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result(s) for
"Muzikansky, Alona"
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Increased mitochondrial calcium levels associated with neuronal death in a mouse model of Alzheimer’s disease
2020
Mitochondria contribute to shape intraneuronal Ca
2+
signals. Excessive Ca
2+
taken up by mitochondria could lead to cell death. Amyloid beta (Aβ) causes cytosolic Ca
2+
overload, but the effects of Aβ on mitochondrial Ca
2+
levels in Alzheimer’s disease (AD) remain unclear. Using a ratiometric Ca
2+
indicator targeted to neuronal mitochondria and intravital multiphoton microscopy, we find increased mitochondrial Ca
2+
levels associated with plaque deposition and neuronal death in a transgenic mouse model of cerebral β-amyloidosis. Naturally secreted soluble Aβ applied onto the healthy brain increases Ca
2+
concentration in mitochondria, which is prevented by blockage of the mitochondrial calcium uniporter. RNA-sequencing from post-mortem AD human brains shows downregulation in the expression of mitochondrial influx Ca
2+
transporter genes, but upregulation in the genes related to mitochondrial Ca
2+
efflux pathways, suggesting a counteracting effect to avoid Ca
2+
overload. We propose lowering neuronal mitochondrial Ca
2+
by inhibiting the mitochondrial Ca
2+
uniporter as a novel potential therapeutic target against AD.
Calvo-Rodriguez et al. show elevated calcium levels in neuronal mitochondria in a mouse model of cerebral β-amyloidosis after plaque deposition, which precede rare neuron death events in this model. The mechanism involves toxic extracellular Aβ oligomers and the mitochondrial calcium uniporter.
Journal Article
Temperature induced changes in the optical properties of skin in vivo
by
Yaroslavsky, Anna N.
,
Iorizzo, Tyler W.
,
Salomatina, Elena
in
639/624/1107/527/1820
,
639/624/1111/55
,
Absorption
2021
Knowledge of temperature-induced changes of skin optical properties is required for accurate dosimetry of photothermal treatments. We determined and compared in vivo optical properties of mouse ear skin at different temperatures. The diffuse reflectance, total and diffuse transmittance were measured in the spectral range from 400 to 1650 nm using an integrating sphere spectrometer at the temperatures of 25 °C, 36 °C and 60 °C. Target temperatures were attained and maintained using an automated heater equipped with a sensor for feed-back and control. Temperature and temperature induced morphological changes of skin were monitored using an infrared thermal camera and reflectance confocal microscopy, respectively. An inverse Monte Carlo technique was utilized to determine absorption, scattering, and anisotropy factors from the measured quantities. Our results indicate significant differences between the optical properties of skin at different temperatures. Absorption and scattering coefficients increased, whereas anisotropy factors decreased with increasing temperature. Changes in absorption coefficients indicate deoxygenation of hemoglobin, and a blue shift of water absorption bands. Confocal imaging confirmed that our observations can be explained by temperature induced protein denaturation and blood coagulation. Monitoring spectral responses of treated tissue may become a valuable tool for accurate dosimetry of light treatments.
Journal Article
Fluorescence Polarization of Methylene Blue as a Quantitative Marker of Breast Cancer at the Cellular Level
2019
A quantitative technique to detect cancer in single cells could transform cancer diagnosis. Current cancer diagnosis utilizes histopathology, which requires tissue acquisition, extensive processing and, in most cases, relies on the qualitative morphological analysis of tissues and cells. Molecular biomarkers are only available for a few specific tumor subtypes. We discovered that the fluorescence polarization (Fpol) of Methylene Blue (MB) is significantly higher in cancer than in normal human breast tissues and cells. We confirmed that fluorescence polarization imaging did not affect the viability of the cells and yielded highly significant differences between cancer and normal cells using MB concentrations as low as 0.05 and 0.01 mg/ml. To explain this phenomenon we examined intracellular localization of MB and its fluorescence lifetime. We determined that higher fluorescence polarization of MB occurs due to its increased accumulation in mitochondria of cancer cells, as well as shorter fluorescence lifetime in cancer relative to normal cells. As quantitative MB Fpol imaging can be performed
in vivo
and in real time, it holds the potential to provide an accurate quantitative marker of cancer at the cellular level.
Journal Article
Ang-2/VEGF bispecific antibody reprograms macrophages and resident microglia to anti-tumor phenotype and prolongs glioblastoma survival
by
Amoozgar, Zohreh
,
Krieter, Oliver
,
Munn, Lance L.
in
Animals
,
Antibodies, Bispecific - pharmacology
,
Antibodies, Neoplasm - pharmacology
2016
Inhibition of the vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) pathway has failed to improve overall survival of patients with glioblastoma (GBM). We previously showed that angiopoietin-2 (Ang-2) overexpression compromised the benefit from anti-VEGF therapy in a preclinical GBM model. Here we investigated whether dual Ang-2/VEGF inhibition could overcome resistance to anti-VEGF treatment. We treated mice bearing orthotopic syngeneic (Gl261) GBMs or human (MGG8) GBMxenografts with antibodies inhibiting VEGF (B20), or Ang-2/VEGF (CrossMab, A2V). We examined the effects of treatment on the tumor vasculature, immune cell populations, tumor growth, and survival in both the Gl261 and MGG8 tumor models. We found that in the Gl261 model, which displays a highly abnormal tumor vasculature, A2V decreased vessel density, delayed tumor growth, and prolonged survival compared with B20. In the MGG8 model, which displays a low degree of vessel abnormality, A2V induced no significant changes in the tumor vasculature but still prolonged survival. In both the Gl261 and MGG8 models A2V reprogrammed protumor M2 macrophages toward the antitumor M1 phenotype. Our findings indicate that A2V may prolong survival in mice with GBM by reprogramming the tumor immune microenvironment and delaying tumor growth.
Journal Article
Dual inhibition of Ang-2 and VEGF receptors normalizes tumor vasculature and prolongs survival in glioblastoma by altering macrophages
by
Goveia, Jermaine
,
Farrar, Christian T.
,
Seano, Giorgio
in
Animals
,
Antibodies, Neoplasm - pharmacology
,
Biological Sciences
2016
Glioblastomas (GBMs) rapidly become refractory to anti-VEGF therapies. We previously demonstrated that ectopic overexpression of angiopoietin-2 (Ang-2) compromises the benefits of anti-VEGF receptor (VEGFR) treatment in murine GBM models and that circulating Ang-2 levels in GBM patients rebound after an initial decrease following cediranib (a pan-VEGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitor) administration. Here we tested whether dual inhibition of VEGFR/Ang-2 could improve survival in two orthotopic models of GBM, Gl261 and U87. Dual therapy using cediranib and MEDI3617 (an anti–Ang-2–neutralizing antibody) improved survival over each therapy alone by delaying Gl261 growth and increasing U87 necrosis, effectively reducing viable tumor burden. Consistent with their vascular-modulating function, the dual therapies enhanced morphological normalization of vessels. Dual therapy also led to changes in tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs). Inhibition of TAM recruitment using an anti–colony-stimulating factor-1 antibody compromised the survival benefit of dual therapy. Thus, dual inhibition of VEGFR/Ang-2 prolongs survival in preclinical GBM models by reducing tumor burden, improving normalization, and altering TAMs. This approach may represent a potential therapeutic strategy to overcome the limitations of anti-VEGFR monotherapy in GBM patients by integrating the complementary effects of anti-Ang2 treatment on vessels and immune cells.
Journal Article
Differential Relationships of Reactive Astrocytes and Microglia to Fibrillar Amyloid Deposits in Alzheimer Disease
by
Betensky, Rebecca A.
,
Gómez-Isla, Teresa
,
Growdon, John H.
in
Aged
,
Aged, 80 and over
,
Alzheimer Disease - pathology
2013
ABSTRACTAlthough it is clear that astrocytes and microglia cluster around dense-core amyloid plaques in Alzheimer disease (AD), whether they are primarily attracted to amyloid deposits or are just reacting to plaque-associated neuritic damage remains elusive. We postulate that astrocytes and microglia may differentially respond to fibrillar amyloid β. Therefore, we quantified the size distribution of dense-core thioflavin-S (ThioS)–positive plaques in the temporal neocortex of 40 AD patients and the microglial and astrocyte responses in their vicinity (≤50 μm) and performed correlations between both measures. As expected, both astrocytes and microglia were clearly spatially associated with ThioS-positive plaques (p = 0.0001, ≤50 μm vs >50 μm from their edge), but their relationship to ThioS-positive plaque size differedlarger ThioS-positive plaques were associated with more surrounding activated microglia (p = 0.0026), but this effect was not observed with reactive astrocytes. Microglial response to dense-core plaques seems to be proportional to their size, which we postulate reflects a chemotactic effect of amyloid β. By contrast, plaque-associated astrocytic response does not correlate with plaque size and seems to parallel the behavior of plaque-associated neuritic damage.
Journal Article
An RNA-based signature enables high specificity detection of circulating tumor cells in hepatocellular carcinoma
by
Zhang, Huidan
,
Choz, Melissa
,
Milner, John D.
in
Biological Sciences
,
Biomarkers, Tumor - blood
,
Blood
2017
Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) are shed into the bloodstream by invasive cancers, but the difficulty inherent in identifying these rare cells by microscopy has precluded their routine use in monitoring or screening for cancer. We recently described a high-throughput microfluidic CTC-iChip, which efficiently depletes hematopoietic cells from blood specimens and enriches for CTCs with well-preserved RNA. Application of RNA-based digital PCR to detect CTC-derived signatures may thus enable highly accurate tissue lineage-based cancer detection in blood specimens. As proof of principle, we examined hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), a cancer that is derived from liver cells bearing a unique gene expression profile. After identifying a digital signature of 10 liver-specific transcripts, we used a cross-validated logistic regression model to identify the presence of HCC-derived CTCs in nine of 16 (56%) untreated patients with HCC versus one of 31 (3%) patients with nonmalignant liver disease at risk for developing HCC (P < 0.0001). Positive CTC scores declined in treated patients: Nine of 32 (28%) patients receiving therapy and only one of 15 (7%) patients who had undergone curative-intent ablation, surgery, or liver transplantation were positive. RNA-based digital CTC scoring was not correlated with the standard HCC serum protein marker alpha fetoprotein (P = 0.57). Modeling the sequential use of these two orthogonal markers for liver cancer screening in patients with high-risk cirrhosis generates positive and negative predictive values of 80% and 86%, respectively. Thus, digital RNA quantitation constitutes a sensitive and specific CTC readout, enabling high-throughput clinical applications, such as noninvasive screening for HCC in populations where viral hepatitis and cirrhosis are prevalent.
Journal Article
Real-time monitoring of mitochondrial oxygenation during machine perfusion using resonance Raman spectroscopy predicts organ function
by
Hafiz, Ehab O. A.
,
Jain, Rohil
,
Lopera Higuita, Manuela
in
631/61/32
,
692/308/575
,
692/4020/4021/288
2024
Organ transplantation is a life-saving procedure affecting over 100,000 people on the transplant waitlist. Ischemia reperfusion injury (IRI) is a major challenge in the field as it can cause post-transplantation complications and limit the use of organs from extended criteria donors. Machine perfusion technology has the potential to mitigate IRI; however, it currently fails to achieve its full potential due to a lack of highly sensitive and specific assays to assess organ quality during perfusion. We developed a real-time and non-invasive method of assessing organs during perfusion based on mitochondrial function and injury using resonance Raman spectroscopy. It uses a 441 nm laser and a high-resolution spectrometer to quantify the oxidation state of mitochondrial cytochromes during perfusion. This index of mitochondrial oxidation, or 3RMR, was used to understand differences in mitochondrial recovery of cold ischemic rodent livers during machine perfusion at normothermic temperatures with an acellular versus cellular perfusate. Measurement of the mitochondrial oxidation revealed that there was no difference in 3RMR of fresh livers as a function of normothermic perfusion when comparing acellular versus cellular-based perfusates. However, following 24 h of static cold storage, 3RMR returned to baseline faster with a cellular-based perfusate, yet 3RMR progressively increased during perfusion, indicating injury may develop over time. Thus, this study emphasizes the need for further refinement of a reoxygenation strategy during normothermic machine perfusion that considers cold ischemia durations, gradual recovery/rewarming, and risk of hemolysis.
Journal Article
NKG2D upregulation sensitizes tumors to combined anti-PD1 and anti-VEGF therapy and prevents hearing loss
2026
NF2
-related schwannomatosis (
NF2
-SWN) is a debilitating condition, characterized by bilateral vestibular schwannomas (VSs) that progressively cause irreversible sensorineural hearing loss. Current management relies on surgery or radiotherapy, while bevacizumab (αVEGF) is used off-label, with variable and often transient efficacy. Effective therapies that durably suppress tumor growth and preserve hearing are urgently needed. Although immune checkpoint inhibitors have transformed cancer treatment, their efficacy in non-malignant tumors such as VS remains unclear. Here, we evaluate combined anti-PD1 (αPD1) and αVEGF therapy in two syngeneic, immune-competent VS models. Combination treatment significantly outperforms either monotherapy, inhibiting tumor growth and preventing hearing loss. Mechanistically, αVEGF enhances αPD1 efficacy by normalizing tumor vasculature, improving drug delivery and immune cell infiltration, and promoting cytotoxicity of T and NK cells via NKG2D upregulation. Combined treatment effectively controls tumor growth that progresses despite anti-VEGF therapy. These findings support αPD1 and αVEGF combination therapy as a promising strategy for
NF2
-SWN.
Vestibular schwannomas that are caused by genetic mutations in the
NF2
gene are hard to treat and lead to hearing loss. Here authors show in a mouse model that faithfully represents the human condition that combination therapy with anti-PD-1 and anti-VEGF inhibits tumor growth via normalizing the tumor vasculature and enhances T and NK cell antitumor cytotoxicity via upregulation of NKG2D.
Journal Article
Cell release during perfusion reflects cold ischemic injury in rat livers
2020
The global shortage of donor organs has made it crucial to deeply understand and better predict donor liver viability. However, biomarkers that effectively assess viability of marginal grafts for organ transplantation are currently lacking. Here, we showed that hepatocytes, sinusoidal endothelial, stellate, and liver-specific immune cells were released into perfusates from Lewis rat livers as a result of cold ischemia and machine perfusion. Perfusate comparison analysis of fresh livers and cold ischemic livers showed that the released cell profiles were significantly altered by the duration of cold ischemia. Our findings show for the first time that parenchymal cells are released from organs under non-proliferative pathological conditions, correlating with the degree of ischemic injury. Thus, perfusate cell profiles could serve as potential biomarkers of graft viability and indicators of specific injury mechanisms during organ handling and transplantation. Further, parenchymal cell release may have applications in other pathological conditions beyond organ transplantation.
Journal Article