104 results on '"Lesche, R."'
Search Results
2. S11.1 Stratification of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) patients based on the molecular patterns of mouse models
- Author
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Rivas-Torrubia, M, primary, Morell, M, additional, Makowska, Z, additional, Kageyama, J, additional, Buttgereit, A, additional, Cytometry Consortium, P, additional, Lesche, R, additional, Mcdonald, F, additional, Alarcón-Riquelme, ME, additional, and Barturen-Briñas, G, additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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3. Expression Quantitative Trait Locus Analysis in Systemic Sclerosis Identifies New Candidate Genes Associated With Multiple Aspects of Disease Pathology
- Author
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Kerick, Martin, González-Serna, David, Carnero-Montoro, Elena, Teruel, María, Acosta-Herrera, Marialbert, Makowska, Z., Buttgereit, Anne, Babaei, Sepideh, Barturen, Guillermo, López-Isac, Elena, PRECISESADS Clinical Consortium, Lesche, R., Beretta, L., Alarcón-Riquelme, M. E., and Martín, Javier
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0301 basic medicine ,Adult ,Male ,Candidate gene ,Immunology ,Quantitative Trait Loci ,Kruppel-Like Transcription Factors ,Genome-wide association study ,Single-nucleotide polymorphism ,Disease ,Biology ,Bioinformatics ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Pathogenesis ,03 medical and health sciences ,Kruppel-Like Factor 4 ,0302 clinical medicine ,Rheumatology ,Basic Helix-Loop-Helix Transcription Factors ,Immunology and Allergy ,Humans ,Molecular Targeted Therapy ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,Transcription factor ,Genetic Association Studies ,Aged ,030203 arthritis & rheumatology ,Scleroderma, Systemic ,integumentary system ,Nuclear Proteins ,Middle Aged ,DNA binding site ,030104 developmental biology ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Expression quantitative trait loci ,Female ,Inhibitor of Differentiation Proteins ,T-Box Domain Proteins ,Transcription Factors - Abstract
Objective: To identify the genetic variants that affect gene expression (expression quantitative trait loci [eQTLs]) in systemic sclerosis (SSc) and to investigate their role in the pathogenesis of the disease. Methods: We performed an eQTL analysis using whole-blood sequencing data from 333 SSc patients and 524 controls and integrated them with SSc genome-wide association study (GWAS) data. We integrated our findings from expression modeling, differential expression analysis, and transcription factor binding site enrichment with key clinical features of SSc. Results: We detected 49,123 validated cis-eQTLs from 4,539 SSc-associated single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) (PGWAS < 10-5 ). A total of 1,436 genes were within 1 Mb of the 4,539 SSc-associated SNPs. Of those 1,436 genes, 565 were detected as having ≥1 eQTL with an SSc-associated SNP. We developed a strategy to prioritize disease-associated genes based on their expression variance explained by SSc eQTLs (r2 > 0.05). As a result, 233 candidates were identified, 134 (58%) of them associated with hallmarks of SSc and 105 (45%) of them differentially expressed in the blood cells, skin, or lung tissue of SSc patients. Transcription factor binding site analysis revealed enriched motifs of 24 transcription factors (5%) among SSc eQTLs, 5 of which were found to be differentially regulated in the blood cells (ELF1 and MGA), skin (KLF4 and ID4), and lungs (TBX4) of SSc patients. Ten candidate genes (4%) can be targeted by approved medications for immune-mediated diseases, of which only 3 have been tested in clinical trials in patients with SSc. Conclusion: The findings of the present study indicate a new layer to the molecular complexity of SSc, contributing to a better understanding of the pathogenesis of the disease.
- Published
- 2021
4. A new molecular classification to drive precision treatment strategies in primary Sjögren's syndrome
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Agence Nationale de la Recherche (France), European Commission, Soret, P., Le Dantec, C., Desvaux, E., Foulquier, N., Chassagnol, B., Hubert, S., Jamin, C., Barturen, Guillermo, Desachy, G., Devauchelle-Pensec, V., Boudjeniba, C., Cornec, D., Saraux, A., Jousse-Joulin, S., Barbarroja, N., Rodríguez-Pintó, I., De Langhe, E., Beretta, L., Chizzolini, C., Kovács, L., Witte, T., PRECISESADS Clinical Consortium, PRECISESADS Flow Cytometry Consortium, Bettacchioli, E., Buttgereit, A., Makowska, Z., Lesche, R., Borghi, M. O., Martín, J., Courtade-Gaiani, S, Xuereb, L., Guedj, M, Moingeon, P., Alarcón-Riquelme, M. E., Laigle, L., Pers, Jacques-Olivier, Agence Nationale de la Recherche (France), European Commission, Soret, P., Le Dantec, C., Desvaux, E., Foulquier, N., Chassagnol, B., Hubert, S., Jamin, C., Barturen, Guillermo, Desachy, G., Devauchelle-Pensec, V., Boudjeniba, C., Cornec, D., Saraux, A., Jousse-Joulin, S., Barbarroja, N., Rodríguez-Pintó, I., De Langhe, E., Beretta, L., Chizzolini, C., Kovács, L., Witte, T., PRECISESADS Clinical Consortium, PRECISESADS Flow Cytometry Consortium, Bettacchioli, E., Buttgereit, A., Makowska, Z., Lesche, R., Borghi, M. O., Martín, J., Courtade-Gaiani, S, Xuereb, L., Guedj, M, Moingeon, P., Alarcón-Riquelme, M. E., Laigle, L., and Pers, Jacques-Olivier
- Abstract
There is currently no approved treatment for primary Sjögren’s syndrome, a disease thatprimarily affects adult women. The difficulty in developing effective therapies is -in part-because of the heterogeneity in the clinical manifestation and pathophysiology of the disease.Finding common molecular signatures among patient subgroups could improve our under-standing of disease etiology, and facilitate the development of targeted therapeutics. Here,we report, in a cross-sectional cohort, a molecular classification scheme for Sjögren’s syn-drome patients based on the multi-omic profiling of whole blood samples from a Europeancohort of over 300 patients, and a similar number of age and gender-matched healthyvolunteers. Using transcriptomic, genomic, epigenetic, cytokine expression andflow cyto-metry data, combined with clinical parameters, we identify four groups of patients withdistinct patterns of immune dysregulation. The biomarkers we identify can be used bymachine learning classifiers to sort future patients into subgroups, allowing the re-evaluationof response to treatments in clinical trials.
- Published
- 2021
5. Crystal structure of BAY-297 with PIP4K2A
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Holton, S.J., primary, Wortmann, L., additional, Braeuer, N., additional, Irlbacher, H., additional, Weiske, J., additional, Lechner, C., additional, Meier, R., additional, Puetter, V., additional, Christ, C., additional, ter Laak, T., additional, Lienau, P., additional, Lesche, R., additional, Nicke, B., additional, Bauser, M., additional, Haegebarth, A., additional, von Nussbaum, F., additional, Mumberg, D., additional, and Lemos, C., additional
- Published
- 2021
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6. Crystal structure of Compound 1 with PIP4K2A
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Holton, S.J., primary, Wortmann, L., additional, Braeuer, N., additional, Irlbacher, H., additional, Weiske, J., additional, Lechner, C., additional, Meier, R., additional, Puetter, V., additional, Christ, C., additional, ter Laak, T., additional, Lienau, P., additional, Lesche, R., additional, Nicke, B., additional, Bauser, M., additional, Haegebarth, A., additional, von Nussbaum, F., additional, Mumberg, D., additional, and Lemos, C., additional
- Published
- 2021
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7. Crystal structure of BAY-091 with PIP4K2A
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Holton, S.J., primary, Wortmann, L., additional, Braeuer, N., additional, Irlbacher, H., additional, Weiske, J., additional, Lechner, C., additional, Meier, R., additional, Puetter, V., additional, Christ, C., additional, ter Laak, T., additional, Lienau, P., additional, Lesche, R., additional, Nicke, B., additional, Bauser, M., additional, Haegebarth, A., additional, von Nussbaum, F., additional, Mumberg, D., additional, and Lemos, C., additional
- Published
- 2021
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8. Die Rolle von Cand1 im Prostatakarzinom und seine Auswirkungen auf die Therapieresistenz gegen Enzalutamid
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Heidegger, I., Tymoszuk, P., Zwick, J., Schmitz, A. A., Pircher, A., Kocher, F., Schlicker, A., Lesche, R., Schäfer, G., Horninger, W., Klocker, H., and Eigentler, A.
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ddc: 610 ,610 Medical sciences ,Medicine - Abstract
Hintergrund: Es ist bekannt, dass Cullin-RING-Ubiquitin-Ligasen (CRLs) und deren Regulator, das Cullin-assoziiertes NEDD8-dissoziierte Protein 1 (Cand1), bei verschiedenen Krebsarten von Bedeutung sind. Die Rolle von Cand1 beim Prostatakarzinom (PCa) wurde bisher jedoch noch nicht intensiv untersucht.[zum vollständigen Text gelangen Sie über die oben angegebene URL], 46. Gemeinsame Tagung der Bayerischen Urologenvereinigung und der Österreichischen Gesellschaft für Urologie und Andrologie
- Published
- 2020
9. Die Rolle von Cand1 im Prostatakarzinom und seine Auswirkungen auf die Therapieresistenz gegen Enzalutamid
- Author
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Heidegger, I, Tymoszuk, P, Zwick, J, Schmitz, AA, Pircher, A, Kocher, F, Schlicker, A, Lesche, R, Schäfer, G, Horninger, W, Klocker, H, Eigentler, A, Heidegger, I, Tymoszuk, P, Zwick, J, Schmitz, AA, Pircher, A, Kocher, F, Schlicker, A, Lesche, R, Schäfer, G, Horninger, W, Klocker, H, and Eigentler, A
- Published
- 2020
10. Genome-wide whole blood transcriptome profiling in a large European cohort of systemic sclerosis patients
- Author
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European Commission, Beretta, L., Barturen, Guillermo, Vigone, B, Bellocchi, C., Hunzelmann, Nicolas, De Langhe, E., Cervera, R., Gerosa, M., Kovács, L., Ortega Castro, R., Almeida, I., Cornec, D., Chizzolini, C., Pers, J.O., Makowska, Z., Lesche, R., Kerick, Martin, Alarcón-Riquelme, M. E., Martín, J., European Commission, Beretta, L., Barturen, Guillermo, Vigone, B, Bellocchi, C., Hunzelmann, Nicolas, De Langhe, E., Cervera, R., Gerosa, M., Kovács, L., Ortega Castro, R., Almeida, I., Cornec, D., Chizzolini, C., Pers, J.O., Makowska, Z., Lesche, R., Kerick, Martin, Alarcón-Riquelme, M. E., and Martín, J.
- Abstract
Objectives: The analysis of annotated transcripts from genome-wide expression studies may help to understand the pathogenesis of complex diseases, such as systemic sclerosis (SSc). We performed a whole blood (WB) transcriptome analysis on RNA collected in the context of the European PRECISESADS project, aiming at characterising the pathways that differentiate SSc from controls and that are reproducible in geographically diverse populations. Methods: Samples from 162 patients and 252 controls were collected in RNA stabilisers. Cases and controls were divided into a discovery (n=79+163; Southern Europe) and validation cohort (n=83+89; Central-Western Europe). RNA sequencing was performed by an Illumina assay. Functional annotations of Reactome pathways were performed with the Functional Analysis of Individual Microarray Expression (FAIME) algorithm. In parallel, immunophenotyping of 28 circulating cell populations was performed. We tested the presence of differentially expressed genes/pathways and the correlation between absolute cell counts and RNA transcripts/FAIME scores in regression models. Results significant in both populations were considered as replicated. Results: Overall, 15 224 genes and 1277 functional pathways were available; of these, 99 and 225 were significant in both sets. Among replicated pathways, we found a deregulation in type-I interferon, Toll-like receptor cascade, tumour suppressor p53 protein function, platelet degranulation and activation. RNA transcripts or FAIME scores were jointly correlated with cell subtypes with strong geographical differences; neutrophils were the major determinant of gene expression in SSc-WB samples. Conclusions: We discovered a set of differentially expressed genes/pathways validated in two independent sets of patients with SSc, highlighting a number of deregulated processes that have relevance for the pathogenesis of autoimmunity and SSc.
- Published
- 2020
11. OP0137 GENOME-WIDE WHOLE-BLOOD TRANSCRIPTOME PROFILING IN A LARGE EUROPEAN COHORT OF SYSTEMIC SCLEROSIS PATIENTS
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Beretta, L., primary, Barturen, G., additional, Vigone, B., additional, Bellocchi, C., additional, Hunzelmann, N., additional, Delanghe, E., additional, Kovács, L., additional, Cervera, R., additional, Gerosa, M., additional, Ortega Castro, R., additional, Almeida, I., additional, Cornec, D., additional, Chizzolini, C., additional, Pers, J. O., additional, Makowska, Z., additional, Buttgereit, A., additional, Lesche, R., additional, Kerick, M., additional, Alarcon-Riquelme, M., additional, and Martin Ibanez, J., additional
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- 2020
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12. Cand1 in prostate cancer and its implication in therapy resistance to enzalutamide
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Eigentler, A., primary, Zwick, J., additional, Tymoszuk, P., additional, Schmitz, A.A., additional, Pircher, A., additional, Kocher, F., additional, Schlicker, A., additional, Lesche, R., additional, Schäfer, G., additional, Klocker, H., additional, and Heidegger, I., additional
- Published
- 2019
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13. Crystal structure of Compound 35 with ERK5
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Nguyen, D., primary, Lemos, C., additional, Wortmann, L., additional, Eis, K., additional, Holton, S.J., additional, Boemer, U., additional, Lechner, C., additional, Prechtl, S., additional, Suelze, D., additional, Siegel, F., additional, Prinz, F., additional, Lesche, R., additional, Nicke, B., additional, Mumberg, D., additional, Bauser, M., additional, and Haegebarth, A., additional
- Published
- 2019
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14. Crystal structure of Compound 1 with ERK5
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Nguyen, D., primary, Lemos, C., additional, Wortmann, L., additional, Eis, K., additional, Holton, S.J., additional, Boemer, U., additional, Lechner, C., additional, Prechtl, S., additional, Suelze, D., additional, Siegel, F., additional, Prinz, F., additional, Lesche, R., additional, Nicke, B., additional, Mumberg, D., additional, Bauser, M., additional, and Haegebarth, A., additional
- Published
- 2019
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15. FRI0424 Comparative analysis of clinically affected and unaffected skin biopsies from scleroderma patients based on rna-sequencing
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Makowska, Z., primary, Buttgereit, A., additional, Babaei, S., additional, Limaye, N., additional, Galant, C., additional, Houssiau, F., additional, Weiss, B., additional, Lesche, R., additional, McDonald, F., additional, and Lauwerys, B., additional
- Published
- 2018
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16. Super-enhancers define a proliferative PGC-1α-expressing melanoma subgroup sensitive to BET inhibition
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Gelato, K A, primary, Schöckel, L, additional, Klingbeil, O, additional, Rückert, T, additional, Lesche, R, additional, Toedling, J, additional, Kalfon, E, additional, Héroult, M, additional, Lejeune, P, additional, Mönning, U, additional, Fernández-Montalván, A E, additional, Bäurle, S, additional, Siegel, S, additional, and Haendler, B, additional
- Published
- 2017
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17. P76 - Cand1 in prostate cancer and its implication in therapy resistance to enzalutamide
- Author
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Eigentler, A., Zwick, J., Tymoszuk, P., Schmitz, A.A., Pircher, A., Kocher, F., Schlicker, A., Lesche, R., Schäfer, G., Klocker, H., and Heidegger, I.
- Published
- 2019
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18. Identification of disease associated genes and tumour class prediction by genome wide microarray-based DNA methylation scanning
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Genc, B., Adorjan, P., Distler, J., Lipscher, E., Model, F., Mueller, J., Pelet, C., Braun, A., Guetig, D., Grabs, G., Lesche, R., Leu, E., Lewin, A., Maier, S., Mueller, V., Otto, T., Ziebarth, H., Berlin, K., Piepenbrock, C., and Olek, A.
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Genomes -- Research ,Genetic screening -- Research ,Disease susceptibility -- Genetic aspects ,Genetic disorders -- Research ,Biological sciences - Published
- 2001
19. Ftl, a novel gene related to ubiquitin-conjugating enzymes, is deleted in the Fused toes mouse mutation
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Ulrich Rüther, Lesche R, Peetz A, and van der Hoeven F
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Untranslated region ,Insertional mutagenesis ,Mutation ,Open reading frame ,Polyadenylation ,Complementary DNA ,Genetics ,medicine ,Biology ,Ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme ,medicine.disease_cause ,Molecular biology ,Gene - Abstract
The dominant mouse mutation Fused toes is characterized by partial syndactyly of the limbs and thymic hyperplasia. Both morphological abnormalities were shown to be related to impaired regulation of programmed cell death. Ft/Ft embryos die in midgestation showing severe malformations of fore- and mid-brain as well as randomized situs. In Ft mice a large chromosomal deletion (about 300 kb) occurred after insertional mutagenesis. In this report we describe the identification of the first gene that has been mutated by Fused toes. The expression of the novel gene Ftl is reduced in Ft/+ mice and completely absent in Ft/Ft embryos. Analysis of the Ftl cDNA revealed an open reading frame that could code for a 32-kDa protein with similarities to ubiquitin-conjugating enzymes. Ftl transcripts with alternative 5′ UTR sequences as well as differential usage of polyadenylation sites were found. Interestingly, the 3’ parts of the longest Ftl transcripts are identical to the reverse complement of the 3′-most sequences of the Rb-related pl30 gene. Both genes are transcribed in opposite directions and overlap in their 3′ UTRs. Despite the close linkage, pl30 expression appeared not to be affected by the Ft mutation. In wild type mice, Ftl expression levels were found to be high in brain, kidney, and testes and detectable in all other adult organs and throughout embryonic development. Finally, we show that Ftl is conserved among mammals and identify the human homolog.
- Published
- 1997
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20. Super-enhancers define a proliferative PGC-1α-expressing melanoma subgroup sensitive to BET inhibition
- Author
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Gelato, K A, Schöckel, L, Klingbeil, O, Rückert, T, Lesche, R, Toedling, J, Kalfon, E, Héroult, M, Lejeune, P, Mönning, U, Fernández-Montalván, A E, Bäurle, S, Siegel, S, and Haendler, B
- Abstract
Metabolic changes are linked to epigenetic reprogramming and play important roles in several tumor types. PGC-1α is a transcriptional coactivator controlling mitochondrial biogenesis and is linked to oxidative phosphorylation. We provide evidence that melanoma models with elevated PGC-1α levels are characteristic of the proliferative phenotype and are sensitive to bromodomain and extra-terminal domain (BET) inhibitor treatment. A super-enhancer region highly occupied by the BET family member BRD4 was identified for the PGC-1α gene. BET inhibitor treatment prevented this interaction, leading to a dramatic reduction of PGC-1α expression. Accordingly, BET inhibition diminished respiration and mitochondrial function in cells. In vivo, melanoma models with high PGC-1α expression strongly responded to BET inhibition by reduction of PGC-1α and impaired tumor growth. Altogether, our findings identify epigenetic regulatory elements that define a subset of melanomas with high sensitivity to BET inhibition, which opens up the opportunity to define melanoma patients most likely to respond to this treatment, depending on their tumor characteristics.
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- 2018
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21. CDO1 Promoter Methylation is a Biomarker for Outcome Prediction of Anthracycline Treated, Estrogen Receptor-Positive, Lymph Node-Positive Breast Cancer Patients
- Author
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Dietrich, D. (Dimo), Krispin, M. (Manuel), Dietrich, J. (Jörn), Fassbender, A. (Anne), Lewin, J. (Jörn), Harbeck, N. (Nadia), Schmitt, M. (Manfred), Eppenberger-Castori, S. (Serenella), Vuaroqueaux, V. (Vincent), Spyratos, F. (F.), Foekens, J.A. (John), Lesche, R. (Ralf), Martens, J.W.M. (John), Dietrich, D. (Dimo), Krispin, M. (Manuel), Dietrich, J. (Jörn), Fassbender, A. (Anne), Lewin, J. (Jörn), Harbeck, N. (Nadia), Schmitt, M. (Manfred), Eppenberger-Castori, S. (Serenella), Vuaroqueaux, V. (Vincent), Spyratos, F. (F.), Foekens, J.A. (John), Lesche, R. (Ralf), and Martens, J.W.M. (John)
- Published
- 2010
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22. CDO1 Promoter Methylation is a Biomarker for Outcome Prediction of Anthracycline Treated, Estrogen Receptor-Positive, Lymph Node-Positive Breast Cancer Patients
- Author
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Dietrich, D, Krispin, M, Dietrich, J, Fassbender, A, Lewin, J, Harbeck, N, Schmitt, M, Eppenberger-Castori, S, Vuaroqueaux, V, Spyratos, F, Foekens, John, Lesche, R, Martens, John, Dietrich, D, Krispin, M, Dietrich, J, Fassbender, A, Lewin, J, Harbeck, N, Schmitt, M, Eppenberger-Castori, S, Vuaroqueaux, V, Spyratos, F, Foekens, John, Lesche, R, and Martens, John
- Abstract
Background: Various biomarkers for prediction of distant metastasis in lymph-node negative breast cancer have been described; however, predictive biomarkers for patients with lymph-node positive (LNP) disease in the context of distinct systemic therapies are still very much needed. DNA methylation is aberrant in breast cancer and is likely to play a major role in disease progression. In this study, the DNA methylation status of 202 candidate loci was screened to identify those loci that may predict outcome in LNP/estrogen receptor-positive (ER+) breast cancer patients with adjuvant anthracycline-based chemotherapy. Methods: Quantitative bisulfite sequencing was used to analyze DNA methylation biomarker candidates in a retrospective cohort of 162 LNP/ER+ breast cancer patients, who received adjuvant anthracycline-based chemotherapy. First, twelve breast cancer specimens were analyzed for all 202 candidate loci to exclude genes that showed no differential methylation. To identify genes that predict distant metastasis, the remaining loci were analyzed in 84 selected cases, including the 12 initial ones. Significant loci were analyzed in the remaining 78 independent cases. Metastasis-free survival analysis was conducted by using Cox regression, time-dependent ROC analysis, and the Kaplan-Meier method. Pairwise multivariate regression analysis was performed by linear Cox Proportional Hazard models, testing the association between methylation scores and clinical parameters with respect to metastasis-free survival. Results: Of the 202 loci analysed, 37 showed some indication of differential DNA methylation among the initial 12 patient samples tested. Of those, 6 loci were associated with outcome in the initial cohort (n = 84, log rank test, p < 0.05). Promoter DNA methylation of cysteine dioxygenase 1 (CDO1) was confirmed in univariate and in pairwise multivariate analysis adjusting for age at surgery, pathological T stage, progesterone receptor status, grade, and endoc
- Published
- 2010
23. DNA methylation marker and prediction of outcome in node-positive, estrogen-receptor positive breast cancer patients receiving adjuvant anthracyclin-based chemotherapy
- Author
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Martens, J. W., primary, Hartmann, O., additional, Spyratos, F., additional, Harbeck, N., additional, Schmitt, M., additional, Lerebours, F., additional, Eppenberger-Castori, S., additional, Vuaroqueaux, V., additional, Foekens, J., additional, and Lesche, R., additional
- Published
- 2008
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24. Nachweis von kolorektalen Adenomen mithilfe epigenetischer Veränderungen im Blut
- Author
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Lofton-Day, C, primary, Model, F, additional, Schuster, M, additional, Lesche, R, additional, Röcken, C, additional, Schmid, R, additional, and Ebert, M, additional
- Published
- 2007
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25. Multicenter study using paraffin-embedded tumor tissue testing PITX2 DNA methylation as a marker for outcome prediction in tamoxifen-treated, node-negative breast cancer patients.
- Author
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Harbeck N, Nimmrich I, Hartmann A, Ross JS, Cufer T, Grützmann R, Kristiansen G, Paradiso A, Hartmann O, Margossian A, Martens J, Schwope I, Lukas A, Müller V, Milde-Langosch K, Nährig J, Foekens J, Maier S, Schmitt M, and Lesche R
- Published
- 2008
26. DNA-methylation of the homeodomain transcription factor PITX2 reliably predicts risk of distant disease recurrence in tamoxifen-treated, node-negative breast cancer patients--Technical and clinical validation in a multi-centre setting in collaboration with the European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) PathoBiology group.
- Author
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Maier S, Nimmrich I, Koenig T, Eppenberger-Castori S, Bohlmann I, Paradiso A, Spyratos F, Thomssen C, Mueller V, Nährig J, Schittulli F, Kates R, Lesche R, Schwope I, Kluth A, Marx A, Martens JW, Foekens JA, Schmitt M, and Harbeck N
- Abstract
Our aim was to identify and validate DNA-methylation markers associated with very good outcome in node negative, hormone receptor positive breast cancer patients after adjuvant endocrine therapy which might allow identifying patients who could be spared the burden of adjuvant chemotherapy. Using a methylation microarray, we analysed 117 candidate genes in hormone receptor-positive tumours from 109 breast cancer patients treated by adjuvant tamoxifen. Results were validated in an independent cohort (n=236, 5 centres). Independent methodological validation was achieved by a real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based technique. DNA methylation of PITX2 showed the strongest correlation with distant recurrence. Its impact on patient outcome was validated in the independent cohort: 86% of patients with low PITX2 methylation were metastasis-free after 10 years, compared to 69% with elevated PITX2 methylation. Moreover, PITX2 methylation added significant independent information to established clinical factors. All clinical and technical findings were confirmed by quantitative DNA-methylation PCR. These results provide strong evidence that DNA-methylation analysis allows clinically relevant risk assessment in tamoxifen-treated primary breast cancer. Based on PITX2 methylation, about half of hormone receptor-positive, node-negative breast cancer patients receiving adjuvant tamoxifen monotherapy can be considered low-risk regarding development of distant recurrences and may thus be spared adjuvant chemotherapy. In addition, these low-risk postmenopausal patients seem to respond sufficiently well to tamoxifen so that they may not require up-front aromatase inhibitor therapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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27. Discovery of YAP1/TAZ pathway inhibitors through phenotypic screening with potent anti-tumor activity via blockade of Rho-GTPase signaling.
- Author
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Graham K, Lienau P, Bader B, Prechtl S, Naujoks J, Lesche R, Weiske J, Kuehnlenz J, Brzezinka K, Potze L, Zanconato F, Nicke B, Montebaur A, Bone W, Golfier S, Kaulfuss S, Kopitz C, Pilari S, Steuber H, Hayat S, Kamburov A, Steffen A, Schlicker A, Buchgraber P, Braeuer N, Font NA, Heinrich T, Kuhnke L, Nowak-Reppel K, Stresemann C, Steigemann P, Walter AO, Blotta S, Ocker M, Lakner A, von Nussbaum F, Mumberg D, Eis K, Piccolo S, and Lange M
- Subjects
- Humans, Animals, Mice, rho GTP-Binding Proteins metabolism, rho GTP-Binding Proteins antagonists & inhibitors, Cell Line, Tumor, Phosphoproteins metabolism, Phosphoproteins antagonists & inhibitors, Drug Screening Assays, Antitumor, Alkyl and Aryl Transferases antagonists & inhibitors, Alkyl and Aryl Transferases metabolism, Small Molecule Libraries chemistry, Small Molecule Libraries pharmacology, Drug Discovery, Mice, Nude, Acyltransferases antagonists & inhibitors, Acyltransferases metabolism, Phenotype, Structure-Activity Relationship, Transcriptional Coactivator with PDZ-Binding Motif Proteins, Transcription Factors metabolism, Transcription Factors antagonists & inhibitors, YAP-Signaling Proteins metabolism, Antineoplastic Agents pharmacology, Antineoplastic Agents chemistry, Antineoplastic Agents chemical synthesis, Signal Transduction drug effects, Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing metabolism, Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing antagonists & inhibitors, Cell Proliferation drug effects, High-Throughput Screening Assays
- Abstract
This study describes the identification and target deconvolution of small molecule inhibitors of oncogenic Yes-associated protein (YAP1)/TAZ activity with potent anti-tumor activity in vivo. A high-throughput screen (HTS) of 3.8 million compounds was conducted using a cellular YAP1/TAZ reporter assay. Target deconvolution studies identified the geranylgeranyltransferase-I (GGTase-I) complex as the direct target of YAP1/TAZ pathway inhibitors. The small molecule inhibitors block the activation of Rho-GTPases, leading to subsequent inactivation of YAP1/TAZ and inhibition of cancer cell proliferation in vitro. Multi-parameter optimization resulted in BAY-593, an in vivo probe with favorable PK properties, which demonstrated anti-tumor activity and blockade of YAP1/TAZ signaling in vivo., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests K.G., B.B, S.P., J.N., J.W., R.L., K.B, B.N., W.B., S.G., S.K., C.K., H.S., N.B., K.N-R., C.S., P.S., M.L. are/were employees of Nuvisan ICB GmbH and Bayer Pharma AG. P.L., J.K., L.P., A.M., S.P., S.H., A.K., A.St., A.Sc., P.B., N.A.F., T.H., L.K., A.O.W., S.B., M.O., A. L., F.v.N., D.M., K.E. are/were employees of Bayer Pharma AG. This study was funded by Bayer Pharma AG. The following patent applications in relation to this study have been submitted: WO-2020048826-A1, WO-2020048830-A1, WO-2020048829-A1, WO-2020048828-A1, WO-2020048831-A1, WO-2020048827-A1. S.P. served as consultant for Bayer in relation to this study., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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28. Velcrin molecular glues induce apoptosis in glioblastomas with high PDE3A and SLFN12 expression.
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Aquilanti E, Goldoni S, Baker A, Kotynkova K, Andersen S, Bozinov V, Gao GF, Cherniack AD, Lange M, Lesche R, Kopitz C, Lienau P, Lewis TA, Garrido M, Gradl S, Seidel H, Tseng YY, Ligon KL, Wen PY, Meyerson M, and Greulich H
- Abstract
Background: Velcrins are molecular glues that kill cells by inducing the formation of a protein complex between the RNase SLFN12 and the phosphodiesterase PDE3A. Formation of the complex activates SLFN12, which cleaves tRNA
Leu (TAA) and induces apoptosis. Velcrins such as the clinical investigational compound, BAY 2666605, were found to have activity across multiple solid tumor cell lines from the cancer cell line encyclopedia, including glioblastoma cell lines. We therefore aim to characterize velcrins as novel therapeutic agents in glioblastoma., Materials and Methods: PDE3A and SLFN12 expression levels were measured in glioblastoma cell lines, the Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) tumor samples, and tumor neurospheres. Velcrin-treated cells were assayed for viability, induction of apoptosis, cell cycle phases, and global changes in translation. Transcriptional profiling of the cells was obtained. Xenograft-harboring mice treated with velcrins were also monitored for survival., Results: We identified several velcrin-sensitive glioblastoma cell lines and 4 velcrin-sensitive glioblastoma patient-derived models. We determined that BAY 2666605 crosses the blood-brain barrier and elicits full tumor regression in an orthotopic xenograft model of GB1 cells. We also determined that the velcrins BAY 2666605 and BRD3800 induce tumor regression in subcutaneous glioblastoma PDX models., Conclusions: Velcrins have antitumor activity in preclinical models of glioblastoma, warranting further investigation as potential therapeutic agents., Competing Interests: P.Y.W.: Research Support: Agios, Astra Zeneca/Medimmune, Beigene, Celgene, Eli Lily, Genentech/Roche, Kazia, MediciNova, Merck, Novartis, Nuvation Bio, Oncoceutics, Vascular Biogenics, VBI Vaccines. Advisory Board: Agios, Astra Zeneca, Bayer, Boston Pharmaceuticals, CNS Pharmaceuticals, Elevate Bio Immunomic Therapeutics, Imvax, Karyopharm, Merck, Novartis, Nuvation Bio, Vascular Biogenics, VBI Vaccines, Voyager, QED, Celularity, Sapience. J.G.D.: consults for Microsoft Research, Abata Therapeutics, Servier, Maze Therapeutics, BioNTech, Sangamo, and Pfizer; consults for and has equity in Tango Therapeutics; serves as a paid scientific advisor to the Laboratory for Genomics Research, funded in part by GSK; receives funding support from the Functional Genomics Consortium: Abbvie, Bristol Myers Squibb, Janssen, Merck, and Vir Biotechnology. M.M. is the scientific advisory board chair of Isabl; consults for Bayer, DelveBio, and Interline; is an inventor of patents licensed to LabCorp and Bayer; and receives research funding from Bayer and Janssen. M.M. and H.G. receive an inventor’s share of license revenue as part of their employment for certain patent filings, including US-2016-0016913 and US-2018-0235961, which relate to aspects of the work described in this manuscript. The co-owners of these patent filings are The Broad Institute, Inc., Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Inc., and Bayer Pharma A.G., A.D.C, and H.G. also receive research funding from Bayer. A.D.C consults for KaryoVerse. K.L.L.: Research Support: BMS; Consulting: BMS, Travera, Integragen Equity: Travera., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press, the Society for Neuro-Oncology and the European Association of Neuro-Oncology.)- Published
- 2024
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29. Dual targeting of the androgen receptor and PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathways in prostate cancer models improves antitumor efficacy and promotes cell apoptosis.
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Sugawara T, Nevedomskaya E, Heller S, Böhme A, Lesche R, von Ahsen O, Grünewald S, Nguyen HM, Corey E, Baumgart SJ, Georgi V, Pütter V, Fernández-Montalván A, Vasta JD, Robers MB, Politz O, Mumberg D, and Haendler B
- Subjects
- Male, Humans, Aged, Receptors, Androgen metabolism, Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinases metabolism, Caspase 3, Androgens, TOR Serine-Threonine Kinases metabolism, Cell Proliferation, Apoptosis, Cell Line, Tumor, Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-akt metabolism, Prostatic Neoplasms genetics
- Abstract
Prostate cancer is a frequent malignancy in older men and has a very high 5-year survival rate if diagnosed early. The prognosis is much less promising if the tumor has already spread outside the prostate gland. Targeted treatments mainly aim at blocking androgen receptor (AR) signaling and initially show good efficacy. However, tumor progression due to AR-dependent and AR-independent mechanisms is often observed after some time, and novel treatment strategies are urgently needed. Dysregulation of the PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway in advanced prostate cancer and its implication in treatment resistance has been reported. We compared the impact of PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway inhibitors with different selectivity profiles on in vitro cell proliferation and on caspase 3/7 activation as a marker for apoptosis induction, and observed the strongest effects in the androgen-sensitive prostate cancer cell lines VCaP and LNCaP. Combination treatment with the AR inhibitor darolutamide led to enhanced apoptosis in these cell lines, the effects being most pronounced upon cotreatment with the pan-PI3K inhibitor copanlisib. A subsequent transcriptomic analysis performed in VCaP cells revealed that combining darolutamide with copanlisib impacted gene expression much more than individual treatment. A comprehensive reversal of the androgen response and the mTORC1 transcriptional programs as well as a marked induction of DNA damage was observed. Next, an in vivo efficacy study was performed using the androgen-sensitive patient-derived prostate cancer (PDX) model LuCaP 35 and a superior efficacy was observed after the combined treatment with copanlisib and darolutamide. Importantly, immunohistochemistry analysis of these treated tumors showed increased apoptosis, as revealed by elevated levels of cleaved caspase 3 and Bcl-2-binding component 3 (BBC3). In conclusion, these data demonstrate that concurrent blockade of the PI3K/AKT/mTOR and AR pathways has superior antitumor efficacy and induces apoptosis in androgen-sensitive prostate cancer cell lines and PDX models., (© 2024 The Authors. Molecular Oncology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Federation of European Biochemical Societies.)
- Published
- 2024
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30. Pan-PI3K inhibition with copanlisib overcomes Treg- and M2-TAM-mediated immune suppression and promotes anti-tumor immune responses.
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Heller S, Glaeske S, Gluske K, Paul J, Böhme A, Janzer A, Roider HG, Montebaur A, Nicke B, Lesche R, von Ahsen O, Politz O, Liu N, and Gorjánácz M
- Subjects
- Humans, Animals, Mice, T-Lymphocytes, Regulatory metabolism, Immunity, Tumor Microenvironment, Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinases metabolism, Neoplasms drug therapy
- Abstract
The PI3K pathway is one of the most frequently altered signaling pathways in human cancer. In addition to its function in cancer cells, PI3K plays a complex role in modulating anti-tumor immune responses upon immune checkpoint inhibition (ICI). Here, we evaluated the effects of the pan-Class I PI3K inhibitor copanlisib on different immune cell types in vitro and on tumor growth and immune cell infiltration in syngeneic murine cancer models. Intermittent treatment with copanlisib resulted in a strong in vivo anti-tumor efficacy, increased tumor infiltration of activated T cells and macrophages, and increased CD8
+ T cell/regulatory T cell and M1/M2 macrophage ratios. The strong in vivo efficacy was at least partially due to immunomodulatory activity of copanlisib, as in vitro these murine cancer cells were resistant to PI3K inhibition. Furthermore, the combination of copanlisib with the ICI antibody anti-PD-1 demonstrated enhanced anti-tumor efficacy in both ICI-sensitive and insensitive syngeneic mouse tumor models. Importantly, in an ICI-sensitive model, combination therapy resulted in complete remission and prevention of tumor recurrence. Thus, the combination of ICIs with PI3K inhibition by intermittently dosed copanlisib represents a promising new strategy to increase sensitivity to ICI therapies and to treat human solid cancers., (© 2023. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2023
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31. Targeting the aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) with BAY 2416964: a selective small molecule inhibitor for cancer immunotherapy.
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Kober C, Roewe J, Schmees N, Roese L, Roehn U, Bader B, Stoeckigt D, Prinz F, Gorjánácz M, Roider HG, Olesch C, Leder G, Irlbacher H, Lesche R, Lefranc J, Oezcan-Wahlbrink M, Batra AS, Elmadany N, Carretero R, Sahm K, Oezen I, Cichon F, Baumann D, Sadik A, Opitz CA, Weinmann H, Hartung IV, Kreft B, Offringa R, Platten M, and Gutcher I
- Subjects
- Humans, Mice, Animals, Tryptophan, Receptors, Aryl Hydrocarbon genetics, Leukocytes, Mononuclear metabolism, Squamous Cell Carcinoma of Head and Neck drug therapy, Kynurenine metabolism, Immunotherapy, Immunologic Factors, Tumor Microenvironment, Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung drug therapy, Lung Neoplasms drug therapy, Head and Neck Neoplasms drug therapy, Dioxygenases
- Abstract
Background: The metabolism of tryptophan to kynurenines (KYN) by indoleamine-2,3-dioxygenase or tryptophan-2,3-dioxygenase is a key pathway of constitutive and adaptive tumor immune resistance. The immunosuppressive effects of KYN in the tumor microenvironment are predominantly mediated by the aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR), a cytosolic transcription factor that broadly suppresses immune cell function. Inhibition of AhR thus offers an antitumor therapy opportunity via restoration of immune system functions., Methods: The expression of AhR was evaluated in tissue microarrays of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC), non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and colorectal cancer (CRC). A structure class of inhibitors that block AhR activation by exogenous and endogenous ligands was identified, and further optimized, using a cellular screening cascade. The antagonistic properties of the selected AhR inhibitor candidate BAY 2416964 were determined using transactivation assays. Nuclear translocation, target engagement and the effect of BAY 2416964 on agonist-induced AhR activation were assessed in human and mouse cancer cells. The immunostimulatory properties on gene and cytokine expression were examined in human immune cell subsets. The in vivo efficacy of BAY 2416964 was tested in the syngeneic ovalbumin-expressing B16F10 melanoma model in mice. Coculture of human H1299 NSCLC cells, primary peripheral blood mononuclear cells and fibroblasts mimicking the human stromal-tumor microenvironment was used to assess the effects of AhR inhibition on human immune cells. Furthermore, tumor spheroids cocultured with tumor antigen-specific MART-1 T cells were used to study the antigen-specific cytotoxic T cell responses. The data were analyzed statistically using linear models., Results: AhR expression was observed in tumor cells and tumor-infiltrating immune cells in HNSCC, NSCLC and CRC. BAY 2416964 potently and selectively inhibited AhR activation induced by either exogenous or endogenous AhR ligands. In vitro, BAY 2416964 restored immune cell function in human and mouse cells, and furthermore enhanced antigen-specific cytotoxic T cell responses and killing of tumor spheroids. In vivo, oral application with BAY 2416964 was well tolerated, induced a proinflammatory tumor microenvironment, and demonstrated antitumor efficacy in a syngeneic cancer model in mice., Conclusions: These findings identify AhR inhibition as a novel therapeutic approach to overcome immune resistance in various types of cancers., Competing Interests: Competing interests: CK, NS, LR, UR, BB, DS, FP, MG, HGR, CO, GL, HI, RL, JL, MO-W, RC, HW, IVH, BK and IG are current or former employees of Bayer. NS, UR, BB, MG, GL, HI, RL, JL, FC, DB, CAO, HW, IVH and IG are stockholders of Bayer AG. CK, NS, LR, UR, BB, DS, HI, RC, MP and IG hold patents connected to this work.AS and CAO are founders and managing directors of cAHRmeleon Bioscience GmbH. Some of the authors have patents on AHR inhibitors in cancer (WO2013034685, MP; CAO); A method to multiplex tryptophan and its metabolites (WO2017072368, MP, CAO); A transcriptional signature to determine AHR activity (WO2020201825, AS, CAO); Interleukin-4-induced gene 1 (IL4I1) as a biomarker (WO2020208190, AS,CAO); Interleukin-4-induced gene 1 (IL4I1) and its metabolites as biomarkers for cancer (WO2021116357, AS, CAO).No disclosures were reported by the other authors., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2023. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
- Published
- 2023
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32. Targeting fatty acid oxidation via Acyl-CoA binding protein hinders glioblastoma invasion.
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Duman C, Di Marco B, Nevedomskaya E, Ulug B, Lesche R, Christian S, and Alfonso J
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- Humans, Diazepam Binding Inhibitor metabolism, Lipid Metabolism, Fatty Acids metabolism, Carrier Proteins metabolism, Glioblastoma genetics
- Abstract
The diffuse nature of Glioblastoma (GBM) tumors poses a challenge to current therapeutic options. We have previously shown that Acyl-CoA Binding Protein (ACBP, also known as DBI) regulates lipid metabolism in GBM cells, favoring fatty acid oxidation (FAO). Here we show that ACBP downregulation results in wide transcriptional changes affecting invasion-related genes. In vivo experiments using patient-derived xenografts combined with in vitro models demonstrated that ACBP sustains GBM invasion via binding to fatty acyl-CoAs. Blocking FAO mimics ACBP
KD -induced immobility, a cellular phenotype that can be rescued by increasing FAO rates. Further investigation into ACBP-downstream pathways served to identify Integrin beta-1, a gene downregulated upon inhibition of either ACBP expression or FAO rates, as a mediator for ACBP's role in GBM invasion. Altogether, our findings highlight a role for FAO in GBM invasion and reveal ACBP as a therapeutic vulnerability to stall FAO and subsequent cell invasion in GBM tumors., (© 2023. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2023
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33. Comparative Proteomic and Transcriptomic Analysis of the Impact of Androgen Stimulation and Darolutamide Inhibition.
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Nevedomskaya E, Sugawara T, Baumgart SJ, Lesche R, Hahne H, Mumberg D, and Haendler B
- Abstract
Several inhibitors of androgen receptor (AR) function are approved for prostate cancer treatment, and their impact on gene transcription has been described. However, the ensuing effects at the protein level are far less well understood. We focused on the AR signaling inhibitor darolutamide and confirmed its strong AR binding and antagonistic activity using the high throughput cellular thermal shift assay (CETSA HT). Then, we generated comprehensive, quantitative proteomic data from the androgen-sensitive prostate cancer cell line VCaP and compared them to transcriptomic data. Following treatment with the synthetic androgen R1881 and darolutamide, global mass spectrometry-based proteomics and label-free quantification were performed. We found a generally good agreement between proteomic and transcriptomic data upon androgen stimulation and darolutamide inhibition. Similar effects were found both for the detected expressed genes and their protein products as well as for the corresponding biological programs. However, in a few instances there was a discrepancy in the magnitude of changes induced on gene expression levels compared to the corresponding protein levels, indicating post-transcriptional regulation of protein abundance. Chromatin immunoprecipitation DNA sequencing (ChIP-seq) and Hi-C chromatin immunoprecipitation (HiChIP) revealed the presence of androgen-activated AR-binding regions and long-distance AR-mediated loops at these genes.
- Published
- 2022
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34. Identification of a neural development gene expression signature in colon cancer stem cells reveals a role for EGR2 in tumorigenesis.
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Regan JL, Schumacher D, Staudte S, Steffen A, Lesche R, Toedling J, Jourdan T, Haybaeck J, Golob-Schwarzl N, Mumberg D, Henderson D, Győrffy B, Regenbrecht CRA, Keilholz U, Schäfer R, and Lange M
- Abstract
Recent evidence demonstrates that colon cancer stem cells (CSCs) can generate neurons that synapse with tumor innervating fibers required for tumorigenesis and disease progression. Greater understanding of the mechanisms that regulate CSC driven tumor neurogenesis may therefore lead to more effective treatments. RNA-sequencing analyses of ALDH
Positive CSCs from colon cancer patient-derived organoids (PDOs) and xenografts (PDXs) showed CSCs to be enriched for neural development genes. Functional analyses of genes differentially expressed in CSCs from PDO and PDX models demonstrated the neural crest stem cell (NCSC) regulator EGR2 to be required for tumor growth and to control expression of homebox superfamily embryonic master transcriptional regulator HOX genes and the neural stem cell and master cell fate regulator SOX2 . These data support CSCs as the source of tumor neurogenesis and suggest that targeting EGR2 may provide a therapeutic differentiation strategy to eliminate CSCs and block nervous system driven disease progression., Competing Interests: A.S., T.J., D.M., and. D.H. are employees of Bayer AG. R.L., J.T., and M.L. are employees of Nuvisan ICB GmbH. C.R.A.R. is the founder of CELLphenomics GmbH., (© 2022 The Authors.)- Published
- 2022
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35. Discovery and Characterization of the Potent and Highly Selective 1,7-Naphthyridine-Based Inhibitors BAY-091 and BAY-297 of the Kinase PIP4K2A.
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Wortmann L, Bräuer N, Holton SJ, Irlbacher H, Weiske J, Lechner C, Meier R, Karén J, Siöberg CB, Pütter V, Christ CD, Ter Laak A, Lienau P, Lesche R, Nicke B, Cheung SH, Bauser M, Haegebarth A, von Nussbaum F, Mumberg D, and Lemos C
- Subjects
- Animals, Apoptosis drug effects, Cell Line, Tumor, Cell Proliferation drug effects, Drug Screening Assays, Antitumor, High-Throughput Screening Assays, Humans, Mice, Mice, Knockout, Mitochondria drug effects, Mitochondria metabolism, Phosphotransferases (Alcohol Group Acceptor) genetics, Reactive Oxygen Species metabolism, Signal Transduction drug effects, Structure-Activity Relationship, Drug Discovery, Enzyme Inhibitors chemistry, Enzyme Inhibitors pharmacology, Naphthyridines chemistry, Phosphotransferases (Alcohol Group Acceptor) antagonists & inhibitors
- Abstract
PIP4K2A is an insufficiently studied type II lipid kinase that catalyzes the conversion of phosphatidylinositol-5-phosphate (PI5P) into phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PI4,5P
2 ). The involvement of PIP4K2A/B in cancer has been suggested, particularly in the context of p53 mutant/null tumors. PIP4K2A/B depletion has been shown to induce tumor growth inhibition, possibly due to hyperactivation of AKT and reactive oxygen species-mediated apoptosis. Herein, we report the identification of the novel potent and highly selective inhibitors BAY-091 and BAY-297 of the kinase PIP4K2A by high-throughput screening and subsequent structure-based optimization. Cellular target engagement of BAY-091 and BAY-297 was demonstrated using cellular thermal shift assay technology. However, inhibition of PIP4K2A with BAY-091 or BAY-297 did not translate into the hypothesized mode of action and antiproliferative activity in p53-deficient tumor cells. Therefore, BAY-091 and BAY-297 serve as valuable chemical probes to study PIP4K2A signaling and its involvement in pathophysiological conditions such as cancer.- Published
- 2021
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36. Expression Quantitative Trait Locus Analysis in Systemic Sclerosis Identifies New Candidate Genes Associated With Multiple Aspects of Disease Pathology.
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Kerick M, González-Serna D, Carnero-Montoro E, Teruel M, Acosta-Herrera M, Makowska Z, Buttgereit A, Babaei S, Barturen G, López-Isac E, Lesche R, Beretta L, Alarcon-Riquelme ME, and Martin J
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Basic Helix-Loop-Helix Transcription Factors genetics, Female, Genetic Association Studies, Humans, Inhibitor of Differentiation Proteins genetics, Kruppel-Like Factor 4, Kruppel-Like Transcription Factors genetics, Male, Middle Aged, Molecular Targeted Therapy, Nuclear Proteins genetics, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Quantitative Trait Loci, T-Box Domain Proteins genetics, Transcription Factors genetics, Gene Expression Regulation genetics, Scleroderma, Systemic genetics
- Abstract
Objective: To identify the genetic variants that affect gene expression (expression quantitative trait loci [eQTLs]) in systemic sclerosis (SSc) and to investigate their role in the pathogenesis of the disease., Methods: We performed an eQTL analysis using whole-blood sequencing data from 333 SSc patients and 524 controls and integrated them with SSc genome-wide association study (GWAS) data. We integrated our findings from expression modeling, differential expression analysis, and transcription factor binding site enrichment with key clinical features of SSc., Results: We detected 49,123 validated cis-eQTLs from 4,539 SSc-associated single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) (P
GWAS < 10-5 ). A total of 1,436 genes were within 1 Mb of the 4,539 SSc-associated SNPs. Of those 1,436 genes, 565 were detected as having ≥1 eQTL with an SSc-associated SNP. We developed a strategy to prioritize disease-associated genes based on their expression variance explained by SSc eQTLs (r2 > 0.05). As a result, 233 candidates were identified, 134 (58%) of them associated with hallmarks of SSc and 105 (45%) of them differentially expressed in the blood cells, skin, or lung tissue of SSc patients. Transcription factor binding site analysis revealed enriched motifs of 24 transcription factors (5%) among SSc eQTLs, 5 of which were found to be differentially regulated in the blood cells (ELF1 and MGA), skin (KLF4 and ID4), and lungs (TBX4) of SSc patients. Ten candidate genes (4%) can be targeted by approved medications for immune-mediated diseases, of which only 3 have been tested in clinical trials in patients with SSc., Conclusion: The findings of the present study indicate a new layer to the molecular complexity of SSc, contributing to a better understanding of the pathogenesis of the disease., (© 2021, American College of Rheumatology.)- Published
- 2021
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37. A new molecular classification to drive precision treatment strategies in primary Sjögren's syndrome.
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Soret P, Le Dantec C, Desvaux E, Foulquier N, Chassagnol B, Hubert S, Jamin C, Barturen G, Desachy G, Devauchelle-Pensec V, Boudjeniba C, Cornec D, Saraux A, Jousse-Joulin S, Barbarroja N, Rodríguez-Pintó I, De Langhe E, Beretta L, Chizzolini C, Kovács L, Witte T, Bettacchioli E, Buttgereit A, Makowska Z, Lesche R, Borghi MO, Martin J, Courtade-Gaiani S, Xuereb L, Guedj M, Moingeon P, Alarcón-Riquelme ME, Laigle L, and Pers JO
- Subjects
- Adult, Autoantibodies blood, Biomarkers blood, Chemokines analysis, Chemokines genetics, Chemokines metabolism, Cohort Studies, Computational Biology, Computer Simulation, Cross-Sectional Studies, Cytokines analysis, Cytokines genetics, Databases, Genetic, Databases, Protein, Female, Flow Cytometry, Genome-Wide Association Study, Humans, Inflammation genetics, Inflammation immunology, Inflammation metabolism, Interferons genetics, Male, Middle Aged, Multigene Family, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Proteome genetics, RNA-Seq, Sjogren's Syndrome blood, Sjogren's Syndrome genetics, Sjogren's Syndrome physiopathology, Cytokines blood, DNA Methylation genetics, Interferons blood, Proteome metabolism, Sjogren's Syndrome immunology, Transcriptome genetics
- Abstract
There is currently no approved treatment for primary Sjögren's syndrome, a disease that primarily affects adult women. The difficulty in developing effective therapies is -in part- because of the heterogeneity in the clinical manifestation and pathophysiology of the disease. Finding common molecular signatures among patient subgroups could improve our understanding of disease etiology, and facilitate the development of targeted therapeutics. Here, we report, in a cross-sectional cohort, a molecular classification scheme for Sjögren's syndrome patients based on the multi-omic profiling of whole blood samples from a European cohort of over 300 patients, and a similar number of age and gender-matched healthy volunteers. Using transcriptomic, genomic, epigenetic, cytokine expression and flow cytometry data, combined with clinical parameters, we identify four groups of patients with distinct patterns of immune dysregulation. The biomarkers we identify can be used by machine learning classifiers to sort future patients into subgroups, allowing the re-evaluation of response to treatments in clinical trials.
- Published
- 2021
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38. Integrative Analysis Reveals a Molecular Stratification of Systemic Autoimmune Diseases.
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Barturen G, Babaei S, Català-Moll F, Martínez-Bueno M, Makowska Z, Martorell-Marugán J, Carmona-Sáez P, Toro-Domínguez D, Carnero-Montoro E, Teruel M, Kerick M, Acosta-Herrera M, Le Lann L, Jamin C, Rodríguez-Ubreva J, García-Gómez A, Kageyama J, Buttgereit A, Hayat S, Mueller J, Lesche R, Hernandez-Fuentes M, Juarez M, Rowley T, White I, Marañón C, Gomes Anjos T, Varela N, Aguilar-Quesada R, Garrancho FJ, López-Berrio A, Rodriguez Maresca M, Navarro-Linares H, Almeida I, Azevedo N, Brandão M, Campar A, Faria R, Farinha F, Marinho A, Neves E, Tavares A, Vasconcelos C, Trombetta E, Montanelli G, Vigone B, Alvarez-Errico D, Li T, Thiagaran D, Blanco Alonso R, Corrales Martínez A, Genre F, López Mejías R, Gonzalez-Gay MA, Remuzgo S, Ubilla Garcia B, Cervera R, Espinosa G, Rodríguez-Pintó I, De Langhe E, Cremer J, Lories R, Belz D, Hunzelmann N, Baerlecken N, Kniesch K, Witte T, Lehner M, Stummvoll G, Zauner M, Aguirre-Zamorano MA, Barbarroja N, Castro-Villegas MC, Collantes-Estevez E, de Ramon E, Díaz Quintero I, Escudero-Contreras A, Fernández Roldán MC, Jiménez Gómez Y, Jiménez Moleón I, Lopez-Pedrera R, Ortega-Castro R, Ortego N, Raya E, Artusi C, Gerosa M, Meroni PL, Schioppo T, De Groof A, Ducreux J, Lauwerys B, Maudoux AL, Cornec D, Devauchelle-Pensec V, Jousse-Joulin S, Jouve PE, Rouvière B, Saraux A, Simon Q, Alvarez M, Chizzolini C, Dufour A, Wynar D, Balog A, Bocskai M, Deák M, Dulic S, Kádár G, Kovács L, Cheng Q, Gerl V, Hiepe F, Khodadadi L, Thiel S, de Rinaldis E, Rao S, Benschop RJ, Chamberlain C, Dow ER, Ioannou Y, Laigle L, Marovac J, Wojcik J, Renaudineau Y, Borghi MO, Frostegård J, Martín J, Beretta L, Ballestar E, McDonald F, Pers JO, and Alarcón-Riquelme ME
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Antiphospholipid Syndrome genetics, Antiphospholipid Syndrome immunology, Arthritis, Rheumatoid genetics, Arthritis, Rheumatoid immunology, Autoimmune Diseases immunology, Case-Control Studies, Cluster Analysis, Cross-Sectional Studies, Epigenomics, Female, Humans, Inflammation immunology, Interferons immunology, Lupus Erythematosus, Systemic genetics, Lupus Erythematosus, Systemic immunology, Male, Middle Aged, Mixed Connective Tissue Disease genetics, Mixed Connective Tissue Disease immunology, Scleroderma, Systemic genetics, Scleroderma, Systemic immunology, Sjogren's Syndrome genetics, Sjogren's Syndrome immunology, Undifferentiated Connective Tissue Diseases genetics, Undifferentiated Connective Tissue Diseases immunology, Autoimmune Diseases classification, Autoimmune Diseases genetics, Epigenome, Gene Expression Profiling
- Abstract
Objective: Clinical heterogeneity, a hallmark of systemic autoimmune diseases, impedes early diagnosis and effective treatment, issues that may be addressed if patients could be classified into groups defined by molecular pattern. This study was undertaken to identify molecular clusters for reclassifying systemic autoimmune diseases independently of clinical diagnosis., Methods: Unsupervised clustering of integrated whole blood transcriptome and methylome cross-sectional data on 955 patients with 7 systemic autoimmune diseases and 267 healthy controls was undertaken. In addition, an inception cohort was prospectively followed up for 6 or 14 months to validate the results and analyze whether or not cluster assignment changed over time., Results: Four clusters were identified and validated. Three were pathologic, representing "inflammatory," "lymphoid," and "interferon" patterns. Each included all diagnoses and was defined by genetic, clinical, serologic, and cellular features. A fourth cluster with no specific molecular pattern was associated with low disease activity and included healthy controls. A longitudinal and independent inception cohort showed a relapse-remission pattern, where patients remained in their pathologic cluster, moving only to the healthy one, thus showing that the molecular clusters remained stable over time and that single pathogenic molecular signatures characterized each individual patient., Conclusion: Patients with systemic autoimmune diseases can be jointly stratified into 3 stable disease clusters with specific molecular patterns differentiating different molecular disease mechanisms. These results have important implications for future clinical trials and the study of nonresponse to therapy, marking a paradigm shift in our view of systemic autoimmune diseases., (© 2020, American College of Rheumatology.)
- Published
- 2021
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39. RNA sequencing of long-term label-retaining colon cancer stem cells identifies novel regulators of quiescence.
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Regan JL, Schumacher D, Staudte S, Steffen A, Lesche R, Toedling J, Jourdan T, Haybaeck J, Mumberg D, Henderson D, Győrffy B, Regenbrecht CRA, Keilholz U, Schäfer R, and Lange M
- Abstract
Recent data suggest that therapy-resistant quiescent cancer stem cells (qCSCs) are the source of relapse in colon cancer. Here, using colon cancer patient-derived organoids and xenografts, we identify rare long-term label-retaining qCSCs that can re-enter the cell cycle to generate new tumors. RNA sequencing analyses demonstrated that these cells display the molecular hallmarks of quiescent tissue stem cells, including expression of p53 signaling genes, and are enriched for transcripts common to damage-induced quiescent revival stem cells of the regenerating intestine. In addition, we identify negative regulators of cell cycle, downstream of p53, that we show are indicators of poor prognosis and may be targeted for qCSC abolition in both p53 wild-type and mutant tumors. These data support the temporal inhibition of downstream targets of p53 signaling, in combination with standard-of-care treatments, for the elimination of qCSCs and prevention of relapse in colon cancer., Competing Interests: A.S., T.J., D.M., and. D.H. are employees of Bayer AG. R.L., J.T., and M.L. are employees of Nuvisan ICB GmbH. C.R.A.R. is a founder of CELLphenomics GmbH., (© 2021 The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2021
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40. An elevated polyclonal free light chain level reflects a strong interferon signature in patients with systemic autoimmune diseases.
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Bettacchioli E, Le Gaffric C, Mazeas M, Borghi MO, Frostegard J, Barturen G, Makowska Z, Babei S, Lesche R, Meroni PL, Alarcon-Riquelme ME, and Renaudineau Y
- Abstract
High amount of polyclonal free light chains (FLC) are reported in systemic autoimmune diseases (SAD) and we took advantage of the PRECISESADS study to better characterize them. Serum FLC levels were explored in 1979 patients with SAD (RA, SLE, SjS, Scl, APS, UCTD, MCTD) and 614 healthy controls. Information regarding clinical parameters, disease activity, medications, autoantibodies (Ab) and the interferon α and/or γ scores were recorded. Among SAD patients, 28.4% had raised total FLC (from 12% in RA to 30% in SLE and APS) with a normal kappa/lambda ratio. Total FLC levels were significantly higher in SAD with inflammation, active disease in SLE and SjS, and an impaired pulmonary functional capacity in SSc, while independent from kidney impairment, infection, cancer and treatment. Total FLC concentrations were positively correlated among the 10/17 (58.8%) autoantibodies (Ab) tested with anti-RNA binding protein Ab (SSB, SSA-52/60 kDa, Sm, U1-RNP), anti-dsDNA/nucleosome Ab, rheumatoid factor and negatively correlated with complement fractions C3/C4. Finally, examination of interferon (IFN) expression as a potential driver of FLC overexpression was tested showing an elevated level of total FLC among patients with a high IFNα and IFNγ Kirou's score, a strong IFN modular score, and the detection in the sera of B-cell IFN dependent factors, such as TNF-R1/TNFRSF1A and CXCL10/IP10. In conclusion, an elevated level of FLC, in association with a strong IFN signature, defines a subgroup of SAD patients, including those without renal affectation, characterized by increased disease activity, autoreactivity, and complement reduction., Competing Interests: All authors declare that they have no conflict of interest., (© 2021 The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2021
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41. Genome-wide whole blood transcriptome profiling in a large European cohort of systemic sclerosis patients.
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Beretta L, Barturen G, Vigone B, Bellocchi C, Hunzelmann N, De Langhe E, Cervera R, Gerosa M, Kovács L, Ortega Castro R, Almeida I, Cornec D, Chizzolini C, Pers JO, Makowska Z, Lesche R, Kerick M, Alarcón-Riquelme ME, and Martin J
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Cohort Studies, Europe, Female, Gene Expression Profiling, Genome-Wide Association Study, Humans, Immunophenotyping, Interferon Type I blood, Male, Microarray Analysis, Middle Aged, Sequence Analysis, RNA, Toll-Like Receptors blood, Autoimmunity genetics, Scleroderma, Systemic genetics, Signal Transduction genetics, Transcriptome genetics
- Abstract
Objectives: The analysis of annotated transcripts from genome-wide expression studies may help to understand the pathogenesis of complex diseases, such as systemic sclerosis (SSc). We performed a whole blood (WB) transcriptome analysis on RNA collected in the context of the European PRECISESADS project, aiming at characterising the pathways that differentiate SSc from controls and that are reproducible in geographically diverse populations., Methods: Samples from 162 patients and 252 controls were collected in RNA stabilisers. Cases and controls were divided into a discovery (n=79+163; Southern Europe) and validation cohort (n=83+89; Central-Western Europe). RNA sequencing was performed by an Illumina assay. Functional annotations of Reactome pathways were performed with the Functional Analysis of Individual Microarray Expression (FAIME) algorithm. In parallel, immunophenotyping of 28 circulating cell populations was performed. We tested the presence of differentially expressed genes/pathways and the correlation between absolute cell counts and RNA transcripts/FAIME scores in regression models. Results significant in both populations were considered as replicated., Results: Overall, 15 224 genes and 1277 functional pathways were available; of these, 99 and 225 were significant in both sets. Among replicated pathways, we found a deregulation in type-I interferon, Toll-like receptor cascade, tumour suppressor p53 protein function, platelet degranulation and activation. RNA transcripts or FAIME scores were jointly correlated with cell subtypes with strong geographical differences; neutrophils were the major determinant of gene expression in SSc-WB samples., Conclusions: We discovered a set of differentially expressed genes/pathways validated in two independent sets of patients with SSc, highlighting a number of deregulated processes that have relevance for the pathogenesis of autoimmunity and SSc., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2020. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
- Published
- 2020
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42. Darolutamide antagonizes androgen signaling by blocking enhancer and super-enhancer activation.
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Baumgart SJ, Nevedomskaya E, Lesche R, Newman R, Mumberg D, and Haendler B
- Subjects
- Cell Line, Tumor, Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic drug effects, Genome, Human, Hepatocyte Nuclear Factor 3-alpha metabolism, Humans, Male, Prostatic Neoplasms genetics, Prostatic Neoplasms pathology, Receptors, Androgen metabolism, Transcription, Genetic drug effects, Androgens metabolism, Enhancer Elements, Genetic genetics, Pyrazoles pharmacology, Signal Transduction drug effects
- Abstract
Prostate cancer (PCa) is one of the most frequent tumor types in the male Western population. Early-stage PCa and late-stage PCa are dependent on androgen signaling, and inhibitors of the androgen receptor (AR) axis represent the standard therapy. Here, we studied in detail the global impact of darolutamide, a newly approved AR antagonist, on the transcriptome and AR-bound cistrome in two PCa cell models. Darolutamide strongly depleted the AR from gene regulatory regions and abolished AR-driven transcriptional signaling. Enhancer activation was blocked at the chromatin level as evaluated by H3K27 acetylation (H3K27ac), H3K4 monomethylation (H3K4me1), and FOXA1, MED1, and BRD4 binding. We identified genomic regions with high affinities for the AR in androgen-stimulated, but also in androgen-depleted conditions. A similar AR affinity pattern was observed in healthy and PCa tissue samples. High FOXA1, BRD4, H3K27ac, and H3K4me1 levels were found to mark regions showing AR binding in the hormone-depleted setting. Conversely, low FOXA1, BRD4, and H3K27ac levels were observed at regulatory sites that responded strongly to androgen stimulation, and AR interactions at these sites were blocked by darolutamide. Beside marked loss of AR occupancy, FOXA1 recruitment to chromatin was also clearly reduced after darolutamide treatment. We furthermore identified numerous androgen-regulated super-enhancers (SEs) that were associated with hallmark androgen and cell proliferation-associated gene sets. Importantly, these SEs are also active in PCa tissues and sensitive to darolutamide treatment in our models. Our findings demonstrate that darolutamide is a potent AR antagonist blocking genome-wide AR enhancer and SE activation, and downstream transcription. We also show the existence of a dynamic AR cistrome that depends on the androgen levels and on high AR affinity regions present in PCa cell lines and also in tissue samples., (© 2020 The Authors. Published by FEBS Press and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2020
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43. Identification of Small Molecules that Modulate Mutant p53 Condensation.
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Lemos C, Schulze L, Weiske J, Meyer H, Braeuer N, Barak N, Eberspächer U, Werbeck N, Stresemann C, Lange M, Lesche R, Zablowsky N, Juenemann K, Kamburov A, Luh LM, Leissing TM, Mortier J, Steckel M, Steuber H, Eis K, Eheim A, and Steigemann P
- Abstract
Structural mutants of p53 induce global p53 protein destabilization and misfolding, followed by p53 protein aggregation. First evidence indicates that p53 can be part of protein condensates and that p53 aggregation potentially transitions through a condensate-like state. We show condensate-like states of fluorescently labeled structural mutant p53 in the nucleus of living cancer cells. We furthermore identified small molecule compounds that interact with the p53 protein and lead to dissolution of p53 structural mutant condensates. The same compounds lead to condensation of a fluorescently tagged p53 DNA-binding mutant, indicating that the identified compounds differentially alter p53 condensation behavior depending on the type of p53 mutation. In contrast to p53 aggregation inhibitors, these compounds are active on p53 condensates and do not lead to mutant p53 reactivation. Taken together our study provides evidence for structural mutant p53 condensation in living cells and tools to modulate this process., Competing Interests: All authors are or were employees of Bayer AG., (© 2020 The Author(s).)
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- 2020
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44. The Impact of Cand1 in Prostate Cancer.
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Eigentler A, Tymoszuk P, Zwick J, Schmitz AA, Pircher A, Kocher F, Schlicker A, Lesche R, Schäfer G, Theurl I, Klocker H, and Heidegger I
- Abstract
Evidence has accumulated asserting the importance of cullin-RING (really interesting new gene) ubiquitin ligases (CRLs) and their regulator Cullin-associated neural-precursor-cell-expressed developmentally down-regulated 8 (NEDD8) dissociated protein 1 (Cand1) in various cancer entities. However, the role of Cand1 in prostate cancer (PCa) has not been intensively investigated so far. Thus, in the present study, we aimed to assess the relevance of Cand1 in the clinical and preclinical setting. Immunohistochemical analyses of radical prostatectomy specimens of PCa patients showed that Cand1 protein levels are elevated in PCa compared to benign areas. In addition, high Cand1 levels were associated with higher Gleason Scores, as well as higher tumor recurrence and decreased overall survival. In line with clinical findings, in vitro experiments in different PCa cell lines revealed that knockdown of Cand1 reduced cell viability and proliferation and increased apoptosis, therefore underlining its role in tumor progression. We also found that the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p21 is significantly upregulated upon downregulation of Cand1. Using bioinformatic tools, we detected genes encoding for proteins linked to mRNA turnover, protein polyubiquitination, and proteasomal degradation to be significantly upregulated in Cand1
high tumors. Next generation sequencing of PCa cell lines resistant to the anti-androgen enzalutamide revealed that Cand1 is mutated in enzalutamide-resistant cells, however, with little functional and clinically relevant impact in the process of resistance development. To summarize the present study, we found that high Cand1 levels correlate with PCa aggressiveness., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest.- Published
- 2020
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45. Characterization of the Menin-MLL Interaction as Therapeutic Cancer Target.
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Brzezinka K, Nevedomskaya E, Lesche R, Haegebarth A, Ter Laak A, Fernández-Montalván AE, Eberspaecher U, Werbeck ND, Moenning U, Siegel S, Haendler B, Eheim AL, and Stresemann C
- Abstract
Inhibiting the interaction of menin with the histone methyltransferase MLL1 (KMT2A) has recently emerged as a novel therapeutic strategy. Beneficial therapeutic effects have been postulated in leukemia, prostate, breast, liver and in synovial sarcoma models. In those indications, MLL1 recruitment by menin was described to critically regulate the expression of disease associated genes. However, most findings so far rely on single study reports. Here we independently evaluated the pathogenic functions of the menin-MLL interaction in a large set of different cancer models with a potent and selective probe inhibitor BAY-155. We characterized the inhibition of the menin-MLL interaction for anti-proliferation, gene transcription effects, and for efficacy in several in vivo xenografted tumor models. We found a specific therapeutic activity of BAY-155 primarily in AML/ALL models. In solid tumors, we observed anti-proliferative effects of BAY-155 in a surprisingly limited fraction of cell line models. These findings were further validated in vivo. Overall, our study using a novel, highly selective and potent inhibitor, shows that the menin-MLL interaction is not essential for the survival of most solid cancer models. We can confirm that disrupting the menin-MLL complex has a selective therapeutic benefit in MLL-fused leukemia. In solid cancers, effects are restricted to single models and more limited than previously claimed., Competing Interests: Except A.E.F.-M all authors are employees of Bayer AG. C.S., B.H., A.E., A.E.F.-M, U.M., A.t.L. and S.S. are listed as inventors of a patent applications related to menin-MLL inhibitors [27,28].
- Published
- 2020
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46. The novel dihydroorotate dehydrogenase (DHODH) inhibitor BAY 2402234 triggers differentiation and is effective in the treatment of myeloid malignancies.
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Christian S, Merz C, Evans L, Gradl S, Seidel H, Friberg A, Eheim A, Lejeune P, Brzezinka K, Zimmermann K, Ferrara S, Meyer H, Lesche R, Stoeckigt D, Bauser M, Haegebarth A, Sykes DB, Scadden DT, Losman JA, and Janzer A
- Subjects
- Animals, Apoptosis drug effects, Cell Line, Tumor, Dihydroorotate Dehydrogenase, Female, HL-60 Cells, Humans, Leukemia, Myeloid, Acute metabolism, Leukemia, Promyelocytic, Acute drug therapy, Leukemia, Promyelocytic, Acute metabolism, Mice, Mice, Inbred NOD, Mice, SCID, Pyrimidines metabolism, THP-1 Cells, Translocation, Genetic drug effects, Antineoplastic Agents pharmacology, Cell Differentiation drug effects, Enzyme Inhibitors pharmacology, Leukemia, Myeloid, Acute drug therapy, Oxidoreductases Acting on CH-CH Group Donors antagonists & inhibitors
- Abstract
Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a devastating disease, with the majority of patients dying within a year of diagnosis. For patients with relapsed/refractory AML, the prognosis is particularly poor with currently available treatments. Although genetically heterogeneous, AML subtypes share a common differentiation arrest at hematopoietic progenitor stages. Overcoming this differentiation arrest has the potential to improve the long-term survival of patients, as is the case in acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL), which is characterized by a chromosomal translocation involving the retinoic acid receptor alpha gene. Treatment of APL with all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) induces terminal differentiation and apoptosis of leukemic promyelocytes, resulting in cure rates of over 80%. Unfortunately, similarly efficacious differentiation therapies have, to date, been lacking outside of APL. Inhibition of dihydroorotate dehydrogenase (DHODH), a key enzyme in the de novo pyrimidine synthesis pathway, was recently reported to induce differentiation of diverse AML subtypes. In this report we describe the discovery and characterization of BAY 2402234 - a novel, potent, selective and orally bioavailable DHODH inhibitor that shows monotherapy efficacy and differentiation induction across multiple AML subtypes. Herein, we present the preclinical data that led to initiation of a phase I evaluation of this inhibitor in myeloid malignancies.
- Published
- 2019
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47. Functional diversity of inhibitors tackling the differentiation blockage of MLL-rearranged leukemia.
- Author
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Brzezinka K, Nevedomskaya E, Lesche R, Steckel M, Eheim AL, Haegebarth A, and Stresemann C
- Subjects
- Cell Line, Tumor, Cell Proliferation drug effects, Enzyme Inhibitors chemistry, Enzyme Inhibitors pharmacology, Gene Expression Regulation, Leukemic drug effects, Gene Rearrangement drug effects, Histone-Lysine N-Methyltransferase metabolism, Humans, Leukemia genetics, Leukemia metabolism, Myeloid-Lymphoid Leukemia Protein metabolism, Oncogene Proteins, Fusion genetics, Oncogene Proteins, Fusion metabolism, Protein Interaction Maps drug effects, Proto-Oncogene Proteins metabolism, Antineoplastic Agents chemistry, Antineoplastic Agents pharmacology, Histone-Lysine N-Methyltransferase genetics, Leukemia drug therapy, Myeloid-Lymphoid Leukemia Protein genetics
- Abstract
Introduction: The chromosomal rearrangements of the mixed-lineage leukemia gene MLL (KMT2A) have been extensively characterized as a potent oncogenic driver in leukemia. For its oncogenic function, most MLL-fusion proteins exploit the multienzyme super elongation complex leading to elevated expression of MLL target genes. High expression of MLL target genes overwrites the normal hematopoietic differentiation program, resulting in undifferentiated blasts characterized by the capacity to self-renew. Although extensive resources devoted to increased understanding of therapeutic targets to overcome de-differentiation in ALL/AML, the inter-dependencies of targets are still not well described. The majority of inhibitors potentially interfering with MLL-fusion protein driven transformation have been characterized in individual studies, which so far hindered their direct cross-comparison., Methods: In our study, we characterized head-to-head clinical stage inhibitors for BET, DHODH, DOT1L as well as two novel inhibitors for CDK9 and the Menin-MLL interaction with a focus on differentiation induction. We profiled those inhibitors for global gene expression effects in a large cell line panel and examined cellular responses such as inhibition of proliferation, apoptosis induction, cell cycle arrest, surface marker expression, morphological phenotype changes, and phagocytosis as functional differentiation readout. We also verified the combination potential of those inhibitors on proliferation and differentiation level., Results: Our analysis revealed significant differences in differentiation induction and in modulating MLL-fusion target gene expression. We observed Menin-MLL and DOT1L inhibitors act very specifically on MLL-fused leukemia cell lines, whereas inhibitors of BET, DHODH and P-TEFb have strong effects beyond MLL-fusions. Significant differentiation effects were detected for Menin-MLL, DOT1L, and DHODH inhibitors, whereas BET and CDK9 inhibitors primarily induced apoptosis in AML/ALL cancer models. For the first time, we explored combination potential of the abovementioned inhibitors with regards to overcoming the differentiation blockage., Conclusion: Our findings show substantial diversity in the molecular activities of those inhibitors and provide valuable insights into the further developmental potential as single agents or in combinations in MLL-fused leukemia.
- Published
- 2019
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48. Discovery and Characterization of the Potent and Highly Selective (Piperidin-4-yl)pyrido[3,2- d]pyrimidine Based in Vitro Probe BAY-885 for the Kinase ERK5.
- Author
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Nguyen D, Lemos C, Wortmann L, Eis K, Holton SJ, Boemer U, Moosmayer D, Eberspaecher U, Weiske J, Lechner C, Prechtl S, Suelzle D, Siegel F, Prinz F, Lesche R, Nicke B, Nowak-Reppel K, Himmel H, Mumberg D, von Nussbaum F, Nising CF, Bauser M, and Haegebarth A
- Subjects
- Apoptosis drug effects, Binding Sites, Cell Differentiation drug effects, Cell Line, Cell Proliferation drug effects, Crystallography, X-Ray, Drug Evaluation, Preclinical, Half-Life, Humans, Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase 7 metabolism, Molecular Docking Simulation, Protein Kinase Inhibitors metabolism, Protein Kinase Inhibitors pharmacology, Protein Structure, Tertiary, Pyridines metabolism, Pyridines pharmacology, Pyrimidines metabolism, Pyrimidines pharmacology, Signal Transduction drug effects, Structure-Activity Relationship, Transcription, Genetic drug effects, Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase 7 antagonists & inhibitors, Protein Kinase Inhibitors chemistry, Pyridines chemistry, Pyrimidines chemistry
- Abstract
The availability of a chemical probe to study the role of a specific domain of a protein in a concentration- and time-dependent manner is of high value. Herein, we report the identification of a highly potent and selective ERK5 inhibitor BAY-885 by high-throughput screening and subsequent structure-based optimization. ERK5 is a key integrator of cellular signal transduction, and it has been shown to play a role in various cellular processes such as proliferation, differentiation, apoptosis, and cell survival. We could demonstrate that inhibition of ERK5 kinase and transcriptional activity with a small molecule did not translate into antiproliferative activity in different relevant cell models, which is in contrast to the results obtained by RNAi technology.
- Published
- 2019
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49. Intrarenal activation of adaptive immune effectors is associated with tubular damage and impaired renal function in lupus nephritis.
- Author
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Pamfil C, Makowska Z, De Groof A, Tilman G, Babaei S, Galant C, Montigny P, Demoulin N, Jadoul M, Aydin S, Lesche R, McDonald F, Houssiau FA, and Lauwerys BR
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Kidney Tubules pathology, Male, Renal Insufficiency immunology, Renal Insufficiency pathology, Transcriptome, Lupus Nephritis immunology, Lupus Nephritis pathology
- Abstract
Objectives: Chronic renal impairment remains a feared complication of lupus nephritis (LN). The present work aimed at identifying mechanisms and markers of disease severity in renal tissue samples from patients with LN., Methods: We performed high-throughput transcriptomic studies (Illumina HumanHT-12 v4 Expression BeadChip) on archived kidney biopsies from 32 patients with LN and eight controls (pretransplant donors). Histological staging (glomerular and tubular scores) and immunohistochemistry experiments were performed on the same and on a replication set of 37 LN kidney biopsy samples., Results: A group of LN samples was identified by unsupervised clustering studies based on their gene expression features, that is, the overexpression of transcripts involved in antigen presentation, T and B cell activation. These samples were characterised by a significantly lower estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) at the time of biopsy (T0) compared with the other systemic lupus erythematosus samples. Yet, apparent disease duration at T0, double-stranded DNA antibody titres at T0 and other relevant characteristics (serum C3, proteinuria, histological scores, numbers of previous flares) were not different between groups.Immunohistochemistry studies confirmed the association between interstitial infiltration by adaptive immune effectors and decreased renal function in the same and in a replication group of LN kidney biopsies. This was associated with transcriptomic, histological and immunohistochemical evidence of renal tubular cell involvement., Conclusion: Interstitial infiltration of LN kidney biopsies by adaptive immune effectors is associated with impaired renal tubular cell function and decreased eGFR. These results open new perspectives in evaluating and treating patients with LN, focusing on intrarenal mechanisms of immune cell activation., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2018. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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50. Preclinical Efficacy of the Novel Monocarboxylate Transporter 1 Inhibitor BAY-8002 and Associated Markers of Resistance.
- Author
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Quanz M, Bender E, Kopitz C, Grünewald S, Schlicker A, Schwede W, Eheim A, Toschi L, Neuhaus R, Richter C, Toedling J, Merz C, Lesche R, Kamburov A, Siebeneicher H, Bauser M, and Hägebarth A
- Subjects
- Aminobenzoates chemistry, Animals, Benzoates chemistry, Biological Transport drug effects, Carbon Radioisotopes, Cell Line, Tumor, Cell Proliferation drug effects, Fluorescence, Humans, Hydrogen-Ion Concentration, Lactic Acid metabolism, Mice, SCID, Monocarboxylic Acid Transporters metabolism, Muscle Proteins metabolism, Pyrimidinones pharmacology, Pyruvic Acid metabolism, Sulfones chemistry, Symporters metabolism, Thiophenes pharmacology, Treatment Outcome, Xenopus laevis, Aminobenzoates pharmacology, Benzoates pharmacology, Biomarkers, Tumor metabolism, Drug Resistance, Neoplasm drug effects, Monocarboxylic Acid Transporters antagonists & inhibitors, Sulfones pharmacology, Symporters antagonists & inhibitors
- Abstract
The lactate transporter SLC16A1 /monocarboxylate transporter 1 (MCT1) plays a central role in tumor cell energy homeostasis. In a cell-based screen, we identified a novel class of MCT1 inhibitors, including BAY-8002, which potently suppress bidirectional lactate transport. We investigated the antiproliferative activity of BAY-8002 in a panel of 246 cancer cell lines and show that hematopoietic tumor cells, in particular diffuse large B-cell lymphoma cell lines, and subsets of solid tumor models are particularly sensitive to MCT1 inhibition. Associated markers of sensitivity were, among others, lack of MCT4 expression, low pleckstrin homology like domain family A member 2, and high pellino E3 ubiquitin protein ligase 1 expression. The antitumor effect of MCT1 inhibition was less pronounced on tumor xenografts, with tumor stasis being the maximal response. BAY-8002 significantly increased intratumor lactate levels and transiently modulated pyruvate levels. In order to address potential acquired resistance mechanisms to MCT1 inhibition, we generated MCT1 inhibitor-resistant cell lines and show that resistance can occur by upregulation of MCT4 even in the presence of sufficient oxygen, as well as by shifting energy generation toward oxidative phosphorylation. These findings provide insight into novel aspects of tumor response to MCT1 modulation and offer further rationale for patient selection in the clinical development of MCT1 inhibitors. Mol Cancer Ther; 17(11); 2285-96. ©2018 AACR ., (©2018 American Association for Cancer Research.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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