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Dive into the research topics where Christine E. Eyler is active.

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Featured researches published by Christine E. Eyler.


Cancer Cell | 2009

Hypoxia-Inducible Factors Regulate Tumorigenic Capacity of Glioma Stem Cells

Zhizhong Li; Shideng Bao; Qiulian Wu; Hui Wang; Christine E. Eyler; Sith Sathornsumetee; Qing Shi; Yiting Cao; Justin D. Lathia; Roger E. McLendon; Anita B. Hjelmeland; Jeremy N. Rich

Glioblastomas are lethal cancers characterized by florid angiogenesis promoted in part by glioma stem cells (GSCs). Because hypoxia regulates angiogenesis, we examined hypoxic responses in GSCs. We now demonstrate that hypoxia-inducible factor HIF2alpha and multiple HIF-regulated genes are preferentially expressed in GSCs in comparison to non-stem tumor cells and normal neural progenitors. In tumor specimens, HIF2alpha colocalizes with cancer stem cell markers. Targeting HIFs in GSCs inhibits self-renewal, proliferation, and survival in vitro, and attenuates tumor initiation potential of GSCs in vivo. Analysis of a molecular database reveals that HIF2A expression correlates with poor glioma patient survival. Our results demonstrate that GSCs differentially respond to hypoxia with distinct HIF induction patterns, and HIF2alpha might represent a promising target for antiglioblastoma therapies.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2008

Survival of the Fittest: Cancer Stem Cells in Therapeutic Resistance and Angiogenesis

Christine E. Eyler; Jeremy N. Rich

In an increasing number of cancers, tumor populations called cancer stem cells (CSCs), or tumor-initiating cells, have been defined in functional assays of self-renewal and tumor initiation. Moreover, recent work in several different cancers has suggested the CSC population as a source of chemotherapy and radiation-therapy resistance within tumors. Work in glioblastoma and breast cancers supports the idea that CSCs may possess innate resistance mechanisms against radiation- and chemotherapy-induced cancer cell death, allowing them to survive and initiate tumor recurrence. Several resistance mechanisms have been proposed, including amplified checkpoint activation and DNA damage repair as well as increased Wnt/beta-catenin and Notch signaling. Novel targeted therapies against the DNA damage checkpoint or stem-cell maintenance pathways may sensitize CSCs to radiation or other therapies. Another important category of cancer therapies are antiangiogenic and vascular targeting agents, which are also becoming integrated in the treatment paradigm of an increasing number of cancers. Recent results from our laboratory and others support a role for CSCs in the angiogenic drive as well as the mechanism of antiangiogenic agents. Identifying and targeting the molecular mechanisms responsible for CSC therapeutic resistance may improve the efficacy of current cancer therapies.


Cell Stem Cell | 2010

Integrin Alpha 6 Regulates Glioblastoma Stem Cells

Justin D. Lathia; Joseph Gallagher; John M. Heddleston; Jialiang Wang; Christine E. Eyler; Jennifer MacSwords; Qiulian Wu; Amit Vasanji; Roger E. McLendon; Anita B. Hjelmeland; Jeremy N. Rich

Cancer stem cells (CSCs) are a subpopulation of tumor cells suggested to be critical for tumor maintenance, metastasis, and therapeutic resistance. Prospective identification and targeting of CSCs are therefore priorities for the development of novel therapeutic paradigms. Although CSC enrichment has been achieved with cell surface proteins including CD133 (Prominin-1), the roles of current CSC markers in tumor maintenance remain unclear. We examined the glioblastoma stem cell (GSC) perivascular microenvironment in patient specimens to identify enrichment markers with a functional significance and identified integrin alpha6 as a candidate. Integrin alpha6 is coexpressed with conventional GSC markers and enriches for GSCs. Targeting integrin alpha6 in GSCs inhibits self-renewal, proliferation, and tumor formation capacity. Our results provide evidence that GSCs express high levels of integrin alpha6, which can serve not only as an enrichment marker but also as a promising antiglioblastoma therapy.


Stem Cells | 2009

Targeting interleukin 6 signaling suppresses glioma stem cell survival and tumor growth

Hui Wang; Justin D. Lathia; Qiulian Wu; Jialiang Wang; Zhizhong Li; John M. Heddleston; Christine E. Eyler; Jennifer L. Elderbroom; Joseph Gallagher; Jesse Schuschu; Jennifer MacSwords; Yiting Cao; Roger E. McLendon; Xiao-Fan Wang; Anita B. Hjelmeland; Jeremy N. Rich

Glioblastomas are the most common and most lethal primary brain tumor. Recent studies implicate an important role for a restricted population of neoplastic cells (glioma stem cells (GSCs)) in glioma maintenance and recurrence. We now demonstrate that GSCs preferentially express two interleukin 6 (IL6) receptors: IL6 receptor alpha (IL6Rα) and glycoprotein 130 (gp130). Targeting IL6Rα or IL6 ligand expression in GSCs with the use of short hairpin RNAs (shRNAs) significantly reduces growth and neurosphere formation capacity while increasing apoptosis. Perturbation of IL6 signaling in GSCs attenuates signal transducers and activators of transcription three (STAT3) activation, and small molecule inhibitors of STAT3 potently induce GSC apoptosis. These data indicate that STAT3 is a downstream mediator of prosurvival IL6 signals in GSCs. Targeting of IL6Rα or IL6 expression in GSCs increases the survival of mice bearing intracranial human glioma xenografts. IL6 is clinically significant because elevated IL6 ligand and receptor expression are associated with poor glioma patient survival. The potential utility of anti‐IL6 therapies is demonstrated by decreased growth of subcutaneous human GSC‐derived xenografts treated with IL6 antibody. Together, our data indicate that IL6 signaling contributes to glioma malignancy through the promotion of GSC growth and survival, and that targeting IL6 may offer benefit for glioma patients. STEM CELLS 2009;27:2393–2404


Stem Cells | 2008

Brain cancer stem cells display preferential sensitivity to Akt inhibition.

Christine E. Eyler; Wen-Chi Foo; Katherine M. LaFiura; Roger E. McLendon; Anita B. Hjelmeland; Jeremy N. Rich

Malignant brain tumors are among the most lethal cancers, and conventional therapies are largely limited to palliation. Novel therapies targeted against specific molecular pathways may offer superior efficacy and less toxicity than conventional therapies, but initial clinical trials of molecular targeted agents in brain cancer therapy have been frequently disappointing. In brain tumors and other cancers, subpopulations of tumor cells have recently been characterized by their ability to self‐renew and initiate tumors. Although these cancer stem cells, or tumor initiating cells, are often only present in small numbers in human tumors, mounting evidence suggests that cancer stem cells contribute to tumor maintenance and therapeutic resistance. Thus, the development of therapies that target cancer stem cell signal transduction and biology may improve brain tumor patient survival. We now demonstrate that populations enriched for cancer stem cells are preferentially sensitive to an inhibitor of Akt, a prominent cell survival and invasion signaling node. Treatment with an Akt inhibitor more potently reduced the numbers of viable brain cancer stem cells relative to matched nonstem cancer cells associated with a preferential induction of apoptosis and a suppression of neurosphere formation. Akt inhibition also reduced the motility and invasiveness of all tumor cells but had a greater impact on cancer stem cell behaviors. Furthermore, inhibition of Akt activity in cancer stem cells increased the survival of immunocompromised mice bearing human glioma xenografts in vivo. Together, these results suggest that Akt inhibitors may function as effective anticancer stem cell therapies.


Cell | 2011

Glioma Stem Cell Proliferation and Tumor Growth Are Promoted by Nitric Oxide Synthase-2

Christine E. Eyler; Qiulian Wu; Kenneth Yan; Jennifer MacSwords; Devin Chandler-Militello; Katherine L. Misuraca; Justin D. Lathia; Michael T. Forrester; Jeongwu Lee; Jonathan S. Stamler; Steven A. Goldman; Markus Bredel; Roger E. McLendon; Andrew E. Sloan; Anita B. Hjelmeland; Jeremy N. Rich

Malignant gliomas are aggressive brain tumors with limited therapeutic options, and improvements in treatment require a deeper molecular understanding of this disease. As in other cancers, recent studies have identified highly tumorigenic subpopulations within malignant gliomas, known generally as cancer stem cells. Here, we demonstrate that glioma stem cells (GSCs) produce nitric oxide via elevated nitric oxide synthase-2 (NOS2) expression. GSCs depend on NOS2 activity for growth and tumorigenicity, distinguishing them from non-GSCs and normal neural progenitors. Gene expression profiling identified many NOS2-regulated genes, including the cell-cycle inhibitor cell division autoantigen-1 (CDA1). Further, high NOS2 expression correlates with decreased survival in human glioma patients, and NOS2 inhibition slows glioma growth in a murine intracranial model. These data provide insight into how GSCs are mechanistically distinct from their less tumorigenic counterparts and suggest that NOS2 inhibition may be an efficacious approach to treating this devastating disease.


Cancer Cell | 2011

Nonreceptor tyrosine kinase BMX maintains self-renewal and tumorigenic potential of glioblastoma stem cells by activating STAT3.

Olga A. Guryanova; Qiulian Wu; Lin Cheng; Justin D. Lathia; Zhi Huang; Jinbo Yang; Jennifer MacSwords; Christine E. Eyler; Roger E. McLendon; John M. Heddleston; Weinian Shou; Dolores Hambardzumyan; Jeongwu Lee; Anita B. Hjelmeland; Andrew E. Sloan; Markus Bredel; George R. Stark; Jeremy N. Rich; Shideng Bao

Glioblastomas display cellular hierarchies containing tumor-propagating glioblastoma stem cells (GSCs). STAT3 is a critical signaling node in GSC maintenance but molecular mechanisms underlying STAT3 activation in GSCs are poorly defined. Here we demonstrate that the bone marrow X-linked (BMX) nonreceptor tyrosine kinase activates STAT3 signaling to maintain self-renewal and tumorigenic potential of GSCs. BMX is differentially expressed in GSCs relative to nonstem cancer cells and neural progenitors. BMX knockdown potently inhibited STAT3 activation, expression of GSC transcription factors, and growth of GSC-derived intracranial tumors. Constitutively active STAT3 rescued the effects of BMX downregulation, supporting that BMX signals through STAT3 in GSCs. These data demonstrate that BMX represents a GSC therapeutic target and reinforces the importance of STAT3 signaling in stem-like cancer phenotypes.


Cell Death and Disease | 2011

Distribution of CD133 reveals glioma stem cells self-renew through symmetric and asymmetric cell divisions.

Justin D. Lathia; Masahiro Hitomi; Joseph Gallagher; S P Gadani; J Adkins; Amit Vasanji; L Liu; Christine E. Eyler; John M. Heddleston; Qiulian Wu; S Minhas; A Soeda; D J Hoeppner; R Ravin; R D G McKay; Roger E. McLendon; Denis Corbeil; Anjen Chenn; Anita B. Hjelmeland; D M Park; Jeremy N. Rich

Malignant gliomas contain a population of self-renewing tumorigenic stem-like cells; however, it remains unclear how these glioma stem cells (GSCs) self-renew or generate cellular diversity at the single-cell level. Asymmetric cell division is a proposed mechanism to maintain cancer stem cells, yet the modes of cell division that GSCs utilize remain undetermined. Here, we used single-cell analyses to evaluate the cell division behavior of GSCs. Lineage-tracing analysis revealed that the majority of GSCs were generated through expansive symmetric cell division and not through asymmetric cell division. The majority of differentiated progeny was generated through symmetric pro-commitment divisions under expansion conditions and in the absence of growth factors, occurred mainly through asymmetric cell divisions. Mitotic pair analysis detected asymmetric CD133 segregation and not any other GSC marker in a fraction of mitoses, some of which were associated with Numb asymmetry. Under growth factor withdrawal conditions, the proportion of asymmetric CD133 divisions increased, congruent with the increase in asymmetric cell divisions observed in the lineage-tracing studies. Using single-cell-based observation, we provide definitive evidence that GSCs are capable of different modes of cell division and that the generation of cellular diversity occurs mainly through symmetric cell division, not through asymmetric cell division.


PLOS Biology | 2010

Targeting A20 decreases glioma stem cell survival and tumor growth.

Anita B. Hjelmeland; Qiulian Wu; Sarah Wickman; Christine E. Eyler; John M. Heddleston; Qing Shi; Justin D. Lathia; Jennifer MacSwords; Jeongwu Lee; Roger E. McLendon; Jeremy N. Rich

The A20 protein is a known inhibitor of apoptosis that here is shown to be a novel cancer stem cell-promoting factor associated with poor glioma patient survival.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Turning cancer stem cells inside out: an exploration of glioma stem cell signaling pathways.

Zhizhong Li; Hui Wang; Christine E. Eyler; Anita B. Hjelmeland; Jeremy N. Rich

Tumors are complex collections of heterogeneous cells with recruited vasculature, inflammatory cells, and stromal elements. Neoplastic cells frequently display a hierarchy in differentiation status. Recent studies suggest that brain tumors have a limited population of neoplastic cells called cancer stem cells with the capacity for sustained self-renewal and tumor propagation. Brain tumor stem cells contribute to therapeutic resistance and tumor angiogenesis. In this minireview, we summarize recent data regarding critical signaling pathways involved in brain tumor stem cell biology and discuss how targeting these molecules may contribute to the development of novel anti-glioma therapies.

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Jeremy N. Rich

University of California

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Anita B. Hjelmeland

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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