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Dive into the research topics where Shelley B. Hoover is active.

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Featured researches published by Shelley B. Hoover.


Journal of Immunology | 2013

B Cell–Specific Deficiencies in mTOR Limit Humoral Immune Responses

Shuling Zhang; Margaret Pruitt; Dena Tran; Wendy Du Bois; Ke Zhang; Rushi Patel; Shelley B. Hoover; R. Mark Simpson; John K. Simmons; Joy Gary; Clifford M. Snapper; Rafael Casellas; Beverly A. Mock

Generation of high-affinity Abs in response to Ags/infectious agents is essential for developing long-lasting immune responses. B cell maturation and Ab responses to Ag stimulation require Ig somatic hypermutation (SHM) and class-switch recombination (CSR) for high-affinity responses. Upon immunization with either the model Ag 4-hydroxy-3-nitrophenylacetyl hapten (NP) conjugated to chicken γ globulin lysine (NP-CGG) or heat-killed Streptococcus pneumoniae capsular type 14 protein (Pn14), knock-in (KI) mice hypomorphic for mTOR function had a decreased ability to form germinal centers, develop high-affinity anti-NP–specific or anti-Pn14–specific Abs, and perform SHM/CSR. Hypomorphic mTOR mice also had a high mortality (40%) compared with wild-type (WT) (0%) littermates and had lower pneumococcal surface protein A–specific Ab titers when immunized and challenged with live S. pneumoniae infection. Mice with mTOR deleted in their B cell lineage (knockout [KO]) also produced fewer splenic germinal centers and decreased high-affinity Ab responses to NP-CGG than did their WT littermates. CSR rates were lower in mTOR KI and KO mice, and pharmacologic inhibition of mTOR in WT B cells resulted in decreased rates of ex vivo CSR. RNA and protein levels of activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID), a protein essential for SHM and CSR, were lower in B cells from both KI and B cell–specific KO mice, concomitant with increases in phosphorylated AKT and FOXO1. Rescue experiments increasing AID expression in KI B cells restored CSR levels to those in WT B cells. Thus, mTOR plays an important immunoregulatory role in the germinal center, at least partially through AID signaling, in generating high-affinity Abs.


Pigment Cell & Melanoma Research | 2014

Sporadic naturally occurring melanoma in dogs as a preclinical model for human melanoma

R. Mark Simpson; Boris C. Bastian; Helen Michael; Joshua D. Webster; Manju L. Prasad; Catherine M. Conway; Victor M. Prieto; Joy Gary; Michael H. Goldschmidt; D. Glen Esplin; R. C. Smedley; Adriano Piris; Donald J. Meuten; Matti Kiupel; Chyi-Chia Richard Lee; Jerrold M. Ward; Jennifer E. Dwyer; Barbara J. Davis; Miriam R. Anver; Alfredo A. Molinolo; Shelley B. Hoover; Jaime Rodriguez-Canales; Stephen M. Hewitt

Melanoma represents a significant malignancy in humans and dogs. Different from genetically engineered models, sporadic canine melanocytic neoplasms share several characteristics with human disease that could make dogs a more relevant preclinical model. Canine melanomas rarely arise in sun‐exposed sites. Most occur in the oral cavity, with a subset having intra‐epithelial malignant melanocytes mimicking the in situ component of human mucosal melanoma. The spectrum of canine melanocytic neoplasia includes benign lesions with some analogy to nevi, as well as invasive primary melanoma, and widespread metastasis. Growing evidence of distinct subtypes in humans, differing in somatic and predisposing germ‐line genetic alterations, cell of origin, epidemiology, relationship to ultraviolet radiation and progression from benign to malignant tumors, may also exist in dogs. Canine and human mucosal melanomas appear to harbor BRAF, NRAS, and c‐kit mutations uncommonly, compared with human cutaneous melanomas, although both species share AKT and MAPK signaling activation. We conclude that there is significant overlap in the clinical and histopathological features of canine and human mucosal melanomas. This represents opportunity to explore canine oral cavity melanoma as a preclinical model.


PLOS ONE | 2009

Serum S100A6 Concentration Predicts Peritoneal Tumor Burden in Mice with Epithelial Ovarian Cancer and Is Associated with Advanced Stage in Patients

Bih Rong Wei; Shelley B. Hoover; Mark M. Ross; Weidong Zhou; Francesco Meani; Jeniffer B. Edwards; Elizabeth Spehalski; John I. Risinger; W. Gregory Alvord; Octavio A. Quiñones; Claudio Belluco; Luca Martella; Elio Campagnutta; Antonella Ravaggi; Rei Ming Dai; Paul Goldsmith; Kevin D. Woolard; Sergio Pecorelli; Lance A. Liotta; Emanuel F. Petricoin; R. Mark Simpson

Background Ovarian cancer is the 5th leading cause of cancer related deaths in women. Five-year survival rates for early stage disease are greater than 94%, however most women are diagnosed in advanced stage with 5 year survival less than 28%. Improved means for early detection and reliable patient monitoring are needed to increase survival. Methodology and Principal Findings Applying mass spectrometry-based proteomics, we sought to elucidate an unanswered biomarker research question regarding ability to determine tumor burden detectable by an ovarian cancer biomarker protein emanating directly from the tumor cells. Since aggressive serous epithelial ovarian cancers account for most mortality, a xenograft model using human SKOV-3 serous ovarian cancer cells was established to model progression to disseminated carcinomatosis. Using a method for low molecular weight protein enrichment, followed by liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry analysis, a human-specific peptide sequence of S100A6 was identified in sera from mice with advanced-stage experimental ovarian carcinoma. S100A6 expression was documented in cancer xenografts as well as from ovarian cancer patient tissues. Longitudinal study revealed that serum S100A6 concentration is directly related to tumor burden predictions from an inverse regression calibration analysis of data obtained from a detergent-supplemented antigen capture immunoassay and whole-animal bioluminescent optical imaging. The result from the animal model was confirmed in human clinical material as S100A6 was found to be significantly elevated in the sera from women with advanced stage ovarian cancer compared to those with early stage disease. Conclusions S100A6 is expressed in ovarian and other cancer tissues, but has not been documented previously in ovarian cancer disease sera. S100A6 is found in serum in concentrations that correlate with experimental tumor burden and with clinical disease stage. The data signify that S100A6 may prove useful in detecting and/or monitoring ovarian cancer, when used in concert with other biomarkers.


Journal of Pathology Informatics | 2012

Investigation into diagnostic agreement using automated computer-assisted histopathology pattern recognition image analysis

Joshua D. Webster; Aleksandra M. Michalowski; Jennifer E. Dwyer; Kara N. Corps; Bih-Rong Wei; Tarja Juopperi; Shelley B. Hoover; R. Mark Simpson

The extent to which histopathology pattern recognition image analysis (PRIA) agrees with microscopic assessment has not been established. Thus, a commercial PRIA platform was evaluated in two applications using whole-slide images. Substantial agreement, lacking significant constant or proportional errors, between PRIA and manual morphometric image segmentation was obtained for pulmonary metastatic cancer areas (Passing/Bablok regression). Bland-Altman analysis indicated heteroscedastic measurements and tendency toward increasing variance with increasing tumor burden, but no significant trend in mean bias. The average between-methods percent tumor content difference was -0.64. Analysis of between-methods measurement differences relative to the percent tumor magnitude revealed that method disagreement had an impact primarily in the smallest measurements (tumor burden <3%). Regression-based 95% limits of agreement indicated substantial agreement for method interchangeability. Repeated measures revealed concordance correlation of >0.988, indicating high reproducibility for both methods, yet PRIA reproducibility was superior (C.V.: PRIA = 7.4, manual = 17.1). Evaluation of PRIA on morphologically complex teratomas led to diagnostic agreement with pathologist assessments of pluripotency on subsets of teratomas. Accommodation of the diversity of teratoma histologic features frequently resulted in detrimental trade-offs, increasing PRIA error elsewhere in images. PRIA error was nonrandom and influenced by variations in histomorphology. File-size limitations encountered while training algorithms and consequences of spectral image processing dominance contributed to diagnostic inaccuracies experienced for some teratomas. PRIA appeared better suited for tissues with limited phenotypic diversity. Technical improvements may enhance diagnostic agreement, and consistent pathologist input will benefit further development and application of PRIA.


BMC Developmental Biology | 2014

Detection of differential fetal and adult expression of chloride intracellular channel 4 (CLIC4) protein by analysis of a green fluorescent protein knock-in mouse line

Vc Padmakumar; Katelyn E. Masiuk; Dror Luger; Christina Lee; Vincenzo Coppola; Lino Tessarollo; Shelley B. Hoover; Irina Karavanova; Andres Buonanno; R. Mark Simpson; Stuart H. Yuspa

BackgroundChloride Intracellular Channel 4 (CLIC4) is one of seven members in the closely related CLIC protein family. CLIC4 is involved in multiple cellular processes including apoptosis, cellular differentiation, inflammation and endothelial tubulogenesis. Despite over a decade of research, no comprehensive in situ expression analysis of CLIC4 in a living organism has been reported. In order to fulfill this goal, we generated a knock-in mouse to express Green Fluorescent Protein (GFP) from the CLIC4 locus, thus substituting the GFP coding region for CLIC4. We used GFP protein expression to eliminate cross reaction with other CLIC family members.ResultsWe analyzed CLIC4 expression during embryonic development and adult organs. During mid and late gestation, CLIC4 expression is modulated particularly in fetal brain, heart, thymus, liver and kidney as well as in developing brown adipose tissue and stratifying epidermis. In the adult mouse, CLIC4 is highly expressed globally in vascular endothelial cells as well as in liver, lung alveolar septae, pancreatic acini, spermatogonia, renal proximal tubules, cardiomyocytes and thymic epithelial cells. Neural expression included axonal tracks, olfactory bulb, Purkinje cell layer and dentate gyrus. Renal CLIC4 expression was most pronounced in proximal tubules, although altered renal function was not detected in the absence of CLIC4. Myeloid cells and B cells of the spleen are rich in CLIC4 expression as are CD4 and CD8 positive T cells.ConclusionsIn a comprehensive study detailing CLIC4 expression in situ in a mouse model that excludes cross reaction with other family members, we were able to document previously unreported expression for CLIC4 in developing fetus, particularly the brain. In addition, compartmentalized expression of CLIC4 in specific adult tissues and cells provides a focus to explore potential functions of this protein not addressed previously.


Molecular Carcinogenesis | 2013

Normal viability of Kai1/Cd82 deficient mice

John I. Risinger; Mary C. Custer; Lionel Feigenbaum; R. Mark Simpson; Shelley B. Hoover; Joshua D. Webster; Gadisetti V.R. Chandramouli; Lino Tessarollo; J. Carl Barrett

The KAI1/CD82 tetraspanin is a widely expressed cell surface molecule thought to organize diverse cellular signaling processes. KAI1/CD82 suppresses metastasis but not tumorigenicity, establishing it as one of a class of metastasis suppressor genes. In order to further assess its functions, we have characterized the phenotypic properties of Kai1/Cd82 deleted mice, including viability, fertility, lymphocyte composition, blood chemistry and tissue histopathology, and of their wild‐type and heterozygote littermates. Interestingly, Kai1/Cd82−/− showed no obvious genotype associated defects in any of these processes and displayed no genotype associated histopathologic abnormalities after 12 or 18 months of life. Expression profiles of non‐immortal, wild‐type and Kai1/Cd82−/− mouse embryo fibroblast (MEFs) indicated distinct sex‐specific and genotype‐specific profiles. These data identify 191 and 1,271 differentially expressed transcripts (by twofold at P < 0.01) based on Kai1/CD82 genotype status in female and male MEFs, respectively. Differentially expressed genes in male MEFs were surprisingly enriched for cell division related processes, suggesting that Kai1/Cd82 may functionally affect these processes. This suggests that Kai/Cd82 has an unappreciated role in the early establishment of proliferation and division when challenged with a new environment that might play a role in adaptability to new metastatic sites.


Science Signaling | 2016

MET signaling in keratinocytes activates EGFR and initiates squamous carcinogenesis

Christophe Cataisson; Aleksandra M. Michalowski; Kelly Shibuya; Andrew Ryscavage; Mary Klosterman; Lisa Wright; Wendy Dubois; Fan Liu; Anne Zhuang; Kameron B. Rodrigues; Shelley B. Hoover; Jennifer E. Dwyer; Mark Simpson; Glenn Merlino; Stuart H. Yuspa

The receptor tyrosine kinase MET and oncogenic RAS both stimulate EGFR signaling to initiate skin cancer. MET and RAS converge on EGFR in skin cancer Whereas a subset of cutaneous melanomas harbor oncogenic mutations in N-RAS that lead to out-of-control signaling through this proliferative pathway, RAS mutations are infrequent in cutaneous squamous cell carcinomas (SCC). Cataisson et al. found that cutaneous SCC was associated with high amounts of hepatocyte growth factor (HGF), which activates the receptor MET. In transgenic mouse models, HGF and oncogenic RAS each activated a common downstream transcriptional program in skin cells, resulting in stimulation of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) pathway through the production and secretion of its ligands. Furthermore, established squamous tumors in mice regressed when this activation of or signaling by this EGFR pathway was blocked. In some human SCCs, high HGF and activated MET correlated with an EGFR-activating gene signature like the one identified in the mice, indicating that this pathway may offer therapeutic targets for patients. The receptor tyrosine kinase MET is abundant in many human squamous cell carcinomas (SCCs), but its functional significance in tumorigenesis is not clear. We found that the incidence of carcinogen-induced skin squamous tumors was substantially increased in transgenic MT-HGF (mouse metallothionein–hepatocyte growth factor) mice, which have increased abundance of the MET ligand HGF. Squamous tumors also erupted spontaneously on the skin of MT-HGF mice that were promoted by wounding or the application of 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol 13-acetate, an activator of protein kinase C. Carcinogen-initiated tumors had Ras mutations, but spontaneous tumors did not. Cultured keratinocytes from MT-HGF mice and oncogenic RAS-transduced keratinocytes shared phenotypic and biochemical features of initiation that were dependent on autocrine activation of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) through increased synthesis and release of EGFR ligands, which was mediated by the kinase SRC, the pseudoproteases iRhom1 and iRhom2, and the metallopeptidase ADAM17. Pharmacological inhibition of EGFR caused the regression of MT-HGF squamous tumors that developed spontaneously in orthografts of MT-HGF keratinocytes combined with dermal fibroblasts and implanted onto syngeneic mice. The global gene expression profile in MET-transformed keratinocytes was highly concordant with that in RAS-transformed keratinocytes, and a core RAS/MET coexpression network was activated in precancerous and cancerous human skin lesions. Tissue arrays revealed that many human skin SCCs have abundant HGF at both the transcript and protein levels. Thus, through the activation of EGFR, MET activation parallels a RAS pathway to contribute to human and mouse cutaneous cancers.


Pigment Cell & Melanoma Research | 2016

Synergistic targeted inhibition of MEK and dual PI3K/mTOR diminishes viability and inhibits tumor growth of canine melanoma underscoring its utility as a preclinical model for human mucosal melanoma

Bih-Rong Wei; Helen Michael; Charles Halsey; Cody J. Peer; Amit Adhikari; Jennifer E. Dwyer; Shelley B. Hoover; Rajaa El Meskini; Serguei Kozlov; Zoe Weaver Ohler; William D. Figg; Glenn Merlino; R. Mark Simpson

Human mucosal melanoma (MM), an uncommon, aggressive and diverse subtype, shares characteristics with spontaneous MM in dogs. Although BRAF and N‐RAS mutations are uncommon in MM in both species, the majority of human and canine MM evaluated exhibited RAS/ERK and/or PI3K/mTOR signaling pathway activation. Canine MM cell lines, with varying ERK and AKT/mTOR activation levels reflective of naturally occurring differences in dogs, were sensitive to the MEK inhibitor GSK1120212 and dual PI3K/mTOR inhibitor NVP‐BEZ235. The two‐drug combination synergistically decreased cell survival in association with caspase 3/7 activation, as well as altered expression of cell cycle regulatory proteins and Bcl‐2 family proteins. In combination, the two drugs targeted their respective signaling pathways, potentiating reduction of pathway mediators p‐ERK, p‐AKT, p‐S6, and 4E‐BP1 in vitro, and in association with significantly inhibited solid tumor growth in MM xenografts in mice. These findings provide evidence of synergistic therapeutic efficacy when simultaneously targeting multiple mediators in melanoma with Ras/ERK and PI3K/mTOR pathway activation.


Stem cell reports | 2017

cFOS-SOX9 Axis Reprograms Bone Marrow-Derived Mesenchymal Stem Cells into Chondroblastic Osteosarcoma

Yunlong He; Wentao Zhu; Min Hwa Shin; Joy Gary; Chengyu Liu; Wendy Dubois; Shelley B. Hoover; Shunlin Jiang; Eryney Marrogi; Beverly A. Mock; R. Mark Simpson; Jing Huang

Summary Bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells (BMSCs) are proposed as the cells of origin of several subtypes of osteosarcoma (OS). However, signals that direct BMSCs to form different subtypes of OS are unclear. Here we show that the default tumor type from spontaneously transformed p53 knockout (p53_KO) BMSCs is osteoblastic OS. The development of this default tumor type caused by p53 loss can be overridden by various oncogenic signals: RAS reprograms p53_KO BMSCs into undifferentiated sarcoma, AKT enhances osteoblastic OS, while cFOS promotes chondroblastic OS formation. We focus on studying the mechanism of cFOS-induced chondroblastic OS formation. Integrated genome-wide studies reveal a regulatory mechanism whereby cFOS binds to the promoter of a key chondroblastic transcription factor, Sox9, and induces its transcription in BMSCs. Importantly, SOX9 mediates cFOS-induced cartilage formation in chondroblastic OS. In summary, oncogenes determine tumor types derived from BMSCs, and the cFOS-SOX9 axis is critical for chondroblastic OS formation.


Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 2012

Soluble peptide treatment reverses CD8 T-cell-induced disease in a mouse model of spontaneous tissue-selective autoimmunity.

So Yeon Paek; Fumi Miyagawa; Hong Zhang; Jay Linton; Shelley B. Hoover; R. Mark Simpson; Stephen I. Katz

Transgenic (Tg) mouse models of autoimmunity have been used to express model antigens that can be recognized by T cells or by autoantibodies. To identify mechanisms of CD8-mediated tissue-specific autoimmune reactions and to identify potential treatments, we generated a double-transgenic (DTg) murine model of autoimmunity by crossing keratin-14 (K14)-soluble chicken ovalbumin (sOVA) mice, which express sOVA predominantly in external ear skin, with OT-I mice whose CD8 T cells express Vα2/Vβ5 regions of the TCR and are specific for SIINFEKL peptide (chicken ovalbumin (OVA) peptide 257-264) in association with class I major histocompatibility complex. The K14-sOVA/OT-I DTg mice develop a destructive process selectively targeting the external ear pinnae in the first 6 days of life. The ear bud area develops an intense inflammatory infiltrate of OT-I cells. Administration of the SIINFEKL peptide intravenously to pregnant F1 (filial 1, first filial generation of animal offspring from cross-mating two parental types) mice and subsequently intraperitoneally to newborn pups resulted in normal external ear development. Treatment with this self-peptide markedly reduced OT-I cell numbers, as well as downregulated the CD8 co-receptor. This model can be useful in studying localized, tissue-specific, immune-mediated skin disease, and provide information about potential therapies for autoimmune diseases in which specific molecular targets are known.

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R. Mark Simpson

National Institutes of Health

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Jennifer E. Dwyer

National Institutes of Health

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Joshua D. Webster

National Institutes of Health

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Joy Gary

Michigan State University

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Beverly A. Mock

National Institutes of Health

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Bih Rong Wei

National Institutes of Health

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