Study of the effects of cancer on the skeleton has represented a multi-departmental and multidisciplinary area of research at UTHSCSA for over twenty years. This collaborative effort has resulted in significant research breakthroughs and successful applications for external funding by the participating investigators. While there has been an NCI PO1 grant active continuously at UTHSCSA since 1986 on """"""""Effects of Tumors on the Skeleton,"""""""" this group has also had NCI-funded grants on this topic since 1976. In addition, through these efforts, UTHSCSA has become well known nationally and internationally as a center for studies on this topic. Studies funded by this grant have led to the current animal models used to study manifestations of bone metastasis, have identified new therapeutic modalities, and determined many of the basic mechanisms responsible for interactions between cancer cells and the bone microenvironment, which has fundamentally changed how the metastatic process in general is viewed, and in particular the role of the bone microenvironment in this process, as exemplified by the """"""""vicious cycle"""""""", a concept derived from work coming from this PO1 during the last grant period. This grant has been responsible for publications in Science, Nature, J Clin Invest, J Cell Biol, PNAS, and NEJM, and 138 papers alone in the most recent grant period. During the last funding cycle, two of the project leaders left the institution to start their own large independent programs. Although these investigators stay closely affiliated, this natural attrition has allowed the opportunity for us to recruit outstanding new investigators to the program and markedly expand our research breadth and approaches into completely new areas such as proteasome biology in cancer bone disease, and the potential of TGF/ff antagonists to reduce bone metastasis and the mechanisms responsible. During the next funding period, our objectives are to identify novel molecular mechanisms responsible for important manifestations of cancer on the skeleton, including mechanisms responsible for the stimulatory effect of TGF/8 on PTH-rP expression and subsequent osteolysis, regulation of expression of the bone resorbing peptide PTH-rP by breast cancer cells, molecular interactions between TGF/S and its receptor on breast cancer cells, and the role of the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway in myeloma progression and the associated bone disease. We believe that these studies should have practical consequences in the identification of molecular targets for rational new drug discovery in this field.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Research Program Projects (P01)
Project #
5P01CA040035-20
Application #
7477134
Study Section
Subcommittee G - Education (NCI)
Program Officer
Mohla, Suresh
Project Start
1997-05-01
Project End
2011-08-31
Budget Start
2008-09-01
Budget End
2009-08-31
Support Year
20
Fiscal Year
2008
Total Cost
$1,133,920
Indirect Cost
Name
Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Department
Internal Medicine/Medicine
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
004413456
City
Nashville
State
TN
Country
United States
Zip Code
37212
Arnold Egloff, Shanna A; Du, Liping; Loomans, Holli A et al. (2017) Shed urinary ALCAM is an independent prognostic biomarker of three-year overall survival after cystectomy in patients with bladder cancer. Oncotarget 8:722-741
Arnold, Shanna A; Loomans, Holli A; Ketova, Tatiana et al. (2016) Urinary oncofetal ED-A fibronectin correlates with poor prognosis in patients with bladder cancer. Clin Exp Metastasis 33:29-44
Preston Campbell, J; Mulcrone, P; Masood, S K et al. (2015) TRIzol and Alu qPCR-based quantification of metastatic seeding within the skeleton. Sci Rep 5:12635
Sharma, Ramaswamy; Williams, Paul J; Gupta, Anjana et al. (2015) A dominant-negative F-box deleted mutant of E3 ubiquitin ligase, ?-TrCP1/FWD1, markedly reduces myeloma cell growth and survival in mice. Oncotarget 6:21589-602
Seeley, Erin H; Wilson, Kevin J; Yankeelov, Thomas E et al. (2014) Co-registration of multi-modality imaging allows for comprehensive analysis of tumor-induced bone disease. Bone 61:208-16
Johnson, Rachelle W; Merkel, Alyssa R; Page, Jonathan M et al. (2014) Wnt signaling induces gene expression of factors associated with bone destruction in lung and breast cancer. Clin Exp Metastasis 31:945-59
Ding, Hao; Nyman, Jeffry S; Sterling, Julie A et al. (2014) Development of Raman spectral markers to assess metastatic bone in breast cancer. J Biomed Opt 19:111606
Hansen, Amanda G; Arnold, Shanna A; Jiang, Ming et al. (2014) ALCAM/CD166 is a TGF-?-responsive marker and functional regulator of prostate cancer metastasis to bone. Cancer Res 74:1404-15
Waning, David L; Mohammad, Khalid S; Guise, Theresa A (2013) Cancer-associated osteoclast differentiation takes a good look in the miR(NA)ror. Cancer Cell 24:407-9
Jin, Renjie; Sterling, Julie A; Edwards, James R et al. (2013) Activation of NF-kappa B signaling promotes growth of prostate cancer cells in bone. PLoS One 8:e60983

Showing the most recent 10 out of 210 publications