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Dive into the research topics where Katie T. Freeman is active.

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Featured researches published by Katie T. Freeman.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2010

Pathological Sprouting of Adult Nociceptors in Chronic Prostate Cancer-Induced Bone Pain

Juan Miguel Jimenez-Andrade; Aaron P. Bloom; James I. Stake; William G. Mantyh; Reid N. Taylor; Katie T. Freeman; Joseph R. Ghilardi; Michael A. Kuskowski; Patrick W. Mantyh

Pain frequently accompanies cancer. What remains unclear is why this pain frequently becomes more severe and difficult to control with disease progression. Here we test the hypothesis that with disease progression, sensory nerve fibers that innervate the tumor-bearing tissue undergo a pathological sprouting and reorganization, which in other nonmalignant pathologies has been shown to generate and maintain chronic pain. Injection of canine prostate cancer cells into mouse bone induces a remarkable sprouting of calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP+) and neurofilament 200 kDa (NF200+) sensory nerve fibers. Nearly all sensory nerve fibers that undergo sprouting also coexpress tropomyosin receptor kinase A (TrkA+). This ectopic sprouting occurs in sensory nerve fibers that are in close proximity to colonies of prostate cancer cells, tumor-associated stromal cells and newly formed woven bone, which together form sclerotic lesions that closely mirror the osteoblastic bone lesions induced by metastatic prostate tumors in humans. Preventive treatment with an antibody that sequesters nerve growth factor (NGF), administered when the pain and bone remodeling were first observed, blocks this ectopic sprouting and attenuates cancer pain. Interestingly, reverse transcription PCR analysis indicated that the prostate cancer cells themselves do not express detectable levels of mRNA coding for NGF. This suggests that the tumor-associated stromal cells express and release NGF, which drives the pathological reorganization of nearby TrkA+ sensory nerve fibers. Therapies that prevent this reorganization of sensory nerve fibers may provide insight into the evolving mechanisms that drive cancer pain and lead to more effective control of this chronic pain state.


The Journal of Pain | 2011

Breast Cancer-Induced Bone Remodeling, Skeletal Pain, and Sprouting of Sensory Nerve Fibers

Aaron P. Bloom; Juan Miguel Jimenez-Andrade; Reid N. Taylor; Gabriela Castañeda-Corral; Magdalena J. Kaczmarska; Katie T. Freeman; Kathleen A. Coughlin; Joseph R. Ghilardi; Michael A. Kuskowski; Patrick W. Mantyh

UNLABELLED Breast cancer metastasis to bone is frequently accompanied by pain. What remains unclear is why this pain tends to become more severe and difficult to control with disease progression. Here we test the hypothesis that with disease progression, sensory nerve fibers that innervate the breast cancer bearing bone undergo a pathological sprouting and reorganization, which in other nonmalignant pathologies has been shown to generate and maintain chronic pain. Injection of human breast cancer cells (MDA-MB-231-BO) into the femoral intramedullary space of female athymic nude mice induces sprouting of calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP(+)) sensory nerve fibers. Nearly all CGRP(+) nerve fibers that undergo sprouting also coexpress tropomyosin receptor kinase A (TrkA(+)) and growth-associated protein-43 (GAP43(+)). This ectopic sprouting occurs in periosteal sensory nerve fibers that are in close proximity to breast cancer cells, tumor-associated stromal cells, and remodeled cortical bone. Therapeutic treatment with an antibody that sequesters nerve growth factor (NGF), administered when the pain and bone remodeling were first observed, blocks this ectopic sprouting and attenuates cancer pain. The present data suggest that the breast cancer cells and tumor-associated stromal cells express and release NGF, which drives bone pain and the pathological reorganization of nearby CGRP(+)/TrkA(+)/GAP43(+) sensory nerve fibers. PERSPECTIVE Therapies that block breast cancer pain by reducing the tumor-induced pathological sprouting and reorganization of sensory nerve fibers may provide insight into the evolving mechanisms that drive breast cancer pain and lead to more effective therapies for attenuating this chronic pain state.


Oncogene | 2010

Inhibition of cancer cell proliferation and metastasis by insulin receptor downregulation

Hua Zhang; Dedra H. Fagan; Xianke Zeng; Katie T. Freeman; Deepali Sachdev; Douglas Yee

Insulin receptor (IR) and the type I IGF receptor (IGF1R) are structurally and functionally related. The function of IGF1R in cancer has been well documented and anti-IGF1R strategies to treat cancer have shown initial positive results. However, the role of IR in tumor biology, independent of IGF1R, is less clear. To address this issue, short hairpin RNA (shRNA) was used to specifically downregulate IR in two cancer cell lines, LCC6 and T47D. Cells with reduced IR showed reduced insulin-stimulated Akt activation, without affecting IGF1R activation. Cells with reduced IR formed fewer colonies in anchorage-independent conditions. LCC6 IR shRNA xenograft tumors in mice had reduced growth, angiogenesis and lymphangiogensis when compared with LCC6 wild-type cells. Accordingly, LCC6 IR shRNA clones produced less hypoxia-inducible factor-1α, vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF)-A and VEGF-D. Furthermore, LCC6 IR shRNA cells formed fewer pulmonary metastases when compared with LCC6 wild-type cells. Using in vivo luciferase imaging, we have shown that LCC6 IR shRNA cells have less seeding and colonization potential in the lung and liver of mice than LCC6 cells. In conclusion, downregulation of IR inhibited cancer cell proliferation, angiogenesis, lymphangiogenesis and metastasis. Our data argue that IR should also be targeted in cancer therapy.


Pain | 2007

Nerve growth factor sequestering therapy attenuates non-malignant skeletal pain following fracture

Juan Miguel Jimenez-Andrade; Carl D. Martin; Nathan J. Koewler; Katie T. Freeman; Lucy J. Sullivan; Kyle G. Halvorson; Christina M. Barthold; Christopher M. Peters; Ryan J. Buus; Joseph R. Ghilardi; Jack Lewis; Michael A. Kuskowski; Patrick W. Mantyh

Abstract Current therapies to treat skeletal fracture pain are extremely limited. Some non‐steroidal anti‐inflammatory drugs have been shown to inhibit bone healing and opiates induce cognitive dysfunction and respiratory depression which are especially problematic in the elderly suffering from osteoporotic fractures. In the present report, we developed a closed femur fracture pain model in the mouse where skeletal pain behaviors such as flinching and guarding of the fractured limb are reversed by 10 mg/kg morphine. Using this model we showed that the administration of a monoclonal antibody against nerve growth factor (anti‐NGF) reduced fracture‐induced pain‐related behaviors by over 50%. Treatment with anti‐NGF reduced c‐Fos and dynorphin up‐regulation in the spinal cord at day 2 post‐fracture. However, anti‐NGF treatment did not reduce p‐ERK and c‐Fos expression at 20 and 90 min, respectively, following fracture. This suggests NGF is involved in maintenance but not the acute generation of fracture pain. Anti‐NGF therapy did not inhibit bone healing as measured by callus formation, bridging of the fracture site or mechanical strength of the bone. As the anti‐NGF antibody does not appreciably cross the blood–brain barrier, the present data suggest that the anti‐hyperalgesic action of anti‐NGF therapy results from blockade of activation and/or sensitization of the CGRP/trkA positive fibers that normally constitute the majority of sensory fibers that innervate the bone. These results demonstrate that NGF plays a significant role in driving fracture pain and that NGF sequestering therapies may be efficacious in attenuating this pain.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2012

Neuroplasticity of sensory and sympathetic nerve fibers in a mouse model of a painful arthritic joint.

Joseph R. Ghilardi; Katie T. Freeman; Juan Miguel Jimenez-Andrade; Kathleen A. Coughlin; Magdalena J. Kaczmarska; Gabriela Castañeda-Corral; Aaron P. Bloom; Michael A. Kuskowski; Patrick W. Mantyh

OBJECTIVE Many forms of arthritis are accompanied by significant chronic joint pain. This study was undertaken to investigate whether there is significant sprouting of sensory and sympathetic nerve fibers in the painful arthritic knee joint and whether nerve growth factor (NGF) drives this pathologic reorganization. METHODS A painful arthritic knee joint was produced by injection of Freunds complete adjuvant (CFA) into the knee joint of young adult mice. CFA-injected mice were then treated systemically with vehicle or anti-NGF antibody. Pain behaviors were assessed, and at 28 days following the initial CFA injection, the knee joints were processed for immunohistochemistry analysis using antibodies against calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP; sensory nerve fibers), neurofilament 200 kd (NF200; sensory nerve fibers), growth-associated protein 43 (GAP-43; sprouted nerve fibers), tyrosine hydroxylase (TH; sympathetic nerve fibers), CD31 (endothelial cells), or CD68 (monocyte/macrophages). RESULTS In CFA-injected mice, there was a significant increase in the density of CD68+ macrophages, CD31+ blood vessels, and CGRP+, NF200+, GAP-43+, and TH+ nerve fibers in the synovium, as well as a significant increase in joint pain-related behaviors. None of these findings were observed in sham-injected mice. Administration of anti-NGF reduced these pain-related behaviors and the ectopic sprouting of nerve fibers, but had no significant effect on the increase in density of CD31+ blood vessels or CD68+ macrophages. CONCLUSION These findings demonstrate that ectopic sprouting of sensory and sympathetic nerve fibers occurs in the painful arthritic joint and may be involved in the generation and maintenance of arthritic pain.


Journal of Bone and Mineral Research | 2007

Effects of a Monoclonal Antibody Raised Against Nerve Growth Factor on Skeletal Pain and Bone Healing After Fracture of the C57BL/6J Mouse Femur†

Nathan J. Koewler; Katie T. Freeman; Ryan J. Buus; Monica Herrera; Juan Miguel Jimenez-Andrade; Joseph R. Ghilardi; Christopher M. Peters; Lucy J. Sullivan; Michael A. Kuskowski; Jack Lewis; Patrick W. Mantyh

A closed femur fracture pain model was developed in the C57BL/6J mouse. One day after fracture, a monoclonal antibody raised against nerve growth factor (anti‐NGF) was delivered intraperitoneally and resulted in a reduction in fracture pain‐related behaviors of ∼50%. Anti‐NGF therapy did not interfere with bone healing as assessed by mechanical testing and histomorphometric analysis.


Molecular Pain | 2010

Administration of a tropomyosin receptor kinase inhibitor attenuates sarcoma-induced nerve sprouting, neuroma formation and bone cancer pain

Joseph R. Ghilardi; Katie T. Freeman; Juan Miguel Jimenez-Andrade; William G. Mantyh; Aaron P. Bloom; Michael A. Kuskowski; Patrick W. Mantyh

Pain often accompanies cancer and most current therapies for treating cancer pain have significant unwanted side effects. Targeting nerve growth factor (NGF) or its cognate receptor tropomyosin receptor kinase A (TrkA) has become an attractive target for attenuating chronic pain.In the present report, we use a mouse model of bone cancer pain and examine whether oral administration of a selective small molecule Trk inhibitor (ARRY-470, which blocks TrkA, TrkB and TrkC kinase activity at low nm concentrations) has a significant effect on cancer-induced pain behaviors, tumor-induced remodeling of sensory nerve fibers, tumor growth and tumor-induced bone remodeling. Early/sustained (initiated day 6 post cancer cell injection), but not late/acute (initiated day 18 post cancer cell injection) administration of ARRY-470 markedly attenuated bone cancer pain and significantly blocked the ectopic sprouting of sensory nerve fibers and the formation of neuroma-like structures in the tumor bearing bone, but did not have a significant effect on tumor growth or bone remodeling.These data suggest that, like therapies that target the cancer itself, the earlier that the blockade of TrkA occurs, the more effective the control of cancer pain and the tumor-induced remodeling of sensory nerve fibers. Developing targeted therapies that relieve cancer pain without the side effects of current analgesics has the potential to significantly improve the quality of life and functional status of cancer patients.


Bone | 2011

Sustained blockade of neurotrophin receptors TrkA, TrkB and TrkC reduces non-malignant skeletal pain but not the maintenance of sensory and sympathetic nerve fibers.

Joseph R. Ghilardi; Katie T. Freeman; Juan Miguel Jimenez-Andrade; William G. Mantyh; Aaron P. Bloom; Karyn S. Bouhana; David Trollinger; James Winkler; Patrice Lee; Steven W. Andrews; Michael A. Kuskowski; Patrick W. Mantyh

Current therapies for treating skeletal pain have significant limitations as available drugs (non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and opiates) have significant unwanted side effects. Targeting nerve growth factor (NGF) or its cognate receptor tropomysin receptor kinase A (TrkA) has recently become an attractive target for inhibition of adult skeletal pain. Here we explore whether sustained administration of a selective small molecule Trk inhibitor that blocks TrkA, TrkB and TrkC kinase activity with nanomolar affinity reduces skeletal pain while allowing the maintenance of sensory and sympathetic neurons in the adult mouse. Twice-daily administration of a Trk inhibitor was begun 1 day post fracture and within 8 h of acute administration fracture pain-related behaviors were reduced by 50% without significant sedation, weight gain or inhibition of fracture healing. Following administration of the Trk inhibitor for 7 weeks, there was no significant decline in the density of unmyelinated or myelinated sensory nerve fibers, sympathetic nerve fibers, measures of acute thermal pain, acute mechanical pain, or general neuromuscular function. The present results suggest that sustained administration of a peripherally selective TrkA, B and C inhibitor significantly reduces skeletal pain without having any obvious detrimental effects on adult sensory and sympathetic nerve fibers or early fracture healing. As with any potential therapeutic advance, understanding whether the benefits of Trk blockade are associated with any risks or unexpected effects will be required to fully appreciate the patient populations that may benefit from this therapeutic approach.


Neuroscience | 2009

CAPSAICIN-SENSITIVE SENSORY NERVE FIBERS CONTRIBUTE TO THE GENERATION AND MAINTENANCE OF SKELETAL FRACTURE PAIN

Juan Miguel Jimenez-Andrade; Aaron P. Bloom; William G. Mantyh; Nathan J. Koewler; Katie T. Freeman; David Delong; Joseph R. Ghilardi; Michael A. Kuskowski; Patrick W. Mantyh

Although skeletal pain can have a marked impact on a patients functional status and quality of life, relatively little is known about the specific populations of peripheral nerve fibers that drive non-malignant bone pain. In the present report, neonatal male Sprague-Dawley rats were treated with capsaicin or vehicle and femoral fracture was produced when the animals were young adults (15-16 weeks old). Capsaicin treatment, but not vehicle, resulted in a significant (>70%) depletion in the density of calcitonin-gene related peptide positive (CGRP(+)) sensory nerve fibers, but not 200 kDa neurofilament H positive (NF200(+)) sensory nerve fibers in the periosteum. The periosteum is a thin, cellular and fibrous tissue that tightly adheres to the outer surface of all but the articulated surface of bone and appears to play a pivotal role in driving fracture pain. In animals treated with capsaicin, but not vehicle, there was a 50% reduction in the severity, but no change in the time course, of fracture-induced skeletal pain-related behaviors as measured by spontaneous flinching, guarding and weight bearing. These results suggest that both capsaicin-sensitive (primarily CGRP(+) C-fibers) and capsaicin-insensitive (primarily NF200(+) A-delta fibers) sensory nerve fibers participate in driving skeletal fracture pain. Skeletal pain can be a significant impediment to functional recovery following trauma-induced fracture, osteoporosis-induced fracture and orthopedic surgery procedures such as knee and hip replacement. Understanding the specific populations of sensory nerve fibers that need to be targeted to inhibit the generation and maintenance of skeletal pain may allow the development of more specific mechanism-based therapies that can effectively attenuate acute and chronic skeletal pain.


Neurobiology of Aging | 2012

The effect of aging on the density of the sensory nerve fiber innervation of bone and acute skeletal pain

Juan Miguel Jimenez-Andrade; William G. Mantyh; Aaron P. Bloom; Katie T. Freeman; Joseph R. Ghilardi; Michael A. Kuskowski; Patrick W. Mantyh

As humans age there is a decline in most sensory systems including vision, hearing, taste, smell, and tactile acuity. In contrast, the frequency and severity of musculoskeletal pain generally increases with age. To determine whether the density of sensory nerve fibers that transduce skeletal pain changes with age, calcitonin gene related peptide (CGRP) and neurofilament 200 kDa (NF200) sensory nerve fibers that innervate the femur were examined in the femurs of young (4-month-old), middle-aged (13-month-old) and old (36-month-old) male F344/BNF1 rats. Whereas the bone quality showed a significant age-related decline, the density of CGRP(+) and NF200(+) nerve fibers that innervate the bone remained remarkably unchanged as did the severity of acute skeletal fracture pain. Thus, while bone mass, quality, and strength undergo a significant decline with age, the density of sensory nerve fibers that transduce noxious stimuli remain largely intact. These data may in part explain why musculoskeletal pain increases with age.

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Robert C. Speth

Nova Southeastern University

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