The Department of Urology recognizes the importance of conducting state-of-the-art basic and translational research by our faculty. Our research mission is to develop novel treatment ideas and bring technological advances more quickly to the patients. The Urology Department focuses on research that investigates bladder and prostate tumorigenesis and cancer biomarkers.
Department of Urology Research Faculty
Publications:
1. Gabig T. G., Waltzer W. C., Whyard T. C., Romanov V. (2016) Clostridium
perfringens enterotoxin as a potential drug for intravesical treatment of
bladder cancer. Biochem Biophys Res
Commun. 478: 887-892. PMID:
27520378.
Abstract: The current intravesical treatment of bladder
cancer (BC) is limited to a few chemotherapeutics that show imperfect
effectiveness and are associated with some serious complications. Thus, there
is an urgent need for alternative therapies, especially for patients with
high-risk non-muscle invasive (NMIBC)… -Read More
2. Whyard T. C., Waltzer W. C.,
Waltzer D., Romanov V. (2016) Metabolic alterations in bladder cancer:
applications for cancer imaging. Exp Cell
Res. 341: 77-83. PMID: 26808412.
Abstract: Treatment planning, outcome and prognosis are
strongly related to the adequate tumor staging for bladder cancer (BC).
Unfortunately, a large discrepancy exists between the preoperative clinical and
final pathologic staging. Therefore, an advanced imaging-based technique is
crucial for adequate staging… -Read More
3. Romanov V., Whyard T. C.,
Waltzer W. C., Gabig T. G. (2014) A claudin 3 and claudin 4-targeted
Clostridium perfringens protoxin is selectively cytotoxic to PSA-producing
prostate cancer cells. Cancer Lett. 351:
260-264. PMID: 24952257.
Abstract: Prostate cancer is
the second leading cause of non-cutaneous cancer-related death in males, and
effective strategies for treatment of metastatic disease are currently limited.
The tight junction proteins, claudin 3 and claudin 4, serve as cell-surface
receptors for the pore-forming Clostridium perfringens enterotoxin [CPE]…-Read
More
4. Romanov V., Whyard T. C.,
Waltzer W. C., Grollman A. P., Rosenquist T. (2015) Aristolochic
acid-induced apoptosis and G2 cell cycle arrest depends on ROS generation and
MAP kinases activation. Arch Toxicol. 89:
47-56. PMID: 24792323.
Abstract: Ingestion of
aristolochic acids (AAs) contained in herbal remedies results in a renal
disease and, frequently, urothelial malignancy. The genotoxicity of AA in renal
cells, including mutagenic DNA adducts formation, is well documented. However,
the mechanisms of AA-induced tubular atrophy and renal fibrosis are largely
unknown…-Read More
5. Romanov V., Whyard T. C., Adler H.
L., Waltzer W. C., Zucker S. (2004) Prostate cancer cell adhesion to
bone marrow endothelium: the role of prostate-specific antigen. Cancer Res. 64: 2083-2089. PMID: 15026347.
Abstract: Bone metastasis is
the most frequent complication of prostate cancer (PC). Elucidation of the
biological basis of this specificity is required for the development of
approaches for metastatic inhibition. We investigated the possibility that the
preferential attachment of PC cells to bone marrow endothelium (as opposed to
endothelium from other organs) affects this specificity…-Read More
For a full list of publications by Victor Romanov - Click Here
For a full list of publications by Terry Whyard - Click Here
Publications:
1. Talos F., Mitrofanova A., Bergren S., Califano A., and Shen M.M. (2017) A
computational systems approach identifies synergistic specification genes that
facilitate lineage conversion to prostate tissue. Nature Commun. 8:14662. PMID: 28429718, PMCID: PMC5413950
Abstract: Here
we show that a computational systems approach can identify cell type specification
genes (master regulators) that act synergistically, and demonstrate its
application for reprogramming of fibroblasts to prostate tissue... -Read More
3. Talos, F., Abraham, A., Vaseva, A., Holembowski, L., Tsirka, S., Scheel, A.,
Bode, D., Dobbelstein, M., Brück, W., and Moll, U. M. (2010). p73 is an
essential regulator of neural stem cell maintenance in embryonal and adult CNS
neurogenesis. Cell Death Differ. 17:
1816-1829. PMCID: PMC3260880.
Abstract: In this study, we
define a novel essential role of p73 in the regulation of the neural stem cell
compartment. In both embryonic and adult neurogenesis, p73 has a critical role
in maintaining an adequate neurogenic pool by promoting self-renewal and
proliferation and inhibiting premature senescence of neural stem and early
progenitor cells...-Read More
4. Talos, F., Nemajerova, A., Flores, E. R., Petrenko, O., and Moll, U. M.
(2007). p73 suppresses polyploidy and aneuploidy in the absence of functional
p53. Mol. Cell 27: 647-659. PMID:
17707235
Abstract: Previous studies
showed that p53 plays a central role in G1 and DNA damage checkpoints, thus
contributing to genomic stability. We show here that p73 also plays a role in
genomic integrity but this mechanism is manifest only when p53 is lost...-Read
More
5. Talos, F., Petrenko, O., Mena, P., and Moll, U. M. (2005). Mitochondrially
targeted p53 has tumor suppressor activities in vivo. Cancer Res. 65: 9971-9981. PMID: 16267022.
Abstract: Complex
proapoptotic functions are essential for the tumor suppressor activity of p53.
We recently described a novel transcription-independent mechanism that involves
a rapid proapoptotic action of p53 at the mitochondria and executes the
shortest known circuitry of p53 death signaling. Here, we examine if this
p53-dependent mitochondrial program could be exploited for tumor
suppression in vivo...-Read
More
For a full list of all publications by Flaminia Talos - Click Here