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Dive into the research topics where Stephen B. Keysar is active.

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Featured researches published by Stephen B. Keysar.


Molecular Cancer Therapeutics | 2010

More than Markers: Biological Significance of Cancer Stem Cell-Defining Molecules

Stephen B. Keysar; Antonio Jimeno

Small populations within an increasing array of solid tumors, labeled cancer stem cells (CSC) or tumor-initiating cells (TIC), have the ability to differentiate, self-renew, and replicate the original tumor in vivo. To date, these cells have been distinguished from the bulk-tumor population by the expression pattern of cell-surface proteins (e.g., CD24, CD44, CD133) and cellular activities, such as the efflux of Hoechst dye or aldehyde dehydrogenase activity. Recent data have shown that these markers are inducible by exposure to anticancer agents; this finding highlights not only the potential fluidity of the CSC compartment, but also the functionality of these markers. The involvement of CD44 in invasion, adhesion, and metastasis, or the role of CD24 in modulation of src, FAK, and GLI1 are examples of these relevant roles. Instead of looking solely at the marker expression in these populations, we hope to clarify the biologically significant roles these markers and activities play in tumor progression, metastases, and as possible targets for therapy. Mol Cancer Ther; 9(9); 2450–7. ©2010 AACR.


Molecular Oncology | 2013

A patient tumor transplant model of squamous cell cancer identifies PI3K inhibitors as candidate therapeutics in defined molecular bins

Stephen B. Keysar; David P. Astling; Ryan T. Anderson; Brian W. Vogler; Daniel W. Bowles; J. Jason Morton; Jeramiah J. Paylor; Magdalena J. Glogowska; Phuong N. Le; Justin R. Eagles-Soukup; Severine Kako; Sarah M. Takimoto; Daniel Sehrt; Adrian Umpierrez; Morgan A. Pittman; Sarah M. Macfadden; Ryan M. Helber; Scott Peterson; Diana F. Hausman; Sherif Said; Ted H. Leem; Julie A. Goddard; John J. Arcaroli; Wells A. Messersmith; William A. Robinson; Fred R. Hirsch; Marileila Varella-Garcia; David Raben; Xiao-Jing Wang; John I. Song

Targeted therapy development in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) is challenging given the rarity of activating mutations. Additionally, HNSCC incidence is increasing related to human papillomavirus (HPV). We sought to develop an in vivo model derived from patients reflecting the evolving HNSCC epidemiologic landscape, and use it to identify new therapies. Primary and relapsed tumors from HNSCC patients, both HPV+ and HPV−, were implanted on mice, giving rise to 25 strains. Resulting xenografts were characterized by detecting key mutations, measuring protein expression by IHC and gene expression/pathway analysis by mRNA‐sequencing. Drug efficacy studies were run with representative xenografts using the approved drug cetuximab as well as the new PI3K inhibitor PX‐866. Tumors maintained their original morphology, genetic profiles and drug susceptibilities through serial passaging. The genetic makeup of these tumors was consistent with known frequencies of TP53, PI3KCA, NOTCH1 and NOTCH2 mutations. Because the EGFR inhibitor cetuximab is a standard HNSCC therapy, we tested its efficacy and observed a wide spectrum of efficacy. Cetuximab‐resistant strains had higher PI3K/Akt pathway gene expression and protein activation than cetuximab‐sensitive strains. The PI3K inhibitor PX‐866 had anti‐tumor efficacy in HNSCC models with PIK3CA alterations. Finally, PI3K inhibition was effective in two cases with NOTCH1 inactivating mutations. In summary, we have developed an HNSCC model covering its clinical spectrum whose major genetic alterations and susceptibility to anticancer agents represent contemporary HNSCC. This model enables to prospectively test therapeutic‐oriented hypotheses leading to personalized medicine.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2013

Epithelial stem cell mutations that promote squamous cell carcinoma metastasis.

Ruth White; Jill M. Neiman; Anand Reddi; Gangwen Han; Stanca A. Birlea; Doyel Mitra; Laikuan Dionne; Pam Fernandez; Kazutoshi Murao; Li Bian; Stephen B. Keysar; Nathaniel B. Goldstein; Ningjing Song; Sophia Bornstein; Zheyi Han; Xian Lu; Joshua Wisell; Fulun Li; John I. Song; Shi-Long Lu; Antonio Jimeno; Dennis R. Roop; Xiao-Jing Wang

Squamous cell carcinomas (SCCs) originate in stratified epithelia, with a small subset becoming metastatic. Epithelial stem cells are targets for driver mutations that give rise to SCCs, but it is unknown whether they contribute to oncogenic multipotency and metastasis. We developed a mouse model of SCC by targeting two frequent genetic mutations in human SCCs, oncogene Kras(G12D) activation and Smad4 deletion, to mouse keratin 15-expressing (K15+) stem cells. We show that transgenic mice developed multilineage tumors, including metastatic SCCs. Among cancer stem cell-enriched (CSC-enriched) populations, those with increased side population (SP) cells correlated with epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) and lung metastasis. We show that microRNA-9 (miR-9) contributed to SP expansion and metastasis, and miR-9 inhibition reduced the number of SP cells and metastasis. Increased miR-9 was detected in metastatic human primary SCCs and SCC metastases, and miR-9-transduced human SCC cells exhibited increased invasion. We identified α-catenin as a predominant miR-9 target. Increased miR-9 in human SCC metastases correlated with α-catenin loss but not E-cadherin loss. Our results demonstrate that stem cells with Kras(G12D) activation and Smad4 depletion can produce tumors that are multipotent and susceptible to EMT and metastasis. Additionally, tumor initiation and metastatic properties of CSCs can be uncoupled, with miR-9 regulating the expansion of metastatic CSCs.


Cancer Research | 2013

Hedgehog Signaling Alters Reliance on EGF Receptor Signaling and Mediates Anti-EGFR Therapeutic Resistance in Head and Neck Cancer

Stephen B. Keysar; Phuong N. Le; Ryan T. Anderson; J. Jason Morton; Daniel W. Bowles; Jeramiah J. Paylor; Brian W. Vogler; Jackie Thorburn; Pamela Fernandez; Magdalena J. Glogowska; Sarah M. Takimoto; Daniel Sehrt; Gregory Gan; Justin R. Eagles-Soukup; Hilary S. Serracino; Fred R. Hirsch; M. Scott Lucia; Andrew Thorburn; John I. Song; Xiao-Jing Wang; Antonio Jimeno

The EGF receptor (EGFR)-directed monoclonal antibody cetuximab is the only targeted therapy approved for the treatment of squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck (HNSCC) but is only effective in a minority of patients. Epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) has been implicated as a drug resistance mechanism in multiple cancers, and the EGFR and Hedgehog pathways (HhP) are relevant to this process, but the interplay between the two pathways has not been defined in HNSCC. Here, we show that HNSCC cells that were naturally sensitive to EGFR inhibition over time developed increased expression of the HhP transcription factor GLI1 as they became resistant after long-term EGFR inhibitor exposure. This robustly correlated with an increase in vimentin expression. Conversely, the HhP negatively regulated an EGFR-dependent, EMT-like state in HNSCC cells, and pharmacologic or genetic inhibition of HhP signaling pushed cells further into an EGFR-dependent phenotype, increasing expression of ZEB1 and VIM. In vivo treatment with cetuximab resulted in tumor shrinkage in four of six HNSCC patient-derived xenografts; however, they eventually regrew. Cetuximab in combination with the HhP inhibitor IPI-926 eliminated tumors in two cases and significantly delayed regrowth in the other two cases. Expression of EMT genes TWIST and ZEB2 was increased in sensitive xenografts, suggesting a possible resistant mesenchymal population. In summary, we report that EGFR-dependent HNSCC cells can undergo both EGFR-dependent and -independent EMT and HhP signaling is a regulator in both processes. Cetuximab plus IPI-926 forces tumor cells into an EGFR-dependent state, delaying or completely blocking tumor recurrence.


Oncogene | 2016

XactMice: humanizing mouse bone marrow enables microenvironment reconstitution in a patient-derived xenograft model of head and neck cancer

J. Jason Morton; Gregory H. Bird; Stephen B. Keysar; David P. Astling; Traci R. Lyons; Ryan T. Anderson; Magdalena J. Glogowska; Patricia A. Estes; Justin R. Eagles; Phuong N. Le; Gregory Gan; Brett McGettigan; Pamela Fernandez; Nuria Padilla-Just; Marileila Varella-Garcia; John I. Song; Daniel W. Bowles; Pepper Schedin; Aik Choon Tan; Dennis R. Roop; Xiao-Jing Wang; Yosef Refaeli; Antonio Jimeno

The limitations of cancer cell lines have led to the development of direct patient-derived xenograft models. However, the interplay between the implanted human cancer cells and recruited mouse stromal and immune cells alters the tumor microenvironment and limits the value of these models. To overcome these constraints, we have developed a technique to expand human hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs) and use them to reconstitute the radiation-depleted bone marrow of a NOD/SCID/IL2rg−/− (NSG) mouse on which a patient’s tumor is then transplanted (XactMice). The human HSPCs produce immune cells that home into the tumor and help replicate its natural microenvironment. Despite previous passage on nude mice, the expression of epithelial, stromal and immune genes in XactMice tumors aligns more closely to that of the patient tumor than to those grown in non-humanized mice—an effect partially facilitated by human cytokines expressed by both the HSPC progeny and the tumor cells. The human immune and stromal cells produced in the XactMice can help recapitulate the microenvironment of an implanted xenograft, reverse the initial genetic drift seen after passage on non-humanized mice and provide a more accurate tumor model to guide patient treatment.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2014

Phase I study of oral rigosertib (ON 01910.Na), a dual inhibitor of the PI3K and Plk1 pathways, in adult patients with advanced solid malignancies.

Daniel W. Bowles; Jennifer R. Diamond; Elaine T. Lam; Colin D. Weekes; David P. Astling; Ryan T. Anderson; Stephen Leong; Lia Gore; Marileila Varella-Garcia; Brian W. Vogler; Stephen B. Keysar; Elizabeth Freas; Dara L. Aisner; Chen Ren; Aik Choon Tan; Francois Wilhelm; Manoj Maniar; S. Gail Eckhardt; Wells A. Messersmith; Antonio Jimeno

Purpose: To determine the pharmacokinetics (PK), maximum tolerated dose (MTD), safety, and antitumor activity of an oral formulation of rigosertib, a dual phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) and polo-like kinase 1 (Plk1) pathway inhibitor, in patients with advanced solid malignancies. Experimental Design: Patients with advanced solid malignancies received rigosertib twice daily continuously in 21-day cycles. Doses were escalated until intolerable grade ≥2 toxicities, at which point the previous dose level was expanded to define the MTD. All patients were assessed for safety, PK, and response. Urinary PK were performed at the MTD. Archival tumors were assessed for potential molecular biomarkers with multiplex mutation testing. A subset of squamous cell carcinomas (SCC) underwent exome sequencing. Results: Forty-eight patients received a median of 2 cycles of therapy at 5 dose levels. Rigosertib exposure increased with escalating doses. Dose-limiting toxicities were hematuria and dysuria. The most common grade ≥2 drug-related toxicities involved urothelial irritation. The MTD is 560 mg twice daily. Activity was seen in head and neck SCCs (1 complete response, 1 partial response) and stable disease for ≥12 weeks was observed in 8 additional patients. Tumors experiencing ≥partial response had PI3K pathway activation, inactivated p53, and unique variants in ROBO3 and FAT1, two genes interacting with the Wnt/β-catenin pathway. Conclusions: The recommended phase II dose of oral rigosertib is 560 mg twice daily given continuously. Urinary toxicity is the dose-limiting and most common toxicity. Alterations in PI3K, p53, and Wnt/β-catenin pathway signaling should be investigated as potential biomarkers of response in future trials. Clin Cancer Res; 20(6); 1656–65. ©2014 AACR.


Cancer Research | 2014

Hedgehog signaling drives radioresistance and stroma-driven tumor repopulation in head and neck squamous cancers

Gregory Gan; Justin R. Eagles; Stephen B. Keysar; Guoliang Wang; Magdalena J. Glogowska; Cem Altunbas; Ryan T. Anderson; Phuong N. Le; J. Jason Morton; Barbara Frederick; David Raben; Xiao-Jing Wang; Antonio Jimeno

Local control and overall survival in patients with advanced head and neck squamous cell cancer (HNSCC) remains dismal. Signaling through the Hedgehog (Hh) pathway is associated with epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition, and activation of the Hh effector transcription factor Gli1 is a poor prognostic factor in this disease setting. Here, we report that increased GLI1 expression in the leading edge of HNSCC tumors is further increased by irradiation, where it contributes to therapeutic inhibition. Hh pathway blockade with cyclopamine suppressed GLI1 activation and enhanced tumor sensitivity to radiotherapy. Furthermore, radiotherapy-induced GLI1 expression was mediated in part by the mTOR/S6K1 pathway. Stroma exposed to radiotherapy promoted rapid tumor repopulation, and this effect was suppressed by Hh inhibition. Our results demonstrate that Gli1 that is upregulated at the tumor-stroma intersection in HNSCC is elevated by radiotherapy, where it contributes to stromal-mediated resistance, and that Hh inhibitors offer a rational strategy to reverse this process to sensitize HNSCC to radiotherapy.


Cancer Research | 2017

EGFR mediates responses to small molecule drugs targeting oncogenic fusion kinases

Aria Vaishnavi; Laura Schubert; Uwe Rix; Lindsay Marek; Anh T. Le; Stephen B. Keysar; Magdalena J. Glogowska; Matthew A. Smith; Severine Kako; Natalia J. Sumi; Kurtis D. Davies; Kathryn E. Ware; Marileila Varella-Garcia; Eric B. Haura; Antonio Jimeno; Lynn E. Heasley; Dara L. Aisner; Robert C. Doebele

Oncogenic kinase fusions of ALK, ROS1, RET, and NTRK1 act as drivers in human lung and other cancers. Residual tumor burden following treatment of ALK or ROS1+ lung cancer patients with oncogene-targeted therapy ultimately enables the emergence of drug-resistant clones, limiting the long-term effectiveness of these therapies. To determine the signaling mechanisms underlying incomplete tumor cell killing in oncogene-addicted cancer cells, we investigated the role of EGFR signaling in drug-naïve cancer cells harboring these oncogene fusions. We defined three distinct roles for EGFR in the response to oncogene-specific therapies. First, EGF-mediated activation of EGFR blunted fusion kinase inhibitor binding and restored fusion kinase signaling complexes. Second, fusion kinase inhibition shifted adaptor protein binding from the fusion oncoprotein to EGFR. Third, EGFR enabled bypass signaling to critical downstream pathways such as MAPK. While evidence of EGFR-mediated bypass signaling has been reported after ALK and ROS1 blockade, our results extended this effect to RET and NTRK1 blockade and uncovered the other additional mechanisms in gene fusion-positive lung cancer cells, mouse models, and human clinical specimens before the onset of acquired drug resistance. Collectively, our findings show how EGFR signaling can provide a critical adaptive survival mechanism that allows cancer cells to evade oncogene-specific inhibitors, providing a rationale to cotarget EGFR to reduce the risks of developing drug resistance. Cancer Res; 77(13); 3551-63. ©2017 AACR.


Journal of the National Cancer Institute | 2017

Regulation of Head and Neck Squamous Cancer Stem Cells by PI3K and SOX2.

Stephen B. Keysar; Phuong N. Le; Bettina Miller; Brian C. Jackson; Justin R. Eagles; Cera Nieto; Jihye Kim; Binwu Tang; Magdalena J. Glogowska; J. Jason Morton; Nuria Padilla-Just; Karina Gomez; Emily Warnock; Julie Reisinger; John J. Arcaroli; Wells A. Messersmith; Lalage M. Wakefield; Dexiang Gao; Aik Choon Tan; Hilary S. Serracino; Vasilis Vasiliou; Dennis R. Roop; Xiao-Jing Wang; Antonio Jimeno

Background: We have an incomplete understanding of the differences between cancer stem cells (CSCs) in human papillomavirus–positive (HPV-positive) and –negative (HPV-negative) head and neck squamous cell cancer (HNSCC). The PI3K pathway has the most frequent activating genetic events in HNSCC (especially HPV-positive driven), but the differential signaling between CSCs and non-CSCs is also unknown. Methods: We addressed these unresolved questions using CSCs identified from 10 HNSCC patient-derived xenografts (PDXs). Sorted populations were serially passaged in nude mice to evaluate tumorigenicity and tumor recapitulation. The transcription profile of HNSCC CSCs was characterized by mRNA sequencing, and the susceptibility of CSCs to therapy was investigated using an in vivo model. SOX2 transcriptional activity was used to follow the asymmetric division of PDX-derived CSCs. All statistical tests were two-sided. Results: CSCs were enriched by high aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH) activity and CD44 expression and were similar between HPV-positive and HPV-negative cases (percent tumor formation injecting ⩽ 1x103 cells: ALDH+CD44high = 65.8%, ALDH-CD44high = 33.1%, ALDH+CD44high = 20.0%; and injecting 1x105 cells: ALDH-CD44low = 4.4%). CSCs were resistant to conventional therapy and had PI3K/mTOR pathway overexpression (GSEA pathway enrichment, P < .001), and PI3K inhibition in vivo decreased their tumorigenicity (40.0%–100.0% across cases). PI3K/mTOR directly regulated SOX2 protein levels, and SOX2 in turn activated ALDH1A1 (P < .001 013C and 067C) expression and ALDH activity (ALDH+ [%] empty-control vs SOX2, 0.4% ± 0.4% vs 14.5% ± 9.8%, P = .03 for 013C and 1.7% ± 1.3% vs 3.6% ± 3.4%, P = .04 for 067C) in 013C and 067 cells. SOX2 enhanced sphere and tumor growth (spheres/well, 013C P < .001 and 067C P = .04) and therapy resistance. SOX2 expression prompted mesenchymal-to-epithelial transition (MET) by inducing CDH1 (013C P = .002, 067C P = .01), followed by asymmetric division and proliferation, which contributed to tumor formation. Conclusions: The molecular link between PI3K activation and CSC properties found in this study provides insights into therapeutic strategies for HNSCC. Constitutive expression of SOX2 in HNSCC cells generates a CSC-like population that enables CSC studies.


International Journal of Cancer | 2016

A NOTCH1 gene copy number gain is a prognostic indicator of worse survival and a predictive biomarker to a Notch1 targeting antibody in colorectal cancer

John J. Arcaroli; W. M. Tai; Ryan Mcwilliams; Stacey Bagby; Patrick J. Blatchford; Marileila Varella-Garcia; Alicia Purkey; Kevin Quackenbush; Eun Kee Song; Todd M. Pitts; Dexiang Gao; Christopher Hanyoung Lieu; Martine McManus; Aik Choon Tan; Xianxian Zheng; Qin Zhang; Mark Ozeck; Peter Olson; Zhi Qin Jiang; Scott Kopetz; Antonio Jimeno; Stephen B. Keysar; Gail Eckhardt; Wells A. Messersmith

Dysregulation of the Notch1 receptor has been shown to facilitate the development and progression of colorectal cancer (CRC) and has been identified as an independent predictor of disease progression and worse survival. Although mutations in the NOTCH1 receptor have not been described in CRC, we have previously discovered a NOTCH1 gene copy number gain in a portion of CRC tumor samples. Here, we demonstrated that a NOTCH1 gene copy number gain is significantly associated with worse survival and a high percentage of gene duplication in a cohort of patients with advanced CRC. In our CRC patient‐derived tumor xenograft (PDTX) model, tumors harboring a NOTCH1 gain exhibited significant elevation of the Notch1 receptor, JAG1 ligand and cleaved Notch1 activity. In addition, a significant association was identified between a gain in NOTCH1 gene copy number and sensitivity to a Notch1‐targeting antibody. These findings suggest that patients with metastatic CRC that harbor a gain in NOTCH1 gene copy number have worse survival and that targeting this patient population with a Notch1 antibody may yield improved outcomes.

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Antonio Jimeno

University of Colorado Denver

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Phuong N. Le

University of Colorado Denver

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Xiao-Jing Wang

University of Colorado Denver

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Daniel W. Bowles

University of Colorado Denver

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Ryan T. Anderson

University of Colorado Denver

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J. Jason Morton

University of Colorado Denver

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John I. Song

University of Colorado Denver

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