Investigator

Andree Yeramian

Post-doc research · Institut de Recerca Biomèdica de Lleida Fundació Dr Pifarré

AYAndree Yeramian
Papers(2)
Metformin exhibits an…In Vivo Intra‐Uterine…
Collaborators(10)
Anna Ruiz-MitjanaGisela AltésJoaquim EgeaMaria Vidal‐SabanésMario EncinasRaúl NavaridasSonia GatiusXavier DolcetXavier Matias‐GuiuAida Perramon‐Güell
Institutions(4)
Instituto De Investig…Unknown InstitutionColumbia University I…Hospital Universitari…

Papers

Metformin exhibits antineoplastic effects on Pten-deficient endometrial cancer by interfering with TGF-β and p38/ERK MAPK signalling

Metformin is a widespread antidiabetic agent that is commonly used as a treatment against type 2 diabetes mellitus patients. Regarding its therapeutic potential, multiple studies have concluded that Metformin exhibits antineoplastic activity on several types of cancer, including endometrial carcinoma. Although Metformin's antineoplastic activity is well documented, its cellular and molecular anticancer mechanisms are still a matter of controversy because a plethora of anticancer mechanisms have been proposed for different cancer cell types. In this study, we addressed the cellular and molecular mechanisms of Metformin's antineoplastic activity by using both in vitro and in vivo studies of Pten-loss driven carcinoma mouse models. In vivo, Metformin reduced endometrial neoplasia initiated by Pten-deficiency. Our in vitro studies using Pten-deficient endometrial organoids focused on both cellular and molecular levels in Metformin's tumor suppressive action. At cellular level, we showed that Metformin is involved in not only the proliferation of endometrial epithelial cells but also their regulation via a variety of mechanisms of epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) as well as TGF-β-induced apoptosis. At the molecular level, Metformin was shown to affect the TGF-β signalling., a widely known signal that plays a pivotal role in endometrial carcinogenesis. In this respect, Metformin restored TGF-β-induced apoptosis of Pten-deficient endometrial organoids through a p38-dependent mechanism and inhibited TGF-β-induced EMT on no-polarized endometrial epithelial cells by inhibiting ERK/MAPK signalling. These results provide new insights into the link between the cellular and molecular mechanism for Metformin's antineoplastic activity in Pten-deficient endometrial cancers.

In Vivo Intra‐Uterine Delivery of TAT‐Fused Cre Recombinase and CRISPR/Cas9 Editing System in Mice Unveil Histopathology of Pten/p53‐Deficient Endometrial Cancers

AbstractPhosphatase and TENsin homolog (Pten) and p53 are two of the most frequently mutated tumor suppressor genes in endometrial cancer. However, the functional consequences and histopathological manifestation of concomitant p53 and Pten loss of function alterations in the development of endometrial cancer is still controversial. Here, it is demonstrated that simultaneous Pten and p53 deletion is sufficient to cause epithelial to mesenchymal transition phenotype in endometrial organoids. By a novel intravaginal delivery method using HIV1 trans‐activator of transcription cell penetrating peptide fused with a Cre recombinase protein (TAT‐Cre), local ablation of both p53 and Pten is achieved specifically in the uterus. These mice developed high‐grade endometrial carcinomas and a high percentage of uterine carcinosarcomas resembling those found in humans. To further demonstrate that carcinosarcomas arise from epithelium, double Pten/p53 deficient epithelial cells are mixed with wild type stromal and myometrial cells and subcutaneously transplanted to Scid mice. All xenotransplants resulted in the development of uterine carcinosarcomas displaying high nuclear pleomorphism and metastatic potential. Accordingly, in vivo CRISPR/Cas9 disruption of Pten and p53 also triggered the development of metastatic carcinosarcomas. The results unfadingly demonstrate that simultaneous deletion of p53 and Pten in endometrial epithelial cells is enough to trigger epithelial to mesenchymal transition that is consistently translated to the formation of uterine carcinosarcomas in vivo.

55Works
2Papers
10Collaborators

Positions

Post-doc research

Institut de Recerca Biomèdica de Lleida Fundació Dr Pifarré

Associate professor

University of Lleida · Medicina experimental

PhD in immunology

Universitat de Barcelona Facultat de Biologia · fisiologia

Education

PhD in immunology

Universitat de Barcelona Facultat de Biologia · fisiologia

Keywords
cancer
Links & IDs
0000-0002-9569-6316

Scopus: 23135985300