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Browsing by Author "Gehlhausen, Jeffrey R."
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Item Chemopreventative celecoxib fails to prevent schwannoma formation or sensorineural hearing loss in genetically engineered murine model of neurofibromatosis type 2(Impact Journals, 2017-10-24) Wahle, Benjamin M.; Hawley, Eric T.; He, Yongzheng; Smith, Abbi E.; Yuan, Jin; Masters, Andi R.; Jones, David R.; Gehlhausen, Jeffrey R.; Park, Su-Jung; Conway, Simon J.; Clapp, D. Wade; Yates, Charles W.; Otolaryngology -- Head and Neck Surgery, School of MedicineMutations in the tumor suppressor gene NF2 lead to Neurofibromatosis type 2 (NF2), a tumor predisposition syndrome characterized by the development of schwannomas, including bilateral vestibular schwannomas with complete penetrance. Recent work has implicated the importance of COX-2 in schwannoma growth. Using a genetically engineered murine model of NF2, we demonstrate that selective inhibition of COX-2 with celecoxib fails to prevent the spontaneous development of schwannomas or sensorineural hearing loss in vivo, despite elevated expression levels of COX-2 in Nf2-deficient tumor tissue. These results suggest that COX-2 is nonessential to schwannomagenesis and that the proposed tumor suppressive effects of NSAIDs on schwannomas may occur through COX-2 independent mechanisms.Item The importance of nerve microenvironment for schwannoma development(Springer-Verlag, 2016-08) Schulz, Alexander; Büttner, Robert; Hagel, Christian; Baader, Stephan L.; Kluwe, Lan; Salamon, Johannes; Mautner, Victor-Felix; Mindos, Thomas; Parkinson, David B.; Gehlhausen, Jeffrey R.; Clapp, D. Wade; Morrison, Helen; Department of Pediatrics, IU School of MedicineSchwannomas are predominantly benign nerve sheath neoplasms caused by Nf2 gene inactivation. Presently, treatment options are mainly limited to surgical tumor resection due to the lack of effective pharmacological drugs. Although the mechanistic understanding of Nf2 gene function has advanced, it has so far been primarily restricted to Schwann cell-intrinsic events. Extracellular cues determining Schwann cell behavior with regard to schwannoma development remain unknown. Here we show pro-tumourigenic microenvironmental effects on Schwann cells where an altered axonal microenvironment in cooperation with injury signals contribute to a persistent regenerative Schwann cell response promoting schwannoma development. Specifically in genetically engineered mice following crush injuries on sciatic nerves, we found macroscopic nerve swellings in mice with homozygous nf2 gene deletion in Schwann cells and in animals with heterozygous nf2 knockout in both Schwann cells and axons. However, patient-mimicking schwannomas could only be provoked in animals with combined heterozygous nf2 knockout in Schwann cells and axons. We identified a severe re-myelination defect and sustained macrophage presence in the tumor tissue as major abnormalities. Strikingly, treatment of tumor-developing mice after nerve crush injury with medium-dose aspirin significantly decreased schwannoma progression in this disease model. Our results suggest a multifactorial concept for schwannoma formation-emphasizing axonal factors and mechanical nerve irritation as predilection site for schwannoma development. Furthermore, we provide evidence supporting the potential efficacy of anti-inflammatory drugs in the treatment of schwannomas.Item Ketotifen Modulates Mast Cell Chemotaxis to Kit-Ligand, but Does Not Impact Mast Cell Numbers, Degranulation, or Tumor Behavior in Neurofibromas of Nf1-Deficient Mice(American Association for Cancer Research, 2019-12-01) Burks, Ciersten A.; Rhodes, Steven D.; Bessler, Waylan K.; Chen, Shi; Smith, Abbi; Gehlhausen, Jeffrey R.; Hawley, Eric T.; Jiang, Li; Li, Xiaohong; Yuan, Jin; Lu, Qingbo; Jacobsen, Max; Sandusky, George E.; Jones, David R.; Clapp, D. Wade; Blakeley, Jaishri O.; Pediatrics, School of MedicineNeurofibromatosis Type 1 (NF1) is one of the most common genetic tumor predisposition syndromes in humans. Mutant NF1 results in dysregulated RAS allowing neoplasms throughout the neuroaxis. Plexiform neurofibromas (pNFs) afflict up to 50% of patients with NF1. They are complex tumors of the peripheral nerve that cause major morbidity via nerve dysregulation and mortality via conversion to malignant sarcoma. Genetically engineered mouse models (GEMMs) of NF1 provide valuable insights for the identification of therapies that have utility in people with pNF. Preclinical studies in GEMMs implicate mast cells and the c-Kit/Kit ligand pathway in pNF tumorigenesis. Kit ligand is a potent chemokine secreted by tumorigenic, Nf1-deficient Schwann cells. Ketotifen is an FDA-approved drug for the treatment of allergic conjunctivitis and asthma that promotes mast cell stabilization and has been used in prior case studies to treat or prevent pNFs. This study investigated the effect of ketotifen on mast cell infiltration and degranulation in the presence and absence of Kit ligand provocation and the effect of ketotifen on shrinking or preventing pNF formation in the Nf1flox/flox;PostnCre+ GEMM. Ketotifen decreased mast cell infiltration in response to exogenous Kit ligand administration, but did not affect mast cell degranulation. Importantly, ketotifen did not reduce mast cells numbers or activity in pNF and did not prevent pNF formation or decrease the volume of established pNF despite administration of pharmacologically active doses. These findings suggest ketotifen has limited use as monotherapy to prevent or reduce pNF burden in the setting of Nf1 mutations.Item A proteasome-resistant fragment of NIK mediates oncogenic NF-κB signaling in schwannomas(Oxford University Press, 2019-02-15) Gehlhausen, Jeffrey R.; Hawley, Eric; Wahle, Benjamin Mark; He, Yongzheng; Edwards, Donna; Rhodes, Steven D.; Lajiness, Jacquelyn D.; Staser, Karl; Chen, Shi; Yang, Xianlin; Yuan, Jin; Li, Xiaohong; Jiang, Li; Smith, Abbi; Bessler, Waylan; Sandusky, George; Stemmer-Rachamimov, Anat; Stuhlmiller, Timothy J.; Angus, Steven P.; Johnson, Gary L.; Nalepa, Grzegorz; Yates, Charles W.; Clapp, D. Wade; Park, Su-Jung; Pediatrics, School of MedicineSchwannomas are common, highly morbid and medically untreatable tumors that can arise in patients with germ line as well as somatic mutations in neurofibromatosis type 2 (NF2). These mutations most commonly result in the loss of function of the NF2-encoded protein, Merlin. Little is known about how Merlin functions endogenously as a tumor suppressor and how its loss leads to oncogenic transformation in Schwann cells (SCs). Here, we identify nuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B cells (NF-κB)-inducing kinase (NIK) as a potential drug target driving NF-κB signaling and Merlin-deficient schwannoma genesis. Using a genomic approach to profile aberrant tumor signaling pathways, we describe multiple upregulated NF-κB signaling elements in human and murine schwannomas, leading us to identify a caspase-cleaved, proteasome-resistant NIK kinase domain fragment that amplifies pathogenic NF-κB signaling. Lentiviral-mediated transduction of this NIK fragment into normal SCs promotes proliferation, survival, and adhesion while inducing schwannoma formation in a novel in vivo orthotopic transplant model. Furthermore, we describe an NF-κB-potentiated hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) to MET proto-oncogene receptor tyrosine kinase (c-Met) autocrine feed-forward loop promoting SC proliferation. These innovative studies identify a novel signaling axis underlying schwannoma formation, revealing new and potentially druggable schwannoma vulnerabilities with future therapeutic potential.