Rebecca Marlow
King's College London
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Featured researches published by Rebecca Marlow.
Cancer Research | 2013
Rebecca Marlow; Gabriella Honeth; Sara Lombardi; Massimiliano Cariati; Sonya Hessey; Aikaterini Pipili; Veronica Mariotti; Bharath Buchupalli; Katie Foster; Dominique Bonnet; Agamemnon E. Grigoriadis; Pranela Rameshwar; Anand D. Purushotham; Andrew Tutt; Gabriela Dontu
Mortality of patients with breast cancer is due overwhelmingly to metastatic spread of the disease. Although dissemination is an early event in breast cancer, extended periods of cancer cell dormancy can result in long latency of metastasis development. Deciphering the mechanisms underlying cancer cell dormancy and subsequent growth at the metastatic site would facilitate development of strategies to interfere with these processes. A challenge in this undertaking has been the lack of models for cancer cell dormancy. We have established novel experimental systems that model the bone microenvironment of the breast cancer metastatic niche. These systems are based on 3D cocultures of breast cancer cells with cell types predominant in bone marrow. We identified conditions in which cancer cells are dormant and conditions in which they proliferate. Dormant cancer cells were able to proliferate upon transfer into supportive microenvironment or upon manipulation of signaling pathways that control dormancy. These experimental systems will be instrumental for metastasis studies, particularly the study of cellular dormancy.
Breast Cancer Research | 2014
Gabriella Honeth; Sara Lombardi; Christophe Ginestier; Min-Hee Hur; Rebecca Marlow; Bharath Buchupalli; Ireneusz Shinomiya; Patrycja Gazinska; Silvia Bombelli; Vernie Ramalingam; Anand D. Purushotham; Sarah Pinder; Gabriela Dontu
IntroductionAlthough estrogen and progesterone play a key role in normal mammary development and in breast cancer, the potential for proliferation and lineage differentiation as well as origin of cells that express the estrogen receptor (ER) in normal breast epithelium are not known. Some evidence suggests that normal human mammary stem/progenitor cells are ER–, but the identity of these cells and the cellular hierarchy of breast epithelium are still subjects of controversy. It is likely that elucidation of these aspects will bring insight into the cellular origin of breast cancer subtypes.MethodsWe used fluorescence-activated cell sorting of primary human mammary epithelial cells along with in vitro and in vivo functional assays to examine the hierarchic relation between cells with aldehyde dehydrogenase enzymatic activity (ALDH+ cells) and ER+ cells in the normal human breast epithelium. We assessed the proliferation and lineage differentiation potential of these cells in vitro and in vivo. A gene reporter assay was used to separate live ER+ and ER– mammary epithelial cells. With shRNA-mediated knockdown, we investigated the role of ALDH isoforms in the functionality of mammary epithelial progenitor cells.ResultsWe describe a cellular hierarchy in the normal human mammary gland in which ER–/ALDH+ cells with functional properties of stem/progenitor cells generate ER+ progenitor cells, which in turn give rise to cells of luminal lineage. We show that the ALDH1A1 isoform, through its function in the retinoic acid metabolism, affects the proliferation and/or early differentiation of stem/progenitor cells and is important for branching morphogenesis.ConclusionsThis study presents direct evidence that ER+ cells are generated by ER–/ALDH+ stem/progenitor cells. We also show that ER+ cells are able to generate cell progeny of luminal lineage in vitro and in vivo. Loss of ALDH1A1 function impairs this process, as well as branching morphogenesis and clonogenicity in suspension culture. This latter effect is reversed by treatment with retinoic acid.
Nature Medicine | 2017
Fara Brasó-Maristany; Filosto S; Catchpole S; Rebecca Marlow; Jelmar Quist; Erika Francesch-Domenech; Plumb Da; Zakka L; Patrycja Gazinska; Gianmaria Liccardi; Pascal Meier; Gris-Oliver A; Maggie Cheang; Perdrix-Rosell A; Shafat M; Elodie Noel; Nirmesh Patel; McEachern K; Maurizio Scaltriti; Pau Castel; Farzana Noor; Richard Buus; Sumi Mathew; Johnathan Watkins; Serra; Pierfrancesco Marra; Anita Grigoriadis; Andrew Tutt
Triple-negative breast cancers (TNBCs) have poor prognosis and lack targeted therapies. Here we identified increased copy number and expression of the PIM1 proto-oncogene in genomic data sets of patients with TNBC. TNBC cells, but not nonmalignant mammary epithelial cells, were dependent on PIM1 for proliferation and protection from apoptosis. PIM1 knockdown reduced expression of the anti-apoptotic factor BCL2, and dynamic BH3 profiling of apoptotic priming revealed that PIM1 prevents mitochondrial-mediated apoptosis in TNBC cell lines. In TNBC tumors and their cellular models, PIM1 expression was associated with several transcriptional signatures involving the transcription factor MYC, and PIM1 depletion in TNBC cell lines decreased, in a MYC-dependent manner, cell population growth and expression of the MYC target gene MCL1. Treatment with the pan–PIM kinase inhibitor AZD1208 impaired the growth of both cell line and patient-derived xenografts and sensitized them to standard-of-care chemotherapy. This work identifies PIM1 as a malignant-cell-selective target in TNBC and the potential use of PIM1 inhibitors for sensitizing TNBC to chemotherapy-induced apoptotic cell death.
Stem cell reports | 2014
Sara Lombardi; Gabriella Honeth; Christophe Ginestier; Ireneusz Shinomiya; Rebecca Marlow; Bharath Buchupalli; Patrycja Gazinska; John Brown; Steven Catchpole; Suling Liu; Ariel L. Barkan; Max S. Wicha; Anand D. Purushotham; Joy Burchell; Sarah Pinder; Gabriela Dontu
Summary Using in vitro and in vivo experimental systems and in situ analysis, we show that growth hormone (GH) is secreted locally by normal human mammary epithelial cells upon progesterone stimulation. GH increases proliferation of a subset of cells that express growth hormone receptor (GHR) and have functional properties of stem and early progenitor cells. In 72% of ductal carcinoma in situ lesions, an expansion of the cell population that expresses GHR was observed, suggesting that GH signaling may contribute to breast cancer development.
Stem cell reports | 2015
Gabriella Honeth; Tommaso Schiavinotto; Federico Vaggi; Rebecca Marlow; Tokuwa Kanno; Ireneusz Shinomiya; Sara Lombardi; Bharath Buchupalli; Rosalind Graham; Patrycja Gazinska; Vernie Ramalingam; Joy Burchell; Anand D. Purushotham; Sarah Pinder; Attila Csikász-Nagy; Gabriela Dontu
Summary Characterization of normal breast stem cells is important for understanding their role in breast development and in breast cancer. However, the identity of these cells is a subject of controversy and their localization in the breast epithelium is not known. In this study, we utilized a novel approach to analyze the morphogenesis of mammary lobules, by combining one-dimensional theoretical models and computer-generated 3D fractals. Comparing predictions of these models with immunohistochemical analysis of tissue sections for candidate stem cell markers, we defined distinct areas where stem cells reside in the mammary lobule. An increased representation of stem cells was found in smaller, less developed lobules compared to larger, more mature lobules, with marked differences in the gland of nulliparous versus parous women and that of BRCA1/2 mutation carriers versus non-carriers.
Stem cell reports | 2014
Gwyndolen Harburg; Jennifer E. Compton; Wei Liu; Naomi Iwai; Shahrzad Zada; Rebecca Marlow; Phyllis Strickland; Yi Arial Zeng; Lindsay Hinck
Summary WNT signaling stimulates the self-renewal of many types of adult stem cells, including mammary stem cells (MaSCs), but mechanisms that limit this activity are poorly understood. Here, we demonstrate that SLIT2 restricts stem cell renewal by signaling through ROBO2 in a subset of basal cells to negatively regulate WNT signaling. The absence of SLIT/ROBO2 signaling leads to increased levels of nuclear β-catenin. Robo2 loss does not increase the number of stem cells; instead, stem cell renewal is enhanced in the absence of SLIT/ROBO2 signaling. This is due to repressed expression of p16INK4a, which, in turn, delays MaSC senescence. Together, our studies support a model in which SLITs restrict the expansion of MaSCs by countering the activity of WNTs and limiting self-renewal.
Methods of Molecular Biology | 2015
Rebecca Marlow; Gabriela Dontu
Despite advances in early detection, prevention and treatment of breast cancer, the mortality of breast cancer patients did not decrease considerably in the last years. Metastatic breast cancer remains incurable. There is compelling evidence that dissemination of breast cancer cells at distant sites is an early event. At the time of detection and diagnosis, patients have disseminated breast cancer cells in the bone marrow. Only in half of these patients the disseminated cells proliferate and generate metastases, typically in 3-5 years for ER negative breast tumors and 10-15 years for ER positive breast tumors. In other patients metastases never develop. The ability to predict which patients will develop metastases and to devise strategies to interfere with this process hinges on understanding the mechanisms underlying growth at the metastatic site. In turn, this requires novel experimental systems that model in vitro the survival, dormancy and proliferation of disseminated cancer cells.We have established such experimental systems that model the bone microenvironment of the breast cancer metastatic niche. These systems are based on 3D complex cultures of human bone marrow stromal cells and breast cancer cell lines in collagen biomatrices. We identified conditions in which cancer cells are dormant, and conditions in which they proliferate and we validated the results in vivo. Dormant cancer cells were able to proliferate upon transfer into supportive microenvironment or upon manipulation of signaling pathways that control dormancy. These experimental systems will be instrumental in screening new compounds for metastasis studies and particularly in studying the pathways that control cellular dormancy. We provide in this chapter detailed protocols for these complex 3D coculture systems.
Methods of Molecular Biology | 2011
Massimiliano Cariati; Rebecca Marlow; Gabriela Dontu
Three experimental systems based on mouse models are currently used to study breast cancer: transgenic mice, carcinogen-induced models, and xenografts of breast cancers. Each of these models has advantages and limitations. This chapter focuses on xenotransplantation of breast cancers and reviews the techniques used so far in establishing this model, the advantages and limitations compared to other experimental systems, and finally, the technical questions that remain to be answered.
Frontiers in Immunology | 2017
Kristina M. Ilieva; Judit Fazekas-Singer; Daniela Achkova; Tihomir Dodev; Silvia Mele; Silvia Crescioli; Heather J. Bax; Anthony Cheung; Panagiotis Karagiannis; Isabel Correa; Mariangela Figini; Rebecca Marlow; Debra H. Josephs; Andrew J. Beavil; John Maher; James Spicer; Erika Jensen-Jarolim; Andrew Tutt; Sophia N. Karagiannis
Monoclonal antibodies find broad application as therapy for various types of cancer by employing multiple mechanisms of action against tumors. Manipulating the Fc-mediated functions of antibodies that engage immune effector cells, such as NK cells, represents a strategy to influence effector cell activation and to enhance antibody potency and potentially efficacy. We developed a novel approach to generate and ascertain the functional attributes of Fc mutant monoclonal antibodies. This entailed coupling single expression vector (pVitro1) antibody cloning, using polymerase incomplete primer extension (PIPE) polymerase chain reaction, together with simultaneous Fc region point mutagenesis and high yield transient expression in human mammalian cells. Employing this, we engineered wild type, low (N297Q, NQ), and high (S239D/I332E, DE) FcR-binding Fc mutant monoclonal antibody panels recognizing two cancer antigens, HER2/neu and chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan 4. Antibodies were generated with universal mutagenic primers applicable to any IgG1 pVitro1 constructs, with high mutagenesis and transfection efficiency, in small culture volumes, at high yields and within 12 days from design to purified material. Antibody variants conserved their Fab-mediated recognition of target antigens and their direct anti-proliferative effects against cancer cells. Fc mutations had a significant impact on antibody interactions with Fc receptors (FcRs) on human NK cells, and consequently on the potency of NK cell activation, quantified by immune complex-mediated calcium mobilization and by antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) of tumor cells. This strategy for manipulation and testing of Fc region engagement with cognate FcRs can facilitate the design of antibodies with defined effector functions and potentially enhanced efficacy against tumor cells.
Clinical Cancer Research | 2018
Anthony Cheung; James W. Opzoomer; Kristina M. Ilieva; Patrycja Gazinska; Ricarda M. Hoffmann; Hasan Mirza; Rebecca Marlow; Erika Francesch-Domenech; Matthew Fittall; Diana Dominguez Rodriguez; Angela Clifford; Luned Badder; Nirmesh Patel; Silvia Mele; Giulia Pellizzari; Heather J. Bax; Silvia Crescioli; Gyula Petranyi; Daniel Larcombe-Young; Debra H. Josephs; Silvana Canevari; Mariangela Figini; Sarah Pinder; Frank O. Nestle; Cheryl Gillett; James Spicer; Anita Grigoriadis; Andrew Tutt; Sophia N. Karagiannis
Purpose: Highly aggressive triple-negative breast cancers (TNBCs) lack validated therapeutic targets and have high risk of metastatic disease. Folate receptor alpha (FRα) is a central mediator of cell growth regulation that could serve as an important target for cancer therapy. Experimental Design: We evaluated FRα expression in breast cancers by genomic (n = 3,414) and IHC (n = 323) analyses and its association with clinical parameters and outcomes. We measured the functional contributions of FRα in TNBC biology by RNA interference and the antitumor functions of an antibody recognizing FRα (MOv18-IgG1), in vitro, and in human TNBC xenograft models. Results: FRα is overexpressed in significant proportions of aggressive basal like/TNBC tumors, and in postneoadjuvant chemotherapy–residual disease associated with a high risk of relapse. Expression is associated with worse overall survival. TNBCs show dysregulated expression of thymidylate synthase, folate hydrolase 1, and methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase, involved in folate metabolism. RNA interference to deplete FRα decreased Src and ERK signaling and resulted in reduction of cell growth. An anti-FRα antibody (MOv18-IgG1) conjugated with a Src inhibitor significantly restricted TNBC xenograft growth. Moreover, MOv18-IgG1 triggered immune-dependent cancer cell death in vitro by human volunteer and breast cancer patient immune cells, and significantly restricted orthotopic and patient-derived xenograft growth. Conclusions: FRα is overexpressed in high-grade TNBC and postchemotherapy residual tumors. It participates in cancer cell signaling and presents a promising target for therapeutic strategies such as ADCs, or passive immunotherapy priming Fc-mediated antitumor immune cell responses. Clin Cancer Res; 24(20); 5098–111. ©2018 AACR.