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296


Combined Hepatocellular-Cholangiocarcinoma and Variants: A Single Center Experience From New York [Meeting Abstract]

Mannan, Abu Ala Syed Rifat; Kapur, Varun; Sporn, Matthew; Iskandar, Mazen Elia; Brower, Steven; Theise, Neil
ISI:000359249100237
ISSN: 1943-7722
CID: 2726332

Hepato-biliary stem cells: facts and fancies [Meeting Abstract]

Theise, Neil D
ISI:000215871600007
ISSN: 2047-783x
CID: 2726112

Hepatoma SK Hep-1 Cells Exhibit Characteristics of Oncogenic Mesenchymal Stem Cells with Highly Metastatic Capacity

Eun, Jong Ryeol; Jung, Yong Jin; Zhang, Yanling; Zhang, Yanhong; Tschudy-Seney, Benjamin; Ramsamooj, Rajen; Wan, Yu-Jui Yvonne; Theise, Neil D; Zern, Mark A; Duan, Yuyou
BACKGROUND: SK Hep-1 cells (SK cells) derived from a patient with liver adenocarcinoma have been considered a human hepatoma cell line with mesenchymal origin characteristics, however, SK cells do not express liver genes and exhibit liver function, thus, we hypothesized whether mesenchymal cells might contribute to human liver primary cancers. Here, we characterized SK cells and its tumourigenicity. METHODS AND PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We found that classical mesenchymal stem cell (MSC) markers were presented on SK cells, but endothelial marker CD31, hematopoietic markers CD34 and CD45 were negative. SK cells are capable of differentiate into adipocytes and osteoblasts as adipose-derived MSC (Ad-MSC) and bone marrow-derived MSC (BM-MSC) do. Importantly, a single SK cell exhibited a substantial tumourigenicity and metastatic capacity in immunodefficient mice. Metastasis not only occurred in circulating organs such as lung, liver, and kidneys, but also in muscle, outer abdomen, and skin. SK cells presented greater in vitro invasive capacity than those of Ad-MSC and BM-MSC. The xenograft cells from subcutaneous and metastatic tumors exhibited a similar tumourigenicity and metastatic capacity, and showed the same relatively homogenous population with MSC characteristics when compared to parental SK cells. SK cells could unlimitedly expand in vitro without losing MSC characteristics, its tumuorigenicity and metastatic capacity, indicating that SK cells are oncogenic MSC with enhanced self-renewal capacity. We believe that this is the first report that human MSC appear to be transformed into cancer stem cells (CSC), and that their derivatives also function as CSCs. CONCLUSION: Our findings demonstrate that SK cells represent a transformation mechanism of normal MSC into an enhanced self-renewal CSC with metastasis capacity, SK cells and their xenografts represent a same relative homogeneity of CSC with substantial metastatic capacity. Thus, it represents a novel mechanism of tumor initiation, development and metastasis by CSCs of non-epithelial and endothelia origin.
PMCID:4206444
PMID: 25338121
ISSN: 1932-6203
CID: 1316352

Signaling via the osteopontin and high-mobility group box-1 axis drives the fibrogenic response to liver injury [Meeting Abstract]

Arriazu, Elena; Ge, Xiaodong; Leung, Tung Ming; Lopategi, Aritz; Lu, Yongke; Kitamura, Naoto; Urtasun, Raquel; Theise, Neil D; Nieto, Natalia
ISI:000330252201104
ISSN: 1527-3350
CID: 2726292

Myositis Portends Primary Biliary Cirrhosis: A Case Series [Meeting Abstract]

Singh, Simi; Wong, Carrie; Wang, Lan; Macgowan, Daniel; Fischer, Harry; Theise, Neil; Bodenheimer, Henry
ISI:000330178101261
ISSN: 1572-0241
CID: 2726282

Complementarity in biological systems: A complexity view

Theise, Neil D; Kafatos, Menas C
Niels Bohr and Max Delbruck believed that complementaritysuch as wave-particle dualitywas not limited to the quantum realm, but had correlates in the study of living things. Biological complementarity would indicate that no single technique or perspective allows comprehensive viewing of all of a biological entity's complete qualities and behaviors; instead, complementary perspectives, necessarily and irrevocably excluding all others at the moment an experimental approach is selected, would be necessary to understand the whole. Systems biology and complexity theory reveal that, as in the quantum realm, experimental observations themselves limit our capacity to understand a biological system completely because of scale-dependent horizons of knowledge, a form of biological complementarity as predicted by Bohr and Delbruck. Specifically, observational selection is inherently, irreducibly coupled to observed biological systems as in the quantum realm. These nested systems, beginning with biomolecules in aqueous solution all the way up to the global ecosystem itself, are understood as a seamless whole operating simultaneously and complementarily at various levels. This selection of an observational stance is inseparable from descriptions of biology indicatesin accordance with views of thinkers such as von Neumann, Wigner, and Stappthat even at levels of scale governed by classical physics, at biological scales, observational choice remains inextricably woven into the establishment, in the observational moment, of the present conditions of existence. These conceptual shifts will not only have theoretical impact, but may point the way to new, successful therapeutic interventions, medically (at the scale of organisms) or environmentally/economically (at a global scale). (c) 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Complexity 18: 11-20, 2013
ISI:000322985500003
ISSN: 1076-2787
CID: 2726262

Hepatic steatosis estimated microscopically versus digital image analysis

Hall, Andrew R; Dhillon, Amar P; Green, Anna C; Ferrell, Linda; Crawford, James M; Alves, Venancio; Balabaud, Charles; Bhathal, Prithi; Bioulac-Sage, Paulette; Guido, Maria; Hytiroglou, Prodromos; Nakanuma, Yasuni; Paradis, Valerie; Quaglia, Alberto; Snover, Dale; Theise, Neil; Thung, Swan; Tsui, Wilson; van Leeuwen, Dirk J
BACKGROUND & AIMS: Evaluate in liver biopsies: (i) interobserver agreement of estimates of fat proportionate area (eFPA) and steatosis grading, (ii) the relationship between steatosis grades and measured fat proportionate area (mFPA, digital image analysis), (iii) the accuracy of eFPA, (iv) to present images to aid standardization and accuracy of eFPA. METHODS: Twenty-one liver biopsies were selected from the Royal Free Hospital (RFH) histopathology archive to represent the full range of histopathological steatosis severity. As many non-overlapping fields of parenchyma as possible were photographed at x20 objective magnification from the biopsies (n = 651). A total of 15 sample images were selected to represent the range of steatosis seen. Twelve hepatopathologists from 11 sites worldwide independently evaluated the sample images for steatosis grade [normal (none)/mild/moderate/severe], and eFPA (% area of liver parenchyma occupied by fat). RESULTS: The hepatopathologists had good linear correlation between eFPA and mFPA for sample images (r = 0.924, P < .001) and excellent concordance (kappa = 0.91, P < 0.001). Interobserver concordance of steatosis grade showed 'substantial agreement' (kappa = 0.64). There was significant difference between eFPA and mFPA in the sample images for mild, moderate and severe steatosis (P = 0.024, P < 0.001, P < 0.001 respectively): the observers consistently over-estimated the eFPA. CONCLUSION: Hepatopathologists showed 'excellent' interobserver agreement in eFPA and 'substantial' agreement in assigning steatosis grade (precision was high). However, compared with mFPA, eFPA was inaccurate. eFPA systematically exceeds mFPA; generally the overestimation increases with severity of steatosis. Considering that non-invasive technologies for estimating liver fat utilize histopathology as reference, such assessments would benefit from quantitative validation of visually estimated microscopic liver fat percentages.
PMID: 23560780
ISSN: 1478-3231
CID: 2725572

Matrix Metalloproteinase-9 is Highly Expressed in Fibrosis Regression From Long-Standing Alcohol Abstinence as Compared to Recent Sobriety in Patients Undergoing Liver Transplantation [Meeting Abstract]

Zhu, Hongfa; Zhang, Xuchen; Parikh, Falguni; Wu, HaiShan; Theise, Neil D; Ward, Stephen C; Thung, Swan N; Schiano, Thomas D; Fiel, MIsabel
ISI:000330252203007
ISSN: 1527-3350
CID: 2726302

Pancreaticobiliary Submucosal Anatomy Redefined: A Comprehensive Histologic Analysis of Specimens and Probe-Based Confocal Laser Endomicroscopy [Meeting Abstract]

Klavan, Heather; Benias, Petros; Buonocore, Darren; Ascunce, Gil I; Wayne, Michael; Theise, Neil D; Carr-Locke, David L
ISI:000322997200418
ISSN: 0016-5085
CID: 2726272

Keratin 19 demonstration of canal of Hering loss in primary biliary cirrhosis: "minimal change PBC"?

Khan, Fahad M; Komarla, Arathi Rajendra; Mendoza, Paulo G; Bodenheimer, Henry C Jr; Theise, Neil D
Liver biopsy is important for diagnosing primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC). Prior investigations suggest that immunostaining for biliary keratin 19 (K19) may show the earliest changes suspicious for PBC, namely, loss of the canals of Hering (CoH). We aimed to study the clinical outcomes of patients whose biopsy specimens appeared histologically near normal or with minimal inflammatory changes, but in which K19 staining revealed widespread periportal CoH loss, a finding we termed "minimal change PBC." Ten patients were identified prospectively as having nearly normal or mildly inflamed biopsy specimens without diagnostic or suggestive histologic features of PBC, but with near complete CoH loss; six had available follow-up clinical data, one had follow-up biopsy. Controls for clinical and/or K19 analysis included six normal livers and biopsy specimens from 10 patients with confirmed early PBC, 10 with early stage chronic hepatitis C (CHC), and nine with resolving, self-limited hepatitis (RSLH). Staining for K19 in normal controls, livers with "minimal change" PBC, CHC, and RSLH showed 9.2 +/- 6.0, 0.44 +/- 0.37 (P < 0.0001), 5.7 +/- 4.6 (n.s.), 4.1 +/- 2.1 (P < 0.02) CoH per portal tract, respectively. Patients with available clinical follow up, compared to patients with diagnostic early-stage PBC biopsies, showed identical treatment responses to ursodeoxycholic acid, similar rates and types of nonhepatic autoimmune diseases, and/or subsequent development of autoimmune hepatitis overlap syndrome. CONCLUSION: We suggest that CoH loss demonstrated by K19 immunostaining is an early feature in PBC. Clinical findings in the years following biopsy, including response to ursodeoxycholic acid, show identical changes to patients with biopsy confirmed PBC. We suggest that this "minimal change" feature may support a clinical diagnosis of PBC even in the absence of characteristic, granulomatous, duct destructive lesions.
PMID: 22911653
ISSN: 0270-9139
CID: 903662