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Dive into the research topics where Sergey Malchenko is active.

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Featured researches published by Sergey Malchenko.


Journal of Cellular Physiology | 2010

Cancer hallmarks in induced pluripotent cells: New insights†

Sergey Malchenko; Vasiliy Galat; Elisabeth A. Seftor; Elio F. Vanin; Fabricio F. Costa; Richard E.B. Seftor; Marcelo B. Soares; Mary J.C. Hendrix

Studies are beginning to emerge that demonstrate intriguing differences between human‐induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) and human embryonic stem cells (hESCs). Here, we investigated the expression of key members of the Nodal embryonic signaling pathway, critical to the maintenance of pluripotency in hESCs. Western blot and real‐time RT‐PCR analyses reveal slightly lower levels of Nodal (a TGF‐β family member) and Cripto‐1 (Nodals co‐receptor) and a dramatic decrease in Lefty (Nodals inhibitor and TGF‐β family member) in hiPSCs compared with hESCs. The noteworthy drop in hiPSCs Lefty expression correlated with an increase in the methylation of Lefty B CpG island. Based on these findings, we addressed a more fundamental question related to the consequences of epigenetically reprogramming hiPSCs, especially with respect to maintaining a stable ESC phenotype. A global comparative analysis of 365 microRNAs (miRs) in two hiPSC versus four hESC lines ultimately identified 10 highly expressed miRs in hiPCSs with >10‐fold difference, which have been shown to be cancer related. These data demonstrate cancer hallmarks expressed by hiPSCs, which will require further assessment for their impact on future therapies. J. Cell. Physiol. 225: 390–393, 2010.


BMC Cancer | 2010

Microenvironment alters epigenetic and gene expression profiles in Swarm rat chondrosarcoma tumors

Christopher A. Hamm; Jeff W. Stevens; Hehuang Xie; Elio F. Vanin; Jose A. Morcuende; Hakeem Abdulkawy; Elisabeth A. Seftor; Simone Treiger Sredni; Jared M. Bischof; Deli Wang; Sergey Malchenko; Maria F. Bonaldo; Thomas L. Casavant; Mary J.C. Hendrix; Marcelo B. Soares

BackgroundChondrosarcomas are malignant cartilage tumors that do not respond to traditional chemotherapy or radiation. The 5-year survival rate of histologic grade III chondrosarcoma is less than 30%. An animal model of chondrosarcoma has been established - namely, the Swarm Rat Chondrosarcoma (SRC) - and shown to resemble the human disease. Previous studies with this model revealed that tumor microenvironment could significantly influence chondrosarcoma malignancy.MethodsTo examine the effect of the microenvironment, SRC tumors were initiated at different transplantation sites. Pyrosequencing assays were utilized to assess the DNA methylation of the tumors, and SAGE libraries were constructed and sequenced to determine the gene expression profiles of the tumors. Based on the gene expression analysis, subsequent functional assays were designed to determine the relevancy of the specific genes in the development and progression of the SRC.ResultsThe site of transplantation had a significant impact on the epigenetic and gene expression profiles of SRC tumors. Our analyses revealed that SRC tumors were hypomethylated compared to control tissue, and that tumors at each transplantation site had a unique expression profile. Subsequent functional analysis of differentially expressed genes, albeit preliminary, provided some insight into the role that thymosin-β4, c-fos, and CTGF may play in chondrosarcoma development and progression.ConclusionThis report describes the first global molecular characterization of the SRC model, and it demonstrates that the tumor microenvironment can induce epigenetic alterations and changes in gene expression in the SRC tumors. We documented changes in gene expression that accompany changes in tumor phenotype, and these gene expression changes provide insight into the pathways that may play a role in the development and progression of chondrosarcoma. Furthermore, specific functional analysis indicates that thymosin-β4 may have a role in chondrosarcoma metastasis.


Gene | 2014

Onset of rosette formation during spontaneous neural differentiation of hESC and hiPSC colonies.

Sergey Malchenko; Jianping Xie; Maria F. Bonaldo; Elio F. Vanin; Bula J. Bhattacharyya; Abdelhak Belmadani; Guifa Xi; Vasily Galat; William Goossens; Richard E.B. Seftor; Tadanori Tomita; John D. Crispino; Richard J. Miller; Martha C. Bohn; Mary J.C. Hendrix; Marcelo B. Soares

In vitro neural differentiation of human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) is an advantageous system for studying early neural development. The process of early neural differentiation in hESCs begins by initiation of primitive neuroectoderm, which is manifested by rosette formation, with consecutive differentiation into neural progenitors and early glial-like cells. In this study, we examined the involvement of early neural markers - OTX2, PAX6, Sox1, Nestin, NR2F1, NR2F2, and IRX2 - in the onset of rosette formation, during spontaneous neural differentiation of hESC and human induced pluripotent stem cell (hiPSC) colonies. This is in contrast to the conventional way of studying rosette formation, which involves induction of neuronal differentiation and the utilization of embryoid bodies. Here we show that OTX2 is highly expressed at the onset of rosette formation, when rosettes comprise no more than 3-5 cells, and that its expression precedes that of established markers of early neuronal differentiation. Importantly, the rise of OTX2 expression in these cells coincides with the down-regulation of the pluripotency marker OCT4. Lastly, we show that cells derived from rosettes that emerge during spontaneous differentiation of hESCs or hiPSCs are capable of differentiating into dopaminergic neurons in vitro, and into mature-appearing pyramidal and serotonergic neurons weeks after being injected into the motor cortex of NOD-SCID mice.


Sarcoma | 2012

Putative Multifunctional Signature of Lung Metastases in Dedifferentiated Chondrosarcoma

Sergey Malchenko; Elisabeth A. Seftor; Yuri Nikolsky; Susan L. Hasegawa; Sean Kuo; Jeff W. Stevens; Stas Poyarkov; Tatiana Nikolskaya; Tamara A. Kucaba; Min Wang; Hakim Abdulkawy; Thomas L. Casavant; Jose A. Morcuende; Joseph A. Buckwalter; Raymond J. Hohl; Barry R. DeYoung; Kemp H. Kernstine; Maria F. Bonaldo; Mary J.C. Hendrix; Marcelo B. Soares; Vera Soares

Chondrosarcomas are among the most malignant skeletal tumors. Dedifferentiated chondrosarcoma is a highly aggressive subtype of chondrosarcoma, with lung metastases developing within a few months of diagnosis in 90% of patients. In this paper we performed comparative analyses of the transcriptomes of five individual metastatic lung lesions that were surgically resected from a patient with dedifferentiated chondrosarcoma. We document for the first time a high heterogeneity of gene expression profiles among the individual lung metastases. Moreover, we reveal a signature of “multifunctional” genes that are expressed in all metastatic lung lesions. Also, for the first time, we document the occurrence of massive macrophage infiltration in dedifferentiated chondrosarcoma lung metastases.


PLOS ONE | 2015

A Mouse Model of Human Primitive Neuroectodermal Tumors Resulting from Microenvironmentally-Driven Malignant Transformation of Orthotopically Transplanted Radial Glial Cells

Sergey Malchenko; Simone Treiger Sredni; Hitoshi Hashimoto; Atsushi Kasai; Kazuki Nagayasu; Jianping Xie; Naira V. Margaryan; Kaoru Seiriki; Rishi Lulla; Richard E.B. Seftor; Lauren M. Pachman; Herbert Y. Meltzer; Mary J.C. Hendrix; Marcelo B. Soares

There is growing evidence and a consensus in the field that most pediatric brain tumors originate from stem cells, of which radial glial cells constitute a subtype. Here we show that orthotopic transplantation of human radial glial (RG) cells to the subventricular zone of the 3rd ventricle - but not to other transplantation sites - of the brain in immunocompromised NOD-SCID mice, gives rise to tumors that have the hallmarks of CNS primitive neuroectodermal tumors (PNETs). The resulting mouse model strikingly recapitulates the phenotype of PNETs. Importantly, the observed tumorigenic transformation was accompanied by aspects of an epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT)-like process. It is also noteworthy that the tumors are highly invasive, and that they effectively recruit mouse endothelial cells for angiogenesis. These results are significant for several reasons. First, they show that malignant transformation of radial glial cells can occur in the absence of specific mutations or inherited genomic alterations. Second, they demonstrate that the same radial glial cells may either give rise to brain tumors or differentiate normally depending upon the microenvironment of the specific region of the brain to which the cells are transplanted. In addition to providing a prospect for drug screening and development of new therapeutic strategies, the resulting mouse model of PNETs offers an unprecedented opportunity to identify the cancer driving molecular alterations and the microenvironmental factors that are responsible for committing otherwise normal radial glial cells to a malignant phenotype.


Oncotarget | 2018

Characterization of brain tumor initiating cells isolated from an animal model of CNS primitive neuroectodermal tumors

Sergey Malchenko; Simone Treiger Sredni; Jerusha Boyineni; Yingtao Bi; Naira V. Margaryan; Maheedhara R. Guda; Yulia Kostenko; Tadanori Tomita; Ramana V. Davuluri; Kiran Kumar Velpula; Mary J.C. Hendrix; Marcelo B. Soares

CNS Primitive Neuroectodermal tumors (CNS-PNETs) are members of the embryonal family of malignant childhood brain tumors, which remain refractory to current therapeutic treatments. Current paradigm of brain tumorigenesis implicates brain tumor-initiating cells (BTIC) in the onset of tumorigenesis and tumor maintenance. However, despite their significance, there is currently no comprehensive characterization of CNS-PNETs BTICs. Recently, we described an animal model of CNS-PNET generated by orthotopic transplantation of human Radial Glial (RG) cells - the progenitor cells for adult neural stem cells (NSC) - into NOD-SCID mice brain and proposed that BTICs may play a role in the maintenance of these tumors. Here we report the characterization of BTIC lines derived from this CNS-PNET animal model. BTIC’s orthotopic transplantation generated highly aggressive tumors also characterized as CNS-PNETs. The BTICs have the hallmarks of NSCs as they demonstrate self-renewing capacity and have the ability to differentiate into astrocytes and early migrating neurons. Moreover, the cells demonstrate aberrant accumulation of wild type tumor-suppressor protein p53, indicating its functional inactivation, highly up-regulated levels of onco-protein cMYC and the BTIC marker OCT3/4, along with metabolic switch to glycolysis - suggesting that these changes occurred in the early stages of tumorigenesis. Furthermore, based on RNA- and DNA-seq data, the BTICs did not acquire any transcriptome-changing genomic alterations indicating that the onset of tumorigenesis may be epigenetically driven. The study of these BTIC self-renewing cells in our model may enable uncovering the molecular alterations that are responsible for the onset and maintenance of the malignant PNET phenotype.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Stabilization of HIF-1α and HIF-2α, upregulation of MYCC and accumulation of stabilized p53 constitute hallmarks of CNS-PNET animal model

Sergey Malchenko; Simone Treiger Sredni; Yingtao Bi; Naira V. Margaryan; Jerusha Boyineni; Indra Mohanam; Tadanori Tomita; Ramana V. Davuluri; Marcelo B. Soares

Recently, we described a new animal model of CNS primitive neuroectodermal tumors (CNS-PNET), which was generated by orthotopic transplantation of human Radial Glial (RG) cells into NOD-SCID mice’s brain sub-ventricular zone. In the current study we conducted comprehensive RNA-Seq analyses to gain insights on the mechanisms underlying tumorigenesis in this mouse model of CNS-PNET. Here we show that the RNA-Seq profiles derived from these tumors cluster with those reported for patients’ PNETs. Moreover, we found that (i) stabilization of HIF-1α and HIF-2α, which are involved in mediation of the hypoxic responses in the majority of cell types, (ii) up-regulation of MYCC, a key onco-protein whose dysregulation occurs in ~70% of human tumors, and (iii) accumulation of stabilized p53, which is commonly altered in human cancers, constitute hallmarks of our tumor model, and might represent the basis for CNS-PNET tumorigenesis in this model. We discuss the possibility that these three events might be interconnected. These results indicate that our model may prove invaluable to uncover the molecular events leading to MYCC and TP53 alterations, which would be of broader interest considering their relevance to many human malignancies. Lastly, this mouse model might prove useful for drug screening targeting MYCC and related members of its protein interaction network.


Stem Cells and Development | 2012

A Model of Early Human Embryonic Stem Cell Differentiation Reveals Inter- and Intracellular Changes on Transition to Squamous Epithelium

Vasiliy Galat; Sergey Malchenko; Yekaterina Galat; Alex Ishkin; Yuri Nikolsky; Steven T. Kosak; Bento Marcelo Soares; Philip M. Iannaccone; John D. Crispino; Mary J.C. Hendrix


The Iowa orthopaedic journal | 2002

Identification and initial characterization of 6,000 expressed sequenced tags (ESTs) from rat normal-growing cartilage and swarm rat chondrosarcoma cDNA libraries.

Jose A. Morcuende; Xiao Dong Huang; Jeff W. Stevens; Tammy A Kucaba; Bart Brown; Hakeem Abdulkawy; Todd E. Scheetz; Sergey Malchenko; Fatima Bonaldo; Thomas L. Casavant; Bento Soares


PLOS ONE | 2015

Malchenko S, Treiger Sredni S, Hashimoto H, Kasai A, Nagayasu K, Xie J, Margaryan N, Seiriki K, Lulla R, Pachman LM, Meltzer HY., J.C. M, Soares MB. Microenvironment triggers an epithelial-mesenchymal transition-like process in mouse model of primitive neuroectodermal tumors. PLoS One. 2015 Mar 31;10(3):e012170. PMID: 25826270

Sergey Malchenko; Ss Treiger; Hitoshi Hashimoto; Atsushi Kasai; Kazuki Nagayasu; Jianping Xie; Naira V. Margaryan; Kaoru Seiriki; Rishi Lulla; Lauren M. Pachman; Herbert Y. Meltzer; Marcelo B. Soares

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Elio F. Vanin

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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Jianping Xie

Northwestern University

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