Awardee OrganizationPENNSYLVANIA STATE UNIV HERSHEY MED CTR
Description
Abstract Text
Project Summary/Abstract
The major goal of this project is to test the idea that modulation of autophagy within the hypoxic tumor
microenvironment (TME) can impact circulating tumor cell (CTC) survival, metastatic potential, and therapeutic
response. The TME is a complex breeding ground for selection of aggressive tumor cells with an advantage of
survival or metastatic potential and confers resistance to cytotoxic as well as targeted cancer therapy. The
process of tumor metastasis consists of multiple steps, including tumor cell dissemination from the primary
tumor site into the vasculature or lymphatic circulation (intravasation), survival during circulation, extravasation
into the secondary site, and initiation and colonization at the target organ site. Tumor cells must successfully
complete each step to give rise to clinically detectable metastatic disease. It is generally accepted that
autophagy is essential for tumor cell survival under conditions of nutrient or oxygen deprivation, the hallmarks
of the TME. However, the relative contribution of autophagy within the TME to the pro-survival, metastasis-
prone, and therapy-resistant phenotypes of CTCs is similarly unknown. There is therefore a great opportunity
to unravel this biology and shed light on better therapeutic designs as well as therapy monitoring. We
hypothesize that hypoxia-induced autophagy within the TME contributes to CTC survival, tumor metastasis,
and chemoresistance. To test this hypothesis, we propose the following Specific Aims: 1) To determine the
importance of hypoxia-regulated autophagy in tumor growth and metastasis in xenograft mouse models; 2) To
evaluate autophagy and apoptosis in xenograft tumors and CTCs; 3) To investigate the effect of hypoxia-
induced autophagy on therapeutic response as detected and monitored in CTCs.
Public Health Relevance Statement
Project Narrative/Relevance Statement
Successful implementation of this research will not only offer a better understanding of the biological functions
of hypoxia-induced autophagy within the TME in tumor cell survival, metastatic potential, and therapeutic
resistance, but will also aid in the effort to develop an invaluable tool to monitor molecular events and
biomarkers in CTCs for guiding diagnosis, prognosis and treatment of cancer.
No Sub Projects information available for 5R21CA171501-02
Publications
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Outcomes
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Clinical Studies
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