Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Rajeshree Joshi is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Rajeshree Joshi.


Blood | 2008

HDAC6 inhibition enhances 17-AAG–mediated abrogation of hsp90 chaperone function in human leukemia cells

Rekha Rao; Warren Fiskus; Yonghua Yang; Pearl Lee; Rajeshree Joshi; Pravina Fernandez; Aditya Mandawat; Peter Atadja; James E. Bradner; Kapil N. Bhalla

Histone deacetylase 6 (HDAC6) is a heat shock protein 90 (hsp90) deacetylase. Treatment with pan-HDAC inhibitors or depletion of HDAC6 by siRNA induces hyperacetylation and inhibits ATP binding and chaperone function of hsp90. Treatment with 17-allylamino-demothoxy geldanamycin (17-AAG) also inhibits ATP binding and chaperone function of hsp90, resulting in polyubiquitylation and proteasomal degradation of hsp90 client proteins. In this study, we determined the effect of hsp90 hyperacetylation on the anti-hsp90 and antileukemia activity of 17-AAG. Hyperacetylation of hsp90 increased its binding to 17-AAG, as well as enhanced 17-AAG-mediated attenuation of ATP and the cochaperone p23 binding to hsp90. Notably, treatment with 17-AAG alone also reduced HDAC6 binding to hsp90 and induced hyperacetylation of hsp90. This promoted the proteasomal degradation of HDAC6. Cotreatment with 17-AAG and siRNA to HDAC6 induced more inhibition of hsp90 chaperone function and depletion of BCR-ABL and c-Raf than treatment with either agent alone. In addition, cotreatment with 17-AAG and tubacin augmented the loss of survival of K562 cells and viability of primary acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) samples. These findings demonstrate that HDAC6 is an hsp90 client protein and hyperacetylation of hsp90 augments the anti-hsp90 and antileukemia effects of 17-AAG.


Blood | 2008

Molecular and biologic characterization and drug sensitivity of pan-histone deacetylase inhibitor–resistant acute myeloid leukemia cells

Warren Fiskus; Rekha Rao; Pravina Fernandez; Bryan Herger; Yonghua Yang; Jianguang Chen; Ravindra Kolhe; Aditya Mandawat; Yongchao Wang; Rajeshree Joshi; Kelly Eaton; Pearl Lee; Peter Atadja; Stephen C. Peiper; Kapil N. Bhalla

Hydroxamic acid analog pan-histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors (HA-HDIs) have shown preclinical and clinical activity against human acute leukemia. Here we describe HA-HDI-resistant human acute myeloid leukemia (AML) HL-60 (HL-60/LR) cells that are resistant to LAQ824, vorinostat, LBH589, and sodium butyrate. HL-60/LR cells show increased expression of HDACs 1, 2, and 4 but lack HDAC6 expression, with concomitant hyperacetylation of heat shock protein 90 (hsp90). Treatment with HA-HDI failed to further augment hsp90 acetylation, or increase the levels of p21 or reactive oxygen species (ROSs), in HL-60/LR versus HL-60 cells. Although cross-resistant to antileukemia agents (eg, cytarabine, etoposide, and TRAIL), HL-60/LR cells are collaterally sensitive to the hsp90 inhibitor 17-AAG. Treatment with 17-AAG did not induce hsp70 or deplete the hsp90 client proteins AKT and c-Raf. HL-60/LR versus HL-60 cells display a higher growth fraction and shorter doubling time, along with a shorter interval to generation of leukemia and survival in nonobese diabetic/severe combined immunodeficient (NOD/SCID) mice. Thus, resistance of AML cells to HA-HDIs is associated with loss of HDAC6, hyperacetylation of hsp90, aggressive leukemia phenotype, and collateral sensitivity to 17-AAG. These findings suggest that an hsp90 inhibitor-based antileukemia therapy may override de novo or acquired resistance of AML cells to HA-HDIs.


Cancer Biology & Therapy | 2009

Panobinostat treatment depletes EZH2 and DNMT1 levels and enhances decitabine mediated de-repression of JunB and loss of survival of human acute leukemia cells

Warren Fiskus; Kate Buckley; Rekha Rao; Aditya Mandawat; Yonghua Yang; Rajeshree Joshi; Yongchao Wang; Ramesh Balusu; Jianguang Chen; Sanjay Koul; Atul Joshi; Sunil Upadhyay; Peter Atadja; Kapil N. Bhalla

The PRC2 complex protein EZH2 is a histone methyltransferase that is known to bind and recruit DNMT1 to the DNA to modulate DNA methylation. Here, we determined that the pan-HDAC inhibitor panobinostat (LBH589) treatment depletes DNMT1 and EZH2 protein levels, disrupts the interaction of DNMT1 with EZH2, as well as de-represses JunB in human acute leukemia cells. Similar to treatment with the hsp90 inhibitor 17-DMAG, treatment with panobinostat also inhibited the chaperone association of heat shock protein 90 with DNMT1 and EZH2, which promoted the proteasomal degradation of DNMT1 and EZH2. Unlike treatment with the DNA methyltransferase inhibitor decitabine, which demethylates JunB promoter DNA, panobinostat treatment mediated chromatin alterations in the JunB promoter. Combined treatment with panobinostat and decitabine caused greater attenuation of DNMT1 and EZH2 levels than either agent alone, which was accompanied by more JunB de-repression and loss of clonogenic survival of K562 cells. Co-treatment with panobinostat and decitabine also caused more loss of viability of primary AML but not normal CD34+ bone marrow progenitor cells. Collectively, these findings indicate that co-treatment with panobinostat and decitabine targets multiple epigenetic mechanisms to de-repress JunB and exerts antileukemia activity against human acute myeloid leukemia cells.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2008

Cotreatment with Vorinostat Enhances Activity of MK-0457 (VX-680) against Acute and Chronic Myelogenous Leukemia Cells

Warren Fiskus; Yongchao Wang; Rajeshree Joshi; Rekha Rao; Yonghua Yang; Jianguang Chen; Ravindra Kolhe; Ramesh Balusu; Kelly Eaton; Pearl Lee; Celalettin Ustun; Anand Jillella; Carolyn A. Buser; Stephen C. Peiper; Kapil N. Bhalla

Purpose: We determined the effects of vorinostat (suberoylanalide hydroxamic acid) and/or MK-0457 (VX-680), an Aurora kinase inhibitor on the cultured human (HL-60, OCI-AML3, and K562) and primary acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) and chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML), as well as on the murine pro-B BaF3 cells with ectopic expression of the unmutated and mutant forms of Bcr-Abl. Experimental Design: Following exposure to MK-0457 and/or vorinostat, apoptosis, loss of viability, as well as activity and levels of Aurora kinase and Bcr-Abl proteins were determined. Results: Treatment with MK-0457 decreased the phosphorylation of Aurora kinase substrates including serine (S)10 on histone H3 and survivin, and led to aberrant mitosis, DNA endoreduplication as well as apoptosis of the cultured human acute leukemia HL-60, OCI-AML3, and K562 cells. Combined treatment with vorinostat and MK-0457 resulted in greater attenuation of Aurora and Bcr-Abl (in K562) kinase activity and levels as well as synergistically induced apoptosis of OCI-AML3, HL-60, and K562 cells. MK-0457 plus vorinostat also induced synergistic apoptosis of BaF3 cells with ectopic overexpression of wild-type or mutant Bcr-Abl. Finally, cotreatment with MK-0457 and vorinostat induced more loss of viability of primary AML and imatinib-refractory CML than treatment with either agent alone, but exhibited minimal toxicity to normal CD34+ progenitor cells. Conclusions: Combined in vitro treatment with MK-0457 and vorinostat is highly active against cultured and primary leukemia cells. These findings merit in vivo testing of the combination against human AML and CML cells, especially against imatinib mesylate–resistant Bcr-AblT315I–expressing CML Cells.


Blood | 2009

Cotreatment with BCL-2 antagonist sensitizes cutaneous T-cell lymphoma to lethal action of HDAC7-Nur77-based mechanism

Jianguang Chen; Warren Fiskus; Kelly Eaton; Pravina Fernandez; Yongchao Wang; Rekha Rao; Pearl Lee; Rajeshree Joshi; Yonghua Yang; Ravindra Kolhe; Ramesh Balusu; Prasanthi Chappa; Kavita Natarajan; Anand Jillella; Peter Atadja; Kapil N. Bhalla

Pan-histone deacetylase inhibitors, for example, vorinostat and panobinostat (LBH589; Novartis Pharmaceuticals, East Hanover, NJ), have shown clinical efficacy against advanced cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (CTCL). However, the molecular basis of this activity remains unclear. HDAC7, a class IIA histone deacetylase (HDAC), is overexpressed in thymocytes, where it represses expression of the proapoptotic nuclear orphan receptor Nur77. Here, we demonstrate that treatment with panobinostat rapidly inhibits the in vitro and intracellular activity, as well as the mRNA and protein levels of HDAC7, and induces expression and translocation of Nur77 to the mitochondria. There, Nur77 converts death resistance protein Bcl-2 into a killer protein, promoting cell death of cultured and patient-derived human CTCL cells. Treatment with panobinostat improved survival of athymic nude mice implanted with human CTCL cells. Ectopic expression of Nur77 induced apoptosis and sensitized HH cells to panobinostat, whereas combined knockdown of Nur77 and its family member Nor1 was necessary to inhibit panobinostat-induced apoptosis of CTCL cells. Cotreatment with the Bcl-2/Bcl-x(L) antagonist ABT-737 decreased resistance and synergistically induced apoptosis of human CTCL cells. These findings mechanistically implicate HDAC7 and Nur77 in sensitizing human CTCL cells to panobinostat as well as suggest that cotreatment with an anti-Bcl-2 agent would augment the anti-CTCL activity of panobinostat.


Cancer Biology & Therapy | 2009

Co-treatment with heat shock protein 90 inhibitor 17-dimethylaminoethylamino-17-demethoxygeldanamycin (DMAG) and vorinostat: a highly active combination against human Mantle Cell Lymphoma (MCL) cells

Rekha Rao; Pearl Lee; Warren Fiskus; Yonghua Yang; Rajeshree Joshi; Yongchao Wang; Kate Buckley; Ramesh Balusu; Jianguang Chen; Sanjay Koul; Atul Joshi; Sunil Upadhyay; Jianguo Tao; Eduardo M. Sotomayor; Kapil N. Bhalla

Heat shock protein (hsp) 90 inhibitors promote proteasomal degradation of pro-growth and pro- survival hsp90 client proteins, including CDK4, c-RAF and AKT, and induce apoptosis of human lymphoma cells. The pan-histone deacetylase inhibitor vorinostat has also been shown to induce growth arrest and apoptosis of lymphoma cells. Here, we determined the effects of the more soluble, orally bio-available, geldanamycin analogue 17-NN-dimethyl ethylenediamine geldanamycin (DMAG, Kosan Biosciences Inc) and/or vorinostat in cultured and primary human MCL cells. While vorinostat induced accumulation in the G1 phase, treatment with DMAG arrested MCL cells in the G2/M phase of the cell cycle. Both agents dose-dependently induced apoptosis of MCL cells. Vorinostat also induced hyperacetylation of hsp90 and disrupted the association of hsp90 with its co-chaperones p23 and cdc37, as well as with its client proteins CDK4 and c-RAF. Treatment of MCL cells with vorinostat or 17-DMAG was associated with the induction of p21 and p27, as well as with depletion of c-Myc, c-RAF, AKT and CDK4. Compared to treatment with either agent alone, co-treatment with DMAG and vorinostat markedly attenuated the levels of cyclin D1 and CDK4, as well as of c-Myc, c-RAF and AKT. Combined treatment with DMAG and vorinostat synergistically induced apoptosis of the cultured MCL cells, as well as induced more apoptosis of primary MCL cells than either agent alone. Therefore, these findings support the rationale to determine the in vivo efficacy of co- treatment with vorinostat and DMAG against human MCL cells.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Dentin Sialophosphoprotein (DSPP) Gene-Silencing Inhibits Key Tumorigenic Activities in Human Oral Cancer Cell Line, OSC2

Rajeshree Joshi; Amany Tawfik; Nneka Edeh; Veronica V. McCloud; Stephen W. Looney; Jill B. Lewis; Stephen Hsu; Kalu U.E. Ogbureke

Background We determined recently that dentin sialophosphoprotein (DSPP), a member of the SIBLING (Small integrin-binding ligand N-linked glycoproteins) family of phosphoglycoproteins, is highly upregulated in human oral squamous cell carcinomas (OSCCs) where upregulation is associated with tumor aggressiveness. To investigate the effects of DSPP-silencing on the tumorigenic profiles of the oral cancer cell line, OSC2, short-hairpin RNA (shRNA) interference was employed to silence DSPP in OSC2 cells. Methodology/Principal Findings Multiple regions of DSPP transcript were targeted for shRNA interference using hDSP-shRNA lentiviral particles designed to silence DSPP gene expression. Control shRNA plasmid encoding a scrambled sequence incapable of degrading any known cellular mRNA was used for negative control. Following puromycin selection of stable lines of DSSP-silenced OSC2 cells, phenotypic hallmarks of oral carcinogenesis were assayed by western blot and RT-PCR analyses, MTT (cell-viability), colony-formation, modified Boyden-Chamber (migration and invasion), and flow cytometry (cell-cycle and apoptosis) analyses. DSPP-silenced OSC2 cells showed altered cell morphology, reduced viability, decreased colony-formation ability, decreased migration and invasion, G0/G1 cell-cycle arrest, and increased tumor cell sensitivity to cisplatin-induced apoptosis. Furthermore, MMP-2, MMP-3, MMP-9, VEGF, Ki-67, p53, and EGFR were down-regulated. There was a direct correlation between the degree of DSPP-silencing and MMP suppression, as indicated by least squares regression: MMP-2 {(y = 0.850x, p<0.001) (y = 1.156x, p<0.001)}, MMP-3 {(y = 0.994x, p<0.001) (y = 1.324x, p = 0.004)}, and MMP-9 {(y = 1.248x, p = 0.005, y = 0.809, p = 0.013)}. Conclusions/Significance DSPP-silencing in OSC2 cell decreased salient hallmarks of oral tumorigenesis and provides the first functional evidence of a potential key role for DSPP in oral cancer biology. The down-regulation of MMP-2, MMP-3, MMP-9, p53 and VEGF in DSPP-silenced OSC2 cells provides a significant functional/molecular framework for deciphering the mechanisms of DSPP activities in oral cancer biology.


bioinformatics and biomedicine | 2011

Magnetic resonance angiography study of a normal mouse brain for creating a three-dimensional cerebral vasculature atlas and software for labeling vessels

Rajeshree Joshi; Nathan Yanasak

In our lab, we are studying a mouse model of Hereditary Hemorrhagic Telangiectasia (HHT), a genetic disorder that leads to ArterioVenous Malformations (AVMs) in brain. Using this mouse model and the technique of Magnetic Resonance Angiography (MRA), we are pursuing the goal of tracking AVMs to determine a classification system that stratifies AVMs by longitudinal evolution. Before this work can occur, we need to build a three-dimensional (3D) MRA Atlas for a healthy normal mouse brain for comparison. The 3D atlas we have built presents the vascular structure for the healthy normal mouse brain using a graphical software tool.


Blood | 2008

Combined Epigenetic Therapy with the Novel Histone Methyl Transferase EZH2 Inhibitor 3-Deazaneplanocin and Histone Deacetylase Inhibitor Panobinostat Exerts Synergistic Activity against Human Mantle Cell Lymphoma Cells

Warren Fiskus; Yongchao Wang; Anand Jillella; Pace Johnston; Rajeshree Joshi; Rekha Rao; Eduardo Sotomayor; Jianguo Tao; Peter Atadja; Victor Marqez; Kapil N. Bhalla


Blood | 2008

Co-Treatment with Panobinostat Enhances Bortezomib-Induced Unfolded Protein Response, Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress and Apoptosis of Human Mantle Cell Lymphoma Cells

Rekha Rao; Warren Fiskus; Yonghua Yang; Rajeshree Joshi; Pravina Fernandez; Pearl Lee; Anand Jillella; Jianguo Tao; Peter Atadja; Eduardo Sotomayor; Kapil N. Bhalla

Collaboration


Dive into the Rajeshree Joshi's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kapil N. Bhalla

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Warren Fiskus

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Pearl Lee

Georgia Regents University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yonghua Yang

Georgia Regents University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yongchao Wang

Georgia Regents University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jianguang Chen

Georgia Regents University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Pravina Fernandez

Georgia Regents University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge