Day 2 :
Keynote Forum
Diana Anderson
University of Bradford, UK
Keynote: An empirical assay for assessing genomic sensitivity and for improving cancer diagnostics
Time : 08:30-08:55
Biography:
Diana Anderson holds the Established Chair in Biomedical Sciences at the University of Bradford. Her first degree is from the University of Wales and second degrees from the Faculty of Medicine, University of Manchester. She has 450+ peer-reviewed papers, 9 books, has successfully supervised 28 PhDs. She is currently supervising 6 more and is/has been a Member of Editorial Boards of 10 international journals. She is Editor in Chief of a Book Series on Toxicology for the Royal Society of Chemistry. She gives key note addresses at international meetings and is a Consultant for international organisations (WHO, NATO, TWAS, UNIDO, OECD). Her H index=54.
Abstract:
Detection tests have been developed for many cancers, but there is no single test to identify cancer in general. We have developed such an assay. In this modified patented Comet assay, we investigated peripheral lymphocytes of 208 individuals: 20 melanoma, 34 colon cancer, 4 lung cancer patients 18 suspect melanoma, 28 polyposis, 10 COPD patients and 94 healthy volunteers. The natural logarithm of the Olive tail moment was plotted for exposure to UVA through different agar depths for each of the above groups and analysed using a repeated measures regression model. Response patterns for cancer patients formed a plateau after treating with UVA where intensity varied with different agar depths. In comparison, response patterns for healthy individuals returned towards control values and for pre/suspected cancers were intermediate with less of a plateau. All cancers tested exhibited comparable responses. Analyses of Receiver Operating Characteristic curves, of mean log Olive tail moments, for all cancers plus pre/suspected-cancer versus controls gave a value for the area under the curve of 0.87; for cancer versus pre/suspected-cancer plus controls the value was 0.89; and for cancer alone versus controls alone (excluding pre/suspected-cancer), the value was 0.93. By varying the threshold for test positivity, its sensitivity or specificity can approach 100% whilst maintaining acceptable complementary measures. Evidence presented indicates that this modified assay shows promise as both a stand-alone test and as a possible adjunct to other investigative procedures, as part of detection programmes for a range of cancers.
Keynote Forum
Xiaolian Gao
University of Houston, USA
Keynote: How pancreatic cancer cell signaling proteins (CSPs) respond to tyrosine kinase inkibitor (TKIs) therapeutics - Peptide MicroArray, PepArrayTM, is a powerful molecular tool for CSP profiling
Time : 08:55-09:20
Biography:
Xiaolian Gao has expertise in Chemistry and Biotechnology Development, specifically technologies for massively parallel synthesis of peptides and oligonucleotides on microarray/biochip surfaces. Her team has since developed genomic and proteomic applications to analyze complex biological samples to address questions of biological functions of microRNA and long noncoding RNAs, enzymatic proteins and post-translational modified (PTM) proteins. The biochip technology has led to the establishment of platform of high throughput production of biomolecules and multiplex assay of biomolecules and their interactions.
Abstract:
It is well accepted that molecular profiling of cellular proteins or nucleic acids can offer answers to causes of diseases and underlined connections of pathogenic molecules, and thus, pointing out therapeutic targets. However, protein profiling, especially at the cellular level has been challenging. There is only limited choices to allow systematic investigation of cellular protein activities, such as their responses, (i.e., sensitive, or nonresponsive or resistant, to therapeutic treatment). This presentation reports peptide microarray chip (PeparrayTM) technology developed as a powerful molecular tool for proteomic profiling of Cellular Signaling Proteins (CSPs) to interrogate CSP variations in cancer cells induced by treatment of a new generation of anti-cancer therapies, i.e., tyrosine kinase therapeutics (TKIs). Peparray chips encode a large number of receptor kinase protein (RTK) phosphotyrosine (pY) motif peptides. These are probes for capturing of phosphotyrosine binding domain proteins (PPBD), the profiling thus reveal signaling network activities, which can be translated into clinic relevant information valuable for therapeutic treatments. The case studies involving cellular protein profiling of pancreatic cancer treated with three generations of small molecule tyrosine kinase (EGFR) inhibitors (TKis): Erlotinib (TarcevaTM); Afatinib (Gilotrif TM); and the 2016 FDA approved AZD9291 (TagrissoTM). Peparray™ studies revealed molecular signature profiles of cellular conditions through proteins of commonly or differentially expressed. These proteomic profiles revealed 80 signaling proteins with Erlotinib treatment and 135 signaling proteins with Afatinib treatment and 78 signaling proteins with AZD9291 treatment. The detected signaling proteins are implicated in 38-39 cancer related KEGG pathways. Such information about functional cellular proteins provided valuable molecular signature, which reflect cancer status to allow assessment of effectiveness of cancer treatment, i.e., sensitive vs. insensitive, responsive vs. resistant. Our analysis further revealed signaling pathways responsible for therapeutic resistance. Peparray proteomic and signaling pathway results thus hold clinical significance in identifying molecular markers in therapeutic treatment of cancers, and in cancer therapeutic strategy decision making. These results call for population applications for monitoring and predicting of therapeutic effectiveness, for wide spread expansion of molecular medicine as basis of precision medicine to greatly benefit human health and wellness.
Keynote Forum
Colleen Huber
Naturopathic Oncology Research Institute, USA
Keynote: Vitamin C and cell signaling in cancer
Time : 09:20-09:45
Biography:
Colleen Huber is a Naturopathic Medical Doctor in Tempe, Arizona. She was the Keynote Speaker at the 2015 Euro Cancer Summit, the 2016 World Congress on Cancer Therapy, and a Keynote Speaker at the 2016 World Congress on Breast Cancer. She is President of the Naturopathic Cancer Society. She is a Naturopathic Oncologist and Fellow of the Naturopathic Oncology Research Institute. She authored the largest and longest study in medical history on sugar intake in cancer patients, which was reported in media around the world in 2014.
Abstract:
Research has shown that cytokines such as interferon and interleukin, secreted by the immune system, have an inflammatory effect and play an important role in tumor angiogenesis. High dose intravenous Vitamin C (HDIVC) counteracts this. Vitamin C taken orally cannot attain sufficiently high concentrations in the bloodstream to kill cancer cells. However, intravenous use of ascorbic acid has been shown to rise to concentrations that have killed cancer cells in vivo and in vitro. Vitamin C has been shown to form collagen and to inhibit hyaluronidase leading to stronger membrane integrity and tensile strength of normal tissue, which inhibits invasion and thus metastases. Cancer patients were given HDIVC as part of a naturopathic treatment protocol in an out-patient clinical setting. Data are reported for all patients. Many patients voluntarily left our practice, against our advice, primarily for financial reasons, while still having cancer. Of the remaining patients, 175 either went into remission confirmed by imaging. 44 died while still our patients. Of the 175 who went into remission, 12 had chosen chemotherapy also while having our treatments. Stages 1, 2, 3 and early stage 4 patients at start of treatment had much better outcomes than late stage 4 patients in general. The 32 patients who complied with our dietary and treatment protocol, and still did not survive their cancers must be seen as an 8% failure rate if considered of all 379 patients, or a 15% failure rate if taken of the 210 patients who stayed to complete our treatments.
Keynote Forum
Michael D. West
BioTime, Inc., USA
Keynote: The use of pluripotency in the manufacture of advanced cell-based tissue-engineered therapeutics
Time : 09:45-10:10
Biography:
Michael D West is the Chief Executive Officer of BioTime, Inc. (NYSE-MKT: BTX) and its subsidiary AgeX Therapeutics. The companies are focused on developing therapeutic products using human embryonic stem cells. He received his PhD from Baylor College of Medicine and has focused his academic and business career on the application of developmental biology to the age-related degenerative disease. He was previously the Founder of Geron Corporation (NASDAQ: GERN), where he initiated and managed programs in telomere biology and human embryonic stems and later CEO at ACT (Ocata) (NASDAQ: OCAT) managing programs in somatic cell nuclear transfer and cell-based retinal therapeutics.
Abstract:
Human pluripotent stem cell lines display the potential to cascade through all primary germ layers and hence, almost certainly, all human somatic cell types. This pluripotency has led to the prospect of using master cell banks of pluripotent cells to generate previously rare and valuable cell types on an industrial scale. The growing need for precise genetic modifications in cell-based therapeutics (such as in applications in immunotherapy) highlights the unique advantage of pluripotency in facilitating repeated targeting events in the master cell banks followed by immortal propagation and subsequent differentiation of differentiated cell types. The demonstration that downstream embryonic progenitors can be robustly expanded clonally is leading to improved manufacturing technologies with enhanced definition of purity and identity. The maintenance of a regenerative phenotype in pluripotent stem cell-derived products as evidenced by a lack of markers of the embryonic-fetal transition (EFT), suggests these cells may have the potential to participate in scarless tissue regeneration. Lastly, the use of defined matrices to facilitate differentiation in vitro or to facilitate engraftment in vivo, provide a broad technology platform that will potentially impact numerous fields of medicine. We will provide an update on ongoing clinical trials as well as products in preclinical development.
Keynote Forum
Xiuzhi Susan Sun
Kansas State University, USA
Keynote: Advanced biomaterial PepGel - a new tool for translational research in cell therapy
Time : 10:10-10:35
Biography:
Xiuzhi Susan Sun is a distinguished Professor of Kansas State University. She is the Founder of the Biomaterials and Technology Lab at KSU. Her research interests are in biomaterials design and fabrication, particularly in protein and lipids structure and functional properties at monomers and polymer levels for environmental and medical applications, such as hydrogels, biobased adhesives, resins and coatings. She is a key Founder of the PepGel and PG Biotech companies with the purpose of improving human health through her novel biomaterial discoveries. She earned her Doctor of Philosophy from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, IL.
Abstract:
Life science and biomedical advancement have been limited by the traditional 2D cell culture system. Industries and scientists are switching to 3D cell culture system with the hope of more accurately mimicking the native extracellular microenvironment for translational research leading to clinical applications. Advanced self-assembly peptide hydrogel (PepGel) technology has been recently developed in the Biomaterials and Technology Lab at Kansas State University. The peptide structure was inspired by human muscle and spider silk backbone structure that can form hydrogels at physiological conditions. The peptide can self-assemble into nanofiber networks with 5-150 nm in diameter and 50-2000 nm in pore size that are similar geometry to extracellular matrix (ECM). The hydrogel has sheer-thinning and self-healing properties. This new PepGel system has large flexibility in controlling the gel stiffness, viscoelastic behavior, and surface properties. ECM ligands can be rationally built in the backbone of the PepGel to improve cell properties as needed. PepGel is injectable and biocompatible to biological system as well as compatible with many ECM proteins and cell growth factors. Because of this, the PepGel may have multi applications in the advancement of cell therapeutics strategies for various difficult diseases. This seminar will present PepGel technology, cell studies in vitro and cell delivery in vivo, and case studies with stem cells , cancer cells, virus/antigen, and 3D cell based model for drug toxicity testing.
Keynote Forum
Magnus S. Magnusson
University of Iceland, Iceland
Keynote: T-patterns in human and neuronal interactions and on DNA: Spatio-temporal selfsimilarity and translation symmetry
Time : 10:35-10:55
Biography:
Magnus S Magnusson, PhD, Research Professor, created the T-pattern model with detection algorithms and special purpose software (THEMETM, PatternVision). He Co-directed a two-year DNA analysis project, published numerous papers and invited talks and keynotes at international conferences and at leading universities in Europe, Japan and the US within Ethology, Science of Religion, Mathematical Sciences, Neuroscience, Bioinformatics, Genetics, Proteomics and Mass Spectroscopy. He served as Deputy Director 1983-1988 in the Museum of Mankind of the National Museum of Natural History, Paris. From 1988 to 1993, he served as invited Professor at the University of Paris (V, VIII & XIII) in Psychology and Ethology (Biology of Behavior). Since 1991, he is the Founder and Director of the Human Behavior Laboratory, University of Iceland, leading a formalized network of 24 universities initiated at the University of Paris V, Sorbonne, Paris, in 1995 based on “Magnusson’s analytical model”.
Abstract:
How do cells organize their interactions in time? As a candidate for the search for answers, this talk considers a particular pattern type, called T-pattern. Originally proposed and developed for ethological analysis of human interaction, it has more recently also been applied to dynamic signaling between cells in neuronal networks in brains. The T-pattern is a self-similar hierarchical structure on a single dimension, in time or space, and can be seen as a particular recurrent statistical pseudo-fractal object characterized by statistically significant translation symmetry over all its instances. Just two occurrences may allow detection. A number of extensions to the T-pattern have been defined together constituting the T-System, all of which can be detected using the especially developed THEMETM software widely applied to interaction analysis of organisms from neurons to humans, while DNA and protein analyses are in progress. Examples of T-patterns detected in human interactions and within neuronal networks are presented. The T-pattern structure of genes in DNA and, consequently, in proteins, suggests self-similar spatio-temporal structure across wide spans of temporal and spatial scales, from nano, to neuronal, to human. The self-similarity extends to broader aspects of intra- and inter-cellular interactions as the organization of the biologically recent human mass-societies seem to reflect important aspects of social organization in Cell City as will also be exemplified.
Keynote Forum
Sasha Shafikhani
Rush University Medical Center, USA
Keynote: Discovery of apoptotic compensatory proliferation signaling and its implication in tumor biology and cancer therapy
Biography:
Sasha Shafikhani is an Associate Professor in the Department of Medicine, Division of Hematology, Oncology, and Cell therapy at Rush University Medical Center. His group is interested in understanding how the presence of tumor and infection lead to a state of immune-confusion affecting both anti-tumor and anti-bacterial immune defenses. His group is also interested in developing bacterial toxins as effective anti-cancer therapeutics. His group is also interested in innate immune disregulation that renders diabetic wounds vulnerable to infection.
Abstract:
Apoptosis, in addition to its role in programmed cell death (PCD), has also been implicated in triggering Compensatory Proliferation Signaling (CPS) -- whereby dying cells induce proliferation in neighboring cells as a means to restore homeostasis. To date, the molecular components, the nature of signaling, and the underlying mechanism of CPS remain largely unknown. Recently, we demonstrated that Pseudomonas aeruginosa Exotoxin T (ExoT) induces potent apoptosis in a variety of highly metastatic and resistant tumor cells in vitro and in vivo. We demonstrated that ExoT induces two distinct forms of apoptosis. Through its GTPase Activating Protein (GAP) domain activity, it induces caspase-9-dependent intrinsic apoptosis, while through its ADP-ribosyl transferase (ADPRT) domain, it disrupts integrin survival, causing anoikis apoptosis. During these studies, we have discovered that a fraction of apoptotic cells generate and release CrkI-containing microvesicles, in vitro and in vivo, which are capable of inducing compensatory proliferation in neighboring cancer cells upon contact by activating JNK. For the first time, we provide visual evidence of CPS and show by live videomicroscopy how CrkI-containing microvesicles are generated and how they induce proliferation in other cancer cells upon contact. Our Scanning Electron Microscopic (SEM) and Differential Interference Contrast (DIC) imaging as well as our proteomics and biochemical data indicate that ACPSVs are distinct from apoptotic bodies and exosomes. We further provide evidence that inactivating CrkI by ExoT or by mutagenesis blocks vesicle formation and inhibits CPS in apoptotic cells, thus uncoupling CPS from apoptosis. Given that majority of existing cancer cytotoxic therapeutics destroy tumor cells by apoptosis, CPS could significantly limit their effectiveness, contributing to the disappointing outcomes associated with therapeutic agents against cancer. Understanding the mechanism of CPS could lead to the development of novel targeted therapies that improve the effectiveness of current cancer therapies by inhibiting CPS.
- Workshop
Session Introduction
Jindan Yu
Northwestern University, USA
Title: Role of FOXA1 in prostate cancer and therapeutic resistance
Biography:
Jindan Yu is a member of Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics. She is currently working in Northwestern University as an Associate Professor in Medicine Department.
Abstract:
Signal transduction through the hormonal transcription factor Androgen Receptor (AR) is a major driver of prostate cancer initiation and progression. FOXA1, a transcription factor of the FKHD family, was recently found to be among most frequently mutated genes in both localized prostate cancer (PCa, 3.4%) and castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC, 12%). Further, we found that FOXA1 mRNA expression is transiently up-regulated in PCa, but ultimately down-regulated in CRPC, suggesting context dependent roles. How FOXA1 regulates hormone-naïve primary PCa and hormone-insensitive CRPC has not been carefully examined. Through genomic analysis, here we report that FOXA1 regulates two essential oncogenic processes via disparate mechanisms. FOXA1 inhibits cell motility, epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT), and tumor metastasis through modulating SLUG. On the other hand, FOXA1 regulates cell proliferation by monitoring the genomic actions of the AR; FOXA1 defines prostate-specific AR cistrome and FOXA1 loss in CRPC cells emancipates oncogenic AR activities. Moreover, FOXA1 loss in PCa leads to neuroendocrine prostate cancer, a final-stage, lethal disease with no effective treatment. This is in part mediated by the induction of interleukin 8 (IL-8) transcriptions and subsequent ERK activation. In summary, we propose a model wherein homeostasis between FOXA1 and AR levels is critical in defining prostatic AR signaling and preventing AR from oncogenic activation. FOXA1 plays important roles in maintaining the prostate lineage; therapeutic approaches that restore FOXA1 function may be useful in the treatment of late-stage CRPC patients.
Guoan Chen
University of Michigan Health System, USA
Title: Functional and mechanistic analysis of LncRNAs in lung cancer
Biography:
Guoan Chen is a Research Assistant Professor in the Section of Thoracic Surgery at the University of Michigan Medical School. He completed his PhD from Peking Union Medical College in 1999 and Post-doctoral training in tumor molecular biology at the University of Michigan in 2003. He has over 15 years of research experience in identification and characterization of molecular genetic alterations including protein profiles, autoantibody profiles, gene mutations, DNA copy number changes by SNP, DNA methylation, gene signatures by mRNAs, microRNA profiles, circRNAs and long non-coding RNAs in lung cancer using functional genomic, proteomics and bioinformatics approaches with more than 80 papers in reputed journals.
Abstract:
Lung cancer is a molecularly-heterogenous disease and the leading cause of cancer mortality. The molecular basis for this clinical heterogeneity remains incompletely understood. Increasing appreciation of the role of long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) in cancer progression has led to the identification of these molecules as a largely uncharacterized aspect of disease biology and novel prognostic/diagnostic biomarkers. We recently generated transcriptome data using next-generation RNA sequencing (RNA-Seq) to reveal lncRNA expression patterns in lung cancer. Preliminary studies have identified several novel lncRNAs which were dysregulated in lung cancer. LINC00857, as one of the top dysregulated lncRNAs, was highly expressed in lung cancer and significantly related to poor survival in patients with lung adenocarcinomas. This was verified by several lung data sets and confirmed by RT-PCR in an independent data set. Functional studies of in vitro and in vivo models indicated that LINC00857 plays an important role in lung cancer proliferation, invasion and cell cycle regulation. Mechanistic studies indicated that LINC00857 mediated tumor growth potentially through regulation of autophagy via YBX1-MET/AMPKa axis in lung cancer cell lines. The study provided a comprehensive analysis of lncRNAs in lung adenocarcinomas. It established the role of LINC00857 as a potential driver of lung cancer pathogenesis and a potentially as a new diagnostic/prognostic biomarker. Importantly this study may help identify new molecular targets or a predictive marker for lung cancer treatment in tumors with TP53, KRAS or EGFR mutations, as well as ALK fusion.
Biography:
Qi Cao earned his PhD in Pathology from the University of Michigan in 2008. He was a Research Investigator in the Department of Pathology at the University of Michigan before becoming a member of the Houston Methodist Research Institute in 2013. He is an Assistant Professor of Inflammation and Epigenetics, Institute for Academic Medicine at Houston Methodist, and Assistant Professor of Microbiology and Immunology, Weill Cornell Medical College. He has been working on the functions of polycomb group proteins in prostate and breast cancer for over 10 years.
Abstract:
Prostate cancer (PCa) is the second leading cause of cancer-related deaths in American men, excluding skin cancer. Although most cases will be effectively treated with chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy, 11% of patients diagnosed with PCa will acquire recurrent and/or metastatic disease with a mortality rate of nearly 100%. Androgen receptor (AR) signaling plays a critical role in prostate cancer progression. However, androgen depletion therapy has proven ineffective. Patients relapse and develop castration-resistance. Therefore, identification of novel molecular targets is essential for the development of new treatments. Epigenetic modifiers, such as polycomb group (PcG) proteins, are also crucial in cancer initiation, progression, and metastasis by modifying histones and non-histone proteins. Two polycomb repressive complex 1 (PRC1) proteins, RING1B and BMI1, are essential for PCa stem cell maintenance and are associated with PCa metastasis. However, the precise role of the PRC1 complex remains unclear. B lymphoma Mo-MLV insertion region 1 homolog (BMI1) has been shown associating with metastatic prostate cancer by cDNA microarray analyses and tissue microarray analysis. BMI1 is an epigenetic component of a polycomb repressive complex 1 (PRC1), maintaining gene repression. We have demonstrated that BMI1 promotes prostate cancer progression by repressing multiple tumor suppressors. Here we discovered a novel function of BMI1 in prostate cancer by regulating androgen receptor (AR) protein and pathway. Furthermore, our pre-clinical tests demonstrated that BMI1 is therapeutic target for advanced prostate cancer patients.
Biography:
Zhaoyu Li has completed his PhD from University of Alberta and Post-doctoral studies from University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine. He is an Assistant Professor of Cancer Biology at Mayo Clinic. He has published more than 20 papers in reputed journals and has been serving as an Editorial Board Member of repute.
Abstract:
A transcription factor functions differentially and/or identically in multiple cell types. However, the mechanism for cell-specific regulation of a transcription factor remains to be elucidated. We address how a single transcription factor, forkhead box protein A1 (FOXA1), forms cell-specific genomic signatures and differentially regulates gene expression in four human cancer cell lines (HepG2, LNCaP, MCF7, and T47D). FOXA1 is a pioneer transcription factor in organogenesis and cancer progression. Genomewide mapping of FOXA1 by chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing annotates that target genes associated with FOXA1 binding are mostly common to these cancer cells. However, most of the functional FOXA1 target genes are specific to cancer cell type. Further investigations using the CRISPR-Cas9 genome editing technology indicate that cell-specific FOXA1 regulation is attributable to unique FOXA1 binding, genetic variations, and/or potential epigenetic regulation. Thus, FOXA1 controls the specificity of cancer cell types. We raise a flower-blooming hypothesis for cell-specific transcriptional regulation from these observations.
Qiou Wei
University of Kentucky College of Medicine, USA
Title: Targeting sulfiredoxin in colorectal cancer
Biography:
Qiou Wei after obtaining his MD from Chongqing Medical University and PhD from the University of South Dakota, did his Post-doctoral training at Harvard Medical School and National Cancer Institute. Currently, he is a tenure-track Assistant Professor at the Department of Toxicology and Cancer Biology, and an active Member of the Markey Cancer Center, the University of Kentucky College of Medicine. He studies the fundamental mechanisms of cancer invasion and metastasis with the ultimate goal of identifying small molecules that can be used to block the process of tumorigenesis and cancer metastasis.
Abstract:
Colorectal cancer is the third most common cancer and the second leading cause of cancer death in both men and women. Sulfiredoxin (Srx) is a unique reductase that restores the peroxidase activity of peroxiredoxins (Prxs) by reducing the hyperoxidized, inactive form of Prxs back to their active, reduced form. To understand the role and mechanism of Srx in colorectal cancer development, we studied the functional significance of Srx in colon tumorigenesis, cancer invasion and metastasis using human patient primary specimens, cell culture as well as mouse models. We demonstrate that Srx is highly expressed in primary specimens of human colorectal cancer patients, and such abnormally high expression of Srx enhances cancer invasion in culture and drives cancer metastasis in a mouse orthotopical implantation model. Moreover, we also demonstrate that genetic depletion of Srx protects mouse from carcinogen-induced colon cancer development. Mechanistically, we reveal that loss of Srx sensitizes cancer cell to oxidative stress induced cell death, whereas the presence of Srx enhances the activation of mitogen activated protein kinase signaling through increasing the C-terminal tyrosine phosphorylation levels of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR). This function of Srx is mediated through its inhibition of EGFR acetylation, a novel post-translational modification of EGFR in human CRC cells identified by liquid chromatography-electrospray ionization-tandem mass spectrometry analysis. Taken together, our data suggest that Srx promotes CRC cell invasion and metastasis through a novel mechanism of enhancing EGFR signaling, and it may thus be used as a potential target to develop molecular therapeutics for the treatment of colorectal cancer in patients.
- Session Introduction
Chair
Immunotherapy | Cancer Therapy | Radiation Therapy | Stem Cell Therapeutics and Regenerative Medicine | Cancer Stem Cell Therapy
Session Introduction
Michael J Spinella
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA
Title: The promise of epigenetic therapy in solid tumors: DNA methylation inhibitors in testicular cancer
Biography:
Michael J Spinella joined the Department of Comparative Biosciences and the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in August 2016. After receiving his PhD in Biochemistry in 1992 from Albany Medical College, he performed training fellowships in Cancer Biology and Molecular Therapeutics at the Massey Cancer Center in Richmond, VA and at the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York. He was a member of the faculty in the Department of Pharmacology at Dartmouth Medical School from 1999-2016.
Abstract:
Decitabine (5-aza), a potent inhibitor of DNA methylation, is approved for the treatment of myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) and also shows promise for the treatment of specific leukemias. However, DNA methylation inhibitors in solid tumors have been disappointing. Testicular germ cell tumors (TGCTs) are the most common carcinomas of men of age 15-35. We describe our recent findings that TGCTs are exquisitely sensitive to 5-aza and the novel 5-aza pro-drug quadecitabine (SGI-110). Currently available cisplatin-based cytotoxic therapies result in substantial acute and life-long side effects that impact quality of life. In addition, 15-20% of cases is refractory or relapses despite cisplatin therapy and is in many cases fatal. Our novel findings that extend to animal studies strongly suggest that pluripotent embryonal carcinoma (EC), the stem cells of TGCTs, are uniquely vulnerable to very low doses of 5-aza and SGI-110. The dose is 100-1000 fold lower than those needed to cause cytotoxicity in somatic cancers and normal cells. Notably, hypersensitivity to 5-aza also occurs in EC cells resistant to cisplatin. Further, low dose 5-aza can restore cisplatin sensitivity to cisplatin resistant EC cells. These findings suggest that cisplatin sensitivity of TGCTs may be related to their DNA methylation status. The hypersensitivity was also associated with high levels of the pluripotency marker, DNMT3B. Knockdown of DNMT3B results in resistance to 5-aza suggesting that 5-aza sensitivity is mechanistically linked to high levels of DNMT3B. Together, this work provided the rationale for our recently initiated and promising phase I clinical trial using SGI-110 to treat cisplatin refractory TGCT patients. We discuss our recent genome-wide molecular studies aimed to identify potential mechanism(s) to account for the hypersensitivity of TGCTs to 5-aza including promoter demethylation, p53 activation, dsRNA MDA5/MAVS/IRF7 viral mimicry and pluripotency-specific non-CpG gene body methylation. We also discuss preliminary findings from our ongoing trial.
Sarah J Freemantle
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA
Title: G0S2 represses PI3K/AKT/mTOR signaling and increases sensitivity to PI3K/mTOR pathway inhibitors in estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer cells
Biography:
Sarah Freemantle, Ph.D. is a new faculty member in the Department of Comparative Bioscience at the University of Illinois College of Veterinary Medicine. She received her Ph.D. degree from the University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, England where she examined resistance to antimetabolite-based chemotherapy agents. She continued her work on folate-based chemotherapeutics in her post-doctoral studies at the Medical College of Virginia before taking a position at Dartmouth Medical School in 1998. At Dartmouth she worked on genes involved in chemoprevention and developed several mouse models for lung cancer and knockouts of key genes. More recent work has examined genes involved in chemotherapy response and chemoprevention which include the G0S2 gene.
Abstract:
G0/G1 switch gene 2 (G0S2) is a direct retinoic acid target gene widely expressed in many cell types and implicated in cancer based on frequent methylation-mediated silencing in diverse solid tumors. We recently reported high levels of G0S2 expression in breast cancer, particularly estrogen receptor-positive (ER+) breast cancer that strongly correlates with survival, suggesting that G0S2 plays a role in breast cancer progression. However, the function(s) and mechanism(s) of G0S2 tumor suppression remain unclear. We hypothesize that G0S2 represses proliferation and oncogenic signaling in ER+ breast cancer cells and promotes more effective responses to existing therapies targeting ER+ breast cancer, leading to inhibition of recurrence. In order to determine potential mechanisms of G0S2 anti-oncogenic activity, we performed genome-wide expression analysis that revealed an enrichment of gene signatures related to PI3K/mTOR pathway activation in G0S2-null MEFs. G0S2-null MEFs also exhibited decreased sensitivity to PI3K/mTOR pathway inhibitors. Overexpression of G0S2 in human ER+ breast cancer cells decreased basal mTOR signaling and sensitized the cells to pharmacologic mTOR pathway inhibitors. These findings indicate that G0S2 functions as a tumor suppressor in part by repressing PI3K/mTOR activity and may enhance therapeutic response to PI3K/mTOR inhibitors. Recent studies have suggested that hyper activation of PI3K/mTOR signaling promotes escape from hormone dependence in ER+ breast cancer. Our data implicates G0S2 in opposing this form of antiestrogen resistance, prompting further investigation of the potential role of G0S2 as an antineoplastic breast cancer target and biomarker for recurrence and therapy response.
P. Charles Lin
National Cancer Institute, USA
Title: C/EBP-δ positively regulates MDSC expansion and endothelial VEGFR2 expression in tumor development
Biography:
P Charles Lin received his PhD in Cell and Molecular Biology (1988) at the Peking Union Medical College, Institute of Chinese Medical Sciences, Beijing, China. In 1992, he joined the Department of Medicine, Duke University Medical Center as a Research Associate. In 1999, he was appointed as Assistant Professor at Vanderbilt University Medical Center. In 2005, he became Associate Professor with Tenure at the Department of Radiation Oncology, Department of Cancer Biology, and Department of Cell & Development Biology at Vanderbilt University School of Medicine. He established the Vascular Biology Section at the Center for Cancer Research in August, 2010.
Abstract:
Vascular endothelial cells and Gr-1+CD11b+ myeloid derived suppressor cells (MDSCs) are two important components that constitute the tumor microenvironment. Targeting these cells offers the potential to halt tumor growth. In this study, we report a common mediator in C/EBP-d that regulates both components and aids in tumor development. C/EBP-d is elevated in tumor derived MDSCs. Interestingly, genetic deletion of C/EBP-d in mice significantly impaired MDSC expansion in response to tumor progression, but it had no effect on Gr-1+CD11b+ cell production in normal development. It suggests a specific role of C/EBP-d in emergency myelopoiesis under tumor conditions. Consistent with the pro tumor functions of MDSCs, loss of C/EBP-d resulted in reduced tumor angiogenesis and tumor growth. Moreover, we found expression of C/EBP-d in vascular endothelial cells. C/EBP-d regulated cell motility, endothelial network formation and vascular sprouting. Notably, inactivation of C/EBP-d in endothelial cells specifically inhibited the expression of VEGFR2 but not VEGFR1. Ectopic expression of C/EBP-d increased and knockdown of the gene decreased VEGFR2 expression. C/EBP-d is recruited to the promoter region of VEGFR2, indicative of transcriptional regulation. Collectively, this study has identified a positive mediator in C/EBP-d, which regulates tumor induced MDSC expansion and VEGFR2 expression in endothelium. Considering the importance of MDSCs and endothelial cells in tumor progression, targeting C/EBP-d may provide an interesting means for cancer therapy, killing two birds with one stone.
Biography:
Sudha Bansode is an Associate Professor in Zoology at Shankarrao Mohite College, Akluj, Maharashtra State, India. Recently she was a Visiting Scholar at University of California, Riverside, USA. She is active researcher & passionate teacher in India. Still she has been published above 20 research papers in International Journals & she is interested on Bone Research. Also she has honor of Distinguished Editorial Board Member of several International Journals. She is a own author of “Textbook Histological Techniques” & “Outlines of Physiology”. She was a invited Indian Speaker of “OXFORD SYMPOSIUM” on 27-29 August, 2014 at Balliol College, Oxford, United Kingdom.
Abstract:
Cancer is uncontrolled growth of abnormal cells in the body concern develops when the body’s normal control mechanism stops working. Old cells do not die and cells grow out of control, forming new abnormal cells. Then extra cells may form a mass of tissues called a tumor and some such as leukemia do not form tumors. During the course of tumor progression cancer cells acquire a number of characteristics alterations. These include the capacities to proliferate independently exogenous growth promoting or growth inhibitory signals to invade surrounding tissue and metastasize to distant sites to elicit an antigenic response and to evade mechanisms that limit of cell proliferation, such apoptotic and explicative se scene. These properties reflect alterations in the cellular signaling pathways that in normal cells control cell proliferation, motility and survival many of the proteins currently under investigation as possible target for cancer therapy is signaling proteins that are components of these pathways.
Yuru Liu
University of Illinois at Chicago, USA
Title: CD44-high alveolar type II cells show stem cell properties during steady-state alveolar homeostasis
Biography:
Yuru Liu has completed her PhD from John Hopkins University School of Medicine and Post-doctoral studies from Duke University. She is an Assistant Professor in Department of Pharmacology, School of Medicine, University of Illinois at Chicago. She has established her own research group and uses state-of-the-art genetic models to identify the signaling mechanisms of alveolar regeneration after lung injury. She has published 15 papers in reputed journals and has been serving as Councilor in American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics, the Great Lakes Chapter.
Abstract:
The alveolar epithelium is composed of type I cells covering most of the gas-blood exchange surface and type II cells secreting surfactant that lowers surface tension of alveoli to prevent alveolar collapse. Here we have identified a subgroup of type II cells expressing higher level of cell surface molecule CD44 (CD44high type II cells) that comprised ~3% of total type II cells in 5-10 week old mice. These cells were preferentially apposed to lung capillaries. They displayed a higher proliferation rate and augmented differentiation capacity into type I cells and the ability to form alveolar organoids compared to CD44low type II cells. Moreover, in aged mice of 18-24 months old, the percentage of CD44high type II cells among all type II cells was increased but these cells showed decreased progenitor properties. Thus, CD44high type II cells likely represent a type II cell sub-population important for constitutive regulation of alveolar homeostasis. Since CD44 is considered as a marker for cancer stem cells in lung cancer, it is important to further characterize the signaling of CD44high type II cells in lung homeostasis, regeneration and aging, as disregulation of the CD44high type II cells is likely to contribute to the cancer initiation.
Frank Eckerdt
Northwestern University, USA
Title: Rationale for combinatorial approaches including PI3K-p110alpha targeting in brain cancer stem cells
Biography:
Frank Eckerdt is currently working as Research Assistant Professor of Neurological Surgery in Northwestern Medicine Feinberg School of Medicine. He has done his Post-doctoral Fellowship from J. W. Goethe University, Obstetrics Gynecology (2004) and PhD from J. W. Goethe University, Biology (2003).
Abstract:
Glioblastoma (GBM) and Medulloblastoma (MB) are deadly brain tumors in adults and children, respectively. Most patients still succumb to these diseases due to relapse, which is caused by a subpopulation of therapy resistant brain cancer stem cells (CSCs). The PI3K pathway promotes cancer cell survival and might stimulate chemotherapy resistance in solid tumors. We employed analysis of gene expression data and found that expression of PIK3CA (p110alpha) correlates with stem cell markers in MB and GBM patient samples, respectively, suggesting important roles in CSCs. Using 3-D neurosphere cultures, we show that the PI3K/AKT pathway is activated in stem-like cancer cells and inhibition of PI3K blocked kinase signaling and neurosphere growth in these CSCs. Of all class I PI3K catalytic isoforms, only knockdown of p110alpha disrupted cancer stem cell frequencies, indicating a pivotal role for this isoform in CSCs. Inhibition of the PI3K pathway in combination with inhibitors targeting protein kinases known to be important for survival signaling enhanced these antineoplastic effects in CSCs. In summary, the p110alpha isoform is a promising target for MB and GBM. The striking effects on stem-like cancer cells and neurospheres is particularly interesting as it suggests enhanced vulnerability of the therapy-resistant, tumor-initiating CSC population to PI3K-p110alpha inhibition in MB and GBM.
Biography:
Christina Coughlin joined Immunocore as Chief Medical Officer in April 2015. She has extensive experience in Oncology Drug Development, with expertise in both clinical development and translational medicine. Prior to joining Immunocore, she led two early development programs at Novartis in checkpoint inhibition and PI3 kinase inhibition. She has also served as International Project Team Leader at Morphotek Inc., the monoclonal antibody company acquired by Eisai Co. Ltd in 2007, where she led the early clinical development team responsible for monoclonal antibody development against novel targets. She graduated with an MD and PhD from the University of Pennsylvania, where she studied patient responses to tumour antigens with Dr. Robert Vonderheide in the division of Translational Research under the direction of Dr. Carl June.
Abstract:
Uveal melanoma (UM) is characterized by low PD-L1 expression, low mutational burden and limited efficacy with checkpoint inhibition. IMCgp100 is a bispecific T cell redirector with an affinity-enhanced TCR recognizing gp100 and an anti-CD3 scFV. Two phase 1 trials evaluated safety, pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics and efficacy for IMCgp100 administered IV weekly in HLA-A2 patients: a first in human study enrolling patients with melanoma including a cohort with advanced UM (n=16) and a second study of an intra-patient dose escalation (IE) regimen for pts with advanced UM (n=19). The intra-patient escalation regimen was designed during the course of the FIH Phase 1 study to mitigate T cell-mediated toxicities that were observed. Endpoints of the two studies included overall response rate by RECISTv1.1, progression free survival, and overall survival. The safety profile of IMCgp100 was consistent between trials with the most frequent adverse events including rash, pruritus, and edema. Durable, objective responses were observed in both trials. Within 3 doses of IMCgp100, immunofluorescence studies reveal an influx of PD-1+/CD8+ T cells in the tumor bed with PD-L1 expression. Peripheral cytokines indicate activation of immune responses within 24 hours of the first dose. These studies demonstrate preliminary immune biology, safety and promising efficacy in advanced UM.
Pengda Liu
The University of North Carolina, USA
Title: Targeting Akt regulatory mechanisms for cancer therapy
Biography:
Pengda Liu has completed his PhD from East Carolina University and Post-doctoral studies from Duke University Medical Center and BIDMC, Harvard Medical School. He is currently an Assistant Professor in the Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics at UNC-Chapel Hill. He has published more than 38 papers in peer-reviewed journals and has been serving as an ad hoc reviwers for many reputed journals.
Abstract:
Hyperactivation of the PI3K-Akt pathway is observed in virtually all solid tumors. Multiple genetic events such as PTEN loss and PIK3CA amplification partially account for the increase in the pathway activation. In addition to genetic changes, dysregulation of post-translational modifications of Akt, including phosphorylation, acetylation, hydroxylation, methylation and others, that are necessary for Akt activation is also frequently observed in various types of cancers. However, whether and how Akt is regulated by its binding partners are minimally understood. To this end, through a proteomic approach, we have identified the tumor suppressor SAV1 as a novel Akt interacting partner to suppress Akt activation. Furthermore, we found that phosphorylaton of Akt1-Y26 disrupts SAV1 binding and subsequently activate Akt, which is large mediated by TAM kinases. Mechanistically, TAM-mediated Akt1-Y26 phosphorylation facilitates Akt plasma membrane recruitment by PI(3,4,5)P3 to promote Akt activation. On the other hand, TAM inhibition leads to enhanced SAV1 binding and reduced Akt activity. Importantly, cancer patient-derived SAV1 mutants and Akt1 mutants were identified to exert elevated oncogenicity by bypassing SAV1 binding and suppression, further supporting a pathophysiological role of the identified TAM/Akt/SAV1 signaling in tumorigenesis and the potential to target this Akt regulatory axis for inhibition to combat cancer.
Carla Mattos
Northeastern University, USA
Title: Allosteric modulation of the Ras active site: From biochemistry to binding specificity
Biography:
Carla Mattos received her PhD at MIT and did Post-doctoral work at Harvard University and at Brandeis University. She is a recipient of the Boroughs Wellcome Fund New Investigator Award in the Pharmacological Sciences, the CAREER award from the NSF and the Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers. She uses a combination of biophysical and biochemical approaches to study Ras structure, dynamics and allosteric connections to infer and test hypothesis associated with function. She is actively engaged in the Ras initiative at the NCI through her collaborations at the Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research.
Abstract:
Ras is found mutated in about 20% of human cancers, associated with poor prognosis due to a lack of drugs able to deter uncontrolled signaling through multiple pathways in the cell. There are three isoforms: H-, K-, and N-Ras. The G-domain, which catalyzes GTP hydrolysis and mediates downstream signaling, is 95% conserved between the Ras proteins. To date, biochemical studies done on H-Ras have been considered representative of all three Ras proteins. We have recently shown, using a combination of X-ray crystallography, NMR spectroscopy, enzyme kinetic assays and molecular dynamics simulations, that the three isoforms are biochemically distinct due to allosteric effects of isoform-specific residues on the population of conformational states. Furthermore, oncogenic mutations also affect conformational states in the particular isoforms. An engineered high-affinity binder shows a modest specificity toward K-RasG12D over the wild type protein and crystal structures of the complexes reveal allosteric effects on conformational states induced by the mutation, providing a view of specificity features that may be further developed to direct targeting of oncogenic mutants of K-Ras.
Sweta Srivastava
St. John's National Academy of Health Sciences, India
Title: RhoC-ROCK2 signaling regulate radio-resistance in cervical carcinoma by modulating DNA repair activity
Biography:
Sweta Srivastava has her expertise in Cancer Biology and has been working towards understanding the molecular mechanisms involved in regulating therapy response. Her research activities include understanding the role of small molecule GTPases and their effector kinases in tumor progression.
Abstract:
Therapy resistance and tumor recurrence severely affects therapy outcome. Colossal efforts have gone into understanding radio-resistance in various tumors, however; there is no definitive study to exemplify the molecular mechanisms of radio-resistance in cervical carcinoma. In our previous report we have shown that RhoC regulates cervical carcinoma tumor progression. In this study we extend the role of RhoC to therapy resistance. We also suggest that Rock2, a downstream effector of RhoC, modulates radio-resistance in cervical carcinoma. Using CaSki and SiHa cell lines, our observations suggested that increased expression of RhoC and nuclear Rock2 (Rock2nu) confer therapy resistance to cervical cancer cells and inhibition of RhoC and Rock2 results in increased sensitization to radiation. Interestingly high Rock2nu cells also co-express increased CDK1, indicative of potential to progress in cell division. Additionally flow cytometric live sorting of Rock2high cells and further cell survival analysis showed that Rock2high cells have better cell survival ability as compared to Rock2low cells. The interaction between Rock2 and BRCA2 has also been observed in the resistant cells suggesting its crosstalk with the DNA damage response machinery. Inhibition of Rock2 in cervical cancer resulted in disruption of DNA repair machinery. We extended our finding to other cell lines including Detroit 562 and patient biopsies derived cells and observed increased radio-sensitization upon irradiation in vitro. Our observations thus suggest that RhoC-Rock2 signaling pathway is a novel mechanism of regulation of radiation resistance in cervical cancer.
Stephen Lin
California Institute for Regenerative Medicine, USA
Title: Initiatives to advance stem cell science and medicine at california’s $3 billion stem cell agency
Biography:
Stephen S Lin is a Senior Science Officer at California’s Stem Cell Agency, CIRM. He joined the Agency in 2015 to oversee its $32M initiative to create a repository of iPSCs from over 2800 individuals covering both genetically complex and rare diseases, as well as a $40M genomics initiative that applies cutting edge genomics and bioinformatic approaches to stem cell research and therapeutic development. He is also Program Lead on a $15M award to create a preclinical research organization termed the Translating Center that focuses on preparing stem cell therapy candidates for clinical trials through support with process development, safety/toxicity studies, and manufacturing. From 2012, he had been a Staff Scientist and Team Lead at Thermo Fisher Scientific (formerly Life Technologies) prior to that he was a Scientist since 2006 at StemCells Inc., of California in the area of liver cell therapeutics. He received his PhD from Washington University in St. Louis in 2002 under Jeffrey Gordon and did his Post-doctoral research at Harvard University under Stanley Korsmeyer.
Abstract:
The mission of the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine (CIRM) is to accelerate stem cell treatments to patients with unmet medical needs. With $3 billion in funding and 300 active programs, it is the world’s largest institution dedicated to helping people by developing cell therapies. To accomplish its mission, CIRM has funded a breadth of activities spanning from basic research to translation to clinical trials. In addition to individual grants, CIRM has created resources to help the stem cell community worldwide. Some resources promote research and drug development using stem cells. CIRM has established an iPSC Repository maintained by the Coriell Institute that is currently the largest publically accessible pluripotent stem cell bank in the world. CIRM also has a genomics research initiative that applies cutting edge sequencing and bioinformatics approaches to stem cell research and therapeutic development. Other resources established at CIRM promote the acceleration of stem cell discoveries into therapeutic development, including: the Stem Cell Center, which supports preclinical IND-enabling and clinical trial management activities related for stem cell therapies, and an Alpha Clinics network that conducts clinical trials for stem cell related therapies. CIRM supports additional activities that promote standardization, clarity, and speed to this emerging therapeutic area. In total, these resources are designed to catalyze the flow of stem cell discoveries to the clinic, which can come from both inside and outside of California.
Alexander Kazansky
The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley, USA
Title: Novel nanotechnology approach to target cancer- switch from proto-oncogene to tumor suppressor
Biography:
Alexander Kazansky is working as Associate Professor from 2014 to present at the Dept. of Health and Biomedical Sciences, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley (UTRGV); Associate Professor at the Dept. of Biomedicine, University of Texas Brownsville (UTB) 2011-2014 and; Associate Professor at the Department of Biological Science, University of Texas at Brownsville, Texas (2006-2011) Adjunct Associate Professor, Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas (2006-present). He served as Assistant Professor at the Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas (2003-2006). He served as a Post-doctoral Fellow, Department of Cell Biology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas; Research Associate, Laboratory of Molecular Genetics of Cell Differentiation, Institute of Gene Biology, Moscow, Russia and; Graduate Student, Institute of General Genetics and Koltzov Institute of Developmental Biology, Moscow, Russia.
Abstract:
Prostate cancer remains one of the most common and potentially lethal neoplastic manifestations among men. In many cases, malignant transformation can be directly linked to activation of the STAT family of transcription factors. STAT5B, a specific member of the STAT family is intimately associated with prostate tumor progression. While the full form of STAT5B is thought to promote tumor progression, a naturally occurring truncated isoform acts as a tumor suppressor. We previously demonstrated that truncated STAT5 is generated by insertion of an alternatively spliced exon and results in the introduction of an early termination codon. In this report we demonstrate a new approach aimed at inhibition the expression of full-length STAT5B (a proto-oncogene) while simultaneously enhancing the expression of STAT5∆B (a tumor suppressor). The presented work combines the actions of steric-blocking splice-switching oligonucleotides (SSOs) and a novel nanotechnology-based approach for targeted delivery of DNA to tumor cells. We were able to block alternative splicing of STATs mRNA applying conjugates of SSO with pH insertion peptide (pHLIP). Our data demonstrates the functional effect of the intron/exon proportional tuning toward anti-cancer activity. A common feature of most STATs is alternative splicing, which leads to generation of a dominant-negative isoform. STAT proteins are involved in wide variety of physiological processes including immune response and tumor progression. Ability to modulate their actions and specifically switch function from tumor activating to tumor suppressing would be highly beneficial in many areas of biomedical research. In conclusion we developed and confirmed a novel method to implement steric-blocking splice-switching oligonucleotides for targeted delivery towards the development of novel therapeutic strategies.
Runhua Liu
University of Alabama at Birmingham, USA
Title: FOXP3-mediated Transcriptional Regulation of MicroRNAs in breast cancer
Biography:
Abstract:
MicroRNAs (miRs) have potential as non-invasive biomarkers, but their relevance as biomarkers is limited by inconsistent results, and their regulatory mechanisms remain elusive. In the present study, our results show that the levels of miR-200c and 141 in tumor cells and in circulation differ for mice and for humans between cases with metastatic breast cancer, cases with localized breast cancer, and healthy female controls. The levels of miR-200c and 141 are low in primary tumor cells but are high in the circulation of patients with metastatic breast cancer. Further, we suggest the potential cell origin of circulating miR-200c and 141 and describe their transcriptional regulation in cultured cells and during tumor progression in animal models of spontaneous breast cancer. These results could provide useful insights in early prediction of tumor metastasis and influence treatment strategies for patients at high risk of developing metastatic breast cancer.
- Session Introduction
Chair
Cell signaling | Modes of Signaling & Signaling Pathways | Molecular Medicine | Protein Signaling & Neuronal Signaling | Advanced Approach in Cell Signaling | Cellular and Technological Breakthroughs
Session Introduction
Ramiro Malgor
Ohio University, USA
Title: Modulation of Wnt signaling pathway, a strategy in urothelial carcinoma progression
Biography:
Ramiro Malgor is an Associate Professor of Pathology in the Department of Biomedical Sciences at Ohio University. He graduated as MD at Universidad de la Republica in Uruguay and his first area of research was orientated to the development of novel diagnostic method for E. granulosus infected dogs. In 2005, he moved to Ohio University, where his new area of research was focused on Wnt5a and its relationship with inflammation and cancer. In last 10 years, his research has been focused on two main goals, to analyze the role of Wnt5a signaling pathway in atherosclerosis, a chronic inflammatory disease; to understand the role of Wnt5a signaling in atherosclerosis to develop novel, safe, and cost-effective strategies for treatment; and, to dissect the expression pattern of Wnt5a in urothelial carcinoma, to find a novel molecular biomarker, as well as potential new targets for diagnosis and treatment to this cancer.
Abstract:
Bladder cancer is the fourth most common cancer in men and the most common malignancy of the urinary tract. When the diagnosis is made at an early stage urothelial carcinoma (UC), the five-year survival rate is high, but when detected after local metastasis the rate is only 50%. Our group has reported a positive correlation between the expression of Wnt5a, a member of the Wnt proteins family, and histopathological grade and stage of UC and recently, the expression of major components of Wnt5a / planar cell polarity (PCP) signaling pathway in UC human tissue samples and UC cell lines. The Wnt proteins have been described in late 80’s, and are best known for their association with a number of embryonic functions with critical role in developmental biology and homeostasis of tissues. The aberrant Wnt signaling activation has been described as critical in the pathogenesis of cancer, as tumor suppressor or tumor promoter, in variety of malignancies. A publication on the Wnt family has nearly doubled since 2008 and is exponentially increasing. Recently, Wnt signaling pathways have been associated with metastatic cancer via activation of epithelial mesenchymal transition (EMT) genes transcription suggesting a potential therapeutic use by interference of these pathways. The purpose of this study is to dissect the role of Wnt5a signaling in the pathogenesis/progression of UC. Our findings support that Wnt5a-Ror2 signaling plays a role in UC with potential application as a prognostic marker but most interesting provide evidence that Wnt5a signaling may be used as an effective molecular target for novel therapeutic tools. In conclusion, the correlation between Wnt5a /Ror2 and pathological grade suggests that Wnt5a/Ror2 signaling pathway could play a role in the aggressiveness of this cancer, promoting the EMT and metastasis process. Further studies are needed to determine the underlying mechanism of Wnt5a/Ror2 action in UC for targeting the Wnt signaling pathways as potential treatment for UC, as well as their application as biomarkers for UC.
Malak Haidar
King Abdullah university of science and technology, Saudi Arabia
Title: miR-34c plays a key role in theileria-transformed macrophages and human cancer cell lines by targeting PRKAR2B
Biography:
Malak Haidar is a Post-doctoral fellow is studying host-pathogen interaction of Theileria annulata causative agent of tropical theileriosis. She is focused in examining how different autocrine loops and epigenetic landscape changes contribute to infected macrophage virulence and how their oxidative stress status impacts on pathogenicity. She did her PhD in the laboratory of Cellular Biology of Apicomplexa in CNRS, INSERM, Paris, France, supervised by Prof. Gordon Langsley.
Abstract:
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) play critical roles in regulating a wide range of cellular signaling pathways; for example, both physiological and pathological processes in cancer. Here, we report on the role of miR-34c in regulating PKA activity during in cell transformation. Theileria is an intracellular eukaryotic parasite that transforms its bovine host leukocytes into disseminating leukomas that cause a widespread disease of economic importance called tropical theileriosis. By studying this unique model of cellular transformation we identified PRKAR2B (cAMP-dependent protein kinase type II-beta regulatory subunit) as a new miR-34c target gene. Overexpression of miR-34c repressed PRKAR2B levels and consequently increased PKA activity in Theileria-transformed leukocytes promoting their virulent disseminating tumor phenotype. We also validated miR-34c repression of PRKAR2B expression using human colon cancer (HCT-116) and promyelocytic leukemia (HL-60) cells. The identification of miR-34c as a novel regulator of PKA activity could improve understanding of glucose-independent growth of many different types of cancer.
Seyedmehdi Nourashrafeddin
University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, USA
Title: Stage-specific expression of CYP26B1 in the adult testis is responsible for pulsatile retinoic acid signaling in spermatogenesis
Biography:
Seyedmehdi Nourashrafeddin had received his PhD from Tabriz University of Medical Science, Iran, in the field of Molecular Medicine. He is currently working as an academic Research Assistant at Magee-Women’s Research Institute, University of Pittsburgh, USA. His research focuses on the molecular mechanisms that govern primate spermatogonial stem cell differentiation. His graduate school research focused on the analysis of gene expression during stem cell-based spermatogenesis in vitro. In 2005, he received his Master’s degree in the field of Immunology from Tehran University of Medical Sciences, a premier University in Iran. In addition, from 2004-2006, he worked as a Research Assistant at the Hematology-Oncology and Stem cell Transplantation Research Center in Tehran, Iran. He is proficient in all standard molecular and cellular biology techniques. He is also an employee as Research Assistant in Tehran University of Medical Science. He has published more than 6 papers in reputed journals.
Abstract:
Background: The major physiologically active form of vitamin A, Retinoic acid (RA), plays important roles in germ cell development in both male and female. Studies of mice deficient in the RA degradation enzyme, CYP26B1, indicated that RA is responsible for meiotic initiation; however, the mechanisms underlying the pulsatile RA signaling in spermatogenesis has not been understood yet. We studied the localization and expression analysis of CYP26B1 during development of rhesus monkey testis in order to better understanding of the mechanisms of RA signaling in spermatogenesis process.
Methods: Quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR) and immunohistochemistry was performed to determine the profile expression of CYP26B1 at both mRNA and protein levels in the juvenile and adult rhesus monkey.
Results: The expression of CYP26B1 mRNA was down-regulated during the development of monkey testis. As described previously, the CYP26B1 protein was detected in the cytoplasm of undifferentiated spermatogonia in the developing testis. A rather heterogeneous pattern of the CYP26B1 protein expression was observed along the different stages of seminiferous epithelium, indicating the expression of the protein is stage specific. In adult testes, the highest level of CYP26B1 protein was found in in differentiating germ cells within seminiferous epithelial stages X-XII. The peak of CYP26B1 protein expression was coincided with the onset of meiosis and observed in preleptotene and early leptotene spermatocytes. Whereas, lowest level of CYP26B1 expression was observed in stages VI-IX of the seminiferous epithelium, where undifferentiated Type A spermatogonia divide and differentiate to Type B spermatogonia, meiosis initiates and spermiogenesis occurs.
Conclusion: Down-regulation of CYP26B1 mRNA during the development of monkey testis is consistent with initiation of meiosis in the adult testis. However, the stage-specific expression of RA degradation enzyme CYP26B1 in the seminiferous tubules of adult testis led us to suggest that it might be responsible for pulsatile RA signaling in spermatogenesis. These findings presumably support that the elevated amount of RA in the undifferentiated Type A spermatogonia during stages VI-IX of the seminiferous epithelium of the adult testis is responsible for differentiation of spermatogonia and meiosis entry.
Yiguang Lin
University of Technology Sydney, Australia
Title: FGFR1 lentivirus lung cancer cell model for anti-cancer drug discovery and the study of FGFR1 signaling pathway
Biography:
Yiguang Lin is a Medical Graduate and has completed his PhD in Pharmacology from the University of New South Wales and Post-doctoral training at Prince Henry Hospital, Australia. He was a Visiting Professor at the University of Michigan working with Dr. Peter A Ward and Yale University with Dr. Paul Lizardi. Since 2003, he has been a Tenured Faculty Member at the University of Technology Sydney. He has published widely in many reputed international journals. His research interest has long been in the area of pharmacology of anti-inflammatory drugs, anti-cancer drugs and natural compounds while he recently shifted his interest to cancer biology and medicine with a focus on liver and lung cancer.
Abstract:
Introduction & Aim: Lung cancer is the most common diagnosed cancer worldwide, with the highest cancer death rate. Prognosis of lung cancer patients is still poor despite recent advances in treatment, thus more effective methods for lung cancer management are urgently needed. Overexpression of fibroblast growth factor receptor 1 (FGFR1) is associated with high incidence and mortality in lung cancer. FGFR1 signaling is implicated in oncogenic traits such as proliferation, cell survival, angiogenesis and migration. FGFR1 and its ligand basic FGF (bFGF) are promising new therapeutic targets. This study aimed to develop a simple, effective in vitro lung-cancer cell model for cancer therapy development and to study FGFR signaling in lung cancer.
Methodology: An overexpressing FGFR1 cell line was developed by inserting lentiviral constructs encoding the FGFR1 gene into A549 human lung adenocarcinoma cells and validated by PCR, gel electrophoresis, and gene sequence. FGFR1 overexpression was characterized using a unique bFGF mAb developed in our laboratory and assayed for adhesion, invasion, migration, clonogenicity, cell cycle and apoptosis. PI3K/Akt/mTOR signaling pathway was examined by Western blots.
Results: A stable lentiviral FGFR1 A549 cell model was established with >20-fold higher expression of FGFR1 protein and mRNA compared to A549 parent. Ligand binding to FGFR1 activated the PI3K/Akt/mTOR signaling pathway increasing adhesion, invasion, migration and apoptosis. The overactive PI3K pathway, associated with negative metastatic signaling, can be effectively blocked by unique bFGF mAb. The bFGF mAb not only neutralized free bFGF but also inhibited the endogenous bFGF.
Conclusions & Significance: This model provides an effective and simple screening kit for anti-FGF1 drug compounds for lung cancer treatment and a tool for understanding the molecular mechanisms of the FGFR1 signaling pathway in lung cancer. Furthermore, this basic FGFR1 lentiviral toolkit is transferrable to study FGFR1 signaling in any type of cancer cell.
Heloisa Sobreiro Selistre de Araujo
Universidade Federal de São Carlos, Brazil
Title: Integrin inhibition in the tumor microenvironment
Biography:
Heloisa Sobreiro Selistre de Araujo has completed her PhD from São Paulo University in Brazil and Post-doctoral studies from Oklahoma State University, USA. She is a Full Professor of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology at Federal University of São Carlos, Brazil. She has published more than 120 papers in reputed journals and has been serving as an Editorial Board Member of several journals.
Abstract:
Tumor cell migration and invasion are critical steps in the metastatic cascade and depend on the interaction between tumor cells, the extracellular matrix (ECM) and the endothelial cells. Integrins are key receptors that link cells and ECM, acting as mechanical sensors of the cell microenvironment. Particularly, Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD)-binding integrins such as the v 3 and 5 1 integrins are of special interest in cancer progression since several well-known cancer oncogenes were identified as crucial regulators of integrin traffic and, therefore, of cell invasion and metastasis. Integrins also interact with growth factor receptors resulting in an important cross talking between intracellular signaling pathways triggered by ECM components and growth factors. Recent studies have provided evidence of distinct roles for v 3 and 5 1 integrins in the migration process, where 5 1 integrin clustering supports high matrix forces while v 3 integrin starts mechanotransduction. Therefore, v 3 and 5 1 integrins became an attractive target for pharmacological inhibition in cancer therapy and metastasis prevention. Cilengitide, the first integrin inhibitor based on the RGD motif, is currently under clinical trials in cancer patients with limited success. Efforts to achieve a better understanding of the integrin roles in cancer progression and searches for better inhibitor candidates are needed. We have used a recombinant RGD disintegrin from the Brazilian snake Bothrops alternatus to study the effects of v 3 integrin inhibitions. This protein impairs αvβ3/VEGFR2 cross talking, inhibits HUVEC proliferation, decreases migration speed, directionality and changed the migration mode of a highly invasive tumor cell line from single to collective cell migration. Our data suggest that RGD-disintegrins are interesting as lead compounds for v 3 integrin inhibition.
Zianyi Wang
Taiyuan Lingde Secondary School, China
Title: High TSTA3 expression as a candidate biomarker of poor prognosis of ESCC patients
Biography:
Zianyi Wang is a junior student of Taiyuan Lingde Secondary School. She has participated in a number of biological experiments in Shanxi Medical University due to the curiosity of biology.
Abstract:
Esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC) is the sixth most lethal cancer worldwide and the fourth most lethal cancer in China. Tissue specific transplantation antigen P35B (TSTA3) participates in the biosynthesis of GDP-L-fucose which is an important substrate involved in the biosynthesis of many glycoproteins. However, the contribution of TSTA3 to ESCC prognosis is unclear. We used immunohistochemical method to assess the expression of TSTA3 in 104 ESCC samples and paired normal esophageal epithelial tissues from ESCC specimens. The results showed that the expression of TSTA3 was statistically higher in tumors than that in normal tissues (P=0.00014) and paired adjacent normal tissues (P=0.0002). The expression of TSTA3 was associated with some clinical features of patients, such as age (P=0.017), alcohol history (P=0.007), clinical stage (P=0.010) and LN metastasis (P=0.043). Kaplan–Meier analysis and Log-rank test showed that ESCC patients with high expression levels of TSTA3 had a worse prognosis compared to the patients with low expression (P=0.048). Multivariate Cox proportional hazards regression model showed that high expression of TSTA3 could predict poor prognosis for ESCC patients independently. In conclusion, abnormal fucosylation might participate in the progress of ESCC and TSTA3 may serve as a novel biomarker for prognosis of ESCC patients.
Biography:
Kaiser Jamil is the Principle Investigator and the Head of Genetics Department, having published more than 250 papers in journals of repute and guided 34 scholars for PhD degree. During the last decade following her instincts, she has taken up several projects related to human health, for ‘War against Cancer’ she has contributed in the field of biomarkers in breast cancer, leukemia, and head and neck cancer. Her work is on SNPs of drug metabolizing genes in cancers and it has been published in peer reviewed journals, unfolding the mechanisms of several genes and other genes which network with these genes, elucidating drug-gene interactions. She has also contributed on the role of some signaling pathways such as tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKI) and MAPK in haematological malignancies and HNC. Her research continues to unravel genotypes leading towards personalized medicine.
Abstract:
Oral cancer is the fourth most common cancer, ranked as the sixth cause of cancer deaths. In the past few years, incidence of oral cancer was particularly high in South Asia. Oral cancer is mediated by both environmental carcinogens (including alcohol intake, tobacco consumption, and betel nut chewing) and genetic factors. Increasingly more evidence shows that miRNAs are associated with head and neck/ oral cancer, and several miRNAs have been shown to be unregulated in head and neck cancer. We have carried out studies to investigate the association of micro -RNA genetic polymorphism with the risk of oral cancer. The binding of miRNA to mRNA is critical for regulating the mRNA level and protein expression. However, this binding can be affected by single-nucleotide polymorphisms that can reside in the miRNA target site, which can either abolish existing binding sites or create illegitimate binding sites. Therefore, polymorphisms in miRNA can have a differing effect on gene and protein expression and represent another type of genetic variability that can influence the risk of certain human diseases. The increase or decrease in miRNA binding caused by the SNP variation would probably lead to a corresponding decrease or increase in protein translation. MicroRNA is a potent regulator controlling multiple biological processes including cell growth, differentiation, cell death, development and immune responses. With emerging data supporting that microRNA plays a central role in gene dysregulation in human malignancies, unraveling the microRNA genetic variations in cancer is essential and critical if we want to develop better diagnostic and prognostic system for our patients. On the other hand, gaining better insight into the regulatory mechanisms of microRNA would allow us to design therapeutic regime, which targets the disease with better outcome.
Somi Cho
Jeju National University, Korea
Title: Anticancer activities of the selected phytochemicals and their therapeutic implication in AGS gastric cancer cells
Biography:
Abstract:
Marianna Kapetanou
National Hellenic Research Foundation, Greece
Title: Regulation of proteostasis in hMSCs: Proteasome activation enhances stemness and delays senescence
Biography:
Marianna Kapetanou graduated from University of Crete, Biology Departement in 2012, having achieved a first-class honor’s degree. She obtained her PhD from University of Athens, with an excellent grade. She is currently carrying out Post-doctoral research at the National Hellenic Research Foundation (NHRF). Her excellence has been proven by the reception of the IKY-Siemens Scholarship of Excellency for PhD Studies and for Post-doctoral Research. In addition, she has published articles in reputed journals, participated in numerous conferences, has given a lecture at Seminars of NHRF and has reviewed scientific manuscripts for IUBMB Life.
Abstract:
Proteostasis is a fundamental process, essential for the majority of cellular functions. Numerous studies have demonstrated that ageing is accompanied by a failure of proteostasis, while chronic exposure to denatured or aggregated proteins contributes to the development of age-related diseases. The proteasome, being the main proteolytic cellular system, plays a pivotal role in maintaining proteostasis. Essentially, we have established a direct link between the proteasome mediated protein degradation and aging. In detail, we have revealed that senescent human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs) exhibit a decrease in expression of proteasome subunits, proteasome content and peptidase activities, accompanied by alterations of proteasomal complexes. Additionally, we show that senescence and the concomitant failure of proteostasis negatively affects stemness. Remarkably, the genetic activation of the proteasome through the overxpression of the catalytic β5 subunit, doubled the lifespan, induced the expression of the core pluripotency factors and enhanced the differentiation capability of hMSCs. Based on these observations, we postulated that the molecular factors and mechanisms that regulate the expression of proteasome subunits can be critical determinants of both aging and stem cell function. Shedding light on the limited data regarding the regulation of proteasome subunits’ expression and the mechanisms underlying its age-related decrease, we demontrated that the transcription factors Oct4 and FoxO1 bind at the promoter region of catalytic proteasome subunits and thus possibly regulate their expression. A firm understanding of the mechanisms regulating proteostasis in stem cells will pave the way to innovative stem cell-based interventions to improve healthspan and lifespan.
Maryam Eslami
Islamic Azad University, Iran
Title: Generation of a biologically and mechanically suitable 3D scaffold for Heart Valve
Biography:
Maryam Eslami graduated with MD (2010), PhD (2014) degrees. She has joined in Harvard Medical School (Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology) as a part of her PhD dissertation in the field of Heart valve. She has carried out some broad research on orthopedic fractures and has published a book and papers in this field. Her US and PCT patent achieved the rank of “Best 2008 Invention” from WIPO (World Intellectual Property Organization of the United Nations) and has received the title of "Best 2008 Women Inventor" from WIPO and 6 Gold Medals and 6 Honorary Diplomas in the Contests and Fair of the Inventors in Geneva and South Korea. International and national awards for her research were one of the fundamental achievements that she has received. She now serves as a President of Applied Biotechnology Research Institute and previously was a research Vice President of Paramedical School at Tehran Azad Medical University.
Abstract:
Introduction: Heart valve disease is one of the most important causes of mortality in the world. Although prosthetic valves have been widely used, prosthetic which grows with patient, maintains normal valve mechanical properties and hemodynamic flow has not been innovated. Tissue engineering offers exciting opportunity to engineer heart valves using biodegradable scaffolds and patients own cells. Heart valves are made up of spatially organized extracellular matrix (ECM) which consists of fibrous collagen and elastin and highly hydrated glycosaminoglycan. Valve interstitial cells (VICs) are the major cell types responsible for ECM remodeling in healthy valves. Elastin, proteoglycan and collagen-rich layers are the most important components of the ECM of valves. These elements due to distinct biomechanical properties to the leaflets and supporting structures
Objective: The objective of this workshop is generation of a proper 3D scaffold by mimicking heart valve structure.
Procedures: We want to show how integrated electrospun poly(glycerol sebacate) (PGS)-poly(ε-caprolactone) (PCL) microfiber scaffolds -reinforce hydrogel scaffolds for heart valve tissue engineering by use of methacrylatedhyaluronic acid (HAMA) and methacrylated gelatin (GelMA). Hyaluronic acid is selected because it plays an important role during in heart valve morphogenesis. To enhance cellular properties, denatured collagen in form of GelMA will be added to HAMA. Hypothetical of this technic is that hydrogels provide an ECM in-vivo mimicking environment and is an efficient means of encapsulating cells in desired density on the fibrous scaffolds. On the other hand, elastomeric PGS-PCL scaffolds will provide appropriate mechanical properties to otherwise weak hydrogel scaffolds. Presence of HA will promote secretion of elastin by valve interstitial cells (VICs). After teaching how to design and make this kind of composite and how to encapsulate VICs necessary biological and mechanical tests and analyzes will be taught and discussed.
Conclusions: The composite scaffold synthesis in this workshop will overcome some of the limitations of current materials use for heart valve tissue engineering. The participants will observe that the hydrogel component provides an ECM-mimicking environment and efficient means of Vic’s cell delivery to the scaffold, while the fibrous PGS-PCL mesh maintains the cells’ viability, allowing them to spread and distribute themselves within the hydrogel by providing appropriate mechanical properties to the otherwise weak hydrogel scaffolds. Furthermore, adding the hydrogel component will not adversely affect the scaffold’s mechanical properties based on the similar values of both Young's modulus and the ultimate tensile strength of the bare PGS/PCL scaffolds and the composites. The mechanical and biological advantages of this composite scaffold can motivate further studies using this technology for potential application in heart valve tissue engineering. We hopefully look forward the participants to learning more about design of heart valve scaffolds and will be motivated to generate the most useful scaffold for the patients.The following parts will be tough in this workshop: Design and synthesis of proper composite; encapsulation of VICs by composite; performance of appropriate biological and mechanical test and; analysis of results of result.
Ali Mohammad Hasan Joshaghani
Islamic Azad University, Iran
Title: Trends and limitation in hydrogel-based therapies for myocardial regeneration
Biography:
Ali Mohammad Hasan Joshaghani has completed his BS in Biomedical Engineering from Islamic Azad University and is currently an MS student in Biomedical Engineering in Islamic Azad University. He has won awards at 10th and 12th Royan International Congress on Stem Cell Biology and Technology in 2014 and 2016.
Abstract:
Struggling to expand man's life expectancy, scientists have always come across a rather remarkable obstacle damage done to cardiac tissue by myocardial infarction. Incapability of self-regeneration in myocardium causes major problems in the treatment of cardiovascular diseases. Myocardial infarction cannot be tackled effectively by existing approaches such as pharmaceutical therapy, organ transplant or implantation of medical devices; Said methods lack the efficiency expected of the modern technology, since they exert matters such as shortage of donor organs, long periods of hospitalization, rejection of the immune system, heavy operations often including high invasiveness and a high risk of degeneration. In order to regenerate damaged heart muscle, cell-based regenerative therapies and tissue engineering products have gained popularity these days. Injectable hydrogels are one of the tissue engineering products with great potential in treating heart diseases. Different kinds of hydrogels including cell-free hydrogels or those loaded with cardiac stem cells or bioactive agents are available, and previous treatments of heart diseases are now becoming less popular. Hydrogels can be injected intracoronary, epicardial or endocardial. These gels have satisfactory stiffness and viscoelasticity, most of them are biocompatible, and some are biodegradable and conductive as well; such traits encounter myocardial patches' downsides such as hypoxia, electro-provocation, patch rejection and many more. In what follows we are going to shed some light on hydrogels loaded with or carrying angiogenes drugs or cardiac stem cells and their advantages against the aforementioned methods.