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Dive into the research topics where Sakir H. Gultekin is active.

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Featured researches published by Sakir H. Gultekin.


Journal of Neurosurgery | 2013

Central nervous system stem cell transplantation for children with neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis

Nathan R. Selden; Amira Al-Uzri; Stephen L. Huhn; Thomas K. Koch; Darryn M. Sikora; Mina Nguyen-Driver; Daniel J. Guillaume; Jeffrey L. Koh; Sakir H. Gultekin; James C. Anderson; Hannes Vogel; Trenna Sutcliffe; Yakop Jacobs; Robert D. Steiner

OBJECT Infantile and late-infantile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinoses (NCLs) are invariably fatal lysosomal storage diseases associated with defects in lysosomal enzyme palmitoyl-protein thioesterase 1 (PPT-1) or tripeptidyl peptidase 1 (TPP1) activity. Previous preclinical studies have demonstrated that human CNS stem cells (HuCNS-SCs) produce both PPT-1 and TPP1 and result in donor cell engraftment and reduced accumulation of storage material in the brain when tested in an NCL mouse model. METHODS HuCNS-SC transplantation was tested in an open-label dose-escalation Phase I clinical trial as a potential treatment for infantile and late-infantile NCL. Study design included direct neurosurgical transplantation of allogeneic HuCNS-SCs into the cerebral hemispheres and lateral ventricles accompanied by 12 months of immunosuppression. RESULTS Six children with either the infantile or late-infantile forms of NCL underwent low- (3 patients) and high- (3 patients) dose transplantation of HuCNS-SCs followed by immunosuppression. The surgery, immunosuppression, and cell transplantation were well tolerated. Adverse events following transplantation were consistent with the underlying disease, and none were directly attributed to the donor cells. Observations regarding efficacy of the intervention were limited by the enrollment criteria requiring that patients be in advanced stages of disease. CONCLUSIONS This study represents the first-in-human clinical trial involving transplantation of a purified population of human neural stem cells for a neurodegenerative disorder. The feasibility of this approach and absence of transplantation-related serious adverse events support further exploration of HuCNS-SC transplantation as a potential treatment for select subtypes of NCL, and possibly for other neurodegenerative disorders.


American Journal of Neuroradiology | 2010

Femoral Artery Complications Associated with the Mynx Closure Device

Jeremy D. Fields; Kenneth C. Liu; S. J. Gonda; Aclan Dogan; Sakir H. Gultekin; Gary M. Nesbit; Bryan D. Petersen; Stanley L. Barnwell

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Devices to close a femoral arteriotomy are frequently used after catheterization for interventional radiology and cardiac procedures to decrease the time to hemostasis and ambulation and, potentially, to decrease local complications. The Mynx vascular closure device uses a sealant designed to occlude the access tract, resulting in hemostasis. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed all cases in which the Mynx device was used and for which follow-up angiography was available. A total of 146 devices were deployed in 135 patients. A follow-up vascular study visualizing the femoral artery was performed in 26 patients (27 studies). RESULTS: There were 5 (5/27, 18%) cases of intravascular Mynx sealant on follow-up vascular imaging. Three pseudoaneurysms (3/27, 11%) were identified. CONCLUSIONS: In this small study, intravascular sealant and pseudoaneurysms were found frequently after femoral arterial closure with the Mynx vascular closure device.


Skull Base Surgery | 2013

Factors Associated with Biochemical Remission after Microscopic Transsphenoidal Surgery for Acromegaly

Hai Sun; Jessica Brzana; Chris G. Yedinak; Sakir H. Gultekin; Johnny B. Delashaw; Maria Fleseriu

Objectives To analyze surgical outcomes and predictive factors of disease remission in acromegaly patients who underwent microscopic transsphenoidal surgery (TSS) for a growth hormone (GH)-secreting adenoma. Design A 6-year retrospective review of 86 consecutive acromegaly surgeries. Setting Procedures performed at a single institution by a single surgeon. Participants Seventy acromegaly patients. Main Outcome Measures Demographic information, preoperative laboratory values, tumor imaging data, and morphological and immunohistochemical data were collected. Predictive values using the latest and most stringent biochemical remission criteria were determined using univariate and multivariate statistical analyses. Results Remission rate for 59 (18 males) acromegaly patients meeting the study inclusion criteria was 52.5%. Remission rates for micro- and macroadenomas were 81.8% and 45.8%, respectively. Patients of older age, with a smaller tumor, lower Knosp grade, lower preoperative GH, and insulinlike growth factor 1 levels were more likely to achieve remission. Remission rate decreased significantly with repeat surgeries. Those patients with adenomas that stained positive for somatostatin receptor subtype 2A were less likely to experience tumor recurrence and more likely to respond to medical treatment with persistent or elevated GH hypersecretion. Conclusions Microscopic TSS continues to be a viable means for treating acromegaly patients. Patients should be followed long term.


The American Journal of Surgical Pathology | 2013

LC3 and p62 as diagnostic markers of drug-induced autophagic vacuolar cardiomyopathy: a study of 3 cases.

Brianne H. Daniels; Rodney D. McComb; Bret C. Mobley; Sakir H. Gultekin; Han S. Lee; Marta Margeta

Autophagic vacuolar cardiomyopathy is an underrecognized, but potentially fatal, complication of treatment with chloroquine (CQ) and its derivative hydroxychloroquine (HCQ), which are used as therapy for malaria and common connective tissue disorders. Currently, the diagnosis of autophagic vacuolar cardiomyopathy is established through an endomyocardial biopsy and requires electron microscopy, which is not widely available and has a significant potential for sampling error. Recently, we have reported that immunohistochemistry for autophagic markers LC3 and p62 can replace electron microscopy in the diagnosis of HCQ-induced and colchicine-induced autophagic vacuolar skeletal myopathies. In the current study, we use 3 cases of CQ-induced or HCQ-induced cardiomyopathy and 1 HCQ-treated control case to show that the same two markers can be used to diagnose autophagic vacuolar cardiomyopathies by light microscopy. CQ-induced or HCQ-induced autophagic vacuolar cardiomyopathy is not universally fatal, but successful treatment requires early detection. By lowering the barriers to diagnosis, the application of these immunohistochemical markers will decrease the number of misdiagnosed patients, thus increasing the likelihood of favorable clinical outcomes.


Jcr-journal of Clinical Rheumatology | 2012

Fatal antimalarial-induced cardiomyopathy: report of 2 cases.

Morteza Azimian; Sakir H. Gultekin; Jessica L. Hata; James B. Atkinson; Kim Ely; Howard A. Fuchs; Bret C. Mobley

Abstract Chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine are used to chronically treat certain rheumatologic diseases and are generally considered safe. We describe 2 patients with skeletal myopathy and fatal cardiomyopathy—uncommon and underrecognized adverse effects of these agents. Both patients developed arrhythmias and heart failure, and 1 patient had documented diaphragmatic involvement. Muscle specimens showed typical vacuolar myopathy (indicative of impaired autophagy) with myeloid bodies in both patients and curvilinear bodies in 1 patient. Antimalarial-induced cardiomyopathy should be considered in patients receiving these medications with otherwise unexplained muscle weakness or cardiac symptoms. Whether autophagy enhancers can be used to manage such myopathies merits investigation.


Scientific Reports | 2016

IGF1R as a Key Target in High Risk, Metastatic Medulloblastoma

Matthew N. Svalina; Ken Kikuchi; Jinu Abraham; Sangeet Lal; Monika A. Davare; Teagan P. Settelmeyer; Michael C. Young; Jennifer L. Peckham; Yoon-Jae Cho; Joel E. Michalek; Brian Hernandez; Noah Berlow; Melanie A. Jackson; Daniel J. Guillaume; Nathan R. Selden; Darell D. Bigner; Kellie Nazemi; Sarah Green; Christopher L. Corless; Sakir H. Gultekin; Atiya Mansoor; Brian P. Rubin; Randall L. Woltjer; Charles Keller

Risk or presence of metastasis in medulloblastoma causes substantial treatment-related morbidity and overall mortality. Through the comparison of cytokines and growth factors in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of metastatic medulloblastoma patients with factors also in conditioned media of metastatic MYC amplified medulloblastoma or leptomeningeal cells, we were led to explore the bioactivity of IGF1 in medulloblastoma by elevated CSF levels of IGF1, IGF-sequestering IGFBP3, IGFBP3-cleaving proteases (MMP and tPA), and protease modulators (TIMP1 and PAI-1). IGF1 led not only to receptor phosphorylation but also accelerated migration/adhesion in MYC amplified medulloblastoma cells in the context of appropriate matrix or meningothelial cells. Clinical correlation suggests a peri-/sub-meningothelial source of IGF-liberating proteases that could facilitate leptomeningeal metastasis. In parallel, studies of key factors responsible for cell autonomous growth in MYC amplified medulloblastoma prioritized IGF1R inhibitors. Together, our studies identify IGF1R as a high value target for clinical trials in high risk medulloblastoma.


Surgical Neurology International | 2014

Case comparison and literature review of glioblastoma: A tale of two tumors

Gustavo Mendez; Alp Ozpinar; Jeffrey S. Raskin; Sakir H. Gultekin; Donald A. Ross

Background: Diagnosis of glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) includes a heterogeneous group of tumors. We describe two cases with histopathologically and molecularly similar tumors, but very different outcomes. We attempt to illustrate the need for improved prognostic markers for GBM. Case Description: Two patients with similar molecular profiles were retrospectively identified. The following markers were assessed: O6-methylguanine DNA methyltransferase (MGMT) methylation, isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH) 1 and 2 status, epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) amplification, phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN) status, Ki-67, p53, and 1p/19q status. Each patient was assigned a Karnofsky performance score at presentation. Case 1 (62-year-old male) was a right temporal lobe glioblastoma with a molecular profile of amplified EGFR, normal PTEN, no IDH1/2 mutation, 28.7% MGMT promoter methylation, 5-20% Ki-67, 1p deletion, and 19q intact. The patient underwent resection followed by radiation therapy and 2 years of chemotherapy, and was asymptomatic and tumor free 5 years post diagnosis. Tumor eventually recurred and the patient expired 72 months after initial diagnosis. Case 2 (63-year-old male) was a right frontal white matter mass consistent with glioblastoma with a molecular profile of amplified EGFR, absent PTEN, no IDH1/2 mutation, 9.9% MGMT promoter methylation, 5-10% Ki-67, and 1p/19q status inconclusive. A radical subtotal resection was performed; however, 2 weeks later symptoms had returned. Subsequent imaging revealed a tumor larger than at diagnosis. The patient expired 3 months after initial diagnosis. Conclusion: The need for formulating more robust means to classify GBM tumor subtypes is paramount. Standard histopathologic and molecular analyses are costly and did not provide either of these patients with a realistic appraisal of their prognosis. Individualized whole genome testing similar to that being reported for medulloblastoma and other tumors may be preferable to the array of tests as currently utilized.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2014

Secreted meningeal chemokines, but not VEGFA, modulate the migratory properties of medulloblastoma cells

Monika A. Davare; Sangeet Lal; Jennifer L. Peckham; Suresh I. Prajapati; Sakir H. Gultekin; Brian P. Rubin; Charles Keller

Leptomeningeal metastasis is a cause of morbidity and mortality in medulloblastoma, but the understanding of molecular mechanisms driving this process is nascent. In this study, we examined the secretory chemokine profile of medulloblastoma cells (DAOY) and a meningothelial cell line (BMEN1). Conditioned media (CM) of meningothelial cells increased adhesion, spreading and migration of medulloblastoma. VEGFA was identified at elevated levels in the CM from BMEN1 cells (as compared to DAOY CM); however, recombinant VEGFA alone was insufficient to enhance medulloblastoma cell migration. In addition, bevacizumab, the VEGFA scavenging monoclonal antibody, did not block the migratory phenotype induced by the CM. These results reveal that paracrine factors secreted by meningothelial cells can influence migration and adherence of medulloblastoma tumor cells, but VEGFA may not be a specific target for therapeutic intervention in this context.


Archive | 2009

The Role of Muscle Biopsy in the Diagnosis of Inflammatory Myopathy

Sakir H. Gultekin

Muscle biopsies of patients with immune-mediated inflammatory myopathies are characterized by a combination of chronic inflammatory infiltrates and muscle fiber necrosis. In addition, there are typical histochemical, immunohistochemical, and ultrastructural findings of each type of inflammatory myopathy. Accurate classification of inflammatory myopathies is important because inclusion body myositis does not respond to immunosuppressive treatment, polymyositis is frequently part of an overlap syndrome, and dermatomyositis is associated with cancer in adults. Necrotizing myopathy without inflammation may be due to a partially treated inflammatory myopathy, a toxic myopathy, or a paraneoplastic myopathy. Metabolic myopathies and muscular dystrophies may clinically and rarely pathologically mimic inflammatory myopathy. Correct identification of these entities depends on better awareness of clinical similarities between metabolic myopathy and inflammatory myopathy; appropriate utilization of immunohistochemical, ultrastructural, biochemical, and genetic techniques on muscle samples in difficult cases; and maximizing communication between the clinician and the pathologist.


PLOS ONE | 2018

IL-13 receptors as possible therapeutic targets in diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma

Noah Berlow; Matthew N. Svalina; Michael J. Quist; Teagan P. Settelmeyer; Viktor Zherebitskiy; Mari Kogiso; Lin Qi; Yuchen Du; Cynthia Hawkins; Esther Hulleman; Xiao-Nan Li; Sakir H. Gultekin; Charles Keller

Diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG) is a universally fatal childhood cancer of the brain. Despite the introduction of conventional chemotherapy and radiotherapy, improvements in survival have been marginal and long-term survivorship is uncommon. Thus, new targets for therapeutics are critically needed. Early phase clinical trials exploring molecularly-targeted therapies against the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and novel immunotherapies targeting interleukin receptor-13α2 (IL-13Rα2) have demonstrated activity in this disease. To identify additional therapeutic markers for cell surface receptors, we performed exome sequencing (16 new samples, 22 previously published samples, total 38 with 26 matched normal DNA samples), RNA deep sequencing (17 new samples, 11 previously published samples, total 28 with 18 matched normal RNA samples), and immunohistochemistry (17 DIPG tissue samples) to examine the expression of the interleukin-4 (IL-4) signaling axis components (IL-4, interleukin 13 (IL-13), and their respective receptors IL-4Rα, IL-13Rα1, and IL-13Rα2). In addition, we correlated cytokine and receptor expression with expression of the oncogenes EGFR and c-MET. In DIPG tissues, transcript-level analysis found significant expression of IL-4, IL-13, and IL-13Rα1/2, with strong differential expression of IL-13Rα1/2 in tumor versus normal brain. At the protein level, immunohistochemical studies revealed high content of IL-4 and IL-13Rα1/2 but notably low expression of IL-13. Additionally, a strong positive correlation was observed between c-Met and IL-4Rα. The genomic and transcriptional landscape across all samples was also summarized. These data create a foundation for the design of potential new immunotherapies targeting IL-13 cell surface receptors in DIPG.

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Charles Keller

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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