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Dive into the research topics where Jeffrey E. Segall is active.

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Featured researches published by Jeffrey E. Segall.


Cancer Research | 2004

A Paracrine Loop between Tumor Cells and Macrophages Is Required for Tumor Cell Migration in Mammary Tumors

Jeffrey Wyckoff; Weigang Wang; Elaine Y. Lin; Yarong Wang; Fiona J. Pixley; E. Richard Stanley; Thomas Graf; Jeffrey W. Pollard; Jeffrey E. Segall; John Condeelis

Invasion of tumor cells into the surrounding connective tissue and blood vessels is a key step in the metastatic spread of breast tumors. Although the presence of macrophages in primary tumors is associated with increased metastatic potential, the mechanistic basis for this observation is unknown. Using a chemotaxis-based in vivo invasion assay and multiphoton-based intravital imaging, we show that the interaction between macrophages and tumor cells facilitates the migration of carcinoma cells in the primary tumor. Gradients of either epidermal growth factor (EGF) or colony-stimulating factor 1 (CSF-1) stimulate collection into microneedles of tumor cells and macrophages even though tumor cells express only EGF receptor and macrophages express only CSF-1 receptor. Intravital imaging shows that macrophages and tumor cells migrate toward microneedles containing either EGF or CSF-1. Inhibition of either CSF-1– or EGF-stimulated signaling reduces the migration of both cell types. This work provides the first direct evidence for a synergistic interaction between macrophages and tumor cells during cell migration in vivo and indicates a mechanism for how macrophages may contribute to metastasis.


Nature Reviews Cancer | 2003

Intravital imaging of cell movement in tumours

John Condeelis; Jeffrey E. Segall

Metastasis is the cause of death for patients with many types of cancer, but the process of tumour cell dissemination is poorly understood. As primary tumours are three-dimensional, departure of cells from primary tumours has been difficult to study. Multiphoton microscopy has been developed for in vivo imaging and, using this technique, we are beginning to understand how invasive tumour cells move.


Cancer Research | 2007

Direct visualization of macrophage assisted tumor cell intravasation in mammary tumors

Jeffrey Wyckoff; Yarong Wang; Elaine Y. Lin; Jiu Feng Li; Sumanta Goswami; E. Richard Stanley; Jeffrey E. Segall; Jeffrey W. Pollard; John Condeelis

Although the presence of macrophages in tumors has been correlated with poor prognosis, until now there was no direct observation of how macrophages are involved in hematogenous metastasis. In this study, we use multiphoton microscopy to show, for the first time, that tumor cell intravasation occurs in association with perivascular macrophages in mammary tumors. Furthermore, we show that perivascular macrophages of the mammary tumor are associated with tumor cell intravasation in the absence of local angiogenesis. These results show that the interaction between macrophages and tumor cells lying in close proximity defines a microenvironment that is directly involved in the intravasation of cancer cells in mammary tumors.


Cancer Research | 2005

Macrophages Promote the Invasion of Breast Carcinoma Cells via a Colony-Stimulating Factor-1/Epidermal Growth Factor Paracrine Loop

Sumanta Goswami; Erik Sahai; Jeffrey Wyckoff; Michael Cammer; Dianne Cox; Fiona J. Pixley; E. Richard Stanley; Jeffrey E. Segall; John Condeelis

Previous studies have shown that macrophages and tumor cells are comigratory in mammary tumors and that these cell types are mutually dependent for invasion. Here we show that macrophages and tumor cells are necessary and sufficient for comigration and invasion into collagen I and that this process involves a paracrine loop. Macrophages express epidermal growth factor (EGF), which promotes the formation of elongated protrusions and cell invasion by carcinoma cells. Colony stimulating factor 1 (CSF-1) produced by carcinoma cells promotes the expression of EGF by macrophages. In addition, EGF promotes the expression of CSF-1 by carcinoma cells thereby generating a positive feedback loop. Disruption of this loop by blockade of either EGF receptor or CSF-1 receptor signaling is sufficient to inhibit both macrophage and tumor cell migration and invasion.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2005

Molecular mechanisms of invadopodium formation: the role of the N-WASP–Arp2/3 complex pathway and cofilin

Hideki Yamaguchi; Mike Lorenz; Stephan J. Kempiak; Corina Sarmiento; Salvatore J. Coniglio; Marc Symons; Jeffrey E. Segall; Robert J. Eddy; Hiroaki Miki; Tadaomi Takenawa; John Condeelis

Invadopodia are actin-rich membrane protrusions with a matrix degradation activity formed by invasive cancer cells. We have studied the molecular mechanisms of invadopodium formation in metastatic carcinoma cells. Epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor kinase inhibitors blocked invadopodium formation in the presence of serum, and EGF stimulation of serum-starved cells induced invadopodium formation. RNA interference and dominant-negative mutant expression analyses revealed that neural WASP (N-WASP), Arp2/3 complex, and their upstream regulators, Nck1, Cdc42, and WIP, are necessary for invadopodium formation. Time-lapse analysis revealed that invadopodia are formed de novo at the cell periphery and their lifetime varies from minutes to several hours. Invadopodia with short lifetimes are motile, whereas long-lived invadopodia tend to be stationary. Interestingly, suppression of cofilin expression by RNA interference inhibited the formation of long-lived invadopodia, resulting in formation of only short-lived invadopodia with less matrix degradation activity. These results indicate that EGF receptor signaling regulates invadopodium formation through the N-WASP–Arp2/3 pathway and cofilin is necessary for the stabilization and maturation of invadopodia.


Cancer Research | 2004

Identification and Testing of a Gene Expression Signature of Invasive Carcinoma Cells within Primary Mammary Tumors

Weigang Wang; Sumanta Goswami; Kyle Lapidus; Amber L. Wells; Jeffrey Wyckoff; Erik Sahai; Robert H. Singer; Jeffrey E. Segall; John Condeelis

We subjected cells collected using an in vivo invasion assay to cDNA microarray analysis to identify the gene expression profile of invasive carcinoma cells in primary mammary tumors. Expression of genes involved in cell division, survival, and cell motility were most dramatically changed in invasive cells indicating a population that is neither dividing nor apoptotic but intensely motile. In particular, the genes coding for the minimum motility machine that regulates β-actin polymerization at the leading edge and, therefore, the motility and chemotaxis of carcinoma cells, were dramatically up-regulated. However, ZBP1, which restricts the localization of β-actin, the substrate for the minimum motility machine, was down-regulated. This pattern of expression implicated ZBP1 as a suppressor of invasion. Reexpression of ZBP1 in metastatic cells with otherwise low levels of ZBP1 reestablished normal patterns of β-actin mRNA targeting and suppressed chemotaxis and invasion in primary tumors. ZBP1 reexpression also inhibited metastasis from tumors. These experiments support the involvement in metastasis of the pathways identified in invasive cells, which are regulated by ZBP1.


Nature Cell Biology | 2012

Classifying collective cancer cell invasion

Peter Friedl; Joseph Locker; Erik Sahai; Jeffrey E. Segall

Most invasive solid tumours display predominantly collective invasion, in which groups of cells invade the peritumoral stroma while maintaining cell-cell contacts. As the concepts and experimental models for functional analysis of collective cancer cell invasion are rapidly developing, we propose a framework for addressing potential mechanisms, experimental strategies and technical challenges to study this process.


Nature Methods | 2008

Intravital imaging of metastatic behavior through a mammary imaging window

Dmitriy Kedrin; Bojana Gligorijevic; Jeffrey Wyckoff; Vladislav V. Verkhusha; John Condeelis; Jeffrey E. Segall; Jacco van Rheenen

We report a technique to evaluate the same tumor microenvironment over multiple intravital imaging sessions in living mice. We optically marked individual tumor cells expressing photoswitchable proteins in an orthotopic mammary carcinoma and followed them for extended periods through a mammary imaging window. We found that two distinct microenvironments in the same orthotopic mammary tumor affected differently the invasion and intravasation of tumor cells.


Cell | 1982

Impulse responses in bacterial chemotaxis

Steven M. Block; Jeffrey E. Segall; Howard C. Berg

The chemotactic behavior of Escherichia coli has been studied by exposing cells tethered by a single flagellum to pulses of chemicals delivered iontophoretically. Normally, wild-type cells spin alternately clockwise and counterclockwise, changing their direction on the average approximately once per second. When cells were exposed to a very brief diffusive wave of attractant, the probability of spinning counterclockwise quickly peaked, then fell below the prestimulus value, returning to baseline within a few seconds; repellent responses were similar but inverted. The width of the response indicates that cells integrate sensory inputs over a period of seconds, while the biphasic character implies that they also take time derivatives of these inputs. The sensory system is maximally tuned to concentration changes that occur over a span of approximately 2 sec, an interval over which changes normally occur when cells swim in spatial gradients; it is optimized to extract information from signals subject to statistical fluctuation. Impulse responses of cells defective in methylation were similar to those of wild-type cells, but did not fall as far below the baseline, indicating a partial defect in adaptation. Impulse responses of cheZ mutants were aberrant, indicating a serious defect in excitation.


The EMBO Journal | 1997

Functional characterization of the Cdc42p binding domain of yeast Ste20p protein kinase.

Ekkehard Leberer; Cunle Wu; Thomas Leeuw; Fourest-Lieuvin A; Jeffrey E. Segall; David Y. Thomas

Ste20p from Saccharomyces cerevisiae belongs to the Ste20p/p65PAK family of protein kinases which are highly conserved from yeast to man and regulate conserved mitogen‐activated protein kinase pathways. Ste20p fulfills multiple roles in pheromone signaling, morphological switching and vegetative growth and binds Cdc42p, a Rho‐like small GTP binding protein required for polarized morphogenesis. We have analyzed the functional consequences of mutations that prevent binding of Cdc42p to Ste20p. The complete amino‐terminal, non‐catalytic half of Ste20p, including the conserved Cdc42p binding domain, was dispensable for heterotrimeric G‐protein‐mediated pheromone signaling. However, the Cdc42p binding domain was necessary for filamentous growth in response to nitrogen starvation and for an essential function that Ste20p shares with its isoform Cla4p during vegetative growth. Moreover, the Cdc42p binding domain was required for cell–cell adhesion during conjugation. Subcellular localization of wild‐type and mutant Ste20p fused to green fluorescent protein showed that the Cdc42p binding domain is needed to direct localization of Ste20p to regions of polarized growth. These results suggest that Ste20p is regulated in different developmental pathways by different mechanisms which involve heterotrimeric and small GTP binding proteins.

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John Condeelis

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Jeffrey Wyckoff

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Salvatore J. Coniglio

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Dmitriy Kedrin

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Michael B. Prystowsky

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Tatiana Smirnova

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Geoffrey Childs

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Lizandra Jimenez

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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