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Dive into the research topics where Erica L. Kreimann is active.

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Featured researches published by Erica L. Kreimann.


Archives of Oral Biology | 2003

Biodistribution of a carborane-containing porphyrin as a targeting agent for Boron Neutron Capture Therapy of oral cancer in the hamster cheek pouch

Erica L. Kreimann; Michiko Miura; Maria E. Itoiz; Elisa M. Heber; Ricardo N. Garavaglia; Daniel A. Batistoni; Raúl Jiménez Rebagliati; Marı́a J Roberti; Peggy L. Micca; Jeffrey A. Coderre; Amanda E. Schwint

Boron Neutron Capture Therapy (BNCT) is a bimodal cancer treatment based on the selective accumulation of 10B in tumors and concurrent irradiation with thermalized neutrons. The short-range, high-LET radiation produced by the capture of neutrons by 10B could potentially control tumor while sparing normal tissue if the boron compound targets tumor selectively within the treatment volume. In previous studies, we proposed and validated the hamster cheek pouch model of oral cancer for BNCT studies, proved that absolute and relative uptake of the clinically employed boron compound boronophenylalanine (BPA) would be potentially therapeutic in this model and provided evidence of the efficacy of in vivo BPA-mediated BNCT to control hamster oral mucosa tumors with virtually no damage to normal tissue. We herein present the biodistribution and pharmacokinetics of a lipophilic, carborane-containing tetraphenylporphyrin (CuTCPH) in the hamster oral cancer model. CuTCPH is a novel, non-toxic compound that may be advantageous in terms of selective and absolute delivery of boron to tumor tissues. For potentially effective BNCT, tumor boron concentrations from a new agent should be greater than 30 ppm and tumor/blood and tumor/normal tissue boron concentration ratios should be greater than 5/1 without causing significant toxicity. We administered CuTCPH intraperitoneally (i.p.) as a single dose of 32 microg/g body weight (b.w.) (10 microg B/g b.w.) or as four doses of 32 microg/g b.w. over 2 days. Blood (Bl) and tissues were sampled at 3, 6, 12, 24, 48, and 72 h in the single-dose protocol and at 1-4 days after the last injection in the multidose protocol. The tissues sampled were tumor (T), precancerous tissue surrounding tumor, normal pouch (N), skin, tongue, cheek and palate mucosa, liver, spleen, parotid gland and brain. The maximum mean B ratios for the single-dose protocol were T/N: 9.2/1 (12h) and T/Bl: 18.1/1 (72 h). The B value peaked to 20.7+/-18.5 ppm in tumor at 24h. The multidose protocol maximum mean ratios were T/N: 11.9/1 (3 days) and T/Bl: 235/1 (4 days). Absolute boron concentration in tumor reached a maximum value of 116 ppm and a mean value of 71.5+/-48.3 ppm at 3 days. The fact that absolute and relative B values markedly exceeded the BNCT therapeutic threshold with no apparent toxicity may confer on this compound a therapeutic advantage. CuTCPH-mediated BNCT would be potentially useful for the treatment of oral cancer in an experimental model.


Histochemistry and Cell Biology | 2010

Estrogens regulate the expression of NHERF1 in normal colon during the reproductive cycle of Wistar rats

F. Darío Cuello-Carrión; Mariana Troncoso; Elina Guiñazu; Susana R. Valdez; Mariel A. Fanelli; Daniel R. Ciocca; Erica L. Kreimann

In breast cancer cell lines, the Na+/H+ exchanger regulator factor 1 (NHERF1) gene is regulated at the transcriptional level by estrogens, the protein expression levels correlate with the presence of estrogen receptors and the effect is blocked by anti-estrogens. However, there is limited information regarding the regulation of NHERF1 by estrogens in normal colon tissue. The NHERF1 protein has an important role in the maintenance of the intestine ultrastructure. NHERF1-deficient mice showed defects in the intestinal microvilli as well as molecular alterations in brush border membrane proteins. Here, we have studied the expression of NHERF1 in normal rat colon and uterus during the reproductive cycle of Wistar rats. We found that NHERF1 expression in rat colon during the estral cycle is modified by estrogen levels: higher expression of NHERF1 was observed during the proestrous and estrous stages and lower expression in diestrous 1 when estrogen levels decreased. In uterus, NHERF1 was expressed in the apical region of the luminal epithelium and glands in all stages of the estral cycle, and in both colon and uterus, the expression was independent of the proliferation status. Our results show that NHERF1 expression is regulated by estrogens in colon during the rat estral cycle.


Hormones and Cancer | 2011

Expression of NHERF1 in Colonic Tumors Induced by 1,2-dimethylhydrazine in Rats is Independent of Plasma Ovarian Steroids

Mariana Troncoso; F. Darío Cuello Carrión; Elina Guiñazu; Mariel A. Fanelli; Magdalena Montt-Guevara; Rómulo L. Cabrini; Rubén W. Carón; Erica L. Kreimann

In normal embryonic fibroblasts, the Na+/H+ exchanger regulator factor 1 (NHERF1) stabilizes E-cadherin/β-catenin binding and the lack of NHERF1 expression promotes cell transformation thus acting as a tumor suppressor gene. We here tested the hypothesis that NHERF1 could act as a tumor suppressor gene in colon cancer as a mediator of estrogens’ protective actions in colon carcinogenesis. We studied the expression and localization of NHERF1 and β-catenin by immunohistochemistry in colonic tumors induced by 1,2 dimethylhidrazine (DMH) in Sprague–Dawley rats. One group of the rats treated with the carcinogen was ovariectomized (OVX) in the middle of the tumor induction, simulating a human menopausal condition. We observed a protective role of estrogens in colon cancer, as non-ovariectomized rats (DMH) had a reduced tumor area compared with the ovariectomized group (DMH + OVX; mean ± SE) 28.98 ± 4.65 vs. 67.58 ± 8.69 (p < 0.00380). Despite the lack of plasma estrogen stimulation, we found abundant expression of NHERF1 in colon tumors from ovariectomized rats. NHERF1 was mainly localized in the cytoplasm of the adenocarcinoma cells and lost the apical localization previously reported in normal colon tissue. We also detected expression of NHERF1 by western blot in the SW48, CACO-2, and HT29 colon cancer cell lines. Non-estrogenic factors in plasma or the tumor microenvironment may regulate NHERF1 expression in transformed colon epithelial cells. Further studies are required to understand the regulation of NHERF1 expression in colon cancer tissue.


Acta Histochemica | 2016

Similar expression pattern of NHERF1 and EZRIN in papillary but not in solid areas of human serous ovarian carcinomas

Brenda Demacopulo; Baltazar Eduardo Lema; Rómulo L. Cabrini; Erica L. Kreimann

NHERF1 is an adaptor protein expressed in the apical membrane of polarized epithelia, which interacts with the EZRIN-Radixin-Moesin (ERM) family of proteins connecting signaling pathways to the cell cytoskeleton. NHERF1 and EZRIN cooperate in the maintenance of the apical microvilli in polarized epithelial cells. In several types of cancers, NHERF1 and EZRIN are displaced from the apical compartment to the cytoplasm and nuclei of cancer cells. At the present, the distribution of NHERF1 in ovarian tumors is not well known. In this study, NHERF1 expression was examined by immunohistochemistry in cyst adenofibromas, serous borderline tumors, and serous ovarian carcinomas. We observed a strong staining of NHERF1 and EZRIN at the membrane level of borderline tumors and areas of papillary structures in ovarian carcinomas. In tumors without papillary structures and compact structure, NHERF1 was exclusively expressed in the apical pole of the cells at the edges of the clefts of luminal spaces. In contrast, positive expression of EZRIN was found in the membrane of tumor cells within the solid tumor where NHERF1 was not expressed. In summary, this study shows, for the first time, the distribution of NHERF1 in ovarian cancer and reveals a different regulation of NHERF1 and EZRIN expression in ovarian tumors which represents the complexity of the molecular changes of this disease.


Cancer Research | 2001

The hamster cheek pouch as a model of oral cancer for boron neutron capture therapy studies: selective delivery of boron by boronophenylalanine.

Erica L. Kreimann; Maria E. Itoiz; Alejandra Dagrosa; Ricardo N. Garavaglia; Silvia Farías; Daniel A. Batistoni; Amanda E. Schwint


Cancer Research | 2001

Boron Neutron Capture Therapy for the Treatment of Oral Cancer in the Hamster Cheek Pouch Model

Erica L. Kreimann; Maria E. Itoiz; Juan Longhino; Herman Blaumann; Osvaldo Calzetta; Amanda E. Schwint


Archives of Oral Biology | 2006

Homogeneous boron targeting of heterogeneous tumors for boron neutron capture therapy (BNCT): Chemical analyses in the hamster cheek pouch oral cancer model

Elisa M. Heber; Verónica A. Trivillin; David W. Nigg; Maria E. Itoiz; Beatriz N. Gonzalez; Raúl Jiménez Rebagliati; Daniel A. Batistoni; Erica L. Kreimann; Amanda E. Schwint


Archives of Oral Biology | 2004

Biodistribution of GB-10 ( Na 210B 10 H 10 ) compound for boron neutron capture therapy (BNCT) in an experimental model of oral cancer in the hamster cheek pouch

Elisa M. Heber; Verónica A. Trivillin; David W. Nigg; Erica L. Kreimann; Maria E. Itoiz; Raúl Jiménez Rebagliati; Daniel A. Batistoni; Amanda E. Schwint


Archives of Oral Biology | 2007

Therapeutic effect of boron neutron capture therapy (BNCT) on field cancerized tissue: Inhibition of DNA synthesis and lag in the development of second primary tumors in precancerous tissue around treated tumors in DMBA-induced carcinogenesis in the hamster cheek pouch oral cancer model

Elisa M. Heber; Romina F. Aromando; Verónica A. Trivillin; Maria E. Itoiz; David W. Nigg; Erica L. Kreimann; Amanda E. Schwint


Oncology Letters | 2015

A novel splicing mutation in the SLC9A3R1 gene in tumors from ovarian cancer patients

Erica L. Kreimann; Magdalena Ratajska; Alina Kuzniacka; Brenda Demacopulo; Maciej Stukan; Janusz Limon

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Amanda E. Schwint

National Atomic Energy Commission

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Maria E. Itoiz

University of Buenos Aires

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Daniel A. Batistoni

National Atomic Energy Commission

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Elisa M. Heber

National Atomic Energy Commission

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David W. Nigg

Battelle Memorial Institute

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Raúl Jiménez Rebagliati

National Atomic Energy Commission

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Verónica A. Trivillin

National Atomic Energy Commission

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Brenda Demacopulo

National Atomic Energy Commission

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Ricardo N. Garavaglia

National Atomic Energy Commission

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