Jochen Maurer
Sanford-Burnham Institute for Medical Research
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Publication
Featured researches published by Jochen Maurer.
PLOS ONE | 2010
Carol Lynn Curchoe; Jochen Maurer; Sonja J. McKeown; Giulio Cattarossi; Flavio Cimadamore; Mats Nilbratt; Evan Y. Snyder; Marianne Bronner-Fraser; Alexey Terskikh
Background Neural crest stem cells (NCSCs) are a transient multipotent embryonic cell population that represents a defining characteristic of vertebrates. The neural crest (NC) gives rise to many derivatives including the neurons and glia of the sensory and autonomic ganglia of the peripheral nervous system, enteric neurons and glia, melanocytes, and the cartilaginous, bony and connective tissue of the craniofacial skeleton, cephalic neuroendocrine organs, and some heart vessels. Methodology/Principal Findings We present evidence that neural crest (NC) competence can be acquired very early when human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) are selectively neuralized towards dorsal neuroepithelium in the absence of feeder cells in fully defined conditions. When hESC-derived neurospheres are plated on fibronectin, some cells emigrate onto the substrate. These early migratory Neural Crest Stem Cells (emNCSCs) uniformly upregulate Sox10 and vimentin, downregulate N-cadherin, and remodel F-actin, consistent with a transition from neuroepithelium to a mesenchymal NC cell. Over 13% of emNCSCs upregulate CD73, a marker of mesenchymal lineage characteristic of cephalic NC and connexin 43, found on early migratory NC cells. We demonstrated that emNCSCs give rise in vitro to all NC lineages, are multipotent on clonal level, and appropriately respond to developmental factors. We suggest that human emNCSC resemble cephalic NC described in model organisms. Ex vivo emNCSCs can differentiate into neurons in Ret.k- mouse embryonic gut tissue cultures and transplanted emNCSCs incorporate into NC-derived structures but not CNS tissues in chick embryos. Conclusions/Significance These findings will provide a framework for further studying early human NC development including the epithelial to mesenchymal transition during NC delamination.
Cancer Research | 2010
Lionel Hebbard; Jochen Maurer; Amber Miller; Jacqueline Lesperance; John A. Hassell; Robert G. Oshima; Alexey Terskikh
Maternal embryonic leucine zipper kinase (MELK) is expressed in several developing tissues, in the adult germ line, and in adult neural progenitors. MELK expression is elevated in aggressive undifferentiated tumors, correlating with poor patient outcome in human breast cancer. To investigate the role of MELK in mammary tumorigenesis in vivo, we used a MELK-green fluorescent protein (GFP) reporter mouse, which allows prospective isolation of MELK-expressing cells based on GFP fluorescence. We found that in the normal mammary gland, cells expressing high levels of MELK were enriched in proliferating cells that express markers of mammary progenitors. The isolation of cells with high levels of MELK in mammary tumors from MMTV-Wnt1/MELK-GFP bitransgenic mice resulted in a significant enrichment of tumorsphere formation in culture and tumor initiation after transplantation into mammary fat pads of syngeneic mice. Furthermore, using lentiviral delivery of MELK-specific shRNA and limiting dilution cell transplantations, we showed that MELK function is required for mammary tumorigenesis in vivo. Our findings identify MELK as a potential target in breast tumor-initiating cells.
PLOS ONE | 2008
Jochen Maurer; Brandon Nelson; Grace Cecena; Ruchi Bajpai; Mark Mercola; Alexey Terskikh; Robert G. Oshima
RNA expression data reveals that human embryonic stem (hES) cells differ from mouse ES (mES) cells in the expression of RNAs for keratin intermediate filament proteins. These differences were confirmed at the cellular and protein level and may reflect a fundamental difference in the epithelial nature of embryonic stem cells derived from mouse and human blastocysts. Mouse ES cells express very low levels of the simple epithelial keratins K8, K18 and K19. By contrast hES cells express moderate levels of the RNAs for these intermediate filament proteins as do mouse stem cells derived from the mouse epiblast. Expression of K8 and K18 RNAs are correlated with increased c-Jun RNA expression in both mouse and human ES cell cultures. However, decreasing K8 and K18 expression associated with differentiation to neuronal progenitor cells is correlated with increasing expression of the Snai2 (Slug) transcriptional repression and not decreased Jun expression. Increasing K7 expression is correlated with increased CDX2 and decreased Oct4 RNA expression associated with the formation of trophoblast derivatives by hES cells. Our study supports the view that hES cells are more similar to mouse epiblast cells than mouse ES cells and is consistent with the epithelial nature of hES cells. Keratin intermediate filament expression in hES cells may modulate sensitivity to death receptor mediated apoptosis and stress.
Stem Cells | 2013
David J. Castro; Jochen Maurer; Lionel Hebbard; Robert G. Oshima
The differentiation of stem‐like tumor cells may contribute to the cellular heterogeneity of breast cancers. We report the propagation of highly enriched mouse mammary cancer stem cells that retain the potential to differentiate both in vivo and in culture and their use to identify chemical compounds that influence both self‐renewal and differentiation. We identify epithelial tumor‐initiating cells (ETICs) that express lineage markers of both basal and luminal mammary cell lineages and retain the potential, from even single cells, to generate heterogeneous tumors similar to the tumor of origin. ETICs can progress through a Rho‐associated coiled‐coil containing protein kinase 1 dependent, epithelial to mesenchymal transition to generate mesenchymal tumor‐initiating cells capable of initiating tumors of limited heterogeneity. The propagation of ETICs may allow for the identification of new therapeutic compounds that may inhibit or prevent progression of some types of breast cancer. Stem Cells2013;31:12–22
Oncotarget | 2017
Bogdan-Tiberius Preca; Karolina Bajdak; Waltraut Lehmann; Vignesh Sundararajan; Peter Bronsert; Alexandra Matzge-Ogi; Véronique Orian-Rousseau; Simone Brabletz; Thomas Brabletz; Jochen Maurer; Marc P. Stemmler
Cancer metastasis is the main reason for poor patient survival. Tumor cells delaminate from the primary tumor by induction of epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT). EMT is mediated by key transcription factors, including ZEB1, activated by tumor cell interactions with stromal cells and the extracellular matrix (ECM). ZEB1-mediated EMT and motility is accompanied by substantial cell reprogramming and the acquisition of a stemness phenotype. However, understanding of the underlying mechanism is still incomplete. We identified hyaluronic acid (HA), one major ECM proteoglycan and enriched in mammary tumors, to support EMT and enhance ZEB1 expression in cooperation with CD44s. In breast cancer cell lines HA is synthesized mainly by HAS2, which was already shown to be implicated in cancer progression. ZEB1 and HAS2 expression strongly correlates in various cancer entities and high HAS2 levels associate with an early relapse. We identified HAS2, tumor cell-derived HA and ZEB1 to form a positive feedback loop as ZEB1, elevated by HA, directly activates HAS2 expression. In an in vitro differentiation model HA-conditioned medium of breast cancer cells is enhancing osteoclast formation, an indicator of tumor cell-induced osteolysis that facilitates formation of bone metastasis. In combination with the previously identified ZEB1/ESRP1/CD44s feedback loop, we found a novel autocrine mechanism how ZEB1 is accelerating EMT.
Tumor Biology | 2017
Kathrin Enderle-Ammour; Moritz Bader; Theresa D. Ahrens; Kai Franke; Sylvia Timme; Agnes Csanadi; Jens Hoeppner; Birte Kulemann; Jochen Maurer; Philip Reiss; Oliver Schilling; Tobias Keck; Thomas Brabletz; Elmar Stickeler; Martin Werner; Ulrich F. Wellner; Peter Bronsert
In cancer biology, the architectural concept “form follows function” is reflected by cell morphology, migration, and epithelial–mesenchymal transition protein pattern. In vivo, features of epithelial–mesenchymal transition have been associated with tumor budding, which correlates significantly with patient outcome. Hereby, the majority of tumor buds are not truly detached but still connected to a major tumor mass. For detailed insights into the different tumor bud types and the process of tumor budding, we quantified tumor cells according to histomorphological and immunohistological epithelial–mesenchymal transition characteristics. Three-dimensional reconstruction from adenocarcinomas (pancreatic, colorectal, lung, and ductal breast cancers) was performed as published. Tumor cell morphology and epithelial–mesenchymal transition characteristics (represented by zinc finger E-box-binding homeobox 1 and E-Cadherin) were analyzed qualitatively and quantitatively in a three-dimensional context. Tumor buds were classified into main tumor mass, connected tumor bud, and isolated tumor bud. Cell morphology and epithelial–mesenchymal transition marker expression were assessed for each tumor cell. Epithelial–mesenchymal transition characteristics between isolated tumor bud and connected tumor bud demonstrated no significant differences or trends. Tumor cell count correlated significantly with epithelial–mesenchymal transition and histomorphological characteristics. Regression curve analysis revealed initially a loss of membranous E-Cadherin, followed by expression of cytoplasmic E-Cadherin and subsequent expression of nuclear zinc finger E-box-binding homeobox 1. Morphologic changes followed later in this sequence. Our data demonstrate that connected and isolated tumor buds are equal concerning immunohistochemical epithelial–mesenchymal transition characteristics and histomorphology. Our data also give an insight in the process of tumor budding. While there is a notion that the epithelial–mesenchymal transition zinc finger E-box-binding homeobox 1–E-Cadherin cascade is initiated by zinc finger E-box-binding homeobox 1, our results are contrary and outline other possible pathways influencing the regulation of E-Cadherin.
Oncotarget | 2016
Juliane Strietz; Stella S. Stepputtis; Bogdan-Tiberius Preca; Corinne Vannier; Mihee M. Kim; David J. Castro; Qingyan Au; Melanie Boerries; Hauke Busch; Pedro Aza-Blanc; Susanne Heynen-Genel; Peter Bronsert; Bernhard Kuster; Elmar Stickeler; Thomas Brabletz; Robert G. Oshima; Jochen Maurer
Cancers are heterogeneous by nature. While traditional oncology screens commonly use a single endpoint of cell viability, altering the phenotype of tumor-initiating cells may reveal alternative targets that regulate cellular growth by processes other than apoptosis or cell division. We evaluated the impact of knocking down expression of 420 kinases in bi-lineage triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) cells that express characteristics of both myoepithelial and luminal cells. Knockdown of ERN1 or ALPK1 induces bi-lineage MDA-MB-468 cells to lose the myoepithelial marker keratin 5 but not the luminal markers keratin 8 and GATA3. In addition, these cells exhibit increased β-casein production. These changes are associated with decreased proliferation and clonogenicity in spheroid cultures and anchorage-independent growth assays. Confirmation of these assays was completed in vivo, where ERN1- or ALPK1-deficient TNBC cells are less tumorigenic. Finally, treatment with K252a, a kinase inhibitor active on ERN1, similarly impairs anchorage-independent growth of multiple breast cancer cell lines. This study supports the strategy to identify new molecular targets for types of cancer driven by cells that retain some capacity for normal differentiation to a non-tumorigenic phenotype. ERN1 and ALPK1 are potential targets for therapeutic development.
Scientific Reports | 2018
Maximilian Seidl; Moritz Bader; Astrid Vaihinger; Ulrich F. Wellner; Rumyana Todorova; Bettina Herde; Klaudia Schrenk; Jochen Maurer; Oliver Schilling; Thalia Erbes; Paul Fisch; Jens Pfeiffer; Linda Hoffmann; Kai Franke; Martin Werner; Peter Bronsert
Cancer research of immune-modulating mechanisms mainly addresses the role of tumor-infiltrating immune cells. Mechanisms modulating the adaptive immune system at the primary activation site – the draining lymph node (LN) – are less investigated. Here we present tumor-caused histomorphological changes in tumor draining LNs of breast cancer patients, dependent on the localization (sentinel LN vs. non-sentinel LN), the tumor size, the intrinsic subtype and nodal metastatic status. The quantitative morphological study was conducted in breast cancer patients with at least one sentinel LN and no neoadjuvant therapy. All LNs were annotated considering to their topographical location, stained for IgD/H&E, digitized and quantitatively analyzed. In 206 patients, 394 sentinels and 940 non-sentinel LNs were categorized, comprising 40758 follicles and 7074 germinal centers. Subtype specific immunomorphological patterns were detectable: Follicular density was higher in LNs of Her2 enriched hormone receptor positive and triple-negative breast cancers whereas hormone receptor positive breast cancers showed more macrophage infiltrations in the LN cortex. Follicles are rounder in metastatic LNs and non-sentinel LNs. The identified immunomorphological changes reflect different underlying immunomodulations taking place in the tumor-draining LNs and should therefore be considered as possible prognostic and predictive markers for LN metastasis and therapy associated immunomodulation.
Cancer Research | 2010
Jochen Maurer; Lionel Hebbard; David J. Castro; Yoav Altman; Alexey Terskikh; Robert G. Oshima
Proceedings: AACR 101st Annual Meeting 2010‐‐ Apr 17‐21, 2010; Washington, DC We isolated mouse mammary cancer stem cells from a Wnt1-driven tumor model of aggressive breast cancer. These tumorigenic progenitor cells show expression of marker of both luminal (keratin 8) and myoepithelial (keratin 14) cells, express CD24, CD29 and CD49f surface markers. The K8+, K14+ double positive cells can be greatly enriched from less than 5% of the tumor to greater than 60% of the cultured cells in a 3D-culture system under hypoxic conditions. Transplantation of these cultured cells generated tumors with the differentiated morphology of the tumor of origin from a few as a single cell. In a 2D culture setting under normoxic conditions, double positive cells generate single positive differentiated derivates. Serial transplantation of the tumor generated from the cultured cells resulted in increasing growth rate reflected by reduced generation time from 52 days to 21 days after four passages. The fast-growing tumors were strongly positive for vimentin, negative for K14 and few cells expressed K8. Analysis of the cells in 2D revealed a fibroblast-like growth pattern. When grown in 3D, the cells do not form spheroids but rather grow in an invasive pattern in Matrigel. This tumor line has undergone an epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT). These cells also generate tumors from single cell transplants but do not generate heterogeneous tumors. In summary, we have succeeded in cultivating a mammary cancer stem cell, demonstrated its self renewal capacity and potential for differentiation both in vivo and in culture. Furthermore, we have isolated an EMT derivative that is tumorgenic but appears to have lost the potential for self limiting differentiation. This demonstrates that tumorigenic cells with severely restricted capacity for differentiation can be derived from a cancer stem cell. Potential therapies based on the potential of cancer stem cells to differentiate may need to be applied at very early stages of the development of breast cancer. Citation Format: {Authors}. {Abstract title} [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 101st Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research; 2010 Apr 17-21; Washington, DC. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2010;70(8 Suppl):Abstract nr 4217.
PLOS ONE | 2012
Danielle A. Murphy; Begoña Díaz; Paul Andrew Bromann; Jeff H. Tsai; Yasuhiko Kawakami; Jochen Maurer; Rodney A. Stewart; Juan Carlos Izpisúa-Belmonte; Sara A. Courtneidge