15 results on '"Kim-Wanner SZ"'
Search Results
2. Krebs-Forschungsdatenzentrum - Konzeption, Herausforderungen und Analysepotenzial des Linkage versorgungsnaher Daten
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Schoffer, O, Kleihues-van Tol, K, Franke, B, Kuscher, A, Baum, F, Völkel, V, Benz, SR, Hansinger, J, Lablans, M, Gerken, M, Maier, D, Fox, F, Börries, M, Mertes, R, Vehreschild, JJ, Kussel, T, Kim-Wanner, SZ, Klinkhammer-Schalke, M, Schmitt, J, Schoffer, O, Kleihues-van Tol, K, Franke, B, Kuscher, A, Baum, F, Völkel, V, Benz, SR, Hansinger, J, Lablans, M, Gerken, M, Maier, D, Fox, F, Börries, M, Mertes, R, Vehreschild, JJ, Kussel, T, Kim-Wanner, SZ, Klinkhammer-Schalke, M, and Schmitt, J
- Published
- 2024
3. Incidence and survival of patients with malignant pancreatic neuroendocrine neoplasms in Germany, 2009-2021.
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Stang A, Wellmann I, Holleczek B, Kim-Wanner SZ, Müller-Nordhorn J, Sirri E, Wittenberg I, Siveke JT, and Kajüter H
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- Humans, Germany epidemiology, Female, Male, Incidence, Middle Aged, Aged, Adult, Survival Rate, Aged, 80 and over, Young Adult, Adolescent, Pancreatic Neoplasms epidemiology, Pancreatic Neoplasms mortality, Pancreatic Neoplasms pathology, Neuroendocrine Tumors epidemiology, Neuroendocrine Tumors mortality, Neuroendocrine Tumors pathology, Registries
- Abstract
Background: Due to the rarity of pancreatic neuroendocrine neoplasms, only few population-representative studies on incidence and survival have been conducted. The aim was to provide up-to-date nationwide incidence and relative survival estimates of neuroendocrine (NE) neoplasms overall, NE tumors (NETs), NE carcinomas (NECs), and mixed NE neoplasms (MiNEN)., Methods: We distinguished between pancreatic NETs (functioning versus non-functioning), NECs and mixed NE neoplasms and analyzed data from 2009 through 2021 from all German cancer registries covering a population of more than 80 million. We calculated crude and age-standardized incidence rates and 5-year relative survival estimates (RS)., Results: Overall 6474, 4217, and 243 patients with pancreatic NETs, NECs, and mixed NE neoplasms, respectively were registered. While the age-standardized incidence of NETs has increased (+16.4 % per year, 95 %CI 12.2;20.7), the incidence of NEC has fallen (about -6.4 % per year, 95 %CI -8.0; -4.8). The crude RS was 77.7 % (standard error [SE] 0.9) for non-functioning NETs, 90.3 % for functioning NETs (SE 3.9), and 18.5 % (SE 3.9) for MiNEN. Large and small cell NECs had a low RS (9.1 % and 6.9 %, respectively). RS for G1 NETs was 88.2 %, while it was only 36.6 % for G3 NETs. Localized NETs had a RS of 92.8 %, while distant metastatic NETs had a RS of 45.0 %., Conclusions: The incidence of pancreatic NETs has increased markedly in Germany in the period 2009-2021. Subgroups of NETs (G1 grading or localized stage) have an excellent prognosis. RS of MiNEN is more similar to NECs than NETs., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare the following financial interests/personal relationships which may be considered as potential competing interests: J.T.S. receives honoraria as consultant or for continuing medical education presentations from AstraZeneca, Bayer, Boehringer Ingelheim, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Immunocore, MSD Sharp Dohme, Novartis, Roche/Genentech, and Servier. His institution receives research funding from Abalos Therapeutics, AstraZeneca, Boehringer Ingelheim, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Celgene, Eisbach Bio, and Roche/Genentech; he holds ownership in FAPI Holding (< 3 %); all outside the submitted work., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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4. Treatment of endometrial cancer from 2000 to 2020 in Germany: a retrospective population based cohort study.
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Papathemelis T, Ortmann O, Kohl C, Neuser P, Tol KK, Klinkhammer-Schalke M, Ugocsai P, Walter CB, Rottmann M, Real C, Justenhoven C, Robers G, Schneider C, Gerken M, Sackmann A, and Kim-Wanner SZ
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- Humans, Female, Retrospective Studies, Germany epidemiology, Aged, Middle Aged, Registries, Aged, 80 and over, Combined Modality Therapy, Adult, Prognosis, Survival Rate, Endometrial Neoplasms therapy, Endometrial Neoplasms epidemiology, Endometrial Neoplasms pathology, Endometrial Neoplasms mortality
- Abstract
Purpose: Endometrial cancer (EC) is one of the most common malignancies among women in western countries. This study aimed to assess data on patient treatment in Germany throughout two decades to evaluate the development and effect of surgery, radiation, and chemotherapy., Methods: This retrospective registry study included 34,349 EC patients diagnosed between 2000 and 2020. Patients were classified into five risk groups. Overall survival was analyzed by Kaplan-Meier method as well as univariable and multivariable Cox regression to evaluate risk factors and treatment options., Results: Over the study period, minimal invasive surgery was used more often compared to open surgery and was associated with better overall survival. Patients with advanced EC were more likely to receive multimodal therapy. Patients with intermediate risk EC had a good prognosis upon surgery, which further improved when radiotherapy was added. High-risk patients showed poorer prognosis but clearly benefited from additional radiotherapy. Survival of elderly high-risk patients with a non-endometrioid histology was improved when chemotherapy was added to surgery and radiotherapy., Conclusion: Our study includes a large analysis of data from German clinical cancer registries on the care of endometrial cancer during two decades. We observed an increase of minimal invasive surgery. There is evidence that minimal invasive surgery is not inferior to open surgery. Adjuvant radio- and chemotherapy further improves survival depending on risk group and age., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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5. Population-Based Clinical Cancer Registration in Germany.
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Katalinic A, Halber M, Meyer M, Pflüger M, Eberle A, Nennecke A, Kim-Wanner SZ, Hartz T, Weitmann K, Stang A, Justenhoven C, Holleczek B, Piontek D, Wittenberg I, Heßmer A, Kraywinkel K, Spix C, and Pritzkuleit R
- Abstract
Introduction: In 2013, a new federal law obligated all German federal states to collect additional clinical data in population-based cancer registries as an active tool for monitoring and improving the quality of cancer care, increasing transparency and promoting health research. Now, 10 years later, the current status of the expanded cancer registration is presented, including current figures on cancer in Germany., Methods: Reporting of cancer is mandatory for physicians, and about 5 to 10 reports from different healthcare providers are expected for each case. A uniform national dataset of about 130 items is used, and reports are usually sent electronically to the registry. We used the most recent data available from cancer registries up to the year of diagnosis in 2019. We calculated incidence rates and 5-year relative survival (5YRS) for common cancers. Data on clinical outcomes and benchmarking based on quality indicators (QIs) from guidelines were provided by the Cancer Registry Schleswig-Holstein (CR SH)., Results: All federal state cancer registries met most of the previously defined national eligibility criteria. Approximately 505,000 cancer cases were registered in 2019, with breast, prostate, colorectal and lung cancer being the most common cancers. The age-standardised cancer incidence has slightly decreased during the last decade. and spatial heterogeneity can be observed within Germany. 5YRS for all cancers was 67% and 63% for women and men, respectively. Therapy data for rectal cancer in 2019-2021 from the CR SH are shown as an example: 69% of the registered patients underwent surgery, mostly with curative intent (84%) and tumour-free resection (91%). Radiotherapy was given to 33% of the patients, and chemotherapy was given to 40%. Three selected QIs showed differences between involved healthcare providers., Discussion: The implementation of population-based clinical cancer registration can be considered a success. Comprehensive recording of diagnosis, treatment and disease progression and the use of registry data for quality assurance, benchmarking and feedback have been implemented.
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- 2023
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6. Generation and validation of a formula to calculate hemoglobin loss on a cohort of healthy adults subjected to controlled blood loss.
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Hahn-Klimroth M, Loick P, Kim-Wanner SZ, Seifried E, and Bonig H
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- Adult, Blood Loss, Surgical, Blood Transfusion, Cohort Studies, Humans, Anemia, Hemoglobins analysis
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Background: The ability to approximate intra-operative hemoglobin loss with reasonable precision and linearity is prerequisite for determination of a relevant surgical outcome parameter: This information enables comparison of surgical procedures between different techniques, surgeons or hospitals, and supports anticipation of transfusion needs. Different formulas have been proposed, but none of them were validated for accuracy, precision and linearity against a cohort with precisely measured hemoglobin loss and, possibly for that reason, neither has established itself as gold standard. We sought to identify the minimal dataset needed to generate reasonably precise and accurate hemoglobin loss prediction tools and to derive and validate an estimation formula., Methods: Routinely available clinical and laboratory data from a cohort of 401 healthy individuals with controlled hemoglobin loss between 29 and 233 g were extracted from medical charts. Supervised learning algorithms were applied to identify a minimal data set and to generate and validate a formula for calculation of hemoglobin loss., Results: Of the classical supervised learning algorithms applied, the linear and Ridge regression models performed at least as well as the more complex models. Most straightforward to analyze and check for robustness, we proceeded with linear regression. Weight, height, sex and hemoglobin concentration before and on the morning after the intervention were sufficient to generate a formula for estimation of hemoglobin loss. The resulting model yields an outstanding R
2 of 53.2% with similar precision throughout the entire range of volumes or donor sizes, thereby meaningfully outperforming previously proposed medical models., Conclusions: The resulting formula will allow objective benchmarking of surgical blood loss, enabling informed decision making as to the need for pre-operative type-and-cross only vs. reservation of packed red cell units, depending on a patient's anemia tolerance, and thus contributing to resource management.- Published
- 2021
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7. Donor-intrinsic variables determine mobilization efficiency: analyses from a cohort of sixty twice-mobilized stem cell donors.
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Kim-Wanner SZ, Lee SY, Seifried E, and Bonig H
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- Antigens, CD34, Granulocyte Colony-Stimulating Factor, Hematopoietic Stem Cell Mobilization, Humans, Stem Cells, Tissue Donors, Blood Component Removal, Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation
- Abstract
Background: Healthy volunteer registry donors have become the backbone of stem cell transplantation programs. While most registrants will never become actual donors, a small minority are called upon twice, most commonly for the same patient because of poor graft function. Anecdotal evidence provides no hard reasons to disallow second-time mobilized apheresis, but few centers have treated enough two-time donors for definitive conclusions. Moreover, for reasons unknown, the efficiency of G-CSF varies greatly between donations., Methods: Comparison of outcomes of first vs. second donations can formally confirm G-CSF responsiveness as intrinsically, likely genetically, determined. In our database, we identified 60 donors (1.3%) who received two cycles of G-CSF 24 days to 4 years apart and systematically compared mobilization outcomes., Results: First and second mobilization and collection proceeded without severe or unusual adverse effects. First-time mobilization efficiency was highly predictive of second-time mobilization. Neither mobilization efficiency nor time lag between donations affected the similarity of first- and second-time mobilization outcomes., Conclusions: With the caveat that only donors with an unremarkable first donation were cleared for a second, our data indicate that a second donation is feasible, equally tolerable as a first donation, and efficient. Moreover, the data strongly support the notion of donor-intrinsic variables dictating mobilization response and argue against relevant damage to the stem cell compartment during mobilization with rhG-CSF.
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- 2020
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8. Introduction of principles of blood management to healthy donor bone marrow harvesting.
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Kim-Wanner SZ, Luxembourg B, Schmidt AH, Schäfer R, Möller N, Herbert E, Poppe C, Hümmer C, Bunos M, Seifried E, and Bonig H
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- Bone Marrow Transplantation, Female, Humans, Male, Patient Safety, Retrospective Studies, Stem Cell Transplantation, Bone Marrow, Tissue Donors, Tissue and Organ Harvesting methods
- Abstract
Background and Objectives: Patient blood (more accurately: haemoglobin, Hb) management (PBM) aims to optimize endogenous Hb production and to minimize iatrogenic Hb loss while maintaining patient safety and optimal effectiveness of medical interventions. PBM was adopted as policy for patients by the World Health Organization (WHO), and, all the more, should be applied to healthy donors., Materials and Methods: Observational data from 489 bone marrow (BM) donors were retrospectively analysed, and principles of patient blood management were applied to healthy volunteer BM donations., Results and Conclusion: We managed to render BM aspiration safe for donors, notably completely avoiding the collection of autologous blood units and blood transfusions through iron management, establishment and curation of high-yield aspiration technique, limitation of collection volume to 1·5% of donor body weight and development of volume prediction algorithms for the requested cell dose., (© 2020 The Authors. Vox Sanguinis published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of International Society of Blood Transfusion.)
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- 2020
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9. Genome-Wide DNA Methylation Profiling in Early Stage I Lung Adenocarcinoma Reveals Predictive Aberrant Methylation in the Promoter Region of the Long Noncoding RNA PLUT: An Exploratory Study.
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Kim-Wanner SZ, Assenov Y, Nair MB, Weichenhan D, Benner A, Becker N, Landwehr K, Kuner R, Sültmann H, Esteller M, Koch I, Lindner M, Meister M, Thomas M, Bieg M, Klingmüller U, Schlesner M, Warth A, Brors B, Seifried E, Bönig H, Plass C, Risch A, and Muley T
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- Adenocarcinoma of Lung genetics, Biomarkers, Tumor genetics, Biomarkers, Tumor metabolism, DNA Methylation, Humans, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local genetics, Prognosis, Promoter Regions, Genetic, Lung Neoplasms genetics, RNA, Long Noncoding
- Abstract
Introduction: Surgical procedure is the treatment of choice in early stage I lung adenocarcinoma. However, a considerable number of patients experience recurrence within the first 2 years after complete resection. Suitable prognostic biomarkers that identify patients at high risk of recurrence (who may probably benefit from adjuvant treatment) are still not available. This study aimed at identifying methylation markers for early recurrence that may become important tools for the development of new treatment modalities., Methods: Genome-wide DNA methylation profiling was performed on 30 stage I lung adenocarcinomas, comparing 14 patients with early metastatic recurrence with 16 patients with a long-term relapse-free survival period using methylated-CpG-immunoprecipitation followed by high-throughput next-generation sequencing. The differentially methylated regions between the two subgroups were validated for their prognostic value in two independent cohorts using the MassCLEAVE assay, a high-resolution quantitative methylation analysis., Results: Unsupervised clustering of patients in the discovery cohort on the basis of differentially methylated regions identified patients with shorter relapse-free survival (hazard ratio: 2.23; 95% confidence interval: 0.66-7.53; p = 0.03). In two validation cohorts, promoter hypermethylation of the long noncoding RNA PLUT was significantly associated with shorter relapse-free survival (hazard ratio: 0.54; 95% confidence interval: 0.31-0.93; p < 0.026) and could be reported as an independent prognostic factor in the multivariate Cox regression analysis., Conclusions: Promoter hypermethylation of the long noncoding RNA PLUT is predictive in patients with early stage I adenocarcinoma at high risk for early recurrence. Further studies are needed to validate its role in carcinogenesis and its use as a biomarker to facilitate patient selection and risk stratification., (Copyright © 2020 International Association for the Study of Lung Cancer. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2020
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10. Correction: A novel association between relaxin receptor polymorphism and hematopoietic stem cell yield after mobilization.
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Shin S, Kim J, Kim-Wanner SZ, Bönig H, Cho SR, Kim S, Choi JR, and Lee KA
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[This corrects the article DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0179986.].
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- 2019
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11. Erythrocyte depletion from bone marrow: performance evaluation after 50 clinical-scale depletions with Spectra Optia BMC.
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Kim-Wanner SZ, Bug G, Steinmann J, Ajib S, Sorg N, Poppe C, Bunos M, Wingenfeld E, Hümmer C, Luxembourg B, Seifried E, and Bonig H
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- Antigens, CD34 metabolism, Bone Marrow Transplantation, Cell Lineage, Feasibility Studies, Hematopoiesis, Humans, Transplantation, Homologous, Blood Component Removal methods, Bone Marrow metabolism, Erythrocytes metabolism
- Abstract
Background: Red blood cell (RBC) depletion is a standard graft manipulation technique for ABO-incompatible bone marrow (BM) transplants. The BM processing module for Spectra Optia, "BMC", was previously introduced. We here report the largest series to date of routine quality data after performing 50 clinical-scale RBC-depletions., Methods: Fifty successive RBC-depletions from autologous (n = 5) and allogeneic (n = 45) BM transplants were performed with the Spectra Optia BMC apheresis suite. Product quality was assessed before and after processing for volume, RBC and leukocyte content; RBC-depletion and stem cell (CD34+ cells) recovery was calculated there from. Clinical engraftment data were collected from 26/45 allogeneic recipients., Results: Median RBC removal was 98.2% (range 90.8-99.1%), median CD34+ cell recovery was 93.6%, minimum recovery being 72%, total product volume was reduced to 7.5% (range 4.7-23.0%). Products engrafted with expected probability and kinetics. Performance indicators were stable over time., Discussion: Spectra Optia BMC is a robust and efficient technology for RBC-depletion and volume reduction of BM, providing near-complete RBC removal and excellent CD34+ cell recovery.
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- 2017
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12. Characterization of the novel HLA-B*49:39 allele identified in a German leukaemia patient.
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Becker PSA, Lindner S, Kim-Wanner SZ, Bug G, and Seidl C
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- Amino Acid Substitution, Base Sequence, Codon chemistry, Female, Gene Expression, HLA-B Antigens immunology, Haplotypes, Histocompatibility Testing, Humans, Leukemia immunology, Leukemia pathology, Male, Nuclear Family, Pedigree, Polymerase Chain Reaction, Sequence Alignment, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Tissue Donors, Alleles, Exons, HLA-B Antigens genetics, Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation, Leukemia therapy, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide
- Abstract
HLA-B*49:39 allele is characterised by 1 amino acid substitution in the alpha 1 domain., (© 2017 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2017
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13. A novel association between relaxin receptor polymorphism and hematopoietic stem cell yield after mobilization.
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Shin S, Kim J, Kim-Wanner SZ, Bönig H, Cho SR, Kim S, Choi JR, and Lee KA
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- Adult, Case-Control Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Hematopoietic Stem Cell Mobilization, Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Receptors, G-Protein-Coupled genetics, Receptors, Peptide genetics
- Abstract
Mobilization of hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) from the bone marrow to the peripheral blood is a complex mechanism that involves adhesive and chemotactic interactions of HSCs as well as their bone marrow microenvironment. In addition to a number of non-genetic factors, genetic susceptibilities also contribute to the mobilization outcome. Identification of genetic factors associated with HSC yield is important to better understand the mechanism behind HSC mobilization. In the present study, we enrolled 148 Korean participants (56 healthy donors and 92 patients) undergoing HSC mobilization for allogeneic or autologous HSC transplantation. Among a total of 53 polymorphisms in 33 candidate genes, one polymorphism (rs11264422) in relaxin/insulin-like family peptide receptor 4 (RXFP4) gene was significantly associated with a higher HSC yield after mobilization in Koreans. However, in a set of 101 Europeans, no association was found between circulating CD34+ cell counts and rs11264422 genotype. Therefore, we suggest that the ethnic differences in subjects' genetic background may be related to HSC mobilization. In conclusion, the relaxin-relaxin receptor axis may play an important role in HSC mobilization. We believe that the results of the current study could provide new insights for therapies that use relaxin and HSC populations, as well as a better understanding of HSC regulation and mobilization at the molecular level.
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- 2017
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14. Epigenetic silencing of miR-708 enhances NF-κB signaling in chronic lymphocytic leukemia.
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Baer C, Oakes CC, Ruppert AS, Claus R, Kim-Wanner SZ, Mertens D, Zenz T, Stilgenbauer S, Byrd JC, and Plass C
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- 3' Untranslated Regions genetics, Cell Line, DNA Methylation genetics, Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic genetics, HEK293 Cells, Humans, I-kappa B Kinase genetics, Phosphorylation genetics, Promoter Regions, Genetic genetics, Epigenesis, Genetic genetics, Gene Silencing physiology, Leukemia, Lymphocytic, Chronic, B-Cell genetics, MicroRNAs genetics, NF-kappa B genetics, Signal Transduction genetics
- Abstract
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are post-transcriptional regulators of gene expression and their deregulation is involved in tumor development. Epigenetic gene silencing in cancer by DNA methylation contributes to the silencing of tumor-suppressor genes, including miRNAs. We have recently shown that the promoter of miR-708 is aberrantly methylated in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). To characterize the molecular signaling networks that are influenced by miR-708, we performed a luciferase-based screen evaluating the effects of ectopic miR-708 expression on leukemia-relevant signaling pathways. We found that miR-708 strongly repressed NF-κB signaling, a pathway known to be deregulated in CLL. Among the predicted miR-708 targets was IKKβ (inhibitor of kappa light polypeptide gene enhancer in B cells, kinase-β/IKBKB), a key kinase facilitating NF-κB signaling. We validated the interaction of miR-708 with the 3'-untranslated region of IKKβ and found that miR-708 overexpression represses endogenous IKKβ. Phosphorylation of the IKKβ target IκBα and expression of known NF-κB target genes were impaired by miR-708. Furthermore, we identified an enhancer region downstream of the miR-708 promoter that displays a distinct DNA methylation status in CLL. High enhancer methylation is significantly correlated with lower miR-708 expression and is predominantly found in patients with poor prognosis and shorter time to treatment. These results demonstrate that miR-708 regulates the NF-κB pathway by targeting IKKβ, and that methylation of a key enhancer region contributes to its suppression in CLL., (© 2015 UICC.)
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- 2015
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15. Early aberrant DNA methylation events in a mouse model of acute myeloid leukemia.
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Sonnet M, Claus R, Becker N, Zucknick M, Petersen J, Lipka DB, Oakes CC, Andrulis M, Lier A, Milsom MD, Witte T, Gu L, Kim-Wanner SZ, Schirmacher P, Wulfert M, Gattermann N, Lübbert M, Rosenbauer F, Rehli M, Bullinger L, Weichenhan D, and Plass C
- Abstract
Background: Aberrant DNA methylation is frequently found in human malignancies including acute myeloid leukemia (AML). While most studies focus on later disease stages, the onset of aberrant DNA methylation events and their dynamics during leukemic progression are largely unknown., Methods: We screened genome-wide for aberrant CpG island methylation in three disease stages of a murine AML model that is driven by hypomorphic expression of the hematopoietic transcription factor PU.1. DNA methylation levels of selected genes were correlated with methylation levels of CD34+ cells and lineage negative, CD127-, c-Kit+, Sca-1+ cells; common myeloid progenitors; granulocyte-macrophage progenitors; and megakaryocyte-erythroid progenitors., Results: We identified 1,184 hypermethylated array probes covering 762 associated genes in the preleukemic stage. During disease progression, the number of hypermethylated genes increased to 5,465 in the late leukemic disease stage. Using publicly available data, we found a significant enrichment of PU.1 binding sites in the preleukemic hypermethylated genes, suggesting that shortage of PU.1 makes PU.1 binding sites in the DNA accessible for aberrant methylation. Many known AML associated genes such as RUNX1 and HIC1 were found among the preleukemic hypermethylated genes. Nine novel hypermethylated genes, FZD5, FZD8, PRDM16, ROBO3, CXCL14, BCOR, ITPKA, HES6 and TAL1, the latter four being potential PU.1 targets, were confirmed to be hypermethylated in human normal karyotype AML patients, underscoring the relevance of the mouse model for human AML., Conclusions: Our study identified early aberrantly methylated genes as potential contributors to onset and progression of AML.
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- 2014
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