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75


LEF1 Identifies Androgen-Independent Epithelium in the Developing Prostate

Wu, Xinyu; Daniels, Garrett; Shapiro, Ellen; Xu, Kun; Huang, Hongying; Li, Yirong; Logan, Susan; Greco, M Alba; Peng, Yi; Monaco, Marie E; Melamed, Jonathan; Lepor, Herbert; Grishina, Irina; Lee, Peng
Lymphoid enhancer-binding factor (LEF)1 is a major mediator and a target in canonical Wnt/beta-catenin pathway. Interactions between the androgen receptor (AR) and canonical Wnt pathways have been implicated in the development of the genitourinary organs. Here, we investigated the localization and role of LEF1-positive cells during development of the prostate gland in human and in the murine model. We show that during human prostate development, LEF1 is restricted to the basal epithelial layer of the urogenital sinus. During mouse development, Lef1 is also present in the urogenital mesenchyme in addition to the basal epithelial layer of the urogenital sinus. In the course of elongation and branching of the prostatic ducts, Lef1 is localized to the proliferating epithelium at the distal tips of the buds. Notably, during branching morphogenesis, domains of Lef1 and AR are mutually exclusive. We further employed the TOPGAL reporter strain to examine the dynamics of Wnt signaling in the context of prostate regression upon a 7-d treatment with a competitive AR inhibitor, bicalutamide. We found that Wnt/Lef1-positive basal cells are not dependent upon androgen for survival. Furthermore, upon bicalutamide treatment, Wnt/Lef1-positive basal progenitors repopulated the luminal compartment. We conclude that Wnt/Lef1 activity identifies an androgen-independent population of prostate progenitors, which is important for embryonic development and organ maintenance and regeneration in the adult
PMCID:3100606
PMID: 21527502
ISSN: 1944-9917
CID: 132604

Cell adhesion glycoprotein vitronectin during Xenopus laevis embryogenesis

Luque, M E; Serrano, M A; Honore, S M; Monaco, M E; Sanchez, S S
Vitronectin (vn) is a cell-adhesive glycoprotein present in blood and extracellular matrix of all vertebrates. In the present study we reported the cDNA cloning of Xenopus laevisvitronectin and its spatial and temporal expression pattern during the embryonic development of this important model organism. The deduced amino acid sequence of Xenopus laevis vn showed 49%, 47% and 43% identity with human, chicken and zebrafish orthologs, respectively, whereas the comparison with Xenopus tropicalis vn presented 85% identity. The structural organization consisting of a somatomedin B domain and two hemopexin-like domains was similar to higher vertebrate vitronectins. The vn transcripts were detected from stage 28 onward. At tadpole stages, vn is expressed in heart, gut derivatives and in the notochord. The protein was detected in heart, liver, foregut, pronephros and notochord at stages 43 and 47 of Xenopus embryos. Our results suggest that vitronectin is developmentally regulated and could participate in embryo organogenesis
PMID: 20302971
ISSN: 1872-7298
CID: 122600

Expression of Long-chain Fatty Acyl-CoA Synthetase 4 in Breast and Prostate Cancers Is Associated with Sex Steroid Hormone Receptor Negativity

Monaco, Marie E; Creighton, Chad J; Lee, Peng; Zou, Xuanyi; Topham, Matthew K; Stafforini, Diana M
Previous studies have shown that key enzymes involved in lipid metabolic pathways are differentially expressed in normal compared with tumor tissues. However, the precise role played by dysregulated expression of lipid metabolic enzymes and altered lipid homeostasis in carcinogenesis remains to be established. Fatty acid synthase is overexpressed in a variety of cancers, including breast and prostate. The purpose of the present study was to examine the expression patterns of additional lipid metabolic enzymes in human breast and prostate cancers. This was accomplished by analysis of published expression databases, with confirmation by immunoblot assays. Our results indicate that the fatty acid-activating enzyme, long-chain fatty acyl-CoA synthetase 4 (ACSL4), is differentially expressed in human breast cancer as a function of estrogen receptor alpha (ER) status. In 10 separate studies, ACSL4 messenger RNA (mRNA) was overexpressed in ER-negative breast tumors. Of 50 breast cancer cell lines examined, 17 (89%) of 19 ER-positive lines were negative for ACSL4 mRNA expression and 20 (65%) of 31 ER-negative lines expressed ACSL4 mRNA. The inverse relationship between ER expression and ACSL4 expression was also observed for androgen receptor status in both breast and prostate cancers. Furthermore, loss of steroid hormone sensitivity, such as that observed in Raf1-transfected MCF-7 cells and LNCaP-AI cells, was associated with induction of ACSL4 expression. Ablation of ACSL4 expression inMDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells had no effect on cell proliferation; however, sensitivity to the cytotoxic effects of triacsin C was increased three-fold in the cells lacking ACSL4
PMCID:2847316
PMID: 20360933
ISSN: 1936-5233
CID: 109023

Genomic expression profiling across the pediatric systemic inflammatory response syndrome, sepsis, and septic shock spectrum

Wong, Hector R; Cvijanovich, Natalie; Allen, Geoffrey L; Lin, Richard; Anas, Nick; Meyer, Keith; Freishtat, Robert J; Monaco, Marie; Odoms, Kelli; Sakthivel, Bhuvaneswari; Shanley, Thomas P
OBJECTIVES: To advance our biological understanding of pediatric septic shock, we measured the genome-level expression profiles of critically ill children representing the systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS), sepsis, and septic shock spectrum. DESIGN: Prospective observational study involving microarray-based bioinformatics. SETTING: Multiple pediatric intensive care units in the United States. PATIENTS: Children <or=10 years of age: 18 normal controls, 22 meeting criteria for SIRS, 32 meeting criteria for sepsis, and 67 meeting criteria for septic shock on day 1. The available day 3 samples included 20 patients still meeting sepsis criteria, 39 patients still meeting septic shock criteria, and 24 patients meeting the exclusive day 3 category, SIRS resolved. INTERVENTIONS: None other than standard care. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Longitudinal analyses were focused on gene expression relative to control samples and patients having paired day 1 and day 3 samples. The longitudinal analysis focused on up-regulated genes revealed common patterns of up-regulated gene expression, primarily corresponding to inflammation and innate immunity, across all patient groups on day 1. These patterns of up-regulated gene expression persisted on day 3 in patients with septic shock, but not to the same degree in the other patient classes. The longitudinal analysis focused on down-regulated genes demonstrated gene repression corresponding to adaptive immunity-specific signaling pathways and was most prominent in patients with septic shock on days 1 and 3. Gene network analyses based on direct comparisons across the SIRS, sepsis, and septic shock spectrum, and all available patients in the database, demonstrated unique repression of gene networks in patients with septic shock corresponding to major histocompatibility complex antigen presentation. Finally, analyses focused on repression of genes corresponding to zinc-related biology demonstrated that this pattern of gene repression is unique to patients with septic shock. CONCLUSIONS: Although some common patterns of gene expression exist across the pediatric SIRS, sepsis, and septic shock spectrum, septic shock is particularly characterized by repression of genes corresponding to adaptive immunity and zinc-related biology
PMCID:2747356
PMID: 19325468
ISSN: 1530-0293
CID: 98983

Interleukin-8 as a stratification tool for interventional trials involving pediatric septic shock

Wong, Hector R; Cvijanovich, Natalie; Wheeler, Derek S; Bigham, Michael T; Monaco, Marie; Odoms, Kelli; Macias, William L; Williams, Mark D
RATIONALE: Interventional clinical trials involving children with septic shock would benefit from an efficient preenrollment stratification strategy. OBJECTIVES: To test the predictive value of interleukin (IL)-8 for 28-day mortality in pediatric septic shock. METHODS: A training data set (n = 40) identified a serum IL-8 of greater than 220 pg/ml as having a 75% sensitivity and specificity for predicting 28-day mortality. This cutoff was then subjected to a series of validation steps. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Subjects were drawn from two large, independent pediatric septic shock databases. Prospective application of the IL-8 cutoff to validation data set 1 (n = 139) demonstrated 78% sensitivity and 64% specificity for 28-day mortality. A serum IL-8 level of 220 pg/ml or less, however, had a negative predictive value for 28-day mortality of 95% in validation data set 1, which was subsequently applied to an independently generated data set of children with septic shock (validation set 2, n = 193). A serum IL-8 level of 220 pg/ml or less had a negative predictive value for 28-day mortality of 94% when applied to validation set 2. CONCLUSIONS: A serum IL-8 level of 220 pg/ml or less, obtained within 24 hours of admission, predicts a high likelihood of survival in children with septic shock. We propose that IL-8 can be used to exclude such patients from interventional clinical trials and ultimately derive a study population with a more favorable risk to benefit ratio when subjected to a study agent
PMCID:2542425
PMID: 18511707
ISSN: 1535-4970
CID: 98984

Validating the genomic signature of pediatric septic shock

Cvijanovich, Natalie; Shanley, Thomas P; Lin, Richard; Allen, Geoffrey L; Thomas, Neal J; Checchia, Paul; Anas, Nick; Freishtat, Robert J; Monaco, Marie; Odoms, Kelli; Sakthivel, Bhuvaneswari; Wong, Hector R
We previously generated genome-wide expression data (microarray) from children with septic shock having the potential to lead the field into novel areas of investigation. Herein we seek to validate our data through a bioinformatic approach centered on a validation patient cohort. Forty-two children with a clinical diagnosis of septic shock and 15 normal controls served as the training data set, while 30 separate children with septic shock and 14 separate normal controls served as the test data set. Class prediction modeling using the training data set and the previously reported genome-wide expression signature of pediatric septic shock correctly identified 95-100% of controls and septic shock patients in the test data set, depending on the class prediction algorithm and the gene selection method. Subjecting the test data set to an identical filtering strategy as that used for the training data set, demonstrated 75% concordance between the two gene lists. Subjecting the test data set to a purely statistical filtering strategy, with highly stringent correction for multiple comparisons, demonstrated <50% concordance with the previous gene filtering strategy. However, functional analysis of this statistics-based gene list demonstrated similar functional annotations and signaling pathways as that seen in the training data set. In particular, we validated that pediatric septic shock is characterized by large-scale repression of genes related to zinc homeostasis and lymphocyte function. These data demonstrate that the previously reported genome-wide expression signature of pediatric septic shock is applicable to a validation cohort of patients
PMCID:2440641
PMID: 18460642
ISSN: 1531-2267
CID: 98985

Serum neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (NGAL) as a marker of acute kidney injury in critically ill children with septic shock

Wheeler, Derek S; Devarajan, Prasad; Ma, Qing; Harmon, Kelli; Monaco, Marie; Cvijanovich, Natalie; Wong, Hector R
OBJECTIVE: To validate serum neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (NGAL) as an early biomarker for acute kidney injury in critically ill children with septic shock. DESIGN: Observational cohort study. SETTING: Fifteen North American pediatric intensive care units (PICUs). PATIENTS: A total of 143 critically ill children with systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) or septic shock and 25 healthy controls. INTERVENTIONS: None. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Serum NGAL was measured during the first 24 hrs of admission to the PICU. Acute kidney injury was defined as a blood urea nitrogen concentration >100 mg/dL, serum creatinine >2 mg/dL in the absence of preexisting renal disease, or the need for dialysis. There was a significant difference in serum NGAL between healthy children (median 80 ng/mL, interquartile ratio [IQR] 55.5-85.5 ng/mL), critically ill children with SIRS (median 107.5 ng/mL, IQR 89-178.5 ng/mL), and critically ill children with septic shock (median 302 ng/mL, IQR 151-570 ng/mL; p < .001). Acute kidney injury developed in 22 of 143 (15.4%) critically ill children. Serum NGAL was significantly increased in critically ill children with acute kidney injury (median 355 ng/mL, IQR 166-1322 ng/mL) compared with those without acute kidney injury (median 186 ng/mL, IQR 98-365 ng/mL; p = .009). CONCLUSIONS: Serum NGAL is a highly sensitive but nonspecific predictor of acute kidney injury in critically ill children with septic shock. Further validation of serum NGAL as a biomarker of acute kidney injury in this population is warranted
PMCID:2757115
PMID: 18379258
ISSN: 1530-0293
CID: 98986

Exploring opportunities for collaboration between the corporate sector and the dental education community

Alexander, D; Clarkson, J; Buchanan, R; Chadwick, G; Chesters, R; Drisko, C L; Douglass, C W; Farrell, L; Fletcher, K; Makoni, F; Monaco, M; Nordquist, B; Park, N I; Riggs, S; Schou, L; Smales, F C; Stamm, J W; Toh, C G; Volpe, T; Ward, P; Warren, P
The ultimate purpose of both dental industry and dental education is to improve the oral health of the public. This report provides background information on the different roles and objectives of the dental industry and dental education communities, the different operating environment of each sector and also areas of common interest where collaboration will be of mutual benefit. The report addresses five areas for potential collaboration between the dental industry and the dental education communities: 1. Contribution to joint activities. 2. Effectiveness and efficiency. 3. Workforce needs. 4. Middle- and low-income countries. 5. The future of International Federation of Dental Educators and Associations (IFDEA). The traditional areas of support and their limitations that have been provided by industry are outlined in the report and some new approaches for collaboration are considered. Industry-based research has been an important factor in developing new products and technologies and in promoting oral health. However there is a need to facilitate the introduction of these developments at an early stage in the education process. Industry has to operate in an efficient manner to remain competitive and maximise its returns and therefore survive. The academic sector operates in a different environment and under different governance structures; although some trends are noted towards adoption of greater efficiency and financial accountability similar to industry. Opportunities to jointly develop best business practices should be explored. Industry has responded well to the oral health needs of the public through the development of new products and technologies. The education community needs to respond in a similar way by examining different healthcare delivery models worldwide and developing programmes to train members of the dental team to cater for future needs and demands of communities in different regions of the world. The reputation of industry-based scientists and clinicians is high, and their role in contributing to the dental education process in practical ways needs to be explored and further developed. Closer relationships between industry scientists and faculty and students could assist industrys need and desire to develop new technologies for the broader dental care system. The corporate sector can play a key role in the future success of IFDEA by providing support and expertise in developing areas such as regional leadership institutes, a Global Faculty and Network and in collaborating in developing continuing education programmes as well as involvement in its governance. Thirteen recommendations are made in the report. These are considered to be important initial steps in developing the already strong relationship between the education and corporate sectors. Partnership and collaborating more effectively along the lines suggested should, almost certainly, generate mutually beneficial outcomes, whilst serving over the long term to elevate the publics oral health status on a global basis.
PMID: 18289269
ISSN: 1396-5883
CID: 3629782

Cloning and functional characterization of two key enzymes of glycosphingolipid biosynthesis in the amphibian Xenopus laevis

Luque, Melchor E; Crespo, Pilar M; Monaco, Maria E; Aybar, Manuel J; Daniotti, Jose L; Sanchez, Sara S
Gangliosides are a subfamily of complex glycosphingolipids (GSLs) with important roles in many biological processes. In this study, we report the cDNA cloning, functional characterization, and the spatial and temporal expression of Xlcgt and Xlgd3 synthase during Xenopus laevis development. Xlcgt was expressed both maternally and zigotically persisting at least until stage 35. Maternal Xlgd3 synthase mRNA could not be detected and showed a steady-state expression from gastrula to late tailbud stage. Xlcgt is mainly present in involuted paraxial mesoderm, neural folds, and their derivatives. Xlgd3 synthase transcripts were detected in the dorsal blastoporal lip, in the presumptive neuroectoderm, and later in the head region, branchial arches, otic and optic primordia. We determined the effect of glycosphingolipid depletion with 1-phenyl-2-palmitoyl-3-morpholino-1-propanol (PPMP) in mesodermal layer. PPMP-injected embryos showed altered expression domains in the mesodermal markers. Our results suggest that GSL are involved in convergent-extension movements during early development in Xenopus
PMID: 18095347
ISSN: 1058-8388
CID: 122601

Ultrastructural changes in the follicular epithelium of Ceratophrys cranwelli previtellogenic oocytes

Villecco, E I; Monaco, M E; Sanchez, S S
In this work we carried out ultrastructural, autoradiographic and biochemical analyses of the follicular epithelium during C. cranwelli previtellogenesis. This study revealed that the follicular epithelium in early previtellogenesis is constituted of a single layer of squamous homogeneous cells. During mid-previtellogenesis two types of cells develop: dark cells and clear cells. The follicular dark cells are actively involved in the synthesis of RNA, which is transferred to the oocyte through the interface. In late previtellogenesis the dark cells show apoptotic characteristics such as chromatin condensation, DNA fragmentation and cytoplasm shrinkage. This process forms apoptotic bodies that seem to be engulfed by the oocyte. Our results show evidence that, during mid- and late C. cranwelli previtellogenesis, the follicular epithelium undergoes remodelling processes interacting with the oocyte
PMID: 17637109
ISSN: 0967-1994
CID: 122602