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Dive into the research topics where Tessa Johung is active.

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Featured researches published by Tessa Johung.


Nature Medicine | 2015

Functionally defined therapeutic targets in diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma

Catherine S. Grasso; Yujie Tang; Nathalene Truffaux; Noah Berlow; Lining Liu; Marie Anne Debily; Michael J. Quist; Lara E. Davis; Elaine C. Huang; Pamelyn Woo; Anitha Ponnuswami; Spenser Chen; Tessa Johung; Wenchao Sun; Mari Kogiso; Yuchen Du; Lin Qi; Yulun Huang; Marianne Hütt-Cabezas; Katherine E. Warren; Ludivine Le Dret; Paul S. Meltzer; Hua Mao; Martha Quezado; Dannis G. van Vuurden; Jinu Abraham; Maryam Fouladi; Matthew N. Svalina; Nicholas Wang; Cynthia Hawkins

Diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG) is a fatal childhood cancer. We performed a chemical screen in patient-derived DIPG cultures along with RNA-seq analyses and integrated computational modeling to identify potentially effective therapeutic strategies. The multi–histone deacetylase inhibitor panobinostat demonstrated therapeutic efficacy both in vitro and in DIPG orthotopic xenograft models. Combination testing of panobinostat and the histone demethylase inhibitor GSK-J4 revealed that the two had synergistic effects. Together, these data suggest a promising therapeutic strategy for DIPG.


Cell | 2015

Neuronal Activity Promotes Glioma Growth through Neuroligin-3 Secretion

Humsa Venkatesh; Tessa Johung; Viola Caretti; Alyssa Noll; Yujie Tang; Surya Nagaraja; Erin M. Gibson; Christopher Mount; Jai S. Polepalli; Siddhartha Mitra; Pamelyn Woo; Robert C. Malenka; Hannes Vogel; Markus Bredel; Parag Mallick; Michelle Monje

Active neurons exert a mitogenic effect on normal neural precursor and oligodendroglial precursor cells, the putative cellular origins of high-grade glioma (HGG). By using optogenetic control of cortical neuronal activity in a patient-derived pediatric glioblastoma xenograft model, we demonstrate that active neurons similarly promote HGG proliferation and growth in vivo. Conditioned medium from optogenetically stimulated cortical slices promoted proliferation of pediatric and adult patient-derived HGG cultures, indicating secretion of activity-regulated mitogen(s). The synaptic protein neuroligin-3 (NLGN3) was identified as the leading candidate mitogen, and soluble NLGN3 was sufficient and necessary to promote robust HGG cell proliferation. NLGN3 induced PI3K-mTOR pathway activity and feedforward expression of NLGN3 in glioma cells. NLGN3 expression levels in human HGG negatively correlated with patient overall survival. These findings indicate the important role of active neurons in the brain tumor microenvironment and identify secreted NLGN3 as an unexpected mechanism promoting neuronal activity-regulated cancer growth.


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.


Nature Medicine | 2015

Erratum: Functionally defined therapeutic targets in diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma(Nature Medicine (2015) 21 (555-559) DOI: 10.1038/nm.3855)

Catherine S. Grasso; Yujie Tang; Nathalene Truffaux; Noah Berlow; Lining Liu; Marie Anne Debily; Michael J. Quist; Lara E. Davis; Elaine C. Huang; Pamelyn Woo; Anitha Ponnuswami; Spenser Chen; Tessa Johung; Wenchao Sun; Mari Kogiso; Yuchen Du; Lin Qi; Yulun Huang; Marianne Hütt-Cabezas; Katherine E. Warren; Ludivine Le Dret; Paul S. Meltzer; Hua Mao; Martha Quezado; Dannis G. van Vuurden; Jinu Abraham; Maryam Fouladi; Matthew N. Svalina; Nicholas Wang; Cynthia Hawkins

Catherine S Grasso, Yujie Tang, Nathalene Truffaux, Noah E Berlow, Lining Liu, Marie-Anne Debily, Michael J Quist, Lara E Davis, Elaine C Huang, Pamelyn J Woo, Anitha Ponnuswami, Spenser Chen, Tessa B Johung, Wenchao Sun, Mari Kogiso, Yuchen Du, Lin Qi, Yulun Huang, Marianne Hütt-Cabezas, Katherine E Warren, Ludivine Le Dret, Paul S Meltzer, Hua Mao, Martha Quezado, Dannis G van Vuurden, Jinu Abraham, Maryam Fouladi, Matthew N Svalina, Nicholas Wang, Cynthia Hawkins, Javad Nazarian, Marta M Alonso, Eric H Raabe, Esther Hulleman, Paul T Spellman, Xiao-Nan Li, Charles Keller, Ranadip Pal, Jacques Grill & Michelle Monje Nat. Med. 21, 555–559 (2015); doi:10.1038/nm.3855; published online 4 May 2015; corrected after print 15 June 2015


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.


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.


Current Neuropharmacology | 2016

Diffuse Intrinsic Pontine Glioma: New Pathophysiological Insights and Emerging Therapeutic Targets

Tessa Johung; Michelle Monje

Abstract: Background Diffuse Intrinsic Pontine Glioma (DIPG) is the leading cause of brain tumor-related death in children, with median survival of less than one year. Despite decades of clinical trials, there has been no improvement in prognosis since the introduction of radiotherapy over thirty years ago. Objective To review the clinical features and current treatment challenges of DIPG, and discuss emerging insights into the unique genomic and epigenomic mechanisms driving DIPG pathogenesis that present new opportunities for the identification of therapeutic targets. Conclusion In recent years, an increased availability of biopsy and rapid autopsy tissue samples for preclinical investigation has combined with the advent of new genomic and epigenomic profiling tools to yield remarkable advancements in our understanding of DIPG disease mechanisms. As well, a deeper understanding of the developmental context of DIPG is shedding light on therapeutic targets in the microenvironment of the childhood brain.


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.


Current Opinion in Neurobiology | 2017

Neuronal activity in the glioma microenvironment

Tessa Johung; Michelle Monje

Gliomas are the most common primary brain tumor and high-grade gliomas the leading cause of brain tumor-related death in both children and adults. An appreciation for the crucial role of the nervous system in the tumor microenvironment is emerging for cancers in general, and the neural regulation of glioma progression has come into sharp focus. Here, we review what is known about the influence of active neurons on glioma pathobiology.


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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