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Featured researches published by Susana Galli.


Cancer Research | 2008

Thrombospondin 1 Promotes Tumor Macrophage Recruitment and Enhances Tumor Cell Cytotoxicity of Differentiated U937 Cells

Gema Martin-Manso; Susana Galli; Lisa A. Ridnour; Maria Tsokos; David A. Wink; David D. Roberts

Inhibition of tumor growth by thrombospondin (TSP) 1 is generally attributed to its antiangiogenic activity, but effects on tumor immunity should also be considered. We show that overexpression of TSP1 in melanoma cells increases macrophage recruitment into xenograft tumors grown in nude or beige/nude mice. In vitro, TSP1 acutely induces expression of plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) by monocytic cells, suggesting that TSP1-induced macrophage recruitment is at least partially mediated by PAI-1. Tumor-associated macrophages (TAM) can either promote or limit tumor progression. The percentage of M1-polarized macrophages expressing inducible nitric oxide synthase is increased in TSP1-expressing tumors. Furthermore, soluble TSP1 stimulates killing of breast carcinoma and melanoma cells by IFN-gamma-differentiated U937 cells in vitro via release of reactive oxygen species. TSP1 causes a significant increase in phorbol ester-mediated superoxide generation from differentiated monocytes by interaction with alpha(6)beta(1) integrin through its NH(2)-terminal region. The NH(2)-terminal domain of TSP2 also stimulates monocyte superoxide production. Extracellular calcium is required for the TSP1-induced macrophage respiratory burst. Thus, TSP1 may play an important role in antitumor immunity by enhancing recruitment and activation of M1 TAMs, which provides an additional selective pressure for loss of TSP1 and TSP2 expression during tumor progression.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2012

Phase I Trial and Pharmacokinetic Study of Lexatumumab in Pediatric Patients With Solid Tumors

Melinda S. Merchant; James I. Geller; Kristin Baird; Alexander J. Chou; Susana Galli; Ava Charles; Martha Amaoko; Eunice H. Rhee; Anita P. Price; Leonard H. Wexler; Paul A. Meyers; Brigitte C. Widemann; Maria Tsokos; Crystal L. Mackall

PURPOSE Lexatumumab is an agonistic, fully human monoclonal antibody against tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand receptor 2 with preclinical evidence of activity in pediatric solid tumors. PATIENTS AND METHODS This phase I dose-escalation study examined the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics, and immunogenicity of lexatumumab at doses up to, but not exceeding, the adult maximum-tolerated dose (3, 5, 8, and 10 mg/kg), administered once every 2 weeks to patients age≤21 years with recurrent or progressive solid tumors. RESULTS Twenty-four patients received a total of 56 cycles of lexatumumab over all four planned dose levels. One patient had grade 2 pericarditis consistent with radiation recall, and one patient developed grade 3 pneumonia with hypoxia during the second cycle. Five patients experienced stable disease for three to 24 cycles. No patients experienced complete or partial response, but several showed evidence of antitumor activity, including one patient with recurrent progressive osteosarcoma who experienced resolution of clinical symptoms and positron emission tomography activity, ongoing more than 1 year off therapy. One patient with hepatoblastoma showed a dramatic biomarker response. CONCLUSION Pediatric patients tolerate 10 mg/kg of lexatumumab administered once every 14 days, the maximum-tolerated dose identified in adults. The drug seems to mediate some clinical activity in pediatric solid tumors and may work with radiation to enhance antitumor effects.


Cancer immunology research | 2016

Reduction of MDSCs with All-trans Retinoic Acid Improves CAR Therapy Efficacy for Sarcomas.

Adrienne H. Long; Steven L. Highfill; Yongzhi Cui; Jillian P. Smith; Alec J. Walker; Sneha Ramakrishna; Rana El-Etriby; Susana Galli; Maria Tsokos; Rimas J. Orentas; Crystal L. Mackall

The efficacy of chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)–modified T cells against solid tumors is not proven. Retinoids are clinically accessible and were found to modulate tumor myeloid-derived suppressor cells, enhancing the efficacy of CAR therapies targeting solid tumors. Genetically engineered T cells expressing CD19-specific chimeric antigen receptors (CAR) have shown impressive activity against B-cell malignancies, and preliminary results suggest that T cells expressing a first-generation disialoganglioside (GD2)-specific CAR can also provide clinical benefit in patients with neuroblastoma. We sought to assess the potential of GD2-CAR therapies to treat pediatric sarcomas. We observed that 18 of 18 (100%) of osteosarcomas, 2 of 15 (13%) of rhabdomyosarcomas, and 7 of 35 (20%) of Ewing sarcomas expressed GD2. T cells engineered to express a third-generation GD2-CAR incorporating the 14g2a-scFv with the CD28, OX40, and CD3ζ signaling domains (14g2a.CD28.OX40.ζ) mediated efficient and comparable lysis of both GD2+ sarcoma and neuroblastoma cell lines in vitro. However, in xenograft models, GD2-CAR T cells had no antitumor effect against GD2+ sarcoma, despite effectively controlling GD2+ neuroblastoma. We observed that pediatric sarcoma xenografts, but not neuroblastoma xenografts, induced large populations of monocytic and granulocytic murine myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSC) that inhibited human CAR T-cell responses in vitro. Treatment of sarcoma-bearing mice with all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) largely eradicated monocytic MDSCs and diminished the suppressive capacity of granulocytic MDSCs. Combined therapy using GD2-CAR T cells plus ATRA significantly improved antitumor efficacy against sarcoma xenografts. We conclude that retinoids provide a clinically accessible class of agents capable of diminishing the suppressive effects of MDSCs, and that co-administration of retinoids may enhance the efficacy of CAR therapies targeting solid tumors. Cancer Immunol Res; 4(10); 869–80. ©2016 AACR.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Endogenous Thrombospondin-1 Regulates Leukocyte Recruitment and Activation and Accelerates Death from Systemic Candidiasis

Gema Martin-Manso; Dhammika H. M. L. P. Navarathna; Susana Galli; David R. Soto-Pantoja; Svetlana A. Kuznetsova; Maria Tsokos; David D. Roberts

Disseminated Candida albicans infection results in high morbidity and mortality despite treatment with existing antifungal drugs. Recent studies suggest that modulating the host immune response can improve survival, but specific host targets for accomplishing this goal remain to be identified. The extracellular matrix protein thrombospondin-1 is released at sites of tissue injury and modulates several immune functions, but its role in C. albicans pathogenesis has not been investigated. Here, we show that mice lacking thrombospondin-1 have an advantage in surviving disseminated candidiasis and more efficiently clear the initial colonization from kidneys despite exhibiting fewer infiltrating leukocytes. By examining local and systemic cytokine responses to C. albicans and other standard inflammatory stimuli, we identify a crucial function of phagocytes in this enhanced resistance. Subcutaneous air pouch and systemic candidiasis models demonstrated that endogenous thrombospondin-1 enhances the early innate immune response against C. albicans and promotes activation of inflammatory macrophages (inducible nitric oxide synthase+, IL-6high, TNF-αhigh, IL-10low), release of the chemokines MIP-2, JE, MIP-1α, and RANTES, and CXCR2-driven polymorphonuclear leukocytes recruitment. However, thrombospondin-1 inhibited the phagocytic capacity of inflammatory leukocytes in vivo and in vitro, resulting in increased fungal burden in the kidney and increased mortality in wild type mice. Thus, thrombospondin-1 enhances the pathogenesis of disseminated candidiasis by creating an imbalance in the host immune response that ultimately leads to reduced phagocytic function, impaired fungal clearance, and increased mortality. Conversely, inhibitors of thrombospondin-1 may be useful drugs to improve patient recovery from disseminated candidiasis.


Cancer Research | 2017

Abstract 1940: Prenatal stress increases malignancy of neuroblastoma tumors in TH-MYCN animal model

Sung Hyeok Hong; Larissa Wietlisbach; Susana Galli; Akanksha Mahajan; Shiya Zhu; Yi-Chien Lee; Olga Rodriguez; Chris Albanese; Joanna Kitlinska

Neuroblastoma (NB) is a pediatric malignancy arising due to defects in sympathetic neuron differentiation. NB is a heterogeneous disease, with phenotypes ranging from spontaneously regressing to highly aggressive, incurable tumors. This clinical variability cannot be explained solely by genetic aberrations. Even in families with hereditary NB the penetrance of the disease is incomplete and the same genetic mutation often results in tumors with phenotypes varying from differentiating ganglioneuromas to undifferentiated, highly aggressive NBs. Thus, other, perhaps non-genetic factors can contribute to the disease development and modify its phenotype. Strikingly, the two factors promoting de-differentiation of NB cells and their malignant phenotype, hypoxia and glucocorticoids, are elevated in the fetus during maternal stress, suggesting a role for prenatal stress in NB tumorigenesis. Previously, using TH-MYCN mice as a model of aggressive NB, we have shown that an increase in maternal corticosterone levels during pregnancy attained by inserting slow release pellets resulted in increased tumor frequency in TH-MYCN offspring. The goal of the current study was to determine the effect of prenatal stress on NB metastasis. To this end, pregnant mice carrying TH-MYCN hemizygous offspring were subjected to chronic stress at embryonic days 10-17, the time of sympathetic neuroblast proliferation and differentiation. Two established stress paradigms were used - chronic unpredictable stress, in which mice were subjected daily to various stressors, and chronic cold stress comprising of daily 30 min exposure to cold. The phenotypes of the disease and its dissemination were compared between offspring of control and stressed mothers. The offspring from both prenatally stressed groups presented with more malignant disease, as manifested by the presence of advanced lung metastases disseminating from small primary tumors ( 1,000 mm3). Although not common, lung metastases occur preferentially in NB patients with MYCN amplification and are associated with significantly worse prognosis, as compared to patients with metastatic disease, but no pulmonary involvement (14 vs 43% 3-year event-free survival, respectively). Thus, the profound pulmonary dissemination observed in prenatally-stressed TH-MYCN mice mimics one of the most malignant NB phenotypes observed in human disease. Altogether, our data implicate maternal stress during pregnancy as a potential environmental factor modifying the effects of genetic aberrations and promoting malignant phenotype of NB. Citation Format: Sung Hyeok Hong, Larissa Wietlisbach, Susana Galli, Akanksha Mahajan, Shiya Zhu, Jason Tilan, Yichien Lee, Olga Rodriguez, Chris Albanese, Joanna Kitlinska. Prenatal stress increases malignancy of neuroblastoma tumors in TH-MYCN animal model [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2017; 2017 Apr 1-5; Washington, DC. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2017;77(13 Suppl):Abstract nr 1940. doi:10.1158/1538-7445.AM2017-1940


Cancer Research | 2015

Abstract 3291: Prenatal stress increases neuroblastoma tumorigenesis in TH-MYCN mice model

Sung-Hyeok Hong; David Christian; Emily Trinh; Susana Galli; Meredith Horton; Yi-Chien Lee; Christopher Albanese; Olga Rodriguez; Joanna Kitlinska

Neuroblastomas (NB) are pediatric malignancies with heterogenous phenotypes, ranging from spontaneously regressing to highly aggressive, incurable tumors. Although NB is considered a genetic disease, its etiology and heterogeneity cannot be explained solely by genetic aberrations. NB arises due to defects in sympathetic neuron (SN) differentiation occurring during fetal development. Strikingly, the two factors promoting de-differentiation of NB cells, hypoxia and glucocorticoids, are elevated in the fetus during maternal stress, suggesting a role for prenatal stress in NB tumorigenesis. To test this hypothesis we used mice expressing MYCN oncogene under tyrosine hydroxylase promoter (TH-MYCN mice), which spontaneously develop NBs. To mimic stress, pregnant mothers carrying hemizygous TH-MYCN offspring were implanted with pellets containing either the main rodent glucocorticoid, corticosterone, or placebo at the time of neuroblast proliferation (embryonic days 10-20). Tumor frequency was compared between these two experimental groups and TH-MYCN offspring from intact pregnancies. Surprisingly, in pregnant mothers from the placebo group, physiological stress associated with experimental procedures alone (animal handling, blood collections, pellet insertion and anesthesia) was sufficient to elevate their corticosterone levels and increase tumorigenicity in their hemizygous TH-MYCN offspring from 32 to 64% (p = 0.03). A similar effect was observed in offspring of corticosterone-treated mothers with its levels comparable to mice eliciting a physiological stress response in the placebo group ( 1200ng/ml), indicating that only physiologically relevant levels of stress mediators can accurately recapitulate the stress response in animal models. Taken together, these findings support the role for prenatal stress in NB development, as well as implicate other pathologies associated with elevated levels of glucocorticoids in its etiology. Citation Format: Sung-Hyeok Hong, David Christian, Emily Trinh, Susana Galli, Meredith Horton, Yichien Lee, Christopher Albanese, Olga Rodriguez, Jason Ulip Tilan, Joanna Kitlinska. Prenatal stress increases neuroblastoma tumorigenesis in TH-MYCN mice model. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 106th Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research; 2015 Apr 18-22; Philadelphia, PA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2015;75(15 Suppl):Abstract nr 3291. doi:10.1158/1538-7445.AM2015-3291


Cancer | 2015

Systemic levels of neuropeptide Y and dipeptidyl peptidase activity in Ewing sarcoma patients – associations with tumor phenotype and survival

Mark Krailo; Donald A. Barkauskas; Susana Galli; Haifa Mtaweh; Jessica B. Long; Hongkun Wang; Kirsten Hawkins; Congyi Lu; Dima Jeha; Ewa Izycka-Swieszewska; Elizabeth R. Lawlor; Jeffrey A. Toretsky; Joanna Kitlinska


Omics A Journal of Integrative Biology | 2018

Abstract PR15: Hypoxia, polyploidy, neuropeptide Y, and Ewing sarcoma bone metastases: Is there a link?

Akanksha Mahajan; Sung-Hyeok Hong; Susana Galli; Congyi Lu; Shiya Zhu; Luciane R. Cavalli; Joanna Kitlinska


Cancer Research | 2018

Abstract 4147: Neuropeptide Y promotes osteolytic activity during bone invasion and metastasis in Ewing sarcoma

Richard Garner; Emily Hong; Shiya Zhu; Mina T. Adnani; Sung-Hyeok Hong; Susana Galli; Joanna Kitlinska


Cancer Research | 2017

Abstract 5822: Increase in protein expression and copy number drives the activation of NPY/Y5R pro-survival loop in chemotherapy-treated neuroblastoma

Selene Elifio-Esposito; Akanksha Mahajan; Aline S. Fonseca; Susana Galli; Lúcia de Noronha; Bonald C. Figueiredo; Joanna Kitlinska; Luciane R. Cavalli

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Maria Tsokos

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Akanksha Mahajan

Georgetown University Medical Center

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Shiya Zhu

Georgetown University

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Sung-Hyeok Hong

National Institutes of Health

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Congyi Lu

Georgetown University

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David D. Roberts

National Institutes of Health

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Gema Martin-Manso

National Institutes of Health

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