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Dive into the research topics where Alan Bilsland is active.

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Featured researches published by Alan Bilsland.


Seminars in Cancer Biology | 2015

Broad targeting of angiogenesis for cancer prevention and therapy

Zongwei Wang; Charlotta Dabrosin; Xin Yin; Mark M. Fuster; Alexandra Arreola; W.Kimryn Rathmell; Daniele Generali; Ganji Purnachandra Nagaraju; Bassel F. El-Rayes; Domenico Ribatti; Yi Charlie Chen; Kanya Honoki; Hiromasa Fujii; Alexandros G. Georgakilas; Somaira Nowsheen; Amedeo Amedei; Elena Niccolai; Amr Amin; S. Salman Ashraf; Bill Helferich; Xujuan Yang; Gunjan Guha; Dipita Bhakta; Maria Rosa Ciriolo; Katia Aquilano; Sophie Chen; Dorota Halicka; Sulma I. Mohammed; Asfar S. Azmi; Alan Bilsland

Deregulation of angiogenesis – the growth of new blood vessels from an existing vasculature – is a main driving force in many severe human diseases including cancer. As such, tumor angiogenesis is important for delivering oxygen and nutrients to growing tumors, and therefore considered an essential pathologic feature of cancer, while also playing a key role in enabling other aspects of tumor pathology such as metabolic deregulation and tumor dissemination/metastasis. Recently, inhibition of tumor angiogenesis has become a clinical anti-cancer strategy in line with chemotherapy, radiotherapy and surgery, which underscore the critical importance of the angiogenic switch during early tumor development. Unfortunately the clinically approved anti-angiogenic drugs in use today are only effective in a subset of the patients, and many who initially respond develop resistance over time. Also, some of the anti-angiogenic drugs are toxic and it would be of great importance to identify alternative compounds, which could overcome these drawbacks and limitations of the currently available therapy. Finding “the most important target” may, however, prove a very challenging approach as the tumor environment is highly diverse, consisting of many different cell types, all of which may contribute to tumor angiogenesis. Furthermore, the tumor cells themselves are genetically unstable, leading to a progressive increase in the number of different angiogenic factors produced as the cancer progresses to advanced stages. As an alternative approach to targeted therapy, options to broadly interfere with angiogenic signals by a mixture of non-toxic natural compound with pleiotropic actions were viewed by this team as an opportunity to develop a complementary anti-angiogenesis treatment option. As a part of the “Halifax Project” within the “Getting to know cancer” framework, we have here, based on a thorough review of the literature, identified 10 important aspects of tumor angiogenesis and the pathological tumor vasculature which would be well suited as targets for anti-angiogenic therapy: (1) endothelial cell migration/tip cell formation, (2) structural abnormalities of tumor vessels, (3) hypoxia, (4) lymphangiogenesis, (5) elevated interstitial fluid pressure, (6) poor perfusion, (7) disrupted circadian rhythms, (8) tumor promoting inflammation, (9) tumor promoting fibroblasts and (10) tumor cell metabolism/acidosis. Following this analysis, we scrutinized the available literature on broadly acting anti-angiogenic natural products, with a focus on finding qualitative information on phytochemicals which could inhibit these targets and came up with 10 prototypical phytochemical compounds: (1) oleanolic acid, (2) tripterine, (3) silibinin, (4) curcumin, (5) epigallocatechin-gallate, (6) kaempferol, (7) melatonin, (8) enterolactone, (9) withaferin A and (10) resveratrol. We suggest that these plant-derived compounds could be combined to constitute a broader acting and more effective inhibitory cocktail at doses that would not be likely to cause excessive toxicity. All the targets and phytochemical approaches were further cross-validated against their effects on other essential tumorigenic pathways (based on the “hallmarks” of cancer) in order to discover possible synergies or potentially harmful interactions, and were found to generally also have positive involvement in/effects on these other aspects of tumor biology. The aim is that this discussion could lead to the selection of combinations of such anti-angiogenic compounds which could be used in potent anti-tumor cocktails, for enhanced therapeutic efficacy, reduced toxicity and circumvention of single-agent anti-angiogenic resistance, as well as for possible use in primary or secondary cancer prevention strategies.


Cancer Research | 2005

Synthetic Anticancer Gene Medicine Exploits Intrinsic Antitumor Activity of Cationic Vector to Cure Established Tumors

Christine Dufès; W. Nicol Keith; Alan Bilsland; Irina Proutski; Ijeoma F. Uchegbu; Andreas G. Schätzlein

The systemic delivery of genetic therapies required for the treatment of inaccessible tumors and metastases remains a challenge despite the development of various viral and synthetic vector systems. Here we show that a synthetic vector system based on polypropylenimine dendrimers has the desired properties of a systemic delivery vehicle and mediates efficient transgene expression in tumors after i.v. administration. The systemic tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFalpha) gene therapy was efficacious in the experimental treatment of established A431 epidermoid carcinoma, C33a cervix carcinoma, and LS174T colorectal adenocarcinoma. Specifically, the systemic injection of dendrimer nanoparticles containing a TNFalpha expression plasmid regulated by telomerase gene promoters (hTR and hTERT) leads to transgene expression, regression of remote xenograft murine tumors, and long-term survival of up to 100% of the animals. Interestingly, these dendrimers and, to a lesser extent, other common polymeric transfection agents also exhibit plasmid-independent antitumor activity, ranging from pronounced growth retardation to complete tumor regression. The genetic therapy as well as treatment with dendrimer alone was well tolerated with no apparent signs of toxicity in the animals. The combination of intrinsic dendrimer activity and transcriptionally targeted TNFalpha when complexed was significantly more potent than either treatment alone or when both were administered in sequence. The combination of pharmacologically active synthetic transfection agent and transcriptionally targeted antitumor gene creates an efficacious gene medicine for the systemic treatment of experimental solid tumors.


Seminars in Cancer Biology | 2015

Broad targeting of resistance to apoptosis in cancer

Ramzi M. Mohammad; Irfana Muqbil; Leroy Lowe; Clement Yedjou; Hsue Yin Hsu; Liang Tzung Lin; Markus D. Siegelin; Carmela Fimognari; Nagi B. Kumar; Q. Ping Dou; Huanjie Yang; Abbas K. Samadi; Gian Luigi Russo; Carmela Spagnuolo; Swapan K. Ray; Mrinmay Chakrabarti; James D. Morre; Helen M. Coley; Kanya Honoki; Hiromasa Fujii; Alexandros G. Georgakilas; Amedeo Amedei; Elena Niccolai; Amr Amin; S. Salman Ashraf; William G. Helferich; Xujuan Yang; Chandra S. Boosani; Gunjan Guha; Dipita Bhakta

Apoptosis or programmed cell death is natural way of removing aged cells from the body. Most of the anti-cancer therapies trigger apoptosis induction and related cell death networks to eliminate malignant cells. However, in cancer, de-regulated apoptotic signaling, particularly the activation of an anti-apoptotic systems, allows cancer cells to escape this program leading to uncontrolled proliferation resulting in tumor survival, therapeutic resistance and recurrence of cancer. This resistance is a complicated phenomenon that emanates from the interactions of various molecules and signaling pathways. In this comprehensive review we discuss the various factors contributing to apoptosis resistance in cancers. The key resistance targets that are discussed include (1) Bcl-2 and Mcl-1 proteins; (2) autophagy processes; (3) necrosis and necroptosis; (4) heat shock protein signaling; (5) the proteasome pathway; (6) epigenetic mechanisms; and (7) aberrant nuclear export signaling. The shortcomings of current therapeutic modalities are highlighted and a broad spectrum strategy using approaches including (a) gossypol; (b) epigallocatechin-3-gallate; (c) UMI-77 (d) triptolide and (e) selinexor that can be used to overcome cell death resistance is presented. This review provides a roadmap for the design of successful anti-cancer strategies that overcome resistance to apoptosis for better therapeutic outcome in patients with cancer.


Seminars in Cancer Biology | 2015

Tissue invasion and metastasis: Molecular, biological and clinical perspectives

Wen Guo Jiang; Andrew James Sanders; M. Katoh; Hendrik Ungefroren; Frank Gieseler; Mark E. Prince; Sarah K. Thompson; Massimo Zollo; D. Spano; Punita Dhawan; Daniel Sliva; Pochi R. Subbarayan; Malancha Sarkar; Kanya Honoki; Hiromasa Fujii; Alexandros G. Georgakilas; Amedeo Amedei; Elena Niccolai; Amr Amin; S. Salman Ashraf; Lin Ye; William G. Helferich; Xujuan Yang; Chandra S. Boosani; Gunjan Guha; Maria Rosa Ciriolo; Katia Aquilano; Sophie Chen; Asfar S. Azmi; W. N. Keith

Cancer is a key health issue across the world, causing substantial patient morbidity and mortality. Patient prognosis is tightly linked with metastatic dissemination of the disease to distant sites, with metastatic diseases accounting for a vast percentage of cancer patient mortality. While advances in this area have been made, the process of cancer metastasis and the factors governing cancer spread and establishment at secondary locations is still poorly understood. The current article summarizes recent progress in this area of research, both in the understanding of the underlying biological processes and in the therapeutic strategies for the management of metastasis. This review lists the disruption of E-cadherin and tight junctions, key signaling pathways, including urokinase type plasminogen activator (uPA), phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/v-akt murine thymoma viral oncogene (PI3K/AKT), focal adhesion kinase (FAK), β-catenin/zinc finger E-box binding homeobox 1 (ZEB-1) and transforming growth factor beta (TGF-β), together with inactivation of activator protein-1 (AP-1) and suppression of matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9) activity as key targets and the use of phytochemicals, or natural products, such as those from Agaricus blazei, Albatrellus confluens, Cordyceps militaris, Ganoderma lucidum, Poria cocos and Silybum marianum, together with diet derived fatty acids gamma linolenic acid (GLA) and eicosapentanoic acid (EPA) and inhibitory compounds as useful approaches to target tissue invasion and metastasis as well as other hallmark areas of cancer. Together, these strategies could represent new, inexpensive, low toxicity strategies to aid in the management of cancer metastasis as well as having holistic effects against other cancer hallmarks.


Oncogene | 2001

Telomerase-specific suicide gene therapy vectors expressing bacterial nitroreductase sensitize human cancer cells to the pro-drug CB1954.

Jane A. Plumb; Alan Bilsland; R. Kakani; Jiangqin Zhao; Rosalind Glasspool; R.J. Knox; T.R.J. Evans; Keith Wn

Telomerase activation is considered to be a critical step in cancer progression due to its role in cellular immortalization. The prevalence of telomerase expression in human cancers makes it an attractive candidate for new mechanism-based targets for cancer therapy. The selective killing of cancer cells can be achieved by gene-directed enzyme pro-drug therapy (GDEPT). In this study we have tested the feasibility of using the transcriptional regulatory sequences from the hTERT and hTR genes to regulate expression of the bacterial nitroreductase enzyme in combination with the pro-drug CB1954 in a suicide gene therapy strategy. hTERT and hTR promoter activity was compared in a panel of 10 cell lines and showed a wide distribution in activity; low activity was observed in normal cells and telomerase-negative immortal ALT cell lines, with up to 300-fold higher activity observed in telomerase positive cancer lines. Placing the nitroreductase gene under the control of the telomerase gene promoters sensitized cancer cells in tissue culture to the pro-drug CB1954 and promoter activity was predictive of sensitization to the pro-drug (2–20-fold sensitization), with cell death restricted to lines exhibiting high levels of promoter activity. The in vivo relevance of these data was tested using two xenograft models (C33a and GLC4 cells). Significant tumour reduction was seen with both telomerase promoters and the promoter-specific patterns of sensitization observed in tissue culture were retained in xenograft models. Thus, telomerase-specific suicide gene therapy vectors expressing bacterial nitroreductase sensitize human cancer cells to the pro-drug CB1954.


Oncogene | 2006

Hypoxic regulation of telomerase gene expression by transcriptional and post-transcriptional mechanisms

C.J. Anderson; Stacey F. Hoare; M Ashcroft; Alan Bilsland; Keith Wn

Basal telomerase activity is dependent on expression of the hTERT and hTR genes and upregulation of telomerase gene expression is associated with tumour development. It is therefore possible that signal transduction pathways involved in tumour development and features of the tumour environment itself may influence telomerase gene regulation. The majority of solid tumours contain regions of hypoxia and it has recently been demonstrated that hypoxia can increase telomerase activity by mechanisms that are still poorly defined. Here, we show that hypoxia induces the transcriptional activity of both hTR and hTERT gene promoters. While endogenous hTR expression is regulated at the transcriptional level, hTERT is subject to regulation by alternative splicing under hypoxic conditions, which involves a switch in the splice pattern in favour of the active variant. Furthermore, analysis of the chromatin landscape of the telomerase promoters reveals dynamic recruitment of a transcriptional complex involving the hypoxia-inducible factor-1 transcription factor, p300, RNA polymerase II and TFIIB, to both promoters during hypoxia, which traffics along and remains associated with the hTERT gene as transcription proceeds. These studies show that hTERT and hTR are subject to similar controls under hypoxia and highlight the rapid and dynamic regulation of the telomerase genes in vivo.


Seminars in Cancer Biology | 2015

Genomic instability in human cancer: Molecular insights and opportunities for therapeutic attack and prevention through diet and nutrition

Lynnette R. Ferguson; Helen Chen; Andrew R. Collins; Marisa Connell; Giovanna Damia; Santanu Dasgupta; Meenakshi Malhotra; Alan K. Meeker; Amedeo Amedei; Amr Amin; S. Salman Ashraf; Katia Aquilano; Asfar S. Azmi; Dipita Bhakta; Alan Bilsland; Chandra S. Boosani; Sophie Chen; Maria Rosa Ciriolo; Hiromasa Fujii; Gunjan Guha; Dorota Halicka; William G. Helferich; W. Nicol Keith; Sulma I. Mohammed; Elena Niccolai; Xujuan Yang; Kanya Honoki; Virginia R. Parslow; Satya Prakash; Sarallah Rezazadeh

Genomic instability can initiate cancer, augment progression, and influence the overall prognosis of the affected patient. Genomic instability arises from many different pathways, such as telomere damage, centrosome amplification, epigenetic modifications, and DNA damage from endogenous and exogenous sources, and can be perpetuating, or limiting, through the induction of mutations or aneuploidy, both enabling and catastrophic. Many cancer treatments induce DNA damage to impair cell division on a global scale but it is accepted that personalized treatments, those that are tailored to the particular patient and type of cancer, must also be developed. In this review, we detail the mechanisms from which genomic instability arises and can lead to cancer, as well as treatments and measures that prevent genomic instability or take advantage of the cellular defects caused by genomic instability. In particular, we identify and discuss five priority targets against genomic instability: (1) prevention of DNA damage; (2) enhancement of DNA repair; (3) targeting deficient DNA repair; (4) impairing centrosome clustering; and, (5) inhibition of telomerase activity. Moreover, we highlight vitamin D and B, selenium, carotenoids, PARP inhibitors, resveratrol, and isothiocyanates as priority approaches against genomic instability. The prioritized target sites and approaches were cross validated to identify potential synergistic effects on a number of important areas of cancer biology.


Oncogene | 2003

Selective ablation of human cancer cells by telomerase-specific adenoviral suicide gene therapy vectors expressing bacterial nitroreductase.

Alan Bilsland; C.J. Anderson; Aileen J. Fletcher-Monaghan; F. McGregor; T.R.J. Evans; I. Ganly; R.J. Knox; Jane A. Plumb; Keith Wn

Reactivation of telomerase maintains telomere function and is considered critical to immortalization in most human cancer cells. Elevation of telomerase expression in cancer cells is highly specific: transcription of both RNA (hTR) and protein (hTERT) components is strongly upregulated in cancer cells relative to normal cells. Therefore, telomerase promoters may be useful in cancer gene therapy by selectively expressing suicide genes in cancer cells and not normal cells. One example of suicide gene therapy is the bacterial nitroreductase (NTR) gene, which bioactivates the prodrug CB1954 into an active cytotoxic alkylating agent. We describe construction of adenovirus vectors harbouring the bacterial NTR gene under control of the hTR or hTERT promoters. Western blot analysis of NTR expression in normal and cancer cells infected with adenoviral vectors showed cancer cell-specific nitroreductase expression. Infection with adenoviral telomerase–NTR constructs in a panel of seven cancer cell lines resulted in up to 18-fold sensitization to the prodrug CB1954, an effect that was retained in two drug-resistant ovarian lines. Importantly, no sensitization was observed with either promoter in any of the four normal cell strains. Finally, an efficacious effect was observed in cervical and ovarian xenograft models following single intratumoural injection with low doses of vector, followed by injection with CB1954.


Seminars in Cancer Biology | 2015

Cancer prevention and therapy through the modulation of the tumor microenvironment

Stephanie C. Casey; Amedeo Amedei; Katia Aquilano; Asfar S. Azmi; Fabian Benencia; Dipita Bhakta; Alan Bilsland; Chandra S. Boosani; Sophie Chen; Maria Rosa Ciriolo; Sarah Crawford; Hiromasa Fujii; Alexandros G. Georgakilas; Gunjan Guha; Dorota Halicka; William G. Helferich; Petr Heneberg; Kanya Honoki; W. Nicol Keith; Sid P. Kerkar; Sulma I. Mohammed; Elena Niccolai; Somaira Nowsheen; H.P. Vasantha Rupasinghe; Abbas K. Samadi; Neetu Singh; Wamidh H. Talib; Vasundara Venkateswaran; Richard L. Whelan; Xujuan Yang

Cancer arises in the context of an in vivo tumor microenvironment. This microenvironment is both a cause and consequence of tumorigenesis. Tumor and host cells co-evolve dynamically through indirect and direct cellular interactions, eliciting multiscale effects on many biological programs, including cellular proliferation, growth, and metabolism, as well as angiogenesis and hypoxia and innate and adaptive immunity. Here we highlight specific biological processes that could be exploited as targets for the prevention and therapy of cancer. Specifically, we describe how inhibition of targets such as cholesterol synthesis and metabolites, reactive oxygen species and hypoxia, macrophage activation and conversion, indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase regulation of dendritic cells, vascular endothelial growth factor regulation of angiogenesis, fibrosis inhibition, endoglin, and Janus kinase signaling emerge as examples of important potential nexuses in the regulation of tumorigenesis and the tumor microenvironment that can be targeted. We have also identified therapeutic agents as approaches, in particular natural products such as berberine, resveratrol, onionin A, epigallocatechin gallate, genistein, curcumin, naringenin, desoxyrhapontigenin, piperine, and zerumbone, that may warrant further investigation to target the tumor microenvironment for the treatment and/or prevention of cancer.


Seminars in Cancer Biology | 2015

Sustained proliferation in cancer: Mechanisms and novel therapeutic targets.

Mark A. Feitelson; Alla Arzumanyan; Rob J. Kulathinal; Stacy W. Blain; Randall F. Holcombe; Jamal Mahajna; Maria Marino; Maria L. Martinez-Chantar; Roman Nawroth; Isidro Sánchez-García; Dipali Sharma; Neeraj K. Saxena; Neetu Singh; Panagiotis J. Vlachostergios; Shanchun Guo; Kanya Honoki; Hiromasa Fujii; Alexandros G. Georgakilas; Alan Bilsland; Amedeo Amedei; Elena Niccolai; Amr Amin; S. Salman Ashraf; Chandra S. Boosani; Gunjan Guha; Maria Rosa Ciriolo; Katia Aquilano; Sophie Chen; Sulma I. Mohammed; Asfar S. Azmi

Proliferation is an important part of cancer development and progression. This is manifest by altered expression and/or activity of cell cycle related proteins. Constitutive activation of many signal transduction pathways also stimulates cell growth. Early steps in tumor development are associated with a fibrogenic response and the development of a hypoxic environment which favors the survival and proliferation of cancer stem cells. Part of the survival strategy of cancer stem cells may manifested by alterations in cell metabolism. Once tumors appear, growth and metastasis may be supported by overproduction of appropriate hormones (in hormonally dependent cancers), by promoting angiogenesis, by undergoing epithelial to mesenchymal transition, by triggering autophagy, and by taking cues from surrounding stromal cells. A number of natural compounds (e.g., curcumin, resveratrol, indole-3-carbinol, brassinin, sulforaphane, epigallocatechin-3-gallate, genistein, ellagitannins, lycopene and quercetin) have been found to inhibit one or more pathways that contribute to proliferation (e.g., hypoxia inducible factor 1, nuclear factor kappa B, phosphoinositide 3 kinase/Akt, insulin-like growth factor receptor 1, Wnt, cell cycle associated proteins, as well as androgen and estrogen receptor signaling). These data, in combination with bioinformatics analyses, will be very important for identifying signaling pathways and molecular targets that may provide early diagnostic markers and/or critical targets for the development of new drugs or drug combinations that block tumor formation and progression.

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Kanya Honoki

Nara Medical University

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Katia Aquilano

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Maria Rosa Ciriolo

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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