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Dive into the research topics where Mazen Sidani is active.

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Featured researches published by Mazen Sidani.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2004

Phospholipase C and cofilin are required for carcinoma cell directionality in response to EGF stimulation

Ghassan Mouneimne; Lilian Soon; Vera DesMarais; Mazen Sidani; Xiaoyan Song; Shu Chin Yip; Mousumi Ghosh; Robert J. Eddy; Jonathan M. Backer; John Condeelis

The epidermal growth factor (EGF)–induced increase in free barbed ends, resulting in actin polymerization at the leading edge of the lamellipodium in carcinoma cells, occurs as two transients: an early one at 1 min and a late one at 3 min. Our results reveal that phospholipase (PLC) is required for triggering the early barbed end transient. Phosphoinositide-3 kinase selectively regulates the late barbed end transient. Inhibition of PLC inhibits cofilin activity in cells during the early transient, delays the initiation of protrusions, and inhibits the ability of cells to sense a gradient of EGF. Suppression of cofilin, using either small interfering RNA silencing or function-blocking antibodies, selectively inhibits the early transient. Therefore, our results demonstrate that the early PLC and cofilin-dependent barbed end transient is required for the initiation of protrusions and is involved in setting the direction of cell movement in response to EGF.


Cancer Research | 2006

Epidermal growth factor receptor overexpression results in increased tumor cell motility in vivo coordinately with enhanced intravasation and metastasis

Chengsen Xue; Jeffrey Wyckoff; Fubo Liang; Mazen Sidani; Stefania Violini; Kun Lin Tsai; Zhong Yin Zhang; Erik Sahai; John Condeelis; Jeffrey E. Segall

Although overexpression of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR; ErbB1) has been correlated with poor prognosis in breast and other cancers, clinical trials of ErbB1 inhibitors have shown limited efficacy in inhibiting tumor proliferation. To evaluate other possible roles of ErbB1 in tumor malignancy besides proliferation, we have developed a series of tools for analysis of intravasation. Overexpression of ErbB1 in MTLn3 mammary adenocarcinoma cells results in increased intravasation and lung metastasis from tumors formed by injection of cells in the mammary fat pad. However, increased ErbB1 expression has no effect on primary tumor growth and lung seeding efficiency of cells injected i.v. Chemotactic responses to low concentrations of EGF in vitro and cell motility in vivo in the primary tumor measured using intravital imaging are significantly increased by ErbB1 overexpression. The increased cell motility is restricted to ErbB1-overexpressing cells in tumors containing mixtures of cells expressing different ErbB1 levels, arguing for a cell-autonomous effect of increased ErbB1 expression rather than alteration of the tumor microenvironment. In summary, we propose that ErbB1 overexpression makes more significant contributions to intravasation than growth in some tumors and present a novel model for studying ErbB1 contributions to tumor metastasis via chemotaxis and intravasation.


Cancer Research | 2007

Coordinated regulation of pathways for enhanced cell motility and chemotaxis is conserved in rat and mouse mammary tumors

Weigang Wang; Jeffrey Wyckoff; Sumanta Goswami; Yarong Wang; Mazen Sidani; Jeffrey E. Segall; John Condeelis

Correlating tumor cell behavior in vivo with patterns of gene expression has led to new insights into the microenvironment of tumor cells in the primary tumor. Until now, these studies have been done with cell line-derived tumors. In the current study, we have analyzed, in polyoma middle T oncogene (PyMT)-derived mammary tumors, tumor cell behavior and gene expression patterns of the invasive subpopulation of tumor cells by multiphoton-based intravital imaging and microarray-based expression profiling, respectively. Our results indicate that the patterns of cell behavior that contribute to invasion and metastasis in the PyMT tumor are similar to those seen previously in rat MTLn3 cell line-derived mammary tumors. The invasive tumor cells collected from PyMT mouse mammary tumors, like their counterparts from rat xenograft mammary tumors, are a population that is relatively nondividing and nonapoptotic but chemotherapy resistant and chemotactic. Changes in the expression of genes that occur uniquely in the invasive subpopulation of tumor cells in the PyMT mammary tumors that fall on the Arp2/3 complex, capping protein and cofilin pathways show a pattern like that seen previously in invasive tumor cells from the MTLn3 cell line-derived tumors. These changes predict an enhanced activity of the cofilin pathway, and this was confirmed in isolated invasive PyMT tumor cells. We conclude that changes in gene expression and their related changes in cell behavior, which were identified in the invasive tumor cells of cell line-derived tumors, are conserved in the invasive tumor cells of PyMT-derived mouse mammary tumors, although these tumor types have different genetic origins.


Current Biology | 2006

Spatial and Temporal Control of Cofilin Activity Is Required for Directional Sensing during Chemotaxis

Ghassan Mouneimne; Vera DesMarais; Mazen Sidani; Eliana Scemes; Weigang Wang; Xiaoyan Song; Robert J. Eddy; John Condeelis

BACKGROUND Previous work has led to the hypothesis that cofilin severing, as regulated by PLC, is involved in chemotactic sensing. We have tested this hypothesis by investigating whether activation of endogenous cofilin is spatially and temporally linked to sensing an EGF point source in carcinoma cells. RESULTS We demonstrate that inhibition of endogenous cofilin activity with either siRNA or overexpression of LIMK suppresses directional sensing in carcinoma cells. LIMK siRNA knockdown, which suppresses cofilin phosphorylation, and microinjection of S3C cofilin, a cofilin mutant that is constitutively active and not phosphorylated by LIMK, also inhibits directional sensing and chemotaxis. These results indicate that phosphorylation of cofilin by LIMK, in addition to cofilin activity, is required for chemotaxis. Cofilin activity concentrates rapidly at the newly formed leading edge facing the gradient, whereas cofilin phosphorylation increases throughout the cell. Quantification of these results indicates that the amplification of asymmetric actin polymerization required for protrusion toward the EGF gradient occurs at the level of cofilin but not at the level of PLC activation by EGFR. CONCLUSIONS These results indicate that local activation of cofilin by PLC and its global inactivation by LIMK phosphorylation combine to generate the local asymmetry of actin polymerization required for chemotaxis.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2008

WASP family members and formin proteins coordinate regulation of cell protrusions in carcinoma cells

Corina Sarmiento; Weigang Wang; Athanassios Dovas; Hideki Yamaguchi; Mazen Sidani; Mirvat El-Sibai; Vera DesMarais; Holly A. Holman; Susan M. Kitchen; Jonathan M. Backer; Art Alberts; John Condeelis

We examined the role of the actin nucleation promoters neural Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome protein (N-WASP) and WAVE2 in cell protrusion in response to epidermal growth factor (EGF), a key regulator in carcinoma cell invasion. We found that WAVE2 knockdown (KD) suppresses lamellipod formation and increases filopod formation, whereas N-WASP KD has no effect. However, simultaneous KD of both proteins results in the formation of large jagged protrusions with lamellar properties and increased filopod formation. This suggests that another actin nucleation activity is at work in carcinoma cells in response to EGF. A mammalian Diaphanous–related formin, mDia1, localizes at the jagged protrusions in double KD cells. Constitutively active mDia1 recapitulated the phenotype, whereas inhibition of mDia1 blocked the formation of these protrusions. Increased RhoA activity, which stimulates mDia1 nucleation, was observed in the N-WASP/WAVE2 KD cells and was shown to be required for the N-WASP/WAVE2 KD phenotype. These data show that coordinate regulation between the WASP family and mDia proteins controls the balance between lamellar and lamellipodial protrusion activity.


Journal of Mammary Gland Biology and Neoplasia | 2006

Probing the Microenvironment of Mammary Tumors Using Multiphoton Microscopy

Mazen Sidani; Jeffrey Wyckoff; Chengsen Xue; Jeffrey E. Segall; John Condeelis

Advances in optical imaging technologies that allow the subcellular resolution of undissected tissue have begun to offer new clues into the biology of development and disease. For cancer, such advances mean that the primary tumor is no longer a black box and that the disease can be studied throughout the metastatic cascade and not just as an endpoint. In this review we examine the advances in multiphoton imaging technology that have been used to define the microenvironment and its role in delineating the invasion and intravasation steps of metastasis inside living mammary tumors. Results show that the tumor microenvironment is a dynamic place where interactions between tumor cells, macrophages, blood vessels, and extracellular matrix fibers define the metastatic phenotype.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2009

Unbalancing the phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate-cofilin interaction impairs cell steering.

Shirley Leyman; Mazen Sidani; Laila Ritsma; Davy Waterschoot; Robert J. Eddy; Daisy Dewitte; Olivier Debeir; Christine Decaestecker; Joël Vandekerckhove; Jacco van Rheenen; Christophe Ampe; John Condeelis; Marleen Van Troys

Cofilin is a key player in actin dynamics during cell migration. Its activity is regulated by (de)phosphorylation, pH, and binding to phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate [PI(4,5)P(2)]. Here, we here use a human cofilin-1 (D122K) mutant with increased binding affinity for PI(4,5)P(2) and slower release from the plasma membrane to study the role of the PI(4,5)P(2)-cofilin interaction in migrating cells. In fibroblasts in a background of endogenous cofilin, D122K cofilin expression negatively affects cell turning frequency. In carcinoma cells with down-regulated endogenous cofilin, D122K cofilin neither rescues the drastic morphological defects nor restores the effects in cell turning capacity, unlike what has been reported for wild-type cofilin. In cofilin knockdown cells, D122K cofilin expression promotes outgrowth of an existing lamellipod in response to epidermal growth factor (EGF) but does not result in initiation of new lamellipodia. This indicates that, next to phospho- and pH regulation, the normal release kinetics of cofilin from PI(4,5)P(2) is crucial as a local activation switch for lamellipodia initiation and as a signal for migrating cells to change direction in response to external stimuli. Our results demonstrate that the PI(4,5)P(2) regulatory mechanism, that is governed by EGF-dependent phospholipase C activation, is a determinant for the spatial and temporal control of cofilin activation required for lamellipodia initiation.


Science | 2004

Cofilin Promotes Actin Polymerization and Defines the Direction of Cell Motility

Mousumi Ghosh; Xiaoyan Song; Ghassan Mouneimne; Mazen Sidani; David S. Lawrence; John Condeelis


Journal of Cell Biology | 2007

Cofilin determines the migration behavior and turning frequency of metastatic cancer cells

Mazen Sidani; Deborah Wessels; Ghassan Mouneimne; Mousumi Ghosh; Sumanta Goswami; Corina Sarmiento; Weigang Wang; Spencer Kuhl; Mirvat El-Sibai; Jonathan M. Backer; Robert J. Eddy; David R. Soll; John Condeelis


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005

A Neural Wiskott-Aldrich Syndrome Protein-mediated Pathway for Localized Activation of Actin Polymerization That Is Regulated by Cortactin

Stephan J. Kempiak; Hideki Yamaguchi; Corina Sarmiento; Mazen Sidani; Mousumi Ghosh; Robert J. Eddy; Vera DesMarais; Michael Way; John Condeelis; Jeffrey E. Segall

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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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Jeffrey E. Segall

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Robert J. Eddy

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Vera DesMarais

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Chengsen Xue

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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