Shraddha A. Ravani
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
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Featured researches published by Shraddha A. Ravani.
Cancer Cell | 2011
David H. Nguyen; Hellen A. Oketch-Rabah; Irineu Illa-Bochaca; Felipe C. Geyer; Jorge S. Reis-Filho; Jian Hua Mao; Shraddha A. Ravani; Jiri Zavadil; Alexander D. Borowsky; D. Joseph Jerry; Karen A. Dunphy; Jae Hong Seo; Sandra Z. Haslam; Daniel Medina; Mary Helen Barcellos-Hoff
Tissue microenvironment is an important determinant of carcinogenesis. We demonstrate that ionizing radiation, a known carcinogen, affects cancer frequency and characteristics by acting on the microenvironment. Using a mammary chimera model in which an irradiated host is transplanted with oncogenic Trp53 null epithelium, we show accelerated development of aggressive tumors whose molecular signatures were distinct from tumors arising in nonirradiated hosts. Molecular and genetic approaches show that TGFβ mediated tumor acceleration. Tumor molecular signatures implicated TGFβ, and genetically reducing TGFβ abrogated the effect on latency. Surprisingly, tumors from irradiated hosts were predominantly estrogen receptor negative. This effect was TGFβ independent and linked to mammary stem cell activity. Thus, the irradiated microenvironment affects latency and clinically relevant features of cancer through distinct and unexpected mechanisms.
Radiation Research | 2006
Sylvain V. Costes; Arnaud Boissière; Shraddha A. Ravani; Raquel Romano; Bahram Parvin; Mary Helen Barcellos-Hoff
Abstract Costes, S. V., Boissière, A., Ravani, S., Romano, R., Parvin, B. and Barcellos-Hoff, M. H. Imaging Features that Discriminate between Foci Induced by High- and Low-LET Radiation in Human Fibroblasts. Radiat. Res. 165, 505–515 (2006). In this study, we investigated the formation of radiation-induced foci in normal human fibroblasts exposed to X rays or 130 keV/μm nitrogen ions using antibodies to phosphorylated protein kinase ataxia telangiectasia mutated (ATMp) and histone H2AX (γ-H2AX). High-content automatic image analysis was used to quantify the immunofluorescence of radiation-induced foci. The size of radiation-induced foci increased for both proteins over a 2-h period after nitrogen-ion irradiation, while the size of radiation-induced foci did not change after exposure to low-LET radiation. The number of radiation-induced ATMp foci showed a more rapid rise and greater frequency after X-ray exposure and was resolved more rapidly such that the frequency of radiation-induced foci decreased by 90% compared to 60% after exposure to high-LET radiation 2 h after 30 cGy. In contrast, the kinetics of radiation-induced γ-H2AX focus formation was similar for high- and low-LET radiation in that it reached a plateau early and remained constant for up to 2 h. High-resolution 3D images of radiation-induced γ-H2AX foci and dosimetry computation suggest that multiple double-strand breaks from nitrogen ions are encompassed within large nuclear domains of 4.4 Mbp. Our work shows that the size and frequency of radiation-induced foci vary as a function of radiation quality, dose, time and protein target. Thus, even though double-strand breaks and radiation-induced foci are correlated, the dynamic nature of both contradicts their accepted equivalence for low doses of different radiation qualities.
Cancer Research | 2006
Julia Kirshner; Michael F. Jobling; Maria J. Pajares; Shraddha A. Ravani; Adam B. Glick; Martin J. Lavin; Sergei Koslov; Yosef Shiloh; Mary Helen Barcellos-Hoff
Ionizing radiation causes DNA damage that elicits a cellular program of damage control coordinated by the kinase activity of ataxia telangiectasia mutated protein (ATM). Transforming growth factor beta (TGFbeta)-1, which is activated by radiation, is a potent and pleiotropic mediator of physiologic and pathologic processes. Here we show that TGFbeta inhibition impedes the canonical cellular DNA damage stress response. Irradiated Tgfbeta1 null murine epithelial cells or human epithelial cells treated with a small-molecule inhibitor of TGFbeta type I receptor kinase exhibit decreased phosphorylation of Chk2, Rad17, and p53; reduced gammaH2AX radiation-induced foci; and increased radiosensitivity compared with TGFbeta competent cells. We determined that loss of TGFbeta signaling in epithelial cells truncated ATM autophosphorylation and significantly reduced its kinase activity, without affecting protein abundance. Addition of TGFbeta restored functional ATM and downstream DNA damage responses. These data reveal a heretofore undetected critical link between the microenvironment and ATM, which directs epithelial cell stress responses, cell fate, and tissue integrity. Thus, Tgfbeta1, in addition to its role in homoeostatic growth control, plays a complex role in regulating responses to genotoxic stress, the failure of which would contribute to the development of cancer; conversely, inhibiting TGFbeta may be used to advantage in cancer therapy.
Cancer Research | 2008
Christopher A. Maxwell; Markus C. Fleisch; Sylvain V. Costes; Anna C. Erickson; Arnaud Boissière; Rishi R. Gupta; Shraddha A. Ravani; Bahram Parvin; Mary Helen Barcellos-Hoff
Radiation-induced genomic instability, in which the progeny of irradiated cells display a high frequency of nonclonal genomic damage, occurs at a frequency inconsistent with mutation. We investigated the mechanism of this nontargeted effect in human mammary epithelial cells (HMEC) exposed to low doses of radiation. We identified a centrosome-associated expression signature in irradiated HMEC and show here that centrosome deregulation occurs in the first cell cycle after irradiation, is dose dependent, and that viable daughters of these cells are genomically unstable as evidenced by spontaneous DNA damage, tetraploidy, and aneuploidy. Clonal analysis of genomic instability showed a threshold of >10 cGy. Treatment with transforming growth factor beta1 (TGFbeta), which is implicated in regulation of genomic stability and is activated by radiation, reduced both the centrosome expression signature and centrosome aberrations in irradiated HMEC. Furthermore, TGFbeta inhibition significantly increased centrosome aberration frequency, tetraploidy, and aneuploidy in nonirradiated HMEC. Rather than preventing radiation-induced or spontaneous centrosome aberrations, TGFbeta selectively deleted unstable cells via p53-dependent apoptosis. Together, these studies show that radiation deregulates centrosome stability, which underlies genomic instability in normal human epithelial cells, and that this can be opposed by radiation-induced TGFbeta signaling.
Cancer Research | 2006
Julia Kirshner; Michael F. Jobling; Maria J. Pajares; Shraddha A. Ravani; Adam B. Glick; Martin J. Lavin; Sergei Koslov; Yosef Shiloh; Mary Helen Barcellos-Hoff
Ionizing radiation causes DNA damage that elicits a cellular program of damage control coordinated by the kinase activity of ataxia telangiectasia mutated protein (ATM). Transforming growth factor beta (TGFbeta)-1, which is activated by radiation, is a potent and pleiotropic mediator of physiologic and pathologic processes. Here we show that TGFbeta inhibition impedes the canonical cellular DNA damage stress response. Irradiated Tgfbeta1 null murine epithelial cells or human epithelial cells treated with a small-molecule inhibitor of TGFbeta type I receptor kinase exhibit decreased phosphorylation of Chk2, Rad17, and p53; reduced gammaH2AX radiation-induced foci; and increased radiosensitivity compared with TGFbeta competent cells. We determined that loss of TGFbeta signaling in epithelial cells truncated ATM autophosphorylation and significantly reduced its kinase activity, without affecting protein abundance. Addition of TGFbeta restored functional ATM and downstream DNA damage responses. These data reveal a heretofore undetected critical link between the microenvironment and ATM, which directs epithelial cell stress responses, cell fate, and tissue integrity. Thus, Tgfbeta1, in addition to its role in homoeostatic growth control, plays a complex role in regulating responses to genotoxic stress, the failure of which would contribute to the development of cancer; conversely, inhibiting TGFbeta may be used to advantage in cancer therapy.
Cancer Research | 2006
Julia Kirshner; Michael F. Jobling; Maria J. Pajares; Shraddha A. Ravani; Adam B. Glick; Martin J. Lavin; Sergei Koslov; Yosef Shiloh; Mary Helen Barcellos-Hoff
Ionizing radiation causes DNA damage that elicits a cellular program of damage control coordinated by the kinase activity of ataxia telangiectasia mutated protein (ATM). Transforming growth factor beta (TGFbeta)-1, which is activated by radiation, is a potent and pleiotropic mediator of physiologic and pathologic processes. Here we show that TGFbeta inhibition impedes the canonical cellular DNA damage stress response. Irradiated Tgfbeta1 null murine epithelial cells or human epithelial cells treated with a small-molecule inhibitor of TGFbeta type I receptor kinase exhibit decreased phosphorylation of Chk2, Rad17, and p53; reduced gammaH2AX radiation-induced foci; and increased radiosensitivity compared with TGFbeta competent cells. We determined that loss of TGFbeta signaling in epithelial cells truncated ATM autophosphorylation and significantly reduced its kinase activity, without affecting protein abundance. Addition of TGFbeta restored functional ATM and downstream DNA damage responses. These data reveal a heretofore undetected critical link between the microenvironment and ATM, which directs epithelial cell stress responses, cell fate, and tissue integrity. Thus, Tgfbeta1, in addition to its role in homoeostatic growth control, plays a complex role in regulating responses to genotoxic stress, the failure of which would contribute to the development of cancer; conversely, inhibiting TGFbeta may be used to advantage in cancer therapy.
Cancer Research | 2000
Mary Helen Barcellos-Hoff; Shraddha A. Ravani
Cancer Research | 2002
Kenneth Burnside Ramsay Ewan; Rhonda L. Henshall-Powell; Shraddha A. Ravani; Maria J. Pajares; Carlos L. Arteaga; Ray Warters; Rosemary J. Akhurst; Mary Helen Barcellos-Hoff
International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 2011
Kumari L. Andarawewa; Sylvain V. Costes; Ignacio Fernandez-Garcia; William S. Chou; Shraddha A. Ravani; Howard Park; Mary Helen Barcellos-Hoff
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory | 2006
Julia Kirshner; Michael F. Jobling; Maria J. Pajares; Shraddha A. Ravani; Adam B. Glick; Martin J. Lavin; Sergei Koslov; Yosef Shiloh; Mary Helen Barcellos-Hoff