account for a large part of CD34+ BFU-E and for a high percentage of the BFU-E in premature CB. Hypoxia-insensitive BFU-E are mostly CD34- and are largely predominant in full-term CB, and most probably correspond to a more mature type of BFU-E
The metabolically-modulated stem cell niche: a dynamic scenario regulating cancer cell phenotype and resistance to therapy
This Perspective addresses the interactions of cancer stem cells (CSC) with environment which result in the modulation of CSC metabolism, and thereby of CSC phenotype and resistance to therapy. We considered first as a model disease chronic myeloid leukemia (CML), which is triggered by a well-identified oncogenetic protein (BCR/Abl) and brilliantly treated with tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKi). However, TKi are extremely effective in inducing remission of disease, but unable, in most cases, to prevent relapse. We demonstrated that the interference with cell metabolism (oxygen/glucose shortage) enriches cells exhibiting the leukemia stem cell (LSC) phenotype and, at the same time, suppresses BCR/Abl protein expression. These LSC are therefore refractory to the TKi Imatinib-mesylate, pointing to cell metabolism as an important factor controlling the onset of TKi-resistant minimal residual disease (MRD) of CML and the related relapse. Studies of solid neoplasias brought another player into the control of MRD, low tissue pH, which often parallels cancer growth and progression. Thus, a 3-party scenario emerged for the regulation of CSC/LSC maintenance, MRD induction and disease relapse: the “hypoxic” versus the “ischemic” vs. the “acidic” environment. As these environments are unlikely constrained within rigid borders, we named this model the “metabolically-modulated stem cell niche.
