Sophia Randolph
Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center
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Publication
Featured researches published by Sophia Randolph.
Cancer Research | 2008
Valeria R. Fantin; Andrey Loboda; Cloud P. Paweletz; Ronald C. Hendrickson; Jacqueline W. Pierce; Jennifer A. Roth; Lixia Li; Frank Gooden; Susan Korenchuk; Xiaoli S. Hou; Elizabeth A. Harrington; Sophia Randolph; John F. Reilly; Christopher Ware; Marshall E. Kadin; Stanley R. Frankel; Victoria M. Richon
Vorinostat is a histone deacetylase inhibitor that induces differentiation, growth arrest, and/or apoptosis of malignant cells both in vitro and in vivo and has shown clinical responses in approximately 30% of patients with advanced mycosis fungoides and Sézary syndrome cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (CTCL). The purpose of this study was to identify biomarkers predictive of vorinostat response in CTCL using preclinical model systems and to assess these biomarkers in clinical samples. The signal transducer and activator of transcription (STAT) signaling pathway was evaluated. The data indicate that persistent activation of STAT1, STAT3, and STAT5 correlate with resistance to vorinostat in lymphoma cell lines. Simultaneous treatment with a pan-Janus-activated kinase inhibitor resulted in synergistic antiproliferative effect and down-regulation of the expression of several antiapoptotic genes. Immunohistochemical analysis of STAT1 and phosphorylated tyrosine STAT3 (pSTAT3) in skin biopsies obtained from CTCL patients enrolled in the vorinostat phase IIb trial showed that nuclear accumulation of STAT1 and high levels of nuclear pSTAT3 in malignant T cells correlate with a lack of clinical response. These results suggest that deregulation of STAT activity plays a role in vorinostat resistance in CTCL, and strategies that block this pathway may improve vorinostat response. Furthermore, these findings may be of prognostic value in predicting the response of CTCL patients to vorinostat.
Blood Reviews | 2003
Stanley R. Riddell; Carolina Berger; Makoto Murata; Sophia Randolph; Edus H. Warren
It is now well established that the efficacy of allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant for eradicating a variety of hematologic malignancies is related to antitumor activity mediated by donor immune cells contained in the stem cell graft. Recent studies have provided fundamental insights into the nature of the effector cells and target molecules that are responsible for the graft versus tumor effect. T cells specific for minor histocompatibility antigens can mediate potent antitumor activity but are also responsible for graft versus host disease (GVHD). The molecular characterization of minor antigens has suggested ways of potentially separating antitumor activity from GVHD. The challenge for the future is to continue to build on our understanding of the allogeneic graft versus tumor effect and develop strategies that can be incorporated into clinical practice to augment this effect without GVHD.
Blood | 2012
Xiangao Huang; Maurizio Di Liberto; David Jayabalan; Jun Liang; Scott Ely; Jamieson Bretz; Arthur L. Shaffer; Tracey Louie; Isan Chen; Sophia Randolph; William C. Hahn; Louis M. Staudt; Ruben Niesvizky; Malcolm A. Moore; Selina Chen-Kiang
Dysregulation of cyclin-dependent kinase 4 (CDK4) and CDK6 by gain of function or loss of inhibition is common in human cancer, including multiple myeloma, but success in targeting CDK with broad-spectrum inhibitors has been modest. By selective and reversible inhibition of CDK4/CDK6, we have developed a strategy to both inhibit proliferation and enhance cytotoxic killing of cancer cells. We show that induction of prolonged early-G(1) arrest (pG1) by CDK4/CDK6 inhibition halts gene expression in early-G(1) and prevents expression of genes programmed for other cell-cycle phases. Removal of the early-G(1) block leads to S-phase synchronization (pG1-S) but fails to completely restore scheduled gene expression. Consequently, the IRF4 protein required to protect myeloma cells from apoptosis is markedly reduced in pG1 and further in pG1-S in response to cytotoxic agents, such as the proteasome inhibitor bortezomib. The coordinated loss of IRF4 and gain of Bim sensitize myeloma tumor cells to bortezomib-induced apoptosis in pG1 in the absence of Noxa and more profoundly in pG1-S in cooperation with Noxa in vitro. Induction of pG1 and pG1-S by reversible CDK4/CDK6 inhibition further augments tumor-specific bortezomib killing in myeloma xenografts. Reversible inhibition of CDK4/CDK6 in sequential combination therapy thus represents a novel mechanism-based cancer therapy.
Blood | 2004
Sophia Randolph; Theodore A. Gooley; Edus H. Warren; Frederick R. Appelbaum; Stanley R. Riddell
Blood | 2006
Madeleine Duvic; Youn H. Kim; Timothy M. Kuzel; Theresa R. Pacheco; Francine M. Foss; Sareeta Parker; Stanley R. Frankel; Cong Chen; Justin L. Ricker; Jean Marie Arduino; Sophia Randolph; Victoria M. Richon; Elise A. Olsen
Archive | 2013
Sophia Randolph; Theodore A. Gooley; Edus H. Warren; Frederick R. Appelbaum; Stanley R
Archive | 2008
Bernard Fine; Paul J. Deutsch; Stanley R. Frankel; Sophia Randolph
Archive | 2007
Guillermo Garcia-Manero; Guo Hui Yang; Carlos E. Bueso-Ramos; Alessandra Ferrajoli; Jorge Cortes; William G. Wierda; Stefan H. Faderl; Charles Koller; Abigail Morris; Gary L. Rosner; Andrey Loboda; Valeria R. Fantin; Sophia Randolph; James S. Hardwick; John F. Reilly; Cong Chen; Justin L. Ricker; John Paul Secrist; Victoria M. Richon; Stanley R. Frankel; Hagop M. Kantarjian
Archive | 2006
Paul A. Bunn; Samir E. Witta; Victoria M. Richon; Stanley R. Frankel; Paul J. Deutsch; Sophia Randolph
Archive | 2006
Stanley R. Frankel; Paul J. Deutsch; Sophia Randolph; Bernard Fine