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Dive into the research topics where Dominique B. Hoelzinger is active.

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Featured researches published by Dominique B. Hoelzinger.


Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | 2007

Molecular targets of glioma invasion

Mitsutoshi Nakada; Satoko Nakada; Tim Demuth; Nhan L. Tran; Dominique B. Hoelzinger; Michael E. Berens

Abstract.Glioblastoma multiforme is the most common and lethal primary malignant brain tumor. Although considerable progress has been made in technical proficiencies of surgical and radiation treatment for brain tumor patients, the impact of these advances on clinical outcome has been disappointing, with median survival time not exceeding 15 months. Over the last 30 years, no significant increase in survival of patients suffering from this disease has been achieved. A fundamental source of the management challenge presented in glioma patients is the insidious propensity of tumor invasion into distant brain tissue. Invasive tumor cells escape surgical removal and geographically dodge lethal radiation exposure and chemotherapy. Recent improved understanding of biochemical and molecular determinants of glioma cell invasion provide valuable insight into the underlying biological features of the disease, as well as illuminating possible new therapeutic targets. These findings are moving forward to translational research and clinical trials as novel antiglioma therapies.


Cancer Research | 2006

Increased Fibroblast Growth Factor-Inducible 14 Expression Levels Promote Glioma Cell Invasion via Rac1 and Nuclear Factor-κB and Correlate with Poor Patient Outcome

Nhan L. Tran; Wendy S. McDonough; Benjamin A. Savitch; Shannon P. Fortin; Jeffrey A. Winkles; Marc Symons; Mitsutoshi Nakada; Heather E. Cunliffe; Galen Hostetter; Dominique B. Hoelzinger; Jessica L. Rennert; Jennifer S. Michaelson; Linda C. Burkly; Christopher A. Lipinski; Joseph C. Loftus; Luigi Mariani; Michael E. Berens

Glial tumors progress to malignant grades by heightened proliferation and relentless dispersion throughout the central nervous system. Understanding genetic and biochemical processes that foster these behaviors is likely to reveal specific and effective targets for therapeutic intervention. Our current report shows that the fibroblast growth factor-inducible 14 (Fn14), a member of the tumor necrosis factor (TNF) receptor superfamily, is expressed at high levels in migrating glioma cells in vitro and invading glioma cells in vivo. Forced Fn14 overexpression stimulates glioma cell migration and invasion, and depletion of Rac1 by small interfering RNA inhibits this cellular response. Activation of Fn14 signaling by the ligand TNF-like weak inducer of apoptosis (TWEAK) stimulates migration and up-regulates expression of Fn14; this TWEAK effect requires Rac1 and nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-kappaB) activity. The Fn14 promoter region contains NF-kappaB binding sites, which mediate positive feedback causing sustained overexpression of Fn14 and enduring glioma cell invasion. Furthermore, Fn14 gene expression levels increase with glioma grade and inversely correlate with patient survival. These results show that the Fn14 cascade operates as a positive feedback mechanism for elevated and sustained Fn14 expression. Such a feedback loop argues for aggressive targeting of the Fn14 axis as a unique and specific driver of glioma malignant behavior.


Molecular Cancer Therapeutics | 2007

MAP-ing glioma invasion: Mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase 3 and p38 drive glioma invasion and progression and predict patient survival

Tim Demuth; Linsey B. Reavie; Jessica L. Rennert; Mitsutoshi Nakada; Satoko Nakada; Dominique B. Hoelzinger; Christian Beaudry; Amanda Henrichs; Eric M. Anderson; Michael E. Berens

Although astrocytic brain tumors do not metastasize systemically, during tumorigenesis glioma cells adopt an invasive phenotype that is poorly targeted by conventional therapies; hence, glioma patients die of recurrence from the locally invasive tumor population. Our work is aimed at identifying and validating novel therapeutic targets and biomarkers in invasive human gliomas. Transcriptomes of invasive glioma cells relative to stationary cognates were produced from a three-dimensional spheroid in vitro invasion assay by laser capture microdissection and whole human genome expression microarrays. Qualitative differential expression of candidate invasion genes was confirmed by quantitative reverse transcription-PCR, clinically by immunohistochemistry on tissue microarray, by immunoblotting on surgical specimens, and on two independent gene expression data sets of glial tumors. Cell-based assays and ex vivo brain slice invasion studies were used for functional validation. We identify mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) kinase 3 (MKK3) as a key activator of p38 MAPK in glioma; MKK3 activation is strongly correlated with p38 activation in vitro and in vivo. We further report that these members of the MAPK family are strong promoters of tumor invasion, progression, and poor patient survival. Inhibition of either candidate leads to significantly reduced glioma invasiveness in vitro. Consistent with the concept of synthetic lethality, we show that inhibition of invasion by interference with these genes greatly sensitizes arrested glioma cells to cytotoxic therapies. Our findings therefore argue that interference with MKK3 signaling through a novel treatment combination of p38 inhibitor plus temozolomide heightens the vulnerability of glioma to chemotherapy. [Mol Cancer Ther 2007;6(4):1212–22]


International Journal of Cancer | 2009

The Phosphorylation of Ephrin-B2 Ligand Promotes Glioma Cell Migration and Invasion

Mitsutoshi Nakada; Eric M. Anderson; Tim Demuth; Satoko Nakada; Linsey B. Reavie; Kelsey L. Drake; Dominique B. Hoelzinger; Michael E. Berens

To reveal molecular drivers of glioma invasion, two distinct glioblastoma (GBM) cell phenotypes (invading cells and tumor core cells) were collected from 19 GBM specimens using laser capture microdissection. Isolated RNA underwent whole human genome expression profiling to identify differentially expressed genes. Pathway enrichment analysis highlighted the bidirectional receptor/ligand tyrosine kinase system, EphB/ephrin‐B, as the most tightly linked system to the invading cell phenotype. Clinical relevance of ephrin‐B genes was confirmed in a clinically annotated expression data set of 195 brain biopsy specimens. Levels of ephrin‐B1 and ‐B2 mRNA were significantly higher in GBM (n = 82) than in normal brain (n = 24). Kaplan–Meier analysis demonstrated ephrin‐B2, but not ephrin‐B1, expression levels were significantly associated with short term survival in malignant astrocytomas (n = 97, p = 0.016). In human brain tumor specimens, the production and phosphorylation of ephrin‐B2 were high in GBM. Immunohistochemistry demonstrated ephrin‐B2 localization primarily in GBM cells but not in normal brain. A highly invasive glioma cell line, U87, expressed high levels of ephrin‐B2 compared with relatively less invasive cell lines. Treatment with EphB2/Fc chimera further enhanced migration and invasion of U87 cells, whereas treatment with an ephrin‐B2 blocking antibody significantly slowed migration and invasion. Forced expression of ephrin‐B2 in the U251 cell line stimulated migration and invasion in vitro and ex vivo, concomitant with tyrosine phosphorylation of ephrin‐B2. These results demonstrate that high expression of ephrin‐B2 is a strong predictor of short‐term survival and that ephrin‐B2 plays a critical role in glioma invasion rendering this signaling pathway as a potential therapeutic target.


BMC Genomics | 2008

Glioma cells on the run – the migratory transcriptome of 10 human glioma cell lines

Tim Demuth; Jessica L. Rennert; Dominique B. Hoelzinger; Linsey B. Reavie; Mitsutoshi Nakada; Christian Beaudry; Satoko Nakada; Eric M. Anderson; Amanda Henrichs; Wendy S. McDonough; David R Holz; Anna M. Joy; Richard Lin; Kuang H Pan; Chih Jian Lih; Stan N Cohen; Michael E. Berens

BackgroundGlioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is the most common primary intracranial tumor and despite recent advances in treatment regimens, prognosis for affected patients remains poor. Active cell migration and invasion of GBM cells ultimately lead to ubiquitous tumor recurrence and patient death.To further understand the genetic mechanisms underlying the ability of glioma cells to migrate, we compared the matched transcriptional profiles of migratory and stationary populations of human glioma cells. Using a monolayer radial migration assay, motile and stationary cell populations from seven human long term glioma cell lines and three primary GBM cultures were isolated and prepared for expression analysis.ResultsGene expression signatures of stationary and migratory populations across all cell lines were identified using a pattern recognition approach that integrates a priori knowledge with expression data. Principal component analysis (PCA) revealed two discriminating patterns between migrating and stationary glioma cells: i) global down-regulation and ii) global up-regulation profiles that were used in a proband-based rule function implemented in GABRIEL to find subsets of genes having similar expression patterns. Genes with up-regulation pattern in migrating glioma cells were found to be overexpressed in 75% of human GBM biopsy specimens compared to normal brain. A 22 gene signature capable of classifying glioma cultures based on their migration rate was developed. Fidelity of this discovery algorithm was assessed by validation of the invasion candidate gene, connective tissue growth factor (CTGF). siRNA mediated knockdown yielded reduced in vitro migration and ex vivo invasion; immunohistochemistry on glioma invasion tissue microarray confirmed up-regulation of CTGF in invasive glioma cells.ConclusionGene expression profiling of migratory glioma cells induced to disperse in vitro affords discovery of genomic signatures; selected candidates were validated clinically at the transcriptional and translational levels as well as through functional assays thereby underscoring the fidelity of the discovery algorithm.


Journal of Neuro-oncology | 2008

Autotaxin: a secreted autocrine/paracrine factor that promotes glioma invasion

Dominique B. Hoelzinger; Mitsutoshi Nakada; Tim Demuth; Tyler Rosensteel; Linsey B. Reavie; Michael E. Berens

Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is inherently invasive, and it is from the invasive cell population that the tumor recurs. The GBM invasion transcriptome reveals over-expression of various autocrine factors that could act as motility drivers, such as autotaxin (ATX). Some of these factors could also have paracrine roles, modulating the behavior of cells in the peri-tumoral brain parenchyma. ATX generates lysophosphatidic acid (LPA), which signals through LPA receptors expressed by GBM as well as in astrocytes, oligodendrocytes (ODC) and microglia; their activation manifest cell specific effects. ATX stimulates invasion of GBM cells in vitro and ex vivo invasion assays. ATX activity enhances GBM adhesion in cells expressing the LPA1 receptor, as well as stimulating rac activation. GBM secreted ATX can also have paracrine effects: ATX activity results in reduced ODC adhesion. ODC monolayer invasion showed that U87 and U251 GBM cells expressing ATX invaded through an ODC monolayer significantly more than cells depleted of ATX or cells expressing inactive ATX, suggesting that GBM cells secreting ATX find ODCs less of a barrier than cells that do not express ATX. Secreted factors that drive GBM invasion can have autocrine and paracrine roles; one stimulates GBM motility and the other results in ODC dis-adhesion.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2004

Differential Gene Expression in Auristatin PHE-Treated Cryptococcus neoformans

Tanja Woyke; Michael E. Berens; Dominique B. Hoelzinger; George R. Pettit; Günther Winkelmann; Robin K. Pettit

ABSTRACT The antifungal pentapeptide auristatin PHE was recently shown to interfere with microtubule dynamics and nuclear and cellular division in the opportunistic pathogen Cryptococcus neoformans. To gain a broader understanding of the cellular response of C. neoformans to auristatin PHE, mRNA differential display (DD) and reverse transcriptase PCR (RT-PCR) were applied. Examination of approximately 60% of the cell transcriptome from cells treated with 1.5 times the MIC (7.89 μM) of auristatin PHE for 90 min revealed 29 transcript expression differences between control and drug-treated populations. Differential expression of seven of the transcripts was confirmed by RT-PCR, as was drug-dependent modulation of an additional seven transcripts by RT-PCR only. Among genes found to be differentially expressed were those encoding proteins involved in transport, cell cycle regulation, signal transduction, cell stress, DNA repair, nucleotide metabolism, and capsule production. For example, RHO1 and an open reading frame (ORF) encoding a protein with 91% similarity to the Schizophyllum commune 14-3-3 protein, both involved in cell cycle regulation, were down-regulated, as was the gene encoding the multidrug efflux pump Afr1p. An ORF encoding a protein with 57% identity to the heat shock protein HSP104 in Pleurotus sajor-caju was up-regulated. Also, three transcripts of unknown function were responsive to auristatin PHE, which may eventually contribute to the elucidation of the function of their gene products. Further study of these differentially expressed genes and expression of their corresponding proteins are warranted to evaluate how they may be involved in the mechanism of action of auristatin PHE. This information may also contribute to an explanation of the selectivity of auristatin PHE for C. neoformans. This is the first report of drug action using DD in C. neoformans.


Journal of the National Cancer Institute | 2007

Autocrine Factors That Sustain Glioma Invasion and Paracrine Biology in the Brain Microenvironment

Dominique B. Hoelzinger; Tim Demuth; Michael E. Berens


Cancer Research | 2001

Identification and Validation of P311 as a Glioblastoma Invasion Gene Using Laser Capture Microdissection

Luigi Mariani; Wendy S. McDonough; Dominique B. Hoelzinger; Christian Beaudry; Elzbieta Kaczmarek; Stephen W. Coons; Alf Giese; Mojdeh Moghaddam; Rolf W. Seiler; Michael E. Berens


Clinical Cancer Research | 2001

Death-associated Protein 3 (Dap-3) Is Overexpressed in Invasive Glioblastoma Cells in Vivo and in Glioma Cell Lines with Induced Motility Phenotype in Vitro

Luigi Mariani; Christian Beaudry; Wendy S. McDonough; Dominique B. Hoelzinger; Elzbieta Kaczmarek; Francisco A. Ponce; Stephen W. Coons; Alf Giese; Rolf W. Seiler; Michael E. Berens

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Michael E. Berens

Translational Genomics Research Institute

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Linsey B. Reavie

Translational Genomics Research Institute

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Satoko Nakada

Kanazawa Medical University

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Christian Beaudry

Translational Genomics Research Institute

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Jessica L. Rennert

Translational Genomics Research Institute

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Wendy S. McDonough

Translational Genomics Research Institute

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Eric M. Anderson

Translational Genomics Research Institute

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