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Dive into the research topics where Alena Bartakova is active.

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Featured researches published by Alena Bartakova.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014

The Ras-related protein, Rap1A, mediates thrombin-stimulated, integrin-dependent glioblastoma cell proliferation and tumor growth

Jacqueline Sayyah; Alena Bartakova; Nekeisha Nogal; Lawrence A. Quilliam; Dwayne G. Stupack; Joan Heller Brown

Background: Thrombin and RhoA are linked to cancer cell proliferation. Results: Thrombin induces sustained RhoA-mediated Rap1 activation leading to integrin signaling and glioblastoma cell proliferation. Conclusion: GPCRs that signal through RhoA can engage a Rap1/integrin pathway promoting proliferation. Significance: Rap1 is regulated by endogenous GPCRs and is required for tumor cell growth. Rap1 is a Ras family GTPase with a well documented role in ERK/MAP kinase signaling and integrin activation. Stimulation of the G-protein-coupled receptor PAR-1 with thrombin in human 1321N1 glioblastoma cells led to a robust increase in Rap1 activation. This response was sustained for up to 6 h and mediated through RhoA and phospholipase D (PLD). Thrombin treatment also induced a 5-fold increase in cell adhesion to fibronectin, which was blocked by down-regulating PLD or Rap1A or by treatment with a β1 integrin neutralizing antibody. In addition, thrombin treatment led to increases in phospho-focal adhesion kinase (tyrosine 397), ERK1/2 phosphorylation and cell proliferation, which were significantly inhibited in cells treated with β1 integrin antibody or Rap1A siRNA. To assess the role of Rap1A in tumor formation in vivo, we compared growth of 1321N1 cells stably expressing control, Rap1A or Rap1B shRNA in a mouse xenograft model. Deletion of Rap1A, but not of Rap1B, reduced tumor mass by >70% relative to control. Similar observations were made with U373MG glioblastoma cells in which Rap1A was down-regulated. Collectively, these findings implicate a Rap1A/β1 integrin pathway, activated downstream of G-protein-coupled receptor stimulation and RhoA, in glioblastoma cell proliferation. Moreover, our data demonstrate a critical role for Rap1A in glioblastoma tumor growth in vivo.


Current Ophthalmology Reports | 2014

Regenerative Cell Therapy for Corneal Endothelium

Alena Bartakova; Noelia J. Kunzevitzky; Jeffrey L. Goldberg

Abstract Endothelial cell dysfunction as in Fuchs dystrophy or pseudophakic bullous keratopathy and the limited regenerative capacity of human corneal endothelial cells (HCECs) drive the need for corneal transplant. In response to limited donor corneal availability, significant effort has been directed toward cell therapy as an alternative to surgery. Stimulation of endogenous progenitors or transplant of stem cell-derived HCECs or in vitro-expanded, donor-derived HCECs could replace traditional surgery with regenerative therapy. Ex vivo expansion of HCECs is technically challenging, and the basis for molecular identification of functional HCECs is not established. Delivery of cells to the inner layer of the human cornea is another challenge: different techniques, from simple injection to artificial corneal scaffolds, are being investigated. Despite remaining questions, corneal endothelial cell therapies, translated to the clinic, represent the future for the treatment of corneal endotheliopathies.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Integrin α4 Enhances Metastasis and May Be Associated with Poor Prognosis in MYCNlow Neuroblastoma

Shanique A. Young; Katelyn E. McCabe; Alena Bartakova; Joe R. Delaney; Donald P. Pizzo; Robert O. Newbury; Judith A. Varner; David D. Schlaepfer; Dwayne G. Stupack

High-risk neuroblastoma is associated with an overall survival rate of 30–50%. Neuroblastoma-expressed cell adhesion receptors of the integrin family impact cell adhesion, migration, proliferation and survival. Integrin α4 is essential for neural crest cell motility during development, is highly expressed on leukocytes, and is critical for transendothelial migration. Thus, cancer cells that express this receptor may exhibit increased metastatic potential. We show that α4 expression in human and murine neuroblastoma cell lines selectively enhances in vitro interaction with the alternatively spliced connecting segment 1 of fibronectin, as well as vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 and increases migration. Integrin α4 expression enhanced experimental metastasis in a syngeneic tumor model, reconstituting a pattern of organ involvement similar to that seen in patients. Accordingly, antagonism of integrin α4 blocked metastasis, suggesting adhesive function of the integrin is required. However, adhesive function was not sufficient, as mutants of integrin α4 that conserved the matrix-adhesive and promigratory function in vitro were compromised in their metastatic capacity in vivo. Clinically, integrin α4 is more frequently expressed in non-MYNC amplified tumors, and is selectively associated with poor prognosis in this subset of disease. These results reveal an unexpected role for integrin α4 in neuroblastoma dissemination and identify α4 as a potential prognostic indicator and therapeutic target.


Oncotarget | 2015

A strategy to combine pathway-targeted low toxicity drugs in ovarian cancer

Joe R. Delaney; Chandni Patel; Katelyn E. McCabe; Dan Lu; Mitzie-Ann Davis; Isabelle Tancioni; Tami von Schalscha; Alena Bartakova; Carley Haft; David D. Schlaepfer; Dwayne G. Stupack

Serous Ovarian Cancers (SOC) are frequently resistant to programmed cell death. However, here we describe that these programmed death-resistant cells are nonetheless sensitive to agents that modulate autophagy. Cytotoxicity is not dependent upon apoptosis, necroptosis, or autophagy resolution. A screen of NCBI yielded more than one dozen FDA-approved agents displaying perturbed autophagy in ovarian cancer. The effects were maximized via combinatorial use of the agents that impinged upon distinct points of autophagy regulation. Autophagosome formation correlated with efficacy in vitro and the most cytotoxic two agents gave similar effects to a pentadrug combination that impinged upon five distinct modulators of autophagy. However, in a complex in vivo SOC system, the pentadrug combination outperformed the best two, leaving trace or no disease and with no evidence of systemic toxicity. Targeting the autophagy pathway in a multi-modal fashion might therefore offer a clinical option for treating recalcitrant SOC.


Nature Communications | 2017

Haploinsufficiency networks identify targetable patterns of allelic deficiency in low mutation ovarian cancer

Joe R. Delaney; Chandni Patel; Katelyn McCabe Willis; Mina Haghighiabyaneh; Joshua Axelrod; Isabelle Tancioni; Dan Lu; Jaidev Bapat; Shanique Young; Octavia Cadassou; Alena Bartakova; Parthiv Sheth; Carley Haft; Sandra Hui; Cheryl C. Saenz; David D. Schlaepfer; Olivier Harismendy; Dwayne G. Stupack

Identification of specific oncogenic gene changes has enabled the modern generation of targeted cancer therapeutics. In high-grade serous ovarian cancer (OV), the bulk of genetic changes is not somatic point mutations, but rather somatic copy-number alterations (SCNAs). The impact of SCNAs on tumour biology remains poorly understood. Here we build haploinsufficiency network analyses to identify which SCNA patterns are most disruptive in OV. Of all KEGG pathways (N=187), autophagy is the most significantly disrupted by coincident gene deletions. Compared with 20 other cancer types, OV is most severely disrupted in autophagy and in compensatory proteostasis pathways. Network analysis prioritizes MAP1LC3B (LC3) and BECN1 as most impactful. Knockdown of LC3 and BECN1 expression confers sensitivity to cells undergoing autophagic stress independent of platinum resistance status. The results support the use of pathway network tools to evaluate how the copy-number landscape of a tumour may guide therapy.


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2018

A Cell Culture Approach to Optimized Human Corneal Endothelial Cell Function

Alena Bartakova; Olga Kuzmenko; Karen Alvarez-Delfin; Noelia J. Kunzevitzky; Jeffrey L. Goldberg

Purpose Cell-based therapies to replace corneal endothelium depend on culture methods to optimize human corneal endothelial cell (HCEC) function and minimize endothelial-mesenchymal transition (EnMT). Here we explore contribution of low-mitogenic media on stabilization of phenotypes in vitro that mimic those of HCECs in vivo. Methods HCECs were isolated from cadaveric donor corneas and expanded in vitro, comparing continuous presence of exogenous growth factors (“proliferative media”) to media without those factors (“stabilizing media”). Identity based on canonical morphology and expression of surface marker CD56, and function based on formation of tight junction barriers measured by trans-endothelial electrical resistance assays (TEER) were assessed. Results Primary HCECs cultured in proliferative media underwent EnMT after three to four passages, becoming increasingly fibroblastic. Stabilizing the cells before each passage by switching them to a media low in mitogenic growth factors and serum preserved canonical morphology and yielded a higher number of cells. HCECs cultured in stabilizing media increased both expression of the identity marker CD56 and also tight junction monolayer integrity compared to cells cultured without stabilization. Conclusions HCECs isolated from donor corneas and expanded in vitro with a low-mitogenic media stabilizing step before each passage demonstrate more canonical structural and functional features and defer EnMT, increasing the number of passages and total canonical cell yield. This approach may facilitate development of HCEC-based cell therapies.


Nanomedicine: Nanotechnology, Biology and Medicine | 2015

Magnetic Field-Guided Cell Delivery with Nanoparticle-Loaded Human Corneal Endothelial Cells

Stavros N. Moysidis; Karen Alvarez-Delfin; Veronica J. Peschansky; Enrique Salero; Alejandra D. Weisman; Alena Bartakova; Gabriella A. Raffa; Richard Merkhofer; Karl E. Kador; Noelia J. Kunzevitzky; Jeffrey L. Goldberg


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2015

Optimization of Human Corneal Endothelial Cell Morphology.

Carlos-Alberto Rodriguez-Barrientos; Noelia J. Kunzevitzky; Alena Bartakova; Judith Zavala; Jeffrey L. Goldberg; Jorge E Valdez


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2016

Functional Markers for Cultured Human Corneal Endothelial Cells

Xin Xia; Alena Bartakova; Jonathan Van Dyke; Tye Petrie; Brian Fury; Emily Lynn Fledderman; Gerhard Bauer; Noelia J. Kunzevitzky; Jeffrey L. Goldberg


Archive | 2015

Regenerative Nanomedicine (Ed. A. Seifalian) Magnetic field-guided cell delivery with nanoparticle-loaded human corneal endothelial cells ,

Stavros N. Moysidis; Karen Alvarez-Delfin; Veronica J. Peschansky; Enrique Salero; Alejandra D. Weisman; Alena Bartakova; Gabriella A. Raffa; Richard Merkhofer; Karl E. Kador; Noelia J. Kunzevitzky; Jeffrey L. Goldberg

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Enrique Salero

Bascom Palmer Eye Institute

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Joe R. Delaney

University of California

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