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Dive into the research topics where Nina Pauline Holzapfel is active.

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Featured researches published by Nina Pauline Holzapfel.


International Journal of Molecular Sciences | 2013

The Potential Role of Lycopene for the Prevention and Therapy of Prostate Cancer: From Molecular Mechanisms to Clinical Evidence

Nina Pauline Holzapfel; Boris Michael Holzapfel; Simon Champ; Jesper Feldthusen; Judith A. Clements; Dietmar W. Hutmacher

Lycopene is a phytochemical that belongs to a group of pigments known as carotenoids. It is red, lipophilic and naturally occurring in many fruits and vegetables, with tomatoes and tomato-based products containing the highest concentrations of bioavailable lycopene. Several epidemiological studies have linked increased lycopene consumption with decreased prostate cancer risk. These findings are supported by in vitro and in vivo experiments showing that lycopene not only enhances the antioxidant response of prostate cells, but that it is even able to inhibit proliferation, induce apoptosis and decrease the metastatic capacity of prostate cancer cells. However, there is still no clearly proven clinical evidence supporting the use of lycopene in the prevention or treatment of prostate cancer, due to the only limited number of published randomized clinical trials and the varying quality of existing studies. The scope of this article is to discuss the potential impact of lycopene on prostate cancer by giving an overview about its molecular mechanisms and clinical effects.


Biomaterials | 2014

Species-specific homing mechanisms of human prostate cancer metastasis in tissue engineered bone ☆

Boris Michael Holzapfel; Ferdinand Wagner; Daniela Loessner; Nina Pauline Holzapfel; Laure Thibaudeau; Ross Crawford; Ming-Tat Ling; Judith A. Clements; Pamela J. Russell; Dietmar W. Hutmacher

The development of effective therapeutic strategies against prostate cancer bone metastases has been impeded by the lack of adequate animal models that are able to recapitulate the biology of the disease in humans. Bioengineered approaches allow researchers to create sophisticated experimentally and physiologically relevant in vivo models to study interactions between cancer cells and their microenvironment under reproducible conditions. The aim of this study was to engineer a morphologically and functionally intact humanized organ bone which can serve as a homing site for human prostate cancer cells. Transplantation of biodegradable tubular composite scaffolds seeded with human mesenchymal progenitor cells and loaded with rhBMP-7 resulted in the development of a chimeric bone construct including a large number of human mesenchymal cells which were shown to be metabolically active and capable of producing extracellular matrix components. Micro-CT analysis demonstrated that the newly formed ossicle recapitulated the morphological features of a physiological organ bone with a trabecular network surrounded by a cortex-like outer structure. This microenvironment was supportive of the lodgement and maintenance of murine haematopoietic cell clusters, thus mimicking a functional organ bone. Bioluminescence imaging demonstrated that luciferase-transduced human PC3 cells reproducibly homed to the humanized tissue engineered bone constructs, proliferated, and developed macro-metastases. This model allows the analysis of interactions between human prostate cancer cells and a functional humanized bone organ within an immuno-incompetent murine host. The system can serve as a reproducible platform to study effects of therapeutics against prostate cancer bone metastases within a humanized microenvironment.


Cancer and Metastasis Reviews | 2013

Humanised xenograft models of bone metastasis revisited: novel insights into species-specific mechanisms of cancer cell osteotropism

Boris Michael Holzapfel; Laure Thibaudeau; Parisa Hesami; Anna Taubenberger; Nina Pauline Holzapfel; Susanne Mayer-Wagner; Carl A. Power; Judith A. Clements; Pamela J. Russell; Dietmar W. Hutmacher

The determinants and key mechanisms of cancer cell osteotropism have not been identified, mainly due to the lack of reproducible animal models representing the biological, genetic and clinical features seen in humans. An ideal model should be capable of recapitulating as many steps of the metastatic cascade as possible, thus facilitating the development of prognostic markers and novel therapeutic strategies. Most animal models of bone metastasis still have to be derived experimentally as most syngeneic and transgeneic approaches do not provide a robust skeletal phenotype and do not recapitulate the biological processes seen in humans. The xenotransplantation of human cancer cells or tumour tissue into immunocompromised murine hosts provides the possibility to simulate early and late stages of the human disease. Human bone or tissue-engineered human bone constructs can be implanted into the animal to recapitulate more subtle, species-specific aspects of the mutual interaction between human cancer cells and the human bone microenvironment. Moreover, the replication of the entire “organ” bone makes it possible to analyse the interaction between cancer cells and the haematopoietic niche and to confer at least a partial human immunity to the murine host. This process of humanisation is facilitated by novel immunocompromised mouse strains that allow a high engraftment rate of human cells or tissue. These humanised xenograft models provide an important research tool to study human biological processes of bone metastasis.


Sarcoma | 2013

Can Bone Tissue Engineering Contribute to Therapy Concepts after Resection of Musculoskeletal Sarcoma

Boris Michael Holzapfel; Mohit P. Chhaya; Ferry P.W. Melchels; Nina Pauline Holzapfel; Peter Michael Prodinger; Ruediger von Eisenhart-Rothe; Martijn van Griensven; Jan Thorsten Schantz; Maximilian Rudert; Dietmar W. Hutmacher

Resection of musculoskeletal sarcoma can result in large bone defects where regeneration is needed in a quantity far beyond the normal potential of self-healing. In many cases, these defects exhibit a limited intrinsic regenerative potential due to an adjuvant therapeutic regimen, seroma, or infection. Therefore, reconstruction of these defects is still one of the most demanding procedures in orthopaedic surgery. The constraints of common treatment strategies have triggered a need for new therapeutic concepts to design and engineer unparalleled structural and functioning bone grafts. To satisfy the need for long-term repair and good clinical outcome, a paradigm shift is needed from methods to replace tissues with inert medical devices to more biological approaches that focus on the repair and reconstruction of tissue structure and function. It is within this context that the field of bone tissue engineering can offer solutions to be implemented into surgical therapy concepts after resection of bone and soft tissue sarcoma. In this paper we will discuss the implementation of tissue engineering concepts into the clinical field of orthopaedic oncology.


Biomedical spectroscopy and imaging | 2017

Magnetic resonance microimaging of cancer cell spheroid constructs

Konstantin I. Momot; Onur Bas; Nina Pauline Holzapfel; Daniela Loessner

BACKGROUND Hydrogel-based cell cultures are excellent tools for studying physiological events occurring in the growth and proliferation of cells, including cancer cells. Diffusion magnetic resonance is a physical technique that has been widely used for the characterisation of biological systems as well as hydrogels. In this work, we applied diffusion magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to hydrogel-based cultures of human ovarian cancer cells. METHODS Diffusion-weighted spin-echo MRI measurements were used to obtain spatially-resolved maps of apparent diffusivities for hydrogel samples with different compositions, cell loads and drug (Taxol) treatment regimes. The samples were then characterised using their diffusivity histograms, mean diffusivities and the respective standard deviations, and pairwise Mann-Whitney tests. The elastic moduli of the samples were determined using mechanical compression testing. RESULTS The mean apparent diffusivity of the hydrogels was sensitive to the polymer content, cell load and Taxol treatment. For a given sample composition, the mean apparent diffusivity and the elastic modulus of the hydrogels exhibited a negative correlation. CONCLUSIONS Diffusivity of hydrogel-based cancer cell culture constructs is sensitive to both cell proliferation and Taxol treatment. This suggests that diffusion-weighted imaging is a promising technique for non-invasive monitoring of cancer cell proliferation in hydrogel-based, cellularly-sparse 3D cell cultures. The negative correlation between mean apparent diffusivity and elastic modulus suggests that the diffusion coefficient is indicative of the average density of the physical microenvironment within the hydrogel construct.


Scientific Reports | 2017

The distribution of the apparent diffusion coefficient as an indicator of the response to chemotherapeutics in ovarian tumour xenografts.

Monique C. Tourell; Ali Shokoohmand; Marietta Landgraf; Nina Pauline Holzapfel; Patrina S.P. Poh; Daniela Loessner; Konstantin I. Momot

Diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (DW-MRI) was used to evaluate the effects of single-agent and combination treatment regimens in a spheroid-based animal model of ovarian cancer. Ovarian tumour xenografts grown in non-obese diabetic/severe-combined-immunodeficiency (NOD/SCID) mice were treated with carboplatin or paclitaxel, or combination carboplatin/paclitaxel chemotherapy regimens. After 4 weeks of treatment, tumours were extracted and underwent DW-MRI, mechanical testing, immunohistochemical and gene expression analyses. The distribution of the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) exhibited an upward shift as a result of each treatment regimen. The 99-th percentile of the ADC distribution (“maximum ADC”) exhibited a strong correlation with the tumour size (r2 = 0.90) and with the inverse of the elastic modulus (r2 = 0.96). Single-agent paclitaxel (n = 5) and combination carboplatin/paclitaxel (n = 2) treatment regimens were more effective in inducing changes in regions of higher cell density than single-agent carboplatin (n = 3) or the no-treatment control (n = 5). The maximum ADC was a good indicator of treatment-induced cell death and changes in the extracellular matrix (ECM). Comparative analysis of the tumours’ ADC distribution, mechanical properties and ECM constituents provides insights into the molecular and cellular response of the ovarian tumour xenografts to chemotherapy. Increased sample sizes are recommended for future studies. We propose experimental approaches to evaluation of the timeline of the tumour’s response to treatment.


Nutrition and Cancer | 2016

Lycopene's Effects on Cancer Cell Functions within Monolayer and Spheroid Cultures

Nina Pauline Holzapfel; Boris Michael Holzapfel; Christina Theodoropoulos; Elke Kaemmerer; Tamara Rausch; Jesper Feldthusen; Simon Champ; Judith A. Clements; Dietmar W. Hutmacher; Daniela Loessner

ABSTRACT Lycopene, a compound that blocks the action of free radicals and oxygen molecules, is found in tomatoes and tomato-based products and linked to a reduced incidence of cancer. Increasing willingness of patients to maintain a healthy lifestyle by supplemental intake of nutrients and acceptance of alternative therapeutics has boosted research into nutraceuticals. The potential of lycopene to prevent or treat cancer has been investigated, but outcomes are inconsistent and its mode of action is still unknown. Further studies are needed to understand the role of lycopene in cancer prevention and treatment. The impact of lycopene on viability, proliferation, migration, and invasion of five different cancer cell lines was determined using monolayer and spheroid cultures. Cell viability was significantly reduced upon lycopene treatment at physiologically attainable concentrations. Cell proliferation, migration, and invasion did not change upon lycopene treatment. Ovarian cancer spheroids initially showed a decreased proliferation and after 14 days increased cell viability upon lycopene treatment, confirming the potential of lycopene to reduce cancer cell growth in short-term cultures and also indicate enhanced cell viability over prolonged exposure. This study cannot substantiate that lycopene inhibits cell functions associated with tumor growth, even in a 3D cancer model that mimics the natural tumor microenvironment.


Faculty of Health; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation; Science & Engineering Faculty | 2014

Species-specific homing mechanisms of human prostate cancer metastasis in tissue engineered bone

Boris Michael Holzapfel; Ferdinand Wagner; Daniela Loessner; Nina Pauline Holzapfel; Laure Thibaudeau; Ross Crawford; Ming-Tat Ling; Judith A. Clements; Pamela J. Russell; Dietmar W. Hutmacher


American Journal of Cancer Research | 2017

Lycopene reduces ovarian tumor growth and intraperitoneal metastatic load.

Nina Pauline Holzapfel; Ali Shokoohmand; Ferdinand Wagner; Marietta Landgraf; Simon Champ; Boris Michael Holzapfel; Judith A. Clements; Dietmar W. Hutmacher; Daniela Loessner


School of Biomedical Sciences; School of Chemistry, Physics & Mechanical Engineering; Faculty of Health; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation; Science & Engineering Faculty | 2017

Investigation of the potential anticancer effects of lycopene in tissue engineered in vitro and in vivo models

Nina Pauline Holzapfel

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Boris Michael Holzapfel

Queensland University of Technology

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Dietmar W. Hutmacher

Queensland University of Technology

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Judith A. Clements

Queensland University of Technology

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Daniela Loessner

Queensland University of Technology

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Ali Shokoohmand

Queensland University of Technology

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Laure Thibaudeau

Queensland University of Technology

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Marietta Landgraf

Queensland University of Technology

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Pamela J. Russell

Queensland University of Technology

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Konstantin I. Momot

Queensland University of Technology

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Carl A. Power

University of New South Wales

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