S

Suzanne Hagan

Glasgow Caledonian University

ORCID: 0000-0001-9836-159X

Publishes on Ocular Surface and Contact Lens, Glaucoma and retinal disorders, Melanoma and MAPK Pathways. 67 papers and 5.3k citations.

67Publications
5.3kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Tear fluid biomarkers in ocular and systemic disease: potential use for predictive, preventive and personalised medicine
Cited by 379Open Access

In the field of predictive, preventive and personalised medicine, researchers are keen to identify novel and reliable ways to predict and diagnose disease, as well as to monitor patient response to therapeutic agents. In the last decade alone, the sensitivity of profiling technologies has undergone huge improvements in detection sensitivity, thus allowing quantification of minute samples, for example body fluids that were previously difficult to assay. As a consequence, there has been a huge increase in tear fluid investigation, predominantly in the field of ocular surface disease. As tears are a more accessible and less complex body fluid (than serum or plasma) and sampling is much less invasive, research is starting to focus on how disease processes affect the proteomic, lipidomic and metabolomic composition of the tear film. By determining compositional changes to tear profiles, crucial pathways in disease progression may be identified, allowing for more predictive and personalised therapy of the individual. This article will provide an overview of the various putative tear fluid biomarkers that have been identified to date, ranging from ocular surface disease and retinopathies to cancer and multiple sclerosis. Putative tear fluid biomarkers of ocular disorders, as well as the more recent field of systemic disease biomarkers, will be shown.

Reduction of Raf-1 Kinase Inhibitor Protein Expression Correlates with Breast Cancer Metastasis
Suzanne Hagan, Fahd Al‐Mulla, Elizabeth Mallon et al.|Clinical Cancer Research|2005
Cited by 261

PURPOSE: Raf-1 kinase inhibitor protein (RKIP) was originally identified as the first physiologic inhibitor of the Raf/mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase/extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) pathway. This pathway regulates fundamental cellular functions, including those that are subverted in cancer cells, such as proliferation, transformation, survival, and metastasis. Recently, RKIP has been recognized as a strong candidate for a metastasis suppressor gene in cell and animal model systems. Therefore, we investigated whether RKIP expression is altered in clinical specimens of human primary breast cancers and their lymph node metastases. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: Paraffin-embedded tumor samples from 103 breast cancer patients were examined immunohistochemically for the expression of RKIP, activated ERK, and apoptosis. The specificity of the antibodies used was validated by competition experiments with purified recombinant RKIP protein. RESULTS: RKIP expression was high in breast duct epithelia and retained to varying degrees in primary breast tumors. However, in lymph node metastases, RKIP expression was highly significantly reduced or lost (P = 0.000003). No significant correlations were observed between RKIP expression and histologic type, tumor differentiation grade, size, or estrogen receptor status. CONCLUSION: This is the first study of RKIP expression in a large clinical cohort. It confirms the results of cell culture and animal studies, suggesting that in human breast cancer, RKIP is a metastasis suppressor gene whose expression must be down-regulated for metastases to develop. RKIP expression is independent of other markers for breast cancer progression and prognosis.

Reduction in Raf Kinase Inhibitor Protein Expression Is Associated with Increased Ras-Extracellular Signal-Regulated Kinase Signaling in Melanoma Cell Lines
Marion Schuierer, Frauke Bataille, Suzanne Hagan et al.|Cancer Research|2004
Cited by 197

Mutations in the Raf signaling pathway are known to play a pivotal role in the progression of malignant melanoma. In this study, we provide evidence that the Raf-1 kinase inhibitory protein (RKIP) and its effects on Raf-1-mediated activation of mitogen-activated protein/extracellular signal-regulated kinase kinase are important for the metastatic potential of malignant melanoma. Screening nine melanoma cell lines at mRNA and protein levels, we detected significant down-regulation of RKIP expression in comparison with normal melanocytes. Loss of RKIP expression in transformed cells in vivo was confirmed in immunohistochemical analyses demonstrating reduction of RKIP expression already in primary melanoma and even stronger down-regulation or complete loss in melanoma metastases. Stable transfection of the melanoma cell line Mel Im with an RKIP expression plasmid blocked the Raf kinase pathway, resulting in down-regulation of extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2 and activator protein 1 activity. In very good agreement with the in vivo finding that down-regulation of RKIP expression is most obvious in melanoma metastasis, overexpression of RKIP in the highly invasive Mel Im cell line leads to a significant inhibition of invasiveness in vitro. Taken together, our results suggest that loss of RKIP in malignant melanoma contributes to enhanced invasiveness of transformed cells and therefore to progression of the disease.

Raf Kinase Inhibitor Protein Expression in a Survival Analysis of Colorectal Cancer Patients
Fahd Al‐Mulla, Suzanne Hagan, A. Behbehani et al.|Journal of Clinical Oncology|2006
Cited by 185Open Access

PURPOSE: Raf kinase inhibitor protein (RKIP) inhibits the Raf and nuclear factor kappa B signaling pathways, and suppresses metastasis in animal models. We examined whether RKIP expression in primary colorectal cancers (CRCs) correlates with the risk of metastasis and overall survival. PATIENTS AND METHODS: RKIP expression was examined immunohistochemically in three separate cohorts: a tissue microarray containing 276 samples from human tumors and normal tissues, and retrospective studies of 268 CRC patients and 65 early-stage CRCs. Overall and metastasis-free survival rates were measured. RESULTS: RKIP was expressed in normal epithelia but was reduced in metastatic tumors. RKIP expression in primary CRC was an independent prognostic marker for survival using multivariate Cox regression analysis (hazard ratio, 2.808; 95% CI, 1.58 to 4.96; P = .0002), independent of Dukes' stage. Patients with Dukes' C RKIP-positive tumors had similar 5-year survival rates as early-stage patients if tumors had equivalent RKIP expression levels. An independent study of early-stage CRCs confirmed that reduced RKIP expression predicted metastatic recurrence and reduced disease-free survival (hazard ratio, 4.5; 95% CI, 1.7 to 12.3; P = .003). RKIP expression was independent of sex, age, mitotic index, lymphatic and vascular invasion, depth of invasion, and tumor site, but correlated positively with apoptotic index (P = .024). Weak or loss of RKIP expression was the most significant and independent prognostic marker using a multivariate regression equation (hazard ratio, 4.5; 95% CI, 1.7 to 12.3; P = .003). CONCLUSION: RKIP expression in primary CRCs correlates with overall and disease-free survival, and can be useful for identifying early-stage CRC patients at risk of relapse.