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Dive into the research topics where Sanjay Katiyar is active.

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Featured researches published by Sanjay Katiyar.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

microRNA 17/20 inhibits cellular invasion and tumor metastasis in breast cancer by heterotypic signaling

Zuoren Yu; Nicole E. Willmarth; Jie Zhou; Sanjay Katiyar; Min Wang; Yang Liu; Peter McCue; Andrew A. Quong; Michael P. Lisanti; Richard G. Pestell

microRNAs are thought to regulate tumor progression and invasion via direct interaction with target genes within cells. Here the microRNA17/20 cluster is shown to govern cellular migration and invasion of nearby cells via heterotypic secreted signals. microRNA17/20 abundance is reduced in highly invasive breast cancer cell lines and node-positive breast cancer specimens. Cell-conditioned medium from microRNA17/20–overexpressing noninvasive breast cancer cell MCF7 was sufficient to inhibit MDA-MB-231 cell migration and invasion through inhibiting secretion of a subset of cytokines, and suppressing plasminogen activation via inhibition of the secreted plasminogen activators (cytokeratin 8 and α-enolase). microRNA17/20 directly repressed IL-8 by targeting its 3′ UTR, and inhibited cytokeratin 8 via the cell cycle control protein cyclin D1. At variance with prior studies, these results demonstrated a unique mechanism of how the altered microRNA17/20 expression regulates cellular secretion and tumor microenvironment to control migration and invasion of neighboring cells in breast cancer. These findings not only reveal an antiinvasive function of miR-17/20 in breast cancer, but also identify a heterotypic secreted signal that mediates the microRNA regulation of tumor metastasis.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Akt1 governs breast cancer progression in vivo

Xiaoming Ju; Sanjay Katiyar; Chenguang Wang; Manran Liu; Xuanmao Jiao; Shengwen Li; Jie Zhou; Jacob Turner; Michael P. Lisanti; Robert G. Russell; Susette C. Mueller; John Ojeifo; William S. Chen; Nissim Hay; Richard G. Pestell

The serine threonine kinase Akt1 has been implicated in the control of cellular metabolism, survival and growth. Here, disruption of the ubiquitously expressed member of the Akt family of genes, Akt1, in the mouse demonstrates a requirement for Akt1 in ErbB2-induced mammary tumorigenesis. Akt1 deficiency delayed tumor growth and reduced lung metastases, correlating with a reduction in phosphorylation of the Akt1 target, tuberous sclerosis 2 (TSC2) at Ser-939. Akt1-deficient mammary epithelial tumor cells (MEC) were reduced in size and proliferative capacity, with reduced cyclin D1 and p27KIP1 abundance. Akt1 deficiency abrogated the oncogene-induced changes in polarization of MEC in three-dimensional culture and reverted oncogene-induced relocalization of the phosphorylated ezrin–radixin–moesin proteins. Akt1 increased MEC migration across an endothelial cell barrier, enhancing the persistence of migratory directionality. An unbiased proteomic analysis demonstrated Akt1 mediated MEC migration through paracrine signaling via induction of expression and secretion of CXCL16 and MIP1γ. Akt1 governs MEC polarity, migratory directionality and breast cancer onset induced by ErbB2 in vivo.


Cancer Research | 2010

The Canonical NF-κB Pathway Governs Mammary Tumorigenesis in Transgenic Mice and Tumor Stem Cell Expansion

Manran Liu; Toshiyuki Sakamaki; Mathew C. Casimiro; Nicole E. Willmarth; Andrew A. Quong; Xiaoming Ju; John Ojeifo; Xuanmao Jiao; Wen Shuz Yeow; Sanjay Katiyar; L. Andrew Shirley; David A. Joyce; Michael P. Lisanti; Christopher Albanese; Richard G. Pestell

The role of mammary epithelial cell (MEC) NF-κB in tumor progression in vivo is unknown, as murine NF-κB components and kinases either are required for murine survival or interfere with normal mammary gland development. As NF-κB inhibitors block both tumor-associated macrophages (TAM) and MEC NF-κB, the importance of MEC NF-κB to tumor progression in vivo remained to be determined. Herein, an MEC-targeted inducible transgenic inhibitor of NF-κB (IκBαSR) was developed in ErbB2 mammary oncomice. Inducible suppression of NF-κB in the adult mammary epithelium delayed the onset and number of new tumors. Within similar sized breast tumors, TAM and tumor neoangiogenesis was reduced. Coculture experiments demonstrated MEC NF-κB enhanced TAM recruitment. Genome-wide expression and proteomic analysis showed that IκBαSR inhibited tumor stem cell pathways. IκBαSR inhibited breast tumor stem cell markers in transgenic tumors, reduced stem cell expansion in vitro, and repressed expression of Nanog and Sox2 in vivo and in vitro. MEC NF-κB contributes to mammary tumorigenesis. As we show that NF-κB contributes to expansion of breast tumor stem cells and heterotypic signals that enhance TAM and vasculogenesis, these processes may contribute to NF-κB-dependent mammary tumorigenesis.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

p21CIP1 attenuates Ras- and c-Myc-dependent breast tumor epithelial mesenchymal transition and cancer stem cell-like gene expression in vivo

Manran Liu; Mathew C. Casimiro; Chenguang Wang; L. Andrew Shirley; Xuanmao Jiao; Sanjay Katiyar; Xiaoming Ju; Zhiping Li; Zuoren Yu; Jie Zhou; Michael K. Johnson; Paolo Fortina; Terry Hyslop; Jolene J. Windle; Richard G. Pestell

p21CIP1/WAF1 is a downstream effector of tumor suppressors and functions as a cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor to block cellular proliferation. Breast tumors may derive from self-renewing tumor-initiating cells (BT-ICs), which contribute to tumor progression, recurrence, and therapy resistance. The role of p21CIP1 in regulating features of tumor stem cells in vivo is unknown. Herein, deletion of p21CIP1, which enhanced the rate of tumorigenesis induced by mammary-targeted Ha-Ras or c-Myc, enhanced gene expression profiles and immunohistochemical features of epithelial mesenchymal transition (EMT) and putative cancer stem cells in vivo. Silencing of p21CIP1 enhanced, and expression of p21CIP1 repressed, features of EMT in transformed immortal human MEC lines. p21CIP1 attenuated oncogene-induced BT-IC and mammosphere formation. Thus, the in vitro cell culture assays reflect the changes observed in vivo in transgenic mice. These findings establish a link between the loss of p21CIP1 and the acquisition of breast cancer EMT and stem cell properties in vivo.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2006

Cyclin D1 Determines Mitochondrial Function In Vivo

Toshiyuki Sakamaki; Mathew C. Casimiro; Xiaoming Ju; Andrew A. Quong; Sanjay Katiyar; Manran Liu; Xuanmao Jiao; Anping Li; Xueping Zhang; Yinan Lu; Chenguang Wang; Stephen W. Byers; Rob Nicholson; Todd M. Link; Melvin Shemluck; Jianguo Yang; Stanley T. Fricke; Phyllis M. Novikoff; Alexandros Papanikolaou; Andrew Arnold; Christopher Albanese; Richard G. Pestell

ABSTRACT The cyclin D1 gene encodes a regulatory subunit of the holoenzyme that phosphorylates and inactivates the pRb tumor suppressor to promote nuclear DNA synthesis. cyclin D1 is overexpressed in human breast cancers and is sufficient for the development of murine mammary tumors. Herein, cyclin D1 is shown to perform a novel function, inhibiting mitochondrial function and size. Mitochondrial activity was enhanced by genetic deletion or antisense or small interfering RNA to cyclin D1. Global gene expression profiling and functional analysis of mammary epithelial cell-targeted cyclin D1 antisense transgenics demonstrated that cyclin D1 inhibits mitochondrial activity and aerobic glycolysis in vivo. Reciprocal regulation of these genes was observed in cyclin D1-induced mammary tumors. Cyclin D1 thus integrates nuclear DNA synthesis and mitochondrial function.


Cancer Research | 2006

Cyclin D1 Induction of Cellular Migration Requires p27KIP1

Zhiping Li; Xuanmao Jiao; Chenguang Wang; Xiaoming Ju; Yinan Lu; Liangping Yuan; Michael P. Lisanti; Sanjay Katiyar; Richard G. Pestell

The cyclin D1 gene is amplified and overexpressed in human breast cancer, functioning as a collaborative oncogene. As the regulatory subunit of a holoenzyme phosphorylating Rb, cyclin D1 promotes cell cycle progression and a noncatalytic function has been described to sequester the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor protein p27. Cyclin D1 overexpression correlates with tumor metastasis and cyclin D1-deficient fibroblasts are defective in migration. The genetic mechanism by which cyclin D1 promotes migration and movement is poorly understood. Herein, cyclin D1 promoted cellular migration and cytokinesis of mammary epithelial cells. Cyclin D1 enhanced cellular migratory velocity. The induction of migration by cyclin D1 was abolished by mutation of K112 or deletion of NH(2)-terminal residues 46 to 90. These mutations of cyclin D1 abrogated physical interaction with p27(KIP1). Cyclin D1(-/-) cells were p27(KIP1) deficient and the defect in migration was rescued by p27(KIP1) reintroduction. Conversely, the cyclin D1 rescue of cyclin D1(-/-) cellular migration was reversed by p27(KIP1) small interfering RNA. Cyclin D1 regulated p27(KIP1) abundance at the posttranslational level, inhibiting the Skp2 promoter, Skp2 abundance, and induced p27(KIP1) phosphorylation at Ser(10). Together, these studies show cyclin D1 promotes mammary epithelial cell migration. p27(KIP1) is required for cyclin D1-mediated cellular migration.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

c-Jun induces mammary epithelial cellular invasion and breast cancer stem cell expansion.

Xuanmao Jiao; Sanjay Katiyar; Nicole E. Willmarth; Manran Liu; Xiaojing Ma; Neal Flomenberg; Michael P. Lisanti; Richard G. Pestell

The molecular mechanisms governing breast tumor cellular self-renewal contribute to breast cancer progression and therapeutic resistance. The ErbB2 oncogene is overexpressed in ∼30% of human breast cancers. c-Jun, the first cellular proto-oncogene, is overexpressed in human breast cancer. However, the role of endogenous c-Jun in mammary tumor progression is unknown. Herein, transgenic mice expressing the mammary gland-targeted ErbB2 oncogene were crossed with c-junf/f transgenic mice to determine the role of endogenous c-Jun in mammary tumor invasion and stem cell function. The excision of c-jun by Cre recombinase reduced cellular migration, invasion, and mammosphere formation of ErbB2-induced mammary tumors. Proteomic analysis identified a subset of secreted proteins (stem cell factor (SCF) and CCL5) induced by ErbB2 expression that were dependent upon endogenous c-Jun expression. SCF and CCL5 were identified as transcriptionally induced by c-Jun. CCL5 rescued the c-Jun-deficient breast tumor cellular invasion phenotype. SCF rescued the c-Jun-deficient mammosphere production. Endogenous c-Jun thus contributes to ErbB2-induced mammary tumor cell invasion and self-renewal.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Dachshund inhibits oncogene-induced breast cancer cellular migration and invasion through suppression of interleukin-8

Kongming Wu; Sanjay Katiyar; Anping Li; Manran Liu; Xiaoming Ju; Vladimir M. Popov; Xuanmao Jiao; Michael P. Lisanti; Antonella Casola; Richard G. Pestell

Oncogene-mediated signaling to the host environment induces a subset of cytokines and chemokines. The Drosophila Dac gene promotes migration of the morphogenetic furrow during eye development. Expression of the cell-fate determination factor Dachshund (DACH1) was lost in poor prognosis invasive breast cancer. Mouse embryo fibroblasts derived from Dach1−/− mice demonstrated endogenous Dach1 constitutively represses cellular migration. DACH1 inhibited cellular migration and invasion of oncogene (Ras, Myc, ErbB2, c-Raf)-transformed human breast epithelial cells. An unbiased proteomic analysis identified and immunoneutralizing antibody and reconstitution experiments demonstrated IL-8 is a critical target of DACH1 mediating breast cancer cellular migration and metastasis in vivo. DACH1 bound the endogenous IL-8 promoter in ChIP assays and repressed the IL-8 promoter through the AP-1 and NF-κB binding sites. Collectively, our data identify a pathway by which an endogenous cell-fate determination factor blocks oncogene-dependent tumor metastasis via a key heterotypic mediator.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Cell Fate Determination Factor Dachshund Reprograms Breast Cancer Stem Cell Function

Kongming Wu; Xuanmao Jiao; Zhaoming Li; Sanjay Katiyar; Mathew C. Casimiro; Wancai Yang; Qiong Zhang; Nicole E. Willmarth; Iouri Chepelev; Marco Crosariol; Zhang Wei; Junbo Hu; Keji Zhao; Richard G. Pestell

The cell fate determination factor Dachshund was cloned as a dominant inhibitor of the hyperactive epidermal growth factor receptor ellipse. The expression of Dachshund is lost in human breast cancer associated with poor prognosis. Breast tumor-initiating cells (TIC) may contribute to tumor progression and therapy resistance. Here, endogenous DACH1 was reduced in breast cancer cell lines with high expression of TIC markers and in patient samples of the basal breast cancer phenotype. Re-expression of DACH1 reduced new tumor formation in serial transplantations in vivo, reduced mammosphere formation, and reduced the proportion of CD44high/CD24low breast tumor cells. Conversely, lentiviral shRNA to DACH1 increased the breast (B)TIC population. Genome-wide expression studies of mammary tumors demonstrated DACH1 repressed a molecular signature associated with stem cells (SOX2, Nanog, and KLF4) and genome-wide ChIP-seq analysis identified DACH1 binding to the promoter of the Nanog, KLF4, and Lin28 genes. KLF4/c-Myc and Oct4/Sox2 antagonized DACH1 repression of BTIC. Mechanistic studies demonstrated DACH1 directly repressed the Nanog and Sox2 promoters via a conserved domain. Endogenous DACH1 regulates BTIC in vitro and in vivo.


American Journal of Pathology | 2009

Caveolin-1 (P132L), a common breast cancer mutation, confers mammary cell invasiveness and defines a novel stem cell/metastasis-associated gene signature.

Gloria Bonuccelli; Mathew C. Casimiro; Federica Sotgia; Chenguang Wang; Manran Liu; Sanjay Katiyar; Jie Zhou; Elliott Dew; Franco Capozza; Kristin M. Daumer; Carlo Minetti; Janet N. Milliman; Fabien Alpy; Marie Christine Rio; Catherine Tomasetto; Isabelle Mercier; Neal Flomenberg; Philippe G. Frank; Richard G. Pestell; Michael P. Lisanti

Here we used the Met-1 cell line in an orthotopic transplantation model in FVB/N mice to dissect the role of the Cav-1(P132L) mutation in human breast cancer. Identical experiments were performed in parallel with wild-type Cav-1. Cav-1(P132L) up-regulated the expression of estrogen receptor-alpha as predicted, because only estrogen receptor-alpha-positive patients have been shown to harbor Cav-1(P132L) mutations. In the context of primary tumor formation, Cav-1(P132L) behaved as a loss-of-function mutation, lacking any tumor suppressor activity. In contrast, Cav-1(P132L) caused significant increases in cell migration, invasion, and experimental metastasis, consistent with a gain-of-function mutation. To identify possible molecular mechanism(s) underlying this invasive gain-of-function activity, we performed unbiased gene expression profiling. From this analysis, we show that the Cav-1(P132L) expression signature contains numerous genes that have been previously associated with cell migration, invasion, and metastasis. These include i) secreted growth factors and extracellular matrix proteins (Cyr61, Plf, Pthlh, Serpinb5, Tnc, and Wnt10a), ii) proteases that generate EGF and HGF (Adamts1 and St14), and iii) tyrosine kinase substrates and integrin signaling/adapter proteins (Akap13, Cdcp1, Ddef1, Eps15, Foxf1a, Gab2, Hs2st1, and Itgb4). Several of the P132L-specific genes are also highly expressed in stem/progenitor cells or are associated with myoepithelial cells, suggestive of an epithelial-mesenchymal transition. These results directly support clinical data showing that patients harboring Cav-1 mutations are more likely to undergo recurrence and metastasis.

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Richard G. Pestell

Thomas Jefferson University

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Xuanmao Jiao

Thomas Jefferson University

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Mathew C. Casimiro

Thomas Jefferson University

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Chenguang Wang

Thomas Jefferson University

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Xiaoming Ju

Thomas Jefferson University

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Manran Liu

Thomas Jefferson University

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Zhiping Li

Thomas Jefferson University

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Andrew A. Quong

Thomas Jefferson University

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Kongming Wu

Huazhong University of Science and Technology

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