Ravi Pathak
Baylor College of Medicine
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Publication
Featured researches published by Ravi Pathak.
Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2015
Michael Li; Ravi Pathak; Esther Lopez-Rivera; Scott L. Friedman; Julio A. Aguirre-Ghiso; Andrew G. Sikora
The chick chorioallantoic membrane (CAM) begins to develop by day 7 after fertilization and matures by day 12. The CAM is naturally immunodeficient and highly vascularized, making it an ideal system for tumor implantation. Furthermore, the CAM contains extracellular matrix proteins such as fibronectin, laminin, collagen, integrin alpha(v)beta3, and MMP-2, making it an attractive model to study tumor invasion and metastasis. Scientists have long taken advantage of the physiology of the CAM by using it as a model of angiogenesis. More recently, the CAM assay has been modified to work as an in vivo xenograft model system for various cancers that bridges the gap between basic in vitro work and more complex animal cancer models. The CAM assay allows for the study of tumor growth, anti-tumor therapies, and pro-tumor molecular pathways in a biologically relevant system that is both cost- and time-effective. Here, we describe the development of CAM xenograft model of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) with embryonic survival rates of up to 93% and reliable tumor take leading to growth of three-dimensional, vascularized tumors.
Cancer Research | 2017
Rebeca San Martin; Ravi Pathak; Antrix Jain; Sung Yun Jung; Susan G. Hilsenbeck; María C. Piña-Barba; Andrew G. Sikora; Kenneth J. Pienta; David R. Rowley
Deposition of the extracellular matrix protein tenascin-C is part of the reactive stroma response, which has a critical role in prostate cancer progression. Here, we report that tenascin C is expressed in the bone endosteum and is associated with formation of prostate bone metastases. Metastatic cells cultured on osteo-mimetic surfaces coated with tenascin C exhibited enhanced adhesion and colony formation as mediated by integrin α9β1. In addition, metastatic cells preferentially migrated and colonized tenascin-C-coated trabecular bone xenografts in a novel system that employed chorioallantoic membranes of fertilized chicken eggs as host. Overall, our studies deepen knowledge about reactive stroma responses in the bone endosteum that accompany prostate cancer metastasis to trabecular bone, with potential implications to therapeutically target this process in patients. Cancer Res; 77(21); 5977-88. ©2017 AACR.
OncoImmunology | 2018
Padmini Jayaraman; Falguni Parikh; Jared M. Newton; Aurelie Hanoteau; Charlotte Rivas; Rosemarie Krupar; Kimal Rajapakshe; Ravi Pathak; Kavin Kanthaswamy; Cassie MacLaren; Shixia Huang; Cristian Coarfa; Chad Spanos; Dean P. Edwards; Robin Parihar; Andrew G. Sikora
ABSTRACT Cancer-induced myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSC) play an important role in tumor immune evasion. MDSC programming or polarization has been proposed as a strategy for leveraging the developmental plasticity of myeloid cells to reverse MDSC immune suppressive functions, or cause them to acquire anti-tumor activity. While MDSC derived ex vivo from murine bone marrow precursor cells with tumor-conditioned medium efficiently suppressed T cell proliferation, MDSC derived from conditioned medium in presence of TGF-β1 (TGFβ-MDSC) acquired a novel immune-stimulatory phenotype, losing the ability to inhibit T cell proliferation and acquiring enhanced antigen-presenting capability. Altered immune function was associated with SMAD-2 dependent upregulation of maturation and costimulatory molecules, and downregulation of inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS), an effector mechanism of immunosuppression. TGFβ-MDSC also upregulated FAS-ligand expression, leading to FAS-dependent killing of murine human papillomavirus (HPV)-associated head and neck cancer cells and tumor spheroids in vitro and anti-tumor activity in vivo. Radiation upregulated FAS expression on tumor cells, and the combination of radiotherapy and intratumoral injection of TGFβ-MDSC strongly enhanced class I expression on tumor cells and induction of HPV E7 tetramer-positive CD8 + T cells, leading to clearance of established tumors and long-term survival. TGFβ-MDSC derived from human PBMC with tumor conditioned medium also lost immunosuppressive function and acquired tumor-killing activity. Thus, TGFβ1 mediated programming of nascent MDSC leads to a potent anti-tumor phenotype potentially suitable for adoptive immunotherapy.
American Journal of Pathology | 2018
Rosemarie Krupar; Matthias G. Hautmann; Ravi Pathak; Indu Varier; Cassandra McLaren; Doris Gaag; C Hellerbrand; Matthias Evert; Simon Laban; Christian Idel; Vlad C. Sandulache; Sven Perner; A Bosserhoff; Andrew G. Sikora
Archive | 2018
Andrew G. Sikora; Ravi Pathak; Rebeca San Martin; David R. Rowley
Archive | 2018
Andrew G. Sikora; Ravi Pathak; Rebeca San Martin; David R. Rowley
Cancer Research | 2018
Rosemarie Krupar; Ravi Pathak; Naoko Imai; Eric M. Genden; Krzys Misiukiewicz; Elizabeth G. Demicco; Jigneshkumar Patel; Falguni Parikh; Michael J. Donovan; Seunghee Kim-Schulze; Sven Perner; Marshall R. Posner; Brett A. Miles; Sacha Gnjatic; Andrew G. Sikora
Biomaterials | 2018
Marco Farina; Corrine Ying Xuan Chua; Andrea Ballerini; Usha Thekkedath; Jenolyn F. Alexander; Jessica Rhudy; Gianluca Torchio; Daniel Fraga; Ravi Pathak; Mariana Villanueva; Crystal S. Shin; Jean A. Niles; Raffaella Sesana; Danilo Demarchi; Andrew G. Sikora; Ghanashyam Acharya; A. Osama Gaber; Joan E. Nichols; Alessandro Grattoni
2018 Department of Nanomedicine Symposium | 2018
Veronica Vighetto; Nicola Di Marzio; Francesca Ferraro; Ravi Pathak; Arvind Pandey; Mariana Villanueva; Jessica Rhudy; Sankar Mitra; Andrew G. Sikora; Carly S. Filgueira; Naomi J. Halas; Alessandro Grattoni
Houston Methodist Cancer Symposium | 2017
Francesca Ferraro; Ravi Pathak; Arvind Pandey; Ariel Nixon; Jessica Rhudy; Sankar Mitra; Andrew G. Sikora; Carly S. Filgueira; Naomi J. Halas; Alessandro Grattoni