Publications by authors named "Grace G Bushnell"

Patients with breast cancer with estrogen receptor-positive tumors face a constant risk of disease recurrence for the remainder of their lives. Dormant tumor cells residing in tissues such as the bone marrow may generate clinically significant metastases many years after initial diagnosis. Previous studies suggest that dormant cancer cells display "stem-like" properties (cancer stem cell, CSC), which may be regulated by the immune system.

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Breast cancer patients with estrogen receptor positive tumors face a constant risk of disease recurrence for the remainder of their lives. Dormant tumor cells residing in tissues such as the bone marrow may generate clinically significant metastases many years after initial diagnosis. Previous studies suggest that dormant cells display "stem like" properties (CSCs), which may be regulated by the immune system.

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Article Synopsis
  • Biomaterial scaffolds that simulate metastatic organ environments help researchers understand cancer progression and metastasis by revealing complex signaling mechanisms.
  • In mouse models of metastatic breast cancer, these scaffolds attract tumor cells destined for the lungs while simultaneously enhancing local immune responses to inhibit their growth.
  • Neutrophils play diverse roles in metastasis; they are attracted to both the scaffolds and lungs but can create either supportive or suppressive immune contexts, influencing the behavior of cancer cells differently in each environment.*
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Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is the most common type of pancreatic cancer in the United States. Additionally, the low survival rate makes PDAC the third-leading cause of cancer-related mortality in the United States, and it is projected that by 2030, it will become the second-leading cause of cancer mortality. Several biological factors contribute to PDAC aggressiveness, and their understanding will narrow the gap from biology to clinical care of PDAC, leading to earlier diagnoses and the development of better treatment options.

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  • Researchers explored the early stages of lung metastasis in triple-negative breast cancer to identify treatment targets that could stop secondary tumors from forming and improve patient outcomes.
  • They found that the early metastatic niche had a significant increase in neutrophils, shifting from an anti-cancer phenotype to a pro-cancer one as the disease progressed.
  • The study suggests that understanding these immune cell transitions and identifying specific genes related to the early anti-cancer response could lead to new therapeutic strategies that enhance survival in metastatic breast cancer patients.
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Breast cancer is the most commonly diagnosed cancer in the USA. Although advances in treatment over the past several decades have significantly improved the outlook for this disease, most women who are diagnosed with estrogen receptor positive disease remain at risk of metastatic relapse for the remainder of their life. The cellular source of late relapse in these patients is thought to be disseminated tumor cells that reactivate after a long period of dormancy.

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  • Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDA) alters the local environment, but how it affects distant sites is not well understood, leading researchers to implant biomaterial scaffolds to study these changes.
  • The study found a unique gene expression signature in tumors, with distinct macrophage populations in the scaffolds showing different gene expressions associated with tumor progression.
  • Analysis from both mice and human samples revealed that the same tumor-associated gene signature is present in macrophages and monocytes, indicating systemic immune changes in patients with PDA.
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  • Pancreatic cancer is highly aggressive and hard to detect early, leading researchers to create biomaterial scaffolds that attract tumor cells and mimic the immune environment of metastasis.* -
  • In experiments with the KPCY pancreatic cancer model, these scaffolds successfully recruited tumor cells before cancer formation and provided better differentiation between early and late disease stages compared to natural liver sites.* -
  • The research highlights the scaffolds' potential for early detection of pancreatic cancer, offering hope for better diagnosis and treatment strategies in this challenging cancer type.*
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  • Cancer metastasis is difficult to manage due to its unpredictable nature, making early detection and research challenging.
  • Engineered metastatic niches are innovative solutions that create controlled environments for cancer cells to grow, allowing for early detection and monitoring of metastasis.
  • These niches can enhance research by allowing scientists to study the mechanisms of metastasis more precisely, potentially improving future cancer treatments and clinical care.
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Metastasis represents the greatest challenge to treatment of cancer patients. Biomaterial scaffolds that recruit tumor cells to a defined site in vivo are an emerging platform for the diagnosis, treatment, and study of metastasis. Recruitment of immune cells and metastatic tumor cells to a defined location provides a precision health platform to assess current clinical cancer biomarkers in a metastatic setting, and to define the next generation of biomarkers.

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Article Synopsis
  • * Researchers hypothesize that the immune cell behavior at these scaffolds can reflect the host's immunosuppressive state, helping to track disease advancement and therapy effectiveness.
  • * Analysis of immune-centric genes and single-cell RNA sequencing reveals that the scaffolds demonstrate specific immune dynamics, indicating potential for monitoring cancer metastasis and treatment response.
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For most cancers, metastasis is the point at which disease is no longer curable. Earlier detection of metastasis, when it is undetectable by current clinical methods, may enable better outcomes. We have developed a biomaterial implant that recruits metastatic cancer cells in mouse models of breast cancer.

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Metastases are preceded by stochastic formation of a hospitable microenvironment known as the premetastatic niche, which has been difficult to study. Herein, we employ implantable polycaprolactone scaffolds as an engineered premetastatic niche to independently investigate the role of interleukin-10 (IL10), CXCL12, and CCL2 in recruiting immune and tumor cells and impacting breast cancer cell phenotype via lentiviral overexpression. Lentivirus delivered from scaffolds in vivo achieved sustained transgene expression for 56 days.

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For most cancers, metastasis is the point at which clinical treatment shifts from curative intent to extending survival. Biomaterial implants acting as a synthetic premetastatic niche recruit metastatic cancer cells and provide a survival advantage, and their use as a diagnostic platform requires assessing their relevance to disease progression. Here, we showed that scaffold-captured tumor cells (SCAF) were 30 times more metastatic to the lung than primary tumor (PT) cells, similar to cells derived from lung micrometastases (LUNG).

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For female cancer survivors, premature ovarian insufficiency (POI) is a common complication of anticancer treatments. Ovarian tissue cryopreservation before treatment, followed by auto-transplantation after remission is a promising option to restore fertility and ovarian endocrine function. However, auto-transplantation is associated with the risk of re-introducing malignant cells harbored in the stroma of the ovarian autograft.

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Primary tumor (PT) immune cells and pre-metastatic niche (PMN) sites are critical to metastasis. Recently, synthetic biomaterial scaffolds used as PMN mimics are shown to capture both immune and metastatic tumor cells. Herein, studies are performed to investigate whether the scaffold-mediated redirection of immune and tumor cells would alter the primary tumor microenvironment (TME).

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The pre-metastatic niche - the accumulation of aberrant immune cells and extracellular matrix proteins in target organs - primes the initially healthy organ microenvironment and renders it amenable for subsequent metastatic cell colonization. By attracting metastatic cancer cells, mimics of the pre-metastatic niche offer both diagnostic and therapeutic potential. However, deconstructing the complexity of the niche by identifying the interactions between cell populations and the mediatory roles of the immune system, soluble factors, extracellular matrix proteins, and stromal cells has proved challenging.

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The onset of distant organ metastasis from primary breast cancer marks the transition to a stage IV diagnosis. Standard imaging modalities often detect distant metastasis when the burden of disease is high, underscoring the need for improved methods of detection to allow for interventions that would impede disease progression. Here, microporous poly(ε-caprolactone) scaffolds were developed that capture early metastatic cells and thus serve as a sentinel for early detection.

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Unlabelled: Metastatic tumor cells colonize the pre-metastatic niche, which is a complex microenvironment consisting partially of extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins. We sought to identify and validate novel contributors to tumor cell colonization using ECM-coated poly(ε-caprolactone) (PCL) scaffolds as mimics of the pre-metastatic niche. Utilizing orthotopic breast cancer mouse models, fibronectin and collagen IV-coated scaffolds implanted in the subcutaneous space captured colonizing tumor cells, showing a greater than 2-fold increase in tumor cell accumulation at the implant site compared to uncoated scaffolds.

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Metastatic cell homing is a complex process mediated in part by diffusible factors secreted from immune cells found at a pre-metastatic niche. We report on connecting secretomics and TRanscriptional Activity CEll aRray (TRACER) data to identify functional paracrine interactions between immune cells and metastatic cells as novel mediators of homing. Metastatic breast cancer mouse models were used to generate a diseased splenocyte conditioned media (D-SCM) containing immune cell secreted factors.

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Background: Intraoperative rupture (IOR) is a rare, but potentially morbid complication of endovascular aneurysm coil embolization. Yet, IOR predictors have remained relatively uninvestigated in relation to coil design.

Objective: To develop a novel in vitro aneurysm model to characterize forces exerted by coils of different design on the aneurysm during endovascular embolization that are hypothesized to contribute to IOR.

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Most synthetic polymer hydrogel tissue adhesives and sealants swell considerably in physiologic conditions, which can result in mechanical weakening and adverse medical complications. This paper describes the synthesis and characterization of mechanically tough zero- or negative-swelling mussel-inspired surgical adhesives based on catechol-modified amphiphilic poly(propylene oxide)-poly(ethylene oxide) block copolymers. The formation, swelling, bulk mechanical, and tissue adhesive properties of the resulting thermosensitive gels were characterized.

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