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Dive into the research topics where Juli R. Bagó is active.

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Featured researches published by Juli R. Bagó.


Nature Communications | 2016

Therapeutically engineered induced neural stem cells are tumour-homing and inhibit progression of glioblastoma

Juli R. Bagó; Adolfo Alfonso-Pecchio; Onyi Okolie; Raluca Dumitru; Amanda L. Rinkenbaugh; Albert S. Baldwin; C. Ryan Miller; Scott T. Magness; Shawn D. Hingtgen

Transdifferentiation (TD) is a recent advancement in somatic cell reprogramming. The direct conversion of TD eliminates the pluripotent intermediate state to create cells that are ideal for personalized cell therapy. Here we provide evidence that TD-derived induced neural stem cells (iNSCs) are an efficacious therapeutic strategy for brain cancer. We find that iNSCs genetically engineered with optical reporters and tumouricidal gene products retain the capacity to differentiate and induced apoptosis in co-cultured human glioblastoma cells. Time-lapse imaging shows that iNSCs are tumouritropic, homing rapidly to co-cultured glioblastoma cells and migrating extensively to distant tumour foci in the murine brain. Multimodality imaging reveals that iNSC delivery of the anticancer molecule TRAIL decreases the growth of established solid and diffuse patient-derived orthotopic glioblastoma xenografts 230- and 20-fold, respectively, while significantly prolonging the median mouse survival. These findings establish a strategy for creating autologous cell-based therapies to treat patients with aggressive forms of brain cancer.


Biomaterials | 2016

Electrospun nanofibrous scaffolds increase the efficacy of stem cell-mediated therapy of surgically resected glioblastoma

Juli R. Bagó; Guillaume Pegna; Onyi Okolie; Mahsa Mohiti-Asli; Elizabeth G. Loboa; Shawn D. Hingtgen

Engineered stem cell (SC)-based therapy holds enormous promise for treating the incurable brain cancer glioblastoma (GBM). Retaining the cytotoxic SCs in the surgical cavity after GBM resection is one of the greatest challenges to this approach. Here, we describe a biocompatible electrospun nanofibrous scaffold (bENS) implant capable of delivering and retaining tumor-homing cytotoxic stem cells that suppress recurrence of post-surgical GBM. As a new approach to GBM therapy, we created poly(l-lactic acid) (PLA) bENS bearing drug-releasing human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs). We discovered that bENS-based implant increased hMSC retention in the surgical cavity 5-fold and prolonged persistence 3-fold compared to standard direct injection using our mouse model of GBM surgical resection/recurrence. Time-lapse imaging showed cytotoxic hMSC/bENS treatment killed co-cultured human GBM cells, and allowed hMSCs to rapidly migrate off the scaffolds as they homed to GBMs. In vivo, bENS loaded with hMSCs releasing the anti-tumor protein TRAIL (bENS(sTR)) reduced the volume of established GBM xenografts 3-fold. Mimicking clinical GBM patient therapy, lining the post-operative GBM surgical cavity with bENS(sTR) implants inhibited the re-growth of residual GBM foci 2.3-fold and prolonged post-surgical median survival from 13.5 to 31 days in mice. These results suggest that nanofibrous-based SC therapies could be an innovative new approach to improve the outcomes of patients suffering from terminal brain cancer.


Science Translational Medicine | 2017

Tumor-homing cytotoxic human induced neural stem cells for cancer therapy

Juli R. Bagó; Onyi Okolie; Raluca Dumitru; Matthew G. Ewend; Joel S. Parker; Ryan Vander Werff; T. Michael Underhill; Ralf S. Schmid; C. Ryan Miller; Shawn D. Hingtgen

Human skin cells directly converted to induced neural stem cells seek out cancer foci and deliver therapeutic agents that inhibit glioblastoma progression. Stem cells on a mission Healthy neural stem cells can infiltrate and help treat brain tumors because they naturally migrate toward gliomas in response to chemotactic signals released by the tumor cells. Obtaining neural stem cells from a patient can be difficult, however, and donor stem cells pose a risk of immune rejection and other safety concerns. Bagó et al. have discovered a way to avoid these risks by taking normal human skin fibroblasts and transdifferentiating them into neural stem cells. The entire process took only 4 days to complete, yielding autologous patient-derived neural stem cells. The authors engineered these stem cells to deliver two different types of therapies and demonstrated their ability to infiltrate and effectively treat brain tumors in multiple mouse models. Engineered neural stem cells (NSCs) are a promising approach to treating glioblastoma (GBM). The ideal NSC drug carrier for clinical use should be easily isolated and autologous to avoid immune rejection. We transdifferentiated (TD) human fibroblasts into tumor-homing early-stage induced NSCs (h-iNSCTE), engineered them to express optical reporters and different therapeutic gene products, and assessed the tumor-homing migration and therapeutic efficacy of cytotoxic h-iNSCTE in patient-derived GBM models of surgical and nonsurgical disease. Molecular and functional analysis revealed that our single-factor SOX2 TD strategy converted human skin fibroblasts into h-iNSCTE that were nestin+ and expressed pathways associated with tumor-homing migration in 4 days. Time-lapse motion analysis showed that h-iNSCTE rapidly migrated to human GBM cells and penetrated human GBM spheroids, a process inhibited by blockade of CXCR4. Serial imaging showed that h-iNSCTE delivery of the proapoptotic agent tumor necrosis factor–α–related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) reduced the size of solid human GBM xenografts 250-fold in 3 weeks and prolonged median survival from 22 to 49 days. Additionally, h-iNSCTE thymidine kinase/ganciclovir enzyme/prodrug therapy (h-iNSCTE–TK) reduced the size of patient-derived GBM xenografts 20-fold and extended survival from 32 to 62 days. Mimicking clinical NSC therapy, h-iNSCTE–TK therapy delivered into the postoperative surgical resection cavity delayed the regrowth of residual GBMs threefold and prolonged survival from 46 to 60 days. These results suggest that TD of human skin into h-iNSCTE is a platform for creating tumor-homing cytotoxic cell therapies for cancer, where the potential to avoid carrier rejection could maximize treatment durability in human trials.


Methods | 2016

Neural stem cell therapy for cancer.

Juli R. Bagó; Kevin T. Sheets; Shawn D. Hingtgen

Cancers of the brain remain one of the greatest medical challenges. Traditional surgery and chemo-radiation therapy are unable to eradicate diffuse cancer cells and tumor recurrence is nearly inevitable. In contrast to traditional regenerative medicine applications, engineered neural stem cells (NSCs) are emerging as a promising new therapeutic strategy for cancer therapy. The tumor-homing properties allow NSCs to access both primary and invasive tumor foci, creating a novel delivery platform. NSCs engineered with a wide array of cytotoxic agents have been found to significantly reduce tumor volumes and markedly extend survival in preclinical models. With the recent launch of new clinical trials, the potential to successfully manage cancer in human patients with cytotoxic NSC therapy is moving closer to becoming a reality.


Biomaterials | 2016

Fibrin matrices enhance the transplant and efficacy of cytotoxic stem cell therapy for post-surgical cancer.

Juli R. Bagó; Guillaume Pegna; Onyi Okolie; Shawn D. Hingtgen

Tumor-homing cytotoxic stem cell (SC) therapy is a promising new approach for treating the incurable brain cancer glioblastoma (GBM). However, problems of retaining cytotoxic SCs within the post-surgical GBM resection cavity are likely to significantly limit the clinical utility of this strategy. Here, we describe a new fibrin-based transplant approach capable of increasing cytotoxic SC retention and persistence within the resection cavity, yet remaining permissive to tumoritropic migration. This fibrin-based transplant can effectively treat both solid and post-surgical human GBM in mice. Using our murine model of image-guided model of GBM resection, we discovered that suspending human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCS) in a fibrin matrix increased initial retention in the surgical resection cavity 2-fold and prolonged persistence in the cavity 3-fold compared to conventional delivery strategies. Time-lapse motion analysis revealed that cytotoxic hMSCs in the fibrin matrix remain tumoritropic, rapidly migrating from the fibrin matrix to co-localize with cultured human GBM cells. We encapsulated hMSCs releasing the cytotoxic agent TRAIL (hMSC-sTR) in fibrin, and found hMSC-sTR/fibrin therapy reduced the viability of multiple 3-D human GBM spheroids and regressed established human GBM xenografts 3-fold in 11 days. Mimicking clinical therapy of surgically resected GBM, intra-cavity seeding of therapeutic hMSC-sTR encapsulated in fibrin reduced post-surgical GBM volumes 6-fold, increased time to recurrence 4-fold, and prolonged median survival from 15 to 36 days compared to control-treated animals. Fibrin-based SC therapy could represent a clinically compatible, viable treatment to suppress recurrence of post-surgical GBM and other lethal cancer types.


PLOS ONE | 2018

Intra-cavity stem cell therapy inhibits tumor progression in a novel murine model of medulloblastoma surgical resection

Onyinyechukwu Okolie; David M. Irvin; Juli R. Bagó; Kevin T. Sheets; Andrew Satterlee; Abigail G. Carey-Ewend; Vivien Lettry; Raluca Dumitru; Scott W. Elton; Matthew G. Ewend; C. Ryan Miller; Shawn D. Hingtgen

Background Cytotoxic neural stem cells (NSCs) have emerged as a promising treatment for Medulloblastoma (MB), the most common malignant primary pediatric brain tumor. The lack of accurate pre-clinical models incorporating surgical resection and tumor recurrence limits advancement in post-surgical MB treatments. Using cell lines from two of the 5 distinct MB molecular sub-groups, in this study, we developed an image-guided mouse model of MB surgical resection and investigate intra-cavity NSC therapy for post-operative MB. Methods Using D283 and Daoy human MB cells engineered to express multi-modality optical reporters, we created the first image-guided resection model of orthotopic MB. Brain-derived NSCs and novel induced NSCs (iNSCs) generated from pediatric skin were engineered to express the pro-drug/enzyme therapy thymidine kinase/ganciclovir, seeded into the post-operative cavity, and used to investigate intra-cavity therapy for post-surgical MB. Results We found that surgery reduced MB volumes by 92%, and the rate of post-operative MB regrowth increased 3-fold compared to pre-resection growth. Real-time imaging showed NSCs rapidly homed to MB, migrating 1.6-fold faster and 2-fold farther in the presence of tumors, and co-localized with MB present in the contra-lateral hemisphere. Seeding of cytotoxic NSCs into the post-operative surgical cavity decreased MB volumes 15-fold and extended median survival 133%. As an initial step towards novel autologous therapy in human MB patients, we found skin-derived iNSCs homed to MB cells, while intra-cavity iNSC therapy suppressed post-surgical tumor growth and prolonged survival of MB-bearing mice by 123%. Conclusions We report a novel image-guided model of MB resection/recurrence and provide new evidence of cytotoxic NSCs/iNSCs delivered into the surgical cavity effectively target residual MB foci.


Archive | 2018

Delivery of Cytotoxic Mesenchymal Stem Cells with Biodegradable Scaffolds for Treatment of Postoperative Brain Cancer

Kevin T. Sheets; Juli R. Bagó; Shawn D. Hingtgen

Engineered stem cells have recently entered clinical trials as therapeutic agents for treating glioblastoma foci that remain after primary brain tumor resection. However, efficient delivery of anti-cancer mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) into the resection cavity remains a potential obstacle to therapeutic efficacy in humans. Direct injection quickly leads to significant stem cell loss and poor tumor killing. Recent reports have shown that biodegradable scaffolds improve MSC persistence and restore therapeutic potential. Here, we describe a method for the delivery of therapeutic MSCs on biodegradable fibrin scaffolds into the resection cavity to treat postoperative brain cancer.


Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2018

Image-Guided Resection of Glioblastoma and Intracranial Implantation of Therapeutic Stem Cell-seeded Scaffolds

Kevin T. Sheets; Juli R. Bagó; Ivory L. Paulk; Shawn D. Hingtgen

Glioblastoma (GBM), the most common and aggressive primary brain cancer, carries a life expectancy of 12-15 months. The short life expectancy is due in part to the inability of the current treatment, consisting of surgical resection followed by radiation and chemotherapy, to eliminate invasive tumor foci. Treatment of these foci may be improved with tumoricidal human mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs). MSCs exhibit potent tumor tropism and can be engineered to express therapeutic proteins that kill tumor cells. Advancements in preclinical models indicate that surgical resection induces premature MSC loss and reduces therapeutic efficacy. Efficacy of MSC treatment can be improved by seeding MSCs on a biodegradable poly(lactic acid) (PLA) scaffold. MSC delivery into the surgical resection cavity on a PLA scaffold restores cell retention, persistence, and tumor killing. To study the effects of MSC-seeded PLA implantation on GBM, an accurate preclinical model is needed. Here we provide a preclinical surgical protocol for image-guided tumor resection of GBM in immune-deficient mice followed by MSC-seeded scaffold implantation. MSCs are engineered with lentiviral constructs to constitutively express and secrete therapeutic TNFα-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) as well as green fluorescent protein (GFP) to allow fluorescent tracking. Similarly, the U87 tumor cells are engineered to express mCherry and firefly luciferase, providing dual fluorescent/luminescent tracking. While currently used for investigating stem cell mediated delivery of therapeutics, this protocol could be modified to investigate the impact of surgical resection on other GBM interventions.


Molecular Therapy | 2016

442. Developing Polymeric Bio-Scaffolds That Increase the Efficacy of Stem Cell-Mediated Therapy for Brain Tumors

Juli R. Bagó; Onyi Okolie; Mahsa Mohiti-Asli; Elizabeth G. Loboa; Shawn D. Hingtgen

Engineered stem cell (SC)-based therapy holds enormous promise for treating the incurable brain cancer glioblastoma (GBM). Retaining the cytotoxic SCs in the surgical cavity after GBM resection is one of the greatest challenges to this approach. In this study, we describe a biocompatible electrospun nanofibrous scaffold (bENS) implant capable of delivering and retaining tumor-homing cytotoxic stem cells that suppress recurrence of post-surgical GBM. As a new approach to GBM therapy, we created poly(L-lactic acid) (PLA) bENS bearing drug-releasing human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs). We discovered that bENS-based implant increased hMSC retention in the surgical cavity 5-fold and prolonged persistence 3-fold compared to standard direct injection using our mouse model of GBM surgical resection/recurrence. Time-lapse imaging showed cytotoxic hMSC/bENS treatment killed co-cultured human GBM cells, and allowed hMSCs to rapidly migrate off the scaffolds as they homed to GBMs. In vivo, bENS loaded with hMSCs releasing the anti-tumor protein TRAIL (bENSsTR) reduced the volume of established GBM xenografts 3-fold. Mimicking clinical GBM patient therapy, lining the post-operative GBM surgical cavity with bENSsTR implants inhibited the re-growth of residual GBM foci 2.3-fold and prolonged post-surgical median survival from 13.5 to 31 days in mice. These results suggest that nanofibrous-based SC therapies could be an innovative new approach to improve the outcomes of patients suffering from terminal brain cancer.View Large Image | Download PowerPoint Slide


Molecular Therapy | 2016

528. Towards Personalized Cell Therapy for Cancer: Tumor-Homing Human Induced Neural Stem Cells

Juli R. Bagó; Onyi Okolie; Raluca Dumitru; Matt Ewend; Shawn D. Hingtgen

Background: Engineered neural stem cells (NSC) are a promising new approach to treating glioblastoma (GBM). In clinical trials, the ideal NSC drug carrier should be easily isolated and autologous to avoid immune rejection. Methods: As a new approach to personalized NSC therapy for cancer, we directly transdifferentiated (TD) human fibroblasts in induced neural stem cells (h-iNSCs). The h-iNSCs were engineered to express optical reporters and either the pro-apoptotic agent TRAIL or thymidine kinase. The tumor-homing migration and therapeutic efficacy of cytotoxic h-iNSCs were then assessed in human-derived GBM models of solid and surgically resected disease. All statistical tests were two-sided. Results: Our new single-factor Sox2 strategy converted human skin fibroblasts into nestin+ h-iNSCs in only 4 days and the h-iNSCs survived in the brain of mice for 3 weeks. Time-lapse motion analysis showed h-iNSCs rapidly migrated to human GBMs cells and penetrated solid human GBM spheroids. h-iNSC delivery of TRAIL reduced solid human GBM xenografts 250-fold in 3 weeks and prolonged median survival from 22 to 49 days (P<0.01). h-iNSC prodrug/enzyme therapy regressed patient-derived GBM xenografts 20-fold and extended survival from 32 to 62 days (P<0.01). Mimicking clinical NSC therapy, intra-cavity h-iNSC thymidine kinase/ganciclovir therapy delayed the regrowth of post-surgical GBMs 3-fold and prolonged survival in mice from 46 to 60 days. Conclusions: Transdifferentiating human skin into h-iNSCs is a new platform for creating tumor-homing cytotoxic cell therapies for cancer. Translating this approach has the potential to avoid carrier rejection and maximize treatment durability in patient trials.

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Shawn D. Hingtgen

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Onyi Okolie

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Raluca Dumitru

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Kevin T. Sheets

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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C. Ryan Miller

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Matthew G. Ewend

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Onyinyechukwu Okolie

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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David M. Irvin

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Elizabeth G. Loboa

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Guillaume Pegna

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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