Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Shan Man is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Shan Man.


Science | 2006

Therapy-Induced Acute Recruitment of Circulating Endothelial Progenitor Cells to Tumors

Yuval Shaked; Alessia Ciarrocchi; Marcela Franco; Christina R. Lee; Shan Man; Alison M. Cheung; Daniel J. Hicklin; David D. Chaplin; F. Stuart Foster; Robert Benezra; Robert S. Kerbel

The contribution of bone marrow–derived circulating endothelial progenitor cells (CEPs) to tumor angiogenesis has been controversial, primarily because of their low numbers in blood vessels of untreated tumors. We show that treatment of tumor-bearing mice with vascular disrupting agents (VDAs) leads to an acute mobilization of CEPs, which home to the viable tumor rim that characteristically remains after such therapy. Disruption of this CEP spike by antiangiogenic drugs or by genetic manipulation resulted in marked reductions in tumor rim size and blood flow as well as enhanced VDA antitumor activity. These findings also provide a mechanistic rationale for the enhanced efficacy of VDAs when combined with antiangiogenic drugs.


Cancer Cell | 2008

Rapid chemotherapy-induced acute endothelial progenitor cell mobilization: implications for antiangiogenic drugs as chemosensitizing agents

Yuval Shaked; Erik Henke; Jeanine M.L. Roodhart; Patrizia Mancuso; Marlies H.G. Langenberg; Marco Colleoni; Laura G.M. Daenen; Shan Man; Ping Xu; Urban Emmenegger; Terence Tang; Zhenping Zhu; Larry Witte; Robert M. Strieter; Francesco Bertolini; Emile E. Voest; Robert Benezra; Robert S. Kerbel

Several hypotheses have been proposed to explain how antiangiogenic drugs enhance the treatment efficacy of cytotoxic chemotherapy, including impairing the ability of chemotherapy-responsive tumors to regrow after therapy. With respect to the latter, we show that certain chemotherapy drugs, e.g., paclitaxel, can rapidly induce proangiogenic bone marrow-derived circulating endothelial progenitor (CEP) mobilization and subsequent tumor homing, whereas others, e.g., gemcitabine, do not. Acute CEP mobilization was mediated, at least in part, by systemic induction of SDF-1alpha and could be prevented by various procedures such as treatment with anti-VEGFR2 blocking antibodies or paclitaxel treatment in CEP-deficient Id mutant mice, both of which resulted in enhanced antitumor effects mediated by paclitaxel, but not by gemcitabine.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

Thrombospondin 1, a mediator of the antiangiogenic effects of low-dose metronomic chemotherapy

Guido Bocci; Giulio Francia; Shan Man; Jack Lawler; Robert S. Kerbel

Chemotherapeutic drugs chronically administered to tumor-bearing mice, using a frequent schedule at doses substantially lower than the maximum tolerated dose (MTD) (i.e., metronomic dosing), can cause sustained and potent antiangiogenic effects by targeting the endothelial cells of newly growing tumor blood vessels. These effects appear to occur in the absence of an increase in the severity of side effects caused by destruction of other cell types normally sensitive to MTD chemotherapy, suggesting a marked and selective sensitivity of activated endothelial cells, the basis of which is unknown. Here we report that protracted exposure of endothelial cells in vitro to low concentrations of several different anticancer agents, including microtubule inhibitors and an alkylating agent, caused marked induction of gene and protein expression of TSP-1, a potent and endothelial-specific inhibitor of angiogenesis. Increases in circulating TSP-1 were also detected in the plasma of human tumor-bearing severe combined immunodeficient mice treated with metronomic low-dose cyclophosphamide. Most importantly, the antiangiogenic and antitumor effects of low-dose continuous cyclophosphamide were lost in TSP-1-null C57BL/6 mice, whereas, in contrast, these effects were retained by using a MTD schedule of the same drug. Taken together, the results implicate TSP-1 as a secondary mediator of the antiangiogenic effects of at least some low-dose metronomic chemotherapy regimens.


Cancer Research | 2007

Anticancer Therapies Combining Antiangiogenic and Tumor Cell Cytotoxic Effects Reduce the Tumor Stem-Like Cell Fraction in Glioma Xenograft Tumors

Chris Folkins; Shan Man; Ping Xu; Yuval Shaked; Daniel J. Hicklin; Robert S. Kerbel

Vascular endothelial cells have been identified as a critical component of the neural stem cell niche, raising the possibility that brain tumor stem-like cells (TSLC) may also rely on signaling interactions with nearby tumor vasculature to maintain their stem-like state. The disruption of such a TSLC vascular niche by an antiangiogenic therapy could result in loss of stemness characteristics associated with intrinsic drug resistance and, thus, preferentially sensitize TSLC to the effects of chemotherapy. Considering these possibilities, we investigated the impact of antiangiogenic anticancer therapy on the TSLC fraction of glioma tumors. Athymic nude mice bearing s.c. tumor xenografts of the C6 rat glioma cell line were treated with either a targeted antiangiogenic agent, antiangiogenic schedules of low-dose metronomic chemotherapy, combination therapies of antiangiogenic agents and chemotherapy, or, for the purpose of comparison, a conventional cytotoxic schedule of maximum tolerated dose chemotherapy using cyclophosphamide. Targeted antiangiogenic therapy or cytotoxic chemotherapy did not reduce the fraction of tumor sphere-forming units (SFU) in the tumor, whereas all treatment groups that combined both antiangiogenic and cytotoxic drug effects caused a significant reduction in SFU. This work highlights the possibility that selective eradication of TSLC may be achieved by targeting the tumor microenvironment (and potentially a supportive TSLC niche) rather than the TSLC directly. Furthermore, this work suggests a possible novel effect of antiangiogenic therapy, namely, as a chemosensitizer of TSLC, and thus represents a possible new mechanism to explain the ability of antiangiogenic therapy to enhance the efficacy of chemotherapy.


Nature Reviews Cancer | 2011

Mouse models of advanced spontaneous metastasis for experimental therapeutics

Giulio Francia; William Cruz-Munoz; Shan Man; Ping Xu; Robert S. Kerbel

An enduring problem in cancer research is the failure to reproduce highly encouraging preclinical therapeutic findings using transplanted or spontaneous primary tumours in mice in clinical trials of patients with advanced metastatic disease. There are several reasons for this, including the failure to model established, visceral metastatic disease. We therefore developed various models of aggressive multi-organ spontaneous metastasis after surgical resection of orthotopically transplanted human tumour xenografts. In this Opinion article we provide a personal perspective summarizing the prospect of their increased clinical relevance. This includes the reduced efficacy of certain targeted anticancer drugs, the late emergence of spontaneous brain metastases and the clinical trial results evaluating a highly effective therapeutic strategy previously tested using such models.


Cancer Research | 2009

Glioma tumor stem-like cells promote tumor angiogenesis and vasculogenesis via vascular endothelial growth factor and stromal-derived factor 1.

Chris Folkins; Yuval Shaked; Shan Man; Terence Tang; Christina R. Lee; Zhenping Zhu; Robert M. Hoffman; Robert S. Kerbel

Cancer stem cells (CSC) are predicted to be critical drivers of tumor progression due to their self-renewal capacity and limitless proliferative potential. An emerging area of research suggests that CSC may also support tumor progression by promoting tumor angiogenesis. To investigate how CSC contribute to tumor vascular development, we used an approach comparing tumor xenografts of the C6 glioma cell line containing either a low or a high fraction of CSC. Compared with CSC-low tumors, CSC-high tumors exhibited increased microvessel density and blood perfusion and induced increased mobilization and tumor recruitment of bone marrow-derived endothelial progenitor cells (EPC). CSC-high C6 cell cultures also induced higher levels of endothelial cell proliferation and tubule organization in vitro compared with CSC-low cultures. CSC-high cultures and tumors expressed increased levels of the proangiogenic factors vascular endothelial growth factor and stromal-derived factor 1, and when signaling by either factor was blocked, all aspects of angiogenesis observed in CSC-high cultures and tumors, including microvessel density, perfusion, EPC mobilization/recruitment, and stimulation of endothelial cell activity, were reduced to levels comparable with those observed in CSC-low cultures/tumors. These results suggest that CSC contribute to tumor angiogenesis by promoting both local endothelial cell activity and systemic angiogenic processes involving bone marrow-derived EPC in a vascular endothelial growth factor-dependent and stromal-derived factor 1-dependent manner.


Cancer and Metastasis Reviews | 2001

Possible mechanisms of acquired resistance to anti-angiogenic drugs: implications for the use of combination therapy approaches.

Robert S. Kerbel; Joanne Yu; Jennifer Tran; Shan Man; Alicia Viloria-Petit; Giannoula Klement; Brenda L. Coomber; Janusz Rak

The ultimate target of anti-angiogenic drugs is the genetically stable, activated endothelial cell of a newly forming tumor blood vessel, rather than the genetically unstable tumor cell population per se. This led to the notion that acquired resistance to such drugs may not develop as readily, if at all. While there is some evidence that this lack of resistance development may be the case for some direct-acting angiogenesis inhibitors, it is becoming apparent that resistance can develop over time to many types of angiogenesis inhibitors including, possibly, some direct inhibitors, especially when used as monotherapies. Possible mechanisms for such acquired or induced resistance include: (i) redundancy of pro-angiogenic growth factors when the drug used targets a single such growth factor or its cognate endothelial cell-associated receptor tyrosine kinase; (ii) the anti-apoptotic/pro-survival function of growth factors such as VEGF, which, in high local concentrations, can antagonize the pro-apoptotic effects of various angiogenesis inhibitors; (iii) epigenetic, transient upregulation, or induction, of various anti-apoptotic effector molecules in host-endothelial cells; and (iv) heterogeneous vascular dependence of tumor cell populations. It is suggested that long-term disease control with anti-angiogenic drugs can be best achieved by judicious combination therapy. In this regard, the great molecular diversity of anti-angiogenic drug targets, in contrast to chemotherapy, makes this a particularly attractive therapeutic option, especially when approved, commercially available drugs considered to have anti-angiogenic effects are used in such combination treatment strategies.


Cancer Research | 2004

Increased plasma vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) as a surrogate marker for optimal therapeutic dosing of VEGF receptor-2 monoclonal antibodies

Guido Bocci; Shan Man; Shane K. Green; Giulio Francia; John M.L. Ebos; Jeanne du Manoir; Adina Weinerman; Urban Emmenegger; Li Ma; Philip E. Thorpe; Andrew M. Davidoff; James Huber; Daniel J. Hicklin; Robert S. Kerbel

A major obstacle compromising the successful application of many of the new targeted anticancer drugs, including angiogenesis inhibitors, is the empiricism associated with determining an effective biological/therapeutic dose because many of these drugs express optimum therapeutic activity below the maximum tolerated dose, if such a dose can be defined. Hence, surrogate markers are needed to help determine optimal dosing. Here we describe such a molecular marker, increased plasma levels of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), in normal or tumor-bearing mice that received injections of an anti-VEGF receptor (VEGFR)-2 monoclonal antibody, such as DC101. Rapid increases of mouse VEGF (e.g., within 24 hours) up to 1 order of magnitude were observed after single injections of DC101 in non–tumor-bearing severe combined immunodeficient or nude mice; similar increases in human plasma VEGF were detected in human tumor-bearing mice. RAFL-1, another anti-VEGFR-2 antibody, also caused a significant increase in plasma VEGF. In contrast, increases in mouse VEGF levels were not seen when small molecule VEGFR-2 inhibitors were tested in normal mice. Most importantly, the increases in plasma VEGF were induced in a dose-dependent manner, with the maximum values peaking when doses previously determined to be optimally therapeutic were used. Plasma VEGF should be considered as a possible surrogate pharmacodynamic marker for determining the optimal biological dose of antibody drugs that block VEGFR-2 (KDR) activity in a clinical setting.


Cancer Research | 2006

Targeted anti-vascular endothelial growth factor receptor-2 therapy leads to short-term and long-term impairment of vascular function and increase in tumor hypoxia.

Marcela Franco; Shan Man; Limor Chen; Urban Emmenegger; Yuval Shaked; Alison Cheung; Allison S. Brown; Daniel J. Hicklin; F. Stuart Foster; Robert S. Kerbel

Because antiangiogenic therapies inhibit the growth of new tumor-associated blood vessels, as well as prune newly formed vasculature, they would be expected to reduce the supply of oxygen and thus increase tumor hypoxia. However, it is not clear if antiangiogenic treatments lead only to consistent and sustained increases in hypoxia, or transient decreases in tumor hypoxia along with periods of increased hypoxia. We undertook a detailed analysis of an orthotopically transplanted human breast carcinoma (MDA-MB-231) over a 3-week treatment period using DC101, an anti-vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 2 antibody. We observed consistent reductions in microvascular density, blood flow (measured by high-frequency micro-ultrasound), and perfusion. These effects resulted in an increase in the hypoxic tumor fraction, measured with an exogenous marker, pimonidazole, concurrent with an elevation in hypoxia-inducible factor-1alpha expression, an endogenous marker. The increase in tumor hypoxia was evident within 5 days and remained so throughout the entire course of treatment. Vascular perfusion and flow were impaired at days 2, 5, 7, 8, 14, and 21 after the first injection, but not at 4 hours. A modest increase in the vessel maturation index was detected after the 3-week treatment period, but this was not accompanied by an improvement in vascular function. These results suggest that sustained hypoxia and impairment of vascular function can be two consistent consequences of antiangiogenic drug treatment. The implications of the results are discussed, particularly with respect to how they relate to different theories for the counterintuitive chemosensitizing effects of antiangiogenic drugs, even when hypoxia is increased.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2006

Strategies for Delaying or Treating In vivo Acquired Resistance to Trastuzumab in Human Breast Cancer Xenografts

Jeanne du Manoir; Giulio Francia; Shan Man; Miriam E. Mossoba; Jeffrey A. Medin; Alicia Viloria-Petit; Daniel J. Hicklin; Urban Emmenegger; Robert S. Kerbel

Purpose: Acquired resistance to trastuzumab (Herceptin) is common in patients whose breast cancers show an initial response to the drug. The basis of this acquired resistance is unknown, hampering strategies to delay or treat such acquired resistance, due in part to the relative lack of appropriate in vivo tumorigenic models. Experimental Design: We derived an erbB-2–positive variant called 231-H2N, obtained by gene transfection from the highly tumorigenic erbB-2/HER2–negative human breast cancer cell line, MDA-MB-231. Unlike MDA-MB-231, the 231-H2N variants was sensitive to trastuzumab both in vitro and especially in vivo, thus allowing selection of variant resistant to drug treatment in the latter situation after showing an initial response. Results: The growth of established orthotopic tumors in severe combined immunodeficient mice was blocked for 1 month by trastuzumab, after which rapid growth resumed. These relapsing tumors were found to maintain resistance to trastuzumab, both in vitro and in vivo. We evaluated various therapeutic strategies for two purposes: (a) to delay such tumor relapses or (b) to treat acquired trastuzumab resistance once it has occurred. With respect to the former, a daily oral low-dose metronomic cyclophosphamide regimen was found to be particularly effective. With respect to the latter, an anti–epidermal growth factor receptor antibody (cetuximab) was effective as was the anti–vascular endothelial growth factor (anti-VEGF) antibody bevacizumab, which was likely related to elevated levels of VEGF detected in trastuzumab-resistant tumors. Conclusions: Our results provide a possible additional rationale for combined biological therapy using drugs that target both erbB-2/HER2 and VEGF and also suggest the potential value of combining less toxic metronomic chemotherapy regimens not only with targeted antiangiogenic agents but also with other types of drug such as trastuzumab.

Collaboration


Dive into the Shan Man's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Robert S. Kerbel

Sunnybrook Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ping Xu

Sunnybrook Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yuval Shaked

Technion – Israel Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Urban Emmenegger

Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Christina R. Lee

Sunnybrook Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

William Cruz-Munoz

Sunnybrook Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Francesco Bertolini

European Institute of Oncology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge