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2.
JCI Insight ; 6(19)2021 10 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34428178

ABSTRACT

Repetitive mild traumatic brain injuries (mTBI) disrupt CNS barriers, the erosion of which has been linked to long-term neurodegenerative and psychiatric conditions. Although much attention has been devoted to CNS vasculature following mTBI, little is known about the glia limitans superficialis - a barrier of surface-associated astrocytes that helps protect the CNS parenchyma and maintain homeostasis. Here, we identify the glia limitans superficialis as a crucial barrier surface whose breakdown after acute repeat mTBI facilitates increased cell death and recruitment of peripheral myelomonocytic cells. Using intravital microscopy, we show that brain-resident microglia fortify this structure after a single mTBI, yet they fail to do so following secondary injury, which triggers massive recruitment of myelomonocytic cells from the periphery that contribute to further destruction of the glia limitans superficialis but not cortical cell death. We demonstrate, instead, that reactive oxygen species (ROS) generated in response to repetitive head injury are largely responsible for enhanced cortical cell death, and therapeutic administration of the antioxidant glutathione markedly reduces this cell death, preserves the glia limitans, and prevents myelomonocytic cells from entering the brain parenchyma. Collectively, our findings underscore the importance of preserving the glia limitans superficialis after brain injury and offer a therapeutic means to protect this structure and the underlying cortex.


Subject(s)
Astrocytes/metabolism , Brain Injuries, Traumatic/metabolism , Brain/metabolism , Cell Death/physiology , Cerebral Cortex/metabolism , Oxidative Stress/physiology , Animals , Antioxidants/pharmacology , Astrocytes/drug effects , Astrocytes/pathology , Brain/drug effects , Brain/pathology , Brain Injuries, Traumatic/pathology , Cell Death/drug effects , Cerebral Cortex/drug effects , Cerebral Cortex/pathology , Disease Models, Animal , Glutathione/pharmacology , Inflammation/metabolism , Mice , Monocytes/drug effects , Myeloid Cells/drug effects , Neuroglia/drug effects , Neuroglia/metabolism , Oxidative Stress/drug effects , Reactive Oxygen Species/metabolism , Recurrence
3.
Viruses ; 13(7)2021 06 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34209584

ABSTRACT

Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is a universally lethal cancer of the central nervous system. Patients with GBM have a median survival of 14 months and a 5-year survival of less than 5%, a grim statistic that has remained unchanged over the last 50 years. GBM is intransigent for a variety of reasons. The immune system has a difficult time mounting a response against glioblastomas because they reside in the brain (an immunologically dampened compartment) and generate few neoantigens relative to other cancers. Glioblastomas inhabit the brain like sand in the grass and display a high degree of intra- and inter-tumoral heterogeneity, impeding efforts to therapeutically target a single pathway. Of all potential therapeutic strategies to date, virotherapy offers the greatest chance of counteracting each of the obstacles mounted by GBM. Virotherapy can xenogenize a tumor that is deft at behaving like "self", triggering adaptive immune recognition in an otherwise immunologically quiet compartment. Viruses can also directly lyse tumor cells, creating damage and further stimulating secondary immune reactions that are detrimental to tumor growth. In this review, we summarize the basic immune mechanisms underpinning GBM immune evasion and the recent successes achieved using virotherapies.


Subject(s)
Glioblastoma/therapy , Oncolytic Virotherapy/methods , Animals , Clinical Trials as Topic , Female , Humans , Immunotherapy/methods , Male , Mice , Oncolytic Viruses/classification , Oncolytic Viruses/pathogenicity , Tumor Microenvironment
4.
Nat Neurosci ; 24(2): 245-258, 2021 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33462481

ABSTRACT

Cerebrovascular injuries can cause severe edema and inflammation that adversely affect human health. Here, we observed that recanalization after successful endovascular thrombectomy for acute large vessel occlusion was associated with cerebral edema and poor clinical outcomes in patients who experienced hemorrhagic transformation. To understand this process, we developed a cerebrovascular injury model using transcranial ultrasound that enabled spatiotemporal evaluation of resident and peripheral myeloid cells. We discovered that injurious and reparative responses diverged based on time and cellular origin. Resident microglia initially stabilized damaged vessels in a purinergic receptor-dependent manner, which was followed by an influx of myelomonocytic cells that caused severe edema. Prolonged blockade of myeloid cell recruitment with anti-adhesion molecule therapy prevented severe edema but also promoted neuronal destruction and fibrosis by interfering with vascular repair subsequently orchestrated by proinflammatory monocytes and proangiogenic repair-associated microglia (RAM). These data demonstrate how temporally distinct myeloid cell responses can contain, exacerbate and ultimately repair a cerebrovascular injury.


Subject(s)
Brain/immunology , Inflammation/immunology , Ischemic Stroke/immunology , Animals , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Brain/pathology , Disease Models, Animal , Humans , Inflammation/diagnostic imaging , Inflammation/pathology , Ischemic Stroke/diagnostic imaging , Ischemic Stroke/pathology , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Mice , Microglia , Myeloid Cells
5.
Arch Clin Biomed Res ; 4(3): 221-238, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32905473

ABSTRACT

Glioblastoma (GBM) is the most common malignant primary brain tumor in adults and prognosis is poor despite maximum therapeutic efforts. GBM is composed of heterogeneous cell populations, among which the glioma stem-like cells (GSCs) play an important role in tumor cell self-renewal and the ability to initiate and drive tumor growth and recurrence. The transcription factor SOX2 is enriched in GSCs where it controls the stem cell phenotype, invasion and maintenance of tumorigenicity. Therefore, understanding the molecular mechanisms governed by SOX2 in GSCs is crucial to developing targeted therapies against this resistant cell population. In this study, we identified and validated a miRNA profile regulated by SOX2 in GSCs. Among these miRNAs, miR-425-5p emerged as a significant robust candidate for further study. The expression of miR-425-5p was significantly enriched in clinical GBM specimens compared with a human brain reference sample and showed a positive correlation with SOX2 expression. Using a combination of in silico analyses and molecular approaches, we show that SOX2 binds to the promoter of miR-425-5p. Loss of function studies show that repressing miR-425-5p expression in multiple GSCs inhibited neurosphere renewal and induced cell death. More importantly, miR-425-5p inhibition extended survival in an orthotopic GBM mouse model. Finally, combining several bioinformatics platforms with biological endpoints in multiple GSC lines, we identified FOXJ3 and RAB31 as high confidence miR-425-5p target genes. Our findings show that miR-425-5p is a GBM stem cell survival factor and that miR-425-5p inhibition function is a potential strategy for treating GBM.

6.
Cancer Res ; 80(8): 1644-1655, 2020 04 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32094299

ABSTRACT

Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) and other solid malignancies are heterogeneous and contain subpopulations of tumor cells that exhibit stem-like features. Our recent findings point to a dedifferentiation mechanism by which reprogramming transcription factors Oct4 and Sox2 drive the stem-like phenotype in glioblastoma, in part, by differentially regulating subsets of miRNAs. Currently, the molecular mechanisms by which reprogramming transcription factors and miRNAs coordinate cancer stem cell tumor-propagating capacity are unclear. In this study, we identified miR-486-5p as a Sox2-induced miRNA that targets the tumor suppressor genes PTEN and FoxO1 and regulates the GBM stem-like cells. miR-486-5p associated with the GBM stem cell phenotype and Sox2 expression and was directly induced by Sox2 in glioma cell lines and patient-derived neurospheres. Forced expression of miR-486-5p enhanced the self-renewal capacity of GBM neurospheres, and inhibition of endogenous miR-486-5p activated PTEN and FoxO1 and induced cell death by upregulating proapoptotic protein BIM via a PTEN-dependent mechanism. Furthermore, delivery of miR-486-5p antagomirs to preestablished orthotopic GBM neurosphere-derived xenografts using advanced nanoparticle formulations reduced tumor sizes in vivo and enhanced the cytotoxic response to ionizing radiation. These results define a previously unrecognized and therapeutically targetable Sox2:miR-486-5p axis that enhances the survival of GBM stem cells by repressing tumor suppressor pathways. SIGNIFICANCE: This study identifies a novel axis that links core transcriptional drivers of cancer cell stemness to miR-486-5p-dependent modulation of tumor suppressor genes that feeds back to regulate glioma stem cell survival.


Subject(s)
Brain Neoplasms/pathology , Cell Survival , Forkhead Box Protein O1/genetics , Genes, Tumor Suppressor , Glioblastoma/pathology , MicroRNAs/metabolism , Neoplasm Proteins/physiology , PTEN Phosphohydrolase/genetics , SOXB1 Transcription Factors/physiology , Animals , Bcl-2-Like Protein 11/metabolism , Brain Neoplasms/genetics , Brain Neoplasms/metabolism , Brain Neoplasms/radiotherapy , Cell Death , Cell Dedifferentiation/genetics , Cell Line, Tumor , Cellular Reprogramming/physiology , Epigenetic Repression , Female , Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic , Glioblastoma/genetics , Glioblastoma/metabolism , Glioblastoma/radiotherapy , Heterografts , Humans , Mice , Mice, Nude , MicroRNAs/administration & dosage , MicroRNAs/antagonists & inhibitors , MicroRNAs/genetics , Nanoparticles/administration & dosage , Neoplasm Proteins/genetics , Neoplastic Stem Cells/metabolism , Neoplastic Stem Cells/pathology , Neoplastic Stem Cells/radiation effects , Neural Stem Cells , Octamer Transcription Factor-3/metabolism , Radiation Tolerance , Random Allocation , SOXB1 Transcription Factors/genetics , SOXB1 Transcription Factors/metabolism , Transfection/methods , Tumor Burden , Tumor Stem Cell Assay/methods , Up-Regulation
7.
Nano Lett ; 18(7): 4086-4094, 2018 07 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29927251

ABSTRACT

Despite our growing molecular-level understanding of glioblastoma (GBM), treatment modalities remain limited. Recent developments in the mechanisms of cell fate regulation and nanomedicine provide new avenues by which to treat and manage brain tumors via the delivery of molecular therapeutics. Here, we have developed bioreducible poly(ß-amino ester) nanoparticles that demonstrate high intracellular delivery efficacy, low cytotoxicity, escape from endosomes, and promotion of cytosol-targeted environmentally triggered cargo release for miRNA delivery to tumor-propagating human cancer stem cells. In this report, we combined this nanobiotechnology with newly discovered cancer stem cell inhibiting miRNAs to develop self-assembled miRNA-containing polymeric nanoparticles (nano-miRs) to treat gliomas. We show that these nano-miRs effectively intracellularly deliver single and combination miRNA mimics that inhibit the stem cell phenotype of human GBM cells in vitro. Following direct intratumoral infusion, these nano-miRs were found to distribute through the tumors, inhibit the growth of established orthotopic human GBM xenografts, and cooperatively enhance the response to standard-of-care γ radiation. Co-delivery of two miRNAs, miR-148a and miR-296-5p, within the bioreducible nano-miR particles enabled long-term survival from GBM in mice.


Subject(s)
Glioblastoma/drug therapy , MicroRNAs/genetics , Nanoparticles/administration & dosage , Neoplastic Stem Cells/chemistry , Animals , Cell Line, Tumor , Cell Proliferation/drug effects , Cell Survival/drug effects , Glioblastoma/genetics , Glioblastoma/pathology , Humans , Mice , MicroRNAs/administration & dosage , MicroRNAs/chemistry , Nanomedicine/trends , Nanoparticles/chemistry , Polymers/administration & dosage , Polymers/chemistry
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