16 research outputs found

    Human Breast Cancer Cell Lines Co-Express Neuronal, Epithelial, and Melanocytic Differentiation Markers In Vitro and In Vivo

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    Differentiation programs are aberrant in cancer cells allowing them to express differentiation markers in addition to their tissue of origin. In the present study, we demonstrate the multi-lineage differentiation potential of breast cancer cell lines to express multiple neuronal/glial lineage-specific markers as well as mammary epithelial and melanocytic-specific markers. Multilineage expression was detected in luminal (MCF-7 and SKBR3) and basal (MDA-MB-231) types of human breast cancer cell lines. We also observed comparable co-expression of these three cell lineage markers in MDA-MB-435 cells in vitro, in MDA-MB-435 primary tumors derived from parental and single cell clones and in lung metastases in vivo. Furthermore, ectoderm multi-lineage transdifferentiation was also found in human melanoma (Ul-MeL) and glioblastoma cell lines (U87 and D54). These observations indicate that aberrant multi-lineage transdifferentiation or lineage infidelity may be a wide spread phenomenon in cancer

    MicroRNA Expression Characterizes Oligometastasis(es)

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    Cancer staging and treatment presumes a division into localized or metastatic disease. We proposed an intermediate state defined by ≀ 5 cumulative metastasis(es), termed oligometastases. In contrast to widespread polymetastases, oligometastatic patients may benefit from metastasis-directed local treatments. However, many patients who initially present with oligometastases progress to polymetastases. Predictors of progression could improve patient selection for metastasis-directed therapy.Here, we identified patterns of microRNA expression of tumor samples from oligometastatic patients treated with high-dose radiotherapy.Patients who failed to develop polymetastases are characterized by unique prioritized features of a microRNA classifier that includes the microRNA-200 family. We created an oligometastatic-polymetastatic xenograft model in which the patient-derived microRNAs discriminated between the two metastatic outcomes. MicroRNA-200c enhancement in an oligometastatic cell line resulted in polymetastatic progression.These results demonstrate a biological basis for oligometastases and a potential for using microRNA expression to identify patients most likely to remain oligometastatic after metastasis-directed treatment

    Network Modeling Identifies Molecular Functions Targeted by miR-204 to Suppress Head and Neck Tumor Metastasis

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    Due to the large number of putative microRNA gene targets predicted by sequence-alignment databases and the relative low accuracy of such predictions which are conducted independently of biological context by design, systematic experimental identification and validation of every functional microRNA target is currently challenging. Consequently, biological studies have yet to identify, on a genome scale, key regulatory networks perturbed by altered microRNA functions in the context of cancer. In this report, we demonstrate for the first time how phenotypic knowledge of inheritable cancer traits and of risk factor loci can be utilized jointly with gene expression analysis to efficiently prioritize deregulated microRNAs for biological characterization. Using this approach we characterize miR-204 as a tumor suppressor microRNA and uncover previously unknown connections between microRNA regulation, network topology, and expression dynamics. Specifically, we validate 18 gene targets of miR-204 that show elevated mRNA expression and are enriched in biological processes associated with tumor progression in squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck (HNSCC). We further demonstrate the enrichment of bottleneckness, a key molecular network topology, among miR-204 gene targets. Restoration of miR-204 function in HNSCC cell lines inhibits the expression of its functionally related gene targets, leads to the reduced adhesion, migration and invasion in vitro and attenuates experimental lung metastasis in vivo. As importantly, our investigation also provides experimental evidence linking the function of microRNAs that are located in the cancer-associated genomic regions (CAGRs) to the observed predisposition to human cancers. Specifically, we show miR-204 may serve as a tumor suppressor gene at the 9q21.1–22.3 CAGR locus, a well established risk factor locus in head and neck cancers for which tumor suppressor genes have not been identified. This new strategy that integrates expression profiling, genetics and novel computational biology approaches provides for improved efficiency in characterization and modeling of microRNA functions in cancer as compared to the state of art and is applicable to the investigation of microRNA functions in other biological processes and diseases

    Deep eutectic solvents functionalized polymers for easily and efficiently promoting biocatalysis

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    Biocompatible and magnetic polymers of poly(vinyl pyrrolidone deep eutectic solvent, VP DES) were investigated to determine whether they could efficiently adsorb L-asparaginase, which is an important enzyme inhibiting the growth of certain tumor cells. A series of poly(VP DES)s were successfully obtained, and that based on VP-malonic acid (VP/MA molar ratio of 1:1) was found to be the best for L-asparaginase adsorption. In addition, L-asparaginase was easily separated with biocompatible poly (VP-MA DES) from Escherichia coli extracts under a magnetic field with a high specific activity toward the hydrolysis of L-asparagine, as determined by the Nessler reaction method. Based on this work, poly(VP-MA DES)s seem ideal carriers via adsorption for the delivery of specific enzyme for the biocatalysis. (C) 2019 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved

    MDA-MB-435 lung cell lines derived from lung metastases display neuronal/glial differentiation morphology.

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    <p><b>A</b> and <b>E</b>, parental MDA-MB-435-GFP cells. <b>B–D</b> and <b>F–H</b>, three representative MDA-MB-435-GFP-L cell lines exhibit morphological features of well-differentiated neuron/glial cells.</p

    PCR analysis of mRNA expression of neuronal/glial, epithelial and melanocytic differentiation markers <i>in vitro</i>.

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    <p>Expression of epithelial (I), melanocytic (II) and neuronal/glial markers (III) by MCF-10A normal mammary epithelial cells (lane 1), breast cancer cell lines (lane 2–5), melanoma (lane 6), and glioblastoma cells (lane 7 and 8). TBP is used as a loading control.</p

    Determination of protein expression of lineage markers in MDA-MB-435 xenografts and in metastatic lesions.

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    <p>Immunohistochemical detection of epithelial (AE1/AE3, ESA), melanocytic (melan-A), and neuronal/glial markers (GFAP, nestin) in orthotopic mammary fat pad tumors, and mammary duct differentiation (H&E) (<b>A</b>), pleural lung macrometastases (<b>B</b>) and lung micrometastases (<b>C</b>, arrows).</p
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