Carola A. Neumann
University of Pittsburgh
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Featured researches published by Carola A. Neumann.
Advances in Cancer Research | 2013
Agnieszka Jezierska-Drutel; Steven A. Rosenzweig; Carola A. Neumann
Breast cancer is a highly complex tissue composed of neoplastic and stromal cells. Carcinoma-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) are commonly found in the cancer stroma, where they promote tumor growth and enhance vascularity in the microenvironment. Upon exposure to oxidative stress, fibroblasts undergo activation to become myofibroblasts. These cells are highly mobile and contractile and often express numerous mesenchymal markers. CAF activation is irreversible, making them incapable of being removed by nemosis. In breast cancer, almost 80% of stromal fibroblasts acquire an activated phenotype that manifests by secretion of elevated levels of growth factors, cytokines, and metalloproteinases. They also produce hydrogen peroxide, which induces the generation of subsequent sets of activated fibroblasts and tumorigenic alterations in epithelial cells. While under oxidative stress, the tumor stroma releases high energy nutrients that fuel cancer cells and facilitate their growth and survival. This review describes how breast cancer progression is dependent upon oxidative stress activated stroma and proposes potential new therapeutic avenues.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2015
Luxi Sun; Rong Tan; Jianquan Xu; Justin LaFace; Ying Gao; Yanchun Xiao; Myriam Attar; Carola A. Neumann; Guo Min Li; Bing Su; Yang Liu; Satoshi Nakajima; Arthur S. Levine; Li Lan
Cellular DNA is organized into chromosomes and capped by a unique nucleoprotein structure, the telomere. Both oxidative stress and telomere shortening/dysfunction cause aging-related degenerative pathologies and increase cancer risk. However, a direct connection between oxidative damage to telomeric DNA, comprising <1% of the genome, and telomere dysfunction has not been established. By fusing the KillerRed chromophore with the telomere repeat binding factor 1, TRF1, we developed a novel approach to generate localized damage to telomere DNA and to monitor the real time damage response at the single telomere level. We found that DNA damage at long telomeres in U2OS cells is not repaired efficiently compared to DNA damage in non-telomeric regions of the same length in heterochromatin. Telomeric DNA damage shortens the average length of telomeres and leads to cell senescence in HeLa cells and cell death in HeLa, U2OS and IMR90 cells, when DNA damage at non-telomeric regions is undetectable. Telomere-specific damage induces chromosomal aberrations, including chromatid telomere loss and telomere associations, distinct from the damage induced by ionizing irradiation. Taken together, our results demonstrate that oxidative damage induces telomere dysfunction and underline the importance of maintaining telomere integrity upon oxidative damage.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2017
Chen-Shan Woodcock; Yi Huang; Steven R. Woodcock; Sonia R. Salvatore; Bhupinder Singh; Franca Golin-Bisello; Nancy E. Davidson; Carola A. Neumann; Bruce A. Freeman; Stacy Gelhaus Wendell
Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) comprises ∼20% of all breast cancers and is the most aggressive mammary cancer subtype. Devoid of the estrogen and progesterone receptors, along with the receptor tyrosine kinase ERB2 (HER2), that define most mammary cancers, there are no targeted therapies for patients with TNBC. This, combined with a high metastatic rate and a lower 5-year survival rate than for other breast cancer phenotypes, means there is significant unmet need for new therapeutic strategies. Herein, the anti-neoplastic effects of the electrophilic fatty acid nitroalkene derivative, 10-nitro-octadec-9-enoic acid (nitro-oleic acid, NO2-OA), were investigated in multiple preclinical models of TNBC. NO2-OA reduced TNBC cell growth and viability in vitro, attenuated TNFα-induced TNBC cell migration and invasion, and inhibited the tumor growth of MDA-MB-231 TNBC cell xenografts in the mammary fat pads of female nude mice. The up-regulation of these aggressive tumor cell growth, migration, and invasion phenotypes is mediated in part by the constitutive activation of pro-inflammatory nuclear factor κB (NF-κB) signaling in TNBC. NO2-OA inhibited TNFα-induced NF-κB transcriptional activity in human TNBC cells and suppressed downstream NF-κB target gene expression, including the metastasis-related proteins intercellular adhesion molecule-1 and urokinase-type plasminogen activator. The mechanisms accounting for NF-κB signaling inhibition by NO2-OA in TNBC cells were multifaceted, as NO2-OA (a) inhibited the inhibitor of NF-κB subunit kinase β phosphorylation and downstream inhibitor of NF-κB degradation, (b) alkylated the NF-κB RelA protein to prevent DNA binding, and (c) promoted RelA polyubiquitination and proteasomal degradation. Comparisons with non-tumorigenic human breast epithelial MCF-10A and MCF7 cells revealed that NO2-OA more selectively inhibited TNBC function. This was attributed to more facile mechanisms for maintaining redox homeostasis in normal breast epithelium, including a more favorable thiol/disulfide balance, greater extents of multidrug resistance protein-1 (MRP1) expression, and greater MRP1-mediated efflux of NO2-OA–glutathione conjugates. These observations reveal that electrophilic fatty acid nitroalkenes react with more alkylation-sensitive targets in TNBC cells to inhibit growth and viability.
Oncology Reports | 2016
Ronald P. Mack; Laura M. Enomoto; Samina Alam; Ashley R. Brown; Carola A. Neumann; David I. Soybel; Shannon L. Kelleher
Breastfeeding can reduce breast cancer risk; however, unknown factors modify this protective effect. Zinc (Zn) modulates an array of cellular functions including oxidative stress, cell proliferation, motility and apoptosis. Marginal Zn intake is common in women and is associated with breast cancer. We reported that marginal Zn intake in mice leads to mammary gland hypoplasia and hallmarks of pre-neoplastic lesions. In the present study, we tested the hypothesis that marginal Zn intake confounds the protective effect of lactation on breast cancer. Nulliparous mice fed control (ZA, 30 mg Zn/kg) or a marginal Zn diet (ZD, 15 mg Zn/kg), were bred and offspring were weaned naturally. Post-involution, mice were gavaged with corn oil or 7,12-dimethylbenz(a)anthracene (DMBA, 1 mg/wk for 4 weeks) and tumor development was monitored. A ZD diet led to insufficient involution, increased fibrosis and oxidative stress. Following DMBA treatment, mice fed ZD had higher oxidative stress in mammary tissue that correlated with reduced levels of peroxiredoxin-1 and p53 and tended to have shorter tumor latency and greater incidence of non-palpable tumors. In summary, marginal Zn intake creates a toxic mammary gland microenvironment and abrogates the protective effect of lactation on carcinogenesis.
Oncotarget | 2017
Michelle Schultz; Andrew M. Diaz; Sharon Smite; Anna R. Lay; Brian DeCant; Ronald D. McKinney; Windel E. Mascarinas; Yinglin Xia; Carola A. Neumann; David J. Bentrem; David W. Dawson; Paul J. Grippo
Peroxiredoxin-1 (Prdx1), a member of the thioredoxin (Txn) system, is overexpressed and correlates with poor prognosis in pancreatic cancer patients and can suppress Kras signaling through redox-mediated inhibition of ERK and AKT in lung and breast cancer. Its redox function is maintained by Txn and sulfiredoxin (Srxn), and its tumor promoting functions are activated by post-translational modification. We studied the role of the Txn system in pancreatic neoplasia and cancer by determining how it regulates the phosphorylation of Kras effectors and by determining its association with patient survival. We found that elevated Prdx1 nuclear localization significantly correlated with better patient survival. Our data also demonstrate that the expression of the Txn system is dysregulated, with elevated Prdx1 expression and significantly decreased Txn and Srxn expression in pancreatic lesions of targeted mutant Kras mouse models. This correlated with distinct differences in the interconversion of Prdx1 oligomers that affect its ability to regulate ERK and AKT phosphorylation. Our data also suggest that Prdx1 post-translational modification and oligomerization suppress Prdx1 mediated redox regulation of ERK phosphorylation. We observed distinct differences in Txn expression and in the ability of pTyr-Prdx1 to bind to pERK in a PanIN model of pancreatic neoplasia as compared to an IPMN model, indicating a distinct difference in the function of post-translationally modified Prdx1 in cells with less Txn expression. Modified Txn system function and post-translational regulation may therefore play a significant role in pancreatic tumorigenesis by altering Kras effector phosphorylation and inhibiting the tumor suppressive redox functions of Prdx1.
Journal of Cancer Metastasis and Treatment | 2018
Carola A. Neumann; Kevin Levine; Steffi Oesterreich
© The Author(s) 2018. Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, for any purpose, even commercially, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. Targeting adenosine receptor 2B in triple negative breast cancer
Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2018
Soumya Luthra; Uma Chandran; Brenda Diergaarde; Michael J. Becich; Adrian V. Lee; Carola A. Neumann
ABSTRACT Increased reactive species (RS; reactive oxygen and nitrogen species) are a byproduct of both enzymatic and non‐enzymatic systems, and critical in cancer development, including breast tumorigenesis. To investigate the role of RS‐related genes in breast cancer, expression levels of the most common annotated genes involved in regulating cellular RS levels and proteins that are substrates of RS in specific subtypes of breast cancer 9 were evaluated using public data bases. Based on the premise that increased RS promote tumor formation, and breast cancer subtypes vary in aggressiveness, we hypothesized that specific RS gene expression signatures are associated with breast cancer aggressiveness and patient survival. We identified a group of genes (GSTK1, PRDX2, PRDX3 and SLC36A1) that differentiate Luminal B tumors in two clusters and predict survival of patients with Luminal B breast cancers. Furthermore, network analyses of these four genes revealed an overlap of known LumB related pathways with those of RS‐related signaling, which included regulation of M‐phase and mitochondrial functions. HIGHLIGHTSROS‐related genes are associated with LumB breast cancer patient survival.ROS‐related genes and networks predict LumB breast cancer patient survival.ROS‐related LumB signaling networks comprise mitotic and mitochondrial functions.
Antioxidants & Redox Signaling | 2018
Barbara L. Hopkins; Monica J. S. Nadler; John J. Skoko; Thierry Bertomeu; Andrea Pelosi; Parisa Mousavi Shafaei; Kevin Levine; Anja Schempf; Bodvael Pennarun; Bo Yang; Dipak Datta; Octavian Bucur; Kenneth Ndebele; Steffi Oesterreich; Da Yang; Maria Giulia Rizzo; Roya Khosravi-Far; Carola A. Neumann
Abstract Precision in redox signaling is attained through posttranslational protein modifications such as oxidation of protein thiols. The peroxidase peroxiredoxin 1 (PRDX1) regulates signal transduction through changes in thiol oxidation of its cysteines. We demonstrate here that PRDX1 is a binding partner for the tumor suppressive transcription factor FOXO3 that directly regulates the FOXO3 stress response. Heightened oxidative stress evokes formation of disulfide-bound heterotrimers linking dimeric PRDX1 to monomeric FOXO3. Absence of PRDX1 enhances FOXO3 nuclear localization and transcription that are dependent on the presence of Cys31 or Cys150 within FOXO3. Notably, FOXO3-T32 phosphorylation is constitutively enhanced in these mutants, but nuclear translocation of mutant FOXO3 is restored with PI3K inhibition. Here we show that on H2O2 exposure, transcription of tumor suppressive miRNAs let-7b and let-7c is regulated by FOXO3 or PRDX1 expression levels and that let-7c is a novel target for FOXO3. Conjointly, inhibition of let-7 microRNAs increases let-7-phenotypes in PRDX1-deficient breast cancer cells. Altogether, these data ascertain the existence of an H2O2-sensitive PRDX1-FOXO3 signaling axis that fine tunes FOXO3 activity toward the transcription of gene targets in response to oxidative stress. Antioxid. Redox Signal. 28, 62–77.
Cancer Research | 2013
Michael W. Hance; Krystal D. Nolan; Udhayakumar Gopal; Jessica E. Bohonowych; Agnieszka Jezierska-Drutel; Carola A. Neumann; Haibo Liu; Garraway P. Isla; Omar E. Franco; Simon W. Hayward; Jennifer S. Isaacs
Prostate cancer (PCa) is the most frequently diagnosed malignancy and second most common cause of cancer related lethality in men. Disease mortality is due primarily to metastatic spread, highlighting the urgent need to identify factors involved in this progression. Increased secretion of heat shock protein 90 (Hsp90) has been reported in diverse cancer cells, and secreted, or extracellular Hsp90 (eHsp90) is also found in patient plasma. Although eHsp90 promotes cancer cell motility and invasion and facilitates tumor metastasis, the mechanistic basis for its activity has remained unknown. The goal of this study was to explore whether extracellular Hsp90 (eHsp90) may play a role in PCa progression. To explore this, 3 sets of lineage-related differentially metastatic cell pairs were utilized to evaluate eHsp90 expression and activity. We found that eHsp90 secretion correlated with PCa aggressiveness. To evaluate the functional role of eHsp90, we modulated its expression and activity. Upregulation of eHsp90 was accomplished by exposure of prostate epithelial cells to exogenous Hsp90 protein, or alternatively, cells were transduced with a lentivirus directing the secretion of Hsp90. Blockade of eHsp90 function was accomplished by exposure of cells to anti-Hsp90 antibodies or to a cell-impermeant specific inhibitor of Hsp90. We demonstrate that eHsp90 is a critical factor required for PCa cell motility and for initiation of the epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT) genetic program. Moreover, modest increases in eHsp90 were sufficient to induce tumor growth and localized invasion in a subrenal capsule xenograft model of PCa. Finally, eHsp90 was detected in human cancer specimens and its expression was correlated with upregulated expression of pro-invasive genes. Our findings offer insights into the mechanistic basis of eHsp90 in PCa, and further support a putative clinical role for eHsp90 as a potential driver of PCa progression.nnCitation Format: Michael W. Hance, Krystal Nolan, Udhayakumar Gopal, Jessica E. Bohonowych, Agnieszka Jezierska-Drutel, Carola A. Neumann, Haibo Liu, Garraway P. Isla, Omar E. Franco, Simon W. Hayward, Jennifer S. Isaacs. Tumor secreted Hsp90 initiates tumor growth and the epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT) in prostate cancer. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the AACR Special Conference on Tumor Invasion and Metastasis; Jan 20-23, 2013; San Diego, CA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2013;73(3 Suppl):Abstract nr A74.
Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2017
John J. Skoko; Alparslan Asan; Chen-Shan Woodcock; Juxiang Cao; David Gaboriau; Candice E. Paulsen; Myriam Attar; Bentley M. Wingert; Steven R. Woodcock; Jennifer Schulte; Hongqiang Ma; Carlos J. Camacho; Yang Liu; Ciaran G. Morrison; Kate S. Carroll; Bruce A. Freeman; Carola A. Neumann