Investigator

Arindam Naha

Visiting Fellow · Emory University, Microbiology and Immunology

ANArindam Naha
Papers(1)
Downregulation of Dec…
Collaborators(9)
Aruna KorlimarlaHari P. S.Jyothsna Konkada Mana…Purba SarkarRamray BhatRekha KumarShahid HussainVarun RaghunathanAnnapurna Vadaparty
Institutions(2)
Indian Institute Of S…Shankara Cancer Hospi…

Papers

Downregulation of Decorin in ovarian cancer cells and colonization microenvironment drives progression

Epithelial ovarian cancer is a gynecological disease in which transformed cells, upon dissemination into the peritoneum colonize locales such as omenta and form metastatic foci. Colonization is an emergent outcome of the interactions between the invading cancer cells and extracellular matrix (ECM) of the peritoneal serosa. Although ECM is known to be remodeled in cancer, the dynamics in ovarian cancer of a major class of ECM-remodeling factors: the proteoglycans remain understudied. Here, we focus on Decorin, a proteoglycan with binding activity to the principal stromal ECM protein Collagen I and investigate its regulation of ovarian cancer colonization. We observe that Decorin is depleted in cancer deposits within omenta of cancer patients. The spreading of suspended spheroids of the ovarian cancer line SK-OV-3 on engineered Collagen I scaffolds is impaired when the latter is polymerized in the presence of Decorin. Decorin-supplemented Collagen I shows poorer fibrillar organization, which has been associated with slower kinetics of cancer cell migration. To our surprise, Decorin was also found to be depleted in primary tumor cells as well as in ovarian cancer cell lines compared with their controls. Overexpression of wild type Decorin, but not its glycosaminoglycan (GAG)-removed mutant in cancer cells decreased mean spheroid size, invasion through Collagen I matrix, and migration on fibronectin matrix scaffolds. Our results suggest that downregulation of an extracellular inhibitor of colonization occurs both in the seed and soil components of the metastatic toolkit; in addition, the GAG chains of Decorin may be crucial to its carcinomatosis-inhibiting functions.

19Works
1Papers
9Collaborators
Ovarian NeoplasmsCell Line, TumorTumor Microenvironment

Positions

2025–

Visiting Fellow

Emory University · Microbiology and Immunology

2024–

Postdoctoral Research Associate

University of Virginia · Department of Molecular Physiology and Biological Physics

2022–

Postdoctoral Researcher

The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston · Microbiology and Molecular Genetics

2022–

Research Associate

The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston · Microbiology and Molecular Genetics

2021–

Postdoctoral Research Associate

Indian Institute of Science · Molecular Reproduction, Development and Genetics

2018–

Postdoctoral Fellow

Indian Institute of Science · Department of Microbiology and Cell Biology

2012–

PhD Student

National Institute of Cholera and Enteric Diseases · Department of Microbiology

2009–

Research Assistant

National Institute of Cholera and Enteric Diseases · Department of Microbiology

2007–

Research Trainee

Bose Institute · Department of Botany

2006–

Research Trainee

Calcutta Medical Research Institute · Department of Pathology

Education

2017

Ph.D.

University of Calcutta · Department of Microbiology

2006

Master of Science (M.Sc.)

Bangalore University

2003

Bachelor of Science (B.Sc.)

University of Calcutta