Publications by authors named "D Annis"

Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) travel through the vasculature to seed secondary sites and serve as direct precursors of metastatic outgrowth for many solid tumors. Heterotypic cell clusters form between CTCs and white blood cells (WBCs) and recent studies report that a majority of these WBCs are neutrophils in patient and mouse models. The lab discovered that CTCs produce tubulin-based protrusions, microtentacles (McTNs), which promote reattachment, retention in distant sites during metastasis and formation of tumor cell clusters.

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Article Synopsis
  • Researchers have developed sulanemadlin (ALRN-6924), the first cell-permeable peptide to undergo clinical trials, designed to mimic the p53 tumor suppressor protein.
  • ALRN-6924 effectively binds to MDM2 and MDMX, which normally inhibit p53, thereby activating p53 signaling in non-mutant cells.
  • At higher doses, ALRN-6924 shows anticancer effects in tumor models, while lower doses can briefly halt the cell cycle in healthy cells to protect them during chemotherapy without affecting mutant cancer cells.
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Levels of hydrogen peroxide are highly elevated in the breast tumor microenvironment compared to normal tissue. Production of hydrogen peroxide is implicated in the mechanism of action of many anticancer therapies. Several lines of evidence suggest hydrogen peroxide mediates breast carcinogenesis and metastasis, though the molecular mechanism remains poorly understood.

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The tumor microenvironment and wound healing after injury both contain extremely high concentrations of the extracellular signaling molecule, adenosine triphosphate (ATP) compared to normal tissue. P2Y2 receptor, an ATP-activated purinergic receptor, is typically associated with pulmonary, endothelial, and neurological cell signaling. Here we report its role and importance in breast epithelial cell signaling and how it is altered in metastatic breast cancer.

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Cytoskeletal remodeling in circulating tumor cells (CTCs) facilitates metastatic spread. Previous oncology studies examine sustained aberrant calcium (Ca) signaling and cytoskeletal remodeling scrutinizing long-term phenotypes such as tumorigenesis and metastasis. The significance of acute Ca signaling in tumor cells that occur within seconds to minutes is overlooked.

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