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Evanthia Pashos

Pfizer (United States)

Publishes on Birth, Development, and Health, Adipose Tissue and Metabolism, Genetic Associations and Epidemiology. 46 papers and 938 citations.

46Publications
938Total Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Pluripotency Redux — Advances in Stem-Cell Research
John D. Gearhart, Evanthia Pashos, Megana Prasad|New England Journal of Medicine|2007
Cited by 135

Interview with Douglas Melton on the promise and limitations of recent advances in stem-cell research. (08:22)Download A cell's ability to give to rise to all the cell types of the embryo and the adult organism is called pluripotency. Pluripotent cells are found within mammalian blastocysts and persist briefly in embryos after implantation. Embryonic stem cells, derived from the inner cell mass of blastocysts, are a renewable source of pluripotent stem cells that are proving valuable in basic science studies and may eventually become a source of cells for safe, effective cell-based therapies. Much embryonic stem-cell research has focused on determining the molecular signature of pluripotency, and a picture is emerging of a complex interaction among transcription . . .

Functional Analysis and Transcriptomic Profiling of iPSC-Derived Macrophages and Their Application in Modeling Mendelian Disease
Hanrui Zhang, Chenyi Xue, Rhia Shah et al.|Circulation Research|2015
Cited by 133Open Access

RATIONALE: An efficient and reproducible source of genotype-specific human macrophages is essential for study of human macrophage biology and related diseases. OBJECTIVE: To perform integrated functional and transcriptome analyses of human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived macrophages (IPSDMs) and their isogenic human peripheral blood mononuclear cell-derived macrophage (HMDM) counterparts and assess the application of IPSDM in modeling macrophage polarization and Mendelian disease. METHODS AND RESULTS: We developed an efficient protocol for differentiation of IPSDM, which expressed macrophage-specific markers and took up modified lipoproteins in a similar manner to HMDM. Like HMDM, IPSDM revealed reduction in phagocytosis, increase in cholesterol efflux capacity and characteristic secretion of inflammatory cytokines in response to M1 (lipopolysaccharide+interferon-γ) activation. RNA-Seq revealed that nonpolarized (M0) as well as M1 or M2 (interleukin-4) polarized IPSDM shared transcriptomic profiles with their isogenic HMDM counterparts while also revealing novel markers of macrophage polarization. Relative to IPSDM and HMDM of control individuals, patterns of defective cholesterol efflux to apolipoprotein A-I and high-density lipoprotein-3 were qualitatively and quantitatively similar in IPSDM and HMDM of patients with Tangier disease, an autosomal recessive disorder because of mutations in ATP-binding cassette transporter AI. Tangier disease-IPSDM also revealed novel defects of enhanced proinflammatory response to lipopolysaccharide stimulus. CONCLUSIONS: Our protocol-derived IPSDM are comparable with HMDM at phenotypic, functional, and transcriptomic levels. Tangier disease-IPSDM recapitulated hallmark features observed in HMDM and revealed novel inflammatory phenotypes. IPSDMs provide a powerful tool for study of macrophage-specific function in human genetic disorders as well as molecular studies of human macrophage activation and polarization.

GDF15 neutralization restores muscle function and physical performance in a mouse model of cancer cachexia
Cited by 92Open Access

Cancer cachexia is a disorder characterized by involuntary weight loss and impaired physical performance. Decline in physical performance of patients with cachexia is associated with poor quality of life, and currently there are no effective pharmacological interventions that restore physical performance. Here we examine the effect of GDF15 neutralization in a mouse model of cancer-induced cachexia (TOV21G) that manifests weight loss and muscle function impairments. With comprehensive assessments, our results demonstrate that cachectic mice treated with the anti-GDF15 antibody mAB2 exhibit body weight gain with near-complete restoration of muscle mass and markedly improved muscle function and physical performance. Mechanistically, the improvements induced by GDF15 neutralization are primarily attributed to increased caloric intake, while altered gene expression in cachectic muscles is restored in caloric-intake-dependent and -independent manners. The findings indicate potential of GDF15 neutralization as an effective therapy to enhance physical performance of patients with cachexia.