Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Ved P. Sharma is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Ved P. Sharma.


Journal of Histochemistry and Cytochemistry | 2007

Actin-binding Proteins Coronin-1a and IBA-1 are Effective Microglial Markers for Immunohistochemistry

Zeshan Ahmed; Gerry Shaw; Ved P. Sharma; Cui Wei Yang; Eileen McGowan; Dennis W. Dickson

This study identifies the actin-binding protein, coronin-1a, as a novel and effective immunohistochemical marker for microglia in both cell cultures and in formaldehyde-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue. Antibodies to coronin-1a effectively immunostained microglia in human, monkey, horse, rat, and mouse tissues, even in tissues stored for long periods of time. The identity of coronin-1a-immunoreactive cells as microglia was confirmed using double immunolabeling with cell type-specific markers as well as by morphological features and the distribution of immunoreactive cells. These properties are shared by another actin-binding protein, IBA-1. Unlike IBA-1, coronin-1a immunoreactivity was also detected in lymphocytes and certain other hematopoietic cells. The results indicate that both coronin-1a and IBA-1 are robust markers for microglia that can be used in routinely processed tissue of humans and animals. Because both coronin-1a and IBA-1 are actin-binding proteins that play a role in rearrangement of the membrane cytoskeleton, it suggests that these proteins are critical to dynamic properties of microglia.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2013

β1 integrin regulates Arg to promote invadopodial maturation and matrix degradation.

Brian T. Beaty; Ved P. Sharma; Jose Javier Bravo-Cordero; Mark A. Simpson; Robert J. Eddy; Anthony J. Koleske; John Condeelis

β1 integrin is a major regulator of invadopodium maturation. Studies reveal that β1 integrin–mediated adhesion is a key upstream switch that induces Arg-dependent cortactin phosphorylation, actin polymerization, and MMP recruitment to invadopodia for extracellular matrix degradation.


Oncogene | 2014

Macrophage contact induces RhoA GTPase signaling to trigger tumor cell intravasation

Minna Roh-Johnson; Jose Javier Bravo-Cordero; Antonia Patsialou; Ved P. Sharma; Peng Guo; Huiping Liu; Louis Hodgson; John Condeelis

Most cancer patients die as a result of metastasis, thus it is important to understand the molecular mechanisms of dissemination, including intra- and extravasation. Although the mechanisms of extravasation have been vastly studied in vitro and in vivo, the process of intravasation is still unclear. Furthermore, how cells in the tumor microenvironment facilitate tumor cell intravasation is still unknown. Using high-resolution imaging, we found that macrophages enhance tumor cell intravasation upon physical contact. Macrophage and tumor cell contact induce RhoA activity in tumor cells, triggering the formation of actin-rich degradative protrusions called invadopodia, enabling tumor cells to degrade and break through matrix barriers during tumor cell transendothelial migration. Interestingly, we show that macrophage-induced invadopodium formation and tumor cell intravasation also occur in patient-derived tumor cells and in vivo models, revealing a conserved mechanism of tumor cell intravasation. Our results illustrate a novel heterotypic cell contact-mediated signaling role for RhoA, as well as yield mechanistic insight into the ability of cells within the tumor microenvironment to facilitate steps of the metastatic cascade.


Oncogene | 2014

Autocrine HBEGF expression promotes breast cancer intravasation, metastasis and macrophage-independent invasion in vivo

Zhen Ni Zhou; Ved P. Sharma; Bt Beaty; Minna Roh-Johnson; Ea Peterson; N. van Rooijen; Pa Kenny; H. S. Wiley; John Condeelis; Jeffrey E. Segall

Increased expression of HBEGF in estrogen receptor-negative breast tumors is correlated with enhanced metastasis to distant organ sites and more rapid disease recurrence upon removal of the primary tumor. Our previous work has demonstrated a paracrine loop between breast cancer cells and macrophages in which the tumor cells are capable of stimulating macrophages through the secretion of colony-stimulating factor-1 while the tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs), in turn, aid in tumor cell invasion by secreting epidermal growth factor. To determine how the autocrine expression of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) ligands by carcinoma cells would affect this paracrine loop mechanism, and in particular whether tumor cell invasion depends on spatial ligand gradients generated by TAMs, we generated cell lines with increased HBEGF expression. We found that autocrine HBEGF expression enhanced in vivo intravasation and metastasis and resulted in a novel phenomenon in which macrophages were no longer required for in vivo invasion of breast cancer cells. In vitro studies revealed that expression of HBEGF enhanced invadopodium formation, thus providing a mechanism for cell autonomous invasion. The increased invadopodium formation was directly dependent on EGFR signaling, as demonstrated by a rapid decrease in invadopodia upon inhibition of autocrine HBEGF/EGFR signaling as well as inhibition of signaling downstream of EGFR activation. HBEGF expression also resulted in enhanced invadopodium function via upregulation of matrix metalloprotease 2 (MMP2) and MMP9 expression levels. We conclude that high levels of HBEGF expression can short-circuit the tumor cell/macrophage paracrine invasion loop, resulting in enhanced tumor invasion that is independent of macrophage signaling.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2014

Talin regulates moesin–NHE-1 recruitment to invadopodia and promotes mammary tumor metastasis

Brian T. Beaty; Yarong Wang; Jose Javier Bravo-Cordero; Ved P. Sharma; Veronika Miskolci; Louis Hodgson; John Condeelis

Talin binds directly to moesin in vitro and recruits a moesin–NHE-1 complex to invadopodia to promote tumor cell invasion.


Science Translational Medicine | 2017

Neoadjuvant chemotherapy induces breast cancer metastasis through a TMEM-mediated mechanism

George S. Karagiannis; Jessica Pastoriza; Yarong Wang; Allison S. Harney; David Entenberg; Jeanine Pignatelli; Ved P. Sharma; Emily Xue; Esther Cheng; Timothy M. D’Alfonso; Joan G. Jones; Jesus Anampa; Thomas E. Rohan; Joseph A. Sparano; John Condeelis; Maja H. Oktay

Chemotherapy induces prometastatic changes in breast cancer, reversible by TIE2 or MENA inhibition. Closing the door to cancer cells Breast cancer is one of the most common tumor types, and metastasis greatly increases the risk of death from this disease. By studying the process of intravasation or entry of cells into the vasculature, Karagiannis et al. discovered that, in addition to killing tumor cells, chemotherapy treatment can also increase intravasation. Groups of cells collectively known as tumor microenvironment of metastasis (TMEM) can serve as gateways for tumor cells entering the vasculature, and the authors discovered that several types of chemotherapy can increase the amounts of TMEM complexes and circulating tumor cells in the bloodstream. The researchers also determined that a drug called rebastinib can interfere with TMEM activity and help overcome the increased risk of cancer cell dissemination. Breast cancer cells disseminate through TIE2/MENACalc/MENAINV-dependent cancer cell intravasation sites, called tumor microenvironment of metastasis (TMEM), which are clinically validated as prognostic markers of metastasis in breast cancer patients. Using fixed tissue and intravital imaging of a PyMT murine model and patient-derived xenografts, we show that chemotherapy increases the density and activity of TMEM sites and Mena expression and promotes distant metastasis. Moreover, in the residual breast cancers of patients treated with neoadjuvant paclitaxel after doxorubicin plus cyclophosphamide, TMEM score and its mechanistically connected MENAINV isoform expression pattern were both increased, suggesting that chemotherapy, despite decreasing tumor size, increases the risk of metastatic dissemination. Chemotherapy-induced TMEM activity and cancer cell dissemination were reversed by either administration of the TIE2 inhibitor rebastinib or knockdown of the MENA gene. Our results indicate that TMEM score increases and MENA isoform expression pattern changes with chemotherapy and can be used in predicting prometastatic changes in response to chemotherapy. Furthermore, inhibitors of TMEM function may improve clinical benefits of chemotherapy in the neoadjuvant setting or in metastatic disease.


Journal of Cell Science | 2013

Spatial regulation of RhoC activity defines protrusion formation in migrating cells

Jose Javier Bravo-Cordero; Ved P. Sharma; Minna Roh-Johnson; Xiaoming Chen; Robert J. Eddy; John Condeelis; Louis Hodgson

Summary Protrusion formation is the first step that precedes cell movement of motile cells. Spatial control of actin polymerization is necessary to achieve directional protrusion during cell migration. Here we show that the spatial coordinators p190RhoGEF and p190RhoGAP regulate actin polymerization during leading edge protrusions by regulating the actin barbed end distribution and amplitude. The distribution of RhoC activity and proper balance of cofilin activation achieved by p190RhoGEF and p190RhoGAP determines the direction of final protrusive activity. These findings provide a new insight into the dynamic plasticity in the amplitude and distribution of barbed ends, which can be modulated by fine-tuning RhoC activity by upstream GEFs and GAPs for directed cell motility.


Intravital (Print) | 2012

Reconstitution of in vivo macrophage-tumor cell pairing and streaming motility on one-dimensional micro-patterned substrates

Ved P. Sharma; Brian T. Beaty; Antonia Patsialou; Huiping Liu; Michael F. Clarke; Dianne Cox; John Condeelis; Robert J. Eddy

In mammary tumors, intravital imaging techniques have uncovered an essential role for macrophages during tumor cell invasion and metastasis mediated by an epidermal growth factor (EGF) / colony stimulating factor-1 (CSF-1) paracrine loop. It was previously demonstrated that mammary tumors in mice derived from rat carcinoma cells (MTLn3) exhibited high velocity migration on extracellular matrix (ECM) fibers. These cells form paracrine loop-dependent linear assemblies of alternating host macrophages and tumor cells known as “streams.” Here, we confirm by intravital imaging that similar streams form in close association with ECM fibers in a highly metastatic patient-derived orthotopic mammary tumor (TN1). To understand the in vivo cell motility behaviors observed in streams, an in vitro model of fibrillar tumor ECM utilizing adhesive 1D micropatterned substrates was developed. MTLn3 cells on 1D fibronectin or type I collagen substrates migrated with higher velocity than on 2D substrates and displayed enhanced lamellipodial protrusion and increased motility upon local interaction and pairing with bone marrow-derived macrophages (BMMs). Inhibitors of EGF or CSF-1 signaling disrupted this interaction and reduced tumor cell velocity and protrusion, validating the requirement for an intact paracrine loop. Both TN1 and MTLn3 cells in the presence of BMMs were capable of co-assembling into linear arrays of alternating tumor cells and BMMs that resembled streams in vivo, suggesting the stream assembly is cell autonomous and can be reconstituted on 1D substrates. Our results validate the use of 1D micropatterned substrates as a simple and defined approach to study fibrillar ECM-dependent cell pairing, migration and relay chemotaxis as a complementary tool to intravital imaging.


Trends in Cell Biology | 2017

Tumor Cell Invadopodia: Invasive Protrusions that Orchestrate Metastasis

Robert J. Eddy; Maxwell D. Weidmann; Ved P. Sharma; John Condeelis

Invadopodia are a subset of invadosomes that are implicated in the integration of signals from the tumor microenvironment to support tumor cell invasion and dissemination. Recent progress has begun to define how tumor cells regulate the plasticity necessary for invadopodia to assemble and function efficiently in the different microenvironments encountered during dissemination in vivo. Exquisite mapping by many laboratories of the pathways involved in integrating diverse invadopodium initiation signals, from growth factors, to extracellular matrix (ECM) and cell-cell contact in the tumor microenvironment, has led to insight into the molecular basis of this plasticity. Here, we integrate this new information to discuss how the invadopodium is an important conductor that orchestrates tumor cell dissemination during metastasis.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2013

High-resolution live-cell imaging and time-lapse microscopy of invadopodium dynamics and tracking analysis

Ved P. Sharma; David Entenberg; John Condeelis

Invadopodia are specialized structures of cancer cells which aid in cancer cell invasion and metastasis. Therefore, studying the early steps of invadopodium assembly and its life cycle at the subcellular level by using high spatiotemporal resolution imaging provides an opportunity for understanding the signaling mechanisms involved in this very important process. In this chapter, we describe the design of a custom-built high-resolution fluorescence microscope which makes this challenging imaging possible. We also describe an ImageJ plugin that we have developed for tracking of invadopodia and lifetime analysis.

Collaboration


Dive into the Ved P. Sharma's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

John Condeelis

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Robert J. Eddy

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yarong Wang

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

David Entenberg

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Brian T. Beaty

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

George S. Karagiannis

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jeffrey E. Segall

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jose Javier Bravo-Cordero

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Maja H. Oktay

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge