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Browsing by Author "Cantor, Erica L."
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Item The impact of SBF2 on taxane-induced peripheral neuropathy(PLOS, 2022-01-05) Cunningham, Geneva M.; Shen, Fei; Wu, Xi; Cantor, Erica L.; Gardner, Laura; Philips, Santosh; Jiang, Guanglong; Bales, Casey L.; Tan, Zhiyong; Liu, Yunlong; Wan, Jun; Fehrenbacher, Jill C.; Schneider, Bryan P.; Medical and Molecular Genetics, School of MedicineTaxane-induced peripheral neuropathy (TIPN) is a devastating survivorship issue for many cancer patients. In addition to its impact on quality of life, this toxicity may lead to dose reductions or treatment discontinuation, adversely impacting survival outcomes and leading to health disparities in African Americans (AA). Our lab has previously identified deleterious mutations in SET-Binding Factor 2 (SBF2) that significantly associated with severe TIPN in AA patients. Here, we demonstrate the impact of SBF2 on taxane-induced neuronal damage using an ex vivo model of SBF2 knockdown of induced pluripotent stem cell-derived sensory neurons. Knockdown of SBF2 exacerbated paclitaxel changes to cell viability and neurite outgrowth while attenuating paclitaxel-induced sodium current inhibition. Our studies identified paclitaxel-induced expression changes specific to mature sensory neurons and revealed candidate genes involved in the exacerbation of paclitaxel-induced phenotypes accompanying SBF2 knockdown. Overall, these findings provide ex vivo support for the impact of SBF2 on the development of TIPN and shed light on the potential pathways involved.Item Optimization of a human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived sensory neuron model for the in vitro evaluation of taxane-induced neurotoxicity(Springer Nature, 2024-08-17) Cantor, Erica L.; Shen, Fei; Jiang, Guanglong; Philips, Santosh; Schneider, Bryan P.; Medicine, School of MedicineHuman induced pluripotent stem cell-derived sensory neuron (iPSC-dSN) models are a valuable resource for the study of neurotoxicity but are affected by poor replicability and reproducibility, often due to a lack of optimization. Here, we identify experimental factors related to culture conditions that substantially impact cellular drug response in vitro and determine optimal conditions for improved replicability and reproducibility. Treatment duration and cell seeding density were both found to be significant factors, while cell line differences also contributed to variation. A replicable dose-response in viability was demonstrated after 48-h exposure to docetaxel or paclitaxel. Additionally, a replicable dose-dependent reduction in neurite outgrowth was demonstrated, demonstrating the applicability of the model for the examination of additional phenotypes. Overall, we have established an optimized iPSC-dSN model for the study of taxane-induced neurotoxicity.Item Passage number affects differentiation of sensory neurons from human induced pluripotent stem cells(Springer Nature, 2022-09-23) Cantor, Erica L.; Shen, Fei; Jiang, Guanglong; Tan, Zhiyong; Cunningham, Geneva M.; Wu, Xi; Philips, Santosh; Schneider, Bryan P.; Medicine, School of MedicineInduced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) are a valuable resource for neurological disease-modeling and drug discovery due to their ability to differentiate into neurons reflecting the genetics of the patient from which they are derived. iPSC-derived cultures, however, are highly variable due to heterogeneity in culture conditions. We investigated the effect of passage number on iPSC differentiation to optimize the generation of sensory neurons (iPSC-dSNs). Three iPSC lines reprogrammed from the peripheral blood of three donors were differentiated into iPSC-dSNs at passage numbers within each of the following ranges: low (5-10), intermediate (20-26), and high (30-38). Morphology and pluripotency of the parent iPSCs were assessed prior to differentiation. iPSC-dSNs were evaluated based on electrophysiological properties and expression of key neuronal markers. All iPSC lines displayed similar morphology and were similarly pluripotent across passage numbers. However, the expression levels of neuronal markers and sodium channel function analyses indicated that iPSC-dSNs differentiated from low passage numbers better recapitulated the sensory neuron phenotype than those differentiated from intermediate or high passage numbers. Our results demonstrate that lower passage numbers may be better suited for differentiation into peripheral sensory neurons.