Publications by authors named "Christina Puri"

Activated tumor stroma participates in tumor cell growth, invasion, and metastasis. Normal fibroblasts and cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) have been shown to display distinct gene expression signatures. This molecular heterogeneity may influence the way tumor cells migrate, proliferate, and survive during tumor progression.

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Purpose: Invasion and metastasis of malignant epithelial cells into normal tissues is accompanied by adaptive changes in the mesenchyme-derived supporting stroma of the target organs. Altered gene expression in these nontransformed stromal cells provides potential targets for therapy. The present study was undertaken to determine the antitumor effects of an antibody-conjugate against fibroblast activation protein-alpha, a cell surface protease of activated tumor fibroblasts.

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Emerging in vitro and in vivo data underline the crucial role of G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) in tumorigenesis. Here, we report the contribution of hGPR87, a predicted member of the P2Y subfamily of GPCRs, to proliferation and survival of human tumor cell lines. hGPR87 mRNA transcript was found to be preferentially overexpressed in squamous cell carcinomas (SCCs) of different locations and in their lymph node metastases.

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Medullary thyroid carcinomas are aggressive neoplasias that metastasize very early to loco-regional lymph nodes, and tumors with a desmoplastic stromal reaction have a higher incidence of lymph node metastasis. In order to characterize the desmoplastic response in thyroid cancers, we evaluated the expression pattern of three molecular markers of activated fibroblasts/myofibroblasts, namely, fibroblast activation protein alpha (FAPalpha), tenascin-C (Tn-C), and alpha-smooth muscle actin (alpha-SMA), as well as the endothelial markers endoglyx-1, CD34 and CD31 in a series of 28 metastatic and non-metastatic medullary thyroid cancers. Immunohistochemical studies demonstrated that the three fibroblast activation markers (FAPalpha, Tn-C, alpha-SMA) are consistently expressed in the peritumoral and intratumoral stromal compartment of medullary thyroid carcinomas and expression of FAPalpha and Tn-C correlated with the degree of desmoplasia determined histologically (p=0.

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Background: Podoplanin is a membrane mucin that, among a series of tissues, is expressed on late osteoblasts and osteocytes. Since recent findings have focussed on podoplanin's potential role as a tumour progression factor, we aimed at identifying regulatory elements conferring PDPN promoter activity. Here, we characterized the molecular mechanism controlling basal PDPN transcription in human osteoblast-like MG63 versus Saos-2 cells.

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Endosialin is a C-type lectin-like cell surface receptor of unknown function, with a distinctive pattern of endothelial expression in newly formed blood vessels in human cancers. The murine orthologue of endosialin has been identified, opening up the analysis of developmental regulation in the embryo and in aberrant tissue remodeling, notably cancer angiogenesis. To advance these studies we have generated an antibody to the extracellular domain of mouse endosialin and mapped protein expression from embryonic day E10.

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Transcriptional profiling of cancer biopsies is used extensively to identify expression signatures for specific cancer types, diagnostic and prognostic subgroups, and novel molecular targets for therapy. To broaden these applications, several challenges remain. For example, the integrity of RNA extracted even from small tissue samples has to be insured and monitored.

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Standardized, high-throughput RNA detection with microarray chips allows for the construction of genome-wide databases for tissue specimens suitable for in silico electronic Northern blot (eNorthern) analysis of marker genes. We used the BioExpress database, which contains transcriptional profiles of normal and cancer samples, to examine two putative markers of cancer stroma: fibroblast activation protein-alpha (FAP-alpha) and endosialin. Analyses for FAP-alpha showed that normal tissues generally lack RNA signals, with the exception of endometrium.

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