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Featured researches published by Peter A. Raven.


International Journal of Cancer | 2012

The importance of integrin‐linked kinase in the regulation of bladder cancer invasion

Yoshiyuki Matsui; Kiran Assi; Osamu Ogawa; Peter A. Raven; Shoukat Dedhar; Martin Gleave; Baljinder Salh; Alan I. So

It is important to understand the molecular mechanisms of bladder cancer progression not only to prevent cancer progression but also to detect new therapeutic targets against advanced bladder cancer. The integrin‐linked kinase (ILK) is a major signaling integrator in mammalian cells and plays an important role in epithelial–mesenchymal transition (EMT) of human cancers, but its mechanisms are not completely understood. In this study, we investigated the importance and mechanisms of ILK in bladder cancer progression. When the expression of ILK in bladder cancer cell lines and N‐butyl‐N‐(4‐hydroxybutyl) nitrosamine (BBN)‐induced murine bladder cancer was evaluated, ILK has a tendency to be overexpressed in invasive cell lines and invasive BBN‐induced murine bladder cancer. Overexpression of ILK in 253J bladder cancer cells suppressed E‐cadherin expression, resulting in the promotion of cell invasion. Conversely, ILK knockdown by siRNA suppresses cell invasion in invasive bladder cancer cells through the regulation of E‐cadherin or matrix metalloprotease 9 (MMP‐9). To regulate E‐cadherin expression, our results showed that the glycogen synthase kinase 3β (GSK3β)‐Zeb1 pathway may play an important role downstream of ILK. Finally, the results of a human bladder tissue microarray (TMA) showed that ILK expression correlates with the invasiveness of human bladder cancer. Our study suggests that ILK is overexpressed in invasive bladder cancer and plays an important role in the EMT of bladder cancer via the control of E‐cadherin and MMP‐9 expression. ILK may be a new molecular target to suppress tumor progression in advanced and high‐risk bladder cancer patients.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Genetic versus Rearing-Environment Effects on Phenotype: Hatchery and Natural Rearing Effects on Hatchery- and Wild-Born Coho Salmon

Cedar M. Chittenden; Carlo A. Biagi; Jan Grimsrud Davidsen; Anette Sophie Grimsrud Davidsen; Hidehiro Kondo; Allison McKnight; Ole-Petter Pedersen; Peter A. Raven; Audun H. Rikardsen; J. Mark Shrimpton; Brett Zuehlke; R. Scott McKinley; Robert H. Devlin

With the current trends in climate and fisheries, well-designed mitigative strategies for conserving fish stocks may become increasingly necessary. The poor post-release survival of hatchery-reared Pacific salmon indicates that salmon enhancement programs require assessment. The objective of this study was to determine the relative roles that genotype and rearing environment play in the phenotypic expression of young salmon, including their survival, growth, physiology, swimming endurance, predator avoidance and migratory behaviour. Wild- and hatchery-born coho salmon adults (Oncorhynchus kisutch) returning to the Chehalis River in British Columbia, Canada, were crossed to create pure hatchery, pure wild, and hybrid offspring. A proportion of the progeny from each cross was reared in a traditional hatchery environment, whereas the remaining fry were reared naturally in a contained side channel. The resulting phenotypic differences between replicates, between rearing environments, and between cross types were compared. While there were few phenotypic differences noted between genetic groups reared in the same habitat, rearing environment played a significant role in smolt size, survival, swimming endurance, predator avoidance and migratory behaviour. The lack of any observed genetic differences between wild- and hatchery-born salmon may be due to the long-term mixing of these genotypes from hatchery introgression into wild populations, or conversely, due to strong selection in nature—capable of maintaining highly fit genotypes whether or not fish have experienced part of their life history under cultured conditions.


Biomaterials | 2012

Tissue uptake of docetaxel loaded hydrophobically derivatized hyperbranched polyglycerols and their effects on the morphology of the bladder urothelium.

Clement Mugabe; Peter A. Raven; Ladan Fazli; Jennifer H.E. Baker; John K. Jackson; Richard Liggins; Alan I. So; Martin Gleave; Andrew I. Minchinton; Donald E. Brooks; Helen M. Burt

Recently, we have reported that docetaxel (DTX) loaded, amine terminated hyperbranched polyglycerol (HPG-C(8/10)-MePEG-NH(2)) nanoparticles significantly increased drug uptake in mouse bladder tissues and was the most effective formulation to significantly inhibit tumor growth in an orthotopic model of bladder cancer. The objective of this study was to investigate the effects of HPG-C(8/10)-MePEG-NH(2) nanoparticles on bladder urothelial morphology and integrity, DTX uptake and permeability in bladder tissue and the extent of bladder urothelial recovery following exposure to, and then washout of, HPG-C(8/10)-MePEG-NH(2) nanoparticles. HPG-C(8/10)-MePEG-NH(2) nanoparticles significantly increased the uptake of DTX in both isolated pig bladder as well as in live mouse bladder tissues. Furthermore, HPG-C(8/10)-MePEG-NH(2) nanoparticles were demonstrated to increase the permeability of the urinary bladder wall by causing changes to the urothelial barrier function and morphology through opening of tight junctions and exfoliation of the superficial umbrella cells. These data suggest that exfoliation may be triggered by an apoptosis mechanism, which was followed by a rapid recovery of the urothelium within 24 h post-instillation of HPG-C(8/10)-MePEG-NH(2) nanoparticles. HPG-C(8/10)-MePEG-NH(2) nanoparticles cause significant but rapidly recoverable changes in the bladder urothelial morphology, which we believe may make them suitable for increasing drug permeability of bladder tissue and intravesical drug delivery.


Molecular Cancer Therapeutics | 2015

Targeting Integrin-Linked Kinase Suppresses Invasion and Metastasis through Downregulation of Epithelial-to-Mesenchymal Transition in Renal Cell Carcinoma

Kyung Seok Han; Na Li; Peter A. Raven; Ladan Fazli; Susan Ettinger; Sung Joon Hong; Martin Gleave; Alan I. So

Renal cell carcinoma (RCC) is the most common malignancy in the kidney. Antiangiogenic targeted therapies inhibit the progression of RCC, but have limited impacts on invasion or metastasis of tumor cells. Integrin-linked kinase (ILK) is a serine/threonine kinase implicated in the regulation of cell growth/survival, cell-cycle progression, epithelial–mesenchymal transition (EMT), invasion/migration, and angiogenesis. However, the role of ILK in RCC has not been evaluated. We investigated the role of ILK on cancer progression and metastasis and the therapeutic potential of ILK inhibition in RCC. Our investigation reveals that ILK is expressed at a low level in normal cells and low-stage RCC cells and is highly expressed in advanced and metastatic cells. Caki-1, a metastatic RCC cell line, showed higher expression of molecular EMT markers, including Snail and Zeb1, but decreased activity of GSK3β. Knockdown of ILK using small interference (si)-ILK minimally inhibited tumor proliferation and cell-cycle progression was not significantly affected. However, ILK knockdown suppressed the formation of stress fibers and focal adhesions and impeded phenotypic EMT markers, including cell migration and invasion, in Caki-1 and UMRC-3 cells. Finally, in vivo knockdown of ILK suppressed the progression, invasion, and metastasis of primary RCC in nude mice by downregulation of EMT markers (Snail, Zeb1, vimentin, and E-cadherin). Our results show that ILK may be essential for invasion and metastasis in RCC and regulates vimentin and E-cadherin expression by regulating the EMT-related transcription factors Snail and Zeb1. These results suggest that ILK may be a potential target in RCC. Mol Cancer Ther; 14(4); 1024–34. ©2015 AACR.


Neoplasia | 2015

Cellular Adaptation to VEGF-Targeted Antiangiogenic Therapy Induces Evasive Resistance by Overproduction of Alternative Endothelial Cell Growth Factors in Renal Cell Carcinoma

Kyung Seok Han; Peter A. Raven; Sebastian Frees; Kilian M. Gust; Ladan Fazli; Susan Ettinger; Sung Joon Hong; Cristian Kollmannsberger; Martin E. Gleave; Alan I. So

Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF)–targeted antiangiogenic therapy significantly inhibits the growth of clear cell renal cell carcinoma (RCC). Eventually, therapy resistance develops in even the most responsive cases, but the mechanisms of resistance remain unclear. Herein, we developed two tumor models derived from an RCC cell line by conditioning the parental cells to two different stresses caused by VEGF-targeted therapy (sunitinib exposure and hypoxia) to investigate the mechanism of resistance to such therapy in RCC. Sunitinib-conditioned Caki-1 cells in vitro did not show resistance to sunitinib compared with parental cells, but when tested in vivo, these cells appeared to be highly resistant to sunitinib treatment. Hypoxia-conditioned Caki-1 cells are more resistant to hypoxia and have increased vascularity due to the upregulation of VEGF production; however, they did not develop sunitinib resistance either in vitro or in vivo. Human endothelial cells were more proliferative and showed increased tube formation in conditioned media from sunitinib-conditioned Caki-1 cells compared with parental cells. Gene expression profiling using RNA microarrays revealed that several genes related to tissue development and remodeling, including the development and migration of endothelial cells, were upregulated in sunitinib-conditioned Caki-1 cells compared with parental and hypoxia-conditioned cells. These findings suggest that evasive resistance to VEGF-targeted therapy is acquired by activation of VEGF-independent angiogenesis pathways induced through interactions with VEGF-targeted drugs, but not by hypoxia. These results emphasize that increased inhibition of tumor angiogenesis is required to delay the development of resistance to antiangiogenic therapy and maintain the therapeutic response in RCC.


Archive | 2018

Orthotopic Mouse Models of Urothelial Cancer

Wolfgang Jäger; Igor Moskalev; Peter A. Raven; Akihiro Goriki; Samir Bidnur; Peter C. Black

Orthotopic mouse models of urothelial cancer are essential for testing novel therapies and molecular manipulations of cell lines in vivo. These models are either established by orthotopic inoculation of human (xenograft models) or murine tumor cells (syngeneic models) in immunocompromised or immune competent mice. Current techniques rely on inoculation by intravesical instillation or direct injection into the bladder wall. Alternative models include the induction of murine bladder tumors by chemical carcinogens (BBN) or genetic engineering (GEM).


Oncotarget | 2018

Calcium-sensing receptor (CaSR) promotes development of bone metastasis in renal cell carcinoma

Sebastian Frees; Ines Breuksch; Tobias Haber; Heide-Katharina Bauer; Claudia Chavez-Munoz; Peter A. Raven; Igor Moskalev; Ninadh Malrina D’Costa; Zheng Tan; Mads Daugaard; Joachim W. Thüroff; Axel Haferkamp; Dirk Prawitt; Alan So; Walburgis Brenner

Bone metastasis is an important prognostic factor in renal cell carcinoma (RCC). The calcium-sensing receptor (CaSR) has been associated with bone metastasis in several different malignancies. We analyzed the impact of CaSR in bone metastasis in RCC in vitro and in vivo. The RCC cell line 786-O was stably transfected with the CaSR gene and treated with calcium alone or in combination with the CaSR antagonist NPS2143. Afterwards migration, adhesion, proliferation and prominent signaling molecules were analyzed. Calcium treated CaSR-transfected 768-O cells showed an increased adhesion to endothelial cells and the extracellular matrix components fibronectin and collagen I, but not to collagen IV. The chemotactic cell migration and proliferation was also induced by calcium. The activity of SHC, AKT, ERK, P90RSK and JNK were enhanced after calcium treatment of CaSR-transfected cells. These effects were abolished by NPS2143. Development of bone metastasis was evaluated in vivo in a mouse model. Intracardiac injection of CaSR-transfected 768-O cells showed an increased rate of bone metastasis. The results indicate CaSR as an important component in the mechanism of bone metastasis in RCC. Therefore, targeting CaSR might be beneficial in patients with bone metastatic RCC with a high CaSR expression.


The Prostate | 2017

Magnetically-actuated drug delivery device (MADDD) for minimally invasive treatment of prostate cancer: An in vivo animal pilot study

Werner J. Struss; Zheng Tan; Payam Zachkani; Igor Moskalev; John K. Jackson; Ali Shademani; Ninadh M. D'Costa; Peter A. Raven; Sebastian Frees; Claudia Chavez-Munoz; Mu Chiao; Alan I. So

The vast majority of prostate cancer presents clinically localized to the prostate without evidence of metastasis. Currently, there are several modalities available to treat this particular disease. Despite radical prostatectomy demonstrating a modest prostate cancer specific mortality benefit in the PIVOT trial, several novel modalities have emerged to treat localized prostate cancer in patients that are either not eligible for surgery or that prefer an alternative approach.


Translational Andrology and Urology | 2018

Identification of hypoxic gene-signature as a prognostic and predictive biomarker to determine effective therapy in high risk bladder cancer patients

Zheng Tan; Ninadh Malrina D’Costa; Peter A. Raven; Claudia Chavez-Munoz; Alan I. So

Bladder cancer is the ninth most commonly diagnosed cancer in the world and fth in the USA and Canada (1,2). Patients presenting with bladder cancer are initially treated with transurethral resection and specimens are graded and staged.


Oncotarget | 2018

The role of netrin-1 in metastatic renal cell carcinoma treated with sunitinib

Sebastian Frees; Betty Zhou; Kyung Seok Han; Zheng Tan; Peter A. Raven; Alexander Wong; Ninadh Malrina D’Costa; Ladan Fazli; Werner J. Struss; Igor Moskalev; Claudia Chavez-Munoz; Alan So

Introduction Clear-cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC) is the sixth most common malignancy in men in North America. Since ccRCC is a malignancy dependent on neovascularization, current first line systemic therapies like sunitinib, target the formation of new vessels allowing nutrient deprivation and cell death. However, recent studies have shown that patients develop resistance after approximately 1 year of treatment and show disease progression while on therapy. Therefore, we propose to identify the protein(s) responsible for increased migration with the aim of developing a new therapy that will target the identified protein and potentially slow down the progression of the disease. Material and Methods Human renal cancer cell lines (Caki-1, Caki-2, ACHN) were treated with increasing doses of sunitinib to develop a sunitinib-conditioned renal cell carcinoma cell line. mRNA microarray and qPCR were performed to compare the differences in gene expression between Caki-1 sunitinib-conditioned and non-conditioned cells. NTN1 was assessed in our in vivo sunitinib-conditioned mouse model using immunostaining. xCELLigence and scratch assays were used to evaluate migration and MTS was used to evaluate cell viability. Results Human renal cell carcinoma sunitinib-conditioned cell lines showed upregulation of netrin-1 in microarray and q-PCR. Increased migration was demonstrated in Caki-1 sunitinib-conditioned cells when compared to the non-treated ones as well as, increased endothelial cell migration. Silencing of netrin-1 in sunitinib-conditioned Caki-1 cells did not demonstrate a significant reduction in cell migration. Conclusion Netrin-1 is highly upregulated in renal cell carcinoma treated with sunitinib, but has no influence on cell viability or cell migration in metastatic RCC.

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Alan I. So

University of British Columbia

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Ladan Fazli

University of British Columbia

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Martin Gleave

University of British Columbia

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Alan So

University of British Columbia

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Igor Moskalev

Vancouver Prostate Centre

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Zheng Tan

University of British Columbia

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Estelle Li

University of British Columbia

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