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Dive into the research topics where Grace Guzman is active.

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Featured researches published by Grace Guzman.


Cancer Cell | 2016

Spontaneous Hepatocellular Carcinoma after the Combined Deletion of Akt Isoforms

Qi Wang; Wan Ni Yu; Xinyu Chen; Xiao Ding Peng; Sang Min Jeon; Morris J. Birnbaum; Grace Guzman; Nissim Hay

Akt is frequently hyperactivated in human cancers and is targeted for cancer therapy. However, the physiological consequences of systemic Akt isoform inhibition were not fully explored. We showed that while combined Akt1 and Akt3 deletion in adult mice is tolerated, combined Akt1 and Akt2 deletion induced rapid mortality. Akt2(-/-) mice survived hepatic Akt1 deletion but all developed spontaneous hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), which is associated with FoxO-dependent liver injury and inflammation. The gene expression signature of HCC-bearing livers is similar to aggressive human HCC. Consistently, neither Akt1(-/-) nor Akt2(-/-) mice are resistant to diethylnitrosamine-induced hepatocarcinogenesis, and Akt2(-/-) mice display a high incidence of lung metastasis. Thus, in contrast to other cancers, hepatic Akt inhibition induces liver injury that could promote HCC.


Nature Communications | 2018

Hexokinase-2 depletion inhibits glycolysis and induces oxidative phosphorylation in hepatocellular carcinoma and sensitizes to metformin

Dannielle DeWaal; Veronique Nogueira; Alexander R. Terry; Krushna C. Patra; Sang Min Jeon; Grace Guzman; Jennifer Au; Christopher P. Long; Maciek R. Antoniewicz; Nissim Hay

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) cells are metabolically distinct from normal hepatocytes by expressing the high-affinity hexokinase (HK2) and suppressing glucokinase (GCK). This is exploited to selectively target HCC. Hepatic HK2 deletion inhibits tumor incidence in a mouse model of hepatocarcinogenesis. Silencing HK2 in human HCC cells inhibits tumorigenesis and increases cell death, which cannot be restored by GCK or mitochondrial binding deficient HK2. Upon HK2 silencing, glucose flux to pyruvate and lactate is inhibited, but TCA fluxes are maintained. Serine uptake and glycine secretion are elevated suggesting increased requirement for one-carbon contribution. Consistently, vulnerability to serine depletion increases. The decrease in glycolysis is coupled to elevated oxidative phosphorylation, which is diminished by metformin, further increasing cell death and inhibiting tumor growth. Neither HK2 silencing nor metformin alone inhibits mTORC1, but their combination inhibits mTORC1 in an AMPK-independent and REDD1-dependent mechanism. Finally, HK2 silencing synergizes with sorafenib to inhibit tumor growth.Hexokinase 2 (HK2) is selectively upregulated in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Here the authors show that HK2 ablation decreases glycolysis and triggers oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHO) rendering HCC more susceptible to the OXPHO inhibitor metformin and to the FDA-approved drug sorafenib.


Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology | 2013

Transarterial Sorafenib Chemoembolization: Preliminary Study of Technical Feasibility in a Rabbit Model

Ron C. Gaba; Felix Y. Yap; Elizabeth M. Martinez; Yongchao Li; Grace Guzman; Ahmad Parvinian; Richard B. van Breemen; Nishant Kumar

PURPOSE To test the feasibility of targeted intraarterial administration of the tyrosine kinase inhibitor chemotherapeutic agent sorafenib to inhibit embolotherapy-induced tumor angiogenesis and reduce systemic drug side effects. MATERIALS AND METHODS The left hepatic lobes of five New Zealand White rabbits (mean weight, 2.7 kg±0.2) were treated with chemoembolization with sorafenib and ethiodized oil emulsion, followed by immediate euthanasia. Postprocedure noncontrast computed tomography (CT) was used to evaluate intrahepatic chemotherapy mixture distribution. Liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) was then used to directly measure sorafenib concentration in the treated liver tissue. Histopathologic assessment of treated left lobes was performed to identify any immediate toxic effects of the sorafenib solution. RESULTS Lobar sorafenib chemoembolization was successfully performed in all cases via the left hepatic artery. Sorafenib and ethiodized oil (mean, 6.4 mg±3.8 and 0.95 mL±0.7, respectively) were injected, and CT confirmed targeted left hepatic lobe sorafenib emulsion delivery in all cases. Corresponding LC-MS/MS analysis yielded a mean sorafenib concentration of 94.2 μg/mL±48.3 in treated left lobe samples (n = 5), significantly greater than typical therapeutic drug levels (2-10 μg/mL) achieved with oral sorafenib systemic therapy. Histopathologic assessment showed only mild or moderate nonspecific ballooning degeneration in zone 3 hepatocytes, without tissue necrosis. CONCLUSIONS Targeted transarterial sorafenib delivery is feasible and results in higher tissue drug levels than reported for systemic sorafenib therapy, without immediate histopathologic tissue toxicity. Future studies should aim to determine the utility of sorafenib chemoembolization in reducing hypoxia-induced vasculogenesis in liver tumors.


Journal of Clinical Neuroscience | 2008

Synchronous moyamoya syndrome and ruptured cerebral aneurysm in Alagille syndrome.

Ron C. Gaba; Rajesh P. Shah; Andrew A. Muskovitz; Grace Guzman; Edward A. Michals

Moyamoya syndrome and cerebral aneurysm formation are rare cerebrovascular manifestations of Alagille syndrome. Although previously reported in isolation, occurrence of these complications in a single patient has not been described. We report clinical and imaging features of synchronous moyamoya syndrome and ruptured cerebral aneurysm in a patient with Alagille syndrome.


Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology | 2015

Gene Expression in Hepatocellular Carcinoma: Pilot Study of Potential Transarterial Chemoembolization Response Biomarkers

Ron C. Gaba; John V. Groth; Ahmad Parvinian; Grace Guzman; Leigh C. Casadaban

PURPOSE To perform a feasibility study to explore the relationship between hepatocellular carcinoma genetics and transarterial chemoembolization treatment response to identify potential biomarkers associated with enhanced treatment efficacy. MATERIALS AND METHODS In this single-institution study, pretreatment hepatocellular carcinoma biopsy specimens for tumors in 19 patients (14 men, five women; mean age, 59 y) treated with chemoembolization between 2007 and 2013 were analyzed for a panel of 60 chemotherapy-sensitivity, hypoxia, mitosis, and inflammatory genes with the QuantiGene Plex 2.0 mRNA detection assay. Demographic, disease, and procedure data and tumor response outcomes were collected. Quantitative mRNA levels were compared based on radiologic response between tumors exhibiting complete response (CR) versus partial response (PR). RESULTS The study sample included 19 biopsy specimens from tumors (mean size, 3.0 cm; grade 1, n = 6; grade 2, n = 9; grade 3, n = 4) in patients treated with a mean of two conventional chemoembolization sessions. Thirteen and six tumors exhibited CR and PR, respectively, at a mean of 116 days after treatment. Tumors with CR showed a significant increase in (P < .05) or trend toward (P < .1) greater (range, 1.49-3.50 fold) pretreatment chemotherapy-sensitivity and mitosis (ATF4, BAX, CCNE1, KIF11, NFX1, PPP3CA, SNX1, TOP2A, and TOP2B) gene mRNA expression compared with tumors with PR, in addition to lower CXCL10 levels (0.48-fold), and had significantly (P < .05) higher (1.65-fold) baseline VEGFA levels. CONCLUSIONS Genetic signatures may allow prechemoembolization stratification of tumor response probability, and gene analysis may therefore offer an opportunity to personalize locoregional therapy by enhancing treatment modality allocation. Further corroboration of identified markers and exploration of their respective predictive capacity thresholds is necessary.


Human Pathology | 2016

Microvascular injury in persistent gastric ulcers after yttrium-90 microsphere radioembolization for liver malignancies

Belinda L. Sun; Shawn R. Lapetino; Sameer Al Diffalha; Sherri Yong; Ron C. Gaba; James T. Bui; Sean Koppe; Steven Garzon; Grace Guzman

Yttrium-90 microsphere radioembolization ((90)Y MRE) is a therapy for liver malignancies by permanently implanting (90)Y-containing microspheres into tumors via hepatic artery. The etiology of persistent gastric ulcerations in patients presenting months after treatment remains unclear. Three patients who presented with gastric ulceration 4 to 13 months after (90)Y MRE were examined by esophagogastroduodenoscopy and biopsies. Pathological examinations showed multiple (90)Y microspheres scattered within the lamina propria and submucosa. Most of the microspheres were distributed in a linear fashion, consistent with an intravascular location; however, the vascular lumen and endothelial cells were not present. The microspheres were surrounded by fibrotic tissue infiltrated by chronic inflammatory cells and rare neutrophils. Epithelial granulation without pititis and miniaturized glands with intervening fibrosis were noted, compatible with chronic ischemic changes. These findings suggest that the persistent gastric ulceration is a result of localized ischemic injury in response to (90)Y MRE-induced vascular damage.


Head and Neck Pathology | 2016

Synchronous Ipsilateral Parotid Tumors with Cytologic-Histologic Correlation.

Kristina Gvozdjan; John V. Groth; Tushar Patel; Grace Guzman; Odile David; Robert J. Cabay

Synchronous ipsilateral tumor formation within a major salivary gland is a very rare event. In this case, a 54-year-old female tobacco smoker presented with a slowly enlarging left parotid gland. Computed tomography of the neck demonstrated a solid mass superficial to a cystic mass in the deep lobe of the gland. Ultrasound-guided fine needle aspiration yielded oncocytic cells, lymphoid cells, and granular debris along with rare cohesive groups of basaloid cells. Parotidectomy was performed, and the resected gland was found to contain two adjacent but distinct masses. One mass, a predominantly solid, well-circumscribed lesion composed of ribbons of double-layered oncocytic cells and a lymphoid stroma with germinal center formation, was a Warthin tumor. The other mass, a predominantly cystic lesion composed of cords and nests of basaloid cells with associated deposits of basement membrane-like material, was a basal cell adenoma of the membranous type. To our knowledge, this is the first reported case of synchronous Warthin tumor and basal cell adenoma of the parotid gland with cytologic–histologic correlation attributable to each tumor.


International Journal of Surgical Pathology | 2015

Metachronous bilateral testicular seminoma developing after an interval of 31 years: case report and review of the literature.

Belinda L. Sun; Russell Pearl; Roohollah Sharifi; Grace Guzman

Men diagnosed with testicular germ cell tumors are at higher risk for development of a second germ cell tumor in the contralateral testis. Metachronous bilateral testicular germ cell tumors usually occur within 5 years. Here, we report a case of a 63-year-old man previously diagnosed with testicular seminoma and treated with a left orchiectomy followed by radiation, developing contralateral testicular seminoma after an interval of 31 years. The patient was asymptomatic and found to have an enlarged, nontender right testis on routine urological examination. Further workup did not reveal evidence of metastatic disease or lymphadenopathy. The surgery specimen revealed a 4.2 × 3.1 × 1.8 cm distinct mass without tumor involvement of tunica albuginea or the tunica vaginalis. Microscopy showed classic seminoma with venous/lymphatic tumor invasion. The current case underscores the importance of recommending lifelong follow-up for patients with testicular germ cell tumors.


Digestive Diseases and Sciences | 2015

Evidence for Heightened Hexokinase II Immunoexpression in Hepatocyte Dysplasia and Hepatocellular Carcinoma

Grace Guzman; Rohini Chennuri; Alexander Chan; Bryan Rea; Ada Quintana; Roshan Patel; Pei Zhang Xu; Hui Xie; Nissim Hay


Nature Communications | 2018

Author Correction: Hexokinase-2 depletion inhibits glycolysis and induces oxidative phosphorylation in hepatocellular carcinoma and sensitizes to metformin

Dannielle DeWaal; Veronique Nogueira; Alexander R. Terry; Krushna C. Patra; Sang-Min Jeon; Grace Guzman; Jennifer Au; Christopher P. Long; Maciek R. Antoniewicz; Nissim Hay

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Ahmad Parvinian

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Nissim Hay

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Alexander R. Terry

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Dannielle DeWaal

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Felix Y. Yap

University of Southern California

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Jennifer Au

University of Delaware

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Sang Min Jeon

University of Illinois at Chicago

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