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Dive into the research topics where Penelope E. Roberts is active.

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Featured researches published by Penelope E. Roberts.


Methods | 2012

Establishment of human ovarian serous carcinomas cell lines in serum free media

Zhuangyu Pan; Jeffrey Hooley; Douglas H. Smith; Peter Young; Penelope E. Roberts; Jennie P. Mather

Ovarian cancers are the fifth leading cause of cancer death among US woman. The majority of ovarian cancers belong to a category of serous adenocarcinomas. This type of cancer is often diagnosed at a late stage of the disease. Surgical debulking, followed by chemotherapy is the current treatment. Half of all patients will die within 5 years of diagnosis of the disease. Poor survival may be due to disease progression as a consequence of development of drug resistance, cancer cell heterogeneity within the tumor, or the persistence of cancer stem cells. Cancer stem cells (CSC) are defined as a minority cell type in the tumor, which retains the capacity, through asymmetric division, for self-renewal as well as differentiation into multiple cell types. Through this process, CSC can regenerate the entire tumor phenotype and subsequent metastases. Initial in vitro work in the area of solid tumor CSC biology has focused on the isolation and propagation of cells with CSC-like properties from breast and colon tumors. Breast and colon cell lines with CSC-like properties have been isolated and maintained in vitro for extended periods of time. The in vitro maintenance of these CSC requires growth in hormone-supplemented serum-free media and the use of matrix or growth as tumor spheres (Roberts, Ricci-Vitiani et al., Cammareri et al.). Based on the pioneering work generating breast and colon CSC, our lab has begun to develop methods for the establishment cell lines with CSC-like properties from additional solid tumors. In this article, we describe methods, using defined medium, which allow for the successful establishment of continuous cell cultures from a minority cell type within serous ovarian cancers. The cell lines established using these methods grow in serum-free hormone-supplemented medium either as a monolayer on a matrix, or as tumor spheres in suspension. These cells express markers previously reported for tumor stem cells, including CD44 and CD133, and form tumors that recreate the morphology of the original patient tumor when implanted in immune deficient mice. The introduction of this method will facilitate the expansion of ovarian cancer cells for investigating cancer stem cell biology as well as providing tools to aid in the development of new treatments for this deadly disease.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Isolation of Cancer Stem Like Cells from Human Adenosquamous Carcinoma of the Lung Supports a Monoclonal Origin from a Multipotential Tissue Stem Cell

Jennie P. Mather; Penelope E. Roberts; Zhuangyu Pan; Francine Chen; Jeffrey Hooley; Peter Young; Xiaolin Xu; Douglas H. Smith; Ann Easton; Panjing Li; Ezio Bonvini; Scott Koenig; Paul A. Moore

There is increasing evidence that many solid tumors are hierarchically organized with the bulk tumor cells having limited replication potential, but are sustained by a stem-like cell that perpetuates the tumor. These cancer stem cells have been hypothesized to originate from transformation of adult tissue stem cells, or through re-acquisition of stem-like properties by progenitor cells. Adenosquamous carcinoma (ASC) is an aggressive type of lung cancer that contains a mixture of cells with squamous (cytokeratin 5+) and adenocarcinoma (cytokeratin 7+) phenotypes. The origin of these mixtures is unclear as squamous carcinomas are thought to arise from basal cells in the upper respiratory tract while adenocarcinomas are believed to form from stem cells in the bronchial alveolar junction. We have isolated and characterized cancer stem-like populations from ASC through application of selective defined culture medium initially used to grow human lung stem cells. Homogeneous cells selected from ASC tumor specimens were stably expanded in vitro. Primary xenografts and metastatic lesions derived from these cells in NSG mice fully recapitulate both the adenocarcinoma and squamous features of the patient tumor. Interestingly, while the CSLC all co-expressed cytokeratins 5 and 7, most xenograft cells expressed either one, or neither, with <10% remaining double positive. We also demonstrated the potential of the CSLC to differentiate to multi-lineage structures with branching lung morphology expressing bronchial, alveolar and neuroendocrine markers in vitro. Taken together the properties of these ASC-derived CSLC suggests that ASC may arise from a primitive lung stem cell distinct from the bronchial-alveolar or basal stem cells.


Archive | 1994

Regulation of Germ Cell Proliferation In Vitro by Activins, Follistatin, and Other Growth Factors

Jennie P. Mather; Penelope E. Roberts; Lynne A. Krummen

Inhibin A and B are heterodimers made up of an α-subunit combined with a βA- or βB-subunit. Inhibin is secreted by testicular Sertoli cells in the male and causes a decrease in FSH secretion from the pituitary (reviewed in 1–4). Activin A and B are homodimers of the βA- or βB-subunits, respectively. Activin has been shown to increase FSH secretion from pituitary cultures in vitro (5) and to increase circulating FSH levels in vivo in adult macaques (6) and rats (7). More recently, it has been demonstrated that testicular Leydig cells produce activin (8). Messenger RNA and protein subunits of the α- and β-chains have been localized in multiple cell types in the testis of rats of various ages (9–12); however, these data cannot differentiate between inhibin and activin production if both α- and β-subunits are present. These data led us, and others, to suggest that inhibin and activin act as paracrine and/or autocrine regulators of gonadal function and may play a role in regulating Sertoli-Leydig cell interaction or Sertoli-germ cell interaction (8–18).


Archive | 2001

Human pancreatic epithelial progenitor cells and methods of isolation and use thereof

Penelope E. Roberts; Jennie P. Mather


Archive | 1998

Introduction to cell and tissue culture : theory and technique

Jennie P. Mather; Penelope E. Roberts


Endocrinology | 1998

BIOLOGICAL RESPONSE TO ERBB LIGANDS IN NONTRANSFORMED CELL LINES CORRELATES WITH A SPECIFIC PATTERN OF RECEPTOR EXPRESSION

Srividya Sundaresan; Penelope E. Roberts; Kathleen L. King; Mark X. Sliwkowski; Jennie P. Mather


Endocrinology | 1993

Follistatin modulates activin activity in a cell- and tissue-specific manner.

Jennie P. Mather; Penelope E. Roberts; Lynne A. Krummen


Developmental Biology | 1999

DISTRIBUTION AND FUNCTION OF THE ADHESION MOLECULE BEN DURING RAT DEVELOPMENT

Jean-Philippe Stephan; Laura Bald; Penelope E. Roberts; James Lee; Qimin Gu; Jennie P. Mather


Archive | 2008

Human cancer stem cells

Jennie P. Mather; Penelope E. Roberts


Endocrinology | 1999

Selective Cloning of Cell Surface Proteins Involved in Organ Development: Epithelial Glycoprotein Is Involved in Normal Epithelial Differentiation

Jean-Philippe Stephan; Penelope E. Roberts; Laura Bald; James Lee; Qimin Gu; Brigitte Devaux; Jennie P. Mather

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Douglas H. Smith

University of Pennsylvania

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