43 results on '"Enrico Caserta"'
Search Results
2. Leveraging IFNγ/CD38 regulation to unmask and target leukemia stem cells in acute myelogenous leukemia
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Mariam Murtadha, Miso Park, Yinghui Zhu, Enrico Caserta, Ada Alice Dona, Mahmoud Singer, Hawa Vahed, Theophilus Tasndoh, Asaul Gonzalez, Kevin Ly, James F Sanchez, Arnab Chowdhury, Alex Pozhitkov, Lucy Ghoda, Ling Li, Bin Zhang, Amrita Krishnan, Guido Marcucci, John Williams, and Flavia Pichiorri
- Abstract
Elimination of drug-resistant leukemia stem cells (LSCs) represents a major challenge to achieve a cure in acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Although AML blasts generally retain high levels of surface CD38 (CD38pos), the presence of CD34 and lack of CD38 expression (CD34posCD38neg) are immunophenotypic features of both LSC-enriched AML blasts and normal hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs). We report that IFN-γ induces CD38 upregulation in LSC-enriched CD34posCD38negAML blasts, but not in CD34posCD38negHSCs. To leverage the IFN-γ mediated CD38 up-regulation in LSCs for clinical application, we created a compact, single-chain CD38-CD3-T cell engager (CD38-BIONIC) able to direct T cells against CD38posblasts. Activated CD4posand CD8posT cells not only kill AML blasts but also produce IFNγ, which leads to CD38 expression on CD34posCD38negLSC-enriched blasts. These cells then become CD38-BIONIC targets. The net result is an immune-mediated killing of both CD38negand CD38posAML blasts, which culminates in LSC depletion.Statement of significanceThis work represents a potential advancement in the treatment of AML, as it involves the release of IFN-γ by T cells to induce CD38 expression and thus sensitizing leukemia stem cells, which have been resistant to current treatment regimens, to CD38-directed T cell engagers.
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- 2023
3. CD84 Is a Therapeutically Targetable Driver of Leukemogenesis Via Disruption of Energy Supply in Acute Myeloid Leukemia
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Yinghui Zhu, Miso Park, Mariam Murtadha, Enrico Caserta, Le Xuan Truong Nguyen, Mahmoud Singer, Marc Denisse Estepa, Lokesh Nigam, Ada Alice Dona', James F Sanchez, Theophilus Tandoh, Man Li, Bin Zhang, Ya-Huei Kuo, Guido Marcucci, John C Williams, and Flavia Pichiorri
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Immunology ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,Biochemistry - Published
- 2022
4. Sumoylation Inhibition Potentiates Daratumumab Activity Against Multiple Myeloma
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Li Du, Wei Liu, Enrico Caserta, Flavia Pichiorri, and Steve T Rosen
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Immunology ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,Biochemistry - Published
- 2022
5. Proteasome inhibition enhances myeloma oncolytic reovirus therapy by suppressing monocytic anti-viral immune responses
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Ada Alice Dona, Enrico Caserta, Mahmoud Singer, Theophilus Tandoh, Lokesh Nigam, Janet Winchester, Arnab Chowdhury, Yinghui Zhu, Mariam Murtadha, Alex Pozhitkov, James F Sanchez, Hawa Vahed, Matt Coffey, Guido Marcucci, Amrita Krishnan, Gerard Nuovo, Douglas W. Sborov, Craig C Hofmeister, and Flavia Pichiorri
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viruses ,virus diseases ,biochemical phenomena, metabolism, and nutrition - Abstract
Reovirus is an oncolytic virus with natural tropism for cancer cells. We previously showed that reovirus intravenous administration in myeloma patients was safe, but disease control associated with viral replication in the cancer cells was not observed. Here we show that ex vivo proteasome inhibitors (PIs) potentiate reovirus replication in circulating classical monocytes, increasing viral delivery to myeloma cells. We found that the anti-viral signals in monocytes primarily rely on the NF-kB activation and that this effect is impaired by the addition of PIs. Conversely, PIs improved reovirus-induced monocyte and T cell activation against cancer cells. Based on these preclinical data, we conducted a phase 1b trial of the reovirus Pelareorep together with the PI carfilzomib in 13 heavily pretreated bortezomib-resistant MM patients. Objective responses associated with reovirus active replication in MM cells, T cell activation and monocytic expansion were noted in 70% of patients.
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- 2022
6. A Mathematical Modeling Approach for Targeted Radionuclide and Chimeric Antigen Receptor-T Cell Combination Therapy
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John E. Shively, Megan Minnix, Alexander B Brummer, Amrita Krishnan, Xiuli Wang, Russell C. Rockne, Jeffrey Y.C. Wong, Flavia Pichiorri, Vikram Adhikarla, Enrico Caserta, and Dennis Awuah
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Cancer Research ,Combination therapy ,medicine.medical_treatment ,T cell ,Cell ,TRT ,actinium-225 ,Article ,combination therapy ,medicine ,Distribution (pharmacology) ,RC254-282 ,Multiple myeloma ,applied_mathematics ,business.industry ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,Daratumumab ,Immunotherapy ,daratumumab ,medicine.disease ,targeted radionuclide therapy ,Chimeric antigen receptor ,CAR-T ,multiple myeloma ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Oncology ,Cancer research ,immunotherapy ,CS1 ,alpha particle therapy ,business ,mathematical model - Abstract
Simple Summary Targeted radionuclide therapy (TRT) and immunotherapy, an example being chimeric antigen receptor T cells (CAR-Ts), represent two potent means of eradicating systemic cancers. Although each one as a monotherapy might have a limited effect, the potency can be increased with a combination of the two therapies. The complications involved in the dosing and scheduling of these therapies make the mathematical modeling of these therapies a suitable solution for designing combination treatment approaches. Here, we investigate a mathematical model for TRT and CAR-T cell combination therapies. Through an analysis of the mathematical model, we find that the tumor proliferation rate is the most important factor affecting the scheduling of TRT and CAR-T cell treatments with faster proliferating tumors requiring a shorter interval between the two therapies. Abstract Targeted radionuclide therapy (TRT) has recently seen a surge in popularity with the use of radionuclides conjugated to small molecules and antibodies. Similarly, immunotherapy also has shown promising results, an example being chimeric antigen receptor T cell (CAR-T) therapy in hematologic malignancies. Moreover, TRT and CAR-T therapies possess unique features that require special consideration when determining how to dose as well as the timing and sequence of combination treatments including the distribution of the TRT dose in the body, the decay rate of the radionuclide, and the proliferation and persistence of the CAR-T cells. These characteristics complicate the additive or synergistic effects of combination therapies and warrant a mathematical treatment that includes these dynamics in relation to the proliferation and clearance rates of the target tumor cells. Here, we combine two previously published mathematical models to explore the effects of dose, timing, and sequencing of TRT and CAR-T cell-based therapies in a multiple myeloma setting. We find that, for a fixed TRT and CAR-T cell dose, the tumor proliferation rate is the most important parameter in determining the best timing of TRT and CAR-T therapies.
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- 2021
7. Leflunomide regulates c-Myc expression in myeloma cells through PIM targeting
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Domenico Viola, Hongzhi Li, Xiwei Wu, Flavia Pichiorri, James F. Sanchez, Timothy W. Synold, Steven T. Rosen, Ralf Buettner, Michael Rosenzweig, Austin Christofferson, Amrita Krishnan, Jonathan J Keats, Alex E. Pozhitkov, Nagarajan Vaidehi, Estelle Troadec, Joycelynne Palmer, Jihane Khalife, Enrico Caserta, Guido Marcucci, Corey Morales, and Emine Gulsen Gunes
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Drug synergism ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-myc ,Mice ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-pim-1 ,In vivo ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Teriflunomide ,Tumor Cells, Cultured ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Enzyme Inhibitors ,Lenalidomide ,Active metabolite ,Leflunomide ,Drug Synergism ,Hematology ,Stimulus Report ,chemistry ,Pim kinases ,Cancer research ,Drug Therapy, Combination ,Multiple Myeloma ,Combination method ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Key Points Teriflunomide, the active metabolite of leflunomide, downregulates c-Myc expression through inhibition of PIM kinases. Leflunomide together with lenalidomide significantly extended survival in an in vivo MM model.
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- 2019
8. OAB-001: Potentiating T cell activity against multiple myeloma through SUMOylation inhibition
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Li Du, Dennis Awuah, Wei Liu, Enrico Caserta, Flavia Pichiorri, Xiuli Wang, and Steven Rosen
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Cancer Research ,Oncology ,Hematology - Published
- 2022
9. Abstract 2732: A mathematical model for optimization of combination therapy involving targeted radionuclide and CAR-T cell therapy
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Vikram Adhikarla, Dennis Awuah, Alexander B. Brummer, Enrico Caserta, Amrita Krishnan, Flavia Pichiorri, Megan M. Minnix, John E. Shively, Jeffrey Y.C. Wong, Xiuli Wang, and Russell C. Rockne
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Cancer Research ,Oncology - Abstract
Background: Immunotherapy with chimeric antigen receptor - T (CAR-T) cells and targeted radionuclide therapy (TRT) are two highly promising therapies in cancer treatment. Often, these therapies show limited efficacy in complete eradication of cancer cells making the combination of these two therapies an attractive cancer treatment option. The complications involved in dosing and scheduling of these therapies make mathematical modeling an appropriate method for analyzing and predicting disease response to these therapies. Here we propose a mathematical model evaluating disease response to the combination of these two therapies and explore the optimization of their dosing and scheduling. Methods: An ordinary differential equation-based formalism is proposed for simulation of tumor response to CAR-T cell therapy as well as TRT. CAR-T cell dose and injected radioactivity was input to the model. Among others, key model parameters included tumor proliferation rate, tumor cell and CAR-T cell radiosensitivity, CAR-T cell killing rate, CAR-T cell decay rate indicating persistence. Preclinical experiments involving CS1- CAR-T cell therapy and 225Ac-DOTA-Daratumumab TRT in a multiple myeloma mice model were used to parameterize the model. Sensitivity study of the model parameters using overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival (PFS) as evaluation metrics, was performed to elucidate the parameters with highest impact. Results: OS and PFS were 97 and 55 days when CAR-T cell therapy was given prior to TRT as compared to OS of 43 days for untreated control mice. Sensitivity study of model parameters showed that tumor proliferation has the highest impact on survival metrics. For a ±50% change in tumor proliferation rate, OS changed by -41%/+111% and PFS changed by -62%/+147%. Similar changes in TRT injected activity and CAR-T cell dose changed OS by ± 15% and ±21% respectively. Accordingly, PFS changed by roughly ±32% and ±45% respectively. A variation of the interval between the therapies showed that faster growing tumors required a shorter interval between the two therapies. The sequence of therapies was also changed and TRT prior to CAR-T cell therapy demonstrated shorter PFS (43 days) due to the adverse effects of radiation on CAR-T cells. Conclusion: For a fixed dose of TRT and CAR-T cells, tumor proliferation rate was found to be the prime factor impacting therapy interval. The presented work shows the key parameters required for planning and optimizing preclinical experiments and clinical trials. Using disease, CAR-T cell and radionuclide-specific parameters as shown in this work as well as incorporating immune stimulating effects of radiation would make it an extremely potent tool for optimizing combination therapies. Citation Format: Vikram Adhikarla, Dennis Awuah, Alexander B. Brummer, Enrico Caserta, Amrita Krishnan, Flavia Pichiorri, Megan M. Minnix, John E. Shively, Jeffrey Y.C. Wong, Xiuli Wang, Russell C. Rockne. A mathematical model for optimization of combination therapy involving targeted radionuclide and CAR-T cell therapy [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2022; 2022 Apr 8-13. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2022;82(12_Suppl):Abstract nr 2732.
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- 2022
10. Comparison of CD38-Targeted α- Versus β-Radionuclide Therapy of Disseminated Multiple Myeloma in an Animal Model
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Megan Minnix, Enrico Caserta, John E. Shively, Russell C. Rockne, Flavia Pichiorri, Vikram Adhikarla, and Erasmus Poku
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0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.drug_class ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Alpha (ethology) ,Pharmacology ,Monoclonal antibody ,Basic Science Investigation ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,Cell Line, Tumor ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Molecular Targeted Therapy ,Multiple myeloma ,Hematology ,business.industry ,Daratumumab ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,Radioimmunotherapy ,medicine.disease ,ADP-ribosyl Cyclase 1 ,Beta Particles ,Disease Models, Animal ,030104 developmental biology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Radionuclide therapy ,Toxicity ,Safety ,business ,Multiple Myeloma - Abstract
Targeted therapies for multiple myeloma (MM) include the anti-CD38 antibody daratumumab, which, in addition to its inherent cytotoxicity, can be radiolabeled with tracers for imaging and with β- and α-emitter radionuclides for radioimmunotherapy. Methods: We have compared the potential therapeutic efficacy of β- versus α-emitter radioimmunotherapy using radiolabeled DOTA-daratumumab in a preclinical model of disseminated multiple myeloma. Multiple dose levels were investigated to find the dose with the highest efficacy and lowest toxicity. Results: In a dose–response study with the β-emitter (177)Lu-DOTA-daratumumab, the lowest tested dose, 1.85 MBq, extended survival from 37 to 47 d but did not delay tumor growth. Doses of 3.7 and 7.4 MBq extended survival to 55 and 58 d, respectively, causing a small equivalent delay in tumor growth, followed by regrowth. The higher dose, 11.1 MBq, eradicated the tumor but had no effect on survival compared with untreated controls, because of whole-body toxicity. In contrast, the α-emitter (225)Ac-DOTA-daratumumab had a dose-dependent effect, in which 0.925, 1.85, and 3.7 kBq increased survival, compared with untreated controls (35 d), to 47, 52, and 73 d, respectively, with a significant delay in tumor growth for all 3 doses. Higher doses of 11.1 and 22.2 kBq resulted in equivalent survival to 82 d but with significant whole-body toxicity. Parallel studies with untargeted (225)Ac-DOTA-trastuzumab conferred no improvement over untreated controls and resulted in whole-body toxicity. Conclusion: We conclude, and mathematic modeling confirms, that maximal biologic doses were achieved by targeted α-therapy and demonstrated (225)Ac to be superior to (177)Lu in delaying tumor growth and decreasing whole-body toxicity.
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- 2020
11. Identifying CD38+ cells in patients with multiple myeloma: first-in-human imaging using copper-64-labeled daratumumab
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Van Eric Biglang-awa, Jeffrey Y.C. Wong, Nitya Nathwani, Flavia Pichiorri, Stephen J. Forman, Michael Rosenzweig, Arnab Chowdhury, Dave Yamauchi, Chatchada Karanes, Guido Marcucci, Russell Rockne, Paul J. Yazaki, Amrita Krishnan, Joycelynne M. Palmer, Anna M. Wu, Nicole Bowles, Enrico Caserta, David Colcher, Erasmus Poku, Vikram Adhikarla, Maria Parayno, Ammar Chaudhry, John E. Shively, Jennifer Simpson, James F. Sanchez, and Firoozeh Sahebi
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medicine.diagnostic_test ,Immunobiology and Immunotherapy ,business.industry ,Daratumumab ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,Hematology ,CD38 ,medicine.disease ,ADP-ribosyl Cyclase 1 ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Text mining ,chemistry ,Copper Radioisotopes ,Positron emission tomography ,In vivo ,Positron Emission Tomography Computed Tomography ,medicine ,DOTA ,Humans ,Copper-64 ,Nuclear medicine ,business ,Multiple Myeloma ,Multiple myeloma - Abstract
18F-Fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) is one of the most widely used imaging techniques to detect multiple myeloma (MM). Intracellular FDG uptake depicts in vivo metabolic activity, which can be seen in both malignant and nonmalignant cells, resulting in limited sensitivity and specificity. Our group showed preclinically that tracing MM dissemination using a CD38-directed human antibody, daratumumab, that is radioconjugated with 64Cu via the chelator DOTA (64Cu-daratumumab), led to improved sensitivity and specificity over that of FDG. Here, we report the results of a phase 1 trial designed to (1) assess the safety and feasibility of 64Cu-daratumumab PET/CT and (2) preliminarily evaluate and characterize the ability of 64Cu-daratumumab to accurately detect or exclude MM lesions. A total of 12 daratumumab-naive patients were imaged. Prior to the injection of 15 mCi/5 mg of 64Cu-daratumumab, patients were treated with 0 (n = 3), 10 (n = 3), 45 (n = 3), or 95 mg (n = 3) of unlabeled daratumumab to assess its effect on image quality. No significant adverse events were observed from either unlabeled daratumumab or 64Cu-daratumumab. Of the dose levels tested, 45 mg unlabeled daratumumab was the most optimal in terms of removing background signal without saturating target sites. 64Cu-daratumumab PET/CT provided safe whole-body imaging of MM. A trial comparing the sensitivity and specificity of 64Cu-daratumumab PET/CT with that of FDG PET/CT is planned. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT03311828.
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- 2020
12. Disparate Phenotypes Resulting from Mutations of a Single Histidine in Switch II of
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Jerneja, Tomsic, Arianna, Smorlesi, Enrico, Caserta, Anna Maria, Giuliodori, Cynthia L, Pon, and Claudio O, Gualerzi
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RNA, Transfer, Met ,protein synthesis ,GTP hydrolysis ,translation initiation ,Article ,GTP Phosphohydrolases ,Geobacillus stearothermophilus ,Phenotype ,Amino Acid Substitution ,Bacterial Proteins ,Protein Domains ,Peptide Initiation Factors ,Protein Biosynthesis ,Mutation ,switch II mutations ,Histidine ,Guanosine Triphosphate ,IF2 structure ,IF2 recycling ,Ribosomes - Abstract
The conserved Histidine 301 in switch II of Geobacillus stearothermophilus IF2 G2 domain was substituted with Ser, Gln, Arg, Leu and Tyr to generate mutants displaying different phenotypes. Overexpression of IF2H301S, IF2H301L and IF2H301Y in cells expressing wtIF2, unlike IF2H301Q and IF2H301R, caused a dominant lethal phenotype, inhibiting in vivo translation and drastically reducing cell viability. All mutants bound GTP but, except for IF2H301Q, were inactive in ribosome-dependent GTPase for different reasons. All mutants promoted 30S initiation complex (30S IC) formation with wild type (wt) efficiency but upon 30S IC association with the 50S subunit, the fMet-tRNA reacted with puromycin to different extents depending upon the IF2 mutant present in the complex (wtIF2 ≥ to IF2H301Q > IF2H301R >>> IF2H301S, IF2H301L and IF2H301Y) whereas only fMet-tRNA 30S-bound with IF2H301Q retained some ability to form initiation dipeptide fMet-Phe. Unlike wtIF2, all mutants, regardless of their ability to hydrolyze GTP, displayed higher affinity for the ribosome and failed to dissociate from the ribosomes upon 50S docking to 30S IC. We conclude that different amino acids substitutions of His301 cause different structural alterations of the factor, resulting in disparate phenotypes with no direct correlation existing between GTPase inactivation and IF2 failure to dissociate from ribosomes.
- Published
- 2019
13. OM301, a Synthetic Polypeptide Containing the p53TA (Transactivation) Domain, Impairs Mitochondrial Activity and Survival of Myeloma Cells
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Ada Dona, Flavia Pichiorri, Amrita Krishnan, Lokesh Nigam, Yinghui Zhu, Guido Marcucci, Le Xuan Truong Nguyen, Estelle Troadec, James F. Sanchez, and Enrico Caserta
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Transactivation ,Chemistry ,Immunology ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,Biochemistry ,Cell biology - Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Although the treatment of patients with multiple myeloma (MM) has dramatically improved, those with high-risk characteristics, including the deletion or mutation of the master tumor suppressor gene TP53 on chromosome 17, experience limited survival. OM301 is a synthetic polypeptide containing the p53TA (transactivation) domain, which prevents p53 degradation through inhibition of MDM2. Here, we demonstrate that OM301 has strong anti-MM activity in vitro and in vivo. RESULTS: We first assessed the cytotoxic effects of OM301 in MM cell lines with varying TP53 status (TP53 wild type: MM.1S, H929; TP53 mutated/null: L363, RPMI-8226, U266, JJN3, KMS11) and found that OM301 exerts significant cytotoxic effects at a concentration of ~5 µM in all cell lines we tested, while it was minimally toxic to human peripheral blood mononuclear cells. Next, using immunocompromised NSG mice models injected with MM.1S, we determined the in vivo efficacy of OM301 in three different studies. Many potent anticancer agents, particularly of peptide origin, show prominent anti-tumor effects but fail to sustain similar effects when given intraperitoneally because of poor absorption, distribution, metabolism and excretion properties. OM301 at an intraperitoneal dose of 20 mg/kg/body weight twice a day induced significant reduction in tumor size with respect to vehicle control, suggesting the stability of OM301 without any loss of its activity (n=7, p Because OM301 was designed to simulate the p53 interaction domain with MDM2, we first determined its effect on p53-MDM2 crosstalk using a p53-MDM2 co-Immunoprecipitation (co-IP) assay and compared it with effects from Nutlin-3a, a known inhibitor of p53-MDM2. The co-IP data showed that, unlike Nutlin-3a, OM301 does not inhibit the p53-MDM2 interaction. Thus, to confirm our findings, we first overexpressed MDM2 in HeLa cells, and, using MDM2-IP and p53-MDM2 co-IP, found similar observations. Additionally, OM301 also failed to induce endogenous upregulation of genes activated by p53, such as MDM2 and p21, as opposed to results from Nutlin-3a. RNA sequencing data also showed a distinctive OM301signature, as compared to Nutlin-3a in MM cells. While treatment of Nutlin-3a induced expression of p53-activated canonical genes, OM301-treated cells showed alterations in genes involved in inflammatory responses, c-Myc regulated genes, fatty acid metabolism, glucose metabolism, and oxidative phosphorylation, among others. Next, to dissect its underlying mechanism, we dual-tagged OM301 with fluorophores at the 3' and 5' ends to study its localization and its stability in MM cells. Indeed, OM301 was found to be stable and mainly localized in the cytosol. We then modified OM301 by biotinylation of its penetratin end and first verified its cytotoxic effect in different MM cell lines, which was similar to that of native OM301. The biotinylated OM301 was then immunoprecipitated using streptavidin beads. The streptavidin pull-down and subsequent proteomic analysis confirmed that OM301 does not interact with MDM2 but interacts with c-Myc and with proteins localized in mitochondria, including Bcl-2 and Bcl-2 family members such as Bclaf1, Bcl2L13, and Bcl2L1. Pull-down experiments and immunoblot analysis validated Bcl-2/OM301 interactions. To further evaluate the relative binding potentials of OM301, we performed molecular docking studies using the HPEPDOCK server (Yan et al., Nat Protoc. 2020;15:1829). Post-docking, the calculated docking scores for OM301 was -281, suggesting that OM301directly interacts with Bcl-2. Thus, we evaluated the effects of OM301 on mitochondrial function and physiology. Treatment with OM301 decreased mitochondrial membrane potential in different MM cell lines. OM301 also increased mitochondrial superoxide production and induced mitophagy and mitochondrial fission as seen by electron microscopy. CONCLUSION: Here, we report for the first time that OM301, although designed for p53-selective cells, may instead interact with Bcl-2, which in turn induces mitochondrial dysfunction, leading to cell death irrespective of their TP53 status. Our data suggest that OM301 may be a novel and effective therapeutic option for MM. Figure 1 Figure 1. Disclosures Krishnan: REGENERON: Consultancy; MAGENTA: Consultancy; BMS: Consultancy, Current equity holder in publicly-traded company, Speakers Bureau; JANSSEN: Consultancy, Research Funding; City of Hope Cancer Center: Current Employment; SANOFI: Consultancy; GSK: Consultancy; Amgen: Speakers Bureau. Marcucci: Novartis: Other: Speaker and advisory scientific board meetings; Agios: Other: Speaker and advisory scientific board meetings; Abbvie: Other: Speaker and advisory scientific board meetings.
- Published
- 2021
14. Daratumumab induces mechanisms of immune activation through CD38+ NK cell targeting
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Marianna Martella, Chatchada Karanes, Enrico Caserta, Myo Htut, Flavia Pichiorri, Jonathan J Keats, Jihane Khalife, Arnab Chowdhury, Stephen J. Forman, Michael Rosenzweig, Xiuli Wang, Tinisha McDonald, Estelle Troadec, Craig C. Hofmeister, Steven T. Rosen, Paul J. Yazaki, Guido Marcucci, James F. Sanchez, Todd Ebner, Rodney R. Miles, Francesca Besi, Emine Gulsen Gunes, Amrita Krishnan, Lucy Ghoda, Ada Dona, Douglas W. Sborov, John E. Shively, and Domenico Viola
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Cytotoxicity, Immunologic ,Cancer Research ,Population ,Priming (immunology) ,Protein degradation ,CD38 ,Lymphocyte Activation ,Article ,Immunophenotyping ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Immune system ,Antineoplastic Agents, Immunological ,medicine ,Humans ,education ,CD86 ,education.field_of_study ,biology ,Chemistry ,Monocyte ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,Hematology ,ADP-ribosyl Cyclase 1 ,Killer Cells, Natural ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Proteolysis ,Cancer research ,biology.protein ,Antibody ,Multiple Myeloma ,030215 immunology - Abstract
Daratumumab (Dara), a multiple myeloma (MM) therapy, is an antibody against the surface receptor CD38, which is expressed not only on plasma cells but also on NK cells and monocytes. Correlative data have highlighted the immune-modulatory role of Dara, despite the paradoxical observation that Dara regimens decrease the frequency of total NK cells. Here we show that, despite this reduction, NK cells play a pivotal role in Dara anti-MM activity. CD38 on NK cells is essential for Dara-induced immune modulation, and its expression is restricted to NK cells with effector function. We also show that Dara induces rapid CD38 protein degradation associated with NK cell activation, leaving an activated CD38-negative NK cell population. CD38+ NK cell targeting by Dara also promotes monocyte activation, inducing an increase in T-cell costimulatory molecules (CD86/80) and enhancing anti-MM phagocytosis activity ex vivo and in vivo. In support of Dara's immunomodulating role, we show that MM patients that discontinued Dara therapy because of progression maintain targetable unmutated surface CD38 expression on their MM cells, but retain effector cells with impaired cellular immune function. In summary, we report that CD38+ NK cells may be an unexplored therapeutic target for priming the immune system of MM patients.
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- 2019
15. CD84: A Potential Novel Therapeutic Target in the Multiple Myeloma Microenvironment
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James F. Sanchez, Enrico Caserta, Jonathan J. Keats, Guido Marcucci, Ralf Buettner, Idit Shachar, Hadas Lewinsky, Myo Htut, Flavia Pichiorri, Domenico Viola, Michael Rosenzweig, Emine Gulsen Gunes, and Steven D. Rosen
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Cancer Research ,Oncology ,business.industry ,Cancer research ,Medicine ,Hematology ,business ,medicine.disease ,Multiple myeloma - Published
- 2019
16. Codon-Anticodon Recognition in the Bacillus subtilis glyQS T Box Riboswitch
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Tina M. Henkin, Liang-Chun Liu, Enrico Caserta, and Frank J. Grundy
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Riboswitch ,Genetics ,Antitermination ,Transfer RNA ,RNA ,Translation (biology) ,Cell Biology ,T arm ,Biology ,Molecular Biology ,Biochemistry ,TRNA binding ,Ribosome - Abstract
Many amino acid-related genes in Gram-positive bacteria are regulated by the T box riboswitch. The leader RNA of genes in the T box family controls the expression of downstream genes by monitoring the aminoacylation status of the cognate tRNA. Previous studies identified a three-nucleotide codon, termed the "Specifier Sequence," in the riboswitch that corresponds to the amino acid identity of the downstream genes. Pairing of the Specifier Sequence with the anticodon of the cognate tRNA is the primary determinant of specific tRNA recognition. This interaction mimics codon-anticodon pairing in translation but occurs in the absence of the ribosome. The goal of the current study was to determine the effect of a full range of mismatches for comparison with codon recognition in translation. Mutations were individually introduced into the Specifier Sequence of the glyQS leader RNA and tRNA(Gly) anticodon to test the effect of all possible pairing combinations on tRNA binding affinity and antitermination efficiency. The functional role of the conserved purine 3' of the Specifier Sequence was also verifiedin this study. We found that substitutions at the Specifier Sequence resulted in reduced binding, the magnitude of which correlates well with the predicted stability of the RNA-RNA pairing. However, the tolerance for specific mismatches in antitermination was generally different from that during decoding, which reveals a unique tRNA recognition pattern in the T box antitermination system.
- Published
- 2015
17. Importin-β and exportin-5 are strong biomarkers of productive reoviral infection of cancer cells
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Qiao Shi, Paolo Fadda, Don Morris, P. Leif Bergsagel, Matthew C. Coffey, Andres Gutierrez, Flavia Pichiorri, Chandini M. Thirukkumaran, Marta Chesi, Gerard J. Nuovo, Enrico Caserta, Hue Tran, and Craig C. Hofmeister
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0301 basic medicine ,Caspase 3 ,Biology ,Karyopherins ,Virus ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,03 medical and health sciences ,Mice ,Cell Line, Tumor ,Animals ,MCL1 ,Oncolytic Virotherapy ,General Medicine ,beta Karyopherins ,Molecular biology ,Oncolytic virus ,Reoviridae Infections ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Oncolytic Viruses ,030104 developmental biology ,Capsid ,Cell culture ,Cancer cell ,Beta Karyopherins ,Multiple Myeloma ,Biomarkers - Abstract
Acute reoviral infection has been extensively studied given the virus's propensity to target malignant cells and activate caspase-3 mediated apoptosis. Reovirus infection of malignant N1E-115 mouse neuroblastoma cells led to significant increased expression of importin-β and exportin-5 mRNAs (qRTPCR) and proteins (immunohistochemistry) which was partially blocked by small interfering LNA oligomers directed against the reoviral genome. Co-expression analysis showed that the N1E-115 cells that contained reoviral capsid protein had accumulated importin-β and exportin-5, as well as activated caspase 3. Reoviral oncolysis using a syngeneic mouse model of multiple myeloma similarly induced a significant increase in importin-β and exportin-5 proteins that were co-expressed with reoviral capsid protein and caspase-3. Apoptotic proteins (BAD, BIM, PUMA, NOXA, BAK, BAX) were increased with infection and co-localized with reoviral capsid protein. Surprisingly the anti-apoptotic MCL1 and bcl2 were also increased and co-localized with the capsid protein suggesting that it was the balance of pro-apoptotic molecules that correlated with activation of caspase-3. In summary, productive reoviral infection is strongly correlated with elevated importin-β and exportin-5 levels which may serve as biomarkers of the disease in clinical specimens.
- Published
- 2017
18. Reolysin and Histone Deacetylase Inhibition in the Treatment of Head and Neck Squamous Cell Carcinoma
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Quintin Pan, John H. Lee, Alena Cristina Jaime-Ramirez, Theodoros N. Teknos, Bhavna Kumar, Enrico Caserta, Flavia Pichiorri, Robert A. Baiocchi, Jianying Zhang, Tae Jin Lee, Pawan Kumar, Jun Ge Yu, Ji Young Yoo, Craig C. Hofmeister, Balveen Kaur, and Matthew O. Old
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0301 basic medicine ,Cancer Research ,Combination therapy ,Cell ,oncolytics ,Biology ,reovirus ,lcsh:RC254-282 ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Reolysin ,medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Vorinostat ,Head and neck cancer ,lcsh:Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,medicine.disease ,Head and neck squamous-cell carcinoma ,Virology ,immune impact ,3. Good health ,Oncolytic virus ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Cancer research ,Molecular Medicine ,Original Article ,head and neck cancer ,Histone deacetylase ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Oncolytic viruses (OVs) are emerging as powerful anti-cancer agents and are currently being tested for their safety and efficacy in patients. Reovirus (Reolysin), a naturally occurring non-pathogenic, double-stranded RNA virus, has natural oncolytic activity and is being tested in phase I–III clinical trials in a variety of tumor types. With its recent US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) orphan drug designation for several tumor types, Reolysin is a potential therapeutic agent for various cancers, including head and neck squamous cell carcinomas (HNSCCs), which have a 5-year survival of ∼55%. Histone deacetylase inhibitors (HDACis) comprise a structurally diverse class of compounds with targeted anti-cancer effects. The first FDA-approved HDACi, vorinostat (suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid [SAHA]), is currently being tested in patients with head and neck cancer. Recent findings indicate that HDAC inhibition in myeloma cells results in the upregulation of the Reolysin entry receptor, junctional adhesion molecule 1 (JAM-1), facilitating reovirus infection and tumor cell killing both in vitro and in vivo. In this study, we tested the anti-tumor efficacy of HDAC inhibitors AR-42 or SAHA in conjunction with Reolysin in HNSCCs. While HDAC inhibition increased JAM-1 and reovirus entry, the impact of this combination therapy was tested on the development of anti-tumor immune responses.
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- 2017
19. First-in-Human Imaging of Multiple Myeloma Using Copper-64-Labeled Daratumumab: Preliminary Results
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Stephen J. Forman, Arnab Chowdhury, John E. Shively, Michael Rosenzweig, Vikram Adhikarla, Joycelynne Palmer, Erasmus Poku, Amrita Krishnan, Firoozeh Sahebi, Maria Parayno, David Colcher, Chatchada Karanes, Van Eric Biglang-awa, James F. Sanchez, Anna M. Wu, Jennifer Simpson, Enrico Caserta, David Yamauchi, Flavia Pichiorri, Nicole Bowles, Paul J. Yazaki, Nitya Nathwani, and Ammar Chaudhry
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business.industry ,Immunology ,Whole body imaging ,Daratumumab ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,First in human ,medicine.disease ,Biochemistry ,medicine ,Medical imaging ,Plasmacytoma ,Copper-64 ,Nuclear medicine ,business ,neoplasms ,Multiple myeloma ,Minimal cognitive impairment - Abstract
Introduction: 18Fluoro-deoxyglucose (FDG) positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) is one of the most widely used imaging techniques to detect multiple myeloma (MM). Intracellular FDG uptake depicts in vivo metabolic activity, which can be seen in both malignant and non-malignant cells, resulting in limited sensitivity and specificity. Our group showed preclinically that tracing MM dissemination using a CD38-directed human antibody, daratumumab, that is radioconjugated with copper-64 via the chelator DOTA (64Cu-DOTA-Dara), led to improved sensitivity and specificity over that of FDG (Caserta et al, Blood 2018). Herein, we report the results of a Phase 1 trial (NCT#03311828) designed to 1) assess the safety and feasibility of 64Cu-DOTA-Dara PET/CT and 2) to evaluate and characterize the ability of 64Cu-DOTA-Dara to accurately detect or exclude MM lesions compared with FDG PET/CT. Methods: Patients with biopsy-proven MM and/or a plasmacytoma received an FDG PET/CT scan within 60 days of enrollment. On Day 0, patients were infused with unlabeled ("cold") Dara at one of four dose levels (0 mg, 10 mg, 45 mg, 95 mg) to optimize biodistribution of radioconjugated 64Cu-DOTA-Dara, especially in the liver and the spleen. Within 6 hours of unlabeled Dara administration, patients received 64Cu-DOTA-Dara at a dose of 13.63-16.68 mCi (~5 mg). Whole-body PET scans were obtained at 24 hours and at 48 hours (the latter scan encompassing known tumors). 64Cu-DOTA-Dara standardized uptake values (SUV) were evaluated in MM lesions and normal organs, which were then compared with values from standard FDG PET/CT. Biopsies were performed on accessible discordant lesions. Results: A total of 10 Dara-naïve patients were imaged. Patients were treated with 0 (n=3), 10 (n=3), 45 (n=3), or 95 mg (n=1) of unlabeled Dara. Four patients had newly diagnosed disease, one had biochemical relapse, one had a recurrent plasmacytoma by MRI, and four had possible recurrence by standard PET/CT. No significant adverse events were observed from either cold or 64Cu-DOTA-Dara. With the exception of the one patient with a recurrent plasmacytoma, radiolabeled antibody was eliminated from systemic circulation in subjects analyzed at the first three dose levels within 30 min post injection. In the patient with a recurrent plasmacytoma, the radiolabeled antibody was elevated in the blood for over two days. One newly diagnosed patient had extensive disease by FDG PET and had a biopsy-proven target lesion in the sternum, which had an SUVmax of 14.7 on 64Cu-DOTA-Dara PET/CT vs. 3.3 onFDG PET/CT. A second biopsy from the same patient was taken from a discordant iliac crest lesion (positive for 64Cu-DOTA-Dara but negative for FDG PET/CT) that showed 20-30% MM cell infiltration. In another patient, an iliac crest lesion was 64Cu-DOTA-Dara positive and FDG-negative; biopsy revealed 6% plasmacytosis in the bone. A third patient had an FDG PET/CT positive pleural lesion with an SUVmax of 8.98 and negative on 64Cu-DOTA-Dara (Figure 1A). The lesion did not show recurrence upon biopsy. Furthermore, 64Cu-DOTA-Dara PET/CT yielded superior imaging of bone lesions in the calvarium (Figure 1B). Escalating doses of unlabeled Dara decreased liver and spleen uptake by 64Cu-DOTA-Dara. Conclusions: In this ongoing study, 64Cu-DOTA-Dara PET/CT imaging is to date safe and provides whole body imaging of MM. Further dose escalation of cold Dara (145 mg, 195 mg) is planned to optimize background interference. This modality has the potential to improve sensitivity and specificity over FDG PET/CT scanning in early-stage MM as well as in recurrent disease. Disclosures Krishnan: Celgene, Janssen, Sanofi, BMS: Consultancy; Sutro BioPharma, zPredicta: Consultancy; Amgen, Takeda: Speakers Bureau; Celgene, Z Predicta: Other: Stock Ownership; Takeda: Research Funding. Palmer:Gilead Sciences: Consultancy. Rosenzweig:Celgene, Takeda: Speakers Bureau. Wu:ImaginAb, Inc.: Consultancy, Other: Board Member.
- Published
- 2019
20. Proteasome Inhibitors Impair the Innate Antiviral Immune Response and Potentiate Pelareorep-Based Viral Therapy in Multiple Myeloma
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Amrita Krishnan, Matthew C. Coffey, James F. Sanchez, Ada Dona, Douglas W. Sborov, Flavia Pichiorri, Francesca Besi, Craig C. Hofmeister, Jonathan J Keats, Guido Marcucci, Gerard J. Nuovo, Enrico Caserta, and Domenico Viola
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Bortezomib ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Immunology ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,medicine.disease ,Biochemistry ,Carfilzomib ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Immune system ,Cytokine ,Proteasome ,chemistry ,Cell culture ,medicine ,Cancer research ,Bone marrow ,business ,Multiple myeloma ,medicine.drug - Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Pelareorep is the infusible form of human reovirus (RV). Our single-agent phase 1 RV trial in relapsed multiple myeloma (MM) showed that pelareorep treatment selectively infected MM cells, as viral RNA was found in myeloma cells and not the bone marrow (BM) stroma. However, we did not observe apoptosis. Our ongoing phase 1 trial, which combines the proteasome inhibitor carfilzomib with RV, has demonstrated RV infection, apoptosis, and clinical responses. We investigated the molecular mechanisms behind the role of a PI (carfilzomib) in this setting. RESULTS: In all MM cell lines we tested (n=4), independently from their sensitivity to RV infection (Stiff et al., Mol Cancer Ther, 2016), viral replication and apoptosis was impaired when MM cells were directly exposed to PIs (carfilzomib and bortezomib). When this experiment was repeated in the setting of the bone marrow cellular fraction or peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs), it had the opposite effect, as the addition of PI to RV increased RV replication and apoptosis in MM cells. When we washed PBMCs after overnight exposure to RV+PI or to either single agent, then added MM cells, we observed higher infection and apoptosis in cancer cells co-cultured with RV+PI compared to levels from PBMCs treated with each of the single agents, suggesting that PIs increase the ability of PBMCs to serve as a reservoir for infectious reovirus. Monocytes (CD14+) can engage in phagocytosis of reovirus (Berkeley et al., Cancer Immunol Res, 2018), and accordingly we found that RV genome and capsid protein production were detected in CD14+ cells, but not in CD14-depleted PBMCs, and increased upon PI treatment compared to that in RV-treated CD14+ cells. Given that the NF-κB complex is a key proinflammatory signaling pathway associated with the early innate-antiviral immune response, and because PIs can block the degradation of the NF-κB inhibitor IκBα upon phosphorylation, we investigated the effect of the specific IκBα inhibitor Bay-11 in RV viral replication. Our data show that either PI or Bay-11 can inhibit RV-induced IκBα phosphorylation and its subsequent degradation upon RV infection in CD14+ cells, an effect associated with higher capsid formation in RV-treated CD14+ cells in combination with PI or Bay-11, compared to levels from RV alone. Cytokine profiling in PBMCs and CD14+ cells treated with RV in combination with either PI or Bay-11 showed a significant decrease in IFN-α and IFN-β (IFNs) levels and a concomitant increase in RV replication, in contrast to levels from RV alone (p We then decided to investigate whether CD14 depletion could affect RV delivery to the cancer cells invivo. Upon intra-femoral injection of 5TGM1 MM cells into syngeneic C57BL/KaLwRij mice, the mice in which the monocytes were depleted by clodronate-liposome treatment before intravenous RV injection showed lower capsid protein formation in the BM MM cells compared to that in mice where the monocytic population was intact. Because monocytes respond to infection by dividing into macrophages to eliminate pathogens, we wanted to investigate whether PI could impair this effect. Intriguingly, although higher levels of viral genome were detected in PI+RV-treated CD14+ cells compared to RV-treated cells (p CONCLUSIONS: Here we report for the first time that PIs enhance pelareorep entry, infection, and killing of myeloma cells through its effect on the CD14+ fraction. Reovirus infection and replication within CD14+ cells are augmented by PI-induced NF-κB inhibition of the early innate pro-inflammatory immune response. We also report for the first time that carfilzomib induces direct T cell activation and potentiates T cell killing activity against RV-infected MM cells. Disclosures Krishnan: Takeda: Research Funding; Celgene, Z Predicta: Other: Stock Ownership; Amgen, Takeda: Speakers Bureau; Sutro BioPharma, zPredicta: Consultancy; Celgene, Janssen, Sanofi, BMS: Consultancy. Sborov:Celgene: Honoraria; Janssen: Consultancy. Hofmeister:Nektar: Honoraria, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Karyopharm: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Imbrium: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Celgene: Honoraria; Janssen: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Oncopeptides: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees.
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- 2019
21. In Vivo and In Vitro Analyses of Regulation of the Pheromone-Responsive prgQ Promoter by the PrgX Pheromone Receptor Protein
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Jerneja Tomsic, Enrico Caserta, Gary M. Dunny, Heather A. H. Haemig, Tina M. Henkin, Dawn A. Manias, and Frank J. Grundy
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Genetics ,Transcription, Genetic ,Operon ,Electrophoretic Mobility Shift Assay ,Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial ,Articles ,Protein Sorting Signals ,Biology ,Microbiology ,Pheromones ,Receptors, Pheromone ,DNA binding site ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Plasmid ,Bacterial Proteins ,chemistry ,Transcription (biology) ,Conjugation, Genetic ,Enterococcus faecalis ,Transcriptional regulation ,Binding site ,Promoter Regions, Genetic ,Molecular Biology ,Psychological repression ,DNA - Abstract
Expression of conjugative transfer and virulence functions of the Enterococcus faecalis antibiotic resistance plasmid pCF10 is regulated by the interaction of the pheromone receptor protein PrgX with two DNA binding operator sites (XBS1 and XBS2) upstream from the transcription start site of the prgQ operon (encoding the pCF10 transfer machinery) and by posttranscriptional mechanisms. Occupancy of both binding sites by PrgX dimers results in repression of the prgQ promoter. Structural and genetic studies suggest that the peptide pheromone cCF10 functions by binding to PrgX and altering its oligomerization state, resulting in reduced occupancy of XBSs and increased prgQ transcription. The DNA binding activity of PrgX has additional indirect regulatory effects on prgQ transcript levels related to the position of the convergently transcribed prgX operon. This has complicated interpretation of previous analyses of the control of prgQ expression by PrgX. We report here the results of in vivo and in vitro experiments examining the direct effects of PrgX on transcription from the prgQ promoter, as well as quantitative correlation between the concentrations of XBSs, PrgX protein, and prgQ promoter activity in vivo . The results of electrophoretic mobility shift assays and quantitative analysis of prgQ transcription in vitro and in vivo support the predicted roles of the PrgX DNA binding sites in prgQ transcription regulation. The results also suggest the existence of other factors that impede PrgX repression or enhance its antagonism by cCF10 in vivo .
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- 2012
22. CD84: A Potential Novel Therapeutic Target in Multiple Myeloma
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Emine Gulsen Gunes, Domenico Viola, Flavia Pichiorri, Jonathan J Keats, Amrita Krishnan, Idit Shachar, Ralf Buettner, Steven T. Rosen, Hadas Lewinsky, Enrico Caserta, Myo Htut, James F. Sanchez, Michael Rosenzweig, and Guido Marcucci
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Cell type ,education.field_of_study ,Myeloid ,Chemistry ,T cell ,Immunology ,Population ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,Biochemistry ,Molecular biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cell culture ,Myeloid-derived Suppressor Cell ,medicine ,Bone marrow ,Receptor ,education - Abstract
Introduction: Multiple Myeloma (MM) cell survival strictly depends on the interaction with multiple cell types in the bone marrow (BM), collectively referred to as the MM microenvironment (MM-ME). CD84 (SLAMF5) belongs to the signaling lymphocyte activation molecule family of immunoreceptors; previous data from our group have shown that CD84 mediates malignant B cells and their ME (Marom et al. 2017); however, its role within the MM-ME has not yet been investigated. Results: Using the MMRF CoMMpass IA9 dataset, we found that CD84 mRNA expression is low or absent in CD138+MM cells isolated from 660 newly diagnosed patients. In agreement with these data, flow analysis showed an absence of CD84 expression in all MM cell lines tested (n=9) and minimal surface expression (5.5-13%) in primary cells (n=3). However, a significantly higher expression of CD84 was detected on the surface of BM and peripheral blood (PB) monocytic fractions (CD14+) (76-97%) compared to that of matched CD14 negative fractions (2-9%) obtained from 16 different MM patients (p Next, to understand whether the expansion of Mo-MDSC and associated CD84 up-regulation is directly dependent on the MM cells, we investigated Mo-MDSC expansion and CD84 expression in two different MM mouse models. Specifically, 5TGM1 murine MM cells were IV injected into syngeneic immune-competent KaLwRijHsd mice (n=7), and human MM.1S cells were IV injected into immune-deficient NSG mice (n=10). Our data show that MM progression leads to significant Mo-MDSC expansion (p Since T cell checkpoint inhibitors PD-1/PD-L1 are tumor immune escape receptors that play a pivotal role in supporting an immunosuppressive MM-ME, we also investigated the expression of PD-L1 on the CD14+ fraction in MM patients. BM-CD14+ cells (n=3) were compared with matched CD14 negative cells. We found that the CD14+ fraction had a higher PD-L1 expression in the BM of MM patients compared to the CD14 negative fraction (60-96% versus 3-8%). Hence, we investigated whether CD84-mediated cell-cell contact may increase the level of PD-L1 expression on Mo-MDSCs and whether MM cells can regulate CD84 and PD-L1 expression on CD14+ cells. Co-culture assays were performed using several human MM cell lines (MM1S, U266 and KMS11) with PB CD14+ cells derived from healthy donors (n=3). Our data show a 1.9-fold increase from the basal level of CD84 (27±16% to 50±9.4%) and a 2.9-fold increase from the basal level of PD-L1 (18±8.5% to 52.3±5.7%). Our recently generated mouse anti-human CD84 blocking antibody (Marom et al. 2017) was used to determine whether CD84 direct targeting can affect MM-induced CD84 and PD-L1 expression on the surface of CD14+cells. Co-culture experiments show that targeting CD84 lowered CD84 (1.6-fold decrease) and PD-L1 expression (1.8-fold decrease) on a CD14+ population co-cultured with MM cells. Moreover, when T cells were included in the co-culture experiments, we observed reduced expression of exhaustion markers PD-1 (1.1-fold decrease) and CTLA4 (1.4-fold decrease) in the presence of the CD84 blocking antibody. Conclusion: We show here that CD84 is expressed on Mo-MDSCs in MM and that the expansion of this myeloid population is strictly associated with MM progression. Disruption of CD84 contacts with a blocking antibody decreases the expression of PD-L1 on CD14+ cells and exhaustion markers on T cells. Thus, our results reveal a novel role for CD84 in regulating PD-L1 in the MM-ME and provides the scientific rationale to investigate whether targeting CD84 expression on Mo-MDSCs can restore T cell functions. To further confirm the role of CD84 regulating T cell activity and Mo-MDSC, in vivo mouse studies are ongoing and results will be presented at the meeting. Disclosures Rosenzweig: Celgene: Speakers Bureau. Krishnan:Sutro: Speakers Bureau; Onyx: Speakers Bureau; Janssen: Consultancy, Speakers Bureau; Celgene: Consultancy, Equity Ownership, Speakers Bureau; Takeda: Speakers Bureau.
- Published
- 2018
23. Daratumumab induces CD38 internalization and impairs myeloma cell adhesion
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Domenico Viola, Jonathan J Keats, Cesar Terrazas, Michael Rosenzweig, Guido Marcucci, Enrico Caserta, Flavia Pichiorri, Estelle Troadec, Tinisha McDonald, Balveen Kaur, Jayeeta Ghose, Steven D. Rosen, Emine Gulsen Gunes, James F. Sanchez, Amrita Krishnan, Abhay R. Satoskar, Craig C. Hofmeister, and Jihane Khalife
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lcsh:Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,0301 basic medicine ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Immunology ,CD38 ,lcsh:RC254-282 ,plasma cells ,cd38 ,03 medical and health sciences ,In vivo ,medicine ,Immunology and Allergy ,Internalization ,Cell adhesion ,Original Research ,media_common ,Bortezomib ,Chemistry ,bortezomib ,loss of adhesion ,Daratumumab ,daratumumab ,sensitivity ,lcsh:Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,multiple myeloma ,internalization ,030104 developmental biology ,Oncology ,Proteasome ,Monoclonal ,Cancer research ,lcsh:RC581-607 ,bone marrow stromal cells ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Daratumumab (Dara), a human immunoglobulin G1 kappa (IgG1κ) monoclonal anti-CD38 antibody, has been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of relapsed multiple myeloma (MM) as a single agent as well as in combination with immunomodulatory drugs (IMiDs) and proteasome inhibitors (PI). Although the scientific rationale behind the use of Dara in combination with IMiDs has been extensively explored, the molecular mechanisms underlying Dara-PI regimens have not yet been investigated. Here, we demonstrate that CD38 on the surface of MM cells is rapidly internalized after Dara treatment; we also show that Dara treatment impairs MM cell adhesion, an effect that can be rescued by using the endocytosis inhibitor Dynasore. Finally, we show that Dara potentiates bortezomib (BTZ) killing of MM cells in vitro and in vivo, independent of its function as an immune activator. In conclusion, our data show that Dara impairs MM cell adhesion, which results in an increased sensitivity of MM to proteasome inhibition.
- Published
- 2018
24. Allele-specific tumor spectrum in Pten knockin mice
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Shan Naidu, Gustavo Leone, Wolfgang Sadee, Hui-Zi Chen, Paul C. Stromberg, Hui Wang, Matt Karikomi, Maysoon Rawahneh, Thomas J. Rosol, Charis Eng, Danxin Wang, Ravi Rajmohan, Julie A. Stephens, Michael Weinstein, Michael C. Ostrowski, Enrico Caserta, Krista M. D. La Perle, Julie Moffitt, and Soledad Fernandez
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Tumor suppressor gene ,DNA Mutational Analysis ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Embryonic Development ,Biology ,Mice ,Germline mutation ,Neoplasms ,medicine ,Animals ,Point Mutation ,Tensin ,Missense mutation ,PTEN ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Gene Knock-In Techniques ,Gene Silencing ,Alleles ,Cell Proliferation ,Genetics ,Multidisciplinary ,Base Sequence ,Protein Stability ,Tumor Suppressor Proteins ,Point mutation ,PTEN Phosphohydrolase ,Cowden syndrome ,Biological Sciences ,medicine.disease ,Organ Specificity ,Lipid phosphatase activity ,Gene Targeting ,Disease Progression ,Embryo Loss ,biology.protein ,Mutant Proteins ,Precancerous Conditions ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-akt - Abstract
Germline mutations in the tumor suppressor gene PTEN (phosphatase and tensin homology deleted on chromosome 10) cause Cowden and Bannayan–Riley–Ruvalcaba (BRR) syndromes, two dominantly inherited disorders characterized by mental retardation, multiple hamartomas, and variable cancer risk. Here, we modeled three sentinel mutant alleles of PTEN identified in patients with Cowden syndrome and show that the nonsense Pten ∆4–5 and missense Pten C124R and Pten G129E alleles lacking lipid phosphatase activity cause similar developmental abnormalities but distinct tumor spectra with varying severity and age of onset. Allele-specific differences may be accounted for by loss of function for Pten ∆4–5 , hypomorphic function for Pten C124R , and gain of function for Pten G129E . These data demonstrate that the variable tumor phenotypes observed in patients with Cowden and BRR syndromes can be attributed to specific mutations in PTEN that alter protein function through distinct mechanisms.
- Published
- 2010
25. Ribosomal Interaction of Bacillus stearothermophilus Translation Initiation Factor IF2: Characterization of the Active Sites
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Carlotta Ferrara, Pohl Milón, Jerneja Tomšic, Enrico Caserta, Alessandra Rocchetti, Claudio O. Gualerzi, Anna La Teana, Cynthia L. Pon, and Attilio Fabbretti
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Ribosomal Interaction ,Mutant ,GTPase ,Prokaryotic Initiation Factor-2 ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Ribosome ,Protein Structure, Secondary ,Geobacillus stearothermophilus ,Structural Biology ,Catalytic Domain ,Escherichia coli ,Ribosome Subunits ,medicine ,Initiation factor ,Molecular Biology ,Sequence Deletion ,Genetics ,Mutation ,Genetic Complementation Test ,Dipeptides ,Ribosomal RNA ,Null allele ,Kinetics ,Amino Acid Substitution ,Genes, Bacterial ,Protein Biosynthesis ,Mutant Proteins ,Ribosomes ,Protein Binding - Abstract
InfB-encoded translation initiation factor IF2 contains a non-conserved N-terminal domain and two conserved domains (G and C) constituted by three (G1, G2 and G3) and two (C1 and C2) sub-domains. Here, we show that: (i) Bacillus stearothermophilus IF2 complements in vivo an Escherichia coli infB null mutation and (ii) the N-domain of B. stearothermophilus IF2, like that of E. coli IF2, provides a strong yet dispensable interaction with 30 S and 50 S subunits in spite of the lack of any size, sequence or structural homology between the N-domains of the two factors. Furthermore, the nature of the B. stearothermophilus IF2 sites involved in establishing the functional interactions with the ribosome was investigated by generating deletion, random and site-directed mutations within sub-domains G2 or G3 of a molecule carrying an H301Y substitution in switch II of the G2 module, which impairs the ribosome-dependent GTPase activity of IF2. By selecting suppressors of the dominant-lethal phenotype caused by the H301Y substitution, three independent mutants impaired in ribosome binding were identified; namely, S387P (in G2) and G420E and E424K (in G3). The functional properties of these mutants and those of the deletion mutants are compatible with the premise that IF2 interacts with 30 S and 50 S subunits via G3 and G2 modules, respectively. However, beyond this generalization, because the mutation in G2 resulted in a functional alteration of G3 and vice versa, our results indicate the existence of extensive "cross-talking" between these two modules, highlighting a harmonic conformational cooperation between G2 and G3 required for a functional interaction between IF2 and the two ribosomal subunits. It is noteworthy that the E424K mutant, which completely lacks GTPase activity, displays IF2 wild-type capacity in supporting initiation of dipeptide formation.
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- 2010
26. Pten in stromal fibroblasts suppresses mammary epithelial tumours
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Julie A. Stephens, Michael C. Ostrowski, Fu Li, Shan Naidu, Hui Wang, Jean-Leon Chong, Metin N. Gurcan, Gustavo Leone, Carmen Z. Cantemir-Stone, Nicholas Creasap, Michael Hallett, Sudarshana M. Sharma, Francois Pepin, Soledad Fernandez, Lisa D. Yee, John C. Thompson, Enrico Caserta, Anand S. Merchant, Thomas J. Rosol, Julie A. Wallace, Michael Weinstein, Anthony J. Trimboli, Morag Park, Michael L. Robinson, Paul C. Stromberg, Guo Wei, and Sanford H. Barsky
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Cell signaling ,Stromal cell ,Angiogenesis ,Breast Neoplasms ,Mice, Transgenic ,Article ,Proto-Oncogene Protein c-ets-2 ,Malignant transformation ,Extracellular matrix ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cell Line, Tumor ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,PTEN ,Neoplasms, Glandular and Epithelial ,Fibroblast ,Cell Proliferation ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,PTEN Phosphohydrolase ,Mammary Neoplasms, Experimental ,Fibroblasts ,Cell cycle ,Immunity, Innate ,Extracellular Matrix ,3. Good health ,Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic ,Cell Transformation, Neoplastic ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Cancer research ,biology.protein ,Stromal Cells ,Gene Deletion - Abstract
The tumour stroma is believed to contribute to some of the most malignant characteristics of epithelial tumours. However, signalling between stromal and tumour cells is complex and remains poorly understood. Here we show that the genetic inactivation of Pten in stromal fibroblasts of mouse mammary glands accelerated the initiation, progression and malignant transformation of mammary epithelial tumours. This was associated with the massive remodelling of the extracellular matrix (ECM), innate immune cell infiltration and increased angiogenesis. Loss of Pten in stromal fibroblasts led to increased expression, phosphorylation (T72) and recruitment of Ets2 to target promoters known to be involved in these processes. Remarkably, Ets2 inactivation in Pten stroma-deleted tumours ameliorated disruption of the tumour microenvironment and was sufficient to decrease tumour growth and progression. Global gene expression profiling of mammary stromal cells identified a Pten-specific signature that was highly represented in the tumour stroma of patients with breast cancer. These findings identify the Pten-Ets2 axis as a critical stroma-specific signalling pathway that suppresses mammary epithelial tumours.
- Published
- 2009
27. HDAC inhibitor AR-42 decreases CD44 expression and sensitizes myeloma cells to lenalidomide
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Luciano Cascione, Jessica Consiglio, Nicola Zanesi, Yvonne A. Efebera, Lara Rizzotto, Andrew Stiff, Flavia Pichiorri, Alessandro Canella, Balveen Kaur, Enrico Caserta, John C. Byrd, Hector Cordero Nieves, Hanna S. Radomska, Xiaokui Mo, Volinia Stefano, Emily Smith, Craig C. Hofmeister, and Douglas W. Sborov
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Gerontology ,Blotting, Western ,lenalidomide ,Mice, Nude ,Angiogenesis Inhibitors ,Apoptosis ,Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay ,Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Phenylbutyrate ,Immunoenzyme Techniques ,Mice ,In vivo ,medicine ,Tumor Cells, Cultured ,Animals ,Humans ,RNA, Messenger ,CD44 ,Dexamethasone ,Multiple myeloma ,Lenalidomide ,Cell Proliferation ,IGF2BP3 ,business.industry ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Gene Expression Profiling ,medicine.disease ,Flow Cytometry ,miR-9–5p ,Phenylbutyrates ,Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays ,3. Good health ,Thalidomide ,Histone Deacetylase Inhibitors ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Hyaluronan Receptors ,myeloma ,Oncology ,Drug Resistance, Neoplasm ,Cancer research ,Drug Therapy, Combination ,Female ,Bone marrow ,HDAC Inhibitor AR-42 ,business ,Multiple Myeloma ,medicine.drug ,Research Paper - Abstract
Multiple myeloma (MM) is a hematological malignancy of plasma cells in the bone marrow. Despite multiple treatment options, MM is inevitably associated with drug resistance and poor outcomes. Histone deacetylase inhibitors (HDACi's) are promising novel chemotherapeutics undergoing evaluation in clinical trials for the potential treatment of patients with MM. Although in preclinical studies HDACi's have proven anti-myeloma activity, but in the clinic single-agent HDACi treatments have been limited due to low tolerability. Improved clinical outcomes were reported only when HDACi's were combined with other drugs. Here, we show that a novel pan-HDACi AR-42 downregulates CD44, a glycoprotein that has been associated with lenalidomide and dexamethasone resistance in myeloma both in vitro and in vivo. We also show that this CD44 downregulation is in part mediated by miR-9-5p, targeting insulin-like growth factor 2 mRNA binding protein 3 (IGF2BP3), which directly binds to CD44 mRNA and increases its stability. Importantly, we also demonstrate that AR-42 enhances anti-myeloma activity of lenalidomide in primary MM cells isolated from lenalidomide resistant patients and in in vivo MM mouse model. Thus, our findings shed light on potential novel combinatorial therapeutic approaches modulating CD44 expression, which may help overcome lenalidomide resistance in myeloma patients.
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- 2015
28. Codon-Anticodon Recognition in the Bacillus subtilis glyQS T Box Riboswitch: RNA-DEPENDENT CODON SELECTION OUTSIDE THE RIBOSOME
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Enrico, Caserta, Liang-Chun, Liu, Frank J, Grundy, and Tina M, Henkin
- Subjects
RNA, Bacterial ,Bacterial Proteins ,Riboswitch ,Protein Biosynthesis ,Anticodon ,RNA ,RNA, Transfer, Gly ,Codon ,Bacillus subtilis - Abstract
Many amino acid-related genes in Gram-positive bacteria are regulated by the T box riboswitch. The leader RNA of genes in the T box family controls the expression of downstream genes by monitoring the aminoacylation status of the cognate tRNA. Previous studies identified a three-nucleotide codon, termed the "Specifier Sequence," in the riboswitch that corresponds to the amino acid identity of the downstream genes. Pairing of the Specifier Sequence with the anticodon of the cognate tRNA is the primary determinant of specific tRNA recognition. This interaction mimics codon-anticodon pairing in translation but occurs in the absence of the ribosome. The goal of the current study was to determine the effect of a full range of mismatches for comparison with codon recognition in translation. Mutations were individually introduced into the Specifier Sequence of the glyQS leader RNA and tRNA(Gly) anticodon to test the effect of all possible pairing combinations on tRNA binding affinity and antitermination efficiency. The functional role of the conserved purine 3' of the Specifier Sequence was also verifiedin this study. We found that substitutions at the Specifier Sequence resulted in reduced binding, the magnitude of which correlates well with the predicted stability of the RNA-RNA pairing. However, the tolerance for specific mismatches in antitermination was generally different from that during decoding, which reveals a unique tRNA recognition pattern in the T box antitermination system.
- Published
- 2015
29. Ribosomal localization of translation initiation factor IF2
- Author
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Walter E. Hill, Stefano Marzi, William Knight, Letizia Brandi, J. Stephen Lodmell, Claudio O. Gualerzi, Natalia G. Soboleva, and Enrico Caserta
- Subjects
Models, Molecular ,Base Sequence ,Hydrolysis ,Prokaryotic Initiation Factor-2 ,Ribosomal RNA ,Biology ,Article ,Geobacillus stearothermophilus ,Eukaryotic translation ,Biochemistry ,RNA, Ribosomal ,23S ribosomal RNA ,Eukaryotic initiation factor ,Prokaryotic translation ,Transfer RNA ,Nucleic Acid Conformation ,Initiation factor ,Computer Simulation ,30S ,Cysteine ,Ribosomes ,Molecular Biology - Abstract
Bacterial translation initiation factor IF2 is a GTP-binding protein that catalyzes binding of initiator fMet-tRNA in the ribosomal P site. The topographical localization of IF2 on the ribosomal subunits, a prerequisite for understanding the mechanism of initiation complex formation, has remained elusive. Here, we present a model for the positioning of IF2 in the 70S initiation complex as determined by cleavage of rRNA by the chemical nucleases Cu(II):1,10-orthophenanthroline and Fe(II):EDTA tethered to cysteine residues introduced into IF2. Two specific amino acids in the GII domain of IF2 are in proximity to helices H3, H4, H17, and H18 of 16S rRNA. Furthermore, the junction of the C-1 and C-2 domains is in proximity to H89 and the thiostrepton region of 23S rRNA. The docking is further constrained by the requisite proximity of the C-2 domain with P-site-bound tRNA and by the conserved GI domain of the IF2 with the large subunit’s factor-binding center. Comparison of our present findings with previous data further suggests that the IF2 orientation on the 30S subunit changes during the transition from the 30S to 70S initiation complex.
- Published
- 2003
30. Translation Initiation in Bacteria
- Author
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Enrico Caserta, Claudio O. Gualerzi, Jerneja Tomšic, Roberto Spurio, Letizia Brandi, Anna La Teana, and Cynthia L. Pon
- Subjects
Genetics ,EIF4ENIF1 ,Eukaryotic translation ,Five prime untranslated region ,Eukaryotic initiation factor ,Initiation factor ,EIF4A1 ,Biology ,Prokaryotic initiation factor ,Eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4 gamma - Abstract
This chapter summarizes the most important advances concerning structural and mechanistic aspects of translation initiation in bacteria which have occurred since the appearance of the last reviews on this subject. The small ribosomal subunit (30S) interacts with mRNA and fMet-tRNA in stochastic order to yield a bona fide 30S initiation complex through the rearrangement, kinetically controlled by the three initiation factors, of an unstable kinetic intermediate called the pre-ternary complex. Systematic variations of the translation initiation region (TIR) elements in the in vivo translation of reporter genes in E. coli and Bacillus subtilis have produced similar results in two similar analyses. The differences observed in a study between heterologous and homologous proteins and the sometimes contradictory conclusions reached by similar studies concerning the relevance of specific TIR elements and the consequent criteria for optimization of translation remind us once again that each gene (mRNA) might be endowed with particular, not easily predictable properties. The dispensable nature of the Shine-Dalgarno (SD) sequence is evidenced by the existence of leaderless mRNAs which begin directly with an AUG initiation triplet. The recognition and binding of fMet-tRNA by IF2 play crucial roles in the translation initiation pathway of bacteria. The understanding of the translation initiation pathway cannot be considered satisfactory without full elucidation of the role played in this process by GTP and by the IF2-dependent GTPase.
- Published
- 2014
31. Daratumumab Impairs Myeloma Cell Adhesion Mediated Drug Resistance through CD38 Internalization
- Author
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Amrita Krishnan, Enrico Caserta, Cesar Terrazas, Flavia Pichiorri, Abhay R. Satoskar, Domenico Viola, Jayeeta Ghose, and Craig C. Hofmeister
- Subjects
Stromal cell ,Cell growth ,business.industry ,Bortezomib ,T cell ,Immunology ,Daratumumab ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,CD38 ,Biochemistry ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Proteasome inhibitor ,medicine ,Cancer research ,business ,Cell adhesion ,030215 immunology ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Introduction: Daratumumab (HuMax-CD38, Dara) is an immunoglobulin G1 kappa (IgG1k) human monoclonal antibody that binds a CD38 epitope that has been recently approved by the Food and Drugs Administration as a single agent for the treatment of Multiple Myeloma (MM). Multiple myeloma (MM) is a plasma cell disorder affecting approximately 83,000 US citizens with 30,330 new cases per year in the US. The discovery of intra-clonal heterogeneity strengthens the scientific rationale of using novel therapy combinations to overcome mechanisms of resistance. While CD38 participates in NAD+ hydrolysis generating adenosine and influences intracellular calcium homeostasis through cADPR and NAADP synthesis, CD38 facilitates bone marrow (BM) homing of plasma cells through interaction with CD31 which is highly expressed in MM BM stromal cells (BMSCs) and macrophages (BM-M). Since adhesion of MM cells to stromal cells induces cell adhesion mediated drug resistance (CAM-DR), in this work, tested whether CD38 internalization after Daratumumab treatment impairs stromal cell adhesion, sensitizing MM cells to other drugs including proteasome inhibitors. Methods:Flow cytometry analysis and single cell flow analysis was done to measure the extent of surface CD38 internalization into MM cells (MM cell lines and primary cells) in vitro and ex-vivo. Adhesion assays were performed using MM cell lines treated with Daratumumab and co-cultured with BMSCs and BM-M. Apoptotic assays including cell proliferation and Annexin-V/PI staining were done to assess proteasome inhibitor induced apoptosis (bortezomib, BTZ) of MM cells pretreated with Daratumumab in the presence or absence of BM stroma. Chou-Talalay synergy analysis was used to assess the ability of Daratumumab to synergize with BTZ. Results:Single cell flow analysis revealed surface CD38 internalization into MM cell lines (MM1.S, H929, L363, RPMI-8226) and in primary myeloma cells upon incubation with increasing doses of Daratumumab. Our data show that MM cell lines and primary CD138+ MM plasma cells (MM-PCs) revealed loss of adhesion in a dose and time dependent fashion in co-culture experiments with BMSc. Moreover our data indicate that both BMSCs and BM-M protect MM cells to BTZ treatments. In order to investigate whether loss of adhesion of MM cells deprives them of protection, MM cell lines and primary cells were treated with Daratumumab and co-cultured with BM stroma and then treated with BTZ. Interestingly, it was observed that although stromal cells could protect MM cells from induced apoptosis, it failed to do so when MM cells were pretreated with Daratumumab. A more than two-fold increase in MM cell apoptosis was observed with Daratumumab-BTZ combination compared to the single agent treatments. This indicates that Daratumumab potentiates BTZ killing of MM cells. Conclusion:Daratumumab in combination with both proteasome inhibitors and immune modulators (IMiDs) are synergistic as evidenced by the results of CASTOR and POLLUX trials respectively, but the mechanisms of killing and resistance will likely be different. The main anti-MM effect of Daratumumab has so far been attributed to its antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity, complement dependent cellular cytotoxicity, antibody-dependent cellular phagocytosis activities and in promoting T cell expansion in relapsed/refractary MM patients enrolled in Daratumumab monotherapy trials. Our data indicate that Daratumumab potentiates the BTZ killing of MM cells via CD38 internalization, providing rationale to further explore CD38 targeting using other drugs or cell therapies. Disclosures Hofmeister: Celgene: Research Funding; Karyopharm Therapeutics: Research Funding; Arno Therapeutics, Inc.: Research Funding; Incyte, Corp: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Signal Genetics, Inc.: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Janssen: Pharmaceutical Companies of Johnson & Johnson: Research Funding; Takeda Pharmaceutical Company: Research Funding; Teva: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees.
- Published
- 2016
32. Exploring the Possibility of Using Herpes Simplex Virus in Oncolytic Virotherapy of Multiple Myeloma
- Author
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Domenico Viola, Ramasamy Santhanam, Balveen Kaur, Alena Cristina Jaime-Ramirez, Craig C. Hofmeister, Luke Russell, Enrico Caserta, Jayeeta Ghose, Flavia Pichiorri, and Amrita Krishnan
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Virus quantification ,Immunology ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,Biology ,Biochemistry ,Virology ,Oncolytic virus ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cell killing ,Multiplicity of infection ,Viral replication ,Cell culture ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Cancer cell ,Cancer research ,Plaque-forming unit - Abstract
Introduction: Multiple myeloma (MM) is the second most prevalent hematologic malignancy. Approximately, 80,000 people have died of the disease in the United States and 25,000 new cases are registered every year. Majority of patients develop resistance to current therapeutic treatments and die within 5-10 years of diagnosis. Thus, need of novel therapeutic intervention is extremely urgent. Although the field of oncolytic virotherapy (OV) based on using viruses with natural or engineered tumor selective replication to intentionally infect and kill tumor cells has been extensively explored for the treatment of solid tumors, only few data are available for the treatment of hematopoietic malignancies. Our laboratory was one of the first to show that OV using Reovirus can be an effective therapeutic strategy for the treatment of MM in vitro and in MM patients. In this work we aim at exploring the possibility of using genetically engineered HSV1 (Herpes Simplex Virus) for the treatment of MM. HSV1 is an enveloped, double stranded DNA virus. Engineered HSV1 (HSVQ) has both copies of viral gene important in viral replication in normal cells viz., ICP 34.5 gene deleted and has one copy of GFP inserted into viral ICP6 gene. Such engineered virus has been used for cancer cell selective killing in preclinical and clinical studies for the treatment of several types of solid tumors including melanoma and glioblastoma multiforme. In this study, we investigated the biological and preclinical impact of HSVQ on MM cell in vitro and in vivo. Method: Recombinant HSVQ was amplified in African green monkey kidney epithelial Vero cells, purified by sucrose density gradient centrifugation and titrated by plaque assay on Vero cells. Several MM cell lines (MM1.S, U266, RPMI8226, L363, NIH-H929) were infected with HSVQ at Multiplicity of Infection (MOI) 0.01 to 5. Fluorescence microscopy and flow cytometry analysis were used to assess MM cell infectivity with the virus. RT-PCR was performed to detect presence of viral genome in MM cell lines. Viral replication assays were also performed. Cell proliferation and apoptotic assays including MTT Assay, Tryphan Blue exclusion test, LIVE/DEAD cell viability staining and Annexin/7-AAD assays were done to determine viability of virus infected MM cells. Western Blot analysis was carried out to determine endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress response mediated by ERK, Hsp90, Bip/GRP78, Hsp40 and apoptosis in HSVQ treated MM cells. Total bone marrow (BM) cells obtained from MM patients were infected with HSVQ and multi parametric flow analysis was performed to determine infectivity and specific killing of CD138+ MM cells by the virus. To study in vivo anti-tumorigenic properties of HSVQ, 12.5 x106 GFP/Luc + MM1.S or NIH-H929 cells were subcutaneously injected into the right flank of 20 NOD-SCID mice. Two weeks after injection, mice with comparable size tumors were randomly divided (5 animal for each treatment group) and treated twice with 1x107PFU (Plaque Forming Unit) HSVQ for 2 weeks or with saline. Tumor growth was measured to determine anti tumorigenic effect of HSVQ on MM tumors. Results and Conclusion: Fluorescence microscopy and flow cytometry revealed that MM cell lines can be effectively infected with and killed by HSVQ even at MOI as low as 0.1. Under such conditions, Western Blot analysis revealed increased BAX expression, decreased BCL2 expression and cleavage of Caspase 3 and PARP indicating apoptosis of virus infected cells. Interestingly, multi parametric flow analysis revealed that HSVQ specifically infects and kills CD138+ MM plasma cells in a total population of BM cellular fraction isolated from MM patients. Moreover in vivo preclinical data show that HSVQ dramatically reduces tumor volume (p Disclosures Hofmeister: Arno Therapeutics, Inc.: Research Funding; Celgene: Research Funding; Karyopharm Therapeutics: Research Funding; Incyte, Corp: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Janssen: Pharmaceutical Companies of Johnson & Johnson: Research Funding; Signal Genetics, Inc.: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Takeda Pharmaceutical Company: Research Funding; Teva: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees.
- Published
- 2016
33. Mapping the fMet-tRNAfMet binding site of initiation factor IF2
- Author
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Enrico Caserta, Claudio O. Gualerzi, Roberto Spurio, Marc Guenneugues, Rolf Boelens, Cynthia L. Pon, Letizia Brandi, and Sylvie Meunier
- Subjects
Models, Molecular ,Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy ,RNA, Transfer, Met ,Protein Conformation ,Stereochemistry ,Prokaryotic Initiation Factor-2 ,Biology ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Geobacillus stearothermophilus ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Eukaryotic translation ,Protein structure ,Peptide Initiation Factors ,Initiation factor ,Binding site ,Molecular Biology ,Binding Sites ,N-Formylmethionine ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,Prokaryotic initiation factor-2 ,General Neuroscience ,Articles ,Directed mutagenesis ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Protein Biosynthesis ,Transfer RNA ,Mutagenesis, Site-Directed ,Thermodynamics - Abstract
The interaction between fMet-tRNA(f)(Met) and Bacillus stearothermophilus translation initiation factor IF2 has been characterized. We demonstrate that essentially all thermodynamic determinants governing the stability and the specificity of this interaction are localized within the acceptor hexanucleotide fMet-3'ACCAAC of the initiator tRNA and a fairly small area at the surface of the beta-barrel structure of the 90-amino acid C-terminal domain of IF2 (IF2 C-2). A weak but specific interaction between IF2 C-2 and formyl-methionyl was also demonstrated. The surface of IF2 C-2 interacting with fMet-tRNA(f)(Met) has been mapped using two independent approaches, site- directed mutagenesis and NMR spectroscopy, which yielded consistent results. The binding site comprises C668 and G715 located in a groove accommodating the methionyl side-chain, R700, in the vicinity of the formyl group, Y701 and K702 close to the acyl bond between fMet and tRNA(f)(Met), and the surface lined with residues K702-S660, along which the acceptor arm of the initiator tRNA spans in the direction 3' to 5'.
- Published
- 2000
34. Non parametric cell nuclei segmentation based on a tracking over depth from 3D fluorescence confocal images
- Author
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Enrico Caserta, Shantanu Singh, Raghu Machiraju, Gustavo Leone, Thierry Pécot, Kun Huang, Space-timE RePresentation, Imaging and cellular dynamics of molecular COmplexes (SERPICO), Inria Rennes – Bretagne Atlantique, Institut National de Recherche en Informatique et en Automatique (Inria)-Institut National de Recherche en Informatique et en Automatique (Inria), Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard (BROAD INSTITUTE), Harvard Medical School [Boston] (HMS)-Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)-Massachusetts General Hospital [Boston], Ohio State University [Columbus] (OSU), Department of Biomedical Informatics [Columbus], and Department of Computer Science and Engineering [Columbus] (CSE)
- Subjects
Physics ,business.industry ,Confocal ,[SDV.BC]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Cellular Biology ,Image segmentation ,Image plane ,[INFO.INFO-TI]Computer Science [cs]/Image Processing [eess.IV] ,Histogram ,Microscopy ,Fluorescence microscope ,Computer vision ,Artificial intelligence ,Anisotropy ,business ,Image resolution - Abstract
International audience; 3D cell nuclei segmentation from fluorescence microscopy images is a key application in many biological studies. We propose a new, fully automated and non parametric method that takes advantage of the resolution anisotropy in fluorescence microscopy. The cell nuclei are first detected in 2D at each image plane and then tracked over depth through a graph based decision to recover their 3D profiles. As the tracking fails to separate very close cell nuclei along depth, we also propose a corrective step based on an intensity projection criterion. Experimental results on real data demonstrate the efficacy of the proposed method.
- Published
- 2012
35. Small RNA Deep Sequencing Highlights the Important Contribution of Mirnas in Regulating IRF4/c-Myc Axis in Myeloma Development
- Author
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Hector Cordero, Liu Joseph, Flavia Pichiorri, Alessandro Canella, Santhanam Ramasamy, Yvonne A. Efebera, Stefano Volinia, Enrico Caserta, Cascione Luciano, Hanna S. Radomska, Consiglio Jessica, Alberto Rocci, and Craig C. Hofmeister
- Subjects
Small RNA ,Immunology ,RNA ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,Biology ,medicine.disease ,Biochemistry ,Molecular biology ,RNA silencing ,Gene expression ,microRNA ,medicine ,Transcriptional regulation ,Gene silencing ,Monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance - Abstract
Introduction: Multiple myeloma (MM) is a hematologic malignancy characterized by the accumulation of plasma cells (PCs) in the bone marrow (BM). Over 50% of patients die within 5 years of diagnosis. The transition from normal PCs to active MM, via premalignant condition (monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance; MGUS), consists of many oncogenic events, including upregulation of cyclin D1 and IRF4 genes, as well as activating mutations in NRAS, and KRAS. Despite recent advances in oncogenomics, further studies are needed to identify critical players in MM pathogenesis that could be targeted for pharmacological intervention to improve outcome. Recently, aberrations in epigenetic modifications, including DNA modifications and miRNA expression have been shown to play a crucial role in development and progression of MM. miRNAs are short non-coding RNAs that bind to complementary sequences on target messenger RNA (mRNAs) and downregulate their expression by inhibiting mRNA translation, or inducing its degradation. miRNA analysis, may lead to improved understanding of MM biology and classification, by establishing associations between gene expression changes and MM molecular and clinical features. To assess whether miRNA deregulation plays a critical role in the development of MM we performed small RNA next generation sequencing in the PCs isolated from 3 patients at the MGUS stage and after that they developed active disease, but still untreated. miRNA deregulation was also validated in an independent set of newly diagnosed MM patients (n.34) compared to non-cancer age matched donors (n.6). Mechanisms of transcriptional regulation and biological roles of the differentially expressed miRNAs were also analyzed. Methods: 1x106 CD138+ frozen PCs (purity>90%) from different 3 donors before and after the disease development were used for the analysis. RNA was extracted with RNA-DNA-protein kit (Norgen Biotek) and 0.8µg of total RNA was used to generate the cDNA libraries using TruSeq Small RNA Library Preparation Kit. The obtained cDNA libraries were sequenced on an ILLUMINA system through the OSU Genomic Shared Resource (GSR). Myeloma cells (MM.1S) were treated with pan-HDACi for 24 hours and total miRNA expression was analyzed by nCounter microRNA array (NanoString Technologies, Inc.). miRNA deregulation upon use of several pan-HDAC'i in clinical use (LBH589, SAHA and AR-42) were validated in 4 different cell lines and in the MM cells of newly diagnosed MM patients. Chromatin immunoprecipitation, silencing RNA for specific histone deacetylase enzymes (HDACI, HDAC2, HDAC3, and HDAC6), western blot analysis, luciferase assays, stem loop RT-PCR, q-RT-PCR and cell proliferation assays were also performed. Results: We found that several miRNAs are commonly deregulated during disease transition. Some of these miRNAs, including miR-223, miR-221, miR-222, miR-92a and miR-93 (p Conclusions: Collectively, we believe, that these findings support the key role of miRNA aberrant expression in PC transformation. Their role in regulating the expression of IRF4 during myeloma development and lead us to speculate that this explains why IRF4 and c-Myc mRNA levels are higher in newly diagnosed MM patients, without obvious chromosomal abnormalities, compared to MGUS patients. Understanding of the molecular bases of how c-Myc expression can be regulated by a specific histone deacetylase via modulation of miRNA levels will have important impact not only on myeloma therapy, but also other hematopoietic malignancies involving c-Myc deregulation. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.
- Published
- 2015
36. e-Science, caGrid, and Translational Biomedical Research
- Author
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Joel, Saltz, Tahsin, Kurc, Shannon, Hastings, Stephen, Langella, Scott, Oster, David, Ervin, Ashish, Sharma, Tony, Pan, Metin, Gurcan, Justin, Permar, Renato, Ferreira, Philip, Payne, Umit, Catalyurek, Enrico, Caserta, Gustavo, Leone, Michael C, Ostrowski, Ravi, Madduri, Ian, Foster, Subhashree, Madhavan, Kenneth H, Buetow, Krishnakant, Shanbhag, and Eliot, Siegel
- Subjects
General Computer Science ,business.industry ,Computer science ,Interoperability ,Translational research ,computer.software_genre ,Data science ,Software quality ,Article ,Variety (cybernetics) ,Data modeling ,Grid computing ,e-Science ,Software engineering ,business ,computer ,Reliability (statistics) - Abstract
Translational research projects target a wide variety of diseases, test many different kinds of biomedical hypotheses, and employ a large assortment of experimental methodologies. Diverse data, complex execution environments, and demanding security and reliability requirements make the implementation of these projects extremely challenging and require novel e-Science technologies.
- Published
- 2011
37. Translation initiation factor IF2 interacts with the 30 S ribosomal subunit via two separate binding sites
- Author
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Anna La Teana, Cynthia L. Pon, Roberto Spurio, Enrico Caserta, Claudio O. Gualerzi, and Jerneja Tomšic
- Subjects
eIF2 ,Binding Sites ,RNA, Transfer, Met ,GTP' ,Protein subunit ,Biology ,Prokaryotic Initiation Factor-2 ,Ligand (biochemistry) ,Ligands ,Ribosome ,Guanine Nucleotides ,Kinetics ,Eukaryotic translation ,Biochemistry ,Structural Biology ,Eukaryotic initiation factor ,Biophysics ,Anticodon ,Escherichia coli ,Mutant Proteins ,Binding site ,Codon ,Molecular Biology ,Ribosomes ,Protein Binding - Abstract
The functional properties of the two natural forms of Escherichia coli translation initiation factor IF2 (IF2alpha and IF2beta) and of an N-terminal deletion mutant of the factor (IF2DeltaN) lacking the first 294 residues, corresponding to the entire N-terminal domain, were analysed comparatively. The results revealed that IF2alpha and IF2beta display almost indistinguishable properties, whereas IF2DeltaN, although fully active in all steps of the translation initiation pathway, displays functional activities having properties and requirements distinctly different from those of the intact molecule. Indeed, binding of IF2DeltaN to the 30 S subunit, IF2DeltaN-dependent stimulation of fMet-tRNA binding to the ribosome and of initiation dipeptide formation strongly depend upon the presence of IF1 and GTP, unlike with IF2alpha and IF2beta. The present results indicate that, using two separate active sites, IF2 establishes two interactions with the 30 S ribosomal subunit which have different properties and functions. The first site, located in the N domain of IF2, is responsible for a high-affinity interaction which "anchors" the factor to the subunit while the second site, mainly located in the beta-barrel module homologous to domain II of EF-G and EF-Tu, is responsible for the functional ("core") interaction of IF2 leading to the decoding of fMet-tRNA in the 30 S subunit P-site. The first interaction is functionally dispensable, sensitive to ionic-strength variations and essentially insensitive to the nature of the guanosine nucleotide ligand and to the presence of IF1, unlike the second interaction which strongly depends upon the presence of IF1 and GTP.
- Published
- 2006
38. The nucleotide-binding site of bacterial translation initiation factor 2 (IF2) as a metabolic sensor
- Author
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Jerneja Tomšic, Cynthia L. Pon, Pohl Milón, Claudio O. Gualerzi, Rolf Boelens, Gert E. Folkers, Enrico Caserta, Mv Rodnina, A La Teana, E Tischenko, NMR-spectroscopie, Dep Scheikunde, and Sub NMR Spectroscopy
- Subjects
Models, Molecular ,GTP' ,Stringent response ,Guanosine ,Prokaryotic Initiation Factor-2 ,Guanosine triphosphate ,Biology ,Ligands ,Protein Structure, Secondary ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Prokaryotic translation ,Escherichia coli ,heterocyclic compounds ,Binding site ,Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular ,Binding Sites ,Multidisciplinary ,Nucleotides ,Prokaryotic initiation factor-2 ,Biological Sciences ,equipment and supplies ,Biochemistry ,chemistry ,Protein Biosynthesis ,bacteria ,Guanosine Triphosphate ,Alarmone - Abstract
Translational initiation factor 2 (IF2) is a guanine nucleotide-binding protein that can bind guanosine 3′,5′-(bis) diphosphate (ppGpp), an alarmone involved in stringent response in bacteria. In cells growing under optimal conditions, the GTP concentration is very high, and that of ppGpp very low. However, under stress conditions, the GTP concentration may decline by as much as 50%, and that of ppGpp can attain levels comparable to those of GTP. Here we show that IF2 binds ppGpp at the same nucleotide-binding site and with similar affinity as GTP. Thus, GTP and the alarmone ppGpp can be considered two alternative physiologically relevant IF2 ligands. ppGpp interferes with IF2-dependent initiation complex formation, severely inhibits initiation dipeptide formation, and blocks the initiation step of translation. Our data suggest that IF2 has the properties of a cellular metabolic sensor and regulator that oscillates between an active GTP-bound form under conditions allowing active protein syntheses and an inactive ppGpp-bound form when shortage of nutrients would be detrimental, if not accompanied by slackening of this synthesis.
- Published
- 2006
39. Microarray data analysis and mining
- Author
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Silvia, Saviozzi, Giovanni, Iazzetti, Enrico, Caserta, Alessandro, Guffanti, and Raffaele A, Calogero
- Subjects
Quality Control ,Software Design ,Data Interpretation, Statistical ,Gene Expression Profiling ,Cluster Analysis ,Humans ,Oligonucleotide Probes ,Software ,Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis - Abstract
DNA microarray is an innovative technology for obtaining information on gene function. Because it is a high-throughput method, computational tools are essential in data analysis and mining to extract the knowledge from experimental results. Filtering procedures and statistical approaches are frequently combined to identify differentially expressed genes. However, obtaining a list of differentially expressed genes is only the starting point because an important step is the integration of differential expression profiles in a biological context, which is a hot topic in data mining. In this chapter an integrated approach of filtering and statistical validation to select trustable differentially expressed genes is described together with a brief introduction on data mining focusing on the classification of co-regulated genes on the basis of their biological function.
- Published
- 2004
40. Initiation factors in the early events of mRNA translation in bacteria
- Author
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Enrico Caserta, Matilde Lammi, Dezemona Petrelli, Cynthia L. Pon, Jerneja Tomšic, Claudio O. Gualerzi, Cristiana Garofalo, A. La Teana, Letizia Brandi, and Roberto Spurio
- Subjects
Models, Molecular ,biology ,Bacteria ,Chemistry ,Protein Conformation ,Eukaryotic Initiation Factor-2 ,Eukaryotic Initiation Factor-1 ,RNA ,biology.organism_classification ,Biochemistry ,Protein Structure, Secondary ,Protein structure ,Peptide Initiation Factors ,Protein Biosynthesis ,Genetics ,Protein biosynthesis ,Initiation factor ,Amino Acid Sequence ,RNA, Messenger ,Peptide Chain Initiation, Translational ,Molecular Biology ,Peptide sequence - Published
- 2003
41. The C-terminal subdomain (IF2 C-2) contains the entire fMet-tRNA binding site of initiation factor IF2
- Author
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Christoph Krafft, Heinz Welfle, Roberto Spurio, Karin Welfle, Cynthia L. Pon, Claudio O. Gualerzi, Enrico Caserta, Letizia Brandi, and Rolf Misselwitz
- Subjects
Circular dichroism ,Protein Denaturation ,Hot Temperature ,RNA, Transfer, Met ,Stereochemistry ,Prokaryotic Initiation Factor-2 ,Antiparallel (biochemistry) ,Biochemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Peptide Initiation Factors ,Initiation factor ,Molecule ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Guanidine ,Molecular Biology ,DNA Primers ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Binding Sites ,Base Sequence ,Calorimetry, Differential Scanning ,Cell Biology ,TRNA binding ,Recombinant Proteins ,Amino acid ,Crystallography ,Spectrometry, Fluorescence ,chemistry ,Binding domain - Abstract
Previous protein unfolding studies had suggested that IF2 C, the 24. 5-kDa fMet-tRNA binding domain of Bacillus stearothermophilus translation initiation factor IF2, may consist of two subdomains. In the present work, the four Phe residues of IF2 C (positions 531, 599, 657, and 721) were replaced with Trp, yielding four variant proteins having intrinsic fluorescence markers in different positions of the molecule. Comparison of the circular dichroism and Trp fluorescence changes induced by increasing concentrations of guanidine hydrochloride demonstrated that IF2 C indeed consists of two subdomains: the more stable N-terminal (IF2 C-1) subdomain containing Trp-599, and the less stable C-terminal (IF2 C-2) subdomain containing Trp-721. Isolated subdomain IF2 C-2, which consists of just 110 amino acids (from Glu-632 to Ala-741), was found to bind fMet-tRNA with the same specificity and affinity as native IF2 or IF2 C-domain. Trimming IF2 C-2 from both N and C termini demonstrated that the minimal fragment still capable of fMet-binding consists of 90 amino acids. IF2 C-2 was further characterized by circular dichroism; by urea-, guanidine hydrochloride-, and temperature-induced unfolding; and by differential scanning calorimetry. The results indicate that IF2 C-2 is a globular molecule containing predominantly beta structures (25% antiparallel and 8% parallel beta strands) and turns (19%) whose structural properties are not grossly affected by the presence or absence of the N-terminal subdomain IF2 C-1.
- Published
- 2000
42. Abstract 3260: Allele-specific tumor spectrum in Pten knockin mice
- Author
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Matt Karikomi, Thomas J. Rosol, Enrico Caserta, Hui Wang, Michael C. Ostrowski, Hui-Zi Chen, Paul C. Stromberg, Gustavo Leone, Michael Weinstein, Krista M. D. La Perle, Julie Moffitt, Ravi Rajmohan, Soledad Fernandez, Maysoon Rawahneh, Charis Eng, Shan Naidu, and Julie A. Stephens
- Subjects
Genetics ,Cancer Research ,biology ,business.industry ,Cancer ,medicine.disease ,Phenotype ,law.invention ,Germline mutation ,Oncology ,law ,Lipid phosphatase activity ,Cancer research ,biology.protein ,Medicine ,Suppressor ,Missense mutation ,PTEN ,Allele ,business - Abstract
Germline mutations in the PTEN tumor suppressor cause Cowden and Bannayan-Riley-Ruvalcaba syndromes, two dominantly inherited disorders characterized by mental retardation, multiple hamartomas and variable cancer risk. Here we modeled three sentinel mutant alleles of PTEN identified in Cowden patients and show that the nonsense PtenΔ4–5 and missense PtenC124R and PtenG129E alleles lacking lipid phosphatase activity cause similar developmental abnormalities but distinct tumor spectra with varying severity and age-of-onset. Allele-specific differences may be accounted by loss-of-function for Pten Δ4-5, hypomorphic function for PtenC124R and gain-of-function for PtenG129E. These data demonstrate that the variable tumor phenotypes observed in Cowden and Bannayan-Riley-Ruvalcaba syndrome patients can be attributed to specific mutations in PTEN that alter protein function through distinct mechanisms. Citation Format: {Authors}. {Abstract title} [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 101st Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research; 2010 Apr 17-21; Washington, DC. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2010;70(8 Suppl):Abstract nr 3260.
- Published
- 2010
43. Interleukin-15 Is a Proto-Oncogene In Acute Large Granular Lymphocyte Leukemia
- Author
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Pierluigi Porcu, Nyla A. Heerema, Michael A. Caligiuri, Xunchang Zou, Heiko Becker, Laura Sullivan, Harold A. Fisk, Ramasamy Santhanam, Lauren G. Falkenberg, Lai-Chu Wu, Laura Jaroncyk, Deanna M. W. Schaefer, Ramiro Garzon, Anjali Mishra, Sebastian Schwind, Shujun Liu, Jadwiga Labanowska, Laura J. Rush, Guido Marcucci, Douglas P. Curphey, Enrico Caserta, Gregory H. Sams, Jason C. Chandler, and Yue-Zhong Wu
- Subjects
Oncogene ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Immunology ,Wild type ,Aneuploidy ,Interleukin ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,Biology ,medicine.disease ,Biochemistry ,Molecular biology ,Cytokine ,Interleukin 15 ,In vivo ,Splenocyte ,medicine - Abstract
Abstract 704 Interleukin (IL)-15 is critical for the differentiation, proliferation, activation and survival of large granular lymphocytes (LGL). Malignant blasts from patients with acute LGL leukemia (LGLL) can express membrane bound IL-15 and often require IL-15 or IL-2 to survive and expand in vitro, suggesting a pivotal role of IL-15 in the genesis of LGLL in vivo. Indeed, 30% of mice engineered to over express IL-15 develop LGLL (J Exp Med 193:219-231, 2001), suggesting that IL-15 is a proto-oncogene. The present study examined the mechanism by which this may occur in mouse and in man. We observed ~2.5-fold increased levels of DNA methyltransferase 3b (Dnmt3b) in IL-15tg mice with LGLL compared to wild type (Wt) splenocytes (2.6 ± 0.6 -fold higher, N = 3 each, P =.03) and a ~2-fold increased levels of global DNA methylation (GDM) compared to Wt splenocytes (% global DNA levels measured by mass spec as % 5mC/(5mC+2dC): 3.6 ± 0.11%, N = 4 for IL-15tg LGLL; 1.5 ± 0.08%, N = 4 for Wt, P Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.
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