Natsuko Imaizumi
University of Lausanne
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Publication
Featured researches published by Natsuko Imaizumi.
PLOS ONE | 2010
Inês Vala; Leila R. Martins; Natsuko Imaizumi; Raquel J. Nunes; José Rino; François Kuonen; Lara Carvalho; Curzio Rüegg; Isabel Monteiro Grillo; João T. Barata; Marc Mareel; Susana Constantino Rosa Santos
Radiotherapy is a widely used treatment option in cancer. However, recent evidence suggests that doses of ionizing radiation (IR) delivered inside the tumor target volume, during fractionated radiotherapy, can promote tumor invasion and metastasis. Furthermore, the tissues that surround the tumor area are also exposed to low doses of IR that are lower than those delivered inside the tumor mass, because external radiotherapy is delivered to the tumor through multiple radiation beams, in order to prevent damage of organs at risk. The biological effects of these low doses of IR on the healthy tissue surrounding the tumor area, and in particular on the vasculature remain largely to be determined. We found that doses of IR lower or equal to 0.8 Gy enhance endothelial cell migration without impinging on cell proliferation or survival. Moreover, we show that low-dose IR induces a rapid phosphorylation of several endothelial cell proteins, including the Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor (VEGF) Receptor-2 and induces VEGF production in hypoxia mimicking conditions. By activating the VEGF Receptor-2, low-dose IR enhances endothelial cell migration and prevents endothelial cell death promoted by an anti-angiogenic drug, bevacizumab. In addition, we observed that low-dose IR accelerates embryonic angiogenic sprouting during zebrafish development and promotes adult angiogenesis during zebrafish fin regeneration and in the murine Matrigel assay. Using murine experimental models of leukemia and orthotopic breast cancer, we show that low-dose IR promotes tumor growth and metastasis and that these effects were prevented by the administration of a VEGF receptor-tyrosine kinase inhibitor immediately before IR exposure. These findings demonstrate a new mechanism to the understanding of the potential pro-metastatic effect of IR and may provide a new rationale basis to the improvement of current radiotherapy protocols.
Cancer Research | 2008
Yan Monnier; Pierre Farmer; Grégory Bieler; Natsuko Imaizumi; Thierry Sengstag; Gian Carlo Alghisi; Jean-Christophe Stehle; Laura Ciarloni; Snezana Andrejevic-Blant; Raphaël Moeckli; René-Olivier Mirimanoff; Simon Goodman; Mauro Delorenzi; Curzio Rüegg
Radiotherapy is widely used to treat human cancer. Patients locally recurring after radiotherapy, however, have increased risk of metastatic progression and poor prognosis. The clinical management of postradiation recurrences remains an unresolved issue. Tumors growing in preirradiated tissues have an increased fraction of hypoxic cells and are more metastatic, a condition known as tumor bed effect. The transcription factor hypoxia inducible factor (HIF)-1 promotes invasion and metastasis of hypoxic tumors, but its role in the tumor bed effect has not been reported. Here, we show that tumor cells derived from SCCVII and HCT116 tumors growing in a preirradiated bed, or selected in vitro through repeated cycles of severe hypoxia, retain invasive and metastatic capacities when returned to normoxia. HIF activity, although facilitating metastatic spreading of tumors growing in a preirradiated bed, is not essential. Through gene expression profiling and gain- and loss-of-function experiments, we identified the matricellular protein CYR61 and alphaVbeta5 integrin as proteins cooperating to mediate these effects. The anti-alphaV integrin monoclonal antibody 17E6 and the small molecular alphaVbeta3/alphaVbeta5 integrin inhibitor EMD121974 suppressed invasion and metastasis induced by CYR61 and attenuated metastasis of tumors growing within a preirradiated field. These results represent a conceptual advance to the understanding of the tumor bed effect and identify CYR61 and alphaVbeta5 integrin as proteins that cooperate to mediate metastasis. They also identify alphaV integrin inhibition as a potential therapeutic approach for preventing metastasis in patients at risk for postradiation recurrences.
PLOS ONE | 2009
Adrian Zumsteg; Vanessa Baeriswyl; Natsuko Imaizumi; Reto A. Schwendener; Curzio Rüegg; Gerhard Christofori
The formation of new blood vessels (angiogenesis) and lymphatic vessels (lymphangiogenesis) promotes tumor outgrowth and metastasis. Previously, it has been demonstrated that bone marrow-derived cells (BMDC) can contribute to tumor angiogenesis. However, the role of BMDC in lymphangiogenesis has largely remained elusive. Here, we demonstrate by bone marrow transplantation/reconstitution and genetic lineage-tracing experiments that BMDC integrate into tumor-associated lymphatic vessels in the Rip1Tag2 mouse model of insulinoma and in the TRAMP-C1 prostate cancer transplantation model, and that the integrated BMDC originate from the myelomonocytic lineage. Conversely, pharmacological depletion of tumor-associated macrophages reduces lymphangiogenesis. No cell fusion events are detected by genetic tracing experiments. Rather, the phenotypical conversion of myeloid cells into lymphatic endothelial cells and their integration into lymphatic structures is recapitulated in two in vitro tube formation assays and is dependent on fibroblast growth factor-mediated signaling. Together, the results reveal that myeloid cells can contribute to tumor-associated lymphatic vessels, thus extending the findings on the previously reported role of hematopoietic cells in lymphatic vessel formation.
PLOS ONE | 2010
Natsuko Imaizumi; Yan Monnier; Monika E. Hegi; René-Olivier Mirimanoff; Curzio Rüegg
Background Radiotherapy is widely used to treat cancer. While rapidly dividing cancer cells are naturally considered the main target of radiotherapy, emerging evidence indicates that radiotherapy also affects endothelial cell functions, and possibly also their angiogenic capacity. In spite of its clinical relevance, such putative anti-angiogenic effect of radiotherapy has not been thoroughly characterized. We have investigated the effect of ionizing radiation on angiogenesis using in vivo, ex vivo and in vitro experimental models in combination with genetic and pharmacological interventions. Principal Findings Here we show that high doses ionizing radiation locally suppressed VEGF- and FGF-2-induced Matrigel plug angiogenesis in mice in vivo and prevented endothelial cell sprouting from mouse aortic rings following in vivo or ex vivo irradiation. Quiescent human endothelial cells exposed to ionizing radiation in vitro resisted apoptosis, demonstrated reduced sprouting, migration and proliferation capacities, showed enhanced adhesion to matrix proteins, and underwent premature senescence. Irradiation induced the expression of P53 and P21 proteins in endothelial cells, but p53 or p21 deficiency and P21 silencing did not prevent radiation-induced inhibition of sprouting or proliferation. Radiation induced Smad-2 phosphorylation in skin in vivo and in endothelial cells in vitro. Inhibition of the TGF-β type I receptor ALK5 rescued deficient endothelial cell sprouting and migration but not proliferation in vitro and restored defective Matrigel plug angiogenesis in irradiated mice in vivo. ALK5 inhibition, however, did not rescue deficient proliferation. Notch signaling, known to hinder angiogenesis, was activated by radiation but its inhibition, alone or in combination with ALK5 inhibition, did not rescue suppressed proliferation. Conclusions These results demonstrate that irradiation of quiescent endothelial cells suppresses subsequent angiogenesis and that ALK5 is a critical mediator of this suppression. These results extend our understanding of radiotherapy-induced endothelial dysfunctions, relevant to both therapeutic and unwanted effects of radiotherapy.
Cancer Research | 2011
Julien Laurent; Eveline Faes-van't Hull; Cedric Touvrey; François Kuonen; Qiang Lan; Girieca Lorusso; Marie‑Agnès Doucey; Laura Ciarloni; Natsuko Imaizumi; Gian Carlo Alghisi; Ernesta Fagiani; Khalil Zaman; Roger Stupp; Jean François Delaloye; Gerhard Christofori; Curzio Rüegg
Tumor-mobilized bone marrow-derived CD11b(+) myeloid cells promote tumor angiogenesis, but how and when these cells acquire proangiogenic properties is not fully elucidated. Here, we show that CD11b(+) myelomonocytic cells develop proangiogenic properties during their differentiation from CD34(+) hematopoietic progenitors and that placenta growth factor (PlGF) is critical in promoting this education. Cultures of human CD34(+) progenitors supplemented with conditioned medium from breast cancer cell lines or PlGF, but not from nontumorigenic breast epithelial lines, generate CD11b(+) cells capable of inducing endothelial cell sprouting in vitro and angiogenesis in vivo. An anti-Flt-1 mAb or soluble Flt-1 abolished the generation of proangiogenic activity during differentiation from progenitor cells. Moreover, inhibition of metalloproteinase activity, but not VEGF, during the endothelial sprouting assay blocked sprouting induced by these proangiogenic CD11b(+) myelomonocytes. In a mouse model of breast cancer, circulating CD11b(+) cells were proangiogenic in the sprouting assays. Silencing of PlGF in tumor cells prevented the generation of proangiogenic activity in circulating CD11b(+) cells, inhibited tumor blood flow, and slowed tumor growth. Peripheral blood of breast cancer patients at diagnosis, but not of healthy individuals, contained elevated levels of PlGF and circulating proangiogenic CD11b(+) myelomonocytes. Taken together, our results show that cancer cells can program proangiogenic activity in CD11b(+) myelomonocytes during differentiation of their progenitor cells in a PlGF-dependent manner. These findings impact breast cancer biology, detection, and treatment.
Bulletin Du Cancer | 2011
Curzio Rüegg; Yan Monnier; François Kuonen; Natsuko Imaizumi
Radiotherapy is successfully used to treat cancer. Emerging evidence, however, indicates that recurrences after radiotherapy are associated with increased local invasion, metastatic spreading and poor prognosis. Radiation-induced modifications of the tumor microenvironment have been proposed to contribute to increased aggressive tumor behavior, an effect also referred to as tumor bed effect, but the putative mechanisms involved have remained largely elusive. We have recently demonstrated that irradiation of the prospective tumor stroma impairs de novo angiogenesis through sustained inhibition of proliferation, migration and sprouting of endothelial cells. Experimental tumors growing within a pre-irradiated field have reduced tumor angiogenesis and tumor growth, increased hypoxia, necrosis, local invasion and distant metastasis. Mechanisms of progression involve adaptation of tumor cells to local hypoxic conditions as well as selection of cells with invasive and metastatic capacities. The matricellular protein CYR61 and integrin αVβ5 emerged as molecules that cooperate to mediate lung metastasis. Cilengitide, a small molecular inhibitor of αV integrins prevented lung metastasis formation. These results represent a conceptual advance to the understanding of the tumor bed effect and indicate that αV integrin inhibition might be a potential therapeutic approach for preventing metastasis in patients at risk for post-radiation recurrences.
PLOS ONE | 2015
Laura Ciarloni; Sahar Hosseinian; Sylvain Monnier-Benoit; Natsuko Imaizumi; Gian Dorta; Curzio Rüegg
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the second leading cause of cancer-related death in developed countries. Early detection of CRC leads to decreased CRC mortality. A blood-based CRC screening test is highly desirable due to limited invasiveness and high acceptance rate among patients compared to currently used fecal occult blood testing and colonoscopy. Here we describe the discovery and validation of a 29-gene panel in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) for the detection of CRC and adenomatous polyps (AP). Blood samples were prospectively collected from a multicenter, case-control clinical study. First, we profiled 93 samples with 667 candidate and 3 reference genes by high throughput real-time PCR (OpenArray system). After analysis, 160 genes were retained and tested again on 51 additional samples. Low expressed and unstable genes were discarded resulting in a final dataset of 144 samples profiled with 140 genes. To define which genes, alone or in combinations had the highest potential to discriminate AP and/or CRC from controls, data were analyzed by a combination of univariate and multivariate methods. A list of 29 potentially discriminant genes was compiled and evaluated for its predictive accuracy by penalized logistic regression and bootstrap. This method discriminated AP >1cm and CRC from controls with a sensitivity of 59% and 75%, respectively, with 91% specificity. The behavior of the 29-gene panel was validated with a LightCycler 480 real-time PCR platform, commonly adopted by clinical laboratories. In this work we identified a 29-gene panel expressed in PBMC that can be used for developing a novel minimally-invasive test for accurate detection of AP and CRC using a standard real-time PCR platform.
Clinical Cancer Research | 2016
Laura Ciarloni; Sahar Hosseinian Ehrensberger; Natsuko Imaizumi; Sylvain Monnier-Benoit; Cristina Nichita; Seung-Jae Myung; Joo Sung Kim; Si Young Song; Tae Il Kim; Boudewijn van der Weg; Rémy Meier; Jan Borovicka; Christoph Beglinger; Cédric Vallet; Philippe Maerten; Curzio Rüegg; Gian Dorta
Purpose: A blood test for early detection of colorectal cancer is a valuable tool for testing asymptomatic individuals and reducing colorectal cancer–related mortality. The objective of this study was to develop and validate a novel blood test able to differentiate patients with colorectal cancer and adenomatous polyps (AP) from individuals with a negative colonoscopy. Experimental Design: A case–control, multicenter clinical study was designed to collect blood samples from patients referred for colonoscopy or surgery. Predictive algorithms were developed on 75 controls, 61 large AP (LAP) ≥1 cm, and 45 colorectal cancer cases and independently validated on 74 controls, 42 LAP, and 52 colorectal cancer cases (23 stages I–II) as well as on 245 cases including other colorectal findings and diseases other than colorectal cancer. The test is based on a 29-gene panel expressed in peripheral blood mononuclear cells alone or in combination with established plasma tumor markers. Results: The 29-gene algorithm detected colorectal cancer and LAP with a sensitivity of 79.5% and 55.4%, respectively, with 90.0% specificity. Combination with the protein tumor markers carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) and CYFRA21-2 resulted in a specificity increase (92.2%) with a sensitivity for colorectal cancer and LAP detection of 78.1% and 52.3%, respectively. Conclusions: We report the validation of a novel blood test, Colox®, for the detection of colorectal cancer and LAP based on a 29-gene panel and the CEA and CYFRA21-1 plasma biomarkers. The performance and convenience of this routine blood test provide physicians a useful tool to test average-risk individuals unwilling to undergo upfront colonoscopy. Clin Cancer Res; 22(18); 4604–11. ©2016 AACR.
Cancer Research | 2011
Laura Ciarloni; Sahar Hosseinian; Sylvain Monnier-Benoit; Natsuko Imaizumi; Gian Dorta; Curzio Rüegg
Background: colorectal cancer (CRC) develops over a period of several years and is often preceded by adenoma formation. Detection rates for colorectal adenoma and early CRC, however, are unsatisfactory due to low compliance towards invasive screening procedures such as colonoscopy. There is a large unmet screening need calling for an accurate, non invasive and cost effective test to screen for early neoplastic and preneoplastic colorectal lesions. We developed a screening test aimed at detecting precancerous lesions and CRC at early stages, based on a multigene expression profiling on peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC). Methods: 92 colonoscopy screened subjects served as a training set. Colonoscopy revealed 21 patients had CRC, 30 adenomas larger than 1cm and 41 had no detectable lesions. 16 mL of blood was collected from each individual and PBMC were purified using Vacutainer® CPT tubes (Becton Dickinson). Total RNA was extracted and a whole genome expression analysis by digital gene expression TAG profiling (Illumina) was performed on a subset of these 92 subjects. Deep sequencing generated on average 1.5 million reads per sample and they matched to 20288 different transcripts. Different univariate and multivariate statistical methods were then applied in order to find genes differentially expressed between control, adenoma and CRC (pvalue Results: a validation set was defined using random resampling (bootstrapping method), leading to the separation of individuals without lesion from those with CRC (Se 70%, Sp 94%, AUC 0.89) and from those with adenoma larger than 1cm (Se 67%, Sp 87%, AUC 0.80). In addition, as a test set, the organ and disease specificity of these signatures was confirmed by means of patients with other cancer types and inflammatory bowel diseases. Conclusion: Next generation sequencing is a powerful research tool to define specific signatures for precancerous and early cancerous lesions when coupled to multiplex RT qPCR and normalized with specific reference genes. A prospective, multi-centric, pivotal study is underway in order to validate these results in a larger cohort. Citation Format: {Authors}. {Abstract title} [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 102nd Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research; 2011 Apr 2-6; Orlando, FL. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2011;71(8 Suppl):Abstract nr 3174. doi:10.1158/1538-7445.AM2011-3174
Gastroenterology | 2013
Cristina Nichita; Sylvain Monnier-Benoit; Laura Ciarloni; Sahar Hosseinian; Natsuko Imaizumi; Tae Il Kim; Joo Sung Kim; Seung-Jae Myung; Si Young Song; Christoph Beglinger; Jan Borovicka; Remy Meier; Cédric Vallet; Boudewijn van der Weg; Gian Dorta