Nimalasena, S.
Anbalagan, S.
Box, C.
Yu, S.
Boult, J.K.
Bush, N.
Howell, L.
Sinnett, V.
Murphy, W.
Yarnold, J.
Robinson, S.P.
Somaiah, N.
(2024). Tumour reoxygenation after intratumoural hydrogen peroxide (KORTUC) injection: a novel approach to enhance radiosensitivity. Bjc rep,
Vol.2
(1),
p. 78.
show abstract
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BACKGROUND: KORTUC (0.5% hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) in 1% sodium-hyaluronate) releases cytotoxic levels of H2O2 in tissues after intratumoural injection. High levels of tumour control after radiotherapy plus KORTUC are reported in breast cancer patients. Here, we use human xenograft models to test the hypothesis that oxygen microbubbles released post-KORTUC are effective in modifying the hypoxic tumour microenvironment. METHODS AND MATERIALS: Pimonidazole and Image-iT™ Red (live hypoxia marker) were utilised to assess dose-dependent changes in hypoxia post-H2O2 in HCT116 and LICR-LON-HN5 spheroids. Using a dual 2-nitroimidazole-marker technique and phospho-ATM we evaluated changes in hypoxia and reactive oxygen species (ROS) respectively, in HCT116 and LICR-LON-HN5 xenografts following intratumoural KORTUC. RESULTS: A significant reduction in Image-iT™ Red fluorescence was observed in spheroids 1 h post-H2O2 at ≥1.2 mM, maintained at 24 h. Ultrasound demonstrated sustained release of oxygen microbubbles within tumours, 1 h post-KORTUC. Hypoxia markers demonstrated significant tissue reoxygenation in both models post-KORTUC and significantly increased phospho-ATM foci reflecting increased ROS production. CONCLUSION: Intratumoural KORTUC represents a novel oxygen delivery method, which can be exploited to enhance radiation response. If efficacy is confirmed in the ongoing phase 2 breast trial it could improve treatment of several tumour types where hypoxia is known to affect radiotherapy outcomes..
Reeves, E.L.
Li, J.
Zormpas-Petridis, K.
Boult, J.K.
Sullivan, J.
Cummings, C.
Blouw, B.
Kang, D.
Sinkus, R.
Bamber, J.C.
Jamin, Y.
Robinson, S.P.
(2023). Investigating the contribution of hyaluronan to the breast tumour microenvironment using multiparametric MRI and MR elastography. Mol oncol,
Vol.17
(6),
pp. 1076-1092.
show abstract
full text
Hyaluronan (HA) is a key component of the dense extracellular matrix in breast cancer, and its accumulation is associated with poor prognosis and metastasis. Pegvorhyaluronidase alfa (PEGPH20) enzymatically degrades HA and can enhance drug delivery and treatment response in preclinical tumour models. Clinical development of stromal-targeted therapies would be accelerated by imaging biomarkers that inform on therapeutic efficacy in vivo. Here, PEGPH20 response was assessed by multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in three orthotopic breast tumour models. Treatment of 4T1/HAS3 tumours, the model with the highest HA accumulation, reduced T1 and T2 relaxation times and the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC), and increased the magnetisation transfer ratio, consistent with lower tissue water content and collapse of the extracellular space. The transverse relaxation rate R2 * increased, consistent with greater erythrocyte accessibility following vascular decompression. Treatment of MDA-MB-231 LM2-4 tumours reduced ADC and dramatically increased tumour viscoelasticity measured by MR elastography. Correlation matrix analyses of data from all models identified ADC as having the strongest correlation with HA accumulation, suggesting that ADC is the most sensitive imaging biomarker of tumour response to PEGPH20..
Izquierdo, E.
Carvalho, D.M.
Mackay, A.
Temelso, S.
Boult, J.K.
Pericoli, G.
Fernandez, E.
Das, M.
Molinari, V.
Grabovska, Y.
Rogers, R.F.
Ajmone-Cat, M.A.
Proszek, P.Z.
Stubbs, M.
Depani, S.
O'Hare, P.
Yu, L.
Roumelioti, G.
Choudhary, J.S.
Clarke, M.
Fairchild, A.R.
Jacques, T.S.
Grundy, R.G.
Howell, L.
Picton, S.
Adamski, J.
Wilson, S.
Gray, J.C.
Zebian, B.
Marshall, L.V.
Carceller, F.
Grill, J.
Vinci, M.
Robinson, S.P.
Hubank, M.
Hargrave, D.
Jones, C.
(2022). DIPG Harbors Alterations Targetable by MEK Inhibitors, with Acquired Resistance Mechanisms Overcome by Combinatorial Inhibition. Cancer discov,
Vol.12
(3),
pp. 712-729.
show abstract
full text
UNLABELLED: The survival of children with diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG) remains dismal, with new treatments desperately needed. In a prospective biopsy-stratified clinical trial, we combined detailed molecular profiling and drug screening in newly established patient-derived models in vitro and in vivo. We identified in vitro sensitivity to MEK inhibitors in DIPGs harboring MAPK pathway alterations, but treatment of patient-derived xenograft models and a patient at relapse failed to elicit a significant response. We generated trametinib-resistant clones in a BRAFG469V model through continuous drug exposure and identified acquired mutations in MEK1/2 with sustained pathway upregulation. These cells showed hallmarks of mesenchymal transition and expression signatures overlapping with inherently trametinib-insensitive patient-derived cells, predicting sensitivity to dasatinib. Combined trametinib and dasatinib showed highly synergistic effects in vitro and on ex vivo brain slices. We highlight the MAPK pathway as a therapeutic target in DIPG and show the importance of parallel resistance modeling and combinatorial treatments for meaningful clinical translation. SIGNIFICANCE: We report alterations in the MAPK pathway in DIPGs to confer initial sensitivity to targeted MEK inhibition. We further identify for the first time the mechanism of resistance to single-agent targeted therapy in these tumors and suggest a novel combinatorial treatment strategy to overcome it in the clinic. This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 587..
Parasaram, V.
Civale, J.
Bamber, J.C.
Robinson, S.P.
Jamin, Y.
Harris, E.
(2022). Preclinical Three-Dimensional Vibrational Shear Wave Elastography for Mapping of Tumour Biomechanical Properties In Vivo. Cancers (basel),
Vol.14
(19).
show abstract
full text
Preclinical investigation of the biomechanical properties of tissues and their treatment-induced changes are essential to support drug-discovery, clinical translation of biomarkers of treatment response, and studies of mechanobiology. Here we describe the first use of preclinical 3D elastography to map the shear wave speed (cs), which is related to tissue stiffness, in vivo and demonstrate the ability of our novel 3D vibrational shear wave elastography (3D-VSWE) system to detect tumour response to a therapeutic challenge. We investigate the use of one or two vibrational sources at vibrational frequencies of 700, 1000 and 1200 Hz. The within-subject coefficients of variation of our system were found to be excellent for 700 and 1000 Hz and 5.4 and 6.2%, respectively. The relative change in cs measured with our 3D-VSWE upon treatment with an anti-vascular therapy ZD6126 in two tumour xenografts reflected changes in tumour necrosis. U-87 MG drug vs vehicle: Δcs = −24.7 ± 2.5 % vs 7.5 ± 7.1%, (p = 0.002) and MDA-MB-231 drug vs vehicle: Δcs = −12.3 ± 2.7 % vs 4.5 ± 4.7%, (p = 0.02). Our system enables rapid (<5 min were required for a scan length of 15 mm and three vibrational frequencies) 3D mapping of quantitative tumour viscoelastic properties in vivo, allowing exploration of regional heterogeneity within tumours and speedy recovery of animals from anaesthesia so that longitudinal studies (e.g., during tumour growth or following treatment) may be conducted frequently..
Mączyńska, J.
Raes, F.
Da Pieve, C.
Turnock, S.
Boult, J.K.
Hoebart, J.
Niedbala, M.
Robinson, S.P.
Harrington, K.J.
Kaspera, W.
Kramer-Marek, G.
(2022). Triggering anti-GBM immune response with EGFR-mediated photoimmunotherapy. Bmc med,
Vol.20
(1),
p. 16.
show abstract
full text
BACKGROUND: Surgical resection followed by chemo-radiation postpones glioblastoma (GBM) progression and extends patient survival, but these tumours eventually recur. Multimodal treatment plans combining intraoperative techniques that maximise tumour excision with therapies aiming to remodel the immunologically cold GBM microenvironment could improve patients' outcomes. Herein, we report that targeted photoimmunotherapy (PIT) not only helps to define tumour location and margins but additionally promotes activation of anti-GBM T cell response. METHODS: EGFR-specific affibody molecule (ZEGFR:03115) was conjugated to IR700. The response to ZEGFR:03115-IR700-PIT was investigated in vitro and in vivo in GBM cell lines and xenograft model. To determine the tumour-specific immune response post-PIT, a syngeneic GBM model was used. RESULTS: In vitro findings confirmed the ability of ZEGFR:03115-IR700 to produce reactive oxygen species upon light irradiation. ZEGFR:03115-IR700-PIT promoted immunogenic cell death that triggered the release of damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs) (calreticulin, ATP, HSP70/90, and HMGB1) into the medium, leading to dendritic cell maturation. In vivo, therapeutic response to light-activated conjugate was observed in brain tumours as early as 1 h post-irradiation. Staining of the brain sections showed reduced cell proliferation, tumour necrosis, and microhaemorrhage within PIT-treated tumours that corroborated MRI T2*w acquisitions. Additionally, enhanced immunological response post-PIT resulted in the attraction and activation of T cells in mice bearing murine GBM brain tumours. CONCLUSIONS: Our data underline the potential of ZEGFR:03115-IR700 to accurately visualise EGFR-positive brain tumours and to destroy tumour cells post-conjugate irradiation turning an immunosuppressive tumour environment into an immune-vulnerable one..
Bernauer, C.
Man, Y.K.
Chisholm, J.C.
Lepicard, E.Y.
Robinson, S.P.
Shipley, J.M.
(2021). Hypoxia and its therapeutic possibilities in paediatric cancers. Br j cancer,
Vol.124
(3),
pp. 539-551.
show abstract
full text
In tumours, hypoxia-a condition in which the demand for oxygen is higher than its availability-is well known to be associated with reduced sensitivity to radiotherapy and chemotherapy, and with immunosuppression. The consequences of hypoxia on tumour biology and patient outcomes have therefore led to the investigation of strategies that can alleviate hypoxia in cancer cells, with the aim of sensitising cells to treatments. An alternative therapeutic approach involves the design of prodrugs that are activated by hypoxic cells. Increasing evidence indicates that hypoxia is not just clinically significant in adult cancers but also in paediatric cancers. We evaluate relevant methods to assess the levels and extent of hypoxia in childhood cancers, including novel imaging strategies such as oxygen-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Preclinical and clinical evidence largely supports the use of hypoxia-targeting drugs in children, and we describe the critical need to identify robust predictive biomarkers for the use of such drugs in future paediatric clinical trials. Ultimately, a more personalised approach to treatment that includes targeting hypoxic tumour cells might improve outcomes in subgroups of paediatric cancer patients..
Poon, E.
Liang, T.
Jamin, Y.
Walz, S.
Kwok, C.
Hakkert, A.
Barker, K.
Urban, Z.
Thway, K.
Zeid, R.
Hallsworth, A.
Box, G.
Ebus, M.E.
Licciardello, M.P.
Sbirkov, Y.
Lazaro, G.
Calton, E.
Costa, B.M.
Valenti, M.
De Haven Brandon, A.
Webber, H.
Tardif, N.
Almeida, G.S.
Christova, R.
Boysen, G.
Richards, M.W.
Barone, G.
Ford, A.
Bayliss, R.
Clarke, P.A.
De Bono, J.
Gray, N.S.
Blagg, J.
Robinson, S.P.
Eccles, S.A.
Zheleva, D.
Bradner, J.E.
Molenaar, J.
Vivanco, I.
Eilers, M.
Workman, P.
Lin, C.Y.
Chesler, L.
(2020). Orally bioavailable CDK9/2 inhibitor shows mechanism-based therapeutic potential in MYCN-driven neuroblastoma. J clin invest,
Vol.130
(11),
pp. 5875-5892.
show abstract
full text
The undruggable nature of oncogenic Myc transcription factors poses a therapeutic challenge in neuroblastoma, a pediatric cancer in which MYCN amplification is strongly associated with unfavorable outcome. Here, we show that CYC065 (fadraciclib), a clinical inhibitor of CDK9 and CDK2, selectively targeted MYCN-amplified neuroblastoma via multiple mechanisms. CDK9 - a component of the transcription elongation complex P-TEFb - bound to the MYCN-amplicon superenhancer, and its inhibition resulted in selective loss of nascent MYCN transcription. MYCN loss led to growth arrest, sensitizing cells for apoptosis following CDK2 inhibition. In MYCN-amplified neuroblastoma, MYCN invaded active enhancers, driving a transcriptionally encoded adrenergic gene expression program that was selectively reversed by CYC065. MYCN overexpression in mesenchymal neuroblastoma was sufficient to induce adrenergic identity and sensitize cells to CYC065. CYC065, used together with temozolomide, a reference therapy for relapsed neuroblastoma, caused long-term suppression of neuroblastoma growth in vivo, highlighting the clinical potential of CDK9/2 inhibition in the treatment of MYCN-amplified neuroblastoma..
Clarke, M.
Mackay, A.
Ismer, B.
Pickles, J.C.
Tatevossian, R.G.
Newman, S.
Bale, T.A.
Stoler, I.
Izquierdo, E.
Temelso, S.
Carvalho, D.M.
Molinari, V.
Burford, A.
Howell, L.
Virasami, A.
Fairchild, A.R.
Avery, A.
Chalker, J.
Kristiansen, M.
Haupfear, K.
Dalton, J.D.
Orisme, W.
Wen, J.
Hubank, M.
Kurian, K.M.
Rowe, C.
Maybury, M.
Crosier, S.
Knipstein, J.
Schüller, U.
Kordes, U.
Kram, D.E.
Snuderl, M.
Bridges, L.
Martin, A.J.
Doey, L.J.
Al-Sarraj, S.
Chandler, C.
Zebian, B.
Cairns, C.
Natrajan, R.
Boult, J.K.
Robinson, S.P.
Sill, M.
Dunkel, I.J.
Gilheeney, S.W.
Rosenblum, M.K.
Hughes, D.
Proszek, P.Z.
Macdonald, T.J.
Preusser, M.
Haberler, C.
Slavc, I.
Packer, R.
Ng, H.-.
Caspi, S.
Popović, M.
Faganel Kotnik, B.
Wood, M.D.
Baird, L.
Davare, M.A.
Solomon, D.A.
Olsen, T.K.
Brandal, P.
Farrell, M.
Cryan, J.B.
Capra, M.
Karremann, M.
Schittenhelm, J.
Schuhmann, M.U.
Ebinger, M.
Dinjens, W.N.
Kerl, K.
Hettmer, S.
Pietsch, T.
Andreiuolo, F.
Driever, P.H.
Korshunov, A.
Hiddingh, L.
Worst, B.C.
Sturm, D.
Zuckermann, M.
Witt, O.
Bloom, T.
Mitchell, C.
Miele, E.
Colafati, G.S.
Diomedi-Camassei, F.
Bailey, S.
Moore, A.S.
Hassall, T.E.
Lowis, S.P.
Tsoli, M.
Cowley, M.J.
Ziegler, D.S.
Karajannis, M.A.
Aquilina, K.
Hargrave, D.R.
Carceller, F.
Marshall, L.V.
von Deimling, A.
Kramm, C.M.
Pfister, S.M.
Sahm, F.
Baker, S.J.
Mastronuzzi, A.
Carai, A.
Vinci, M.
Capper, D.
Popov, S.
Ellison, D.W.
Jacques, T.S.
Jones, D.T.
Jones, C.
(2020). Infant High-Grade Gliomas Comprise Multiple Subgroups Characterized by Novel Targetable Gene Fusions and Favorable Outcomes. Cancer discov,
Vol.10
(7),
pp. 942-963.
show abstract
full text
Infant high-grade gliomas appear clinically distinct from their counterparts in older children, indicating that histopathologic grading may not accurately reflect the biology of these tumors. We have collected 241 cases under 4 years of age, and carried out histologic review, methylation profiling, and custom panel, genome, or exome sequencing. After excluding tumors representing other established entities or subgroups, we identified 130 cases to be part of an "intrinsic" spectrum of disease specific to the infant population. These included those with targetable MAPK alterations, and a large proportion of remaining cases harboring gene fusions targeting ALK (n = 31), NTRK1/2/3 (n = 21), ROS1 (n = 9), and MET (n = 4) as their driving alterations, with evidence of efficacy of targeted agents in the clinic. These data strongly support the concept that infant gliomas require a change in diagnostic practice and management. SIGNIFICANCE: Infant high-grade gliomas in the cerebral hemispheres comprise novel subgroups, with a prevalence of ALK, NTRK1/2/3, ROS1, or MET gene fusions. Kinase fusion-positive tumors have better outcome and respond to targeted therapy clinically. Other subgroups have poor outcome, with fusion-negative cases possibly representing an epigenetically driven pluripotent stem cell phenotype.See related commentary by Szulzewsky and Cimino, p. 904.This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 890..
King, D.
Li, X.D.
Almeida, G.S.
Kwok, C.
Gravells, P.
Harrison, D.
Burke, S.
Hallsworth, A.
Jamin, Y.
George, S.
Robinson, S.P.
Lord, C.J.
Poon, E.
Yeomanson, D.
Chesler, L.
Bryant, H.E.
(2020). MYCN expression induces replication stress and sensitivity to PARP inhibition in neuroblastoma. Oncotarget,
Vol.11
(23),
pp. 2141-2159.
show abstract
full text
This study investigates the influence expression of the MYCN oncogene has on the DNA damage response, replication fork progression and sensitivity to PARP inhibition in neuroblastoma. In a panel of neuroblastoma cell lines, MYCN amplification or MYCN expression resulted in increased cell death in response to a range of PARP inhibitors (niraparib, veliparib, talazoparib and olaparib) compared to the response seen in non-expressing/amplified cells. MYCN expression slowed replication fork speed and increased replication fork stalling, an effect that was amplified by PARP inhibition or PARP1 depletion. Increased DNA damage seen was specifically induced in S-phase cells. Importantly, PARP inhibition caused a significant increase in the survival of mice bearing MYCN expressing tumours in a transgenic murine model of MYCN expressing neuroblastoma. Olaparib also sensitized MYCN expressing cells to camptothecin- and temozolomide-induced cell death to a greater degree than non-expressing cells. In summary, MYCN expression leads to increased replication stress in neuroblastoma cells. This effect is exaggerated by inhibition of PARP, resulting in S-phase specific DNA damage and ultimately increased tumour cell death. PARP inhibition alone or in combination with classical chemotherapeutics is therefore a potential therapeutic strategy for neuroblastoma and may be more effective in MYCN expressing tumours..
Zormpas-Petridis, K.
Poon, E.
Clarke, M.
Jerome, N.P.
Boult, J.K.
Blackledge, M.D.
Carceller, F.
Koers, A.
Barone, G.
Pearson, A.D.
Moreno, L.
Anderson, J.
Sebire, N.
McHugh, K.
Koh, D.-.
Chesler, L.
Yuan, Y.
Robinson, S.P.
Jamin, Y.
(2020). Noninvasive MRI Native T1 Mapping Detects Response to MYCN-targeted Therapies in the Th-MYCN Model of Neuroblastoma. Cancer res,
Vol.80
(16),
pp. 3424-3435.
show abstract
full text
Noninvasive early indicators of treatment response are crucial to the successful delivery of precision medicine in children with cancer. Neuroblastoma is a common solid tumor of young children that arises from anomalies in neural crest development. Therapeutic approaches aiming to destabilize MYCN protein, such as small-molecule inhibitors of Aurora A and mTOR, are currently being evaluated in early phase clinical trials in children with high-risk MYCN-driven disease, with limited ability to evaluate conventional pharmacodynamic biomarkers of response. T1 mapping is an MRI scan that measures the proton spin-lattice relaxation time T1. Using a multiparametric MRI-pathologic cross-correlative approach and computational pathology methodologies including a machine learning-based algorithm for the automatic detection and classification of neuroblasts, we show here that T1 mapping is sensitive to the rich histopathologic heterogeneity of neuroblastoma in the Th-MYCN transgenic model. Regions with high native T1 corresponded to regions dense in proliferative undifferentiated neuroblasts, whereas regions characterized by low T1 were rich in apoptotic or differentiating neuroblasts. Reductions in tumor-native T1 represented a sensitive biomarker of response to treatment-induced apoptosis with two MYCN-targeted small-molecule inhibitors, Aurora A kinase inhibitor alisertib (MLN8237) and mTOR inhibitor vistusertib (AZD2014). Overall, we demonstrate the potential of T1 mapping, a scan readily available on most clinical MRI scanners, to assess response to therapy and guide clinical trials for children with neuroblastoma. The study reinforces the potential role of MRI-based functional imaging in delivering precision medicine to children with neuroblastoma. SIGNIFICANCE: This study shows that MRI-based functional imaging can detect apoptotic responses to MYCN-targeted small-molecule inhibitors in a genetically engineered murine model of MYCN-driven neuroblastoma..
Nimalasena, S.
Gothard, L.
Anbalagan, S.
Allen, S.
Sinnett, V.
Mohammed, K.
Kothari, G.
Musallam, A.
Lucy, C.
Yu, S.
Nayamundanda, G.
Kirby, A.
Ross, G.
Sawyer, E.
Castell, F.
Cleator, S.
Locke, I.
Tait, D.
Westbury, C.
Wolstenholme, V.
Box, C.
Robinson, S.P.
Yarnold, J.
Somaiah, N.
(2020). Intratumoral Hydrogen Peroxide With Radiation Therapy in Locally Advanced Breast Cancer: Results From a Phase 1 Clinical Trial. Int j radiat oncol biol phys,
Vol.108
(4),
pp. 1019-1029.
show abstract
full text
PURPOSE: Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) plays a vital role in normal cellular processes but at supraphysiological concentrations causes oxidative stress and cytotoxicity, a property that is potentially exploitable for the treatment of cancer in combination with radiation therapy (RT). We report the first phase 1 trial testing the safety and tolerability of intratumoral H2O2 + external beam RT as a novel combination in patients with breast cancer and exploratory plasma marker analyses investigating possible mechanisms of action. METHODS AND MATERIALS: Twelve patients with breast tumors ≥3 cm (surgically or medically inoperable) received intratumoral H2O2 with either 36 Gy in 6 twice-weekly fractions (n = 6) or 49.5 Gy in 18 daily fractions (n = 6) to the whole breast ± locoregional lymph nodes in a single-center, nonrandomized study. H2O2 was mixed in 1% sodium hyaluronate gel (final H2O2 concentration 0.5%) before administration to slow drug release and minimize local discomfort. The mixture was injected intratumorally under ultrasound guidance twice weekly 1 hour before RT. The primary endpoint was patient-reported maximum intratumoral pain intensity before and 24 hours postinjection. Secondary endpoints included grade ≥3 skin toxicity and tumor response by ultrasound. Blood samples were collected before, during, and at the end of treatment for cell-death and immune marker analysis. RESULTS: Compliance with H2O2 and RT was 100%. Five of 12 patients reported moderate pain after injection (grade 2 Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events v4.02) with median duration 60 minutes (interquartile range, 20-120 minutes). Skin toxicity was comparable to RT alone, with maintained partial/complete tumor response relative to baseline in 11 of 12 patients at last follow-up (median 12 months). Blood marker analysis highlighted significant associations of TRAIL, IL-1β, IL-4, and MIP-1α with tumor response. CONCLUSIONS: Intratumoral H2O2 with RT is well tolerated with no additional toxicity compared with RT alone. If efficacy is confirmed in a randomized phase 2 trial, the approach has potential as a cost-effective radiation response enhancer in multiple cancer types in which locoregional control after RT alone remains poor..
Zormpas-Petridis, K.
Jerome, N.P.
Blackledge, M.D.
Carceller, F.
Poon, E.
Clarke, M.
McErlean, C.M.
Barone, G.
Koers, A.
Vaidya, S.J.
Marshall, L.V.
Pearson, A.D.
Moreno, L.
Anderson, J.
Sebire, N.
McHugh, K.
Koh, D.-.
Yuan, Y.
Chesler, L.
Robinson, S.P.
Jamin, Y.
(2019). MRI Imaging of the Hemodynamic Vasculature of Neuroblastoma Predicts Response to Antiangiogenic Treatment. Cancer res,
Vol.79
(11),
pp. 2978-2991.
show abstract
full text
Childhood neuroblastoma is a hypervascular tumor of neural origin, for which antiangiogenic drugs are currently being evaluated; however, predictive biomarkers of treatment response, crucial for successful delivery of precision therapeutics, are lacking. We describe an MRI-pathologic cross-correlative approach using intrinsic susceptibility (IS) and susceptibility contrast (SC) MRI to noninvasively map the vascular phenotype in neuroblastoma Th-MYCN transgenic mice treated with the vascular endothelial growth factor receptor inhibitor cediranib. We showed that the transverse MRI relaxation rate R 2* (second-1) and fractional blood volume (fBV, %) were sensitive imaging biomarkers of hemorrhage and vascular density, respectively, and were also predictive biomarkers of response to cediranib. Comparison with MRI and pathology from patients with MYCN-amplified neuroblastoma confirmed the high degree to which the Th-MYCN model vascular phenotype recapitulated that of the clinical phenotype, thereby supporting further evaluation of IS- and SC-MRI in the clinic. This study reinforces the potential role of functional MRI in delivering precision medicine to children with neuroblastoma. SIGNIFICANCE: This study shows that functional MRI predicts response to vascular-targeted therapy in a genetically engineered murine model of neuroblastoma..
O'Connor, J.P.
Robinson, S.P.
Waterton, J.C.
(2019). Imaging tumour hypoxia with oxygen-enhanced MRI and BOLD MRI. Br j radiol,
Vol.92
(1095),
p. 20180642.
show abstract
full text
Hypoxia is known to be a poor prognostic indicator for nearly all solid tumours and also is predictive of treatment failure for radiotherapy, chemotherapy, surgery and targeted therapies. Imaging has potential to identify, spatially map and quantify tumour hypoxia prior to therapy, as well as track changes in hypoxia on treatment. At present no hypoxia imaging methods are available for routine clinical use. Research has largely focused on positron emission tomography (PET)-based techniques, but there is gathering evidence that MRI techniques may provide a practical and more readily translational alternative. In this review we focus on the potential for imaging hypoxia by measuring changes in longitudinal relaxation [R1; termed oxygen-enhanced MRI or tumour oxygenation level dependent (TOLD) MRI] and effective transverse relaxation [R2*; termed blood oxygenation level dependent (BOLD) MRI], induced by inhalation of either 100% oxygen or the radiosensitising hyperoxic gas carbogen. We explain the scientific principles behind oxygen-enhanced MRI and BOLD and discuss significant studies and their limitations. All imaging biomarkers require rigorous validation in order to translate into clinical use and the steps required to further develop oxygen-enhanced MRI and BOLD MRI into decision-making tools are discussed..
Carreno, G.
Boult, J.K.
Apps, J.
Gonzalez-Meljem, J.M.
Haston, S.
Guiho, R.
Stache, C.
Danielson, L.S.
Koers, A.
Smith, L.M.
Virasami, A.
Panousopoulos, L.
Buchfelder, M.
Jacques, T.S.
Chesler, L.
Robinson, S.P.
Martinez-Barbera, J.P.
(2019). SHH pathway inhibition is protumourigenic in adamantinomatous craniopharyngioma. Endocr relat cancer,
Vol.26
(3),
pp. 355-366.
show abstract
full text
Pharmacological inhibition of the sonic hedgehog (SHH) pathway can be beneficial against certain cancers but detrimental in others. Adamantinomatous craniopharyngioma (ACP) is a relevant pituitary tumour, affecting children and adults, that is associated with high morbidity and increased mortality in long-term follow-up. We have previously demonstrated overactivation of the SHH pathway in both human and mouse ACP. Here, we show that this activation is ligand dependent and induced by the expression of SHH protein in a small proportion of tumour cells. We investigate the functional relevance of SHH signalling in ACP through MRI-guided preclinical studies using an ACP mouse model. Treatment with vismodegib, a clinically approved SHH pathway inhibitor, results in a significant reduction in median survival due to premature development of highly proliferative and vascularised undifferentiated tumours. Reinforcing the mouse data, SHH pathway inhibition in human ACP leads to a significant increase in tumour cell proliferation both ex vivo, in explant cultures, and in vivo, in a patient-derived xenograft model. Together, our results demonstrate a protumourigenic effect of vismodegib-mediated SHH pathway inhibition in ACP..
Li, J.
Zormpas-Petridis, K.
Boult, J.K.
Reeves, E.L.
Heindl, A.
Vinci, M.
Lopes, F.
Cummings, C.
Springer, C.J.
Chesler, L.
Jones, C.
Bamber, J.C.
Yuan, Y.
Sinkus, R.
Jamin, Y.
Robinson, S.P.
(2019). Investigating the Contribution of Collagen to the Tumor Biomechanical Phenotype with Noninvasive Magnetic Resonance Elastography. Cancer res,
Vol.79
(22),
pp. 5874-5883.
show abstract
full text
Increased stiffness in the extracellular matrix (ECM) contributes to tumor progression and metastasis. Therefore, stromal modulating therapies and accompanying biomarkers are being developed to target ECM stiffness. Magnetic resonance (MR) elastography can noninvasively and quantitatively map the viscoelastic properties of tumors in vivo and thus has clear clinical applications. Herein, we used MR elastography, coupled with computational histopathology, to interrogate the contribution of collagen to the tumor biomechanical phenotype and to evaluate its sensitivity to collagenase-induced stromal modulation. Elasticity (G d) and viscosity (G l) were significantly greater for orthotopic BT-474 (G d = 5.9 ± 0.2 kPa, G l = 4.7 ± 0.2 kPa, n = 7) and luc-MDA-MB-231-LM2-4 (G d = 7.9 ± 0.4 kPa, G l = 6.0 ± 0.2 kPa, n = 6) breast cancer xenografts, and luc-PANC1 (G d = 6.9 ± 0.3 kPa, G l = 6.2 ± 0.2 kPa, n = 7) pancreatic cancer xenografts, compared with tumors associated with the nervous system, including GTML/Trp53KI/KI medulloblastoma (G d = 3.5 ± 0.2 kPa, G l = 2.3 ± 0.2 kPa, n = 7), orthotopic luc-D-212-MG (G d = 3.5 ± 0.2 kPa, G l = 2.3 ± 0.2 kPa, n = 7), luc-RG2 (G d = 3.5 ± 0.2 kPa, G l = 2.3 ± 0.2 kPa, n = 5), and luc-U-87-MG (G d = 3.5 ± 0.2 kPa, G l = 2.3 ± 0.2 kPa, n = 8) glioblastoma xenografts, intracranially propagated luc-MDA-MB-231-LM2-4 (G d = 3.7 ± 0.2 kPa, G l = 2.2 ± 0.1 kPa, n = 7) breast cancer xenografts, and Th-MYCN neuroblastomas (G d = 3.5 ± 0.2 kPa, G l = 2.3 ± 0.2 kPa, n = 5). Positive correlations between both elasticity (r = 0.72, P < 0.0001) and viscosity (r = 0.78, P < 0.0001) were determined with collagen fraction, but not with cellular or vascular density. Treatment with collagenase significantly reduced G d (P = 0.002) and G l (P = 0.0006) in orthotopic breast tumors. Texture analysis of extracted images of picrosirius red staining revealed significant negative correlations of entropy with G d (r = -0.69, P < 0.0001) and G l (r = -0.76, P < 0.0001), and positive correlations of fractal dimension with G d (r = 0.75, P < 0.0001) and G l (r = 0.78, P < 0.0001). MR elastography can thus provide sensitive imaging biomarkers of tumor collagen deposition and its therapeutic modulation. SIGNIFICANCE: MR elastography enables noninvasive detection of tumor stiffness and will aid in the development of ECM-targeting therapies..
Yogev, O.
Almeida, G.S.
Barker, K.T.
George, S.L.
Kwok, C.
Campbell, J.
Zarowiecki, M.
Kleftogiannis, D.
Smith, L.M.
Hallsworth, A.
Berry, P.
Möcklinghoff, T.
Webber, H.T.
Danielson, L.S.
Buttery, B.
Calton, E.A.
da Costa, B.M.
Poon, E.
Jamin, Y.
Lise, S.
Veal, G.J.
Sebire, N.
Robinson, S.P.
Anderson, J.
Chesler, L.
(2019). In Vivo Modeling of Chemoresistant Neuroblastoma Provides New Insights into Chemorefractory Disease and Metastasis. Cancer res,
Vol.79
(20),
pp. 5382-5393.
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Neuroblastoma is a pediatric cancer that is frequently metastatic and resistant to conventional treatment. In part, a lack of natively metastatic, chemoresistant in vivo models has limited our insight into the development of aggressive disease. The Th-MYCN genetically engineered mouse model develops rapidly progressive chemosensitive neuroblastoma and lacks clinically relevant metastases. To study tumor progression in a context more reflective of clinical therapy, we delivered multicycle treatment with cyclophosphamide to Th-MYCN mice, individualizing therapy using MRI, to generate the Th-MYCN CPM32 model. These mice developed chemoresistance and spontaneous bone marrow metastases. Tumors exhibited an altered immune microenvironment with increased stroma and tumor-associated fibroblasts. Analysis of copy number aberrations revealed genomic changes characteristic of human MYCN-amplified neuroblastoma, specifically copy number gains at mouse chromosome 11, syntenic with gains on human chromosome 17q. RNA sequencing revealed enriched expression of genes associated with 17q gain and upregulation of genes associated with high-risk neuroblastoma, such as the cell-cycle regulator cyclin B1-interacting protein 1 (Ccnb1ip1) and thymidine kinase (TK1). The antiapoptotic, prometastatic JAK-STAT3 pathway was activated in chemoresistant tumors, and treatment with the JAK1/JAK2 inhibitor CYT387 reduced progression of chemoresistant tumors and increased survival. Our results highlight that under treatment conditions that mimic chemotherapy in human patients, Th-MYCN mice develop genomic, microenvironmental, and clinical features reminiscent of human chemorefractory disease. The Th-MYCN CPM32 model therefore is a useful tool to dissect in detail mechanisms that drive metastasis and chemoresistance, and highlights dysregulation of signaling pathways such as JAK-STAT3 that could be targeted to improve treatment of aggressive disease. SIGNIFICANCE: An in vivo mouse model of high-risk treatment-resistant neuroblastoma exhibits changes in the tumor microenvironment, widespread metastases, and sensitivity to JAK1/2 inhibition..
Walker-Samuel, S.
Roberts, T.A.
Ramasawmy, R.
Burrell, J.S.
Johnson, S.P.
Siow, B.M.
Richardson, S.
Gonçalves, M.R.
Pendse, D.
Robinson, S.P.
Pedley, R.B.
Lythgoe, M.F.
(2018). Investigating Low-Velocity Fluid Flow in Tumors with Convection-MRI. Cancer res,
Vol.78
(7),
pp. 1859-1872.
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Several distinct fluid flow phenomena occur in solid tumors, including intravascular blood flow and interstitial convection. Interstitial fluid pressure is often raised in solid tumors, which can limit drug delivery. To probe low-velocity flow in tumors resulting from raised interstitial fluid pressure, we developed a novel MRI technique named convection-MRI, which uses a phase-contrast acquisition with a dual-inversion vascular nulling preparation to separate intra- and extravascular flow. Here, we report the results of experiments in flow phantoms, numerical simulations, and tumor xenograft models to investigate the technical feasibility of convection-MRI. We observed a significant correlation between estimates of effective fluid pressure from convection-MRI with gold-standard, invasive measurements of interstitial fluid pressure in mouse models of human colorectal carcinoma. Our results show how convection-MRI can provide insights into the growth and responsiveness to vascular-targeting therapy in colorectal cancers.Significance: A noninvasive method for measuring low-velocity fluid flow caused by raised fluid pressure can be used to assess changes caused by therapy. Cancer Res; 78(7); 1859-72. ©2018 AACR..
Jerome, N.P.
Boult, J.K.
Orton, M.R.
d'Arcy, J.A.
Nerurkar, A.
Leach, M.O.
Koh, D.-.
Collins, D.J.
Robinson, S.P.
(2018). Characterisation of fibrosis in chemically-induced rat mammary carcinomas using multi-modal endogenous contrast MRI on a 1 5T clinical platform. Eur radiol,
Vol.28
(4),
pp. 1642-1653.
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OBJECTIVES: To determine the ability of multi-parametric, endogenous contrast MRI to detect and quantify fibrosis in a chemically-induced rat model of mammary carcinoma. METHODS: Female Sprague-Dawley rats (n=18) were administered with N-methyl-N-nitrosourea; resulting mammary carcinomas underwent nine-b-value diffusion-weighted (DWI), ultrashort-echo (UTE) and magnetisation transfer (MT) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) on a clinical 1.5T platform, and associated quantitative MR parameters were calculated. Excised tumours were histologically assessed for degree of necrosis, collagen, hypoxia and microvessel density. Significance level adjusted for multiple comparisons was p=0.0125. RESULTS: Significant correlations were found between MT parameters and degree of picrosirius red staining (r > 0.85, p < 0.0002 for ka and δ, r < -0.75, p < 0.001 for T1 and T1s, Pearson), indicating that MT is sensitive to collagen content in mammary carcinoma. Picrosirius red also correlated with the DWI parameter fD* (r=0.801, p=0.0004) and conventional gradient-echo T2* (r=-0.660, p=0.0055). Percentage necrosis correlated moderately with ultrashort/conventional-echo signal ratio (r=0.620, p=0.0105). Pimonidazole adduct (hypoxia) and CD31 (microvessel density) staining did not correlate with any MR parameter assessed. CONCLUSIONS: Magnetisation transfer MRI successfully detects collagen content in mammary carcinoma, supporting inclusion of MT imaging to identify fibrosis, a prognostic marker, in clinical breast MRI examinations. KEY POINTS: • Magnetisation transfer imaging is sensitive to collagen content in mammary carcinoma. • Magnetisation transfer imaging to detect fibrosis in mammary carcinoma fibrosis is feasible. • IVIM diffusion does not correlate with microvessel density in preclinical mammary carcinoma..
Boult, J.K.
Apps, J.R.
Hölsken, A.
Hutchinson, J.C.
Carreno, G.
Danielson, L.S.
Smith, L.M.
Bäuerle, T.
Buslei, R.
Buchfelder, M.
Virasami, A.K.
Koers, A.
Arthurs, O.J.
Jacques, T.S.
Chesler, L.
Martinez-Barbera, J.P.
Robinson, S.P.
(2018). Preclinical transgenic and patient-derived xenograft models recapitulate the radiological features of human adamantinomatous craniopharyngioma. Brain pathol,
Vol.28
(4),
pp. 475-483.
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To assess the clinical relevance of transgenic and patient-derived xenograft models of adamantinomatous craniopharyngioma (ACP) using serial magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and high resolution post-mortem microcomputed tomography (μ-CT), with correlation with histology and human ACP imaging. The growth patterns and radiological features of tumors arising in Hesx1Cre/+ ;Ctnnb1lox(ex3)/+ transgenic mice, and of patient-derived ACP xenografts implanted in the cerebral cortex, were monitored longitudinally in vivo with anatomical and functional MRI, and by ex vivo μ-CT at study end. Pathological correlates with hematoxylin and eosin stained sections were investigated. Early enlargement and heterogeneity of Hesx1Cre/+ ;Ctnnb1lox(ex3)/+ mouse pituitaries was evident at initial imaging at 8 weeks, which was followed by enlargement of a solid tumor, and development of cysts and hemorrhage. Tumors demonstrated MRI features that recapitulated those of human ACP, specifically, T1 -weighted signal enhancement in the solid tumor component following Gd-DTPA administration, and in some animals, hyperintense cysts on FLAIR and T1 -weighted images. Ex vivo μ-CT correlated with MRI findings and identified smaller cysts, which were confirmed by histology. Characteristic histological features, including wet keratin and calcification, were visible on μ-CT and verified by histological sections of patient-derived ACP xenografts. The Hesx1Cre/+ ;Ctnnb1lox(ex3)/+ transgenic mouse model and cerebral patient-derived ACP xenografts recapitulate a number of the key radiological features of the human disease and provide promising foundations for in vivo trials of novel therapeutics for the treatment of these tumors..
Little, R.A.
Jamin, Y.
Boult, J.K.
Naish, J.H.
Watson, Y.
Cheung, S.
Holliday, K.F.
Lu, H.
McHugh, D.J.
Irlam, J.
West, C.M.
Betts, G.N.
Ashton, G.
Reynolds, A.R.
Maddineni, S.
Clarke, N.W.
Parker, G.J.
Waterton, J.C.
Robinson, S.P.
O'Connor, J.P.
(2018). Mapping Hypoxia in Renal Carcinoma with Oxygen-enhanced MRI: Comparison with Intrinsic Susceptibility MRI and Pathology. Radiology,
Vol.288
(3),
pp. 739-747.
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Purpose To cross-validate T1-weighted oxygen-enhanced (OE) MRI measurements of tumor hypoxia with intrinsic susceptibility MRI measurements and to demonstrate the feasibility of translation of the technique for patients. Materials and Methods Preclinical studies in nine 786-0-R renal cell carcinoma (RCC) xenografts and prospective clinical studies in eight patients with RCC were performed. Longitudinal relaxation rate changes (∆R1) after 100% oxygen inhalation were quantified, reflecting the paramagnetic effect on tissue protons because of the presence of molecular oxygen. Native transverse relaxation rate (R2*) and oxygen-induced R2* change (∆R2*) were measured, reflecting presence of deoxygenated hemoglobin molecules. Median and voxel-wise values of ∆R1 were compared with values of R2* and ∆R2*. Tumor regions with dynamic contrast agent-enhanced MRI perfusion, refractory to signal change at OE MRI (referred to as perfused Oxy-R), were distinguished from perfused oxygen-enhancing (perfused Oxy-E) and nonperfused regions. R2* and ∆R2* values in each tumor subregion were compared by using one-way analysis of variance. Results Tumor-wise and voxel-wise ∆R1 and ∆R2* comparisons did not show correlative relationships. In xenografts, parcellation analysis revealed that perfused Oxy-R regions had faster native R2* (102.4 sec-1 vs 81.7 sec-1) and greater negative ∆R2* (-22.9 sec-1 vs -5.4 sec-1), compared with perfused Oxy-E and nonperfused subregions (all P < .001), respectively. Similar findings were present in human tumors (P < .001). Further, perfused Oxy-R helped identify tumor hypoxia, measured at pathologic analysis, in both xenografts (P = .002) and human tumors (P = .003). Conclusion Intrinsic susceptibility biomarkers provide cross validation of the OE MRI biomarker perfused Oxy-R. Consistent relationship to pathologic analyses was found in xenografts and human tumors, demonstrating biomarker translation. Published under a CC BY 4.0 license. Online supplemental material is available for this article..
Al-Saffar, N.M.
Troy, H.
Wong Te Fong, A.-.
Paravati, R.
Jackson, L.E.
Gowan, S.
Boult, J.K.
Robinson, S.P.
Eccles, S.A.
Yap, T.A.
Leach, M.O.
Chung, Y.-.
(2018). Metabolic biomarkers of response to the AKT inhibitor MK-2206 in pre-clinical models of human colorectal and prostate carcinoma. Br j cancer,
Vol.119
(9),
pp. 1118-1128.
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BACKGROUND: AKT is commonly overexpressed in tumours and plays an important role in the metabolic reprogramming of cancer. We have used magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) to assess whether inhibition of AKT signalling would result in metabolic changes that could potentially be used as biomarkers to monitor response to AKT inhibition. METHODS: Cellular and metabolic effects of the allosteric AKT inhibitor MK-2206 were investigated in HT29 colon and PC3 prostate cancer cells and xenografts using flow cytometry, immunoblotting, immunohistology and MRS. RESULTS: In vitro treatment with MK-2206 inhibited AKT signalling and resulted in time-dependent alterations in glucose, glutamine and phospholipid metabolism. In vivo, MK-2206 resulted in inhibition of AKT signalling and tumour growth compared with vehicle-treated controls. In vivo MRS analysis of HT29 subcutaneous xenografts showed similar metabolic changes to those seen in vitro including decreases in the tCho/water ratio, tumour bioenergetic metabolites and changes in glutamine and glutathione metabolism. Similar phosphocholine changes compared to in vitro were confirmed in the clinically relevant orthotopic PC3 model. CONCLUSION: This MRS study suggests that choline metabolites detected in response to AKT inhibition are time and microenvironment-dependent, and may have potential as non-invasive biomarkers for monitoring response to AKT inhibitors in selected cancer types..
Papaevangelou, E.
Boult, J.K.
Whitley, G.S.
Robinson, S.P.
Howe, F.A.
(2018). Assessment of the direct effects of DDAH I on tumour angiogenesis in vivo. Angiogenesis,
Vol.21
(4),
pp. 737-749.
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Nitric oxide (NO) has been strongly implicated in glioma progression and angiogenesis. The endogenous inhibitors of NO synthesis, asymmetric dimethylarginine (ADMA) and N-monomethyl-L-arginine (L-NMMA), are metabolized by dimethylarginine dimethylaminohydrolase (DDAH), and hence, DDAH is an intracellular factor that regulates NO. However, DDAH may also have an NO-independent action. We aimed to investigate whether DDAH I has any direct role in tumour vascular development and growth independent of its NO-mediated effects, in order to establish the future potential of DDAH inhibition as an anti-angiogenic treatment strategy. A clone of rat C6 glioma cells deficient in NO production expressing a pTet Off regulatable element was identified and engineered to overexpress DDAH I in the absence of doxycycline. Xenografts derived from these cells were propagated in the presence or absence of doxycycline and susceptibility magnetic resonance imaging used to assess functional vasculature in vivo. Pathological correlates of tumour vascular density, maturation and function were also sought. In the absence of doxycycline, tumours exhibited high DDAH I expression and activity, which was suppressed in its presence. However, overexpression of DDAH I had no measurable effect on tumour growth, vessel density, function or maturation. These data suggest that in C6 gliomas DDAH has no NO-independent effects on tumour growth and angiogenesis, and that the therapeutic potential of targeting DDAH in gliomas should only be considered in the context of NO regulation..
Vlachogiannis, G.
Hedayat, S.
Vatsiou, A.
Jamin, Y.
Fernández-Mateos, J.
Khan, K.
Lampis, A.
Eason, K.
Huntingford, I.
Burke, R.
Rata, M.
Koh, D.-.
Tunariu, N.
Collins, D.
Hulkki-Wilson, S.
Ragulan, C.
Spiteri, I.
Moorcraft, S.Y.
Chau, I.
Rao, S.
Watkins, D.
Fotiadis, N.
Bali, M.
Darvish-Damavandi, M.
Lote, H.
Eltahir, Z.
Smyth, E.C.
Begum, R.
Clarke, P.A.
Hahne, J.C.
Dowsett, M.
de Bono, J.
Workman, P.
Sadanandam, A.
Fassan, M.
Sansom, O.J.
Eccles, S.
Starling, N.
Braconi, C.
Sottoriva, A.
Robinson, S.P.
Cunningham, D.
Valeri, N.
(2018). Patient-derived organoids model treatment response of metastatic gastrointestinal cancers. Science,
Vol.359
(6378),
pp. 920-926.
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Patient-derived organoids (PDOs) have recently emerged as robust preclinical models; however, their potential to predict clinical outcomes in patients has remained unclear. We report on a living biobank of PDOs from metastatic, heavily pretreated colorectal and gastroesophageal cancer patients recruited in phase 1/2 clinical trials. Phenotypic and genotypic profiling of PDOs showed a high degree of similarity to the original patient tumors. Molecular profiling of tumor organoids was matched to drug-screening results, suggesting that PDOs could complement existing approaches in defining cancer vulnerabilities and improving treatment responses. We compared responses to anticancer agents ex vivo in organoids and PDO-based orthotopic mouse tumor xenograft models with the responses of the patients in clinical trials. Our data suggest that PDOs can recapitulate patient responses in the clinic and could be implemented in personalized medicine programs..
Khan, A.A.
Paget, J.T.
McLaughlin, M.
Kyula, J.N.
Wilkinson, M.J.
Pencavel, T.
Mansfield, D.
Roulstone, V.
Seth, R.
Halle, M.
Somaiah, N.
Boult, J.K.
Robinson, S.P.
Pandha, H.S.
Vile, R.G.
Melcher, A.A.
Harris, P.A.
Harrington, K.J.
(2018). Genetically modified lentiviruses that preserve microvascular function protect against late radiation damage in normal tissues. Sci transl med,
Vol.10
(425).
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Improvements in cancer survival mean that long-term toxicities, which contribute to the morbidity of cancer survivorship, are being increasingly recognized. Late adverse effects (LAEs) in normal tissues after radiotherapy (RT) are characterized by vascular dysfunction and fibrosis causing volume loss and tissue contracture, for example, in the free flaps used for immediate breast reconstruction after mastectomy. We evaluated the efficacy of lentivirally delivered superoxide dismutase 2 (SOD2) overexpression and connective tissue growth factor (CTGF) knockdown by short hairpin RNA in reducing the severity of LAEs in an animal model of free flap LAEs. Vectors were delivered by intra-arterial injection, ex vivo, to target the vascular compartment. LVSOD2 and LVshCTGF monotherapy before irradiation resulted in preservation of flap volume or reduction in skin contracture, respectively. Flaps transduced with combination therapy experienced improvements in both volume loss and skin contracture. Both therapies reduced the fibrotic burden after irradiation. LAEs were associated with impaired vascular perfusion, loss of endothelial permeability, and stromal hypoxia, which were all reversed in the treatment model. Using a tumor recurrence model, we showed that SOD2 overexpression in normal tissues did not compromise the efficacy of RT against tumor cells but appeared to enhance it. LVSOD2 and LVshCTGF combination therapy by targeted, intravascular delivery reduced LAE severities in normal tissues without compromising the efficacy of RT and warrants translational evaluation as a free flap-targeted gene therapy..
Baker, L.C.
Sikka, A.
Price, J.M.
Boult, J.K.
Lepicard, E.Y.
Box, G.
Jamin, Y.
Spinks, T.J.
Kramer-Marek, G.
Leach, M.O.
Eccles, S.A.
Box, C.
Robinson, S.P.
(2018). Evaluating Imaging Biomarkers of Acquired Resistance to Targeted EGFR Therapy in Xenograft Models of Human Head and Neck Squamous Cell Carcinoma. Front oncol,
Vol.8,
p. 271.
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Background: Overexpression of EGFR is a negative prognostic factor in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC). Patients with HNSCC who respond to EGFR-targeted tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) eventually develop acquired resistance. Strategies to identify HNSCC patients likely to benefit from EGFR-targeted therapies, together with biomarkers of treatment response, would have clinical value. Methods: Functional MRI and 18F-FDG PET were used to visualize and quantify imaging biomarkers associated with drug response within size-matched EGFR TKI-resistant CAL 27 (CALR) and sensitive (CALS) HNSCC xenografts in vivo, and pathological correlates sought. Results: Intrinsic susceptibility, oxygen-enhanced and dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI revealed significantly slower baseline R2∗ , lower hyperoxia-induced ΔR2∗ and volume transfer constant Ktrans in the CALR tumors which were associated with significantly lower Hoechst 33342 uptake and greater pimonidazole-adduct formation. There was no difference in oxygen-induced ΔR1 or water diffusivity between the CALR and CALS xenografts. PET revealed significantly higher relative uptake of 18F-FDG in the CALR cohort, which was associated with significantly greater Glut-1 expression. Conclusions: CALR xenografts established from HNSCC cells resistant to EGFR TKIs are more hypoxic, poorly perfused and glycolytic than sensitive CALS tumors. MRI combined with PET can be used to non-invasively assess HNSCC response/resistance to EGFR inhibition..
Panek, R.
Welsh, L.
Baker, L.C.
Schmidt, M.A.
Wong, K.H.
Riddell, A.M.
Koh, D.-.
Dunlop, A.
Mcquaid, D.
d'Arcy, J.A.
Bhide, S.A.
Harrington, K.J.
Nutting, C.M.
Hopkinson, G.
Richardson, C.
Box, C.
Eccles, S.A.
Leach, M.O.
Robinson, S.P.
Newbold, K.L.
(2017). Noninvasive Imaging of Cycling Hypoxia in Head and Neck Cancer Using Intrinsic Susceptibility MRI. Clin cancer res,
Vol.23
(15),
pp. 4233-4241.
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full text
Purpose: To evaluate intrinsic susceptibility (IS) MRI for the identification of cycling hypoxia, and the assessment of its extent and spatial distribution, in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) xenografts and patients.Experimental Design: Quantitation of the transverse relaxation rate, R2*, which is sensitive to paramagnetic deoxyhemoglobin, using serial IS-MRI acquisitions, was used to monitor temporal oscillations in levels of paramagnetic deoxyhemoglobin in human CALR xenografts and patients with HNSCC at 3T. Autocovariance and power spectrum analysis of variations in R2* was performed for each imaged voxel, to assess statistical significance and frequencies of cycling changes in tumor blood oxygenation. Pathologic correlates with tumor perfusion (Hoechst 33342), hypoxia (pimonidazole), and vascular density (CD31) were sought in the xenografts, and dynamic contrast-enhanced (DCE) MRI was used to assess patient tumor vascularization. The prevalence of fluctuations within patient tumors, DCE parameters, and treatment outcome were reported.Results: Spontaneous R2* fluctuations with a median periodicity of 15 minutes were detected in both xenografts and patient tumors. Spatially, these fluctuations were predominantly associated with regions of heterogeneous perfusion and hypoxia in the CALR xenografts. In patients, R2* fluctuations spatially correlated with regions of lymph nodes with low Ktrans values, typically in the vicinity of necrotic cores.Conclusions: IS-MRI can be used to monitor variations in levels of paramagnetic deoxyhemoglobin, associated with cycling hypoxia. The presence of such fluctuations may be linked with impaired tumor vasculature, the presence of which may impact treatment outcome. Clin Cancer Res; 23(15); 4233-41. ©2017 AACR..
Robinson, S.P.
Boult, J.K.
Vasudev, N.S.
Reynolds, A.R.
(2017). Monitoring the Vascular Response and Resistance to Sunitinib in Renal Cell Carcinoma In Vivo with Susceptibility Contrast MRI. Cancer res,
Vol.77
(15),
pp. 4127-4134.
show abstract
full text
Antiangiogenic therapy is efficacious in metastatic renal cell carcinoma (mRCC). However, the ability of antiangiogenic drugs to delay tumor progression and extend survival is limited, due to either innate or acquired drug resistance. Furthermore, there are currently no validated biomarkers that predict which mRCC patients will benefit from antiangiogenic therapy. Here, we exploit susceptibility contrast MRI (SC-MRI) using intravascular ultrasmall superparamagnetic iron oxide particles to quantify and evaluate tumor fractional blood volume (fBV) as a noninvasive imaging biomarker of response to the antiangiogenic drug sunitinib. We also interrogate the vascular phenotype of RCC xenografts exhibiting acquired resistance to sunitinib. SC-MRI of 786-0 xenografts prior to and 2 weeks after daily treatment with 40 mg/kg sunitinib revealed a 71% (P < 0.01) reduction in fBV in the absence of any change in tumor volume. This response was associated with significantly lower microvessel density (P < 0.01) and lower uptake of the perfusion marker Hoechst 33342 (P < 0.05). The average pretreatment tumor fBV was negatively correlated (R2 = 0.92, P < 0.0001) with sunitinib-induced changes in tumor fBV across the cohort. SC-MRI also revealed suppressed fBV in tumors that acquired resistance to sunitinib. In conclusion, SC-MRI enabled monitoring of the antiangiogenic response of 786-0 RCC xenografts to sunitinib, which revealed that pretreatment tumor fBV was found to be a predictive biomarker of subsequent reduction in tumor blood volume in response to sunitinib, and acquired resistance to sunitinib was not associated with a parallel increase in tumor blood volume. Cancer Res; 77(15); 4127-34. ©2017 AACR..
O'Connor, J.P.
Aboagye, E.O.
Adams, J.E.
Aerts, H.J.
Barrington, S.F.
Beer, A.J.
Boellaard, R.
Bohndiek, S.E.
Brady, M.
Brown, G.
Buckley, D.L.
Chenevert, T.L.
Clarke, L.P.
Collette, S.
Cook, G.J.
deSouza, N.M.
Dickson, J.C.
Dive, C.
Evelhoch, J.L.
Faivre-Finn, C.
Gallagher, F.A.
Gilbert, F.J.
Gillies, R.J.
Goh, V.
Griffiths, J.R.
Groves, A.M.
Halligan, S.
Harris, A.L.
Hawkes, D.J.
Hoekstra, O.S.
Huang, E.P.
Hutton, B.F.
Jackson, E.F.
Jayson, G.C.
Jones, A.
Koh, D.-.
Lacombe, D.
Lambin, P.
Lassau, N.
Leach, M.O.
Lee, T.-.
Leen, E.L.
Lewis, J.S.
Liu, Y.
Lythgoe, M.F.
Manoharan, P.
Maxwell, R.J.
Miles, K.A.
Morgan, B.
Morris, S.
Ng, T.
Padhani, A.R.
Parker, G.J.
Partridge, M.
Pathak, A.P.
Peet, A.C.
Punwani, S.
Reynolds, A.R.
Robinson, S.P.
Shankar, L.K.
Sharma, R.A.
Soloviev, D.
Stroobants, S.
Sullivan, D.C.
Taylor, S.A.
Tofts, P.S.
Tozer, G.M.
van Herk, M.
Walker-Samuel, S.
Wason, J.
Williams, K.J.
Workman, P.
Yankeelov, T.E.
Brindle, K.M.
McShane, L.M.
Jackson, A.
Waterton, J.C.
(2017). Imaging biomarker roadmap for cancer studies. Nat rev clin oncol,
Vol.14
(3),
pp. 169-186.
show abstract
full text
Imaging biomarkers (IBs) are integral to the routine management of patients with cancer. IBs used daily in oncology include clinical TNM stage, objective response and left ventricular ejection fraction. Other CT, MRI, PET and ultrasonography biomarkers are used extensively in cancer research and drug development. New IBs need to be established either as useful tools for testing research hypotheses in clinical trials and research studies, or as clinical decision-making tools for use in healthcare, by crossing 'translational gaps' through validation and qualification. Important differences exist between IBs and biospecimen-derived biomarkers and, therefore, the development of IBs requires a tailored 'roadmap'. Recognizing this need, Cancer Research UK (CRUK) and the European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) assembled experts to review, debate and summarize the challenges of IB validation and qualification. This consensus group has produced 14 key recommendations for accelerating the clinical translation of IBs, which highlight the role of parallel (rather than sequential) tracks of technical (assay) validation, biological/clinical validation and assessment of cost-effectiveness; the need for IB standardization and accreditation systems; the need to continually revisit IB precision; an alternative framework for biological/clinical validation of IBs; and the essential requirements for multicentre studies to qualify IBs for clinical use..
Almeida, G.S.
Panek, R.
Hallsworth, A.
Webber, H.
Papaevangelou, E.
Boult, J.K.
Jamin, Y.
Chesler, L.
Robinson, S.P.
(2017). Pre-clinical imaging of transgenic mouse models of neuroblastoma using a dedicated 3-element solenoid coil on a clinical 3T platform. Br j cancer,
Vol.117
(6),
pp. 791-800.
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BACKGROUND: The use of clinical MRI scanners to conduct pre-clinical research facilitates comparisons with clinical studies. Here the utility and sensitivity of anatomical and functional MRI data/biomarkers acquired from transgenic mouse models of neuroblastoma using a dedicated radiofrequency (RF) coil on a clinical 3T scanner was evaluated. METHODS: Multiparametric MRI of transgenic mice bearing abdominal neuroblastomas was performed at 3T, and data cross-referenced to that acquired from the same mice on a pre-clinical 7T MRI system. T2-weighted imaging, quantitation of the native longitudinal relaxation time (T1) and the transverse relaxation rate (R2*), and dynamic contrast-enhanced (DCE)-MRI, was used to assess tumour volume, phenotype and response to cyclophosphamide or cabozantinib. RESULTS: Excellent T2-weighted image contrast enabled clear tumour delineation at 3T. Significant correlations of tumour volume (R=0.98, P<0.0001) and R2* (R=0.87, P<0.002) measured at 3 and 7T were established. Mice with neuroblastomas harbouring the anaplastic lymphoma kinase mutation exhibited a significantly slower R2* (P<0.001), consistent with impaired tumour perfusion. DCE-MRI was performed simultaneously on three transgenic mice, yielding estimates of Ktrans for each tumour (median Ktrans values of 0.202, 0.168 and 0.114 min-1). Cyclophosphamide elicited a significant reduction in both tumour burden (P<0.002) and native T1 (P<0.01), whereas cabozantinib induced significant (P<0.01) tumour growth delay. CONCLUSIONS: Simultaneous multiparametric MRI of multiple tumour-bearing animals using this coil arrangement at 3T can provide high efficiency/throughput for both phenotypic characterisation and evaluation of novel therapeutics, and facilitate the introduction of functional MRI biomarkers into aligned imaging-embedded clinical trials..
Tucker, E.R.
Tall, J.R.
Danielson, L.S.
Gowan, S.
Jamin, Y.
Robinson, S.P.
Banerji, U.
Chesler, L.
(2017). Immunoassays for the quantification of ALK and phosphorylated ALK support the evaluation of on-target ALK inhibitors in neuroblastoma. Mol oncol,
Vol.11
(8),
pp. 996-1006.
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Targeted inhibition of anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) is a successful approach for the treatment of many ALK-aberrant malignancies; however, the presence of resistant mutations necessitates both the development of more potent compounds and pharmacodynamic methods with which to determine their efficacy. We describe immunoassays designed to quantitate phosphorylation of ALK, and their use in preclinical models of neuroblastoma, a pediatric malignancy in which gain-of-function ALK mutations predict a poor overall outcome to conventional treatment. Validation of the immunoassays is presented using a panel of neuroblastoma cell lines and evidence of on-target ALK inhibition provided by treatment of a genetically engineered murine model of neuroblastoma with two clinical ALK inhibitors, crizotinib and ceritinib, highlighting the superior efficacy of ceritinib..
Boult, J.K.
Box, G.
Vinci, M.
Perryman, L.
Eccles, S.A.
Jones, C.
Robinson, S.P.
(2017). Evaluation of the Response of Intracranial Xenografts to VEGF Signaling Inhibition Using Multiparametric MRI. Neoplasia,
Vol.19
(9),
pp. 684-694.
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Vascular endothelial growth factor A (VEGF-A) is considered one of the most important factors in tumor angiogenesis, and consequently, a number of therapeutics have been developed to inhibit VEGF signaling. Therapeutic strategies to target brain malignancies, both primary brain tumors, particularly in pediatric patients, and metastases, are lacking, but targeting angiogenesis may be a promising approach. Multiparametric MRI was used to investigate the response of orthotopic SF188luc pediatric glioblastoma xenografts to small molecule pan-VEGFR inhibitor cediranib and the effects of both cediranib and cross-reactive human/mouse anti-VEGF-A antibody B20-4.1.1 in intracranial MDA-MB-231 LM2-4 breast cancer xenografts over 48 hours. All therapeutic regimens resulted in significant tumor growth delay. In cediranib-treated SF188luc tumors, this was associated with lower Ktrans (compound biomarker of perfusion and vascular permeability) than in vehicle-treated controls. Cediranib also induced significant reductions in both Ktrans and apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) in MDA-MB-231 LM2-4 tumors associated with decreased histologically assessed perfusion. B20-4.1.1 treatment resulted in decreased Ktrans, but in the absence of a change in perfusion; a non-significant reduction in vascular permeability, assessed by Evans blue extravasation, was observed in treated tumors. The imaging responses of intracranial MDA-MB-231 LM2-4 tumors to VEGF/VEGFR pathway inhibitors with differing mechanisms of action are subtly different. We show that VEGF pathway blockade resulted in tumor growth retardation and inhibition of tumor vasculature in preclinical models of pediatric glioblastoma and breast cancer brain metastases, suggesting that multiparametric MRI can provide a powerful adjunct to accelerate the development of antiangiogenic therapies for use in these patient populations..
Elyas, E.
Papaevangelou, E.
Alles, E.J.
Erler, J.T.
Cox, T.R.
Robinson, S.P.
Bamber, J.C.
(2017). Correlation of Ultrasound Shear Wave Elastography with Pathological Analysis in a Xenografic Tumour Model. Sci rep,
Vol.7
(1),
p. 165.
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The objective of this study was to evaluate the potential value of ultrasound (US) shear wave elastography (SWE) in assessing the relative change in elastic modulus in colorectal adenocarcinoma xenograft models in vivo and investigate any correlation with histological analysis. We sought to test whether non-invasive evaluation of tissue stiffness is indicative of pathological tumour changes and can be used to monitor therapeutic efficacy. US-SWE was performed in tumour xenografts in 15 NCr nude immunodeficient mice, which were treated with either the cytotoxic drug, Irinotecan, or saline as control. Ten tumours were imaged 48 hours post-treatment and five tumours were imaged for up to five times after treatment. All tumours were harvested for histological analysis and comparison with elasticity measurements. Elastic (Young's) modulus prior to treatment was correlated with tumour volume (r = 0.37, p = 0.008). Irinotecan administration caused significant delay in the tumour growth (p = 0.02) when compared to control, but no significant difference in elastic modulus was detected. Histological analysis revealed a significant correlation between tumour necrosis and elastic modulus (r = -0.73, p = 0.026). SWE measurement provided complimentary information to other imaging modalities and could indicate potential changes in the mechanical properties of tumours, which in turn could be related to the stages of tumour development..
Shah, A.
Delgado-Goni, T.
Casals Galobart, T.
Wantuch, S.
Jamin, Y.
Leach, M.O.
Robinson, S.P.
Bamber, J.
Beloueche-Babari, M.
(2017). Detecting human melanoma cell re-differentiation following BRAF or heat shock protein 90 inhibition using photoacoustic and magnetic resonance imaging. Sci rep,
Vol.7
(1),
p. 8215.
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Targeted therapies specific to the BRAF-MEK-ERK signaling pathway have shown great promise in the treatment of malignant melanoma in the last few years, with these drugs now commonly used in clinic. Melanoma cells treated using these agents are known to exhibit increased levels of melanin pigment and tyrosinase activity. In this study we assessed the potential of non-invasive imaging approaches (photoacoustic imaging (PAI) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)) to detect melanin induction in SKMEL28 human melanoma cells, following inhibition of Hsp90 and BRAF signaling using 17-AAG and vemurafenib, respectively. We confirmed, using western blot and spectrophotometry, that Hsp90 or BRAF inhibitor-induced melanoma cell differentiation resulted in an upregulation of tyrosinase and melanin expression levels, in comparison to control cells. This post-treatment increase in cellular pigmentation induced a significant increase in PAI signals that are spectrally identifiable and shortening of the MRI relaxation times T 1 and [Formula: see text]. This proof-of-concept study demonstrates the potential of MRI and PAI for detecting the downstream cellular changes induced by Hsp90 and BRAF-MEK-targeted therapies in melanoma cells with potential significance for in vivo imaging..
Elyas, E.
Grimwood, A.
Erler, J.T.
Robinson, S.P.
Cox, T.R.
Woods, D.
Clowes, P.
De Luca, R.
Marinozzi, F.
Fromageau, J.
Bamber, J.C.
(2017). Multi-Channel Optical Coherence Elastography Using Relative and Absolute Shear-Wave Time of Flight. Plos one,
Vol.12
(1),
p. e0169664.
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Elastography, the imaging of elastic properties of soft tissues, is well developed for macroscopic clinical imaging of soft tissues and can provide useful information about various pathological processes which is complementary to that provided by the original modality. Scaling down of this technique should ply the field of cellular biology with valuable information with regard to elastic properties of cells and their environment. This paper evaluates the potential to develop such a tool by modifying a commercial optical coherence tomography (OCT) device to measure the speed of shear waves propagating in a three-dimensional (3D) medium. A needle, embedded in the gel, was excited to vibrate along its long axis and the displacement as a function of time and distance from the needle associated with the resulting shear waves was detected using four M-mode images acquired simultaneously using a commercial four-channel swept-source OCT system. Shear-wave time of arrival (TOA) was detected by tracking the axial OCT-speckle motion using cross-correlation methods. Shear-wave speed was then calculated from inter-channel differences of TOA for a single burst (the relative TOA method) and compared with the shear-wave speed determined from positional differences of TOA for a single channel over multiple bursts (the absolute TOA method). For homogeneous gels the relative method provided shear-wave speed with acceptable precision and accuracy when judged against the expected linear dependence of shear modulus on gelatine concentration (R2 = 0.95) and ultimate resolution capabilities limited by 184μm inter-channel distance. This overall approach shows promise for its eventual provision as a research tool in cancer cell biology. Further work is required to optimize parameters such as vibration frequency, burst length and amplitude, and to assess the lateral and axial resolutions of this type of device as well as to create 3D elastograms..
Guan, J.
Tucker, E.R.
Wan, H.
Chand, D.
Danielson, L.S.
Ruuth, K.
El Wakil, A.
Witek, B.
Jamin, Y.
Umapathy, G.
Robinson, S.P.
Johnson, T.W.
Smeal, T.
Martinsson, T.
Chesler, L.
Palmer, R.H.
Hallberg, B.
(2016). The ALK inhibitor PF-06463922 is effective as a single agent in neuroblastoma driven by expression of ALK and MYCN. Dis model mech,
Vol.9
(9),
pp. 941-952.
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The first-in-class inhibitor of ALK, c-MET and ROS1, crizotinib (Xalkori), has shown remarkable clinical efficacy in treatment of ALK-positive non-small cell lung cancer. However, in neuroblastoma, activating mutations in the ALK kinase domain are typically refractory to crizotinib treatment, highlighting the need for more potent inhibitors. The next-generation ALK inhibitor PF-06463922 is predicted to exhibit increased affinity for ALK mutants prevalent in neuroblastoma. We examined PF-06463922 activity in ALK-driven neuroblastoma models in vitro and in vivo In vitro kinase assays and cell-based experiments examining ALK mutations of increasing potency show that PF-06463922 is an effective inhibitor of ALK with greater activity towards ALK neuroblastoma mutants. In contrast to crizotinib, single agent administration of PF-06463922 caused dramatic tumor inhibition in both subcutaneous and orthotopic xenografts as well as a mouse model of high-risk neuroblastoma driven by Th-ALK(F1174L)/MYCN Taken together, our results suggest PF-06463922 is a potent inhibitor of crizotinib-resistant ALK mutations, and highlights an important new treatment option for neuroblastoma patients..
Papaevangelou, E.
Whitley, G.S.
Johnstone, A.P.
Robinson, S.P.
Howe, F.A.
(2016). Investigating the role of tumour cell derived iNOS on tumour growth and vasculature in vivo using a tetracycline regulated expression system. Int j cancer,
Vol.138
(11),
pp. 2678-2687.
show abstract
Nitric oxide (NO) is a free radical signalling molecule involved in various physiological and pathological processes, including cancer. Both tumouricidal and tumour promoting effects have been attributed to NO, making its role in cancer biology controversial and unclear. To investigate the specific role of tumour-derived NO in vascular development, C6 glioma cells were genetically modified to include a doxycycline regulated gene expression system that controls the expression of an antisense RNA to inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) to manipulate endogenous iNOS expression. Xenografts of these cells were propagated in the presence or absence of doxycycline. Susceptibility magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), initially with a carbogen (95% O2/5% CO2) breathing challenge and subsequently an intravascular blood pool contrast agent, was used to assess haemodynamic vasculature (ΔR2*) and fractional blood volume (fBV), and correlated with histopathological assessment of tumour vascular density, maturation and function. Inhibition of NO production in C6 gliomas led to significant growth delay and inhibition of vessel maturation. Parametric fBV maps were used to identify vascularised regions from which the carbogen-induced ΔR2* was measured and found to be positively correlated with vessel maturation, quantified ex vivo using fluorescence microscopy for endothelial and perivascular cell staining. These data suggest that tumour-derived iNOS is an important mediator of tumour growth and vessel maturation, hence a promising target for anti-vascular cancer therapies. The combination of ΔR2* response to carbogen and fBV MRI can provide a marker of tumour vessel maturation that could be applied to non-invasively monitor treatment response to iNOS inhibitors..
Jerome, N.P.
Boult, J.K.
Orton, M.R.
d'Arcy, J.
Collins, D.J.
Leach, M.O.
Koh, D.-.
Robinson, S.P.
(2016). Modulation of renal oxygenation and perfusion in rat kidney monitored by quantitative diffusion and blood oxygen level dependent magnetic resonance imaging on a clinical 1 5T platform. Bmc nephrol,
Vol.17
(1),
p. 142.
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BACKGROUND: To investigate the combined use of intravoxel incoherent motion (IVIM) diffusion-weighted (DW) and blood oxygen level dependent (BOLD) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to assess rat renal function using a 1.5T clinical platform. METHODS: Multiple b-value DW and BOLD MR images were acquired from adult rats using a parallel clinical coil arrangement, enabling quantitation of the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC), IVIM-derived diffusion coefficient (D), pseudodiffusion coefficient (D*) and perfusion fraction (f), and the transverse relaxation time T2*, for whole kidney, renal cortex, and medulla. Following the acquisition of two baseline datasets to assess measurement repeatability, images were acquired following i.v. administration of hydralazine, furosemide, or angiotensin II for up to 40 min. RESULTS: Excellent repeatability (CoV <10 %) was observed for ADC, D, f and T2* measured over the whole kidney. Hydralazine induced a marked and significant (p < 0.05) reduction in whole kidney ADC, D, and T2*, and a significant (p < 0.05) increase in D* and f. Furosemide significantly (p < 0.05) increased whole kidney ADC, D, and T2*. A more variable response to angiotensin II was determined, with a significant (p < 0.05) increase in medulla D* and significant (p < 0.05) reduction in whole kidney T2* established. CONCLUSIONS: Multiparametric MRI, incorporating quantitation of IVIM DWI and BOLD biomarkers and performed on a clinical platform, can be used to monitor the acute effects of vascular and tubular modulating drugs on rat kidney function in vivo. Clinical adoption of such functional imaging biomarkers can potentially inform on treatment effects in patients with renal dysfunction..
Vinci, M.
Molinari, V.
Taylor, K.
Carvalho, D.
Burford, A.
Mackay, A.
Popov, S.
Fofama, M.
Fazal-Salom, J.
Bjerke, L.
Boult, J.K.
Pemberton, H.
Lord, C.J.
Howell, L.
Pears, J.
Mastronuzzi, A.
Carai, A.
Marshall, L.V.
Zacharoulis, S.
Vaidya, S.
Mandeville, H.C.
Bridges, L.R.
Martin, A.J.
Al-Sarraj, S.
Chandler, C.
Robinson, S.P.
Olaciregui, N.G.
Sunol, M.
Mora, J.
de Torres, C.
Cruz, O.
Monje, M.
Moore, A.S.
Carcaboso, A.M.
Jones, C.
(2016). HG-99A PATIENT-DERIVED PAEDIATRIC HIGH GRADE GLIOMA AND DIPG CELL CULTURE PANEL RECAPITULATING THE GENOTYPIC AND PHENOTYPIC DIVERSITY OF THE DISEASE. Neuro-oncology,
Vol.18
(Suppl 3),
pp. iii71-iii71.
Fofana, M.
Boult, J.K.
Vinci, M.
Molinari, V.
Popov, S.
Mackay, A.
Carcaboso, A.M.
Jones, C.
Robinson, S.P.
(2016). PCM-08IN VIVO MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING IDENTIFIES CLINICAL PHENOTYPES OF PAEDIATRIC GLIOBLASTOMA IN AN ORTHOTOPIC MOUSE XENOGRAFT MODEL. Neuro-oncology,
Vol.18
(Suppl 3),
pp. iii140-iii141.
Vaughan, L.
Clarke, P.A.
Barker, K.
Chanthery, Y.
Gustafson, C.W.
Tucker, E.
Renshaw, J.
Raynaud, F.
Li, X.
Burke, R.
Jamin, Y.
Robinson, S.P.
Pearson, A.
Maira, M.
Weiss, W.A.
Workman, P.
Chesler, L.
(2016). Inhibition of mTOR-kinase destabilizes MYCN and is a potential therapy for MYCN-dependent tumors. Oncotarget,
Vol.7
(36),
pp. 57525-57544.
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MYC oncoproteins deliver a potent oncogenic stimulus in several human cancers, making them major targets for drug development, but efforts to deliver clinically practical therapeutics have not yet been realized. In childhood cancer, aberrant expression of MYC and MYCN genes delineates a group of aggressive tumours responsible for a major proportion of pediatric cancer deaths. We designed a chemical-genetic screen that identifies compounds capable of enhancing proteasomal elimination of MYCN oncoprotein. We isolated several classes of compound that selectively kill MYCN expressing cells and we focus on inhibitors of PI3K/mTOR pathway in this study. We show that PI3K/mTOR inhibitors selectively killed MYCN-expressing neuroblastoma tumor cells, and induced significant apoptosis of transgenic MYCN-driven neuroblastoma tumors concomitant with elimination of MYCN protein in vivo. Mechanistically, the ability of these compounds to degrade MYCN requires complete blockade of mTOR but not PI3 kinase activity and we highlight NVP-BEZ235 as a PI3K/mTOR inhibitor with an ideal activity profile. These data establish that MYCN expression is a marker indicative of likely clinical sensitivity to mTOR inhibition, and provide a rationale for the selection of clinical candidate MYCN-destabilizers likely to be useful for the treatment of MYCN-driven cancers..
Baker, L.C.
Boult, J.K.
Thomas, M.
Koehler, A.
Nayak, T.
Tessier, J.
Ooi, C.-.
Birzele, F.
Belousov, A.
Zajac, M.
Horn, C.
LeFave, C.
Robinson, S.P.
(2016). Acute tumour response to a bispecific Ang-2-VEGF-A antibody: insights from multiparametric MRI and gene expression profiling. Br j cancer,
Vol.115
(6),
pp. 691-702.
show abstract
full text
BACKGROUND: To assess antivascular effects, and evaluate clinically translatable magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) biomarkers of tumour response in vivo, following treatment with vanucizumab, a bispecific human antibody against angiopoietin-2 (Ang-2) and vascular endothelial growth factor-A (VEGF-A). METHODS: Colo205 colon cancer xenografts were imaged before and 5 days after treatment with a single 10 mg kg(-1) dose of either vanucizumab, bevacizumab (anti-human VEGF-A), LC06 (anti-murine/human Ang-2) or omalizumab (anti-human IgE control). Volumetric response was assessed using T2-weighted MRI, and diffusion-weighted, dynamic contrast-enhanced (DCE) and susceptibility contrast MRI used to quantify tumour water diffusivity (apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC), × 10(6) mm(2) s(-1)), vascular perfusion/permeability (K(trans), min(-1)) and fractional blood volume (fBV, %) respectively. Pathological correlates were sought, and preliminary gene expression profiling performed. RESULTS: Treatment with vanucizumab, bevacizumab or LC06 induced a significant (P<0.01) cytolentic response compared with control. There was no significant change in tumour ADC in any treatment group. Uptake of Gd-DTPA was restricted to the tumour periphery in all post-treatment groups. A significant reduction in tumour K(trans) (P<0.05) and fBV (P<0.01) was determined 5 days after treatment with vanucizumab only. This was associated with a significant (P<0.05) reduction in Hoechst 33342 uptake compared with control. Gene expression profiling identified 20 human genes exclusively regulated by vanucizumab, 6 of which are known to be involved in vasculogenesis and angiogenesis. CONCLUSIONS: Vanucizumab is a promising antitumour and antiangiogenic treatment, whose antivascular activity can be monitored using DCE and susceptibility contrast MRI. Differential gene expression in vanucizumab-treated tumours is regulated by the combined effect of Ang-2 and VEGF-A inhibition..
Panek, R.
Welsh, L.
Dunlop, A.
Wong, K.H.
Riddell, A.M.
Koh, D.-.
Schmidt, M.A.
Doran, S.
Mcquaid, D.
Hopkinson, G.
Richardson, C.
Nutting, C.M.
Bhide, S.A.
Harrington, K.J.
Robinson, S.P.
Newbold, K.L.
Leach, M.O.
(2016). Repeatability and sensitivity of T2* measurements in patients with head and neck squamous cell carcinoma at 3T. J magn reson imaging,
Vol.44
(1),
pp. 72-80.
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full text
PURPOSE: To determine whether quantitation of T2* is sufficiently repeatable and sensitive to detect clinically relevant oxygenation levels in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) at 3T. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Ten patients with newly diagnosed locally advanced HNSCC underwent two magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans between 24 and 168 hours apart prior to chemoradiotherapy treatment. A multiple gradient echo sequence was used to calculate T2* maps. A quadratic function was used to model the blood transverse relaxation rate as a function of blood oxygenation. A set of published coefficients measured at 3T were incorporated to account for tissue hematocrit levels and used to plot the dependence of fractional blood oxygenation (Y) on T2* values, together with the corresponding repeatability range. Repeatability of T2* using Bland-Altman analysis, and calculation of limits of agreement (LoA), was used to assess the sensitivity, defined as the minimum difference in fractional blood oxygenation that can be confidently detected. RESULTS: T2* LoA for 22 outlined tumor volumes were 13%. The T2* dependence of fractional blood oxygenation increases monotonically, resulting in increasing sensitivity of the method with increasing blood oxygenation. For fractional blood oxygenation values above 0.11, changes in T2* were sufficient to detect differences in blood oxygenation greater than 10% (Δ T2* > LoA for ΔY > 0.1). CONCLUSION: Quantitation of T2* at 3T can detect clinically relevant changes in tumor oxygenation within a wide range of blood volumes and oxygen tensions, including levels reported in HNSCC. J. Magn. Reson. Imaging 2016;44:72-80..
Osborne, J.D.
Matthews, T.P.
McHardy, T.
Proisy, N.
Cheung, K.-.
Lainchbury, M.
Brown, N.
Walton, M.I.
Eve, P.D.
Boxall, K.J.
Hayes, A.
Henley, A.T.
Valenti, M.R.
De Haven Brandon, A.K.
Box, G.
Jamin, Y.
Robinson, S.P.
Westwood, I.M.
van Montfort, R.L.
Leonard, P.M.
Lamers, M.B.
Reader, J.C.
Aherne, G.W.
Raynaud, F.I.
Eccles, S.A.
Garrett, M.D.
Collins, I.
(2016). Multiparameter Lead Optimization to Give an Oral Checkpoint Kinase 1 (CHK1) Inhibitor Clinical Candidate: (R)-5-((4-((Morpholin-2-ylmethyl)amino)-5-(trifluoromethyl)pyridin-2-yl)amino)pyrazine-2-carbonitrile (CCT245737). J med chem,
Vol.59
(11),
pp. 5221-5237.
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full text
Multiparameter optimization of a series of 5-((4-aminopyridin-2-yl)amino)pyrazine-2-carbonitriles resulted in the identification of a potent and selective oral CHK1 preclinical development candidate with in vivo efficacy as a potentiator of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) damaging chemotherapy and as a single agent. Cellular mechanism of action assays were used to give an integrated assessment of compound selectivity during optimization resulting in a highly CHK1 selective adenosine triphosphate (ATP) competitive inhibitor. A single substituent vector directed away from the CHK1 kinase active site was unexpectedly found to drive the selective cellular efficacy of the compounds. Both CHK1 potency and off-target human ether-a-go-go-related gene (hERG) ion channel inhibition were dependent on lipophilicity and basicity in this series. Optimization of CHK1 cellular potency and in vivo pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic (PK-PD) properties gave a compound with low predicted doses and exposures in humans which mitigated the residual weak in vitro hERG inhibition..
Burrell, J.S.
Walker-Samuel, S.
Boult, J.K.
Baker, L.C.
Jamin, Y.
Halliday, J.
Waterton, J.C.
Robinson, S.P.
(2016). Investigating the Vascular Phenotype of Subcutaneously and Orthotopically Propagated PC3 Prostate Cancer Xenografts Using Combined Carbogen Ultrasmall Superparamagnetic Iron Oxide MRI. Top magn reson imaging,
Vol.25
(5),
pp. 237-243.
show abstract
full text
The aim of this study was to use the combined carbogen-ultrasmall superparamagnetic iron oxide (CUSPIO) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) method, which uses spatial correlations in independent susceptibility imaging biomarkers, to investigate and compare the impact of tumor size and anatomical site on vascular structure and function in vivo. Mice bearing either subcutaneous or orthotopic PC3 LN3 prostate tumors were imaged at 7 T, using a multi-gradient echo sequence to quantify R2, before and during carbogen (95% O2/5% CO2) breathing, and subsequently following intravenous administration of USPIO particles. Carbogen and USPIO-induced changes in R2 were used to inform on hemodynamic vasculature and fractional blood volume (%), respectively. The CUSPIO imaging data were also segmented to identify and assess five categories of R2 response. Small and large subcutaneous and orthotopic tumor cohorts all exhibited significantly (P < 0.05) different median baseline R2, ΔR2carbogen, and fractional blood volume. CUSPIO imaging showed that small subcutaneous tumors predominantly exhibited a negative ΔR2carbogen followed by a positive ΔR2USPIO, consistent with a well perfused tumor vasculature. Large subcutaneous tumors exhibited a small positive ΔR2carbogen and relatively low fractional blood volume, suggesting less functional vasculature. Orthotopic tumors revealed a large, positive ΔR2carbogen, consistent with vascular steal, and which may indicate that vascular function is more dependent on site of implantation than tumor size. Regions exhibiting significant ΔR2carbogen, but no significant ΔR2USPIO, suggesting transient vascular shutdown over the experimental timecourse, were apparent in all 3 cohorts. CUSPIO imaging can inform on efficient drug delivery via functional vasculature in vivo, and on appropriate tumor model selection for pre-clinical therapy trials..
Boult, J.K.
Borri, M.
Jury, A.
Popov, S.
Box, G.
Perryman, L.
Eccles, S.A.
Jones, C.
Robinson, S.P.
(2016). Investigating intracranial tumour growth patterns with multiparametric MRI incorporating Gd-DTPA and USPIO-enhanced imaging. Nmr biomed,
Vol.29
(11),
pp. 1608-1617.
show abstract
full text
High grade and metastatic brain tumours exhibit considerable spatial variations in proliferation, angiogenesis, invasion, necrosis and oedema. Vascular heterogeneity arising from vascular co-option in regions of invasive growth (in which the blood-brain barrier remains intact) and neoangiogenesis is a major challenge faced in the assessment of brain tumours by conventional MRI. A multiparametric MRI approach, incorporating native measurements and both Gd-DTPA (Magnevist) and ultrasmall superparamagnetic iron oxide (P904)-enhanced imaging, was used in combination with histogram and unsupervised cluster analysis using a k-means algorithm to examine the spatial distribution of vascular parameters, water diffusion characteristics and invasion in intracranially propagated rat RG2 gliomas and human MDA-MB-231 LM2-4 breast adenocarcinomas in mice. Both tumour models presented with higher ΔR1 (the change in transverse relaxation rate R1 induced by Gd-DTPA), fractional blood volume (fBV) and apparent diffusion coefficient than uninvolved regions of the brain. MDA-MB-231 LM2-4 tumours were less densely cellular than RG2 tumours and exhibited substantial local invasion, associated with oedema, whereas invasion in RG2 tumours was minimal. These additional features were reflected in the more heterogeneous appearance of MDA-MB-231 LM2-4 tumours on T2 -weighted images and maps of functional MRI parameters. Unsupervised cluster analysis separated subregions with distinct functional properties; areas with a low fBV and relatively impermeable blood vessels (low ΔR1 ) were predominantly located at the tumour margins, regions of MDA-MB-231 LM2-4 tumours with relatively high levels of water diffusion and low vascular permeability and/or fBV corresponded to histologically identified regions of invasion and oedema, and areas of mismatch between vascular permeability and blood volume were identified. We demonstrate that dual contrast MRI and evaluation of tissue diffusion properties, coupled with cluster analysis, allows for the assessment of heterogeneity within invasive brain tumours and the designation of functionally diverse subregions that may provide more informative predictive biomarkers..
O'Connor, J.P.
Boult, J.K.
Jamin, Y.
Babur, M.
Finegan, K.G.
Williams, K.J.
Little, R.A.
Jackson, A.
Parker, G.J.
Reynolds, A.R.
Waterton, J.C.
Robinson, S.P.
(2016). Oxygen-Enhanced MRI Accurately Identifies, Quantifies, and Maps Tumor Hypoxia in Preclinical Cancer Models. Cancer res,
Vol.76
(4),
pp. 787-795.
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There is a clinical need for noninvasive biomarkers of tumor hypoxia for prognostic and predictive studies, radiotherapy planning, and therapy monitoring. Oxygen-enhanced MRI (OE-MRI) is an emerging imaging technique for quantifying the spatial distribution and extent of tumor oxygen delivery in vivo. In OE-MRI, the longitudinal relaxation rate of protons (ΔR1) changes in proportion to the concentration of molecular oxygen dissolved in plasma or interstitial tissue fluid. Therefore, well-oxygenated tissues show positive ΔR1. We hypothesized that the fraction of tumor tissue refractory to oxygen challenge (lack of positive ΔR1, termed "Oxy-R fraction") would be a robust biomarker of hypoxia in models with varying vascular and hypoxic features. Here, we demonstrate that OE-MRI signals are accurate, precise, and sensitive to changes in tumor pO2 in highly vascular 786-0 renal cancer xenografts. Furthermore, we show that Oxy-R fraction can quantify the hypoxic fraction in multiple models with differing hypoxic and vascular phenotypes, when used in combination with measurements of tumor perfusion. Finally, Oxy-R fraction can detect dynamic changes in hypoxia induced by the vasomodulator agent hydralazine. In contrast, more conventional biomarkers of hypoxia (derived from blood oxygenation-level dependent MRI and dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI) did not relate to tumor hypoxia consistently. Our results show that the Oxy-R fraction accurately quantifies tumor hypoxia noninvasively and is immediately translatable to the clinic..
Yogev, O.
Barker, K.
Sikka, A.
Almeida, G.S.
Hallsworth, A.
Smith, L.M.
Jamin, Y.
Ruddle, R.
Koers, A.
Webber, H.T.
Raynaud, F.I.
Popov, S.
Jones, C.
Petrie, K.
Robinson, S.P.
Keun, H.C.
Chesler, L.
(2016). p53 Loss in MYC-Driven Neuroblastoma Leads to Metabolic Adaptations Supporting Radioresistance. Cancer res,
Vol.76
(10),
pp. 3025-3035.
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Neuroblastoma is the most common childhood extracranial solid tumor. In high-risk cases, many of which are characterized by amplification of MYCN, outcome remains poor. Mutations in the p53 (TP53) tumor suppressor are rare at diagnosis, but evidence suggests that p53 function is often impaired in relapsed, treatment-resistant disease. To address the role of p53 loss of function in the development and pathogenesis of high-risk neuroblastoma, we generated a MYCN-driven genetically engineered mouse model in which the tamoxifen-inducible p53ER(TAM) fusion protein was expressed from a knock-in allele (Th-MYCN/Trp53(KI)). We observed no significant differences in tumor-free survival between Th-MYCN mice heterozygous for Trp53(KI) (n = 188) and Th-MYCN mice with wild-type p53 (n = 101). Conversely, the survival of Th-MYCN/Trp53(KI/KI) mice lacking functional p53 (n = 60) was greatly reduced. We found that Th-MYCN/Trp53(KI/KI) tumors were resistant to ionizing radiation (IR), as expected. However, restoration of functional p53ER(TAM) reinstated sensitivity to IR in only 50% of Th-MYCN/Trp53(KI/KI) tumors, indicating the acquisition of additional resistance mechanisms. Gene expression and metabolic analyses indicated that the principal acquired mechanism of resistance to IR in the absence of functional p53 was metabolic adaptation in response to chronic oxidative stress. Tumors exhibited increased antioxidant metabolites and upregulation of glutathione S-transferase pathway genes, including Gstp1 and Gstz1, which are associated with poor outcome in human neuroblastoma. Accordingly, glutathione depletion by buthionine sulfoximine together with restoration of p53 activity resensitized tumors to IR. Our findings highlight the complex pathways operating in relapsed neuroblastomas and the need for combination therapies that target the diverse resistance mechanisms at play. Cancer Res; 76(10); 3025-35. ©2016 AACR..
Jamin, Y.
Boult, J.K.
Li, J.
Popov, S.
Garteiser, P.
Ulloa, J.L.
Cummings, C.
Box, G.
Eccles, S.A.
Jones, C.
Waterton, J.C.
Bamber, J.C.
Sinkus, R.
Robinson, S.P.
(2015). Exploring the biomechanical properties of brain malignancies and their pathologic determinants in vivo with magnetic resonance elastography. Cancer res,
Vol.75
(7),
pp. 1216-1224.
show abstract
Malignant tumors are typically associated with altered rigidity relative to normal host tissue. Magnetic resonance elastography (MRE) enables the noninvasive quantitation of the mechanical properties of deep-seated tissue following application of an external vibrational mechanical stress to that tissue. In this preclinical study, we used MRE to quantify (kPa) the elasticity modulus Gd and viscosity modulus Gl of three intracranially implanted glioma and breast metastatic tumor models. In all these brain tumors, we found a notable softness characterized by lower elasticity and viscosity than normal brain parenchyma, enabling their detection on Gd and Gl parametric maps. The most circumscribed tumor (U-87 MG glioma) was the stiffest, whereas the most infiltrative tumor (MDA-MB-231 metastatic breast carcinoma) was the softest. Tumor cell density and microvessel density correlated significantly and positively with elasticity and viscosity, whereas there was no association with the extent of collagen deposition or myelin fiber entrapment. In conclusion, although malignant tumors tend to exhibit increased rigidity, intracranial tumors presented as remarkably softer than normal brain parenchyma. Our findings reinforce the case for MRE use in diagnosing and staging brain malignancies, based on the association of different tumor phenotypes with different mechanical properties..
O'Connor, J.P.
Boult, J.K.
Jamin, Y.
Babur, M.
Finegan, K.G.
Williams, K.J.
Reynolds, A.R.
Little, R.A.
Jackson, A.
Parker, G.J.
Waterton, J.C.
Robinson, S.P.
(2015). Oxygen-enhanced MRI can accurately identify, quantify and map tumour hypoxia in preclinical models. Cancer imaging : the official publication of the international cancer imaging society,
Vol.15
(Suppl 1),
pp. P9-P9.
McErlean, C.M.
Boult, J.K.
Collins, D.J.
Leach, M.O.
Robinson, S.P.
Doran, S.J.
(2015). Detecting microvascular changes in the mouse spleen using optical computed tomography. Microvasc res,
Vol.101,
pp. 96-102.
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Methods of monitoring drug toxicity in off-target organs are very important in the development of effective and safe drugs. Standard 2-D techniques, such as histology, are prone to sampling errors and can miss important information. We demonstrate a novel application of optical computed tomography (CT) imaging to quantitatively assess, in 3-D, the response of adult murine spleen to off-target drug toxicity induced by treatment with the vascular disrupting agent ZD6126. Reconstructed images from optical CT scans sensitive to haemoglobin absorption reveal detailed, high-contrast 3-D maps of splenic structure and microvasculature. A significant difference in total splenic volume was found between vehicle and ZD6126-treated cohorts, with mean volumes of 61±3mm(3) and 44±3mm(3) respectively (both n=3, p=0.05). Textural statistics for each sample were calculated using grey-level co-occurrence matrices (GLCMs). Standard 2-D GLCM analysis was found to be slice-dependent while 3-D GLCM contrast and homogeneity analysis resulted in separation of the vehicle and ZD6126-treated cohorts over a range of length scales..
Hill, R.M.
Kuijper, S.
Lindsey, J.C.
Petrie, K.
Schwalbe, E.C.
Barker, K.
Boult, J.K.
Williamson, D.
Ahmad, Z.
Hallsworth, A.
Ryan, S.L.
Poon, E.
Robinson, S.P.
Ruddle, R.
Raynaud, F.I.
Howell, L.
Kwok, C.
Joshi, A.
Nicholson, S.L.
Crosier, S.
Ellison, D.W.
Wharton, S.B.
Robson, K.
Michalski, A.
Hargrave, D.
Jacques, T.S.
Pizer, B.
Bailey, S.
Swartling, F.J.
Weiss, W.A.
Chesler, L.
Clifford, S.C.
(2015). Combined MYC and P53 defects emerge at medulloblastoma relapse and define rapidly progressive, therapeutically targetable disease. Cancer cell,
Vol.27
(1),
pp. 72-84.
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We undertook a comprehensive clinical and biological investigation of serial medulloblastoma biopsies obtained at diagnosis and relapse. Combined MYC family amplifications and P53 pathway defects commonly emerged at relapse, and all patients in this group died of rapidly progressive disease postrelapse. To study this interaction, we investigated a transgenic model of MYCN-driven medulloblastoma and found spontaneous development of Trp53 inactivating mutations. Abrogation of p53 function in this model produced aggressive tumors that mimicked characteristics of relapsed human tumors with combined P53-MYC dysfunction. Restoration of p53 activity and genetic and therapeutic suppression of MYCN all reduced tumor growth and prolonged survival. Our findings identify P53-MYC interactions at medulloblastoma relapse as biomarkers of clinically aggressive disease that may be targeted therapeutically..
Doblas, S.
Almeida, G.S.
Blé, F.-.
Garteiser, P.
Hoff, B.A.
McIntyre, D.J.
Wachsmuth, L.
Chenevert, T.L.
Faber, C.
Griffiths, J.R.
Jacobs, A.H.
Morris, D.M.
O'Connor, J.P.
Robinson, S.P.
Van Beers, B.E.
Waterton, J.C.
(2015). Apparent diffusion coefficient is highly reproducible on preclinical imaging systems: Evidence from a seven-center multivendor study. J magn reson imaging,
Vol.42
(6),
pp. 1759-1764.
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PURPOSE: To evaluate between-site agreement of apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) measurements in preclinical magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) systems. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A miniaturized thermally stable ice-water phantom was devised. ADC (mean and interquartile range) was measured over several days, on 4.7T, 7T, and 9.4T Bruker, Agilent, and Magnex small-animal MRI systems using a common protocol across seven sites. Day-to-day repeatability was expressed as percent variation of mean ADC between acquisitions. Cross-site reproducibility was expressed as 1.96 × standard deviation of percent deviation of ADC values. RESULTS: ADC measurements were equivalent across all seven sites with a cross-site ADC reproducibility of 6.3%. Mean day-to-day repeatability of ADC measurements was 2.3%, and no site was identified as presenting different measurements than others (analysis of variance [ANOVA] P = 0.02, post-hoc test n.s.). Between-slice ADC variability was negligible and similar between sites (P = 0.15). Mean within-region-of-interest ADC variability was 5.5%, with one site presenting a significantly greater variation than the others (P = 0.0013). CONCLUSION: Absolute ADC values in preclinical studies are comparable between sites and equipment, provided standardized protocols are employed..
Haider, M.-.
Hunter, K.D.
Robinson, S.P.
Graham, T.J.
Corey, E.
Dear, T.N.
Hughes, R.
Brown, N.J.
Holen, I.
(2015). Rapid modification of the bone microenvironment following short-term treatment with Cabozantinib in vivo. Bone,
Vol.81,
pp. 581-592.
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INTRODUCTION: Bone metastasis remains incurable with treatment restricted to palliative care. Cabozantinib (CBZ) is targeted against multiple receptor tyrosine kinases involved in tumour pathobiology, including hepatocyte growth factor receptor (MET) and vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 2 (VEGFR-2). CBZ has demonstrated clinical activity in advanced prostate cancer with resolution of lesions visible on bone scans, implicating a potential role of the bone microenvironment as a mediator of CBZ effects. We characterised the effects of short-term administration of CBZ on bone in a range of in vivo models to determine how CBZ affects bone in the absence of tumour. METHODS: Studies were performed in a variety of in vivo models including male and female BALB/c nude mice (age 6-17-weeks). Animals received CBZ (30 mg/kg, 5× weekly) or sterile H2O control for 5 or 10 days. Effects on bone integrity (μCT), bone cell activity (PINP, TRAP ELISA), osteoblast and osteoclast number/mm trabecular bone surface, area of epiphyseal growth plate cartilage, megakaryocyte numbers and bone marrow composition were assessed. Effects of longer-term treatment (15-day & 6-week administration) were assessed in male NOD/SCID and beige SCID mice. RESULTS: CBZ treatment had significant effects on the bone microenvironment, including reduced osteoclast and increased osteoblast numbers compared to control. Trabecular bone structure was altered after 8 administrations. A significant elongation of the epiphyseal growth plate, in particular the hypertrophic chondrocyte zone, was observed in all CBZ treated animals irrespective of administration schedule. Both male and female BALB/c nude mice had increased megakaryocyte numbers/mm(2) tissue after 10-day CBZ treatment, in addition to vascular ectasia, reduced bone marrow cellularity and extravasation of red blood cells into the extra-vascular bone marrow. All CBZ-induced effects were transient and rapidly lost following cessation of treatment. CONCLUSION: Short-term administration of CBZ induces rapid, reversible effects on the bone microenvironment in vivo highlighting a potential role in mediating treatment responses..
Dolman, M.E.
Poon, E.
Ebus, M.E.
den Hartog, I.J.
van Noesel, C.J.
Jamin, Y.
Hallsworth, A.
Robinson, S.P.
Petrie, K.
Sparidans, R.W.
Kok, R.J.
Versteeg, R.
Caron, H.N.
Chesler, L.
Molenaar, J.J.
(2015). Cyclin-Dependent Kinase Inhibitor AT7519 as a Potential Drug for MYCN-Dependent Neuroblastoma. Clin cancer res,
Vol.21
(22),
pp. 5100-5109.
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PURPOSE: MYCN-dependent neuroblastomas have low cure rates with current multimodal treatment regimens and novel therapeutic drugs are therefore urgently needed. In previous preclinical studies, we have shown that targeted inhibition of cyclin-dependent kinase 2 (CDK2) resulted in specific killing of MYCN-amplified neuroblastoma cells. This study describes the in vivo preclinical evaluation of the CDK inhibitor AT7519. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: Preclinical drug testing was performed using a panel of MYCN-amplified and MYCN single copy neuroblastoma cell lines and different MYCN-dependent mouse models of neuroblastoma. RESULTS: AT7519 killed MYCN-amplified neuroblastoma cell lines more potently than MYCN single copy cell lines with a median LC50 value of 1.7 compared to 8.1 μmol/L (P = 0.0053) and a significantly stronger induction of apoptosis. Preclinical studies in female NMRI homozygous (nu/nu) mice with neuroblastoma patient-derived MYCN-amplified AMC711T xenografts revealed dose-dependent growth inhibition, which correlated with intratumoral AT7519 levels. CDK2 target inhibition by AT7519 was confirmed by significant reductions in levels of phosphorylated retinoblastoma (p-Rb) and nucleophosmin (p-NPM). AT7519 treatment of Th-MYCN transgenic mice resulted in improved survival and clinically significant tumor regression (average tumor size reduction of 86% at day 7 after treatment initiation). The improved efficacy of AT7519 observed in Th-MYCN mice correlated with higher tumor exposure to the drug. CONCLUSIONS: This study strongly suggests that AT7519 is a promising drug for the treatment of high-risk neuroblastoma patients with MYCN amplification..
Papaevangelou, E.
Almeida, G.S.
Jamin, Y.
Robinson, S.P.
deSouza, N.M.
(2015). Diffusion-weighted MRI for imaging cell death after cytotoxic or apoptosis-inducing therapy. Br j cancer,
Vol.112
(9),
pp. 1471-1479.
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BACKGROUND: Non-invasive serial imaging is desirable to detect processes such as necrotic and apoptotic cell death in cancer patients undergoing treatment. This study investigated the use of diffusion-weighted (DW-) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for imaging cell death induced by either a cytotoxic drug (irinotecan), or the apoptosis-inducing agent birinapant, in human tumour xenografts in vivo. METHODS: Nude mice bearing human SW620 colon carcinoma xenografts were treated with vehicle, irinotecan (50 mg kg(-1)) or birinapant (30 mg kg(-1)) for up to 5 days. DW-MRI was performed prior to and on days 1, 3 and 5 during treatment. Assessment of tumour apoptosis and necrosis ex vivo was used to validate the imaging findings. RESULTS: Both irinotecan and birinapant induced significant tumour growth delay. Irinotecan induced a small increase in the tumour apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) after 1 day, with a 20 and 30% increase at days 3 and 5 respectively. ADC was unchanged in the vehicle- and birinapant-treated tumours despite a growth delay in the latter. Histological analysis showed that irinotecan increased necrosis at days 3 and 5, and induced apoptosis after 1 day, compared with vehicle. Birinapant induced apoptosis after day 3, but had no effect on tumour necrosis. CONCLUSIONS: Tumour ADC changes after irinotecan treatment were associated with the induction of a mixture of necrotic and apoptotic cell death, whereas induction of apoptosis alone with birinapant was not sufficient to induce changes in tissue microstructure that were detectable with DW-MRI. ADC is a useful non-invasive biomarker for early detection of response to cytotoxic drugs, but false negatives may arise while detecting apoptotic response to birinapant..
Li, J.
Jamin, Y.
Boult, J.K.
Cummings, C.
Waterton, J.C.
Ulloa, J.
Sinkus, R.
Bamber, J.C.
Robinson, S.P.
(2014). Tumour biomechanical response to the vascular disrupting agent ZD6126 in vivo assessed by magnetic resonance elastography. Br j cancer,
Vol.110
(7),
pp. 1727-1732.
show abstract
BACKGROUND: Magnetic resonance elastography (MRE) is an emerging imaging technique that affords non-invasive quantitative assessment and visualization of tissue mechanical properties in vivo. METHODS: In this study, MRE was used to quantify (kPa) the absolute value of the complex shear modulus |G*|, elasticity Gd and viscosity Gl of SW620 human colorectal cancer xenografts before and 24 h after treatment with either 200 mg kg(-1) of the vascular disrupting agent ZD6126 (N-acetylcolchinol-O-phosphate) or vehicle control, and the data were compared with changes in water diffusivity measured by diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging. RESULTS: A heterogeneous distribution of |G*|, Gd and Gl was observed pre-treatment with an intertumoral coefficient of variation of 13% for |G*|. There were no significant changes in the vehicle-treated cohort. In contrast, ZD6126 induced a significant decrease in the tumour-averaged |G*| (P<0.01), Gd (P<0.01) and Gl (P<0.05), and this was associated with histologically confirmed central necrosis. This reduction in tumour viscoelasticity occurred at a time when no significant change in tumour apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) was observed. CONCLUSIONS: These data demonstrate that MRE can provide early imaging biomarkers for treatment-induced tumour necrosis..
Jamin, Y.
Eykyn, T.R.
Poon, E.
Springer, C.J.
Robinson, S.P.
(2014). Detection of the prodrug-activating enzyme carboxypeptidase G2 activity with chemical exchange saturation transfer magnetic resonance. Mol imaging biol,
Vol.16
(2),
pp. 152-157.
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full text
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study is to evaluate if the differential exchange rates with bulk water between amine and amide protons can be exploited using chemical exchange saturation transfer magnetic resonance (CEST-MR) to monitor the release of glutamate induced by carboxypeptidase G2 (CPG2), an enzyme utilized in cancer gene therapy. PROCEDURES: Z spectra of solutions of the CPG2 substrate, 3,5-difluorobenzoyl-L-glutamate (amide), and glutamate (amine) were acquired at 11.7 T, 37 °C, across different pH (5-8). The ability of CEST-MR to monitor CPG2-mediated release of glutamate was assessed in extracts of CPG2-expressing cancer cells and purified solution of CPG2. RESULTS: The addition of CPG2 to a solution containing 3,5-difluorobenzoyl-L-glutamate led to a marked and progressively increasing CEST effect (+3 ppm), concomitant with the time-dependent release of glutamate induced by CPG2. CONCLUSION: CEST-MR allows the detection of CPG2 activity in vitro and supports the translation of CEST-MRI to assess CPG2-based gene therapy in vivo..
Graham, T.J.
Box, G.
Tunariu, N.
Crespo, M.
Spinks, T.J.
Miranda, S.
Attard, G.
de Bono, J.
Eccles, S.A.
Davies, F.E.
Robinson, S.P.
(2014). Preclinical evaluation of imaging biomarkers for prostate cancer bone metastasis and response to cabozantinib. J natl cancer inst,
Vol.106
(4),
p. dju033.
show abstract
BACKGROUND: Prostate cancer is incurable once it has metastasized to the bone. Appropriate preclinical models are lacking. The therapeutic efficacy of the multikinase inhibitor cabozantinib was assessed in an orthotopic xenograft model of castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) bone metastasis using noninvasive, multimodality functional imaging. METHODS: NOD/SCID mice were injected intratibially with luciferase-expressing ERG (v-ets avian erythroblastosis virus E26 oncogene homolog) rearranged VCaP human prostate carcinoma cells. The response of VCaP xenografts (n = 7 per group) to cabozantinib was investigated using bioluminescence imaging and anatomical and diffusion weighted magnetic resonance imaging. This enabled quantitation of tumor volume and apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC). Bone uptake of technetium-methylene diphosphonate ((99m)Tc-MDP) was assessed by single-photon emission computed tomography. Ex vivo micro computed tomography was used to quantify bone volume and correlated with appropriate histopathology. Statistical significance was determined using the two-sided Mann-Whitney test or Wilcoxon signed rank test. RESULTS: VCaP xenografts were predominantly osteosclerotic with some osteolytic activity. Fluorescent in situ hybridization analysis confirmed retention of ERG oncogene rearrangements. Cabozantinib induced a statistically significant 52% reduction in tumor luminance (P = .02) and stasis in tumor volume after 15 days of treatment. Tumor ADC statistically significantly increased with cabozantinib and was associated with extensive necrosis (after 10 days, mean tumor ADC ± SD = 556±43×10(-6) mm(2)/s vs pretreatment ADC = 485±43×10(-6) mm(2)/s; P = .02 ). Tumor-associated uptake of (99m)Tc-MDP was statistically significantly reduced after 3 days of treatment (P = .02), sustained over 15 days treatment, and associated with a statistically significant (P = .048) reduction in bone growth on the tibial cortex, yet a highly statistically significant (P = .001) increase in trabecular bone volume. CONCLUSIONS: The intratibial VCaP model faithfully emulates clinical disease. Cabozantinib exerts potent effects on both tumor and tumor-induced bone matrix remodeling, and quantitation of ADC provides a clinically translatable imaging biomarker for early, sensitive assessment of treatment response in CRPC bone metastasis..
Lin, G.
Hill, D.K.
Andrejeva, G.
Boult, J.K.
Troy, H.
Fong, A.-.
Orton, M.R.
Panek, R.
Parkes, H.G.
Jafar, M.
Koh, D.-.
Robinson, S.P.
Judson, I.R.
Griffiths, J.R.
Leach, M.O.
Eykyn, T.R.
Chung, Y.-.
(2014). Dichloroacetate induces autophagy in colorectal cancer cells and tumours. Br j cancer,
Vol.111
(2),
pp. 375-385.
show abstract
full text
BACKGROUND: Dichloroacetate (DCA) has been found to have antitumour properties. METHODS: We investigated the cellular and metabolic responses to DCA treatment and recovery in human colorectal (HT29, HCT116 WT and HCT116 Bax-ko), prostate carcinoma cells (PC3) and HT29 xenografts by flow cytometry, western blotting, electron microscopy, (1)H and hyperpolarised (13)C-magnetic resonance spectroscopy. RESULTS: Increased expression of the autophagy markers LC3B II was observed following DCA treatment both in vitro and in vivo. We observed increased production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and mTOR inhibition (decreased pS6 ribosomal protein and p4E-BP1 expression) as well as increased expression of MCT1 following DCA treatment. Steady-state lactate excretion and the apparent hyperpolarised [1-(13)C] pyruvate-to-lactate exchange rate (k(PL)) were decreased in DCA-treated cells, along with increased NAD(+)/NADH ratios and NAD(+). Steady-state lactate excretion and k(PL) returned to, or exceeded, control levels in cells recovered from DCA treatment, accompanied by increased NAD(+) and NADH. Reduced k(PL) with DCA treatment was found in HT29 tumour xenografts in vivo. CONCLUSIONS: DCA induces autophagy in cancer cells accompanied by ROS production and mTOR inhibition, reduced lactate excretion, reduced k(PL) and increased NAD(+)/NADH ratio. The observed cellular and metabolic changes recover on cessation of treatment..
Lin, G.
Andrejeva, G.
Wong Te Fong, A.-.
Hill, D.K.
Orton, M.R.
Parkes, H.G.
Koh, D.-.
Robinson, S.P.
Leach, M.O.
Eykyn, T.R.
Chung, Y.-.
(2014). Reduced Warburg effect in cancer cells undergoing autophagy: steady- state 1H-MRS and real-time hyperpolarized 13C-MRS studies. Plos one,
Vol.9
(3),
p. e92645.
show abstract
Autophagy is a highly regulated, energy dependent cellular process where proteins, organelles and cytoplasm are sequestered in autophagosomes and digested to sustain cellular homeostasis. We hypothesized that during autophagy induced in cancer cells by i) starvation through serum and amino acid deprivation or ii) treatment with PI-103, a class I PI3K/mTOR inhibitor, glycolytic metabolism would be affected, reducing flux to lactate, and that this effect may be reversible. We probed metabolism during autophagy in colorectal HT29 and HCT116 Bax knock-out cells using hyperpolarized (13)C-magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) and steady-state (1)H-MRS. 24 hr PI103-treatment or starvation caused significant reduction in the apparent forward rate constant (k(PL)) for pyruvate to lactate exchange compared with controls in HT29 (100 μM PI-103: 82%, p = 0.05) and HCT116 Bax-ko cells (10 μM PI-103: 53%, p = 0.05; 20 μM PI-103: 42%, p<0.0001; starvation: 52%, p<0.001), associated with reduced lactate excretion and intracellular lactate in all cases, and unchanged lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) activity and increased NAD+/NADH ratio following PI103 treatment or decreased LDH activity and unchanged NAD+/NADH ratio following starvation. After 48 hr recovery from PI103 treatment, k(PL) remained below control levels in HT29 cells (74%, p = 0.02), and increased above treated values, but remained below 24 hr vehicle-treated control levels in HCT116 Bax-ko cells (65%, p = 0.004) both were accompanied by sustained reduction in lactate excretion, recovery of NAD+/NADH ratio and intracellular lactate. Following recovery from starvation, k(PL) was significantly higher than 24 hr vehicle-treated controls (140%, p = 0.05), associated with increased LDH activity and total cellular NAD(H). Changes in k(PL) and cellular and excreted lactate provided measureable indicators of the major metabolic processes accompanying starvation- and drug-induced autophagy. The changes are reversible, returning towards and exceeding control values on cellular recovery, which potentially identifies resistance. k(PL) (hyperpolarized (13)C-MRS) and lactate ((1)H-MRS) provide useful biomarkers for the autophagic process, enabling non-invasive monitoring of the Warburg effect..
Jamin, Y.
Glass, L.
Hallsworth, A.
George, R.
Koh, D.-.
Pearson, A.D.
Chesler, L.
Robinson, S.P.
(2014). Intrinsic susceptibility MRI identifies tumors with ALKF1174L mutation in genetically-engineered murine models of high-risk neuroblastoma. Plos one,
Vol.9
(3),
p. e92886.
show abstract
full text
The early identification of children presenting ALK(F1174L)-mutated neuroblastoma, which are associated with resistance to the promising ALK inhibitor crizotinib and a marked poorer prognosis, has become a clinical priority. In comparing the radiology of the novel Th-ALK(F1174L)/Th-MYCN and the well-established Th-MYCN genetically-engineered murine models of neuroblastoma using MRI, we have identified a marked ALK(F1174L)-driven vascular phenotype. We demonstrate that quantitation of the transverse relaxation rate R2* (s(-1)) using intrinsic susceptibility-MRI under baseline conditions and during hyperoxia, can robustly discriminate this differential vascular phenotype, and identify MYCN-driven tumors harboring the ALK(F1174L) mutation with high specificity and selectivity. Intrinsic susceptibility-MRI could thus potentially provide a non-invasive and clinically-exploitable method to help identifying children with MYCN-driven neuroblastoma harboring the ALK(F1174L) mutation at the time of diagnosis..
Jamin, Y.
Tucker, E.R.
Poon, E.
Popov, S.
Vaughan, L.
Boult, J.K.
Webber, H.
Hallsworth, A.
Baker, L.C.
Jones, C.
Koh, D.-.
Pearson, A.D.
Chesler, L.
Robinson, S.P.
(2013). Evaluation of clinically translatable MR imaging biomarkers of therapeutic response in the TH-MYCN transgenic mouse model of neuroblastoma. Radiology,
Vol.266
(1),
pp. 130-140.
show abstract
full text
PURPOSE: To evaluate noninvasive and clinically translatable magnetic resonance (MR) imaging biomarkers of therapeutic response in the TH-MYCN transgenic mouse model of aggressive, MYCN-amplified neuroblastoma. MATERIALS AND METHODS: All experiments were performed in accordance with the local ethical review panel and the UK Home Office Animals Scientific Procedures Act 1986 and with the UK National Cancer Research Institute guidelines for the welfare of animals in cancer research. Multiparametric MR imaging was performed of abdominal tumors found in the TH-MYCN model. T2-weighted MR imaging, quantitation of native relaxation times T1 and T2, the relaxation rate R2*, and dynamic contrast-enhanced MR imaging were used to monitor tumor response to cyclophosphamide (25 mg/kg), the vascular disrupting agent ZD6126 (200 mg/kg), or the antiangiogenic agent cediranib (6 mg/kg, daily). Any significant changes in the measured parameters, and in the magnitude of the changes after treatment between treated and control cohorts, were identified by using Student two-tailed paired and unpaired t test, respectively, with a 5% level of significance. RESULTS: Treatment with cyclophosphamide or cediranib induced a 54% or 20% reduction in tumor volume at 48 hours, respectively (P < .005 and P < .005, respectively; P < .005 and P < .005 versus control, respectively). Treatment with ZD6126 induced a 45% reduction in mean tumor volume 24 hours after treatment (P < .005; P < .005 versus control). The antitumor activity of cyclophosphamide, cediranib, and ZD6126 was consistently associated with a decrease in tumor T1 (P < .005, P < .005, and P < .005, respectively; P < .005, P < .005, and P < .005 versus control, respectively) and with a correlation between therapy-induced changes in native T1 and changes in tumor volume (r = 0.56; P < .005). Tumor response to cediranib was also associated with a decrease in the dynamic contrast-enhanced MR imaging-derived volume transfer constant (P = .07; P < .05 versus control) and enhancing fraction (P < .05; P < .01 versus control), and an increase in R2* (P < .005; P < .05 versus control). CONCLUSION: The T1 relaxation time is a robust noninvasive imaging biomarker of response to therapy in tumors in TH-MYCN mice, which emulate high-risk neuroblastoma in children. T1 measurements can be readily implemented on clinical MR systems and should be investigated in translational clinical trials of new targeted therapies for pediatric neuroblastoma. SUPPLEMENTAL MATERIAL: http://radiology.rsna.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10.1148/radiol.12120128/-/DC1..
Eccles, S.A.
Aboagye, E.O.
Ali, S.
Anderson, A.S.
Armes, J.
Berditchevski, F.
Blaydes, J.P.
Brennan, K.
Brown, N.J.
Bryant, H.E.
Bundred, N.J.
Burchell, J.M.
Campbell, A.M.
Carroll, J.S.
Clarke, R.B.
Coles, C.E.
Cook, G.J.
Cox, A.
Curtin, N.J.
Dekker, L.V.
Silva, I.D.
Duffy, S.W.
Easton, D.F.
Eccles, D.M.
Edwards, D.R.
Edwards, J.
Evans, D.
Fenlon, D.F.
Flanagan, J.M.
Foster, C.
Gallagher, W.M.
Garcia-Closas, M.
Gee, J.M.
Gescher, A.J.
Goh, V.
Groves, A.M.
Harvey, A.J.
Harvie, M.
Hennessy, B.T.
Hiscox, S.
Holen, I.
Howell, S.J.
Howell, A.
Hubbard, G.
Hulbert-Williams, N.
Hunter, M.S.
Jasani, B.
Jones, L.J.
Key, T.J.
Kirwan, C.C.
Kong, A.
Kunkler, I.H.
Langdon, S.P.
Leach, M.O.
Mann, D.J.
Marshall, J.F.
Martin, L.
Martin, S.G.
Macdougall, J.E.
Miles, D.W.
Miller, W.R.
Morris, J.R.
Moss, S.M.
Mullan, P.
Natrajan, R.
O'Connor, J.P.
O'Connor, R.
Palmieri, C.
Pharoah, P.D.
Rakha, E.A.
Reed, E.
Robinson, S.P.
Sahai, E.
Saxton, J.M.
Schmid, P.
Smalley, M.J.
Speirs, V.
Stein, R.
Stingl, J.
Streuli, C.H.
Tutt, A.N.
Velikova, G.
Walker, R.A.
Watson, C.J.
Williams, K.J.
Young, L.S.
Thompson, A.M.
(2013). Critical research gaps and translational priorities for the successful prevention and treatment of breast cancer. Breast cancer res,
Vol.15
(5),
p. R92.
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INTRODUCTION: Breast cancer remains a significant scientific, clinical and societal challenge. This gap analysis has reviewed and critically assessed enduring issues and new challenges emerging from recent research, and proposes strategies for translating solutions into practice. METHODS: More than 100 internationally recognised specialist breast cancer scientists, clinicians and healthcare professionals collaborated to address nine thematic areas: genetics, epigenetics and epidemiology; molecular pathology and cell biology; hormonal influences and endocrine therapy; imaging, detection and screening; current/novel therapies and biomarkers; drug resistance; metastasis, angiogenesis, circulating tumour cells, cancer 'stem' cells; risk and prevention; living with and managing breast cancer and its treatment. The groups developed summary papers through an iterative process which, following further appraisal from experts and patients, were melded into this summary account. RESULTS: The 10 major gaps identified were: (1) understanding the functions and contextual interactions of genetic and epigenetic changes in normal breast development and during malignant transformation; (2) how to implement sustainable lifestyle changes (diet, exercise and weight) and chemopreventive strategies; (3) the need for tailored screening approaches including clinically actionable tests; (4) enhancing knowledge of molecular drivers behind breast cancer subtypes, progression and metastasis; (5) understanding the molecular mechanisms of tumour heterogeneity, dormancy, de novo or acquired resistance and how to target key nodes in these dynamic processes; (6) developing validated markers for chemosensitivity and radiosensitivity; (7) understanding the optimal duration, sequencing and rational combinations of treatment for improved personalised therapy; (8) validating multimodality imaging biomarkers for minimally invasive diagnosis and monitoring of responses in primary and metastatic disease; (9) developing interventions and support to improve the survivorship experience; (10) a continuing need for clinical material for translational research derived from normal breast, blood, primary, relapsed, metastatic and drug-resistant cancers with expert bioinformatics support to maximise its utility. The proposed infrastructural enablers include enhanced resources to support clinically relevant in vitro and in vivo tumour models; improved access to appropriate, fully annotated clinical samples; extended biomarker discovery, validation and standardisation; and facilitated cross-discipline working. CONCLUSIONS: With resources to conduct further high-quality targeted research focusing on the gaps identified, increased knowledge translating into improved clinical care should be achievable within five years..
Baker, L.C.
Boult, J.K.
Jamin, Y.
Gilmour, L.D.
Walker-Samuel, S.
Burrell, J.S.
Ashcroft, M.
Howe, F.A.
Griffiths, J.R.
Raleigh, J.A.
van der Kogel, A.J.
Robinson, S.P.
(2013). Evaluation and immunohistochemical qualification of carbogen-induced ΔR₂ as a noninvasive imaging biomarker of improved tumor oxygenation. Int j radiat oncol biol phys,
Vol.87
(1),
pp. 160-167.
show abstract
PURPOSE: To evaluate and histologically qualify carbogen-induced ΔR2 as a noninvasive magnetic resonance imaging biomarker of improved tumor oxygenation using a double 2-nitroimidazole hypoxia marker approach. METHODS AND MATERIALS: Multigradient echo images were acquired from mice bearing GH3 prolactinomas, preadministered with the hypoxia marker CCI-103F, to quantify tumor R2 during air breathing. With the mouse remaining positioned within the magnet bore, the gas supply was switched to carbogen (95% O2, 5% CO2), during which a second hypoxia marker, pimonidazole, was administered via an intraperitoneal line, and an additional set of identical multigradient echo images acquired to quantify any changes in tumor R2. Hypoxic fraction was quantified histologically using immunofluorescence detection of CCI-103F and pimonidazole adduct formation from the same whole tumor section. Carbogen-induced changes in tumor pO2 were further validated using the Oxylite fiberoptic probe. RESULTS: Carbogen challenge significantly reduced mean tumor R2 from 116 ± 13 s(-1) to 97 ± 9 s(-1) (P<.05). This was associated with a significantly lower pimonidazole adduct area (2.3 ± 1%), compared with CCI-103F (6.3 ± 2%) (P<.05). A significant correlation was observed between ΔR2 and Δhypoxic fraction (r=0.55, P<.01). Mean tumor pO2 during carbogen breathing significantly increased from 6.3 ± 2.2 mm Hg to 36.0 ± 7.5 mm Hg (P<.01). CONCLUSIONS: The combined use of intrinsic susceptibility magnetic resonance imaging with a double hypoxia marker approach corroborates carbogen-induced ΔR2 as a noninvasive imaging biomarker of increased tumor oxygenation..
Burrell, J.S.
Walker-Samuel, S.
Baker, L.C.
Boult, J.K.
Jamin, Y.
Halliday, J.
Waterton, J.C.
Robinson, S.P.
(2013). Exploring ΔR(2) * and ΔR(1) as imaging biomarkers of tumor oxygenation. J magn reson imaging,
Vol.38
(2),
pp. 429-434.
show abstract
PURPOSE: To investigate the combined use of hyperoxia-inducedΔR(2) * and ΔR(1) as a noninvasive imaging biomarker of tumor hypoxia. MATERIALS AND METHODS: MRI was performed on rat GH3 prolactinomas (n = 6) and human PC3 prostate xenografts (n = 6) propagated in nude mice. multiple gradient echo and inversion recovery truefisp images were acquired from identical transverse slices to quantify tumor R(2) * and R(1)before and during carbogen (95% O2 /5% CO2 ) challenge, and correlates of ΔR(2) * and ΔR(1) assessed. RESULTS: Mean baseline R(2) * and R(1) were 119 ± 7 s(-1) and 0.6 ± 0.03 s(-1) for GH3 prolactinomas and 77 ± 12 s(-1) and 0.7 ± 0.02 s(-1) for PC3 xenografts, respectively. During carbogen breathing, mean ΔR(2) * and ΔR(1) were -20 ± 8 s(-1) and 0.08 ± 0.03 s(-1) for GH3 and -0.5 ± 1 s(-1) and 0.2 ± 0.08 s(-1) for the PC3 tumors, respectively. A pronounced relationship betweenΔR(2) * and ΔR(1) was revealed. CONCLUSION: Considering the blood oxygen-hemoglobin dissociation curve, fast R2 * suggested that GH3 prolactinomas were more hypoxic at baseline, and their carbogen response dominated by increased hemoglobin oxygenation, evidenced by highly negative ΔR(2) *. PC3 tumors were less hypoxic at baseline, and their response to carbogen dominated by increased dissolved oxygen, evidenced by highly positive ΔR(1) . Because the two biomarkers are sensitive to different oxygenation ranges, the combination of ΔR(2) * and ΔR(1) may better characterize tumor hypoxia than each alone..
Brockmann, M.
Poon, E.
Berry, T.
Carstensen, A.
Deubzer, H.E.
Rycak, L.
Jamin, Y.
Thway, K.
Robinson, S.P.
Roels, F.
Witt, O.
Fischer, M.
Chesler, L.
Eilers, M.
(2013). Small molecule inhibitors of aurora-a induce proteasomal degradation of N-myc in childhood neuroblastoma. Cancer cell,
Vol.24
(1),
pp. 75-89.
show abstract
Amplification of MYCN is a driver mutation in a subset of human neuroendocrine tumors, including neuroblastoma. No small molecules that target N-Myc, the protein encoded by MYCN, are clinically available. N-Myc forms a complex with the Aurora-A kinase, which protects N-Myc from proteasomal degradation. Although stabilization of N-Myc does not require the catalytic activity of Aurora-A, we show here that two Aurora-A inhibitors, MLN8054 and MLN8237, disrupt the Aurora-A/N-Myc complex and promote degradation of N-Myc mediated by the Fbxw7 ubiquitin ligase. Disruption of the Aurora-A/N-Myc complex inhibits N-Myc-dependent transcription, correlating with tumor regression and prolonged survival in a mouse model of MYCN-driven neuroblastoma. We conclude that Aurora-A is an accessible target that makes destabilization of N-Myc a viable therapeutic strategy..
Price, J.M.
Robinson, S.P.
Koh, D.M.
(2013). Imaging hypoxia in tumours with advanced MRI. Q j nucl med mol imaging,
Vol.57
(3),
pp. 257-270.
show abstract
Tumour hypoxia results in biological alterations that leads to a more aggressive disease phenotype and is associated with resistance to treatment. In this review, we discuss current magnetic resonance imaging techniques, which can be applied to evaluate tumour hypoxia, highlighting the principles of each technique, their pre-clinical and clinical deployment, as well as their strengths and limitations. The potential to combine these techniques, and also with other imaging modalities (e.g., PET imaging) using a multiparametric approach, may further improve our understanding of the complex interaction of vascular supply, oxygen diffusion and tissue metabolism in pathogenesis of tumour hypoxia; and its reversal with treatment..
Hill, D.K.
Jamin, Y.
Orton, M.R.
Tardif, N.
Parkes, H.G.
Robinson, S.P.
Leach, M.O.
Chung, Y.-.
Eykyn, T.R.
(2013). ¹H NMR and hyperpolarized ¹³C NMR assays of pyruvate-lactate: a comparative study. Nmr biomed,
Vol.26
(10),
pp. 1321-1325.
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full text
Pyruvate-lactate exchange is mediated by the enzyme lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) and is central to the altered energy metabolism in cancer cells. The measurement of exchange kinetics using hyperpolarized (13) C NMR has provided a biomarker of response to novel therapeutics. However, the observable signal is restricted to the exchanging hyperpolarized (13) C pools and the endogenous pools of (12) C-labelled metabolites are invisible in these measurements. In this study, we investigated an alternative in vitro (1) H NMR assay, using [3-(13) C]pyruvate, and compared the measured kinetics with a hyperpolarized (13) C NMR assay, using [1-(13) C]pyruvate, under the same conditions in human colorectal carcinoma SW1222 cells. The apparent forward reaction rate constants (kPL ) derived from the two assays showed no significant difference, and both assays had similar reproducibility (kPL  = 0.506 ± 0.054 and kPL  = 0.441 ± 0.090 nmol/s/10(6) cells; mean ± standard deviation; n = 3); (1) H, (13) C assays, respectively). The apparent backward reaction rate constant (kLP ) could only be measured with good reproducibility using the (1) H NMR assay (kLP  = 0.376 ± 0.091 nmol/s/10(6) cells; mean ± standard deviation; n = 3). The (1) H NMR assay has adequate sensitivity to measure real-time pyruvate-lactate exchange kinetics in vitro, offering a complementary and accessible assay of apparent LDH activity..
Beloueche-Babari, M.
Jamin, Y.
Arunan, V.
Walker-Samuel, S.
Revill, M.
Smith, P.D.
Halliday, J.
Waterton, J.C.
Barjat, H.
Workman, P.
Leach, M.O.
Robinson, S.P.
(2013). Acute tumour response to the MEK1/2 inhibitor selumetinib (AZD6244, ARRY-142886) evaluated by non-invasive diffusion-weighted MRI. Br j cancer,
Vol.109
(6),
pp. 1562-1569.
show abstract
BACKGROUND: Non-invasive imaging biomarkers underpin the development of molecularly targeted anti-cancer drugs. This study evaluates tumour apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC), measured by diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (DW-MRI), as a biomarker of response to the MEK1/2 inhibitor selumetinib (AZD6244, ARRY-142886) in human tumour xenografts. METHODS: Nude mice bearing human BRAF(V600D) WM266.4 melanoma or BRAF(V600E) Colo205 colon carcinoma xenografts were treated for 4 days with vehicle or selumetinib. DW-MRI was performed before and 2 h after the last dose and excised tumours analysed for levels of phospho-ERK1/2, cleaved caspase 3 (CC3) and necrosis. RESULTS: Selumetinib treatment induced tumour stasis and reduced ERK1/2 phosphorylation in both WM266.4 and Colo205 tumour xenografts. Relative to day 0, mean tumour ADC was unchanged in the control groups but was significantly increased by up to 1.6-fold in selumetinib-treated WM266.4 and Colo205 tumours. Histological analysis revealed a significant increase in necrosis in selumetinib-treated WM266.4 and Colo205 xenografts and CC3 staining in selumetinib-treated Colo205 tumours relative to controls. CONCLUSION: Changes in ADC following treatment with the MEK1/2 inhibitor selumetinib in responsive human tumour xenografts were concomitant with induction of tumour cell death. ADC may provide a useful non-invasive pharmacodynamic biomarker for early clinical assessment of response to selumetinib and other MEK-ERK1/2 signalling-targeted therapies..
Boult, J.K.
Terkelsen, J.
Walker-Samuel, S.
Bradley, D.P.
Robinson, S.P.
(2013). A multi-parametric imaging investigation of the response of C6 glioma xenografts to MLN0518 (tandutinib) treatment. Plos one,
Vol.8
(4),
p. e63024.
show abstract
Angiogenesis, the development of new blood vessels, is essential for tumour growth; this process is stimulated by the secretion of numerous growth factors including platelet derived growth factor (PDGF). PDGF signalling, through its receptor platelet derived growth factor receptor (PDGFR), is involved in vessel maturation, stimulation of angiogenesis and upregulation of other angiogenic factors, including vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). PDGFR is a promising target for anti-cancer therapy because it is expressed on both tumour cells and stromal cells associated with the vasculature. MLN0518 (tandutinib) is a potent inhibitor of type III receptor tyrosine kinases that demonstrates activity against PDGFRα/β, FLT3 and c-KIT. In this study a multi-parametric MRI and histopathological approach was used to interrogate changes in vascular haemodynamics, structural response and hypoxia in C6 glioma xenografts in response to treatment with MLN0518. The doubling time of tumours in mice treated with MLN0518 was significantly longer than tumours in vehicle treated mice. The perfused vessel area, number of alpha smooth muscle actin positive vessels and hypoxic area in MLN0518 treated tumours were also significantly lower after 10 days treatment. These changes were not accompanied by alterations in vessel calibre or fractional blood volume as assessed using susceptibility contrast MRI. Histological assessment of vessel size and total perfused area did not demonstrate any change with treatment. Intrinsic susceptibility MRI did not reveal any difference in baseline R2* or carbogen-induced change in R2*. Dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI revealed anti-vascular effects of MLN0518 following 3 days treatment. Hypoxia confers chemo- and radio-resistance, and alongside PDGF, is implicated in evasive resistance to agents targeted against VEGF signalling. PDGFR antagonists may improve potency and efficacy of other therapeutics in combination. This study highlights the challenges of identifying appropriate quantitative imaging response biomarkers in heterogeneous models, particularly considering the multifaceted roles of angiogenic growth factors..
Fryer, R.A.
Graham, T.J.
Smith, E.M.
Walker-Samuel, S.
Morgan, G.J.
Robinson, S.P.
Davies, F.E.
(2013). Characterization of a novel mouse model of multiple myeloma and its use in preclinical therapeutic assessment. Plos one,
Vol.8
(2),
p. e57641.
show abstract
To aid preclinical development of novel therapeutics for myeloma, an in vivo model which recapitulates the human condition is required. An important feature of such a model is the interaction of myeloma cells with the bone marrow microenvironment, as this interaction modulates tumour activity and protects against drug-induced apoptosis. Therefore NOD/SCIDγc(null) mice were injected intra-tibially with luciferase-tagged myeloma cells. Disease progression was monitored by weekly bioluminescent imaging (BLI) and measurement of paraprotein levels. Results were compared with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and histology. Assessment of model suitability for preclinical drug testing was investigated using bortezomib, melphalan and two novel agents. Cells engrafted at week 3, with a significant increase in BLI radiance occurring between weeks 5 and 7. This was accompanied by an increase in paraprotein secretion, MRI-derived tumour volume and CD138 positive cells within the bone marrow. Treatment with known anti-myeloma agents or novel agents significantly attenuated the increase in all disease markers. In addition, intra-tibial implantation of primary patient plasma cells resulted in development of myeloma within bone marrow. In conclusion, using both myeloma cell lines and primary patient cells, we have developed a model which recapitulates human myeloma by ensuring the key interaction of tumour cells with the microenvironment..
Hill, D.L.
Eriksson, E.M.
Li Wai Suen, C.S.
Chiu, C.Y.
Ryg-Cornejo, V.
Robinson, L.J.
Siba, P.M.
Mueller, I.
Hansen, D.S.
Schofield, L.
(2013). Opsonising antibodies to P falciparum merozoites associated with immunity to clinical malaria. Plos one,
Vol.8
(9),
p. e74627.
show abstract
Naturally acquired humoral immunity to the malarial parasite Plasmodium falciparum can protect against disease, although the precise mechanisms remain unclear. Although antibody levels can be measured by ELISA, few studies have investigated functional antibody assays in relation to clinical outcomes. In this study we applied a recently developed functional assay of antibody-mediated opsonisation of merozoites, to plasma samples from a longitudinal cohort study conducted in a malaria endemic region of Papua New Guinea (PNG). Phagocytic activity was quantified by flow cytometry using a standardized and high-throughput protocol, and was subsequently evaluated for association with protection from clinical malaria and high-density parasitemia. Opsonising antibody responses were found to: i) increase with age, ii) be enhanced by concurrent infection, and iii) correlate with protection from clinical episodes and high-density parasitemia. Stronger protective associations were observed in individuals with no detectable parasitemia at baseline. This study presents the first evidence for merozoite phagocytosis as a correlate of acquired immunity and clinical protection against P. falciparum malaria..
Boult, J.K.
Jamin, Y.
Jacobs, V.
Gilmour, L.D.
Walker-Samuel, S.
Halliday, J.
Elvin, P.
Ryan, A.J.
Waterton, J.C.
Robinson, S.P.
(2012). False-negative MRI biomarkers of tumour response to targeted cancer therapeutics. Br j cancer,
Vol.106
(12),
pp. 1960-1966.
show abstract
BACKGROUND: Non-invasive quantitative imaging biomarkers are essential for the evaluation of novel targeted therapeutics. Before deployment in clinical trials, such imaging biomarkers require qualification, typically through pre-clinical identification of imaging-pathology correlates. METHODS: First, in investigating imaging biomarkers of invasion, the response of orthotopic murine PC3 prostate xenografts to the Src inhibitor saracatinib was assessed using susceptibility contrast MRI. Second, the longitudinal response of chemically induced rat mammary adenocarcinomas to the VEGFR2 inhibitor vandetanib was monitored by intrinsic susceptibility MRI, to identify the time window of transient vascular normalisation. RESULTS: No significant differences in fractional blood volume (%), vessel calibre (μm), native T(1) (ms) or apparent water diffusion coefficient were determined, despite reduced expression of activated Fak and paxillin in the saracatinib cohort. Treatment with vandetanib elicited a 60% antitumour response (P<0.01), 80% inhibition in vessel density (P<0.05) and reduction in hypoxia (P<0.05). There was, however, no significant change in tumour baseline R(2)* (s(-1)) or carbogen-induced ΔR(2)* with treatment. CONCLUSION: Reporting negative imaging biomarker responses is important, to avoid the risk of clinical trials using the same biomarkers being undertaken with a false expectation of success, and the abandonment of promising new therapeutics based on a false-negative imaging biomarker response being mistaken for a true-negative..
Baker, L.C.
Boult, J.K.
Walker-Samuel, S.
Chung, Y.-.
Jamin, Y.
Ashcroft, M.
Robinson, S.P.
(2012). The HIF-pathway inhibitor NSC-134754 induces metabolic changes and anti-tumour activity while maintaining vascular function. Br j cancer,
Vol.106
(10),
pp. 1638-1647.
show abstract
BACKGROUND: Hypoxia-inducible factor-1 (HIF-1) mediates the transcriptional response to hypoxic stress, promoting tumour progression and survival. This study investigated the acute effects of the small-molecule HIF-pathway inhibitor NSC-134754. METHODS: Human PC-3LN5 prostate cancer cells were treated with NSC-134754 for 24 h in hypoxia. Orthotopic prostate tumour-bearing mice were treated with a single dose of NSC-134754 for 6, 24 or 48 h. Treatment response was measured using magnetic resonance spectroscopy and imaging. Ex-vivo histological validation of imaging findings was also sought. RESULTS: In vitro, NSC-134754 significantly reduced lactate production and glucose uptake (P<0.05), while significantly increasing intracellular glucose (P<0.01) and glutamine uptake/metabolism (P<0.05). Increased glutamine metabolism was independent of c-Myc, a factor also downregulated by NSC-134754. In vivo, a significantly higher tumour apparent diffusion coefficient was determined 24 h post-treatment (P<0.05), with significantly higher tumour necrosis after 48 h (P<0.05). NSC-134754-treated tumours revealed lower expression of HIF-1α and glucose transporter-1, at 6 and 24 h respectively, while a transient increase in tumour hypoxia was observed after 24 h. Vessel perfusion/flow and vascular endothelial growth factor levels were unchanged with treatment. CONCLUSION: NSC-134754 induces metabolic alterations in vitro and early anti-tumour activity in vivo, independent of changes in vascular function. Our data support the further evaluation of NSC-134754 as an anti-cancer agent..
Burrell, J.S.
Bradley, R.S.
Walker-Samuel, S.
Jamin, Y.
Baker, L.C.
Boult, J.K.
Withers, P.J.
Halliday, J.
Waterton, J.C.
Robinson, S.P.
(2012). MRI measurements of vessel calibre in tumour xenografts: comparison with vascular corrosion casting. Microvasc res,
Vol.84
(3),
pp. 323-329.
show abstract
Vessel size index (R(v), μm) has been proposed as a quantitative magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) derived imaging biomarker in oncology, for the non-invasive assessment of tumour blood vessel architecture and vascular targeted therapies. Appropriate pre-clinical evaluation of R(v) in animal tumour models will improve the interpretation and guide the introduction of the biomarker into clinical studies. The objective of this study was to compare R(v) measured in vivo with vessel size measurements from high-resolution X-ray computed tomography (μCT) of vascular corrosion casts measured post mortem from the same tumours, with and without vascular targeted therapy. MRI measurements were first acquired from subcutaneous SW1222 colorectal xenografts in mice following treatment with 0 (n=6), 30 (n=6) or 200 mg/kg (n=3) of the vascular disrupting agent ZD6126. The mice were then immediately infused with a low viscosity resin and, following polymerisation and maceration of surrounding tissues, the resulting tumour vascular casts were dissected and subsequently imaged using an optimised μCT imaging approach. Vessel diameters were not measurable by μCT in the 200 mg/kg group as the high dose of ZD6126 precluded delivery of the resin to the tumour vascular bed. The mean R(v) for the three treatment groups was 24, 23 and 23.5 μm respectively; the corresponding μCT measurements from corrosion casts from the 0 and 30 mg/kg cohorts were 25 and 28 μm. The strong association between the in vivo MRI and post mortem μCT values supports the use of R(v) as an imaging biomarker in clinical trials of investigational vascular targeted therapies..
Bielen, A.
Box, G.
Perryman, L.
Bjerke, L.
Popov, S.
Jamin, Y.
Jury, A.
Valenti, M.
Brandon, A.D.
Martins, V.
Romanet, V.
Jeay, S.
Raynaud, F.I.
Hofmann, F.
Robinson, S.P.
Eccles, S.A.
Jones, C.
(2012). Dependence of Wilms tumor cells on signaling through insulin-like growth factor 1 in an orthotopic xenograft model targetable by specific receptor inhibition. Proc natl acad sci u s a,
Vol.109
(20),
pp. E1267-E1276.
show abstract
We have previously demonstrated an increased DNA copy number and expression of IGF1R to be associated with poor outcome in Wilms tumors. We have now tested whether inhibiting this receptor may be a useful therapeutic strategy by using a panel of Wilms tumor cell lines. Both genetic and pharmacological targeting resulted in inhibition of downstream signaling through PI3 and MAP kinases, G(1) cell cycle arrest, and cell death, with drug efficacy dependent on the levels of phosphorylated IGF1R. These effects were further associated with specific gene expression signatures reflecting pathway inhibition, and conferred synergistic chemosensitisation to doxorubicin and topotecan. In the in vivo setting, s.c. xenografts of WiT49 cells resembled malignant rhabdoid tumors rather than Wilms tumors. Treatment with an IGF1R inhibitor (NVP-AEW541) showed no discernable antitumor activity and no downstream pathway inactivation. By contrast, Wilms tumor cells established orthotopically within the kidney were histologically accurate and exhibited significantly elevated insulin-like growth factor-mediated signaling, and growth was significantly reduced on treatment with NVP-AEW541 in parallel with signaling pathway ablation. As a result of the paracrine effects of enhanced IGF2 expression in Wilms tumor, this disease may be acutely dependent on signaling through the IGF1 receptor, and thus treatment strategies aimed at its inhibition may be useful in the clinic. Such efficacy may be missed if only standard ectopic models are considered as a result of an imperfect recapitulation of the specific tumor microenvironment..
Walton, M.I.
Eve, P.D.
Hayes, A.
Valenti, M.R.
De Haven Brandon, A.K.
Box, G.
Hallsworth, A.
Smith, E.L.
Boxall, K.J.
Lainchbury, M.
Matthews, T.P.
Jamin, Y.
Robinson, S.P.
Aherne, G.W.
Reader, J.C.
Chesler, L.
Raynaud, F.I.
Eccles, S.A.
Collins, I.
Garrett, M.D.
(2012). CCT244747 is a novel potent and selective CHK1 inhibitor with oral efficacy alone and in combination with genotoxic anticancer drugs. Clin cancer res,
Vol.18
(20),
pp. 5650-5661.
show abstract
PURPOSE: Many tumors exhibit defective cell-cycle checkpoint control and increased replicative stress. CHK1 is critically involved in the DNA damage response and maintenance of replication fork stability. We have therefore discovered a novel potent, highly selective, orally active ATP-competitive CHK1 inhibitor, CCT244747, and present its preclinical pharmacology and therapeutic activity. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: Cellular CHK1 activity was assessed using an ELISA assay, and cytotoxicity a SRB assay. Biomarker modulation was measured using immunoblotting, and cell-cycle effects by flow cytometry analysis. Single-agent oral CCT244747 antitumor activity was evaluated in a MYCN-driven transgenic mouse model of neuroblastoma by MRI and in genotoxic combinations in human tumor xenografts by growth delay. RESULTS: CCT244747 inhibited cellular CHK1 activity (IC(50) 29-170 nmol/L), significantly enhanced the cytotoxicity of several anticancer drugs, and abrogated drug-induced S and G(2) arrest in multiple tumor cell lines. Biomarkers of CHK1 (pS296 CHK1) activity and cell-cycle inactivity (pY15 CDK1) were induced by genotoxics and inhibited by CCT244747 both in vitro and in vivo, producing enhanced DNA damage and apoptosis. Active tumor concentrations of CCT244747 were obtained following oral administration. The antitumor activity of both gemcitabine and irinotecan were significantly enhanced by CCT244747 in several human tumor xenografts, giving concomitant biomarker modulation indicative of CHK1 inhibition. CCT244747 also showed marked antitumor activity as a single agent in a MYCN-driven neuroblastoma. CONCLUSION: CCT244747 represents the first structural disclosure of a highly selective, orally active CHK1 inhibitor and warrants further evaluation alone or combined with genotoxic anticancer therapies..
Burrell, J.S.
Walker-Samuel, S.
Baker, L.C.
Boult, J.K.
Jamin, Y.
Ryan, A.J.
Waterton, J.C.
Halliday, J.
Robinson, S.P.
(2012). Evaluation of novel combined carbogen USPIO (CUSPIO) imaging biomarkers in assessing the antiangiogenic effects of cediranib (AZD2171) in rat C6 gliomas. Int j cancer,
Vol.131
(8),
pp. 1854-1862.
show abstract
The recently described combined carbogen USPIO (CUSPIO) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) method uses spatial correlations in independent imaging biomarkers to assess specific components of tumor vascular structure and function. Our study aimed to evaluate CUSPIO biomarkers for the assessment of tumor response to antiangiogenic therapy. CUSPIO imaging was performed in subcutaneous rat C6 gliomas before and 2 days after treatment with the potent VEGF-signaling inhibitor cediranib (n = 12), or vehicle (n = 12). Histological validation of Hoechst 33342 uptake (perfusion), smooth muscle actin staining (maturation), pimonidazole adduct formation (hypoxia) and necrosis were sought. Following treatment, there was a significant decrease in fractional blood volume (-43%, p < 0.01) and a significant increase in hemodynamic vascular functionality (treatment altered ΔR(2) *(carbogen) from 1.2 to -0.2 s(-1) , p < 0.05). CUSPIO imaging revealed an overall significant decrease in plasma perfusion (-27%, p < 0.05) following cediranib treatment, that was associated with selective effects on immature blood vessels. The CUSPIO responses were associated with a significant 15% reduction in Hoechst 33342 uptake (p < 0.05), but no significant difference in vascular maturation or necrosis. Additionally, treatment with cediranib resulted in a significant 40% increase in tumor hypoxia (p < 0.05). The CUSPIO imaging method provides novel and more specific biomarkers of tumor vessel maturity and vascular hemodynamics, and their response to VEGF-signaling inhibition, compared to current MR imaging biomarkers utilized in the clinic. Such biomarkers may prove effective in longitudinally monitoring tumor vascular remodeling and/or evasive resistance in response to antiangiogenic therapy..
Walker-Samuel, S.
Boult, J.K.
McPhail, L.D.
Box, G.
Eccles, S.A.
Robinson, S.P.
(2012). Non-invasive in vivo imaging of vessel calibre in orthotopic prostate tumour xenografts. Int j cancer,
Vol.130
(6),
pp. 1284-1293.
show abstract
Susceptibility contrast magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), utilising ultrasmall superparamagnetic iron oxide (USPIO) particles, was evaluated for the quantitation of vessel size index (Rv, μm), a weighted average measure of tumour blood vessel calibre, and fractional tumour blood volume (fBV, %), in orthotopically propagated murine PC3 prostate tumour xenografts. Tumour vascular architecture was assessed in vivo by MRI prior to and 24 hr after treatment with 200 mg/kg of the vascular disrupting agent ZD6126. A Bayesian hierarchical model (BHM) was used to reduce the uncertainty associated with quantitation of Rv and fBV. Quantitative histological analyses of the uptake of Hoechst 33342 for perfused vasculature, and haematoxylin and eosin staining for necrosis, were also performed to qualify the MRI data. A relatively large median Rv of 40.3 μm (90% confidence interval (CI90) = 37.4, 44.0 μm) and a high fBV of 5.4% (CI90 = 5.3, 5.5%) were determined in control tumours, which agreed with histologically determined vessel size index. Treatment with ZD6126 significantly (p < 0.01) reduced tumour Rv (34.2 μm, CI90 = 31.2, 38.0 μm) and fBV (3.9%, CI90 = 3.8, 4.1%), which were validated against histologically determined significant reductions in perfusion and vessel size, and increased necrosis. Together these data (i) highlight the use of a BHM to optimise the inferential power available from susceptibility contrast MRI data, (ii) provide strong evaluation and qualification of R(v) and fBV as non-invasive imaging biomarkers of tumour vascular morphology, (iii) reveal the presence of a different vascular phenotype and (iv) demonstrate that ZD6126 exhibits good anti-vascular activity against orthotopic prostate tumours..
Walker-Samuel, S.
Orton, M.
Boult, J.K.
Robinson, S.P.
(2011). Improving apparent diffusion coefficient estimates and elucidating tumor heterogeneity using Bayesian adaptive smoothing. Magn reson med,
Vol.65
(2),
pp. 438-447.
show abstract
The spatial distribution of apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) estimates in tumors is typically heterogeneous, although this observed variability is composed of both true regional differences and random measurement uncertainty. In this study, an adaptive Bayesian adaptive smoothing (BAS) model for estimating ADC values is developed and applied to data acquired in two murine tumor models in vivo. BAS models have previously been shown to reduce parameter uncertainty through the use of a Markov random field. Here, diffusion data acquired with four averages was used as an empirical gold standard for evaluating the BAS model. ADC estimates using BAS displayed a significantly closer accordance with the gold standard data and, following analysis of uncertainty estimates, appeared to even outperform the gold standard. These observations were also reflected in simulations. These results have strong implications for clinical studies, as it suggests that the BAS postprocessing technique can be used to improve ADC estimates without the need to compromise on spatial resolution or signal-to-noise or for the adaptation of acquisition hardware. A novel measure of tumor ADC heterogeneity was also defined, which identified differences between tumors derived from different cell lines, which were reflected in histological variations within the tissue microenvironment..
Kostourou, V.
Cartwright, J.E.
Johnstone, A.P.
Boult, J.K.
Cullis, E.R.
Whitley, G.S.
Robinson, S.P.
(2011). The role of tumour-derived iNOS in tumour progression and angiogenesis. British journal of cancer,
Vol.104
(1),
pp. 83-8.
Jamin, Y.
Smyth, L.
Robinson, S.P.
Poon, E.S.
Eykyn, T.R.
Springer, C.J.
Leach, M.O.
Payne, G.S.
(2011). Noninvasive detection of carboxypeptidase G2 activity in vivo. Nmr biomed,
Vol.24
(4),
pp. 343-350.
show abstract
The pseudomonad protein, carboxypeptidase G2 (CPG2), is a prodrug-activating enzyme utilized in the targeted chemotherapy strategies of antibody- and gene-directed enzyme prodrug therapy (ADEPT and GDEPT). We have developed a noninvasive imaging approach to monitor CPG2 activity in vivo that will facilitate the preclinical and clinical development of CPG2-based ADEPT and GDEPT strategies. Cleavage of the novel reporter probe, 3,5-difluorobenzoyl-L-glutamic acid (3,5-DFBGlu), by CPG2, in human colon adenocarcinoma WiDr xenografts engineered to stably express CPG2, was monitored using (19)F MRSI. The high signal-to-noise ratio afforded by the two MR-equivalent (19)F nuclei of 3,5-DFBGlu, and the 1.4 ppm (19)F chemical shift difference on CPG2-mediated cleavage, enabled the dynamics and quantification of the apparent pharmacokinetics of 3,5-DFBGlu and its CPG2-mediated cleavage in the tumor to be evaluated. In addition, the apparent rate of increase of 3,5-difluorobenzoic acid concentration could also provide a biomarker of CPG2 activity levels in tumors of patients undergoing CPG2-based therapies, as well as a biomarker of treatment response. The addition of in vivo reporter probes, such as 3,5-DFBGlu, to the armamentarium of prodrugs cleaved by CPG2 affords new applications for CPG2 as a gene reporter of transgene expression..
Burrell, J.S.
Walker-Samuel, S.
Baker, L.C.
Boult, J.K.
Ryan, A.J.
Waterton, J.C.
Halliday, J.
Robinson, S.P.
(2011). Investigating temporal fluctuations in tumor vasculature with combined carbogen and ultrasmall superparamagnetic iron oxide particle (CUSPIO) imaging. Magn reson med,
Vol.66
(1),
pp. 227-234.
show abstract
A combined carbogen ultrasmall superparamagnetic iron oxide (USPIO) imaging protocol was developed and applied in vivo in two murine colorectal tumor xenograft models, HCT116 and SW1222, with established disparate vascular morphology, to investigate whether additional information could be extracted from the combination of two susceptibility MRI biomarkers. Tumors were imaged before and during carbogen breathing and subsequently following intravenous administration of USPIO particles. A novel segmentation method was applied to the image data, from which six categories of R(2)* response were identified, and compared with histological analysis of the vasculature. In particular, a strong association between a negative ΔR(2)*(carbogen) followed by positive ΔR(2)*(USPIO) with the uptake of the perfusion marker Hoechst 33342 was determined. Regions of tumor tissue where there was a significant ΔR(2)*(carbogen) but no significant ΔR(2)*(USPIO) were also identified, suggesting these regions became temporally isolated from the vascular supply during the experimental timecourse. These areas correlated with regions of tumor tissue where there was CD31 staining but no Hoechst 33342 uptake. Significantly, different combined carbogen USPIO responses were determined between the two tumor models. Combining ΔR(2)*(carbogen) and ΔR(2)*(USPIO) with a novel segmentation scheme can facilitate the interpretation of susceptibility contrast MRI data and enable a deeper interrogation of tumor vascular function and architecture..
Gillies, R.M.
Robinson, S.P.
McPhail, L.D.
Carter, N.D.
Murray, J.F.
(2011). Immunohistochemical assessment of intrinsic and extrinsic markers of hypoxia in reproductive tissue: differential expression of HIF1α and HIF2α in rat oviduct and endometrium. Journal of molecular histology,
Vol.42
(4),
pp. 341-14.
Boult, J.K.
Walker-Samuel, S.
Jamin, Y.
Leiper, J.M.
Whitley, G.S.
Robinson, S.P.
(2011). Active site mutant dimethylarginine dimethylaminohydrolase 1 expression confers an intermediate tumour phenotype in C6 gliomas. J pathol,
Vol.225
(3),
pp. 344-352.
show abstract
Dimethylarginine dimethylaminohydrolase (DDAH) metabolizes the endogenous inhibitor of nitric oxide synthesis, asymmetric dimethylarginine (ADMA). Constitutive over-expression of DDAH1, the isoform primarily associated with neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) results in increased tumour growth and vascularization, and elevated VEGF secretion. To address whether DDAH1-mediated tumour growth is reliant upon the enzymatic activity of DDAH1, cell lines expressing an active site mutant of DDAH1 incapable of metabolizing ADMA were created. Xenografts derived from these cell lines grew significantly faster than those derived from control cells, yet not as fast as those over-expressing wild-type DDAH1. VEGF expression in DDAH1 mutant-expressing tumours did not differ from control tumours but was significantly lower than that of wild-type DDAH1-over-expressing tumours. Fluorescence microscopy for CD31 and pimonidazole adduct formation demonstrated that DDAH1 mutant-expressing tumours had a lower endothelial content and demonstrated less hypoxia, respectively, than wild-type DDAH1-expressing tumours. However, there was no difference in uptake of the perfusion marker Hoechst 33342. Non-invasive multiparametric quantitative MRI, including the measurement of native T(1) and T(2) relaxation times and apparent water diffusion coefficient, was indicative of higher cellularity in DDAH1-expressing xenografts, which was confirmed by histological quantification of necrosis. C6 xenografts expressing active site mutant DDAH1 displayed an intermediate phenotype between tumours over-expressing wild-type DDAH1 and control tumours. These data suggest that enhanced VEGF expression downstream of DDAH1 was dependent upon ADMA metabolism, but that the DDAH1-mediated increase in tumour growth was only partially dependent upon its enzymatic activity, and therefore must involve an as-yet unidentified mechanism. DDAH1 is an important mediator of tumour progression, but appears to have addition roles independent of its metabolism of ADMA, which need to be considered in therapeutic strategies targeted against the NO/DDAH pathway in cancer..
Faisal, A.
Vaughan, L.
Bavetsias, V.
Sun, C.
Atrash, B.
Avery, S.
Jamin, Y.
Robinson, S.P.
Workman, P.
Blagg, J.
Raynaud, F.I.
Eccles, S.A.
Chesler, L.
Linardopoulos, S.
(2011). The aurora kinase inhibitor CCT137690 downregulates MYCN and sensitizes MYCN-amplified neuroblastoma in vivo. Mol cancer ther,
Vol.10
(11),
pp. 2115-2123.
show abstract
Aurora kinases regulate key stages of mitosis including centrosome maturation, spindle assembly, chromosome segregation, and cytokinesis. Aurora A and B kinase overexpression has also been associated with various human cancers, and as such, they have been extensively studied as novel antimitotic drug targets. Here, we characterize the Aurora kinase inhibitor CCT137690, a highly selective, orally bioavailable imidazo[4,5-b]pyridine derivative that inhibits Aurora A and B kinases with low nanomolar IC(50) values in both biochemical and cellular assays and exhibits antiproliferative activity against a wide range of human solid tumor cell lines. CCT137690 efficiently inhibits histone H3 and transforming acidic coiled-coil 3 phosphorylation (Aurora B and Aurora A substrates, respectively) in HCT116 and HeLa cells. Continuous exposure of tumor cells to the inhibitor causes multipolar spindle formation, chromosome misalignment, polyploidy, and apoptosis. This is accompanied by p53/p21/BAX induction, thymidine kinase 1 downregulation, and PARP cleavage. Furthermore, CCT137690 treatment of MYCN-amplified neuroblastoma cell lines inhibits cell proliferation and decreases MYCN protein expression. Importantly, in a transgenic mouse model of neuroblastoma that overexpresses MYCN protein and is predisposed to spontaneous neuroblastoma formation, this compound significantly inhibits tumor growth. The potent preclinical activity of CCT137690 suggests that this inhibitor may benefit patients with MYCN-amplified neuroblastoma..
Chung, Y.-.
Lin, G.
Troy, H.
Fong, A.-.
Jackson, L.E.
Hill, D.K.
Orton, M.
Koh, D.-.
Robinson, S.P.
Judson, I.R.
Griffiths, J.R.
Leach, M.O.
Eykyn, T.R.
(2011). Autophagy induced by DCA, PI3K inhibition or starvation results in reduced lactate production measured in real-time by DNP 13C MRS. Cancer research,
Vol.71.
McPhail, L.D.
Robinson, S.P.
(2010). Intrinsic susceptibility MR imaging of chemically induced rat mammary tumors: relationship to histologic assessment of hypoxia and fibrosis. Radiology,
Vol.254
(1),
pp. 110-118.
show abstract
PURPOSE: To investigate relationships between magnetic resonance (MR) imaging measurements of R2* and carbogen-induced DeltaR2* in vivo with subsequent histologic assessment of grade, hypoxia, fibrosis, and necrosis in a chemically induced rat mammary tumor model. MATERIALS AND METHODS: All experiments were performed in accordance with the local ethics review panel, the UK Home Office Animals Scientific Procedures Act of 1986, and the UK Co-ordinating Committee on Cancer Research guidelines. Of 30 rats injected with N-methyl-N-nitrosourea, 17 developed mammary tumors. Prior to MR imaging, rats were administered pimonidazole. Tumor R2* was then quantified while the host first breathed air and then carbogen (95% O(2), 5% CO(2); n = 16). Tumor sections were subsequently stained for pimonidazole, sirius red, cytokeratin 14, and hematoxylin-eosin for quantitative assessment of hypoxia, fibrosis, malignancy, and necrosis, respectively, and graded according to the Scarff-Bloom-Richardson scale. Linear regression analysis was used to identify any correlates of the MR imaging data with histologic data. RESULTS: Tumors exhibited wide heterogeneity in the magnitude of carbogen-induced reduction in R2*, an emerging imaging biomarker of fractional blood volume. Significant correlations were found between pimonidazole adduct formation and both baseline tumor R2* (r = -0.54, P = .03) and carbogen-induced DeltaR2* (r = 0.56, P = .02), demonstrating that tumors with a larger fractional blood volume were less hypoxic. There was also a significant correlation between pimonidazole and sirius red staining (r = 0.76, P < .01), indicating that more fibrotic tumors were also more hypoxic. There were no correlations of R2* with grade. CONCLUSION: In this model of breast cancer, baseline tumor R2* and carbogen-induced DeltaR2* are predictive imaging biomarkers for hypoxia and primarily determined by blood volume..
Jamin, Y.
Cullis, E.R.
Vaughan, L.
Koh, D.-.
Chesler, L.
Robinson, S.P.
(2010). Characterization of tumor progression and chemoresponse in a novel transgenic mouse model of neuroblastoma (TH-MYCN) using magnetic resonance imaging. Cancer research,
Vol.70.
Walker-Samuel, S.
Orton, M.
McPhail, L.D.
Boult, J.K.
Box, G.
Eccles, S.A.
Robinson, S.P.
(2010). Bayesian estimation of changes in transverse relaxation rates. Magn reson med,
Vol.64
(3),
pp. 914-921.
show abstract
Although the biasing of R(2)* estimates by assuming magnitude MR data to be normally distributed has been described, the effect on changes in R(2)* (DeltaR(2)*), such as induced by a paramagnetic contrast agent, has not been reported. In this study, two versions of a novel Bayesian maximum a posteriori approach for estimating DeltaR(2)* are described and evaluated: one that assumes normally distributed data and the other, Rice-distributed data. The approach enables the robust, voxelwise determination of the uncertainty in DeltaR(2)* estimates and provides a useful statistical framework for quantifying the probability that a pixel has been significantly enhanced. This technique was evaluated in vivo, using ultrasmall superparamagnetic iron oxide particles in orthotopic murine prostate tumors. It is shown that assuming magnitude data to be normally distributed causes DeltaR(2)* to be underestimated when signal-to-noise ratio is modest. However, the biasing effect is less than is found in R(2)* estimates, implying that the simplifying assumption of normally distributed noise is more justifiable when evaluating DeltaR(2)* compared with when evaluating precontrast R(2)* values..
Walker-Samuel, S.
Orton, M.
McPhail, L.D.
Robinson, S.P.
(2009). Robust estimation of the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) in heterogeneous solid tumors. Magn reson med,
Vol.62
(2),
pp. 420-429.
show abstract
The least-squares algorithm is known to bias apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) values estimated from magnitude MR data, although this effect is commonly assumed to be negligible. In this study the effect of this bias on tumor ADC estimates was evaluated in vivo and was shown to introduce a consistent and significant underestimation of ADC, relative to those given by a robust maximum likelihood approach (on average, a 23.4 +/- 12% underestimation). Monte Carlo simulations revealed that the magnitude of the bias increased with ADC and decreasing signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). In vivo, this resulted in a much-reduced ability to resolve necrotic regions from surrounding viable tumor tissue compared with a maximum likelihood approach. This has significant implications for the evaluation of diffusion MR data in vivo, in particular in heterogeneous tumor tissue, when evaluating bi- and multiexponential tumor diffusion models for the modeling of data acquired with larger b-values (b > 1000 s/mm(2)) and for data with modest SNR. Use of a robust approach to modeling magnitude MR data from tumors is therefore recommended over the least-squares approach when evaluating data from heterogeneous tumors..
Jamin, Y.
Gabellieri, C.
Smyth, L.
Reynolds, S.
Robinson, S.P.
Springer, C.J.
Leach, M.O.
Payne, G.S.
Eykyn, T.R.
(2009). Hyperpolarized (13)C magnetic resonance detection of carboxypeptidase G2 activity. Magn reson med,
Vol.62
(5),
pp. 1300-1304.
show abstract
Carboxypeptidase G2 (CPG2) is a bacterial enzyme that is currently employed in a range of targeted cancer chemotherapy strategies such as gene-directed enzyme prodrug therapy (GDEPT). Employing dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) and natural abundance (13)C magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS), we observed the CPG2-mediated conversion of a novel hyperpolarized reporter probe 3,5-difluorobenzoyl-L-glutamic acid (3,5-DFBGlu) to 3,5-difluorobenzoic acid (3,5-DFBA) and L-glutamic acid (L-Glu) in vitro. Isotopic labeling of the relevant nuclei with (13)C in 3,5-DFBGlu or related substrates will yield a further factor of 100 increase in the signal-to-noise. We discuss the feasibility of translating these experiments to generate metabolic images of CPG2 activity in vivo..
Robinson, S.P.
Ludwig, C.
Paulsson, J.
Oestman, A.
(2008). The effects of tumor-derived platelet-derived growth factor on vascular morphology and function in vivo revealed by susceptibility MRI. International journal of cancer,
Vol.122
(7),
pp. 1548-9.
Howe, F.A.
McPhail, L.D.
Griffiths, J.R.
McIntyre, D.J.
Robinson, S.P.
(2008). Vessel size index magnetic resonance imaging to monitor the effect of antivascular treatment in a rodent tumor model. International journal of radiation oncology biology physics,
Vol.71
(5),
pp. 1470-7.
Madhu, B.
Robinson, S.P.
Howe, F.A.
Griffiths, J.R.
(2008). Effect of Gd-DTPA-BMA on Choline Signals of HT29 Tumors Detected by In Vivo H-1 MRS. Journal of magnetic resonance imaging,
Vol.28
(5),
pp. 1201-8.
Kalber, T.L.
Waterton, J.C.
Griffiths, J.R.
Ryan, A.J.
Robinson, S.P.
(2008). Longitudinal In Vivo Susceptibility Contrast MRI Measurements of LS174T Colorectal Liver Metastasis in Nude Mice. Journal of magnetic resonance imaging,
Vol.28
(6),
pp. 1451-8.
Robinson, S.P.
Howe, F.A.
Griffiths, J.R.
Ryan, A.J.
Waterton, J.C.
(2007). Susceptibility contrast magnetic resonance imaging determination of fractional tumor blood volume: A noninvasive imaging biomarker of response to the vascular disrupting agent ZD6126. International journal of radiation oncology biology physics,
Vol.69
(3),
pp. 872-8.
Robinson, S.
(2007). Identification of in vivo biomarkers of tumour response to vascular disrupting agents by magnetic resonance imaging and spectroscopy. Clinical oncology,
Vol.19
(3),
pp. S5-2.
McPhail, L.D.
Griffiths, J.R.
Robinson, S.P.
(2007). Assessment of tumor response to the vascular disrupting agents 5,6-dimethylxanthenone-4-acetic acid or combretastatin-A4-phosphate by intrinsic susceptibility magnetic resonance imaging. Int j radiat oncol biol phys,
Vol.69
(4),
pp. 1238-1245.
show abstract
PURPOSE: To investigate the use of the transverse magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) relaxation rate R(2)(*) (s(-1)) as a biomarker of tumor vascular response to monitor vascular disrupting agent (VDA) therapy. METHODS AND MATERIALS: Multigradient echo MRI was used to quantify R(2)(*) in rat GH3 prolactinomas. R(2)(*) is a sensitive index of deoxyhemoglobin in the blood and can therefore be used to give an index of tissue oxygenation. Tumor R(2)(*) was measured before and up to 35 min after treatment, and 24 h after treatment with either 350 mg/kg 5,6-dimethylxanthenone-4-acetic acid (DMXAA) or 100 mg/kg combretastatin-A4-phosphate (CA4P). After acquisition of the MRI data, functional tumor blood vessels remaining after VDA treatment were quantified using fluorescence microscopy of the perfusion marker Hoechst 33342. RESULTS: DMXAA induced a transient, significant (p < 0.05) increase in tumor R(2)(*) 7 min after treatment, whereas CA4P induced no significant changes in tumor R(2)(*) over the first 35 min. Twenty-four hours after treatment, some DMXAA-treated tumors demonstrated a decrease in R(2)(*), but overall, reduction in R(2)(*) was not significant for this cohort. Tumors treated with CA4P showed a significant (p < 0.05) reduction in R(2)(*) 24 h after treatment. The degree of Hoechst 33342 uptake was associated with the degree of R(2)(*) reduction at 24 h for both agents. CONCLUSIONS: The reduction in tumor R(2)(*) or deoxyhemoglobin levels 24 h after VDA treatment was a result of reduced blood volume caused by prolonged vascular collapse. Our results suggest that DMXAA was less effective than CA4P in this rat tumor model..
McPhail, L.D.
McIntyre, D.J.
Ludwig, C.
Kestell, P.
Griffiths, J.R.
Kelland, L.R.
Robinson, S.P.
(2006). Rat tumor response to the vascular-disrupting agent 5,6-dimethylxanthenone-4-acetic acid as measured by dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging, plasma 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid levels, and tumor necrosis. Neoplasia,
Vol.8
(3),
pp. 199-8.
full text
Cullis, E.R.
Kalber, T.L.
Ashton, S.E.
Cartwright, J.E.
Griffiths, J.R.
Ryan, A.J.
Robinson, S.P.
(2006). Tumor overexpression of inducible nitric oxide synthase (NOS) increases angiogenesis and may modulate the anti-tumour effects of the vascular disrupting agent ZD6126. Microvascular research,
Vol.71
(2),
pp. 76-9.
Madhu, B.
Waterton, J.C.
Griffiths, J.R.
Ryan, A.J.
Robinson, S.P.
(2006). The response of RIF-1 fibrosarcomas to the vascular-disrupting agent ZD6126 assessed by in vivo and ex vivo 1H magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Neoplasia,
Vol.8
(7),
pp. 560-567.
show abstract
full text
The response of radiation-induced fibrosarcoma 1 (RIF-1) tumors treated with the vascular-disrupting agent (VDA) ZD6126 was assessed by in vivo and ex vivo 1H magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) methods. Tumors treated with 200 mg/kg ZD6126 showed a significant reduction in total choline (tCho) in vivo 24 hours after treatment, whereas control tumors showed a significant increase in tCho. This response was investigated further within both ex vivo unprocessed tumor tissues and tumor tissue metabolite extracts. Ex vivo high-resolution magic angle spinning (HRMAS) and 1H MRS of metabolite extracts revealed a significant reduction in phosphocholine and glycerophosphocholine in biopsies of ZD6126-treated tumors, confirming in vivo tCho response. ZD6126-induced reduction in choline compounds is consistent with a reduction in cell membrane turnover associated with necrosis and cell death following disruption of the tumor vasculature. In vivo tumor tissue water diffusion and lactate measurements showed no significant changes in response to ZD6126. Spin-spin relaxation times (T2) of water and metabolites also remained unchanged. Noninvasive 1H MRS measurement of tCho in vivo provides a potential biomarker of tumor response to VDAs in RIF-1 tumors..
Tatum, J.L.
Kelloff, G.J.
Gillies, R.J.
Arbeit, J.M.
Brown, J.M.
Chao, K.S.
Chapman, J.D.
Eckelman, W.C.
Fyles, A.W.
Giaccia, A.J.
Hill, R.P.
Koch, C.J.
Krishna, M.C.
Krohn, K.A.
Lewis, J.S.
Mason, R.P.
Melillo, G.
Padhani, A.R.
Powis, G.
Rajendran, J.G.
Reba, R.
Robinson, S.P.
Semenza, G.L.
Swartz, H.M.
Vaupel, P.
Yang, D.
Croft, B.
Hoffman, J.
Liu, G.
Stone, H.
Sullivan, D.
(2006). Hypoxia: importance in tumor biology, noninvasive measurement by imaging, and value of its measurement in the management of cancer therapy. Int j radiat biol,
Vol.82
(10),
pp. 699-757.
show abstract
PURPOSE: The Cancer Imaging Program of the National Cancer Institute convened a workshop to assess the current status of hypoxia imaging, to assess what is known about the biology of hypoxia as it relates to cancer and cancer therapy, and to define clinical scenarios in which in vivo hypoxia imaging could prove valuable. RESULTS: Hypoxia, or low oxygenation, has emerged as an important factor in tumor biology and response to cancer treatment. It has been correlated with angiogenesis, tumor aggressiveness, local recurrence, and metastasis, and it appears to be a prognostic factor for several cancers, including those of the cervix, head and neck, prostate, pancreas, and brain. The relationship between tumor oxygenation and response to radiation therapy has been well established, but hypoxia also affects and is affected by some chemotherapeutic agents. Although hypoxia is an important aspect of tumor physiology and response to treatment, the lack of simple and efficient methods to measure and image oxygenation hampers further understanding and limits their prognostic usefulness. There is no gold standard for measuring hypoxia; Eppendorf measurement of pO(2) has been used, but this method is invasive. Recent studies have focused on molecular markers of hypoxia, such as hypoxia inducible factor 1 (HIF-1) and carbonic anhydrase isozyme IX (CA-IX), and on developing noninvasive imaging techniques. CONCLUSIONS: This workshop yielded recommendations on using hypoxia measurement to identify patients who would respond best to radiation therapy, which would improve treatment planning. This represents a narrow focus, as hypoxia measurement might also prove useful in drug development and in increasing our understanding of tumor biology..
McSheehy, P.M.
Port, R.E.
Rodrigues, L.M.
Robinson, S.P.
Stubbs, M.
van der Borns, K.
Peters, G.J.
Judson, I.R.
Leach, M.O.
Griffiths, J.R.
(2005). Investigations in vivo of the effects of carbogen breathing on 5-fluorouracil pharmacokinetics and physiology of solid rodent tumours. Cancer chemotherapy and pharmacology,
Vol.55
(2),
pp. 117-12.
Dredge, K.
Horsfall, R.
Robinson, S.P.
Zhang, L.H.
Lu, L.
Tang, Y.
Shirley, M.A.
Muller, G.
Schafer, P.
Stirling, D.
Dalgleish, A.G.
Bartlett, J.B.
(2005). Orally administered lenalidomide (CC-5013) is anti-angiogenic in vivo and inhibits endothelial cell migration and Akt phosphorylation in vitro. Microvascular research,
Vol.69
(1-2),
pp. 56-8.
Kalber, T.L.
Smith, C.J.
Howe, F.A.
Griffiths, J.R.
Ryan, A.J.
Waterton, J.C.
Robinson, S.P.
(2005). A longitudinal study of R-2* and R-2 magnetic resonance imaging relaxation rate measurements in murine liver after a single administration of 3 different iron oxide-based contrast agents. Investigative radiology,
Vol.40
(12),
pp. 784-8.
Kelland, L.R.
Baguley, B.C.
Zhao, L.
Kestell, P.
McPhail, L.D.
Robinson, S.P.
Ravic, M.
Jameson, M.B.
McKeage, M.J.
(2005). Mouse, rat and clinical studies with the tumour vascular disrupting agent (VDA) 5,6 dimethyl xanthenone acetic acid, DMXAA: 5-hydroxyindole-3-acetic acid (5HIAA) plasma levels as a pharmacodynamic marker of blood flow changes. Ejc supplements,
Vol.3
(2),
pp. 421-2.
Robinson, S.P.
Kalber, T.L.
Howe, F.A.
McIntyre, D.J.
Griffiths, J.R.
Blakey, D.C.
Whittaker, L.
Ryan, A.J.
Waterton, J.C.
(2005). Acute tumor response to ZD6126 assessed by intrinsic susceptibility magnetic resonance imaging. Neoplasia,
Vol.7
(5),
pp. 466-474.
show abstract
full text
The effective magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) transverse relaxation rate R(2)* was investigated as an early acute marker of the response of rat GH3 prolactinomas to the vascular-targeting agent, ZD6126. Multigradient echo (MGRE) MRI was used to quantify R(2)*, which is sensitive to tissue deoxyhemoglobin levels. Tumor R(2)* was measured prior to, and either immediately for up to 35 minutes, or 24 hours following administration of 50 mg/kg ZD6126. Following MRI, tumor perfusion was assessed by Hoechst 33342 uptake. Tumor R(2)* significantly increased to 116 +/- 4% of baseline 35 minutes after challenge, consistent with an ischemic insult induced by vascular collapse. A strong positive correlation between baseline R(2)* and the subsequent increase in R(2)* measured 35 minutes after treatment was obtained, suggesting that the baseline R(2)* is prognostic for the subsequent tumor response to ZD6126. In contrast, a significant decrease in tumor R(2)* was found 24 hours after administration of ZD6126. Both the 35-minute and 24-hour R(2)* responses to ZD6126 were associated with a decrease in Hoechst 33342 uptake. Interpretation of the R(2)* response is complex, yet changes in tumor R(2)* may provide a convenient and early MRI biomarker for detecting the antitumor activity of vascular-targeting agents..
McPhail, L.D.
Chung, Y.L.
Madhu, B.
Clark, S.
Griffiths, J.R.
Kelland, L.R.
Robinson, S.P.
(2005). Tumor dose response to the vascular disrupting agent, 5,6-dimethylxanthenone-4-acetic acid, using in vivo magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Clinical cancer research,
Vol.11
(10),
pp. 3705-9.
McPhail, L.D.
Chung, Y.-.
Madhu, B.
Clark, S.
Griffiths, J.R.
Kelland, L.R.
Robinson, S.P.
(2005). Tumor Dose Response to the Vascular Disrupting Agent, 5,6-Dimethylxanthenone-4-Acetic Acid, Using In vivo Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy. Clinical cancer research,
Vol.11
(10),
pp. 3705-3713.
show abstract
Abstract
Purpose: To use 31P and 1H magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) to assess changes in tumor metabolic profile in vivo in response to 5,6-dimethylxanthenone-4-acetic acid (DMXAA) with a view to identifying biomarkers associated with tumor dose response.
Experimental Design: In vivo 31P and 1H MRS measurements of (a) tumor bioenergetics [β-nucleoside triphosphate/inorganic phosphate (β-NTP/Pi)], (b) the membrane-associated phosphodiesters and phosphomonoesters (PDE/PME), (c) choline (mmol/L), and (d) lactate/water ratio were made on murine HT29 colon carcinoma xenografts pretreatment and 6 or 24 hours posttreatment with increasing doses of DMXAA. Following in vivo MRS, the tumors were excised and used for high-resolution 31P and 1H MRS of extracts to provide validation of the in vivo MRS data, histologic analysis of necrosis, and high-performance liquid chromatography.
Results: Both β-NTP/Pi and PDE/PME decreased in a dose-dependent manner 6 hours posttreatment with DMXAA, with significant decreases in β-NTP/Pi with 15 mg/kg (P < 0.001) and 21 mg/kg (P < 0.01). A significant decrease in total choline in vivo was found 24 hours posttreatment with 21 mg/kg DMXAA (P < 0.05); this was associated with a significant reduction in the concentration of the membrane degradation products glycerophosphoethanolamine and glycerophosphocholine measured in tissue extracts (P < 0.05).
Conclusions: The reduction in tumor energetics and membrane turnover is consistent with the vascular-disrupting activity of DMXAA. 31P MRS revealed tumor response to DMXAA at doses below the maximum tolerated dose for mice. Both 31P and 1H MRS provide biomarkers of tumor response to DMXAA that could be used in clinical trials..
Howe, F.A.
Connelly, J.P.
Robinson, S.P.
Springett, R.
Griffiths, J.R.
(2005). The effects of tumour blood flow and oxygenation modifiers on subcutaneous tumours as determined by NIRS. Adv exp med biol,
Vol.566,
pp. 75-81.
show abstract
Modulation of tumour oxygenation may be used to increase or decrease tumour hypoxia in order to improve the effect of radiotherapy or bioreductive drugs, respectively. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and near infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) are techniques sensitive to blood deoxyhemoglobin concentration (Hb) that can be used to investigate tumour hypoxia indirectly via blood oxygenation levels. In this study we have used NIRS to determine absolute Hb and changes in deoxyhemoglobin and oxyhemoglobin (HbO) in subcutaneous rodent tumours for challenges that alter blood flow and oxygenation, with the aim to better interpret our MRI data. Both carbogen [95% O2 + 5% CO2] and 100% O2 breathing produced a similar and significant reduction in Hb and increase in HbO, but a negligible change in HbT (= Hb + HbO). In contrast, N2 breathing to terminal anoxia and intravenous hydralazine produced a negligible increase in Hb, but large reductions in HbO and HbT. HbT is proportional to blood volume, so our data suggests large blood volume decreases occur with challenges likely to cause reduced arterial blood pressure. Hence MRI techniques that measure the R2* relaxation rate, which varies linearly with total Hb, will underestimate the effects of hypotensive agents at increasing tumour hypoxia..
Nöth, U.
Rodrigues, L.M.
Robinson, S.P.
Jork, A.
Zimmermann, U.
Newell, B.
Griffiths, J.R.
(2004). In vivo determination of tumor oxygenation during growth and in response to carbogen breathing using 15C5-loaded alginate capsules as fluorine-19 magnetic resonance imaging oxygen sensors. Int j radiat oncol biol phys,
Vol.60
(3),
pp. 909-919.
show abstract
PURPOSE: The objective was to present a method for the repeated noninvasive measurement of tumor oxygenation (Po(2)) over the whole period of tumor growth. METHODS AND MATERIALS: A mixture of tumor homogenate (GH3 prolactinoma) and alginate capsules loaded with perfluoro-15-crown-5-ether (15C5) was injected into the flanks of Wistar Furth rats. The temporal behavior of tumor Po(2) was monitored between Day 1 and 26 after injection using fluorine-19 ((19)F) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). In addition, the response of tumor Po(2) to modifiers of the tumor microenvironment (carbogen [95% O(2)/5% CO(2)], nicotinamide, and hydralazine) was investigated. RESULTS: An initial increase of tumor Po(2), probably reflecting neovascularization, followed by a decrease after Week 2, probably indicating tumor hypoxia or necrosis, were observed. The minimum and maximum average Po(2) +/- SEM observed were 3.3 +/- 2.0 mm Hg on Day 2 and 25.7 +/- 3.8 mm Hg on Day 13, respectively. Carbogen increased the tumor Po(2), whereas nicotinamide caused no significant change and hydralazine induced a significant decrease in tumor oxygenation. CONCLUSIONS: A preclinical method for the repeated noninvasive determination of tumor Po(2) was presented. It might help to investigate tumor physiology and the mechanisms of modifiers of the tumor microenvironment and their role in different therapeutic approaches..
McIntyre, D.J.
Robinson, S.P.
Howe, F.A.
Griffiths, J.R.
Ryan, A.J.
Blakey, D.C.
Peers, I.S.
Waterton, J.C.
(2004). Single dose of the antivascular agent, ZD6126 (N-acetylcoichinol-O-phosphate), reduces perfusion for at least 96 hours in the GH3 prolactinoma rat tumor model. Neoplasia,
Vol.6
(2),
pp. 150-8.
full text
Rodrigues, L.M.
Stubbs, M.
Robinson, S.P.
Newell, B.
Mansi, J.
Griffiths, J.R.
(2004). The C-neu mammary carcinoma in Oncomice; characterization and monitoring response to treatment with herceptin by magnetic resonance methods. Magnetic resonance materials in physics biology and medicine,
Vol.17
(3-6),
pp. 260-11.
Rodrigues, L.M.
Howe, F.A.
Griffiths, J.R.
Robinson, S.P.
(2004). Tumor R2* is a prognostic indicator of acute radiotherapeutic response in rodent tumors. J magn reson imaging,
Vol.19
(4),
pp. 482-488.
show abstract
PURPOSE: To test the prognostic potential of tumor R2* with respect to radiotherapeutic outcome. Blood oxygenation level dependent (BOLD) MRI images are sensitive to changes in deoxyhemoglobin concentration through the transverse MRI relaxation rate R2* of tissue water, hence the quantitative measurement of tumor R2* may be related to tissue oxygenation. METHODS AND MATERIALS: Tumor growth inhibition in response to radiation was established for both GH3 prolactinomas and RIF-1 fibrosarcomas with animals breathing either air or carbogen during radiation. In a separate cohort, the baseline R2* and carbogen (95% O2, 5% CO2)-induced DeltaR2* of rat GH3 prolactinomas and murine RIF-1 fibrosarcomas were quantified using multigradient echo (MGRE) MRI prior to radiotherapy, and correlated with subsequent tumor growth inhibition in response to ionizing radiation, while the animals breathed air. RESULTS: A radiation dose of 15 Gy caused pronounced growth delay in both tumor models and transient regression of the GH3 prolactinomas. When the animals breathed carbogen during radiation, the growth delay/regression was enhanced only in the GH3 prolactinomas. The GH3 prolactinomas, which exhibit a relatively fast baseline R2* and large DeltaR2* in response to carbogen breathing prior to radiotherapy, showed a substantial reduction in normalized tumor volume to 66 +/- 3% with air breathing and 36 +/- 5% with carbogen seven days after 15 Gy irradiation. In contrast, the effect of 15 Gy on the RIF-1 fibrosarcomas, which give a relatively slow baseline R2* and negligible DeltaR2* response to carbogen prior to treatment, showed a much smaller growth inhibition (143 +/- 3% with air, 133 +/- 12% with carbogen). CONCLUSION: Quantitation of tumor R2* and carbogen-induced DeltaR2* by MGRE MRI provides completely noninvasive prognostic indicators of a potential acute radiotherapeutic response..
Robinson, S.P.
Griffiths, J.R.
(2004). Current issues in the utility of 19F nuclear magnetic resonance methodologies for the assessment of tumour hypoxia. Philosophical transactions of the royal society of london series b-biological sciences,
Vol.359
(1446),
pp. 987-10.
full text
Kostourou, V.
Troy, H.
Murray, J.F.
Cullis, E.R.
Whitley, G.S.
Griffiths, J.R.
Robinson, S.P.
(2004). Overexpression of dimethylarginine dimethylaminohydrolase enhances tumor hypoxia: an insight into the relationship of hypoxia and angiogenesis in vivo. Neoplasia,
Vol.6
(4),
pp. 401-411.
show abstract
full text
The oxygenation status of tumors derived from wild-type C6 glioma cells and clone D27 cells overexpressing dimethylarginine dimethylaminohydrolase (DDAH) was assessed in vivo using a variety of direct and indirect assays of hypoxia. Clone D27 tumors exhibit a more aggressive and better-vascularized phenotype compared to wild-type C6 gliomas. Immunohistochemical analyses using the 2-nitroimidazole hypoxia marker pimonidazole, fiber optic OxyLite measurements of tumor pO2, and localized 31P magnetic resonance spectroscopy measurements of tumor bioenergetic status and pH clearly demonstrated that the D27 tumors were more hypoxic compared to C6 wild type. In the tumor extracts, only glucose concentrations were significantly lower in the D27 tumors. Elevated Glut-1 expression, a reliable functional marker for hypoxia-inducible factor-1-mediated metabolic adaptation, was observed in the D27 tumors. Together, the data show that overexpression of DDAH results in C6 gliomas that are more hypoxic compared to wild-type tumors, and point strongly to an inverse relationship of tumor oxygenation and angiogenesis in vivo--a concept now being supported by the enhanced understanding of oxygen sensing at the molecular level..
Robinson, S.P.
Rijken, P.F.
Howe, F.A.
McSheehy, P.M.
van der Sanden, B.P.
Heerschap, A.
Stubbs, M.
van der Kogel, A.J.
Griffiths, J.R.
(2003). Tumor vascular architecture and function evaluated by non-invasive susceptibility MRI methods and immunohistochemistry. J magn reson imaging,
Vol.17
(4),
pp. 445-454.
show abstract
PURPOSE: To investigate the physiological origins responsible for the varying blood oxygenation level dependent (BOLD) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) responses to carbogen (95% O(2)/5% CO(2)) breathing observed with different tumor types. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Susceptibility contrast-enhanced MRI using the exogenous blood pool contrast agent NC100150 to determine blood volume and vessel size, and immunohistochemical-derived morphometric parameters, were determined in GH3 prolactinomas and RIF-1 fibrosarcomas, both grown in mice, which exhibited very different BOLD responses to carbogen. RESULTS: Administration of NC100150 increased the R(2)* and R(2) rates of both tumor types, and indicated a significant four-fold larger blood volume in the GH3 tumor. The ratio deltaR(2)*/deltaR(2) showed that the capillaries in the GH3 were two-fold larger than those in the RIF-1, in agreement with morphometric analysis. Carbogen breathing induced a significant 25% decrease in R(2)* in the GH3 prolactinoma, whereas the response in the RIF-1 fibrosarcoma was negligible. CONCLUSION: Low blood volume and small vessel size (and hence reduced hematocrit) are two reasons for the lack of R(2)* change in the RIF-1 with carbogen breathing. BOLD MRI is sensitive to erythrocyte-perfused vessels, whereas exogenous contrast agents interrogate the total perfused vascular volume. BOLD MRI, coupled with a carbogen challenge, provides information on functional, hemodynamic tumor vasculature..
Kostourou, V.
Robinson, S.P.
Whitley, G.S.
Griffiths, J.R.
(2003). Effects of overexpression of dimethylarginine dimethylaminohydrolase on tumor angiogenesis assessed by susceptibility magnetic resonance imaging. Cancer res,
Vol.63
(16),
pp. 4960-4966.
show abstract
Intracellular factors that regulate nitric oxide (NO) synthesis represent important targets in tumor progression. Overexpression of dimethylarginine dimethylaminohydrolase (DDAH), which metabolizes the endogenous inhibitors of NO synthesis asymmetric dimethylarginine and N-monomethyl-L-arginine, results in C6 gliomas with enhanced growth rate compared with wild type. To investigate the effects of DDAH on tumor vascular morphogenesis in vivo, we have measured the transverse relaxation rates R(2)* and R(2) in clone D27 gliomas overexpressing DDAH and C6 wild-type gliomas using intrinsic susceptibility magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), sensitive to changes in endogenous [deoxyhemoglobin], and susceptibility contrast-enhanced MRI using the intravascular blood pool contrast agent NC100150, and we compared the results with fluorescence microscopy of the tumor uptake of the perfusion marker Hoechst 33342. The baseline R(2)* was significantly faster in the D27 tumors, consistent with a greater vascular development (P < 0.02, ANOVA). There was no significant difference between the response of the two tumor types to hypercapnia (5% CO(2)/95% air), used as a probe for vascular maturation, or hyperoxia (5% CO(2)/95% O(2)), used as a probe for vascular function. NC100150 increased the R(2)* and R(2) rates of both tumor types and demonstrated a significantly larger blood volume in the D27 tumors (P < 0.02, ANOVA). This correlated with a significantly greater uptake of Hoechst 33342 in the D27 tumors compared with C6 wild-type tumors (P < 0.02, ANOVA). Despite the increased tumor blood volume, the Delta R(2)*/Delta R(2) ratio, an index of microvessel size, showed that the capillaries in the two tumor types were of a similar caliber. The data highlight the potential of susceptibility MRI-derived quantitative end points to noninvasively assess tumor angiogenesis, and in this regard, the use of intravascular blood pool contrast agents such as NC100150 appears very promising. Overexpression of DDAH results in increased neovascularization of C6 gliomas in vivo. The lack of significant difference in hypercapnic/hyperoxic response between the C6 and D27 tumors and the similar vessel caliber are also consistent with a role for DDAH in the initial stages of vasculogenesis..
Robinson, S.P.
McIntyre, D.J.
Checkley, D.
Tessier, J.J.
Howe, F.A.
Griffiths, J.R.
Ashton, S.E.
Ryan, A.J.
Blakey, D.C.
Waterton, J.C.
(2003). Tumour dose response to the antivascular agent ZD6126 assessed by magnetic resonance imaging. Br j cancer,
Vol.88
(10),
pp. 1592-1597.
show abstract
ZD6126 is a vascular targeting agent that disrupts the tubulin cytoskeleton of proliferating neo-endothelial cells. This leads to the selective destruction and congestion of tumour blood vessels in experimental tumours, resulting in extensive haemorrhagic necrosis. In this study, the dose-dependent activity of ZD6126 in rat GH3 prolactinomas and murine RIF-1 fibrosarcomas was assessed using two magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) methods. Dynamic contrast-enhanced (DCE) MRI, quantified by an initial area under the time-concentration product curve (IAUC) method, gives values related to tumour perfusion and vascular permeability. Multigradient recalled echo MRI measures the transverse relaxation rate T(2)*, which is sensitive to tissue (deoxyhaemoglobin). Tumour IAUC and R(2)* (=1/T(2)*) decreased post-treatment with ZD6126 in a dose-dependent manner. In the rat model, lower doses of ZD6126 reduced the IAUC close to zero within restricted areas of the tumour, typically in the centre, while the highest dose reduced the IAUC to zero over the majority of the tumour. A decrease in both MRI end points was associated with the induction of massive central tumour necrosis measured histologically, which increased in a dose-dependent manner. Magnetic resonance imaging may be of value in evaluation of the acute clinical effects of ZD6126 in solid tumours. In particular, measurement of IAUC by DCE MRI should provide an unambiguous measure of biological activity of antivascular therapies for clinical trial..
Howe, F.A.
Robinson, S.P.
Rodrigues, L.M.
Stubbs, M.
Griffiths, J.R.
(2003). Issues in GRE & SE magnetic resonance imaging to probe tumor oxygenation. Adv exp med biol,
Vol.530,
pp. 441-448.
show abstract
Tumor oxygenation determines the efficacy of radiotherapy, but there is no non-invasive way to image this parameter. Since gradient recalled echo (GRE) images are sensitive to blood deoxyhaemoglobin concentration ([dHb]) they could have a role in assessing tumor oxygenation. In brain, linear relationships have been demonstrated between brain tissue R2* relaxation rate and tissue [dHb] or oxygen saturation, but in tumors, vascular and tissue heterogeneity, and the presence of simultaneous oxidative and glycolytic metabolism, complicate the analysis. We have studied the effects of vascular challenge in a rat prolactinoma tumor model by MR imaging and spectroscopy and comment on the implications of these results for calibrating GRE images for blood or tissue pO2..
Griffiths, J.R.
McSheehy, P.M.
Robinson, S.P.
Troy, H.
Chung, Y.L.
Leek, R.D.
Williams, K.J.
Stratford, I.J.
Harris, A.L.
Stubbs, M.
(2002). Metabolic changes detected by in vivo magnetic resonance studies of HEPA-1 wild-type tumors and tumors deficient in hypoxia-inducible factor-1β (HIF-1β):: Evidence of an anabolic role for the HIF-1 pathway. Cancer research,
Vol.62
(3),
pp. 688-8.
Kostourou, V.
Robinson, S.P.
Cartwright, J.E.
Whitley, G.S.
(2002). Dimethylarginine dimethylaminohydrolase I enhances tumour growth and angiogenesis. British journal of cancer,
Vol.87
(6),
pp. 673-8.
Stubbs, M.
Robinson, S.P.
Hui, C.
Price, N.M.
Rodrigues, L.M.
Howe, F.A.
Griffiths, J.R.
(2002). The importance of tumor metabolism in cancer prognosis and therapy; pre-clinical studies on rodent tumors with agents that improve tumor oxygenation. Adv enzyme regul,
Vol.42,
pp. 131-141.
Rodrigues, L.M.
Robinson, S.P.
McSheehy, P.M.
Stubbs, M.
Griffiths, J.R.
(2002). Enhanced uptake of ifosfamide into GH3 prolactinomas with hypercapnic hyperoxic gases monitored in vivo by (31)P MRS. Neoplasia,
Vol.4
(6),
pp. 539-543.
show abstract
full text
Previously, (31)P magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) has been used to detect ifosfamide (IF) in vivo and to show that breathing carbogen (5% CO(2)/95% O(2)) enhances the uptake and increases the efficacy of IF in rat GH3 prolactinomas [Rodrigues LM, Maxwell RJ, McSheehy PMJ, Pinkerton CR, Robinson SP, Stubbs M, and Griffiths JR (1997). In vivo detection of ifosfamide by (31)P MRS in rat tumours; increased uptake and cytotoxicity induced by carbogen breathing in GH3 prolactinomas. Br J Cancer 75, 62-68]. We now show that other hypercapnic and/or hyperoxic (5% CO(2) in air, 2.5% CO(2) in O(2)) gas mixtures also increase the uptake of IF into tumors, measured by (31)P MRS. All gases caused an increased uptake (C(max)) of IF compared to air breathing, with carbogen inducing the largest increase (85% (P<.02) compared to 46% with 2.5% CO(2) in O(2) (P<.004) and 48% with 5% CO(2) in air (P<.004)). The T(max) (time of maximum concentration in tumor posintravenous injection of IF) was significantly (P<.04) later in the cohort that breathed 5% CO(2) in air. The increased uptake of IF with carbogen breathing was selective to tumor tissue and there were no significant increases in any of the normal tissues studied, suggesting that any host tissue toxicity would be minimal. Carbogen breathing by patients causes breathlessness. There was no significant difference in IF uptake between breathing carbogen and 2.5% CO(2) in O(2) and, therefore, the ability of 2.5% CO(2) in O(2) to also increase IF uptake may be clinically useful as it causes less patient discomfort..
McIntyre, D.J.
Robinson, S.P.
Tessier, J.J.
Checkley, D.
Howe, F.A.
Griffiths, J.R.
Blakey, D.C.
Waterton, J.C.
(2001). Tumor dose response to the novel vascular targeting agent ZD6126 assessed by dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI. Clinical cancer research,
Vol.7
(11),
pp. 3653S-1.
Robinson, S.P.
Rodrigues, L.M.
Howe, F.A.
Stubbs, M.
Griffiths, J.R.
(2001). Effects of different levels of hypercapnic hyperoxia on tumour R(2)* and arterial blood gases. Magn reson imaging,
Vol.19
(2),
pp. 161-166.
show abstract
The hypercapnia induced by carbogen (95% O(2)/5% CO(2)) breathing, which is being re-evaluated as a clinical radiosensitiser, causes patient discomfort and hence poor compliance. Recent preclinical and clinical studies have indicated that the CO(2) content might be lowered without compromising increased tumour oxygenation and radiosensitisation. This preclinical study was designed to see if lower levels of hypercapnia could evoke similar decreases in the transverse relaxation rate R(2)* of rodent tumours to those seen with carbogen breathing. The response of rat GH3 prolactinomas to 1%, 212% and 5% CO(2) in oxygen, and 100% O(2) breathing, was monitored by non-invasive multi-gradient echo MRI to quantify R(2)*. As the oxygenation of haemoglobin is proportional to the blood p(a)O(2) and therefore in equilibrium with tissue pO(2), R(2)* is a sensitive indicator of tissue oxygenation. Hyperoxia alone decreased R(2)* by 13%, whilst all three hypercapnic hyperoxic gases decreased R(2)* by 29%. Breathing 1% CO(2) in oxygen evoked the same decrease in R(2)* as carbogen. The DeltaR(2)* response is primarily consistent with an increase in blood oxygenation, though localised increases in tumour blood flow were also identified in response to hypercapnia. The data support the concept that levels of hypercapnia can be reduced without loss of enhanced oxygenation and hence potential radiotherapeutic benefit..
Howe, F.A.
Robinson, S.P.
McIntyre, D.J.
Stubbs, M.
Griffiths, J.R.
(2001). Issues in flow and oxygenation dependent contrast (FLOOD) imaging of tumours. Nmr biomed,
Vol.14
(7-8),
pp. 497-506.
show abstract
The sensitivity of blood oxygenation level dependent (BOLD) contrast techniques to changes to tumour deoxyhaemoglobin concentration is of relevance to many strategies in cancer treatments. In the context of tumour studies, which frequently involve the use of agents to modify blood flow, there are underlying physiological changes different to those of BOLD in the brain. Hence we use the term, flow and oxygenation dependent (FLOOD) contrast, to emphasize this difference and the importance of flow effects. We have measured the R(2)* changes in a prolactinoma tumour model for a variety of vasoactive challenges [carbogen, 100% oxygen and 100% nitrogen as different breathing gases, and administration of tumour blood flow modifiers such as calcitonin gene related peptide (CGRP), hydralazine and nicotinamide]. In addition we have measured other relevant physiological parameters, such as bioenergetic status from (31)P MRS, and blood pH and glucose, that may change during a vasoactive challenge. Here we discuss how they relate to our understanding of FLOOD contrast in tumours. We frequently observe R(2)* changes that match the expected action of the vascular stimulus: R(2)* decreases with agents expected to improve tumour oxygenation and blood flow, and increases with agents designed to increase tumour hypoxia. Unlike most normal tissues, tumours have a chaotic and poorly regulated blood supply, and a mix of glycolytic and oxidative metabolism; thus the response to a vasoactive challenge is not predictable. Changes in blood volume can counteract the effect of blood oxygenation changes, and changes in blood pH and glucose levels can alter oxygen extraction. This can lead to R(2)* changes that are smaller or the reverse of those expected. To properly interpret FLOOD contrast changes these effects must be accounted for..
Robinson, S.P.
Howe, F.A.
Stubbs, M.
Griffiths, J.R.
(2000). Effects of nicotinamide and carbogen on tumour oxygenation, blood flow, energetics and blood glucose levels. British journal of cancer,
Vol.82
(12),
pp. 2007-8.
Gillies, R.J.
Bhujwalla, Z.M.
Evelhoch, J.
Garwood, M.
Neeman, M.
Robinson, S.P.
Sotak, C.H.
Van Der Sanden, B.
(2000). Applications of magnetic resonance in model systems: tumor biology and physiology. Neoplasia,
Vol.2
(1-2),
pp. 139-151.
show abstract
full text
A solid tumor presents a unique challenge as a system in which the dynamics of the relationship between vascularization, the physiological environment and metabolism are continually changing with growth and following treatment. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) studies have demonstrated quantifiable linkages between the physiological environment, angiogenesis, vascularization and metabolism of tumors. The dynamics between these parameters continually change with tumor aggressiveness, tumor growth and during therapy and each of these can be monitored longitudinally, quantitatively and non-invasively with MRI and MRS. An important aspect of MRI and MRS studies is that techniques and findings are easily translated between systems. Hence, pre-clinical studies using cultured cells or experimental animals have a high connectivity to potential clinical utility. In the following review, leaders in the field of MR studies of basic tumor physiology using pre-clinical models have contributed individual sections according to their expertise and outlook. The following review is a cogent and timely overview of the current capabilities and state-of-the-art of MRI and MRS as applied to experimental cancers. A companion review deals with the application of MR methods to anticancer therapy..
Robinson, S.P.
Collingridge, D.R.
Howe, F.A.
Rodrigues, L.M.
Chaplin, D.J.
Griffiths, J.R.
(1999). Tumour response to hypercapnia and hyperoxia monitored by FLOOD magnetic resonance imaging. Nmr in biomedicine,
Vol.12
(2),
pp. 98-9.
Griffiths, J.R.
Robinson, S.P.
(1999). The OxyLite: a fibre-optic oxygen sensor. Br j radiol,
Vol.72
(859),
pp. 627-630.
Howe, F.A.
Robinson, S.P.
Rodrigues, L.M.
Griffiths, J.R.
(1999). Flow and oxygenation dependent (FLOOD) contrast MR imaging to monitor the response of rat tumors to carbogen breathing. Magn reson imaging,
Vol.17
(9),
pp. 1307-1318.
show abstract
Gradient recalled echo (GRE) images are sensitive to both paramagnetic deoxyhaemoglobin concentration (via T2*) and flow (via T1*). Large GRE signal intensity increases have been observed in subcutaneous tumors during carbogen (5% carbon dioxide, 95% oxygen) breathing. We term this combined effect flow and oxygenation-dependent (FLOOD) contrast. We have now used both spin echo (SE) and GRE images to evaluate how changes in relaxation times and flow contribute to image intensity contrast changes. T1-weighted images, with and without outer slice suppression, and calculated T2, T2* and "flow" maps, were obtained for subcutaneous GH3 prolactinomas in rats during air and carbogen breathing. T1-weighted images showed bright features that increased in size, intensity and number with carbogen breathing. H&E stained histological sections confirmed them to be large blood vessels. Apparent T1 and T2 images were fairly homogeneous with average relaxation times of 850 ms and 37 ms, respectively, during air breathing, with increases of 2% for T1 and 11% for T2 during carbogen breathing. The apparent T2* over all tumors was very heterogeneous, with values between 9 and 23 ms and localized increases of up to 75% during carbogen breathing. Synthesised "flow" maps also showed heterogeneity, and regions of maximum increase in flow did not always coincide with maximum increases in T2*. Carbogen breathing caused a threefold increase in arterial rat blood PaO2, and typically a 50% increase in tumor blood volume as measured by 51Cr-labelled RBC uptake. The T2* increase is therefore due to a decrease in blood deoxyhaemoglobin concentration with the magnitude of the FLOOD response being determined by the vascular density and responsiveness to blood flow modifiers. FLOOD contrast may therefore be of value in assessing the magnitude and heterogeneity of response of individual tumors to blood flow modifiers for both chemotherapy, antiangiogenesis therapy in particular, and radiotherapy..
Robinson, S.P.
Rodrigues, L.M.
Griffiths, J.R.
Stubbs, M.
(1999). Response of hepatoma 9618a and normal liver to host carbogen and carbon monoxide breathing. Neoplasia,
Vol.1
(6),
pp. 537-543.
show abstract
full text
The effects of hyperoxia (induced by host carbogen [95% oxygen/5% carbon dioxide breathing] and hypoxia (induced by host carbon monoxide [CO at 660 ppm] breathing) were compared by using noninvasive magnetic resonance (MR) methods to gain simultaneous information on blood flow/oxygenation and the bioenergetic status of rat Morris H9618a hepatomas. Both carbogen and CO breathing induced a 1.5- to 2-fold increase in signal intensity in blood oxygenation level dependent (BOLD) MR images. This was due to a decrease in deoxyhemoglobin (deoxyHb), which acts as an endogenous contrast agent, caused either by formation of oxyhemoglobin in the case of carbogen breathing, or carboxyhemoglobin with CO breathing. The results were confirmed by observation of similar changes in deoxyHb in arterial blood samples examined ex vivo after carbogen or CO breathing. There was no change in nucleoside triphosphates (NTP)/P(i) in either tumor or liver after CO breathing, whereas NTP/P(i) increased twofold in the hepatoma (but not in the liver) after carbogen breathing. No changes in tumor intracellular pH were seen after either treatment, whereas extracellular pH became more alkaline after CO breathing and more acid after carbogen breathing, respectively. This tumor type and the liver are unaffected by CO breathing at 660 ppm, which implies an adequate oxygen supply..
Robinson, S.P.
van den Boogaart, A.
Maxwell, R.J.
Griffiths, J.R.
Hamilton, E.
Waterton, J.C.
(1998). P-31-magnetic resonance spectroscopy and H-2-magnetic resonance imaging studies of a panel of early-generation transplanted murine tumour models. British journal of cancer,
Vol.77
(11),
pp. 1752-9.
full text
Robinson, S.P.
Howe, F.A.
Rodrigues, L.M.
Stubbs, M.
Griffiths, J.R.
(1998). Magnetic resonance imaging techniques for monitoring changes in tumor oxygenation and blood flow. Seminars in radiation oncology,
Vol.8
(3),
pp. 197-11.
Stubbs, M.
Robinson, S.P.
Rodrigues, L.M.
Parkins, C.S.
Collingridge, D.R.
Griffiths, J.R.
(1998). The effects of host carbogen (95% oxygen/5% carbon dioxide) breathing on metabolic characteristics of Morris hepatoma 9618a. Br j cancer,
Vol.78
(11),
pp. 1449-1456.
show abstract
full text
Characteristics of the tumour metabolic profile play a role in both the tumour-host interaction and in resistance to treatment. Because carbogen (95% oxygen/5% carbon dioxide) breathing can both increase sensitivity to radiation and improve chemotherapeutic efficacy, we have studied its effects on the metabolic characteristics of Morris hepatoma 9618a. Host carbogen breathing increased both arterial blood pCO2 and pO2, but decreased blood pH. A fourfold increase in tumour pO2 (measured polarographically) and a twofold increase in image intensity [measured by gradient recalled echo magnetic resonance (MR) imaging sensitive to changes in oxy/deoxyhaemoglobin] were observed. No changes were seen in blood flow measured by laser Doppler flowmetry. Tumour intracellular pH remained neutral, whereas extracellular pH decreased significantly (P < 0.01). Nucleoside triphosphate/inorganic phosphate (NTP/Pi), tissue and plasma glucose increased twofold and lactate decreased in both intra- and extracellular compartments, suggesting a change to a more oxidative metabolism. The improvement in energy status of the tumour was reflected in changes in tissue ions, including Na+, through ionic equilibria. The findings suggest that the metabolic profile of hepatoma 9618a is defined partly by intrinsic tumour properties caused by transformation and partly by tissue hypoxia, but that it can respond to environmental changes induced by carbogen with implications for improvements in therapeutic efficacy..
McSheehy, P.M.
Robinson, S.P.
Ojugo, A.S.
Aboagye, E.O.
Cannell, M.B.
Leach, M.O.
Judson, I.R.
Griffiths, J.R.
(1998). Carbogen breathing increases 5-fluorouracil uptake and cytotoxicity in hypoxic murine RIF-1 tumors: A magnetic resonance study in vivo. Cancer research,
Vol.58
(6),
pp. 1185-10.
Rodrigues, L.M.
Maxwell, R.J.
McSheehy, P.M.
Pinkerton, C.R.
Robinson, S.P.
Stubbs, M.
Griffiths, J.R.
(1997). In vivo detection of ifosfamide by P-31-MRS in rat tumours: Increased uptake and cytotoxicity induced by carbogen breathing in GH3 prolactinomas. British journal of cancer,
Vol.75
(1),
pp. 62-7.
full text
Robinson, S.P.
Barton, S.J.
McSheehy, P.M.
Griffiths, J.R.
(1997). Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy of cancer. British journal of radiology,
Vol.70,
pp. S60-10.
Griffiths, J.R.
Taylor, N.J.
Howe, F.A.
Saunders, M.I.
Robinson, S.P.
Hoskin, P.J.
Powell, M.E.
Thoumine, M.
Caine, L.A.
Baddeley, H.
(1997). The response of human tumors to carbogen breathing, monitored by Gradient-Recalled Echo Magnetic Resonance Imaging. International journal of radiation oncology biology physics,
Vol.39
(3),
pp. 697-5.
Robinson, S.P.
Rodrigues, L.M.
Ojugo, A.S.
McSheehy, P.M.
Howe, F.A.
Griffiths, J.R.
(1997). The response to carbogen breathing in experimental tumour models monitored by gradient-recalled echo magnetic resonance imaging. British journal of cancer,
Vol.75
(7),
pp. 1000-7.
full text
Stubbs, M.
Robinson, S.P.
Rodrigues, L.R.
Griffiths, J.R.
(1996). The effect of carbogen breathing on intra- and extracellular pH and [lactate] in rat hepatomas. British journal of cancer,
Vol.73
(8),
pp. 15-1.
McCoy, C.L.
McIntyre, D.J.
Robinson, S.P.
Aboagye, E.O.
Griffiths, J.R.
(1996). Magnetic resonance spectroscopy and imaging methods for measuring tumour and tissue oxygenation. Br j cancer suppl,
Vol.27,
pp. S226-S231.
show abstract
full text
It is well known that low levels of tissue oxygen (pO2) protect tumour cells from ionising radiation and some chemotherapeutic agents. Thus, numerous studies have been aimed at developing methods to measure tissue oxygenation. An initial discussion of some of the traditional methods for measuring oxygenation is included, followed by a discussion of magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) methods for measuring tumour and normal tissue oxygenation. The latter methods are of interest because of the non-invasive nature of magnetic resonance (MR). Some of the MR methods described herein include: 31P MRS, 1H MRS and MRI, and 19F MRS and MRI. Each method is detailed, including a brief assessment of its ability to measure tumour oxygenation and its potential for clinical application..
Howe, F.A.
Robinson, S.P.
Griffiths, J.R.
(1996). Modification of tumour perfusion and oxygenation monitored by gradient recalled echo MRI and 31P MRS. Nmr biomed,
Vol.9
(5),
pp. 208-216.
show abstract
Gradient recalled echo (GRE) 1H images can be used to monitor changes in blood oxygenation via the dephasing effects of paramagnetic deoxyhaemoglobin (Hb). We have modulated the blood flow/oxygenation of GH3 rat tumours by i.v. calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) or carbogen (95% O2, 5% CO2) inhalation, and obtained GRE 1H images interleaved with 31P spectra before, during and after the insult. With CGRP the GRE image intensity decreased (6/10) by > 10% with a concomitant 40% decrease (4/4) in beta NTP/P1 and a small decrease in pH. Both the image intensity and 31P spectra returned to near their pre-CGRP levels after 50 min, consistent with a transient episode of hypoxia. Carbogen breathing (5/5) caused > 40% increases in average GRE image intensity, with no significant changes in the 31P spectra (4/4). Three-dimensional GRE images were obtained to confirm that a T2* increase, rather than just an 'in-flow' effect due to increased blood flow, was responsible for the GRE enhancement. Increases in average image intensity > 40% were observed for the three-dimensional GRE images (2/2), indicating a T2* increase. Using Hb as an endogenous contrast agent, the high sensitivity of the GRE technique may provide a method of monitoring heterogeneous tumour perfusion and oxygenation, both in the laboratory and the clinic..
ROBINSON, S.P.
HOWE, F.A.
GRIFFITHS, J.R.
(1995). NONINVASIVE MONITORING OF CARBOGEN-INDUCED CHANGES IN TUMOR BLOOD-FLOW AND OXYGENATION BY FUNCTIONAL MAGNETIC-RESONANCE-IMAGING. International journal of radiation oncology biology physics,
Vol.33
(4),
pp. 855-5.
HOWELLS, S.L.
MAXWELL, R.J.
HOWE, F.A.
PEET, A.C.
STUBBS, M.
RODRIGUES, L.M.
ROBINSON, S.P.
BALUCH, S.
GRIFFITHS, J.R.
(1993). PATTERN-RECOGNITION OF P-31 MAGNETIC-RESONANCE SPECTROSCOPY TUMOR SPECTRA OBTAINED IN-VIVO. Nmr in biomedicine,
Vol.6
(4),
pp. 237-5.
Robinson, S.P.
Reid, D.G.
Gajjar, K.
Hickey, D.M.
Benson, G.M.
Haynes, C.
Leeson, P.D.
Whittaker, C.M.
(1991). Precipitation and 13C-NMR relaxation enhancement measurements of the interactions of bile acids with synthetic cationic bile acid derivatives, and with spin labelled fatty acids. Chemistry and physics of lipids,
Vol.60,
pp. 143-151.
Reid, D.G.
MacLachlan, L.K.
Robinson, S.P.
Camilleri, P.
Dyke, C.A.
Thorpe, C.J.
(1990). Calmodulin discriminates between the two enantiomers of the receptor-operated calcium channel blocker SK&F 96365: a study using 1H-NMR and chiral HPLC. Chirality,
Vol.2
(4),
pp. 229-232.
show abstract
1H nuclear magnetic resonance at 360 MHz shows that SK&F 96365 (1-(beta-[3-(p-methoxyphenyl)-propyloxy]-p-methoxyphenethyl)-1H- imidazole hydrochloride), an antagonist of mammalian receptor-operated calcium channels, interacts with the calcium-binding regulatory protein calmodulin (CaM). This may be inferred by a number of chemical shift changes in the spectrum of the calcium-saturated protein induced by addition of the compound. Moreover, two well-resolved singlets corresponding to the 2-proton of the SK&F 96365 imidazolium moiety are observed in the spectrum over a wide range of protein:compound ratios. Separation of rac SK&F 96365 into its two enantiomers by high-performance liquid chromatography on a cellulose tris (4-methylbenzoate) column enabled us to show that the doubling of this NMR signal in the presence of CaM is due to a propensity of the protein to distinguish between the two optical isomers of the compound..
Berry, T.
Luther, W.
Bhatnager, N.
Jamin, Y.
Poon, E.
Sanda, T.
Pei, D.
Sharma, B.
Vetharoy, W.R.
Hallsworth, A.
Ahmad, Z.
Barker, K.
Moreau, L.
Webber, H.
Wang, W.
Liu, Q.
Perez-Atayde, A.
Rodig, S.
Cheung, N.K.
Raynaud, F.
Hallberg, B.
Robinson, S.P.
Gray, N.S.
Pearson, A.D.
Eccles, S.A.
George, R.E.
Chesler, L.
The ALK(F1174L) Mutation Potentiates
the Oncogenic Activity of MYCN in Neuroblastoma. Cancer cell,
Vol.22
(1),
pp. 117-130.
Hill, D.K.
Ortom, M.R.
Mariotti, E.
Boult, J.K.
Panek, R.
Jafar, M.
Parkes, H.G.
Jamin, Y.
Miniotis, M.F.
Al-Saffar, M.S.
Beloueche-Babari, M.
Robinson, S.P.
Leach, M.O.
Chung, Y.-.
Eykyn, T.R.
Model Free Approach to Kinetic Analysis of Real-Time Hyperpolarized 13C Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Data. Plos one,
Vol.9
(8).
show abstract
Real-time detection of the rates of metabolic flux, or exchange rates of endogenous enzymatic reactions, is now feasible in biological systems using Dynamic Nuclear Polarization Magnetic Resonance. Derivation of reaction rate kinetics from this technique typically requires multi-compartmental modeling of dynamic data, and results are therefore model-dependent and prone to misinterpretation. We present a model-free formulism based on the ratio of total areas under the curve (AUC) of the injected and product metabolite, for example pyruvate and lactate. A theoretical framework to support this novel analysis approach is described, and demonstrates that the AUC ratio is proportional to the forward rate constant k. We show that the model-free approach strongly correlates with k for whole cell in vitro experiments across a range of cancer cell lines, and detects response in cells treated with the pan-class I PI3K inhibitor GDC-0941 with comparable or greater sensitivity. The same result is seen in vivo with tumor xenograft bearing mice, in control tumors and following drug treatment with dichloroacetate. An important finding is that the area under the curve is independent of both the input function and of any other metabolic pathways arising from the injected metabolite. This model-free approach provides a robust and clinically relevant alternative to kinetic model-based rate measurements in the clinical translation of hyperpolarized 13C metabolic imaging in humans, where measurement of the input function can be problematic..