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Dive into the research topics where Imran Babar is active.

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Featured researches published by Imran Babar.


Cancer Research | 2007

MicroRNAs as Potential Agents to Alter Resistance to Cytotoxic Anticancer Therapy

Joanne B. Weidhaas; Imran Babar; Sunitha M. Nallur; Phong Trang; Sarah Roush; Michelle Boehm; Erin F. Gillespie; Frank J. Slack

Tumor cells use preexisting prosurvival signaling pathways to evade the damaging and cytotoxic effects of anticancer agents. Radiation therapy is a primary form of cytotoxic anticancer treatment, but agents that successfully modify the radiation response in vivo are lacking. MicroRNAs (miRNA) are global gene regulators that play critical roles in oncogenesis and have been found to regulate prosurvival pathways. However, there is little understanding of how cellular miRNA expression affects the response of a cancer to cytotoxic therapy and ultimately outcome. The let-7 family of miRNAs regulates expression of oncogenes, such as RAS, and is specifically down-regulated in many cancer subtypes. In fact, low levels of let-7 predict a poor outcome in lung cancer. Here, we report that the let-7 family of miRNAs is overrepresented in a class of miRNAs exhibiting altered expression in response to radiation. More strikingly, we also can create a radiosensitive state when the select let-7 family of miRNAs is overexpressed in vitro in lung cancer cells and in vivo in a Caenorhabditis elegans model of radiation-induced cell death, whereas decreasing their levels causes radioresistance. In C. elegans, we show that this is partly through control of the proto-oncogene homologue let-60/RAS and genes in the DNA damage response pathway. These findings are the first direct evidence that miRNAs can suppress resistance to anticancer cytotoxic therapy, a common feature of cancer cells, and suggest that miRNAs may be a viable tool to augment current cancer therapies.


Nature | 2015

MicroRNA silencing for cancer therapy targeted to the tumour microenvironment

Christopher J. Cheng; Raman Bahal; Imran Babar; Zachary Pincus; Francisco N. Barrera; Connie Liu; Alexander A. Svoronos; Demetrios T. Braddock; Peter M. Glazer; Donald M. Engelman; W. Mark Saltzman; Frank J. Slack

MicroRNAs are short non-coding RNAs expressed in different tissue and cell types that suppress the expression of target genes. As such, microRNAs are critical cogs in numerous biological processes, and dysregulated microRNA expression is correlated with many human diseases. Certain microRNAs, called oncomiRs, play a causal role in the onset and maintenance of cancer when overexpressed. Tumours that depend on these microRNAs are said to display oncomiR addiction. Some of the most effective anticancer therapies target oncogenes such as EGFR and HER2; similarly, inhibition of oncomiRs using antisense oligomers (that is, antimiRs) is an evolving therapeutic strategy. However, the in vivo efficacy of current antimiR technologies is hindered by physiological and cellular barriers to delivery into targeted cells. Here we introduce a novel antimiR delivery platform that targets the acidic tumour microenvironment, evades systemic clearance by the liver, and facilitates cell entry via a non-endocytic pathway. We find that the attachment of peptide nucleic acid antimiRs to a peptide with a low pH-induced transmembrane structure (pHLIP) produces a novel construct that could target the tumour microenvironment, transport antimiRs across plasma membranes under acidic conditions such as those found in solid tumours (pH approximately 6), and effectively inhibit the miR-155 oncomiR in a mouse model of lymphoma. This study introduces a new model for using antimiRs as anti-cancer drugs, which can have broad impacts on the field of targeted drug delivery.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Nanoparticle-based therapy in an in vivo microRNA-155 (miR-155)-dependent mouse model of lymphoma

Imran Babar; Chao Cheng; Carmen J. Booth; Xianping Liang; Joanne B. Weidhaas; Saltzman Wm; Frank J. Slack

MicroRNA-155 (miR-155) is an oncogenic microRNA that regulates several pathways involved in cell division and immunoregulation. It is overexpressed in numerous cancers, is often correlated with poor prognosis, and is thus a key target for future therapies. In this work we show that overexpression of miR-155 in lymphoid tissues results in disseminated lymphoma characterized by a clonal, transplantable pre-B-cell population of neoplastic lymphocytes. Withdrawal of miR-155 in mice with established disease results in rapid regression of lymphadenopathy, in part because of apoptosis of the malignant lymphocytes, demonstrating that these tumors are dependent on miR-155 expression. We show that systemic delivery of antisense peptide nucleic acids encapsulated in unique polymer nanoparticles inhibits miR-155 and slows the growth of these “addicted” pre-B-cell tumors in vivo, suggesting a promising therapeutic option for lymphoma/leukemia.


Cancer Biology & Therapy | 2011

Inhibition of hypoxia-induced miR-155 radiosensitizes hypoxic lung cancer cells.

Imran Babar; Jennifer Czochor; Allison Steinmetz; Joanne B. Weidhaas; Peter M. Glazer; Frank J. Slack

miR-155 is a prominent microRNA (miRNA) that regulates genes involved in immunity and cancer-related pathways. miR-155 is overexpressed in lung cancer, which correlates with poor patient prognosis. It is unclear how miR-155 becomes increased in lung cancers and how this increase contributes to reduced patient survival. Here, we show that hypoxic conditions induce miR-155 expression in lung cancer cells and trigger a corresponding decrease in a validated target, FOXO3A. Furthermore, we find that increased levels of miR-155 radioprotects lung cancer cells, while inhibition of miR-155 radiosensitizes these cells. Moreover, we reveal a therapeutically important link between miR-155 expression, hypoxia, and irradiation by demonstrating that anti-miR-155 molecules also sensitize hypoxic lung cancer cells to irradiation. Our study helps explain how miR-155 becomes elevated in lung cancers, which contain extensive hypoxic microenvironments, and demonstrates that inhibition of miR-155 may have important therapeutic potential as a means to radiosensitize hypoxic lung cancer cells.


Future Oncology | 2008

miRNA modulation of the cellular stress response

Imran Babar; Frank J. Slack; Joanne B. Weidhaas

Cellular stress responses are potent and dynamic, allowing cells to effectively counteract diverse stresses. These pathways are crucial not only for maintaining normal cellular homeostasis, but also for protecting cells from what would otherwise lead to their demise. A novel class of genes, termed miRNAs, has recently been implicated in the cellular stress response. For example, it has been demonstrated that a cardiac-specific miRNA that is not required for normal development is requisite for a normal cardiac stress response in mice. In addition, we have found that a miRNA family is able to modulate the cellular response to cytotoxic cancer treatment both in vitro and in vivo. In this review, we will discuss these and other important developments in the field. In particular, we will focus on studies that have linked miRNAs to the genotoxic stress response and will suggest how this connection may be both important for our understanding of biology and pertinent for the development of novel cancer therapies.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Interactome analysis of longitudinal pharyngeal infection of cynomolgus macaques by group A Streptococcus

Patrick R. Shea; Kimmo Virtaneva; John J. Kupko; Stephen F. Porcella; William T. Barry; Fred A. Wright; Scott D. Kobayashi; Aaron B. Carmody; Robin Ireland; Daniel E. Sturdevant; Stacy M. Ricklefs; Imran Babar; Claire A. Johnson; Morag R. Graham; Donald J. Gardner; John R. Bailey; Michael J. Parnell; Frank R. DeLeo; James M. Musser

Relatively little is understood about the dynamics of global host–pathogen transcriptome changes that occur during bacterial infection of mucosal surfaces. To test the hypothesis that group A Streptococcus (GAS) infection of the oropharynx provokes a distinct host transcriptome response, we performed genome-wide transcriptome analysis using a nonhuman primate model of experimental pharyngitis. We also identified host and pathogen biological processes and individual host and pathogen gene pairs with correlated patterns of expression, suggesting interaction. For this study, 509 host genes and seven biological pathways were differentially expressed throughout the entire 32-day infection cycle. GAS infection produced an initial widespread significant decrease in expression of many host genes, including those involved in cytokine production, vesicle formation, metabolism, and signal transduction. This repression lasted until day 4, at which time a large increase in expression of host genes was observed, including those involved in protein translation, antigen presentation, and GTP-mediated signaling. The interactome analysis identified 73 host and pathogen gene pairs with correlated expression levels. We discovered significant correlations between transcripts of GAS genes involved in hyaluronic capsule production and host endocytic vesicle formation, GAS GTPases and host fibrinolytic genes, and GAS response to interaction with neutrophils. We also identified a strong signal, suggesting interaction between host γδ T cells and genes in the GAS mevalonic acid synthesis pathway responsible for production of isopentenyl-pyrophosphate, a short-chain phospholipid that stimulates these T cells. Taken together, our results are unique in providing a comprehensive understanding of the host–pathogen interactome during mucosal infection by a bacterial pathogen.


Cancer Research | 2008

A SNP in a let-7 microRNA Complementary Site in the KRAS 3′ Untranslated Region Increases Non–Small Cell Lung Cancer Risk

Lena J Chin; Elena Ratner; Shuguang Leng; Rihong Zhai; Sunitha Nallur; Imran Babar; Roman-Ulrich Müller; Eva Straka; Li Su; Elizabeth A. Burki; Richard E. Crowell; Rajeshvari Patel; Trupti Kulkarni; Robert J. Homer; Daniel Zelterman; Kenneth K. Kidd; Yong Zhu; David C. Christiani; Steven A. Belinsky; Frank J. Slack; Joanne B. Weidhaas


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2005

Longitudinal analysis of the group A Streptococcus transcriptome in experimental pharyngitis in cynomolgus macaques

Kimmo Virtaneva; Stephen F. Porcella; Morag R. Graham; Robin Ireland; Claire A. Johnson; Stacy M. Ricklefs; Imran Babar; Larye D. Parkins; Romina A. Romero; G. Judson Corn; Don Gardner; John R. Bailey; Michael J. Parnell; James M. Musser


Drug Delivery and Translational Research | 2011

Prevention of K-Ras- and Pten-mediated intravaginal tumors by treatment with camptothecin-loaded PLGA nanoparticles

Jeremy S. Blum; Caroline E. Weller; Carmen J. Booth; Imran Babar; Xianping Liang; Frank J. Slack; W. Mark Saltzman


Biophysical Journal | 2015

pHLIP® Targeting and Delivery of PNA to Silence MicroRNA in Tumor Cells§

Donald M. Engelman; Christopher J. Cheng; Raman Bahal; Imran Babar; Zachary Pincus; Francisco N. Barrera; Connie Liu; Alexander A. Svoronos; Demetrios T. Braddock; Peter M. Glazer; W. Mark Saltzman; Frank J. Slack

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Frank J. Slack

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Claire A. Johnson

National Institutes of Health

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