Jeremy Parker
BC Cancer Agency
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Publication
Featured researches published by Jeremy Parker.
Microvascular Research | 2010
Alexandre Patenaude; Jeremy Parker; Aly Karsan
The generation of new microvasculature progresses by the process of angiogenesis, which involves the invasion and proliferation of endothelial cells from existing blood vessels into the local environment. In recent years, de novo generation of endothelial cells from circulating or local precursor endothelial cells is thought to also contribute to the neovasculature, a process that is referred to as vasculogenesis. In the adult, endothelial progenitor cells (EPC) are believed to be recruited from the bone marrow, migrate to sites requiring neovascularization and participate in the assembly of newly-forming blood vessels. A growing number of studies report that EPC participate in tumor progression and influence the efficacy of anticancer chemotherapeutics, and thus are attractive targets for cancer treatments. However, recent evidence calls into question the ability of marrow-derived EPC to act as a bona fide precursor for adult vasculogenesis. This review focuses on studies reporting or precluding the importance of EPC in tumor vasculogenesis. The putative sources of these cells and difficulties associated with their detection are discussed.
Molecular Cancer | 2010
Derek Murphy; Jeremy Parker; Minglong Zhou; Faisal M Fadlelmola; Christian Steidl; Aly Karsan; Randy Gascoyne; Hong Chen; Diponkar Banerjee
BackgroundWe have previously reported a novel constitutively overexpressed 21 kDa protein in Hodgkin Lymphoma (HL) and aggressive Non-Hodgkin Lymphomas (NHL). The objective of the current study was to 1) identify this protein using two independent methods, 2) study the expression of the protein and its encoding mRNA in reactive lymph nodes, normal lymphocytes and CD34+ bone marrow precursor cells, 3) analyse patterns of expression of the protein in tissue microarrays assembled from a large number of diagnostic clinical biopsies from patients with HL, and 4) determine the copy number variation and mutation status of the encoding gene in HL cell lines.ResultsPeptide sequencing by LC-MS/MS and protein identification by protein array screening identified a single protein, CYB5B. No mutations were detected in the CYB5B gene in HL cell lines. Quantitative PCR showed CYB5B gene expression was increased in HL and NHL cell lines. Array CGH using a submegabase resolution tiling array revealed gains in the CYB5B locus in HL cell lines KMH2 and L428. Membrane expression was seen in Reed-Sternberg cells in clinical biopsies from patients with HL but not in reactive lymph nodes. Bone marrow CD34+ precursor cells were CYB5B negative on the cell surface. RT-PCR assays of RNA extracted from T and B cell enriched fractions obtained from normal peripheral blood mononuclear cells, reactive lymph nodes, tonsils and normal bone marrow samples showed no evidence of increased mRNA levels of CYB5B in comparison to housekeeping gene GAPDH.ConclusionsThe 21 kDa protein overexpressed in HL and aggressive NHL is identical to CYB5B. CYB5B gene expression is increased in a subset of HL and NHL cell lines tested. This is associated with CYB5B gene amplification in HL cell lines KMH2 and L428. CYB5B may be a potential target for antibody-based therapy of HL and aggressive NHL as although cytoplasmic expression is present in reactive lymphocytes, it is not expressed on the cell surface of non-neoplastic lymphocytes or bone marrow precursor cells.
Microvascular Research | 2015
Alexandre Patenaude; Stefan Woerher; Patricia Umlandt; Fred Wong; Rawa Ibrahim; Alastair H. Kyle; Sandy Unger; Megan Fuller; Jeremy Parker; Andrew I. Minchinton; Connie J. Eaves; Aly Karsan
Pericytes are perivascular support cells, the origin of which in tumor tissue is not clear. Recently, we identified a Tie1(+) precursor cell that differentiates into vascular smooth muscle, in a Notch-dependent manner. To understand the involvement of Notch in the ontogeny of tumor pericytes we used a novel flow immunophenotyping strategy to define CD146(+)/CD45(-)/CD31(-/lo) pericytes in the tumor stroma. This strategy combined with ex vivo co-culture experiments identified a novel pericyte progenitor cell population defined as Sca1(hi)/CD146(-)/CD45(-)/CD31(-). The differentiation of these progenitor cells was stimulated by co-culture with endothelial cells. Overexpression of the Notch ligand Jagged1 in endothelial cells further stimulated the differentiation of Sca1(hi)/CD146(-)/CD45(-)/CD31(-) cells into pericytes, while inhibition of Notch signaling with a γ-secretase inhibitor reduced this differentiation. However, Notch inhibition specifically in Tie1-expressing cells did not change the abundance of pericytes in tumors, suggesting that the pericyte precursor is distinct from the vascular smooth muscle cell precursor. Transplant experiments showed that the bone marrow contributes minimally to tumor pericytes. Immunophenotyping revealed that Sca1(hi)/CD146(-)/CD45(-)/CD31(-) cells have greater potential to differentiate into pericytes and have increased expression of classic mesenchymal stem cell markers (CD13, CD44, Nt5e and Thy-1) compared to Sca1(-/lo)/CD146(-)/CD45(-)/CD31(-) cells. Our results suggest that a local Sca1(hi)/CD146(-)/CD45(-)/CD31(-) pericyte progenitor resides in the tumor microenvironment and requires Notch signaling for differentiation into mature pericytes.
Bioinformatics | 2015
Kieran O’Neill; Nima Aghaeepour; Jeremy Parker; Donna E. Hogge; Aly Karsan; Bakul I Dalal; Ryan R. Brinkman
MOTIVATION Deep profiling the phenotypic landscape of tissues using high-throughput flow cytometry (FCM) can provide important new insights into the interplay of cells in both healthy and diseased tissue. But often, especially in clinical settings, the cytometer cannot measure all the desired markers in a single aliquot. In these cases, tissue is separated into independently analysed samples, leaving a need to electronically recombine these to increase dimensionality. Nearest-neighbour (NN) based imputation fulfils this need but can produce artificial subpopulations. Clustering-based NNs can reduce these, but requires prior domain knowledge to be able to parameterize the clustering, so is unsuited to discovery settings. RESULTS We present flowBin, a parameterization-free method for combining multitube FCM data into a higher-dimensional form suitable for deep profiling and discovery. FlowBin allocates cells to bins defined by the common markers across tubes in a multitube experiment, then computes aggregate expression for each bin within each tube, to create a matrix of expression of all markers assayed in each tube. We show, using simulated multitube data, that flowType analysis of flowBin output reproduces the results of that same analysis on the original data for cell types of >10% abundance. We used flowBin in conjunction with classifiers to distinguish normal from cancerous cells. We used flowBin together with flowType and RchyOptimyx to profile the immunophenotypic landscape of NPM1-mutated acute myeloid leukemia, and present a series of novel cell types associated with that mutation.
Cold Spring Harb Mol Case Stud | 2016
Jeremy Parker; Yaoqing Shen; Erin Pleasance; Yvonne Y. Li; Jacqueline E. Schein; Yongjun Zhao; Richard G. Moore; Joanna Wegrzyn-Woltosz; Kerry J. Savage; Andrew P. Weng; Randy D. Gascoyne; Steven J.M. Jones; Marco A. Marra; Janessa Laskin; Aly Karsan
In an attempt to assess potential treatment options, whole-genome and transcriptome sequencing were performed on a patient with an unclassifiable small lymphoproliferative disorder. Variants from genome sequencing were prioritized using a combination of comparative variant distributions in a spectrum of lymphomas, and meta-analyses of gene expression profiling. In this patient, the molecular variants that we believe to be most relevant to the disease presentation most strongly resemble a diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), whereas the gene expression data are most consistent with a low-grade chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). The variant of greatest interest was a predicted NOTCH2-truncating mutation, which has been recently reported in various lymphomas.
Blood | 2015
Sergio Martinez-Høyer; Rod Docking; Simon Chan; Martin Jädersten; Jeremy Parker; Aly Karsan
Clinical Biochemistry | 2018
Jonatan Blais; Sylvie Giroux; André Caron; Valérie Clément; Alexandre Dionne-Laporte; Loubna Jouan; Julie Gauthier; Tina MacLeod; Richard A. Moore; Jeremy Parker; Lucas Swanson; Yongjun Zhao; Guy A. Rouleau; Aly Karsan; Sylvie Langlois; François Rousseau
Experimental Hematology | 2017
Jennifer Grants; Joanna Wegrzyn; David J.H.F. Knapp; Tony Hui; Kieran O'Neill; Jeremy Parker; Deborah Deng; Connie J. Eaves; Martin Hirst; Aly Karsan
Experimental Hematology | 2013
Amanda Fentiman; Jeremy Parker; Lucas Swanson; Karen Mungall; Inanc Birol; Aly Karsan
BioMed Central Ltd | 2013
Lucas Swanson; Gordon Robertson; Karen Mungall; Yaron S N Butterfield; Readman Chiu; Richard Corbett; T R Docking; Donna E. Hogge; Shaun D. Jackman; Richard A. Moore; Andrew J. Mungall; Ka Ming Nip; Jeremy Parker; Jenny Q. Qian; Anthony Raymond; Sandy Sung; Angela Tam; Nina Thiessen; Richard Varhol; Sherry Wang; Deniz Yorukoglu; Yongjun Zhao; Pamela A. Hoodless; S. C. Sahinalp; Aly Karsan; Inanc Birol; S. Sahinalp