70 research outputs found
Enhancing Chemotherapy Response with Bmi-1 Silencing in Ovarian Cancer
Undoubtedly ovarian cancer is a vexing, incurable disease for patients with
recurrent cancer and therapeutic options are limited. Although the polycomb
group gene, Bmi-1 that regulates the self-renewal of normal
stem and progenitor cells has been implicated in the pathogenesis of many human
malignancies, yet a role for Bmi-1 in influencing chemotherapy response has not
been addressed before. Here we demonstrate that silencing Bmi-1 reduces
intracellular GSH levels and thereby sensitizes chemoresistant ovarian cancer
cells to chemotherapeutics such as cisplatin. By exacerbating ROS production in
response to cisplatin, Bmi-1 silencing activates the DNA damage response
pathway, caspases and cleaves PARP resulting in the induction apoptosis in
ovarian cancer cells. In an in vivo orthotopic mouse model of
chemoresistant ovarian cancer, knockdown of Bmi-1 by nanoliposomal delivery
significantly inhibits tumor growth. While cisplatin monotherapy was inactive,
combination of Bmi-1 silencing along with cisplatin almost completely abrogated
ovarian tumor growth. Collectively these findings establish Bmi-1 as an
important new target for therapy in chemoresistant ovarian cancer
Bmi-1 Absence Causes Premature Brain Degeneration
Bmi-1, a polycomb transcriptional repressor, is implicated in cell cycle regulation and cell senescence. Its absence results in generalized astrogliosis and epilepsy during the postnatal development, but the underlying mechanisms are poorly understood. Here, we demonstrate the occurrence of oxidative stress in the brain of four-week-old Bmi-1 null mice. The mice showed various hallmarks of neurodegeneration including synaptic loss, axonal demyelination, reactive gliosis and brain mitochondrial damage. Moreover, astroglial glutamate transporters and glutamine synthetase decreased in the Bmi-1 null hippocampus, which might contribute to the sporadic epileptic-like seizures in these mice. These results indicate that Bmi-1 is required for maintaining endogenous antioxidant defenses in the brain, and its absence subsequently causes premature brain degeneration
On the origin of glioma
Glioma is the most frequent primary brain tumor of adults that has a presumably glial origin. Although our knowledge regarding molecular mechanisms and signaling pathways involved in gliomagenesis has increased immensely during the past decade, high-grade glioma remains a lethal disease with dismal prognosis. The failure of current therapies has to a large extent been ascribed the functional heterogeneity of glioma cells. One reason for this heterogeneity is most certainly the large number of variations in genetic alterations that can be found in high-grade gliomas. Another factor that may influence glioma heterogeneity could be the cell type from which the glioma is initiated. The cell of origin for glioma is still undefined, and additional knowledge about this issue may prove critical for a more complete understanding of glioma biology. Based on information from patients, developmental biology, and experimental glioma models, the most putative target cells include astrocytes, neural stem cells, and oligodendrocyte precursor cells, which are all discussed in more detail in this article. Animal modeling of glioma suggests that these three cell types have the capability to be the origin of glioma, and we have reason to believe that, depending on the initiating cell type, prognosis and response to therapy may be significantly different. Thus, it is essential to explore further the role of cellular origin in glioma
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