Catalogue Search | MBRL
Search Results Heading
Explore the vast range of titles available.
MBRLSearchResults
-
DisciplineDiscipline
-
Is Peer ReviewedIs Peer Reviewed
-
Item TypeItem Type
-
SubjectSubject
-
YearFrom:-To:
-
More FiltersMore FiltersSourceLanguage
Done
Filters
Reset
935
result(s) for
"Forkhead Box Protein O1 - genetics"
Sort by:
Addition of temsirolimus to chemotherapy in children, adolescents, and young adults with intermediate-risk rhabdomyosarcoma (ARST1431): a randomised, open-label, phase 3 trial from the Children's Oncology Group
2024
The Children's Oncology Group defines intermediate-risk rhabdomyosarcoma as unresected FOXO1 fusion-negative disease arising at an unfavourable site or non-metastatic FOXO1 fusion-positive disease. Temsirolimus in combination with chemotherapy has shown promising activity in patients with relapsed or refractory rhabdomyosarcoma. We aimed to compare event-free survival in patients with intermediate-risk rhabdomyosarcoma treated with vincristine, actinomycin, and cyclophosphamide alternating with vincristine and irinotecan (VAC/VI) combined with temsirolimus followed by maintenance therapy versus VAC/VI alone with maintenance therapy.
ARST1431 was a randomised, open-label, phase 3 trial conducted across 210 institutions in Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and the USA. Eligible patients were those aged 40 years or younger with non-metastatic FOXO1-positive rhabdomyosarcoma or unresected FOXO1-negative rhabdomyosarcoma disease from unfavourable sites. Two other groups of patients were also eligible: those who had FOXO1-negative disease at a favourable site (excluding orbit) that was unresected; and those who were aged younger than 10 years with stage IV FOXO1-negative disease with distant metastases. Eligible patients had to have a Lansky performance status score of 50 or higher if 16 years or younger and a Karnofsky performance status score of 50 or higher if older than 16 years; all patients were previously untreated. Patients were randomised (1:1) in blocks of four and stratified by histology, stage, and group. Patients received intravenous VAC/VI chemotherapy with a cyclophosphamide dose of 1·2 g/m2 per dose per cycle with or without a reducing dose of intravenous weekly temsirolimus starting at 15 mg/m2 or 0·5 mg/kg per dose for those who weighed less than 10 kg. The total duration of therapy was 42 weeks followed by 6 months of maintenance therapy with oral cyclophosphamide plus intravenous vinorelbine for all patients. Temsirolimus was withheld during radiotherapy and for 2 weeks before any major surgical procedure. The primary endpoint was 3-year event-free survival. Data were analysed with a revised intention-to-treat approach. The study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT02567435) and is complete.
Between May 23, 2016, and Jan 1, 2022, 325 patients were enrolled. In 297 evaluable patients (148 assigned to VAC/VI alone and 149 assigned to VAC/VI with temsirolimus), the median age was 6·3 years (IQR 3·0–11·3); 33 (11%) patients were aged 18 years or older; 179 (60%) of 297 were male. 113 (77%) of 148 patients were FOXO1 negative in the VAC/VI group, and 108 (73%) of 149 were FOXO1 negative in the VAC/VI with temsirolimus group. With a median follow-up of 3·6 years (IQR 2·8–4·5), 3-year event-free survival did not differ significantly between the two groups (64·8% [95% CI 55·5–74·1] in the VAC/VI group vs 66·8% [57·5–76·2] in the VAC/VI plus temsirolimus group (hazard ratio 0·86 [95% CI 0·58–1·26]; log-rank p=0·44). The most common grade 3–4 adverse events were anaemia (62 events in 60 [41%] of 148 patients in the VAC/VI group vs 89 events in 87 [58%] of 149 patients in the VAC/VI with temsirolimus group), lymphopenia (83 events in 65 [44%] vs 99 events in 71 [48%]), neutropenia (160 events in 99 [67%] vs 164 events in 105 [70%]), and leukopenia (121 events in 86 [58%] vs 132 events in 93 [62%]). There was one treatment-related death in the VAC/VI with temsirolimus group, categorised as not otherwise specified.
Addition of temsirolimus to VAC/VI did not improve event-free survival in patients with intermediate-risk rhabdomyosarcoma defined by their FOXO1 translocation status and clinical factors. Novel biology-based strategies are needed to improve outcomes in this population.
The Children's Oncology Group (supported by the US National Cancer Institute, US National Institutes of Health).
Journal Article
The Immunomodulatory Effects of Curcumin on Forkhead Box O1 and MicroRNA-873 in Patients with Osteoarthritis
by
Mohammadi, Mojgan
,
Noori, Elmira
,
Afshari, Jalil Tavakol
in
Clinical trials
,
Curcumin
,
Forkhead protein
2024
Osteoarthritis (OA) is among the most prevalent articular disorders, whose incidence is directly related to aging. Due to the antiinflammatory potential of curcumin as the active component of turmeric, the present study evaluated the effects of curcumin on the expression of genes related to T helper 17 (Th17), including forkhead box p3 (FOXP3), forkhead box o1 (FOXO1), transforming growth factor-β (TGFB1) and microRNA-873, human (HSA-MIR-873), in OA patients. Female patients with knee OA (n=30) were randomly categorized into 2 groups, including the intervention group who received curcumin (n=15) and the placebo (n=15) in a double-blind clinical trial for 3 months. The expression of FOXO1, FOXP3, TGFB1, and HSA-MIR-873 genes was evaluated by SYBR Green real-time reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction. In the curcumin group, FOXO1 gene expression was significantly increased, while the increase in FOXP3 gene expression was not significant. Moreover, the expression level of the HSA-MIR-873 gene showed a significant increase in the curcumin group. The modulatory effects of curcumin on Th17 function might be associated with the expression of FOXO1 and HSA-MIR-873 genes.
Journal Article
PI3K‐AKT‐FOXO1 pathway targeted by skeletal muscle microRNA to suppress proteolytic gene expression in response to carbohydrate intake during aerobic exercise
by
Young, Andrew J.
,
Pasiakos, Stefan M.
,
Murphy, Nancy E.
in
Dietary Carbohydrates - administration & dosage
,
Dietary Carbohydrates - pharmacology
,
Dietary Proteins - administration & dosage
2018
Ingesting protein and carbohydrate together during aerobic exercise suppresses the expression of specific skeletal muscle microRNA and promotes muscle hypertrophy. Determining whether there are independent effects of carbohydrate and protein on microRNA will allow for a clearer understanding of the mechanistic role microRNA serve in regulating skeletal muscle protein synthetic and proteolytic responses to nutrition and exercise. This study determined skeletal muscle microRNA responses to aerobic exercise with or without carbohydrate, and recovery whey protein (WP). Seventeen males were randomized to consume carbohydrate (CHO; 145 g; n = 9) or non‐nutritive control (CON; n = 8) beverages during exercise. Muscle was collected before (BASE) and after 80 min of steady‐state exercise (1.7 ± 0.3 V̇O2 L·min−1) followed by a 2‐mile time trial (17.9 ± 3.5 min; POST), and 3‐h into recovery after consuming WP (25 g; REC). RT‐qPCR was used to determine microRNA and mRNA expression. Bioinformatics analysis was conducted using the mirPath software. Western blotting was used to assess protein signaling. The expression of six microRNA (miR‐19b‐3p, miR‐99a‐5p, miR‐100‐5p, miR‐222‐3p, miR‐324‐3p, and miR‐486‐5p) were higher (P < 0.05) in CHO compared to CON, all of which target the PI3K‐AKT, ubiquitin proteasome, FOXO, and mTORC1 pathways. p‐AKTThr473 and p‐FOXO1Thr24 were higher (P < 0.05) in POST CHO compared to CON. The expression of PTEN was lower (P < 0.05) in REC CHO than CON, while MURF1 was lower (P < 0.05) POST CHO than CON. These findings suggest the mechanism by which microRNA facilitate skeletal muscle adaptations in response to exercise with carbohydrate and protein feeding is by inhibiting markers of proteolysis. The main outcome of this study was that miR‐19b‐3p, miR‐99a‐5p, miR‐100‐5p, miR‐222‐3p, miR‐324‐3p, and miR‐486‐5p were more highly expressed in skeletal muscle following aerobic exercise in CHO compared to CON. Bioinformatics analysis determined that all six of these miRNA target the PI3K‐AKT pathway, ubiquitin proteasome, FOXO, and mTOR signaling pathways. The examination of these pathways identified group differences in markers of proteolysis, but not anabolism.
Journal Article
FoxO maintains a genuine muscle stem-cell quiescent state until geriatric age
2020
Tissue regeneration declines with ageing but little is known about whether this arises from changes in stem-cell heterogeneity. Here, in homeostatic skeletal muscle, we identify two quiescent stem-cell states distinguished by relative CD34 expression: CD34High, with stemness properties (genuine state), and CD34Low, committed to myogenic differentiation (primed state). The genuine-quiescent state is unexpectedly preserved into later life, succumbing only in extreme old age due to the acquisition of primed-state traits. Niche-derived IGF1-dependent Akt activation debilitates the genuine stem-cell state by imposing primed-state features via FoxO inhibition. Interventions to neutralize Akt and promote FoxO activity drive a primed-to-genuine state conversion, whereas FoxO inactivation deteriorates the genuine state at a young age, causing regenerative failure of muscle, as occurs in geriatric mice. These findings reveal transcriptional determinants of stem-cell heterogeneity that resist ageing more than previously anticipated and are only lost in extreme old age, with implications for the repair of geriatric muscle.García-Prat, Perdiguero, Alonso-Martín et al. show that skeletal muscle contains a subpopulation of quiescent stem cells, maintained by FoxO signalling, that is preserved into late life but declines in advanced geriatric age.
Journal Article
FOXO1 and FOXO3 transcription factors have unique functions in meniscus development and homeostasis during aging and osteoarthritis
2020
The objective of this study was to examine FoxO expression and FoxO function in meniscus. In menisci from human knee joints with osteoarthritis (OA), FoxO1 and 3 expression were significantly reduced compared with normal menisci from young and old normal donors. The expression of FoxO1 and 3 was also significantly reduced in mouse menisci during aging and OA induced by surgical meniscus destabilization or mechanical overuse. Deletion of FoxO1 and combined FoxO1, 3, and 4 deletions induced abnormal postnatal meniscus development in mice and these mutant mice spontaneously displayed meniscus pathology at 6 mo. Mice with Col2Cre-mediated deletion of FoxO3 or FoxO4 had normal meniscus development but had more severe aging-related damage. In mature AcanCreERT2 mice, the deletion of FoxO1, 3, and 4 aggravated meniscus lesions in all experimental OA models. FoxO deletion suppressed autophagy and antioxidant defense genes and altered several meniscus-specific genes. Expression of these genes was modulated by adenoviral FoxO1 in cultured human meniscus cells. These results suggest that FoxO1 plays a key role in meniscus development and maturation, and both FoxO1 and 3 support homeostasis and protect against meniscus damage in response to mechanical overuse and during aging and OA.
Journal Article
Sestrin prevents atrophy of disused and aging muscles by integrating anabolic and catabolic signals
2020
A unique property of skeletal muscle is its ability to adapt its mass to changes in activity. Inactivity, as in disuse or aging, causes atrophy, the loss of muscle mass and strength, leading to physical incapacity and poor quality of life. Here, through a combination of transcriptomics and transgenesis, we identify sestrins, a family of stress-inducible metabolic regulators, as protective factors against muscle wasting. Sestrin expression decreases during inactivity and its genetic deficiency exacerbates muscle wasting; conversely, sestrin overexpression suffices to prevent atrophy. This protection occurs through mTORC1 inhibition, which upregulates autophagy, and AKT activation, which in turn inhibits FoxO-regulated ubiquitin–proteasome-mediated proteolysis. This study reveals sestrin as a central integrator of anabolic and degradative pathways preventing muscle wasting. Since sestrin also protected muscles against aging-induced atrophy, our findings have implications for sarcopenia.
Ageing is associated with muscle atrophy, which negatively impacts quality of life. Here the authors show that expression of sestrins decreases during inactivity and that their overexpression prevents atrophy in mice via modulation of autophagy and protein degradation.
Journal Article
FOXO1 regulates uterine epithelial integrity and progesterone receptor expression critical for embryo implantation
by
Vasquez, Yasmin M.
,
Lessey, Bruce A.
,
DeMayo, Francesco J.
in
Ablation (Surgery)
,
Abortion
,
Animal sciences
2018
Successful embryo implantation requires a receptive endometrium. Poor uterine receptivity can account for implantation failure in women who experience recurrent pregnancy loss or multiple rounds of unsuccessful in vitro fertilization cycles. Here, we demonstrate that the transcription factor Forkhead Box O1 (FOXO1) is a critical regulator of endometrial receptivity in vivo. Uterine ablation of Foxo1 using the progesterone receptor Cre (PgrCre) mouse model resulted in infertility due to altered epithelial cell polarity and apoptosis, preventing the embryo from penetrating the luminal epithelium. Analysis of the uterine transcriptome after Foxo1 ablation identified alterations in gene expression for transcripts involved in the activation of cell invasion, molecular transport, apoptosis, β-catenin (CTNNB1) signaling pathway, and an increase in PGR signaling. The increase of PGR signaling was due to PGR expression being retained in the uterine epithelium during the window of receptivity. Constitutive expression of epithelial PGR during this receptive period inhibited expression of FOXO1 in the nucleus of the uterine epithelium. The reciprocal expression of PGR and FOXO1 was conserved in human endometrial samples during the proliferative and secretory phase. This demonstrates that expression of FOXO1 and the loss of PGR during the window of receptivity are interrelated and critical for embryo implantation.
Journal Article
CircMRPS35 suppresses gastric cancer progression via recruiting KAT7 to govern histone modification
2020
Background
Aberrant expression of circular RNAs contributes to the initiation and progression of cancers, but the underlying mechanism remains elusive.
Methods
RNA-seq and qRT-PCR were performed to screen differential expressed circRNAs between gastric cancer tissues and adjacent normal tissues. Candidate circRNA (circMRPS35) was screened out and validated by qRT-PCR. Cell proliferation and invasion ability were determined by CCK-8 and cell invasion assays. RNA-seq, GO-pathway, RNA pull-down and ChIRP were further applied to search for detailed mechanism.
Results
Here, a novel circRNA named circMRPS35, was screened out by RNA-seq in gastric cancer tissues, whose expression is related to clinicopathological characteristics and prognosis in gastric cancer patients. Biologically, circMRPS35 suppresses the proliferation and invasion of gastric cancer cells in vitro and in vivo. Mechanistically, circMRPS35 acts as a modular scaffold to recruit histone acetyltransferase KAT7 to the promoters of FOXO1 and FOXO3a genes, which elicits acetylation of H4K5 in their promoters. Particularly, circMRPS35 specifically binds to FOXO1/3a promoter regions directly. Thus, it dramatically activates the transcription of FOXO1/3a and triggers subsequent response of their downstream target genes expression, including p21, p27, Twist1 and E-cadherin, resulting in the inhibition of cell proliferation and invasion. Moreover, circMRPS35 expression positively correlates with that of FOXO1/3a in gastric cancer tissues.
Conclusions
Our findings not only reveal the pivotal roles of circMRPS35 in governing histone modification in anticancer treatment, but also advocate for triggering circMRPS35/KAT7/FOXO1/3a pathway to combat gastric cancer.
Journal Article
FOXO1 enhances CAR T cell stemness, metabolic fitness and efficacy
2024
Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapy has transformed the treatment of haematological malignancies such as acute lymphoblastic leukaemia, B cell lymphoma and multiple myeloma
1
–
4
, but the efficacy of CAR T cell therapy in solid tumours has been limited
5
. This is owing to a number of factors, including the immunosuppressive tumour microenvironment that gives rise to poorly persisting and metabolically dysfunctional T cells. Analysis of anti-CD19 CAR T cells used clinically has shown that positive treatment outcomes are associated with a more ‘stem-like’ phenotype and increased mitochondrial mass
6
–
8
. We therefore sought to identify transcription factors that could enhance CAR T cell fitness and efficacy against solid tumours. Here we show that overexpression of FOXO1 promotes a stem-like phenotype in CAR T cells derived from either healthy human donors or patients, which correlates with improved mitochondrial fitness, persistence and therapeutic efficacy in vivo. This work thus reveals an engineering approach to genetically enforce a favourable metabolic phenotype that has high translational potential to improve the efficacy of CAR T cells against solid tumours.
Increased effectiveness of anti-cancer chimeric antigen receptor T cell therapy is associated with a stem-like phenotype through increased expression of FOXO1.
Journal Article
Delivery of muscle-derived exosomal miRNAs induced by HIIT improves insulin sensitivity through down-regulation of hepatic FoxO1 in mice
by
Mirasierra, Mercedes
,
Castaño, Carlos
,
Novials, Anna
in
Animals
,
Applied Biological Sciences
,
Biological Sciences
2020
Implementation of regular physical activity helps in the maintenance of a healthy metabolic profile both in humans and mice through molecular mechanisms not yet completely defined. Here, we show that high-intensity interval training (HIIT) modifies the microRNA (miRNA) profile of circulating exosomes in mice, including significant increases in miR-133a and miR-133b. Importantly, treatment of sedentary mice with exosomes isolated from the plasma of trained mice improves glucose tolerance, insulin sensitivity, and decreases plasma levels of triglycerides. Moreover, exosomes isolated from the muscle of trained mice display similar changes in miRNA content, and their administration to sedentary mice reproduces the improvement of glucose tolerance. Exosomal miRNAs up-regulated by HIIT target insulin-regulated transcription factor forkhead box O1 (FoxO1) and, accordingly, expression of FoxO1 is decreased in the liver of trained and exosome-treated mice. Treatment with exosomes transfected with a miR-133b mimic or with a specific siRNA targeting FoxO1 recapitulates the metabolic effects observed in trained mice. Overall, our data suggest that circulating exosomes released by the muscle carry a specific miRNA signature that is modified by exercise and induce expression changes in the liver that impact whole-body metabolic profile.
Journal Article