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Dive into the research topics where Valerie L. Jacobs is active.

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Featured researches published by Valerie L. Jacobs.


Asn Neuro | 2011

Current Review of in Vivo GBM Rodent Models: Emphasis on the CNS-1 Tumour Model

Valerie L. Jacobs; Pablo A. Valdés; William F. Hickey; Joyce A. De Leo

GBM (glioblastoma multiforme) is a highly aggressive brain tumour with very poor prognosis despite multi-modalities of treatment. Furthermore, recent failure of targeted therapy for these tumours highlights the need of appropriate rodent models for preclinical studies. In this review, we highlight the most commonly used rodent models (U251, U86, GL261, C6, 9L and CNS-1) with a focus on the pathological and genetic similarities to the human disease. We end with a comprehensive review of the CNS-1 rodent model.


Scientific Reports | 2012

Quantitative, spectrally-resolved intraoperative fluorescence imaging.

Pablo A. Valdés; Frederic Leblond; Valerie L. Jacobs; Brian C. Wilson; Keith D. Paulsen; David W. Roberts

Intraoperative visual fluorescence imaging (vFI) has emerged as a promising aid to surgical guidance, but does not fully exploit the potential of the fluorescent agents that are currently available. Here, we introduce a quantitative fluorescence imaging (qFI) approach that converts spectrally-resolved data into images of absolute fluorophore concentration pixel-by-pixel across the surgical field of view (FOV). The resulting estimates are linear, accurate, and precise relative to true values, and spectral decomposition of multiple fluorophores is also achieved. Experiments with protoporphyrin IX in a glioma rodent model demonstrate in vivo quantitative and spectrally-resolved fluorescence imaging of infiltrating tumor margins for the first time. Moreover, we present images from human surgery which detect residual tumor not evident with state-of-the-art vFI. The wide-field qFI technique has broad implications for intraoperative surgical guidance because it provides near real-time quantitative assessment of multiple fluorescent biomarkers across the operative field.


Experimental Neurology | 2012

Propentofylline, a CNS glial modulator does not decrease pain in post-herpetic neuralgia patients: in vitro evidence for differential responses in human and rodent microglia and macrophages.

Russell P. Landry; Valerie L. Jacobs; Edgar Alfonso Romero-Sandoval; Joyce A. DeLeo

There is a growing body of preclinical evidence for the potential involvement of glial cells in neuropathic pain conditions. Several glial-targeted agents are in development for the treatment of pain conditions. Here we report the failure of a glial modulating agent, propentofylline, to decrease pain reported in association with post-herpetic neuralgia. We offer new evidence to help explain why propentofylline failed in patients by describing in vitro functional differences between rodent and human microglia and macrophages. We directly compared the proinflammatory response induced by lipopolysaccharide (LPS) with or without propentofylline using rat postnatal microglia, rat peritoneal macrophages, human fetal microglia, human peripheral macrophages and human immortalized THP-1 cells. We measured tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α), interleukin-1 beta (IL-1β) and nitrite release (as an indicator of nitric oxide (NO)) as downstream indicators. We found that LPS treatment did not induce nitrite in human microglia, macrophages or THP-1 cells; however LPS treatment did induce nitrite release in rat microglia and macrophages. Following LPS exposure, propentofylline blocked TNF-α release in rodent microglia with all the doses tested (1-100 μM), and dose-dependently decreased TNF-α release in rodent macrophages. Propentofylline partially decreased TNF-α (35%) at 100 μM in human microglia, macrophages and THP-1 macrophages. Propentofylline blocked nitrite release from LPS stimulated rat microglia and inhibited nitrite in LPS-stimulated rat macrophages. IL-1β was decreased in LPS-stimulated human microglia following propentofylline at 100 μM. Overall, human microglia were less responsive to LPS stimulation and propentofylline treatment than the other cell types. Our data demonstrate significant functional differences between cell types and species following propentofylline treatment and LPS stimulation. These results may help explain the differential behavioral effects of propentofylline observed between rodent models of pain and the human clinical trial.


Neuro-oncology | 2012

Propentofylline decreases tumor growth in a rodent model of glioblastoma multiforme by a direct mechanism on microglia.

Valerie L. Jacobs; Russell P. Landry; Yingna Liu; Edgar Alfonso Romero-Sandoval; Joyce A. De Leo

Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is the most common and aggressive primary brain cancer, with a median survival of less than 2 years after diagnosis. The tumor microenvironment plays a critical role in tumor invasion and progression. Microglia and infiltrating macrophages are the most abundant immune cells in the tumor. In the present study, we demonstrate that systemic propentofylline (PPF), an atypical methylxanthine with central nervous system (CNS) glial modulating and anti-inflammatory actions, significantly decreased tumor growth in a CNS-1 rat model of GBM by targeting microglia and not tumor cells. Rats received tumor injections of 1 × 10(5) CNS-1 cells in the right striatum with daily intraperitonial injections of PPF (50 mg/kg) or saline beginning the day of tumor injection. PPF did not cause apoptosis or decrease proliferation of CNS-1 tumor cells. Furthermore, we demonstrate, using in vitro methods, that PPF decreased microglial migration toward CNS-1 tumor cells and decreased MMP-9 expression. The effects of PPF were shown to be specific to microglia and not peripheral macrophages. These results support a differential functional role of resident microglia and infiltrating macrophages in the brain tumor environment. Our data highlight microglia as a crucial target for future therapeutic development and present PPF as a possible drug for treatment of human GBM.


Journal of Immunology | 2011

Stimulation of the Glucocorticoid-Induced TNF Receptor Family-Related Receptor on CD8 T Cells Induces Protective and High-Avidity T Cell Responses to Tumor-Specific Antigens

Anik L. Côté; Peisheng Zhang; Jeremy A. O'Sullivan; Valerie L. Jacobs; Carli R. Clemis; Shimon Sakaguchi; José A. Guevara-Patiño; Mary Jo Turk

Treatment of tumor-bearing mice with a stimulatory Ab to glucocorticoid-induced TNFR family-related receptor (GITR) has previously been shown to elicit protective T cell responses against poorly immunogenic tumors. However, the role of GITR stimulation on CD8 T cells and the nature of tumor rejection Ags have yet to be determined. In this study, we show that a stimulatory mAb to GITR (clone DTA-1) acts directly on CD8 T cells, but not on CD4+CD25+ regulatory T (Treg) cells, in B16 tumor-bearing mice to induce concomitant immunity against secondary B16 tumors, as well as protective memory following surgical excision of the primary tumor. Melanoma growth itself induced GITR expression on tumor-specific CD8 T cells, providing a mechanism whereby these cells may respond to stimulatory anti-GITR. Unexpectedly, in contrast to Treg cell depletion therapy with anti-CD4, GITR stimulation induced very weak CD8 T cell responses to melanocyte differentiation Ags expressed by the tumor, and did not induce autoimmune vitiligo. Accordingly, GITR-stimulated hosts that were primed with B16 melanoma rejected B16, but not the unrelated JBRH melanoma, indicating that tumor rejection Ags are tumor-specific rather than shared. In support of this, we show that GITR stimulation induces CD8 T cell responses to a tumor-specific Ag, and that these responses are of higher functional avidity compared with those induced by Treg cell depletion. We conclude that stimulation of GITR on effector CD8 T cells results in high-avidity T cell responses to tumor-specific Ags, thereby inducing potent antitumor immunity in the absence of autoimmunity.


Optics Letters | 2013

System and methods for wide-field quantitative fluorescence imaging during neurosurgery

Pablo A. Valdés; Valerie L. Jacobs; Brian C. Wilson; Frederic Leblond; David W. Roberts; Keith D. Paulsen

We report an accurate, precise and sensitive method and system for quantitative fluorescence image-guided neurosurgery. With a low-noise, high-dynamic-range CMOS array, we perform rapid (integration times as low as 50 ms per wavelength) hyperspectral fluorescence and diffuse reflectance detection and apply a correction algorithm to compensate for the distorting effects of tissue absorption and scattering. Using this approach, we generated quantitative wide-field images of fluorescence in tissue-simulating phantoms for the fluorophore PpIX, having concentrations and optical absorption and scattering variations over clinically relevant ranges. The imaging system was tested in a rodent model of glioma, detecting quantitative levels down to 20 ng/ml. The resulting performance is a significant advance on existing wide-field quantitative imaging techniques, and provides performance comparable to a point-spectroscopy probe that has previously demonstrated significant potential for improved detection of malignant brain tumors during surgical resection.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Propentofylline Targets TROY, a Novel Microglial Signaling Pathway

Valerie L. Jacobs; Yingna Liu; Joyce A. De Leo

Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is the most common and aggressive primary brain cancer, with a median survival of less than 2 years after diagnosis with current available therapies. The tumor microenvironment serves a critical role in tumor invasion and progression, with microglia as a critical player. Our laboratory has previously demonstrated that propentofylline, an atypical methylxanthine with central nervous system glial modulating and anti-inflammatory actions, significantly decreases tumor growth in a GBM rodent model by preferentially targeting microglia. In the present study, we used the CNS-1 rat glioma model to elucidate the mechanisms of propentofylline. Here we demonstrate that propentofylline targets TROY, a novel signaling molecule up-regulated in infiltrating microglia, and not macrophages, in response to CNS-1 cells. We identify Pyk2, Rac1 and pJNK as the downstream signaling molecules of TROY through western blot analysis and siRNA transfection. We demonstrate that inhibition of TROY expression in microglia by siRNA transfection significantly inhibits microglial migration towards CNS-1 cells similar to 10 µM propentofylline treatment. These results identify TROY as a novel molecule expressed in microglia, involved in their migration and targeted by propentofylline. Furthermore, these results describe a signaling molecule that is differentially expressed between microglia and macrophages in the tumor microenvironment.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

Quantitative spectrally resolved intraoperative fluorescence imaging for neurosurgical guidance in brain tumor surgery: pre-clinical and clinical results

Pablo A. Valdés; Valerie L. Jacobs; Frederic Leblond; Brian C. Wilson; Keith D. Paulsen; David W. Roberts

Fluorescence-guidance is a useful adjunct to maximize brain tumor resection but current commercial systems are limited by subjective assessment of fluorescence, low sensitivity and non-spectrally-resolved detection. We present a quantitative, spectrally-resolved system integrated onto a commercial neurosurgical microscope that performs spectrallyresolved detection and corrects for effects of tissue optical absorption and scattering on the detected fluorescence signal to image the true fluorophore concentration. Pre-clinical studies in rodent glioma models using multiple fluorophores (PpIX, fluorescein) and clinical studies demonstrate improved residual tumor tissue detection. This quantitative, spectrally-resolved technique opens the door to simultaneous image-guided surgery of multiple fluorophores in the visible and near infrared.


Journal of Neurosurgery | 2015

Quantitative fluorescence using 5-aminolevulinic acid-induced protoporphyrin IX biomarker as a surgical adjunct in low-grade glioma surgery

Pablo A. Valdés; Valerie L. Jacobs; Brent T. Harris; Brian C. Wilson; Frederic Leblond; Keith D. Paulsen; David W. Roberts


Current Medical Imaging Reviews | 2012

In vivo Fluorescence Detection in Surgery: A Review of Principles, Methods, and Clinical Applications

Pablo A. Valdés; Frederic Leblond; Valerie L. Jacobs; Keith D. Paulsen; David W. Roberts

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Frederic Leblond

École Polytechnique de Montréal

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Brian C. Wilson

University of British Columbia

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Brent T. Harris

Georgetown University Medical Center

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