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Browsing by Author "Roodman, G. David"
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Item Aplidin (plitidepsin) is a novel anti-myeloma agent with potent anti-resorptive activity mediated by direct effects on osteoclasts(Impact Journals, 2019-04-12) Delgado-Calle, Jesus; Kurihara, Noriyoshi; Atkinson, Emily G.; Nelson, Jessica; Miyagawa, Kazuaki; Galmarini, Carlos Maria; Roodman, G. David; Bellido, Teresita; Medicine, School of MedicineDespite recent progress in its treatment, Multiple Myeloma (MM) remains incurable and its associated bone disease persists even after complete remission. Thus, identification of new therapeutic agents that simultaneously suppress MM growth and protect bone is an unmet need. Herein, we examined the effects of Aplidin, a novel anti-cancer marine-derived compound, on MM and bone cells. In vitro, Aplidin potently inhibited MM cell growth and induced apoptosis, effects that were enhanced by dexamethasone (Dex) and bortezomib (Btz). Aplidin modestly reduced osteocyte/osteoblast viability and decreased osteoblast mineralization, effects that were enhanced by Dex and partially prevented by Btz. Further, Aplidin markedly decreased osteoclast precursor numbers and differentiation, and reduced mature osteoclast number and resorption activity. Moreover, Aplidin reduced Dex-induced osteoclast differentiation and further decreased osteoclast number when combined with Btz. Lastly, Aplidin alone, or suboptimal doses of Aplidin combined with Dex or Btz, decreased tumor growth and bone resorption in ex vivo bone organ cultures that reproduce the 3D-organization and the cellular diversity of the MM/bone marrow niche. These results demonstrate that Aplidin has potent anti-myeloma and anti-resorptive properties, and enhances proteasome inhibitors blockade of MM growth and bone destruction.Item Bidirectional Notch signaling and osteocyte-derived factors in the bone marrow microenvironment promote tumor cell proliferation and bone destruction in multiple myeloma(American Association for Cancer Research, 2016-03-01) Delgado-Calle, Jesus; Anderson, Judith; Cregor, Meloney D.; Hiasa, Masahiro; Chirgwin, John M.; Carlesso, Nadia; Yoneda, Toshiyuki; Mohammad, Khalid S.; Plotkin, Lilian I.; Roodman, G. David; Bellido, Teresita; Department of Anatomy & Cell Biology, IU School of MedicineIn multiple myeloma, an overabundance of monoclonal plasma cells in the bone marrow induces localized osteolytic lesions that rarely heal due to increased bone resorption and suppressed bone formation. Matrix-embedded osteocytes comprise more than 95% of bone cells and are major regulators of osteoclast and osteoblast activity, but their contribution to multiple myeloma growth and bone disease is unknown. Here, we report that osteocytes in a mouse model of human MM physically interact with multiple myeloma cells in vivo, undergo caspase-3-dependent apoptosis, and express higher RANKL (TNFSF11) and sclerostin levels than osteocytes in control mice. Mechanistic studies revealed that osteocyte apoptosis was initiated by multiple myeloma cell-mediated activation of Notch signaling and was further amplified by multiple myeloma cell-secreted TNF. The induction of apoptosis increased osteocytic Rankl expression, the osteocytic Rankl/Opg (TNFRSF11B) ratio, and the ability of osteocytes to attract osteoclast precursors to induce local bone resorption. Furthermore, osteocytes in contact with multiple myeloma cells expressed high levels of Sost/sclerostin, leading to a reduction in Wnt signaling and subsequent inhibition of osteoblast differentiation. Importantly, direct contact between osteocytes and multiple myeloma cells reciprocally activated Notch signaling and increased Notch receptor expression, particularly Notch3 and 4, stimulating multiple myeloma cell growth. These studies reveal a previously unknown role for bidirectional Notch signaling that enhances MM growth and bone disease, suggesting that targeting osteocyte-multiple myeloma cell interactions through specific Notch receptor blockade may represent a promising treatment strategy in multiple myeloma.Item Blocking the ZZ domain of sequestosome1/p62 suppresses myeloma growth and osteoclast formation in vitro and induces dramatic bone formation in myeloma-bearing bones in vivo(SpringerNature, 2016-02) Teramachi, Jumpei; Silbermann, Rebecca; Yang, Peng; Zhao, Wei; Mohammad, Khalid S.; Guo, Jianxia; Anderson, Judith L.; Zhou, Dan; Feng, Rentian; Myint, Kyaw-Zeyar; Maertz, Nathan; Beumer, Jan H.; Eiseman, Julie L.; Windle, Jolene J.; Xie, Xiang-Qun; Roodman, G. David; Kurihara, Noriyoshi; Department of Medicine, IU School of MedicineWe reported that p62 (sequestosome 1) serves as a signaling hub in bone marrow stromal cells (BMSCs) for the formation of signaling complexes, including NFκB, p38MAPK and JNK, that are involved in the increased osteoclastogenesis and multiple myeloma (MM) cell growth induced by BMSCs that are key contributors to multiple myeloma bone disease (MMBD), and demonstrated that the ZZ domain of p62 (p62-ZZ) is required for BMSC enhancement of MMBD. We recently identified a novel p62-ZZ inhibitor, XRK3F2, which inhibits MM cell growth and BMSC growth enhancement of human MM cells. In the current study, we evaluate the relative specificity of XRK3F2 for p62-ZZ, characterize XRK3F2's capacity to inhibit growth of primary MM cells and human MM cell lines, and test the in vivo effects of XRK3F2 in the immunocompetent 5TGM1 MM model. We found that XRK3F2 induces dramatic cortical bone formation that is restricted to MM containing bones and blocked the effects and upregulation of tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFα), an osteoblast (OB) differentiation inhibitor that is increased in the MM bone marrow microenvironment and utilizes signaling complexes formed on p62-ZZ, in BMSC. Interestingly, XRK3F2 had no effect on non-MM bearing bone. These results demonstrate that targeting p62 in MM models has profound effects on MMBD.Item Critical Role of AKT in Myeloma-induced Osteoclast Formation and Osteolysis(2013-10) Cao, Huiling; Zhu, Ke; Qiu, Lugui; Li, Shuai; Niu, Hanjie; Yang, Shengyong; Zhao, Zhongfang; Lai, Yumei; Anderson, Judith L.; Fan, Jie; Im, Hee-Jeong; Chen, Di; Roodman, G. David; Xiao, Guozhi; Hao, Mu; Department of Hematology and Oncology, IU School of MedicineAbnormal osteoclast formation and osteolysis are the hallmarks of multiple myeloma (MM) bone disease, yet the underlying molecular mechanisms are incompletely understood. Here, we show that the AKT pathway was up-regulated in primary bone marrow monocytes (BMM) from patients with MM, which resulted in sustained high expression of the receptor activator of NF-κB (RANK) in osteoclast precursors. The up-regulation of RANK expression and osteoclast formation in the MM BMM cultures was blocked by AKT inhibition. Conditioned media from MM cell cultures activated AKT and increased RANK expression and osteoclast formation in BMM cultures. Inhibiting AKT in cultured MM cells decreased their growth and ability to promote osteoclast formation. Of clinical significance, systemic administration of the AKT inhibitor LY294002 blocked the formation of tumor tissues in the bone marrow cavity and essentially abolished the MM-induced osteoclast formation and osteolysis in SCID mice. The level of activating transcription factor 4 (ATF4) protein was up-regulated in the BMM cultures from multiple myeloma patients. Adenoviral overexpression of ATF4 activated RANK expression in osteoclast precursors. These results demonstrate a new role of AKT in the MM promotion of osteoclast formation and bone osteolysis through, at least in part, the ATF4-dependent up-regulation of RANK expression in osteoclast precursors.Item Decreased JMJD3 expression in mesenchymal stem cells contributes to longterm suppression of osteoblast differentiation in multiple myeloma(2018-06) Zhao, Wei; Roodman, G. David; Broxmeyer, Hal E.; Yoder, Mervin C.; Clapp, D. Wade; Guise, TheresaMultiple myeloma (MM) is the most frequent cancer to involve the skeleton, with over 80% of myeloma patients developing lytic bone disease (MMBD). Importantly, MM-associated bone lesions rarely heal even when patients are in complete remission. Bone marrow stromal cells (BMSCs) isolated from MM patients have a distinct genetic profile and an impaired osteoblast (OB) differentiation capacity when compared to BMSCs from healthy donors. Utilizing an in vivo model of MMBD and patient samples, we showed that BMSCs from tumor-bearing bones failed to differentiate into OBs weeks after removal of MM cells. Both Runx2 and Osterix, the master transcription factors for OB differentiation, remained suppressed in these BMSCs. However, the molecular mechanisms for MM-induced long-term OB suppression are poorly understood. We characterized both Runx2 and Osterix promoters in murine pre-osteoblast MC4 cells by chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP). The transcriptional start sites (TSSs) of Runx2 and Osterix in untreated MC4 cells were co-occupied by transcriptionally active histone 3 lysine 4 tri-methylation (H3K4me3) and transcriptionally repressive histone 3 lysine 27 tri-methylation (H3K27me3), termed the “bivalent domain”. These bivalent domains became transcriptionally silent with increasing H3K27me3 levels when MC4 cells were co-cultured with MM cells or treated with TNF-α, an inflammatory cytokine increased in MM bone marrow microenvironment. The increasing H3K27me3 levels induced by MM cells or TNF-α were associated with the downregulation of the H3K27 demethylase JMJD3 in MC4 cells and murine BMSCs. Knockdown of JMJD3 in MC4 cells was sufficient to inhibit OB differentiation. Further, ectopic overexpression of JMJD3 in MC4 cells partially rescued the suppression of osteoblast differentiation induced by TNFa. We also found that pre-incubation of MC4 cells with the NF-kB inhibitor quinazoline (QNZ) before TNF-a treatment prevented the downregulation of JMJD3. In agreement with our in vitro findings, BMSCs from MM patients had persistently decreased JMJD3 expression compared to healthy BMSCs. Our findings together demonstrate that decreased JMJD3 expression in BMSCs contributes to the long-term OB suppression in MMBD by remodeling histone landscapes at the Runx2 and Osterix TSSs. Thus, developing strategies to restore JMJD3 expression in BMSCs should increase bone formation and possibly decrease tumor burden in MM.Item Doubling Down on Wnt Signaling to Overcome Myeloma Bone Disease(Oxford University Press, 2023) Delgado-Calle, Jesus; Roodman, G. David; Medicine, School of MedicineItem Excess TGF-β mediates muscle weakness associated with bone metastases in mice(SpringerNature, 2015-11) Waning, David L.; Mohammad, Khalid S.; Reiken, Steven; Xie, Wenjun; Andersson, Daniel C.; John, Sutha; Chiechi, Antonella; Wright, Laura E.; Umanskaya, Alisa; Niewolna, Maria; Trivedi, Trupti; Charkhzarrin, Sahba; Khatiwada, Pooja; Wronska, Anetta; Haynes, Ashley; Benassi, Maria Serena; Witzmann, Frank A.; Zhen, Gehua; Wang, Xiao; Cao, Xu; Roodman, G. David; Marks, Andrew R.; Guise, Theresa A.; Department of Medicine, IU School of MedicineCancer-associated muscle weakness is a poorly understood phenomenon, and there is no effective treatment. Here we find that seven different mouse models of human osteolytic bone metastases-representing breast, lung and prostate cancers, as well as multiple myeloma-exhibited impaired muscle function, implicating a role for the tumor-bone microenvironment in cancer-associated muscle weakness. We found that transforming growth factor (TGF)-β, released from the bone surface as a result of metastasis-induced bone destruction, upregulated NADPH oxidase 4 (Nox4), resulting in elevated oxidization of skeletal muscle proteins, including the ryanodine receptor and calcium (Ca(2+)) release channel (RyR1). The oxidized RyR1 channels leaked Ca(2+), resulting in lower intracellular signaling, which is required for proper muscle contraction. We found that inhibiting RyR1 leakage, TGF-β signaling, TGF-β release from bone or Nox4 activity improved muscle function in mice with MDA-MB-231 bone metastases. Humans with breast- or lung cancer-associated bone metastases also had oxidized skeletal muscle RyR1 that is not seen in normal muscle. Similarly, skeletal muscle weakness, increased Nox4 binding to RyR1 and oxidation of RyR1 were present in a mouse model of Camurati-Engelmann disease, a nonmalignant metabolic bone disorder associated with increased TGF-β activity. Thus, pathological TGF-β release from bone contributes to muscle weakness by decreasing Ca(2+)-induced muscle force production.Item EZH2 or HDAC1 Inhibition Reverses Multiple Myeloma-Induced Epigenetic Suppression of Osteoblast Differentiation(American Association for Cancer Research, 2017-04) Adamik, Juraj; Jin, Shunqian; Sun, Quanhong; Zhang, Peng; Weiss, Kurt R.; Anderson, Judith L.; Silbermann, Rebecca; Roodman, G. David; Galson, Deborah L.; Medicine, School of MedicineIn multiple myeloma, osteolytic lesions rarely heal because of persistent suppressed osteoblast differentiation resulting in a high fracture risk. Herein, chromatin immunoprecipitation analyses reveal that multiple myeloma cells induce repressive epigenetic histone changes at the Runx2 locus that prevent osteoblast differentiation. The most pronounced multiple myeloma-induced changes were at the Runx2-P1 promoter, converting it from a poised bivalent state to a repressed state. Previously, it was observed that multiple myeloma induces the transcription repressor GFI1 in osteoblast precursors, which correlates with decreased Runx2 expression, thus prompting detailed characterization of the multiple myeloma and TNFα-dependent GFI1 response element within the Runx2-P1 promoter. Further analyses reveal that multiple myeloma-induced GFI1 binding to Runx2 in osteoblast precursors and recruitment of the histone modifiers HDAC1, LSD1, and EZH2 is required to establish and maintain Runx2 repression in osteogenic conditions. These GFI1-mediated repressive chromatin changes persist even after removal of multiple myeloma. Ectopic GFI1 is sufficient to bind to Runx2, recruit HDAC1 and EZH2, increase H3K27me3 on the gene, and prevent osteogenic induction of endogenous Runx2 expression. Gfi1 knockdown in MC4 cells blocked multiple myeloma-induced recruitment of HDAC1 and EZH2 to Runx2, acquisition of repressive chromatin architecture, and suppression of osteoblast differentiation. Importantly, inhibition of EZH2 or HDAC1 activity in pre-osteoblasts after multiple myeloma exposure in vitro or in osteoblast precursors from patients with multiple myeloma reversed the repressive chromatin architecture at Runx2 and rescued osteoblast differentiation.Implications: This study suggests that therapeutically targeting EZH2 or HDAC1 activity may reverse the profound multiple myeloma-induced osteoblast suppression and allow repair of the lytic lesions.Item Genetic Deletion of Sost or Pharmacological Inhibition of Sclerostin Prevent Multiple Myeloma-induced Bone Disease without Affecting Tumor Growth(Nature Publishing group, 2017-12) Delgado-Calle, Jesus; Anderson, Judith; Cregor, Meloney D.; Condon, Keith W.; Kuhstoss, Stuart A.; Plotkin, Lilian I.; Bellido, Teresita; Roodman, G. David; Medicine, School of MedicineMultiple myeloma (MM) causes lytic bone lesions due to increased bone resorption and concomitant marked suppression of bone formation. Sclerostin (Scl) levels, an osteocyte-derived inhibitor of Wnt/β-catenin signaling, are elevated in MM patient sera and are increased in osteocytes in MM-bearing mice. We show here that genetic deletion of Sost, the gene encoding Scl, prevented MM-induced bone disease in an immune-deficient mouse model of early MM, and that administration of anti-Scl antibody (Scl-Ab) increased bone mass and decreases osteolysis in immune-competent mice with established MM. Sost/Scl inhibition increased osteoblast numbers, stimulated new bone formation and decreased osteoclast number in MM-colonized bone. Further, Sost/Scl inhibition did not affect tumor growth in vivo or anti-myeloma drug efficacy in vitro. These results identify the osteocyte as a major contributor to the deleterious effects of MM in bone and osteocyte-derived Scl as a promising target for the treatment of established MM-induced bone disease. Further, Scl did not interfere with efficacy of chemotherapy for MM suggesting that combined treatment with anti-myeloma drugs and Scl-Ab should effectively control MM growth and bone disease, providing new avenues to effectively control MM and bone disease in patients with active MM.Item GFI1-Dependent Repression of SGPP1 Increases Multiple Myeloma Cell Survival(MDPI, 2022-02-02) Petrusca, Daniela N.; Mulcrone, Patrick L.; Macar, David A.; Bishop, Ryan T.; Berdyshev, Evgeny; Suvannasankha, Attaya; Anderson, Judith L.; Sun, Quanhong; Auron, Philip E.; Galson, Deborah L.; Roodman, G. David; Medicine, School of MedicineMultiple myeloma (MM) remains incurable for most patients due to the emergence of drug resistant clones. Here we report a p53-independent mechanism responsible for Growth Factor Independence-1 (GFI1) support of MM cell survival by its modulation of sphingolipid metabolism to increase the sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P) level regardless of the p53 status. We found that expression of enzymes that control S1P biosynthesis, SphK1, dephosphorylation, and SGPP1 were differentially correlated with GFI1 levels in MM cells. We detected GFI1 occupancy on the SGGP1 gene in MM cells in a predicted enhancer region at the 5' end of intron 1, which correlated with decreased SGGP1 expression and increased S1P levels in GFI1 overexpressing cells, regardless of their p53 status. The high S1P:Ceramide intracellular ratio in MM cells protected c-Myc protein stability in a PP2A-dependent manner. The decreased MM viability by SphK1 inhibition was dependent on the induction of autophagy in both p53WT and p53mut MM. An autophagic blockade prevented GFI1 support for viability only in p53mut MM, demonstrating that GFI1 increases MM cell survival via both p53WT inhibition and upregulation of S1P independently. Therefore, GFI1 may be a key therapeutic target for all types of MM that may significantly benefit patients that are highly resistant to current therapies.
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