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Dive into the research topics where Sonia L. Hernandez is active.

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Featured researches published by Sonia L. Hernandez.


Cancer Research | 2008

A Notch1 Ectodomain Construct Inhibits Endothelial Notch Signaling, Tumor Growth, and Angiogenesis

Yasuhiro Funahashi; Sonia L. Hernandez; Indranil Das; Audrey Ahn; Jianzhong Huang; Marina Vorontchikhina; Anshula Sharma; Emi Kanamaru; Valeriya Borisenko; Dinuka M. DeSilva; Akihiko Suzuki; Xing Wang; Carrie J. Shawber; Jessica J. Kandel; Darrell J. Yamashiro; Jan Kitajewski

Notch signaling is required for vascular development and tumor angiogenesis. Although inhibition of the Notch ligand Delta-like 4 can restrict tumor growth and disrupt neovasculature, the effect of inhibiting Notch receptor function on angiogenesis has yet to be defined. In this study, we generated a soluble form of the Notch1 receptor (Notch1 decoy) and assessed its effect on angiogenesis in vitro and in vivo. Notch1 decoy expression reduced signaling stimulated by the binding of three distinct Notch ligands to Notch1 and inhibited morphogenesis of endothelial cells overexpressing Notch4. Thus, Notch1 decoy functioned as an antagonist of ligand-dependent Notch signaling. In mice, Notch1 decoy also inhibited vascular endothelial growth factor-induced angiogenesis in skin, establishing a role for Notch receptor function in this process. We tested the effects of Notch1 decoy on tumor angiogenesis using two models: mouse mammary Mm5MT cells overexpressing fibroblast growth factor 4 (Mm5MT-FGF4) and NGP human neuroblastoma cells. Exogenously expressed FGF4 induced Notch ligand expression in Mm5MT cells and xenografts. Notch1 decoy expression did not affect tumorigenicity of Mm5MT-FGF4 cells in vitro but restricted Mm5MT-FGF4 xenograft growth in mice while markedly impairing neoangiogenesis. Similarly, Notch1 decoy expression did not affect NGP cells in vitro but disrupted vessels and decreased tumor viability in vivo. These results strongly suggest that Notch receptor signaling is required for tumor neoangiogenesis and provides a new target for tumor therapy.


Journal of Controlled Release | 2012

Polyplex-microbubble hybrids for ultrasound-guided plasmid DNA delivery to solid tumors.

Shashank R. Sirsi; Sonia L. Hernandez; Lukasz Zielinski; Henning Blomback; Adel Koubaa; Milo Synder; Shunichi Homma; Jessica J. Kandel; Darrell J. Yamashiro; Mark A. Borden

Microbubble ultrasound contrast agents are being developed as image-guided gene carriers for targeted delivery in vivo. In this study, novel polyplex-microbubbles were synthesized, characterized and evaluated for systemic circulation and tumor transfection. Branched polyethylenimine (PEI; 25 kDa) was modified with polyethylene glycol (PEG; 5 kDa), thiolated and covalently attached to maleimide groups on lipid-coated microbubbles. The PEI-microbubbles demonstrated increasingly positive surface charge and DNA loading capacity with increasing maleimide content. The in vivo ultrasound contrast persistence of PEI-microbubbles was measured in the healthy mouse kidney, and a two-compartment pharmacokinetic model accounting for free and adherent microbubbles was developed to describe the anomalous time-intensity curves. The model suggested that PEI loading dramatically reduced free circulation and increased nonspecific adhesion to the vasculature. However, DNA loading to form polyplex-microbubbles increased circulation in the bloodstream and decreased nonspecific adhesion. PEI-microbubbles coupled to a luciferase bioluminescence reporter plasmid DNA were shown to transfect tumors implanted in the mouse kidney. Site-specific delivery was achieved using ultrasound applied over the tumor area following bolus injection of the DNA/PEI-microbubbles. In vivo imaging showed over 10-fold higher bioluminescence from the tumor region compared to untreated tissue. Ex vivo analysis of excised tumors showed greater than 40-fold higher expression in tumor tissue than non-sonicated control (heart) tissue. These results suggest that the polyplex-microbubble platform offers improved control of DNA loading and packaging suitable for ultrasound-guided tissue transfection.


Ultrasound in Medicine and Biology | 2012

Contrast Ultrasound Imaging for Identification of Early Responder Tumor Models to Anti-Angiogenic Therapy

Shashank R. Sirsi; Molly Flexman; Fotois Vlachos; Jianzhong Huang; Sonia L. Hernandez; Hyun Keol Kim; Tessa Johung; Jeffrey W. Gander; Ari R. Reichstein; Brooke S. Lampl; Antai Wang; Andreas H. Hielscher; Jessica J. Kandel; Darrell J. Yamashiro; Mark A. Borden

Agents targeting vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) have been validated as cancer therapeutics, yet efficacy can differ widely between tumor types and individual patients. In addition, such agents are costly and can have significant toxicities. Rapid noninvasive determination of response could provide significant benefits. We tested if response to the anti-VEGF antibody bevacizumab (BV) could be detected using contrast-enhanced ultrasound imaging (CEUS). We used two xenograft model systems with previously well-characterized responses to VEGF inhibition, a responder (SK-NEP-1) and a non-responder (NGP), and examined perfusion-related parameters. CEUS demonstrated that BV treatment arrested the increase in blood volume in the SK-NEP-1 tumor group only. Molecular imaging of α(V)β(3) with targeted microbubbles was a more sensitive prognostic indicator of BV efficacy. CEUS using RGD-labeled microbubbles showed a robust decrease in α(V)β(3) vasculature following BV treatment in SK-NEP-1 tumors. Paralleling these findings, lectin perfusion assays detected a disproportionate pruning of smaller, branch vessels. Therefore, we conclude that the response to BV can be identified soon after initiation of treatment, often within 3 days, by use of CEUS molecular imaging techniques. The use of a noninvasive ultrasound approach may allow for earlier and more effective determination of efficacy of antiangiogenic therapy.


Vascular Cell | 2013

Notch and VEGF pathways play distinct but complementary roles in tumor angiogenesis

Sonia L. Hernandez; Debarshi Banerjee; Alejandro Garcia; Thaned Kangsamaksin; Wei Yi Cheng; Dimitris Anastassiou; Yasuhiro Funahashi; Angela Kadenhe-Chiweshe; Carrie J. Shawber; Jan Kitajewski; Jessica J. Kandel; Darrell J. Yamashiro

BackgroundAnti-angiogenesis is a validated strategy to treat cancer, with efficacy in controlling both primary tumor growth and metastasis. The role of the Notch family of proteins in tumor angiogenesis is still emerging, but recent data suggest that Notch signaling may function in the physiologic response to loss of VEGF signaling, and thus participate in tumor adaptation to VEGF inhibitors.MethodsWe asked whether combining Notch and VEGF blockade would enhance suppression of tumor angiogenesis and growth, using the NGP neuroblastoma model. NGP tumors were engineered to express a Notch1 decoy construct, which restricts Notch signaling, and then treated with either the anti-VEGF antibody bevacizumab or vehicle.ResultsCombining Notch and VEGF blockade led to blood vessel regression, increasing endothelial cell apoptosis and disrupting pericyte coverage of endothelial cells. Combined Notch and VEGF blockade did not affect tumor weight, but did additively reduce tumor viability.ConclusionsOur results indicate that Notch and VEGF pathways play distinct but complementary roles in tumor angiogenesis, and show that concurrent blockade disrupts primary tumor vasculature and viability further than inhibition of either pathway alone.


Journal of Biomedical Optics | 2012

Monitoring early tumor response to drug therapy with diffuse optical tomography

Molly Flexman; Fotios Vlachos; Hyun Keol Kim; Shashank R. Sirsi; Jianzhong Huang; Sonia L. Hernandez; Tessa Johung; Jeffrey W. Gander; Ari R. Reichstein; Brooke S. Lampl; Antai Wang; Mark A. Borden; Darrell J. Yamashiro; Jessica J. Kandel; Andreas H. Hielscher

Although anti-angiogenic agents have shown promise as cancer therapeutics, their efficacy varies between tumor types and individual patients. Providing patient-specific metrics through rapid noninvasive imaging can help tailor drug treatment by optimizing dosages, timing of drug cycles, and duration of therapy-thereby reducing toxicity and cost and improving patient outcome. Diffuse optical tomography (DOT) is a noninvasive three-dimensional imaging modality that has been shown to capture physiologic changes in tumors through visualization of oxygenated, deoxygenated, and total hemoglobin concentrations, using non-ionizing radiation with near-infrared light. We employed a small animal model to ascertain if tumor response to bevacizumab (BV), an anti-angiogenic agent that targets vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), could be detected at early time points using DOT. We detected a significant decrease in total hemoglobin levels as soon as one day after BV treatment in responder xenograft tumors (SK-NEP-1), but not in SK-NEP-1 control tumors or in non-responder control or BV-treated NGP tumors. These results are confirmed by magnetic resonance imaging T2 relaxometry and lectin perfusion studies. Noninvasive DOT imaging may allow for earlier and more effective control of anti-angiogenic therapy.


Cancer Research | 2015

Notch Suppresses Angiogenesis and Progression of Hepatic Metastases

Debarshi Banerjee; Sonia L. Hernandez; Alejandro Garcia; Thaned Kangsamaksin; Emily Sbiroli; John Andrews; Lynn Ann Forrester; Na Wei; Angela Kadenhe-Chiweshe; Carrie J. Shawber; Jan Kitajewski; Jessica J. Kandel; Darrell J. Yamashiro

The Notch pathway plays multiple key roles in tumorigenesis, and its signaling components have therefore aroused great interest as targets for emerging therapies. Here, we show that inhibition of Notch, using a soluble receptor Notch1 decoy, unexpectedly caused a remarkable increase in liver metastases from neuroblastoma and breast cancer cells. Increased liver metastases were also seen after treatment with the γ-secretase inhibitor PF-03084014. Transgenic mice with heterozygous loss of Notch1 demonstrated a marked increase in hepatic metastases, indicating that Notch1 signaling acts as metastatic suppressor in the liver microenvironment. Inhibition of DLL1/4 with ligand-specific Notch1 decoys increased sprouting of sinusoidal endothelial cells into micrometastases, thereby supporting early metastatic angiogenic growth. Inhibition of tumor-derived JAG1 signaling activated hepatic stellate cells, increasing their recruitment to vasculature of micrometastases, thereby supporting progression to macrometastases. These results demonstrate that inhibition of Notch causes pathologic activation of liver stromal cells, promoting angiogenesis and growth of hepatic metastases. Our findings have potentially serious implications for Notch inhibition therapy.


Vascular Cell | 2011

Inhibition of cyclo-oxygenase 2 reduces tumor metastasis and inflammatory signaling during blockade of vascular endothelial growth factor

Jason C. Fisher; Jeffrey W. Gander; Mary Jo Haley; Sonia L. Hernandez; Jianzhong Huang; Yan-Jung Chang; Tessa Johung; Paolo Guarnieri; Kathleen O'Toole; Darrell J. Yamashiro; Jessica J. Kandel

Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) blockade is an effective therapy for human cancer, yet virtually all neoplasms resume primary tumor growth or metastasize during therapy. Mechanisms of progression have been proposed to include genes that control vascular remodeling and are elicited by hypoperfusion, such as the inducible enzyme cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2). We have previously shown that COX-2 inhibition by the celecoxib analog SC236 attenuates perivascular stromal cell recruitment and tumor growth. We therefore examined the effect of combined SC236 and VEGF blockade, using the metastasizing orthotopic SKNEP1 model of pediatric cancer. Combined treatment perturbed tumor vessel remodeling and macrophage recruitment, but did not further limit primary tumor growth as compared to VEGF blockade alone. However, combining SC236 and VEGF inhibition significantly reduced the incidence of lung metastasis, suggesting a distinct effect on prometastatic mechanisms. We found that SC236 limited tumor cell viability and migration in vitro, with effects enhanced by hypoxia, but did not change tumor proliferation or matrix metalloproteinase expression in vivo. Gene set expression analysis (GSEA) indicated that the addition of SC236 to VEGF inhibition significantly reduced expression of gene sets linked to macrophage mobilization. Perivascular recruitment of macrophages induced by VEGF blockade was disrupted in tumors treated with combined VEGF- and COX-2-inhibition. Collectively, these findings suggest that during VEGF blockade COX-2 may restrict metastasis by limiting both prometastatic behaviors in individual tumor cells and mobilization of macrophages to the tumor vasculature.


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2013

Polyplex-microbubbles for improved ultrasound-mediated gene therapy

Mark A. Borden; Shashank R. Sirsi; Sonia L. Hernandez; Shunichi Homma; Jessica J. Kandel; Darrell J. Yamashiro

Sonoporation is an established method whereby acoustically stimulated microbubbles create pores in the endothelium to promote the delivery of nucleic acids and other macromolecules through the vasculature. In this presentation, we describe the development of polyplex-microbubbles to enhance delivery and intracellular trafficking to target cells beyond the endothelium following sonoporation. Our design combines the tissue targeting capability of microbubbles with the cellular targeting capability of polyplexes, which are self-assembled particles comprising nucleic acids and a cationic polymer. The first purpose of the cationic polymer (polyethylenimine, PEI) is to condense and protect the nucleic acids on the microbubble surface as it travels in circulation from the site of injection to the target tissue. Polyethylene glycol (PEG) is conjugated to the PEI to reduce immunogenicity. Ultrasound is applied to the target tissue to fragment the microbubbles and release the polyplexes and to porate the endotheliu...


northeast bioengineering conference | 2010

Monitoring of anti-angiogenic drug response with dynamic fluorescence imaging

Jong Hwan Lee; Thomas Pöschinger; Sonia L. Hernandez; Jianzhong Huang; Tessa Johung; Jessica J. Kandel; Darrell J. Yamashiro; Andreas H. Hielscher

We present the results of a study in which we monitored anti-angiogenic therapy response in a mouse cancer model with in-vivo dynamic fluorescence imaging. In the experiments indocyanine green (ICG) was used as a fluorescent optical contrast agent and its time-dependent uptake and washout before and after the administration of bevacizumab was recorded. We found that compared with other organs, tumors showed a noticeable difference in ICG kinetics after treatment.


IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering | 2010

Dynamic Fluorescence Imaging For The Detection of Vascular Changes in Anti-Angiogenic Drug Therapy

Jong Hwan Lee; Thomas Pöschinger; Sonia L. Hernandez; Jianzhong Huang; Tessa Johung; Jessica J. Kandel; Darrell J. Yamashiro; Andreas H. Hielscher

We show that dynamic fluorescence imaging with indocyanine green can be used to detect changes in the the vasculature of a small-animal Ewing sarcoma model in response to anti-angiogenic drug treatments.

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Mark A. Borden

University of Colorado Boulder

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Shashank R. Sirsi

University of Texas at Dallas

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Angela Kadenhe-Chiweshe

Columbia University Medical Center

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