Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Fabio Stossi is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Fabio Stossi.


Nature | 2017

Mutual regulation of tumour vessel normalization and immunostimulatory reprogramming

Lin Tian; Amit Goldstein; Hai Wang; Hin Ching Lo; Ik Sun Kim; Thomas Welte; Kuanwei Sheng; Lacey E. Dobrolecki; Xiaomei Zhang; Nagireddy Putluri; Thuy L. Phung; Sendurai A. Mani; Fabio Stossi; Arun Sreekumar; Michael A. Mancini; William K. Decker; Chenghang Zong; Michael T. Lewis; Xiang H.-F. Zhang

Blockade of angiogenesis can retard tumour growth, but may also paradoxically increase metastasis. This paradox may be resolved by vessel normalization, which involves increased pericyte coverage, improved tumour vessel perfusion, reduced vascular permeability, and consequently mitigated hypoxia. Although these processes alter tumour progression, their regulation is poorly understood. Here we show that type 1 T helper (TH1) cells play a crucial role in vessel normalization. Bioinformatic analyses revealed that gene expression features related to vessel normalization correlate with immunostimulatory pathways, especially T lymphocyte infiltration or activity. To delineate the causal relationship, we used various mouse models with vessel normalization or T lymphocyte deficiencies. Although disruption of vessel normalization reduced T lymphocyte infiltration as expected, reciprocal depletion or inactivation of CD4+ T lymphocytes decreased vessel normalization, indicating a mutually regulatory loop. In addition, activation of CD4+ T lymphocytes by immune checkpoint blockade increased vessel normalization. TH1 cells that secrete interferon-γ are a major population of cells associated with vessel normalization. Patient-derived xenograft tumours growing in immunodeficient mice exhibited enhanced hypoxia compared to the original tumours in immunocompetent humans, and hypoxia was reduced by adoptive TH1 transfer. Our findings elucidate an unexpected role of TH1 cells in vasculature and immune reprogramming. TH1 cells may be a marker and a determinant of both immune checkpoint blockade and anti-angiogenesis efficacy.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Primary Human Placental Trophoblasts are Permissive for Zika Virus (ZIKV) Replication

Kjersti Aagaard; Anismrita Lahon; Melissa Suter; Ravi P. Arya; Maxim D. Seferovic; Megan B. Vogt; Min Hu; Fabio Stossi; Michael A. Mancini; R. Alan Harris; Maike K. Kahr; Catherine Eppes; Martha Rac; Michael A. Belfort; Chun Shik Park; Daniel Lacorazza; Rebecca Rico-Hesse

Zika virus (ZIKV) is an emerging mosquito-borne (Aedes genus) arbovirus of the Flaviviridae family. Although ZIKV has been predominately associated with a mild or asymptomatic dengue-like disease, its appearance in the Americas has been accompanied by a multi-fold increase in reported incidence of fetal microcephaly and brain malformations. The source and mode of vertical transmission from mother to fetus is presumptively transplacental, although a causal link explaining the interval delay between maternal symptoms and observed fetal malformations following infection has been missing. In this study, we show that primary human placental trophoblasts from non-exposed donors (n = 20) can be infected by primary passage ZIKV-FLR isolate, and uniquely allowed for ZIKV viral RNA replication when compared to dengue virus (DENV). Consistent with their being permissive for ZIKV infection, primary trophoblasts expressed multiple putative ZIKV cell entry receptors, and cellular function and differentiation were preserved. These findings suggest that ZIKV-FLR strain can replicate in human placental trophoblasts without host cell destruction, thereby serving as a likely permissive reservoir and portal of fetal transmission with risk of latent microcephaly and malformations.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2013

Coactivators enable glucocorticoid receptor recruitment to fine-tune estrogen receptor transcriptional responses

Michael J. Bolt; Fabio Stossi; Justin Y. Newberg; Arturo Orjalo; Hans E. Johansson; Michael A. Mancini

Nuclear receptors (NRs) are central regulators of pathophysiological processes; however, how their responses intertwine is still not fully understood. The aim of this study was to determine whether and how steroid NRs can influence each other’s activity under co-agonist treatment. We used a unique system consisting of a multicopy integration of an estrogen receptor responsive unit that allows direct visualization and quantification of estrogen receptor alpha (ERα) DNA binding, co-regulator recruitment and transcriptional readout. We find that ERα DNA loading is required for other type I nuclear receptors to be co-recruited after dual agonist treatment. We focused on ERα/glucocorticoid receptor interplay and demonstrated that it requires steroid receptor coactivators (SRC-2, SRC-3) and the mediator component MED14. We then validated this cooperative interplay on endogenous target genes in breast cancer cells. Taken together, this work highlights another layer of mechanistic complexity through which NRs cross-talk with each other on chromatin under multiple hormonal stimuli.


Chemistry & Biology | 2014

Defining Estrogenic Mechanisms of Bisphenol A Analogs through High Throughput Microscopy-Based Contextual Assays

Fabio Stossi; Michael J. Bolt; Felicity Ashcroft; Jane E. Lamerdin; Jonathan S. Melnick; Reid T. Powell; Radhika D. Dandekar; Maureen G. Mancini; Cheryl L. Walker; John K. Westwick; Michael A. Mancini

Environmental exposures to chemically heterogeneous endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs) mimic or interfere with hormone actions and negatively affect human health. Despite public interest and the prevalence of EDCs in the environment, methods to mechanistically classify these diverse chemicals in a high throughput (HT) manner have not been actively explored. Here, we describe the use of multiparametric, HT microscopy-based platforms to examine how a prototypical EDC, bisphenol A (BPA), and 18 poorly studied BPA analogs (BPXs), affect estrogen receptor (ER). We show that short exposure to BPA and most BPXs induces ERα and/or ERβ loading to DNA changing target gene transcription. Many BPXs exhibit higher affinity for ERβ and act as ERβ antagonists, while they act largely as agonists or mixed agonists and antagonists on ERα. Finally, despite binding to ERs, some BPXs exhibit lower levels of activity. Our comprehensive view of BPXs activities allows their classification and the evaluation of potential harmful effects. The strategy described here used on a large-scale basis likely offers a faster, more cost-effective way to identify safer BPA alternatives.


Nature Communications | 2016

Inhibition of the hexosamine biosynthetic pathway promotes castration-resistant prostate cancer

Akash K. Kaushik; Ali Shojaie; Katrin Panzitt; Rajni Sonavane; Harene Venghatakrishnan; Mohan Manikkam; Alexander Zaslavsky; Vasanta Putluri; Vihas T. Vasu; Yiqing Zhang; Ayesha S. Khan; Stacy M. Lloyd; Adam T. Szafran; Subhamoy Dasgupta; David A. Bader; Fabio Stossi; Hangwen Li; Susmita Samanta; Xuhong Cao; Efrosini Tsouko; Shixia Huang; Daniel E. Frigo; Lawrence Chan; Dean P. Edwards; Benny Abraham Kaipparettu; Nicholas Mitsiades; Nancy L. Weigel; Michael A. Mancini; Sean E. McGuire; Rohit Mehra

The precise molecular alterations driving castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) are not clearly understood. Using a novel network-based integrative approach, here, we show distinct alterations in the hexosamine biosynthetic pathway (HBP) to be critical for CRPC. Expression of HBP enzyme glucosamine-phosphate N-acetyltransferase 1 (GNPNAT1) is found to be significantly decreased in CRPC compared with localized prostate cancer (PCa). Genetic loss-of-function of GNPNAT1 in CRPC-like cells increases proliferation and aggressiveness, in vitro and in vivo. This is mediated by either activation of the PI3K-AKT pathway in cells expressing full-length androgen receptor (AR) or by specific protein 1 (SP1)-regulated expression of carbohydrate response element-binding protein (ChREBP) in cells containing AR-V7 variant. Strikingly, addition of the HBP metabolite UDP-N-acetylglucosamine (UDP-GlcNAc) to CRPC-like cells significantly decreases cell proliferation, both in-vitro and in animal studies, while also demonstrates additive efficacy when combined with enzalutamide in-vitro. These observations demonstrate the therapeutic value of targeting HBP in CRPC.


ACS Sensors | 2017

Reversible Reaction-Based Fluorescent Probe for Real-Time Imaging of Glutathione Dynamics in Mitochondria

Jianwei Chen; Xiqian Jiang; Chengwei Zhang; Kevin R. MacKenzie; Fabio Stossi; Timothy Palzkill; Meng C. Wang; Jin Wang

We report a mitochondria-specific glutathione (GSH) probe-designated as Mito-RealThiol (MitoRT)-that can monitor in vivo real-time mitochondrial glutathione dynamics, and apply this probe to follow mitochondrial GSH dynamic changes in living cells for the first time. MitoRT can be utilized in confocal microscopy, super-resolution fluorescence imaging, and flow cytometry systems. Using MitoRT, we demonstrate that cells have a high priority to maintain the GSH level in mitochondria compared to the cytosol not only under normal growing conditions but also upon oxidative stress.


Nature Medicine | 2018

Combinatorial inhibition of PTPN12-regulated receptors leads to a broadly effective therapeutic strategy in triple-negative breast cancer

Amritha Nair; Hsiang Ching Chung; Tingting Sun; Siddhartha Tyagi; Lacey E. Dobrolecki; Rocio Dominguez-Vidana; Sarah J. Kurley; Mayra Orellana; Alexander Renwick; David M. Henke; Panagiotis Katsonis; Earlene M. Schmitt; Doug W. Chan; Hui Li; Sufeng Mao; Ivana Petrovic; Chad J. Creighton; Carolina Gutierrez; Julien Dubrulle; Fabio Stossi; Jeffrey W. Tyner; Olivier Lichtarge; Charles Y. Lin; Bing Zhang; Kenneth L. Scott; Susan G. Hilsenbeck; Jin-Peng Sun; Xiao Yu; C. Kent Osborne; Rachel Schiff

Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) is an aggressive subtype of breast cancer diagnosed in more than 200,000 women each year and is recalcitrant to targeted therapies. Although TNBCs harbor multiple hyperactive receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs), RTK inhibitors have been largely ineffective in TNBC patients thus far. We developed a broadly effective therapeutic strategy for TNBC that is based on combined inhibition of receptors that share the negative regulator PTPN12. Previously, we and others identified the tyrosine phosphatase PTPN12 as a tumor suppressor that is frequently inactivated in TNBC. PTPN12 restrains several RTKs, suggesting that PTPN12 deficiency leads to aberrant activation of multiple RTKs and a co-dependency on these receptors. This in turn leads to the therapeutic hypothesis that PTPN12-deficient TNBCs may be responsive to combined RTK inhibition. However, the repertoire of RTKs that are restrained by PTPN12 in human cells has not been systematically explored. By methodically identifying the suite of RTK substrates (MET, PDGFRβ, EGFR, and others) inhibited by PTPN12, we rationalized a combination RTK-inhibitor therapy that induced potent tumor regression across heterogeneous models of TNBC. Orthogonal approaches revealed that PTPN12 was recruited to and inhibited these receptors after ligand stimulation, thereby serving as a feedback mechanism to limit receptor signaling. Cancer-associated mutation of PTPN12 or reduced PTPN12 protein levels diminished this feedback mechanism, leading to aberrant activity of these receptors. Restoring PTPN12 protein levels restrained signaling from RTKs, including PDGFRβ and MET, and impaired TNBC survival. In contrast with single agents, combined inhibitors targeting the PDGFRβ and MET receptors induced the apoptosis in TNBC cells in vitro and in vivo. This therapeutic strategy resulted in tumor regressions in chemo-refractory patient-derived TNBC models. Notably, response correlated with PTPN12 deficiency, suggesting that impaired receptor feedback may establish a combined addiction to these proto-oncogenic receptors. Taken together, our data provide a rationale for combining RTK inhibitors in TNBC and other malignancies that lack receptor-activating mutations.


Scientific Reports | 2018

Cisplatin generates oxidative stress which is accompanied by rapid shifts in central carbon metabolism

Wangie Yu; Yunyun Chen; Julien Dubrulle; Fabio Stossi; Vasanta Putluri; Arun Sreekumar; Nagireddy Putluri; Dodge Baluya; Stephen Y. Lai; Vlad C. Sandulache

Cisplatin is commonly utilized in the treatment of solid tumors. Its mechanism of action is complex and multiple mechanisms of resistance have been described. We sought to determine the impact of cisplatin-generated oxidative stress on head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) proliferation, survival and metabolic activity in order to identify a potential metabolic signature associated with cisplatin response. DNA-bound cisplatin represents a small fraction of total intra-cellular cisplatin but generates a robust oxidative stress response. Neutralization of oxidative stress reverses cisplatin toxicity independent of the mechanism of cell death and TP53 mutational status. Cisplatin-induced oxidative stress triggers rapid shifts in carbon flux in 3 commonly utilized catabolic pathways: glycolysis, pentose phosphate pathway and citric acid cycle. Among these metabolic shifts, decreased flux from pyruvate into lactate is the only metabolic effect consistently observed across multiple HNSCC cell lines of varying genomic backgrounds and may reflect differential cisplatin sensitivity. Oxidative stress is a critical component of cisplatin cytotoxicity in HNSCC and is reflected in acute changes in carbon flux from pyruvate into lactate. This suggests that lactate may contribute to a metabolic signature of acute cisplatin toxicity, and could prove useful in optimizing cisplatin-based treatment regimens in HNSCC.


Nature | 2018

A homing system targets therapeutic T cells to brain cancer

Heba Samaha; Antonella Pignata; Kristen Fousek; Jun Ren; Fong Lam; Fabio Stossi; Julien Dubrulle; Vita S. Salsman; Shanmugarajan Krishnan; Sung-Ha Hong; Matthew L. Baker; Ankita Shree; Ahmed Z. Gad; Thomas Shum; Dai Fukumura; Tiara Byrd; Malini Mukherjee; Sean P. Marrelli; Jordan S. Orange; Sujith Joseph; Poul H. Sorensen; Michael D. Taylor; Meenakshi Hegde; Maksim Mamonkin; Rakesh K. Jain; Shahenda El-Naggar; Nabil Ahmed

Successful T cell immunotherapy for brain cancer requires that the T cells can access tumour tissues, but this has been difficult to achieve. Here we show that, in contrast to inflammatory brain diseases such as multiple sclerosis, where endothelial cells upregulate ICAM1 and VCAM1 to guide the extravasation of pro-inflammatory cells, cancer endothelium downregulates these molecules to evade immune recognition. By contrast, we found that cancer endothelium upregulates activated leukocyte cell adhesion molecule (ALCAM), which allowed us to overcome this immune-evasion mechanism by creating an ALCAM-restricted homing system (HS). We re-engineered the natural ligand of ALCAM, CD6, in a manner that triggers initial anchorage of T cells to ALCAM and conditionally mediates a secondary wave of adhesion by sensitizing T cells to low-level ICAM1 on the cancer endothelium, thereby creating the adhesion forces necessary to capture T cells from the bloodstream. Cytotoxic HS T cells robustly infiltrated brain cancers after intravenous injection and exhibited potent antitumour activity. We have therefore developed a molecule that targets the delivery of T cells to brain cancer.Therapeutic T cells bearing ligands engineered to optimize adhesion and transmigration through the blood–brain barrier can be targeted to brain tumours.


Nature Communications | 2017

Bone-in-culture array as a platform to model early-stage bone metastases and discover anti-metastasis therapies

Hai Wang; Lin Tian; Amit Goldstein; Jun Liu; Hin Ching Lo; Kuanwei Sheng; Thomas Welte; Stephen T. C. Wong; Zbigniew Gugala; Fabio Stossi; Chenghang Zong; Zonghai Li; Michael A. Mancini; Xiang H.-F. Zhang

The majority of breast cancer models for drug discovery are based on orthotopic or subcutaneous tumours. Therapeutic responses of metastases, especially microscopic metastases, are likely to differ from these tumours due to distinct cancer-microenvironment crosstalk in distant organs. Here, to recapitulate such differences, we established an ex vivo bone metastasis model, termed bone-in-culture array or BICA, by fragmenting mouse bones preloaded with breast cancer cells via intra-iliac artery injection. Cancer cells in BICA maintain features of in vivo bone micrometastases regarding the microenvironmental niche, gene expression profile, metastatic growth kinetics and therapeutic responses. Through a proof-of-principle drug screening using BICA, we found that danusertib, an inhibitor of the Aurora kinase family, preferentially inhibits bone micrometastases. In contrast, certain histone methyltransferase inhibitors stimulate metastatic outgrowth of indolent cancer cells, specifically in the bone. Thus, BICA can be used to investigate mechanisms involved in bone colonization and to rapidly test drug efficacies on bone micrometastases.

Collaboration


Dive into the Fabio Stossi's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Julien Dubrulle

Baylor College of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Vasanta Putluri

Baylor College of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Antonella Pignata

Baylor College of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Arun Sreekumar

Baylor College of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Fong Lam

Baylor College of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kristen Fousek

Baylor College of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Michael J. Bolt

Baylor College of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nabil Ahmed

Baylor College of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nagireddy Putluri

Baylor College of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge