Publications by authors named "Harvey Herschman"

Background: Prostacyclin is a fundamental signaling pathway traditionally associated with the cardiovascular system and protection against thrombosis but which also has regulatory functions in fibrosis, proliferation, and immunity. Prevailing dogma states that prostacyclin is principally derived from vascular endothelium, although it is known that other cells can also synthesize it. However, the role of nonendothelial sources in prostacyclin production has not been systematically evaluated resulting in an underappreciation of their importance relative to better characterized endothelial sources.

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Background And Aims: Phagocytosis (efferocytosis) of apoptotic neutrophils by macrophages anchors the resolution of intestinal inflammation. Efferocytosis prevents secondary necrosis and inhibits further inflammation, and also reprograms macrophages to facilitate tissue repair and promote resolution function. Macrophage efferocytosis and efferocytosis-dependent reprogramming are implicated in the pathogenesis of inflammatory bowel disease.

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Unlike other epithelial cancer types, circulating tumor cells (CTCs) are less frequently detected in the peripheral blood of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients using epithelial marker-based detection approaches despite the aggressive nature of NSCLC. Here, we demonstrate hexokinase-2 (HK2) as a metabolic function-associated marker for the detection of CTCs. In 59 NSCLC patients bearing cytokeratin-positive (CK) primary tumors, HK2 enables resolving cytokeratin-negative (HK2/CK) CTCs as a prevalent population in about half of the peripheral blood samples with positive CTC counts.

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  • Researchers studied how certain substances made by our blood vessels can help protect the heart but also cause problems.
  • They used special mice to find out that while these substances can be good, they can also lead to serious issues like hardening of the arteries.
  • This discovery suggests that scientists might be able to target these substances to help prevent heart problems in the future.
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  • Aspirin helps prevent blood clots by stopping a part of the blood cells called platelets from producing a signal that can cause clots.
  • Scientists studied mice to understand how aspirin works and found that different types of these mice showed different eicosanoid levels, which are chemicals involved in clotting.
  • The research showed that too much aspirin or mixing it with other medicines might actually make it less effective in preventing blood clots.
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The initiation of an intestinal tumour is a probabilistic process that depends on the competition between mutant and normal epithelial stem cells in crypts. Intestinal stem cells are closely associated with a diverse but poorly characterized network of mesenchymal cell types. However, whether the physiological mesenchymal microenvironment of mutant stem cells affects tumour initiation remains unknown.

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Positron emission tomography (PET) reporter genes (PRGs), when coupled with positron-emitting PET reporter probes (PRPs), are useful for tracking specific cell populations in cell-based therapies, in transgenic animal models, and in xenograft tumor progression experiments. The activities of incorporated PRGs in targeted cells can be monitored noninvasively by PET imaging in preclinical in vivo studies and clinical applications following systemic administration of the appropriate PRG. Here we describe a method that minimizes both design and variability of vector delivery vehicles for alternative PRGs and biological variability of the in vivo target when comparing the efficacy, sensitivity, and specificity of alternative PRG/PRP combinations for in vivo PRG imaging.

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Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) have been used in clinical studies to treat neurological diseases and damage. However, implanted MSCs do not achieve their regenerative effects by differentiating into and replacing neural cells. Instead, MSC secretome components mediate the regenerative effects of MSCs.

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Chronic inflammation facilitates tumor progression. We discovered that a subset of non-small cell lung cancer cells underwent a gradually progressing epithelial-to-mesenchymal (EMT) phenotype following a 21-day exposure to IL-1β, an abundant proinflammatory cytokine in the at-risk for lung cancer pulmonary and the lung tumor microenvironments. Pathway analysis of the gene expression profile and in vitro functional studies revealed that the EMT and EMT-associated phenotypes, including enhanced cell invasion, PD-L1 upregulation, and chemoresistance, were sustained in the absence of continuous IL-1β exposure.

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Rationale: Endothelial cells (ECs) and platelets, which respectively produce antithrombotic prostacyclin and prothrombotic thromboxane A, both express COX1 (cyclooxygenase1). Consequently, there has been no way to delineate any antithrombotic role for COX1-derived prostacyclin from the prothrombotic effects of platelet COX1. By contrast, an antithrombotic role for COX2, which is absent in platelets, is straightforward to demonstrate.

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Since Warburg's observation that most cancers exhibit elevated glycolysis, decades of research have attempted to reduce tumor glucose utilization as a therapeutic approach. Hexokinase (HK) activity is the first glycolytic enzymatic step; despite many attempts to inhibit HK activity, none has reached clinical application. Identification of HK isoforms, and recognition that most tissues express only HK1 while most tumors express HK1 and HK2, stimulated reducing HK2 activity as a therapeutic option.

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  • - Hair is vital for maintaining body temperature and mental health, but many suffer from hair loss with few effective regrowth solutions available.
  • - Researchers found that small molecules like α-ketoglutarate, α-ketobutyrate, rapamycin, and metformin can stimulate dormant hair follicles to start growing hair by activating autophagy, a cellular process.
  • - The study shows that stimulating autophagy can help trigger hair regeneration, particularly in aging mice, indicating potential new treatments for hair loss in humans.
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Cyclooxygenase 2 (Cox2) total knockout and myeloid knockout (MKO) mice develop Crohn's-like intestinal inflammation when fed cholate-containing high fat diet (CCHF). We demonstrated that CCHF impaired intestinal barrier function and increased translocation of endotoxin, initiating TLR/MyD88-dependent inflammation in Cox2 KO but not WT mice. Cox2 MKO increased pro-inflammatory mediators in LPS-activated macrophages, and in the intestinal tissue and plasma upon CCHF challenge.

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Adult brains have limited regenerative capacity. Consequently, both brain damage and neurodegenerative diseases often cause functional impairment for patients. Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs), one type of adult stem cells, can be isolated from various adult tissues.

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Although the majority of adult tissues express only hexokinase 1 (HK1) for glycolysis, most cancers express hexokinase 2 (HK2) and many coexpress HK1 and HK2. In contrast to HK1HK2 cancers, HK1HK2 cancer subsets are sensitive to cytostasis induced by HK2 knockdown and are also sensitive to synthetic lethality in response to the combination of HK2 knockdown, an oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) inhibitor diphenyleneiodonium (DPI), and a fatty acid oxidation (FAO) inhibitor perhexiline (PER). The majority of human multiple myeloma cell lines are HK1HK2.

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It is well understood that fatty acids can be synthesized, imported, and modified to meet requisite demands in cells. However, following the movement of fatty acids through the multiplicity of these metabolic steps has remained difficult. To better address this problem, we developed Fatty Acid Source Analysis (FASA), a model that defines the contribution of synthesis, import, and elongation pathways to fatty acid homeostasis in saturated, monounsaturated, and polyunsaturated fatty acid pools.

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Background: Precision medicine therapies require identification of unique molecular cancer characteristics. Hexokinase (HK) activity has been proposed as a therapeutic target; however, different hexokinase isoforms have not been well characterized as alternative targets. While HK2 is highly expressed in the majority of cancers, cancer subtypes with differential HK1 and HK2 expression have not been characterized for their sensitivities to HK2 silencing.

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Although absent in most adult tissues, hexokinase 2 (HK2) is expressed in a majority of tumors and contributes to increased glucose consumption and to in vivo tumor F-FDG PET signaling. Both HK2 knockdown and knockout approaches were used to investigate the role of HK2 in cancer cell proliferation, in vivo xenograft tumor progression and F-FDG tumor accumulation. BioProfiler analysis monitored cell culture glucose consumption and lactate production; F-FDG PET/CT monitored in vivo tumor glucose accumulation.

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Cells expressing mesenchymal/basal phenotypes in tumors have been associated with stem cell properties. Cancer stem cells (CSCs) are often resistant to conventional chemotherapy. We explored overcoming mesenchymal CSC resistance to chemotherapeutic agents.

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Cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) is an inducible enzyme expressed in inflammation and cancer targeted by nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. COX-2 is also expressed constitutively in discreet locations where its inhibition drives gastrointestinal and cardiovascular/renal side effects. Constitutive COX-2 expression in the kidney regulates renal function and blood flow; however, the global relevance of the kidney versus other tissues to COX-2-dependent blood flow regulation is not known.

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Leukemia cells rely on two nucleotide biosynthetic pathways, de novo and salvage, to produce dNTPs for DNA replication. Here, using metabolomic, proteomic, and phosphoproteomic approaches, we show that inhibition of the replication stress sensing kinase ataxia telangiectasia and Rad3-related protein (ATR) reduces the output of both de novo and salvage pathways by regulating the activity of their respective rate-limiting enzymes, ribonucleotide reductase (RNR) and deoxycytidine kinase (dCK), via distinct molecular mechanisms. Quantification of nucleotide biosynthesis in ATR-inhibited acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) cells reveals substantial remaining de novo and salvage activities, and could not eliminate the disease in vivo.

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New radiochemistry techniques can yield novel PET tracers for COX-2 and address the shortcomings in in vivo stability and specificity, which have held back clinical translation of tracers to image COX-2 expression. Current techniques limit radiosynthesis to analogs of the COX-2 inhibitors with fluorine-18 added via a carbon chain, or on an aromatic position which renders the radiolabeled analog less specific towards COX-2, resulting in tracers with low in vivo stability or specificity. To solve this problem, we have developed a new high affinity, 18F-labelled COX-2 inhibitor that is radiolabeled directly on a heteroaromatic ring.

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Prostaglandin E (PGE )-initiated signaling contributes to stem cell homeostasis and regeneration. However, it is unclear how PGE signaling controls cell stemness. This study identifies a previously unknown mechanism by which PGE /prostaglandin E receptor 4 (EP ) signaling regulates multiple signaling pathways (e.

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