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Best of the 2015 AUA Annual Meeting: Highlights From the 2015 American Urological Association Annual Meeting, May 15-19, 2015, New Orleans, LA
Nickel, J Curtis; Gorin, Michael A; Partin, Alan W; Assimos, Dean; Brawer, Michael; Nicolai, Heinz; Chancellor, Michael B; Goggins, Aine; Loeb, Stacy; Shapiro, Ellen
PMCID:4633663
PMID: 26543434
ISSN: 1523-6161
CID: 1826062
Stromal Androgen Receptor in Prostate Development and Cancer
Singh, Mandeep; Jha, Ruchi; Melamed, Jonathan; Shapiro, Ellen; Hayward, Simon W; Lee, Peng
The androgen receptor (AR) in stromal cells contributes significantly to the development and growth of prostate during fetal stages as well as during prostate carcinogenesis and cancer progression. During prostate development, stromal AR induces and promotes epithelial cell growth, as observed from tissue recombinant and mouse knockout studies. During prostate carcinogenesis and progression, the stromal cells begin to lose AR expression as early as at the stage of high-grade prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia. The extent of loss of stromal AR is directly proportional to the degree of differentiation (Gleason grade) and progression of prostate cancer (PCa). Co-culture studies suggested that stromal AR inhibits the growth of malignant epithelial cells, possibly through expression of certain paracrine factors in the presence of androgens. This functional reversal of stromal AR, from growth promotion during fetal prostate development to mediating certain growth-inhibiting effects in cancer, explains to some extent the reason that loss of AR expression in stromal cells may be crucial for development of resistance to androgen ablation therapy for PCa. From a translational perspective, it generates the need to re-examine the current therapeutic options and opens a fundamental new direction for therapeutic interventions, especially in advanced PCa.
PMCID:4188859
PMID: 25088980
ISSN: 0002-9440
CID: 1094972
Upper urinary tract anomalies and perinatal renal tumors
Shapiro, Ellen
Congenital anomalies of the upper urinary tract are common and frequently diagnosed on prenatal ultrasound. In the absence of infection, these anomalies are often asymptomatic. This article reviews key features and long-term implications to assist in discussions with families. In contrast, a perinatal renal tumor is rare but extremely alarming. This update on the most common tumors and their treatment is useful in reassuring parents that most infants, after primary surgical resection, are cured without adjuvant therapies. To understand renal agenesis and other congenital renal malformations and their associated anomalies, a brief review of normal renal development is presented.
PMID: 25155735
ISSN: 0095-5108
CID: 1298812
The Stress-response protein prostate-associated gene 4, interacts with c-Jun and potentiates its transactivation
Rajagopalan, Krithika; Qiu, Ruoyi; Mooney, Steven M; Rao, Shweta; Shiraishi, Takumi; Sacho, Elizabeth; Huang, Hongying; Shapiro, Ellen; Weninger, Keith R; Kulkarni, Prakash
The Cancer/Testis Antigen (CTA), Prostate-associated Gene 4 (PAGE4), is a stress-response protein that is upregulated in prostate cancer (PCa) especially in precursor lesions that result from inflammatory stress. In cells under stress, translocation of PAGE4 to mitochondria increases while production of reactive oxygen species decreases. Furthermore, PAGE4 is also upregulated in human fetal prostate, underscoring its potential role in development. However, the proteins that interact with PAGE4 and the mechanisms underlying its pleiotropic functions in prostatic development and disease remain unknown. Here, we identified c-Jun as a PAGE4 interacting partner. We show that both PAGE4 and c-Jun are overexpressed in the human fetal prostate; and in cell-based assays, PAGE4 robustly potentiates c-Jun transactivation. Single-molecule Forster resonance energy transfer experiments indicate that upon binding to c-Jun, PAGE4 undergoes conformational changes. However, no interaction is observed in presence of BSA or unilamellar vesicles containing the mitochondrial inner membrane diphosphatidylglycerol lipid marker cardiolipin. Together, our data indicate that PAGE4 specifically interacts with c-Jun and that, conformational dynamics may account for its observed pleiotropic functions. To our knowledge, this is the first report demonstrating crosstalk between a CTA and a proto-oncogene. Disrupting PAGE4/c-Jun interactions using small molecules may represent a novel therapeutic strategy for PCa.
PMCID:4086653
PMID: 24263171
ISSN: 0006-3002
CID: 801132
Best of the 2014 AUA Annual Meeting: Highlights From the 2014 American Urological Association Annual Meeting, May 16-21, 2014, Orlando, FL
Kern, Adam J M; Partin, Alan W; Shapiro, Ellen
PMCID:4191636
PMID: 25337046
ISSN: 1523-6161
CID: 1315462
Best of the 2013 AUA Annual Meeting Part II: More Highlights From the 2013 American Urological Association Annual Meeting, May 4-8, 2013, San Diego, CA
Zeitlin, Scott I; Rajfer, Jacob; Shapiro, Ellen
PMCID:3821991
PMID: 24223024
ISSN: 1523-6161
CID: 801122
Urothelial tumor initiation requires deregulation of multiple signaling pathways: implications in target-based therapies
Zhou, H; Huang, HY; Shapiro, E; Lepor, H; Huang, WC; Mohammadi, M; Mohr, I; Tang, MS; Huang, C; Wu, XR
Although formation of urothelial carcinoma of the bladder (UCB) requires multiple steps and proceeds along divergent pathways, the underlying genetic and molecular determinants for each step and pathway remain undefined. By developing transgenic mice expressing single or combinatorial genetic alterations in urothelium, we demonstrated here that overcoming oncogene-induced compensatory tumor barriers was critical for urothelial tumor initiation. Constitutively active Ha-ras (Ras*) elicited urothelial hyperplasia that was persistent and did not progress to tumors over a 10 months period. This resistance to tumorigenesis coincided with increased expression of p53 and all pRb family proteins. Expression of a Simian virus 40 T antigen (SV40T), which disables p53 and pRb family proteins, in urothelial cells expressing Ras* triggered early-onset, rapidly-growing and high-grade papillary UCB that strongly resembled the human counterpart (pTaG3). Urothelial cells expressing both Ras* and SV40T had defective G(1)/S checkpoint, elevated Ras-GTPase and hyperactivated AKT-mTOR signaling. Inhibition of the AKT-mTOR pathway with rapamycin significantly reduced the size of high-grade papillary UCB but hyperactivated mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK). Inhibition of AKT-mTOR, MAPK and STAT3 altogether resulted in much greater tumor reduction and longer survival than did inhibition of AKT-mTOR pathway alone. Our studies provide the first experimental evidence delineating the combinatorial genetic events required for initiating high-grade papillary UCB, a poorly defined and highly challenging clinical entity. Furthermore, they suggest that targeted therapy using a single agent such as rapamycin may not be highly effective in controlling high-grade UCB and that combination therapy employing inhibitors against multiple targets are more likely to achieve desirable therapeutic outcomes.
PMCID:3384072
PMID: 22287562
ISSN: 0143-3334
CID: 162340
Defects in the endoderm survival and polarity of cell divisions in the mouse model for rectourethral malformations [Meeting Abstract]
Xu, K.; Wu, X.; Shapiro, E.; Huang, H.; Zhang, L.; Deng, Y.; Mandelshtam, V; Li, J.; Lepor, H.; Grishina, I. B.
ISI:000303001301352
ISSN: 1569-9056
CID: 166869
Best of the 2012 AUA Annual Meeting: Highlights From the 2012 American Urological Association Meeting, May 19-23, 2012, Atlanta, GA
Nickel, J Curtis; Partin, Alan W; Nirmal, Jayabalan; Chancellor, Michael B; Loeb, Stacy; Brawer, Michael K; Assimos, Dean; Shapiro, Ellen
PMCID:3602732
PMID: 23526762
ISSN: 1523-6161
CID: 250402
Urodynamics in children
Shapiro, Ellen
PMCID:3502051
PMID: 23173000
ISSN: 1523-6161
CID: 185032