The Tumor Microenvironment and Metastasis Program focuses on the interactions between cancer cells and their microenvironment that are determinants of the potential of tumor cells to invade surrounding tissues, penetrate blood vessels, and ultimately enter and grow in distant tissues. Studies are directed to deciphening the signaling pathways and mechanical interactions among monocytes, macrophages, endothelial cells and carcinoma cells, and each of their supporting stroma, which contribute to the metastatic phenotype. The goals of the program are to: (1) Dissect the role the microenvironment in tumor progression and metastasis, in particular, the contribution of macrophage subpopulations to the various phases and elements of tumor progression; 2) to elucidate the molecular mechanisms of growth factor and cytokine action in regulating cell migration, dissemination, angiogenesis and invasion of distant sites by primary tumor cells; 3) to assess the role of surface molecules, such a cadherins and membrane surface oligosaccharides, in tumor progression; (4) to characterize the biochemical and structural properties of molecules that regulate cytoskeletal proteins involved in tumor cell and macrophage motility through the development of (i) fluorescent biosensors of the activity status of pathways involved in regulating cell migration in vivo and (ii) photo-switchable proteins for quantitative long-term tracking of distinct groups of cells photomarked in the primary tumor and (5) to translate these findings into correlative studies with human tissues that are predictive of metastatic potential and risk, and that identify therapeutic targets. New imaging technologies are developed in the Gruss Lipper Biophotonics Center that provides this program with unique tools that are made available to the broader AECC community through the Analytical Imaging Shared Resource. Intrinsic to the experimental approach is the development of novel mouse transgenic models with fluorescently-labeled cellular lineages. The research by members of this program is integrated by a major shared focus on breast cancer, although other tumor types are studied as well. Research in this program is supported, in part, by a program project grant which reflects, and furthers, the collaborative research of members of this program. There are currently 24 members from 11 departments, of whom 10 are new to the program, supported by 22 NCI grants ($4.1M Direct) and 18 other peer-reviewed cancer-relevant grants ($3.5M Direct). Since the last CCSG review there have been 239 cancer-relevant research papers by members of this program of which 23% represent intraprogrammatic, and 28% represent interprogrammatic publications.

Public Health Relevance

The spread of tumors from their sites of origin is usually the cause of death due to cancer. This program studies how cancer cells dislodge from tumors, invade surrounding tissues and blood vessels where they are transported in the blood stream to organs like lung, liver, and brain - a process called metastasis. This program is seeking to develop tests to identify which tumors are likely to metastasize and to develop drugs that prevent metastasis. The major focus is on

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Center Core Grants (P30)
Project #
5P30CA013330-45
Application #
9369686
Study Section
Subcommittee I - Transistion to Independence (NCI)
Program Officer
Roberson, Sonya
Project Start
Project End
2019-06-30
Budget Start
2017-07-01
Budget End
2018-06-30
Support Year
45
Fiscal Year
2017
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Inc
Department
Type
DUNS #
079783367
City
Bronx
State
NY
Country
United States
Zip Code
10461
Zamurrad, Sumaira; Hatch, Hayden A M; Drelon, Coralie et al. (2018) A Drosophila Model of Intellectual Disability Caused by Mutations in the Histone Demethylase KDM5. Cell Rep 22:2359-2369
Sparano, Joseph A (2018) Prognostic gene expression assays in breast cancer: are two better than one? NPJ Breast Cancer 4:11
Centini, Ryan; Tsang, Mark; Iwata, Terri et al. (2018) Loss of Fnip1 alters kidney developmental transcriptional program and synergizes with TSC1 loss to promote mTORC1 activation and renal cyst formation. PLoS One 13:e0197973
Nadaradjane, Celine; Yang, Chia-Ping Huang; Rodriguez-Gabin, Alicia et al. (2018) Improved Dose-Response Relationship of (+)-Discodermolide-Taxol Hybrid Congeners. J Nat Prod 81:607-615
Tiwari, Sangeeta; van Tonder, Andries J; Vilchèze, Catherine et al. (2018) Arginine-deprivation-induced oxidative damage sterilizes Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 115:9779-9784
Celestrin, Kevin; Díaz-Balzac, Carlos A; Tang, Leo T H et al. (2018) Four specific immunoglobulin domains in UNC-52/Perlecan function with NID-1/Nidogen during dendrite morphogenesis in Caenorhabditis elegans. Development 145:
Haider, Afreen; Wei, Yu-Chen; Lim, Koini et al. (2018) PCYT1A Regulates Phosphatidylcholine Homeostasis from the Inner Nuclear Membrane in Response to Membrane Stored Curvature Elastic Stress. Dev Cell 45:481-495.e8
Cai, Ying; Lin, Jhih-Rong; Zhang, Quanwei et al. (2018) Epigenetic alterations to Polycomb targets precede malignant transition in a mouse model of breast cancer. Sci Rep 8:5535
Li, Ke; Baker, Nicholas E (2018) Regulation of the Drosophila ID protein Extra macrochaetae by proneural dimerization partners. Elife 7:
Xie, Xianhong; Xue, Xiaonan; Strickler, Howard D (2018) Generalized linear mixed model for binary outcomes when covariates are subject to measurement errors and detection limits. Stat Med 37:119-136

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