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Dive into the research topics where Antonio de las Morenas is active.

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Featured researches published by Antonio de las Morenas.


The Journal of Urology | 1996

Mechanisms of Venous Leakage: A Prospective Clinicopathological Correlation of Corporeal Function and Structure

Ajay Nehra; Irwin Goldstein; Ajay Pabby; Matthew A. Nugent; Yue-Hua Huang; Antonio de las Morenas; Robert J. Krane; Daniel Udelson; Iñigo Sáenz de Tejada; Robert B. Moreland

PURPOSE We investigated the pathophysiology of structurally based corporeal veno-occlusive dysfunction. MATERIALS AND METHODS We prospectively evaluated 24 impotent patients (mean age plus or minus standard error 46 +/- 3 years) who had exposure to vascular risk factors and/or disorders inducing diffuse trabecular structure alterations and who underwent penile prosthesis insertion. Preoperative indexes of veno-occlusive function (flow to maintain, venous outflow resistance and pressure decay measurements using repeat dosing pharmacocavernosometry) were correlated with postoperative erectile tissue computer assisted color histomorphometry (percent trabecular smooth muscle to total erectile tissue area). To develop further study findings and correlate histomorphometric findings with molecular biological properties molecular biological studies (ribonuclease protection analysis, reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction assay for expression of transforming growth factor-beta 1 messenger [m] ribonucleic acid [RNA] and protein affinity labeling techniques for specific transforming growth factor-beta receptors) were performed in representative patients with high (39 to 43%), intermediate (30 to 37%) and low (13 to 29%) trabecular smooth muscle content (normal 42 to 50%). RESULTS Flow to maintain, venous outflow resistance and pressure decay values significantly correlated with trabecular smooth muscle cell content (r = -0.89, 0.82 and -0.85, respectively). In the high, intermediate and low smooth muscle content subgroups flow to maintain, venous outflow resistance and pressure decay values were 1 to 5, 9 to 30 and 50 to 120 ml. per minute, 17 to 84, 3 to 9 and 1 to 2 mm. Hg/ml. per minute, and 40 to 60, 48 to 80 and 110 to 120 mm. Hg decrease in 30 seconds from 150 mm. Hg, respectively. There were no significant differences in patient age or prevalence of risk factors among the 3 subgroups. Patients representative of all 3 subgroups had transforming growth factor-beta 1 mRNA, auto-induction of transforming growth factor-beta 1 mRNA and induction and/or increased availability of all 3 types of transforming growth factor-beta receptors. CONCLUSIONS The pathophysiology of structurally based corporeal veno-occlusive dysfunction is related to elevated corporeal connective tissue content. Based on our data and those in the literature corporeal fibrosis is hypothesized to develop secondary to abnormalities in the regulation of normal collagen synthesis and degradation, most likely associated with adverse influences of chronic ischemia.


Breast Cancer Research | 2011

Expression of microRNA and their gene targets are dysregulated in preinvasive breast cancer

Bethany N. Hannafon; Paola Sebastiani; Antonio de las Morenas; Jining Lü; Carol L. Rosenberg

IntroductionmicroRNA (miRNA) are short, noncoding RNA that negatively regulate gene expression and may play a causal role in invasive breast cancer. Since many genetic aberrations of invasive disease are detectable in early stages, we hypothesized that miRNA expression dysregulation and the predicted changes in gene expression might also be found in early breast neoplasias.MethodsExpression profiling of 365 miRNA by real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction assay was combined with laser capture microdissection to obtain an epithelium-specific miRNA expression signature of normal breast epithelium from reduction mammoplasty (RM) (n = 9) and of paired samples of histologically normal epithelium (HN) and ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) (n = 16). To determine how miRNA may control the expression of codysregulated mRNA, we also performed gene expression microarray analysis in the same paired HN and DCIS samples and integrated this with miRNA target prediction. We further validated several target pairs by modulating the expression levels of miRNA in MCF7 cells and measured the expression of target mRNA and proteins.ResultsThirty-five miRNA were aberrantly expressed between RM, HN and DCIS. Twenty-nine miRNA and 420 mRNA were aberrantly expressed between HN and DCIS. Combining these two data sets with miRNA target prediction, we identified two established target pairs (miR-195:CCND1 and miR-21:NFIB) and tested several novel miRNA:mRNA target pairs. Overexpression of the putative tumor suppressor miR-125b, which is underexpressed in DCIS, repressed the expression of MEMO1, which is required for ErbB2-driven cell motility (also a target of miR-125b), and NRIP1/RIP140, which modulates the transcriptional activity of the estrogen receptor. Knockdown of the putative oncogenic miRNA miR-182 and miR-183, both highly overexpressed in DCIS, increased the expression of chromobox homolog 7 (CBX7) (which regulates E-cadherin expression), DOK4, NMT2 and EGR1. Augmentation of CBX7 by knockdown of miR-182 expression, in turn, positively regulated the expression of E-cadherin, a key protein involved in maintaining normal epithelial cell morphology, which is commonly lost during neoplastic progression.ConclusionsThese data provide the first miRNA expression profile of normal breast epithelium and of preinvasive breast carcinoma. Further, we demonstrate that altered miRNA expression can modulate gene expression changes that characterize these early cancers. We conclude that miRNA dysregulation likely plays a substantial role in early breast cancer development.


Urology | 1996

Implications of prostate micrometastases in pelvic lymph nodes: An archival tissue study

Robert A. Edelstein; Anthony L. Zietman; Antonio de las Morenas; Robert J. Krane; Richard K. Babayan; K.C. Dallow; Abdulmaged M. Traish; Robert B. Moreland

OBJECTIVES In the United States, radical retropubic prostatectomy for adenocarcinoma usually includes a staging pelvic lymphadenectomy. If frozen section analysis of the lymph nodes fails to reveal any evidence of metastases, the prostate is removed. We have previously noted that as many as 56% of patients undergoing radical prostatectomy demonstrate rising serum prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels by 4 years postoperatively. This report was designed to determine whether micrometastases undetectable by conventional pathologic methods: could have accounted for these biochemical failures. METHODS A retrospective analysis of formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded pelvic lymph node material was undertaken using a reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR)-based assay designed to amplify messenger RNA from PSA. All specimens were obtained from a group of 57 patients with prostate cancer who had undergone staging pelvic lymphadenectomy at the time of radical prostatectomy, and whose long-term follow-up was known. RESULTS Although all of these nodes appeared to be free of tumor by conventional pathologic methods, a RT-PCR assay was used to identify evidence of prostate metastases in 44% of evaluable samples. Of these, 14 of 16 went on to manifest rising serum PSA values by 5 years postoperatively. CONCLUSIONS These results suggest that molecular staging of pelvic lymph nodes prior to planned therapy for clinically organ-confined prostate cancer may better distinguish between patients with local disease and those for whom local therapy alone will not be curative. To our knowledge, this is the first large-scale retrospective gene expression study published.


American Journal of Pathology | 2002

Loss of Heterozygosity or Allele Imbalance in Histologically Normal Breast Epithelium Is Distinct from Loss of Heterozygosity or Allele Imbalance in Co-Existing Carcinomas

Pamela S. Larson; Antonio de las Morenas; Sheila R. Bennett; L. Adrienne Cupples; Carol L. Rosenberg

To better understand early steps in human breast carcinogenesis, we examined allele imbalance or loss of heterozygosity (LOH), in co-existing normal-appearing breast epithelium and cancers. We microdissected a total of 173 histologically normal ducts or terminal ductolobular units (TDLUs) and malignant epithelial samples from 18 breast cancer cases, and examined their DNA for LOH at 21 microsatellite markers on 10 chromosome arms. Fourteen of 109 (13%) normal ducts/TDLUs, from 8 of 18 (44%) cases, contained LOH. The location of these 14 ducts/TDLUs appeared unrelated to distance from the cancer. LOH in normal-appearing epithelium involved only single markers, whereas LOH in cancers commonly encompassed all informative markers on a chromosome arm. In only 1 of 14 (7%) ducts/TDLUs with LOH, was the same LOH seen in the co-existing cancer. Global differences in LOH per arm in normal-appearing tissue were not demonstrated, but less LOH was seen at 11q and 17p than at 1q (P = 0.002), 16q (P = 0.01), and possibly 17q (P = 0.06). These results indicate that in a large fraction of women with breast cancer, histologically normal breast epithelium harbors occult aberrant clones. Individual clones rarely are precursors of co-existing cancers. However, they might constitute a reservoir from which proliferative lesions or second cancers develop once additional genetic abnormalities occur, they could contribute to intratumoral genetic heterogeneity, and they are consistent with a role for genetic instability early in tumorigenesis.


The Journal of Urology | 1992

Endothelin in the Urinary Bladder. I. Synthesis of Endothelin-1 by Epithelia, Smooth Muscle and Fibroblasts Suggests Autocrine and Paracrine Cellular Regulation

Iñigo Sáenz de Tejada; James Mueller; Antonio de las Morenas; Michelle Machado; Robert B. Moreland; Robert J. Krane; Hubert J. Wolfe; Abdulmaged Traish

The synthesis and localization of endothelin-1 were studied in human and rabbit bladder. In addition, the effects of endothelin-1 on smooth muscle tone and cholinergic neurotransmission were investigated in rabbit bladder. Endothelin-like immunoreactivity was localized in the transitional epithelium, serosal mesothelium, and vascular endothelium; smooth muscle of the bladder (non-vascular) and that of blood vessels; and fibroblasts. With in situ hybridization, transcripts of endothelin messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) were localized with the same cellular distribution as endothelin-like immunoreactivity, in bladder tissue. Northern blot analysis of bladder RNA confirmed the expression of preproendothelin-1 mRNA. Rabbit bladder strips in organ chambers contracted when exposed to endothelin-1 and this response was partially attenuated by calcium channel blockers or by removal of extracellular calcium. Transmural electrical stimulation of rabbit bladder strips elicited contractions that were greatly reduced by atropine. The remaining atropine resistant component was blocked by alpha, beta-methylene ATP, which desensitizes purinergic receptors. Endothelin-1 caused a small but consistent attenuation of the atropine sensitive component of the neurogenic contraction, while it had no effect on the atropine resistant component. The localization of endothelin synthesis in epithelia, smooth muscle, and fibroblasts suggests that endothelin may act as an autocrine hormone in the regulation of the bladder wall structure and smooth muscle tone. In addition, endothelin-1 may regulate cholinergic neurotransmission by a paracrine mechanism.


The Journal of Urology | 1995

Extensive Corporeal Fibrosis After Penile Irradiation

Simon Hall; Guido Basile; Eduardo B. Bertero; Antonio de las Morenas; Irwin Goldstein

A potent man with early signs and symptoms of Peyronies disease 3 months in duration received 1,200 rad of external beam radiation to the penis and presented 5 months later with impotence. Physical examination revealed diffusely woody indurated corporeal tissue. Nocturnal penile tumescence testing was abnormal and pharmaco-cavernosometry demonstrated diffuse corporeal veno-occlusive dysfunction. Treatment by penile injections was unsuccessful. During penile prosthesis implantation bilateral rubbery erectile tissue was encountered, requiring extensive bilateral corporotomy and sharp corporeal tissue excision for prosthesis insertion. Histological analysis of excised corporeal tissue demonstrated extensive corporeal fibrosis and arterial vasculopathy. Computer assisted color histomorphometry revealed that the mean percentage of trabecular smooth muscle area to total erectile tissue area was 26.5 +/- 15.8 (normal 40 to 52%). Immunohistochemical staining with desmin confirmed extensive fibrosis. The most likely explanation for severe corporeal fibrosis is penile irradiation. The hypothesized mechanism of radiation associated fibrosis is ionizing injury to the endothelial cells of the lacunar spaces and cavernous/helicine arteries, which induced irreversible corporeal extracellular matrix structural changes. Penile irradiation, like vascular disease and priapism, is a potential cause of diffuse corporeal fibrosis.


Human Pathology | 1988

Prostatic adenocarcinoma: Reproducibility and correlation with clinical stages of four grading systems

Antonio de las Morenas; Mike B. Siroky; Joseph Merriam; Magda M. Stilmant

One hundred cases of adenocarcinoma of the prostate were independently examined by light microscopy by three pathologists and graded according to the Gleason, Mostofi, Böcking, and MD Anderson systems (MDAH). The results were compared in order to establish which one of these classifications was the most reproducible and then correlated to the clinical stage in order to determine how accurately each classification can predict the spread of the tumors. The MDAH system, based on the percentage of gland formation in the tumor, was the easiest to use and most reproducible system. On the other hand, the Mostofi and the Böcking systems had the best correlation between grade and stage while the MDAH system had the worst. The Böcking system was the best grading system when reproducibility and accuracy in predicting the prognosis were both taken into account.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2004

Quantitative DNA Fingerprinting May Distinguish New Primary Breast Cancer From Disease Recurrence

Benjamin L. Schlechter; Qiong Yang; Pamela S. Larson; Arina Golubeva; Rita A. Blanchard; Antonio de las Morenas; Carol L. Rosenberg

PURPOSE Approximately 10% of women with breast cancer develop a second breast tumor, either a new primary or a recurrence. Differentiating between these entities using standard clinical and pathologic criteria remains challenging. Ambiguous cases arise, and misclassifications may occur. We investigated whether quantitative DNA fingerprinting, based on allele imbalance (AI) or loss of heterozygosity (LOH), could evaluate clonality and distinguish second primary breast cancer from recurrence. METHODS We developed a scoring system based on the AI/LOH fingerprints of 20 independent breast tumors and generated a decision rule to classify any breast tumor pair as related or unrelated. We validated this approach on eight related tumors (cancers and synchronous positive lymph nodes). Finally, we analyzed paired tumors from 13 women (bilateral cancers, primary tumors and contralateral positive axillary lymph nodes, or two ipsilateral tumors). Each pairs genetic classification was compared with their clinical diagnosis and outcome. RESULTS Each independent cancer had a unique fingerprint. Every tumor pairs relationship was quantifiable. Six of eight related tumor pairs were genetically classified correctly, two were indeterminate, and none were misclassified. Among the 13 women with two cancers, four of five clinically indeterminate pairs could be classified genetically. In three of 13 women, the pairs classification contradicted the clinical diagnosis. These women had bilateral cancers genetically classified as related and disease progression. This challenges the paradigm that bilateral cancers represent independent tumors. Overall, women with tumors genetically classified as related had poorer outcomes. CONCLUSION Quantitative AI/LOH fingerprinting is a potentially valuable tool to improve diagnosis and optimize treatment for the growing number of second breast malignancies.


American Journal of Pathology | 2009

Early Dysregulation of Cell Adhesion and Extracellular Matrix Pathways in Breast Cancer Progression

Lyndsey A. Emery; Anusri Tripathi; Chialin King; Maureen Kavanah; Jane Mendez; Michael D. Stone; Antonio de las Morenas; Paola Sebastiani; Carol L. Rosenberg

Proliferative breast lesions, such as simple ductal hyperplasia (SH) and atypical ductal hyperplasia (ADH), are candidate precursors to ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) and invasive cancer. To better understand the relationship of breast lesions to more advanced disease, we used microdissection and DNA microarrays to profile the gene expression of patient-matched histologically normal (HN), ADH, and DCIS from 12 patients with estrogen receptor positive sporadic breast cancer. SH were profiled from a subset of cases. We found 837 differentially expressed genes between DCIS-HN and 447 between ADH-HN, with >90% of the ADH-HN genes also present among the DCIS-HN genes. Only 61 genes were identified between ADH-DCIS. Expression differences were reproduced in an independent cohort of patient-matched lesions by quantitative real-time PCR. Many breast cancer-related genes and pathways were dysregulated in ADH and maintained in DCIS. Particularly, cell adhesion and extracellular matrix interactions were overrepresented. Focal adhesion was the top pathway in each gene set. We conclude that ADH and DCIS share highly similar gene expression and are distinct from HN. In contrast, SH appear more similar to HN. These data provide genetic evidence that ADH (but not SH) are often precursors to cancer and suggest cancer-related genetic changes, particularly adhesion and extracellular matrix pathways, are dysregulated before invasion and even before malignancy is apparent. These findings could lead to novel risk stratification, prevention, and treatment approaches.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2011

Gene Expression Profiles of Estrogen Receptor–Positive and Estrogen Receptor–Negative Breast Cancers Are Detectable in Histologically Normal Breast Epithelium

Kelly A. Graham; Xijin Ge; Antonio de las Morenas; Anusri Tripathi; Carol L. Rosenberg

Purpose: Previously, we found that gene expression in histologically normal breast epithelium (NlEpi) from women at high breast cancer risk can resemble gene expression in NlEpi from cancer-containing breasts. Therefore, we hypothesized that gene expression characteristic of a cancer subtype might be seen in NlEpi of breasts containing that subtype. Experimental Design: We examined gene expression in 46 cases of microdissected NlEpi from untreated women undergoing breast cancer surgery. From 30 age-matched cases [15 estrogen receptor (ER)+, 15 ER−] we used Affymetryix U133A arrays. From 16 independent cases (9 ER+, 7 ER−), we validated selected genes using quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR). We then compared gene expression between NlEpi and invasive breast cancer using four publicly available data sets. Results: We identified 198 genes that are differentially expressed between NlEpi from breasts with ER+ (NlEpiER+) compared with ER− cancers (NlEpiER−). These include genes characteristic of ER+ and ER− cancers (e.g., ESR1, GATA3, and CX3CL1, FABP7). qPCR validated the microarray results in both the 30 original cases and the 16 independent cases. Gene expression in NlEpiER+ and NlEpiER− resembled gene expression in ER+ and ER− cancers, respectively: 25% to 53% of the genes or probes examined in four external data sets overlapped between NlEpi and the corresponding cancer subtype. Conclusions: Gene expression differs in NlEpi of breasts containing ER+ compared with ER− breast cancers. These differences echo differences in ER+ and ER− invasive cancers. NlEpi gene expression may help elucidate subtype-specific risk signatures, identify early genomic events in cancer development, and locate targets for prevention and therapy. Clin Cancer Res; 17(2); 236–46. ©2010 AACR.

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Benjamin L. Schlechter

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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