2,000 results on '"Letai A"'
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2. KIAA0753 promotes glucose and energy metabolism in osteoblasts inhibited by diabetes
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LI Mengxue, WANG Jichun, and LI Letai
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joubert syndrome ,osteoblasts ,kiaa0753 ,glucose metabolism ,mitochondria ,atp ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Objective To explore the effect of KIAA0753 on glucose and energy metabolism in mouse embryonic osteoblast precursor cell line MC3T3-E1. Methods The GSE182286 datasets of patients with Joubert syndrome acquired from the Gene Expression Comprehensive database were analyzed for the levels of gene expression. After the cells with KIAA0753 overexpression were constructed and the experiment were divided into the control group, the high glucose group and the high glucose+overexpression KIAA0753 group, Western blotting was used to determine the effect of KIAA0753 on MC3T3-E1 cells under high glucose condition by detecting the expression of the glucose metabolism-related proteins, such as glycogen synthase 1 (GYS1), glycogen phosphorylase L (PYGL), glucose transporter type 4(GluT4), phosphofructokinase muscle (PFKM), pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphatase 1 (PDP1), and acetyl-CoA carboxylase α (ACACA), as well as the mitochondria function-associated proteins, including peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-γ coactivator-1α (PGC-1α), nuclear respiratory factor 1 (NRF1), and mitochondrial transcription factor A (TFAM). The effect of KIAA0753 on the intermediates of glucose metabolism was analyzed by determining the contents of glycogen, glucose and lactic acid in the cell culture medium. Cellular immunofluorescence assay and adenosine triphosphate (ATP) assay were employed to measure the mitochondrial activity and function impacted by KIAA0753 in the cells under high glucose condition. The effect of KIAA0753 on the proliferation of MC3T3-E1 cells under high glucose was detected by EdU staining. Results The expression of KIAA0753 protein was downregulated in patients with Joubert syndrome and in MC3T3-E1 cells under high glucose conditions (P < 0.05). High glucose resulted in inhibited protein expression of GYS1, ACACA, PFKM, GluT4, PGC-1α, TFAM and NRF1, enhanced protein levels of PDP1 and PYGL, reduced glycogen generation and consumption of extracellular glucose, and promoted production of lactic acid (P < 0.05). While, overexpression of KIAA0753 could attenuate the effect of high glucose, that is, up-regulating the protein expression levels of GYS1, ACACA, PFKM, GluT4, PGC-1α, TFAM and NRF1, suppressing those of PDP1 and PYGL, enhancing glycogen generation and consumption of extracellular glucose, and inhibiting production of lactic acid (P < 0.05). What's more, the overexpression also could elevate the activity and membrane potential of mitochondria, and promote the ATP synthesis (P < 0.05) and cell proliferation (P < 0.05) in MC3T3-E1 cells under high glucose. Conclusion KIAA0753 can promote glucose metabolism and improve mitochondrial activity and function in osteoblasts, consequently providing more energy to the body.
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- 2024
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3. A Bidirectional two-Sample Mendelian Randomization Study of the Association Between Venous Thromboembolism and Ischaemic Stroke
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Haibing Xiong MD, Xinhong Tian MB, Aiwei He MB, Tingting Chen MB, Yanlin Li MB, Jiajie Leng MS, and Letai Li MB
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Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
Previous clinical and epidemiological studies have shown that patients with venous thromboembolism (VTE) are comorbid with symptoms of ischaemic stroke (IS). Current understanding about increased risk of IS after VTE remain inconclusive. This study use a bidirectional two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) study to explore the causality of VTE, pulmonary embolism (PE), deep vein thrombosis (DVT), and IS. This study used pooled data from published genome-wide association studies (GWAS). GWAS statisics of IS (from EBI database, n = 484 121), VTE (from Finngen database, n = 218 792), PE (from Finngen database, n = 218 413), and DVT (from UK biobank database, n = 337 159) were assessed. Forward and reverse MR analysis were conducted to explore the causal relationship between three type of the exposure (VTE, PE, and DVT) and the outcome (IS). Our primary causal inference method was Inverse Variance Weighted (IVW). Secondary inference methods were Weighted Median and MR-Egger. For the sensitive analysis, MR-PRESSO, MR-Egger intercept, Cochran's Q, leave-one method were used to consolidate our findings. In the foward MR analysis, VTE increased the risk of IS (OR IVW = 1.034, P IVW = 0.021) and PE was also a risk factor for IS (OR = 1.055, P IVW = 0.009). There was no causality that DVT influenced on IS ( P IVW > 0.05). In the reverse MR analysis, IS came to be a risk factor for DVT (OR = 1.003, P IVW = 0.046). Meanwhile, IS took not any causal effect on VTE and PE. All the results passed the reasonable sensitive analysis. Our findings provided genetic evidence that PE and VTE can lead to an increased risk of IS, whereas increased IS promoted the risk of DVT further. Our findings provided novel insights about the risk factors and management for IS.
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- 2024
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4. ALMA Observation of a $z\gtrsim10$ Galaxy Candidate Discovered with JWST
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Yoon, Ilsang, Carilli, Christopher L., Fujimoto, Seiji, Castellano, Marco, Merlin, Emiliano, Santini, Paola, Yun, Min S., Murphy, Eric J., Jung, Intae, Casey, Caitlin M., Finkelstein, Steven L., Papovich, Casey, Fontana, Adriano, Treu, Tommaso, and Letai, Jonathan
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We report the ALMA observation of a $z\gtrsim10$ galaxy candidate (GHZ1) discovered from the GLASS-JWST Early Release Science Program. Our ALMA program aims to detect the [OIII] emission line at the rest-frame 3393.0062 GHz ($88.36\mu$m) and far-IR continuum emission with the spectral window setup seamlessly covering a 26.125 GHz frequency range ($10.10
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- 2022
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5. New evidence that vitamin D prevents headache: a bidirectional two-sample Mendelian randomization analysis
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Haibing Xiong, Ran Jiang, Lingzhi Xing, Jiaojiao Zheng, Xinhong Tian, Jiajie Leng, Xin Guo, Shi Zeng, Haofeng Xiong, Jianhong Huo, and Letai Li
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vitamin D ,headache ,Mendelian randomisation study ,single nucleic acid polymorphism ,prevention ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
BackgroundPrevious observational clinical studies and meta-analyses have yielded inconsistent results regarding the relationship between vitamin D and headache, and the causal relationship remains unclear. The aim of this study was to investigate the causal relationship between vitamin D and headache by bidirectional two-sample Mendelian randomisation (MR) analysis.MethodsThe relationship between high levels of vitamin D and headache was investigated by two-sample MR analysis using publicly available genome-wide association study (GWAS) data. The primary method was inverse variance weighting (IVW), and secondary methods were weighted median and MR-Egger methods. No heterogeneity or horizontal multidirectionality was found in the MR results. The robustness and validity of the findings were assessed using the leave-behind method.ResultsA significant causal relationship was found between high vitamin D levels and headache using the IVW method (OR = 0.848; p = 0.007; 95% CI = 0.752–0.956). However, in a reverse analysis, no evidence of a causal relationship between headache and high levels of vitamin D was found using the IVW method (OR = 1.001; p = 0.906; 95% CI = 0.994–1.006). Our MR analyses showed no significant horizontal multidimensionality or heterogeneity (p > 0.05). Sensitivity analyses confirmed that MR estimates were not affected by single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). Confirmation that our results are robust and valid has been obtained by the leave-one-out method.ConclusionOur study suggests that high levels of vitamin D prevent the risk of headache. However, there is no evidence of a causal relationship between headache and high levels of vitamin D. Vitamin D may reduce the risk of headache.
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- 2024
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6. Tris(2-ethylhexyl) phosphate induces cytotoxicity in TM3 Leydig cells by modulating autophagy and endoplasmic reticulum stress
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Wenqiao Zhang, Yali Song, Letai Yi, Jinhuan Ou, Junhui Chen, Wei Zhang, Qinglian Wen, Chuanbin Yang, and Jigang Wang
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Tris (2-ethylhexyl) phosphate ,Reproductive toxicity ,Autophagy ,Endoplasmic reticulum stress ,Environmental pollution ,TD172-193.5 ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
Tris (2-ethylhexyl) phosphate (TEHP) is a frequently used organophosphorus flame retardant with significant ecotoxicity and widespread human exposure. Recent research indicates that TEHP has reproductive toxicity. However, the precise cell mechanism is not enough understood. Here, by using testicular mesenchymal stromal TM3 cells as a model, we reveal that TEHP induces apoptosis. Then RNA sequencing analysis, immunofluorescence, and western blotting results show that THEP inhibits autophagy flux and enhances endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress. Moreover, the activation of the ER stress is critical for TEHP-induced cell injury. Interestingly, TEHP-induced ER stress is contributed to autophagic flux inhibition. Furthermore, pharmacological inhibition of autophagy aggravates, and activation of autophagy attenuates TEHP-induced apoptosis. In summary, these findings indicate that TEHP triggers apoptosis in mouse TM3 cells through ER stress activation and autophagy flux inhibition, offering a new perspective on the mechanisms underlying TEHP-induced interstitial cytotoxicity in the mouse testis.
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- 2024
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7. Tris(2-ethylhexyl) phosphate induces cytotoxicity in TM3 Leydig cells by modulating autophagy and endoplasmic reticulum stress
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Zhang, Wenqiao, Song, Yali, Yi, Letai, Ou, Jinhuan, Chen, Junhui, Zhang, Wei, Wen, Qinglian, Yang, Chuanbin, and Wang, Jigang
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- 2024
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8. An ultrasound-activated nanoplatform remodels tumor microenvironment through diverse cell death induction for improved immunotherapy
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Ma, Jingbo, Yuan, Haitao, Zhang, Jingjing, Sun, Xin, Yi, Letai, Li, Weihua, Li, Zhifen, Fu, Chunjin, Zheng, Liuhai, Xu, Xiaolong, Wang, Xiaoxian, Wang, Fujing, Yin, Da, Yuan, Jimin, Xu, Chengchao, Li, Zhijie, Peng, Xin, and Wang, Jigang
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- 2024
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9. Dynamic BH3 profiling identifies pro-apoptotic drug combinations for the treatment of malignant pleural mesothelioma
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Potter, Danielle S., Du, Ruochen, Bohl, Stephan R., Chow, Kin-Hoe, Ligon, Keith L., Bueno, Raphael, and Letai, Anthony
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- 2023
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10. Activation of Notch and Myc signaling via B cell-restricted depletion of Dnmt3a generates a consistent murine model of chronic lymphocytic leukemia
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Biran, Anat, Yin, Shanye, Kretzmer, Helene, Ten Hacken, Elisa, Parvin, Salma, Lucas, Fabienne, Uduman, Mohamed, Gutierrez, Catherine, Dangle, Nathan, Billington, Leah, Regis, Fara Faye, Rassenti, Laura Z, Mohammad, Arman, Hoffmann, Gabriela Brunsting, Stevenson, Kristen, Zheng, Mei, Witten, Elizabeth, Fernandes, Stacey M, Tausch, Eugen, Sun, Clare, Stilgenbauer, Stephan, Brown, Jennifer R, Kipps, Thomas J, Aster, John C, Gnirke, Andreas, Neuberg, Donna S, Letai, Anthony, Wang, Lili, Carrasco, Ruben D, Meissner, Alexander, and Wu, Catherine J
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Genetics ,Lymphoma ,Cancer ,Rare Diseases ,Hematology ,Aetiology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Animals ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Apoptosis ,Biomarkers ,Tumor ,Cell Proliferation ,DNA Methyltransferase 3A ,Daptomycin ,Disease Models ,Animal ,Drug Resistance ,Neoplasm ,Female ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Neoplastic ,Humans ,Leukemia ,Lymphocytic ,Chronic ,B-Cell ,Male ,Mice ,Mice ,Inbred NOD ,Mice ,Knockout ,Mice ,SCID ,Prognosis ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-myc ,RNA-Seq ,Receptors ,Notch ,Survival Rate ,Tumor Cells ,Cultured ,Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Oncology & Carcinogenesis - Abstract
Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) is characterized by disordered DNA methylation, suggesting these epigenetic changes might play a critical role in disease onset and progression. The methyltransferase DNMT3A is a key regulator of DNA methylation. Although DNMT3A somatic mutations in CLL are rare, we found that low DNMT3A expression is associated with more aggressive disease. A conditional knockout mouse model showed that homozygous depletion of Dnmt3a from B cells results in the development of CLL with 100% penetrance at a median age of onset of 5.3 months, and heterozygous Dnmt3a depletion yields a disease penetrance of 89% with a median onset at 18.5 months, confirming its role as a haploinsufficient tumor suppressor. B1a cells were confirmed as the cell of origin of disease in this model, and Dnmt3a depletion resulted in focal hypomethylation and activation of Notch and Myc signaling. Amplification of chromosome 15 containing the Myc gene was detected in all CLL mice tested, and infiltration of high-Myc-expressing CLL cells in the spleen was observed. Notably, hyperactivation of Notch and Myc signaling was exclusively observed in the Dnmt3a CLL mice, but not in three other CLL mouse models tested (Sf3b1-Atm, Ikzf3, and MDR), and Dnmt3a-depleted CLL were sensitive to pharmacologic inhibition of Notch signaling in vitro and in vivo. Consistent with these findings, human CLL samples with lower DNMT3A expression were more sensitive to Notch inhibition than those with higher DNMT3A expression. Altogether, these results suggest that Dnmt3a depletion induces CLL that is highly dependent on activation of Notch and Myc signaling. SIGNIFICANCE: Loss of DNMT3A expression is a driving event in CLL and is associated with aggressive disease, activation of Notch and Myc signaling, and enhanced sensitivity to Notch inhibition.
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- 2021
11. B Cell-Restricted Depletion of Dnmt3a Activates Notch Signaling and Causes Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia
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Yin, Shanye, Biran, Anat, Kretzmer, Helene, Ten Hacken, Elisa, Parvin, Salma, Lucas, Fabienne, Uduman, Mohamed, Gutierrez, Catherine, Dangle, Nathan J, Billington, Leah, Regis, Fara, Rassenti, Laura Z, Mohammad, Arman W, Zheng, Mei, Witten, Elizabeth, Kipps, Thomas J, Aster, Jon C, Gnirke, Andreas, Neuberg, Donna S, Letai, Anthony G, Wang, Lili, Carrasco, Ruben D, Meissner, Alexander, and Wu, Catherine J
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Rare Diseases ,Hematology ,Lymphoma ,Genetics ,Cancer ,Aetiology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Clinical Sciences ,Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine ,Immunology - Abstract
Abstract Previous studies have revealed a critical role of methylation deregulation in the onset and progression of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). In mammalian cells, DNA methylation is dynamically established by the DNA methyltransferase 3 (DNMT3) family of de novo methyltransferases DNMT3A. Although mutations of DNMT3A are rarely observed in CLL, our RNA-sequencing (RNA-seq) analysis of 107 human CLLs show that low DNMT3A expression is associated with more aggressive disease, and supports a driving role of DNMT3A loss in CLL. To test this hypothesis, we generated a conditional knock-out mouse model with B cell-restricted deletion of Dnmt3a. Homozygous Dnmt3a depletion in B cells resulted in the development of CD5+ B cell leukemia mimicking human CLL with 100% penetrance at a median age of onset of 5.3 months, and heterozygous Dnmt3a depletion yielded a disease penetrance of 89% with a median onset at 18.5 months, confirming its role as a haplo-insufficient tumor suppressor. Given the known role of Dnmt3a as a de novo methyltransferase, we first evaluated the impact of Dnmt3a depletion on global DNA methylation in non-leukemic CD5+ B cells isolated from the peritoneal cavity by cell sorting (i.e. B1a cells) using reduced representation bisulfite sequencing (RRBS). We identified a set of differentially methylated regions (DMRs) (difference>0.2), mostly hypomethylated, in Dnmt3afl/fl versus WT B1a cells (473 hypomethylated, 19 hypermethylated). Genes with dysregulated methylation were highly enriched in pathways involved in immune response (e.g., Interferon-α signaling, JAK/STAT3 signaling) and proliferation (Wnt Signaling and Notch signaling). Given the prominent hypomethylation changes observed in Dnmt3a depleted B1a cells, we investigated whether these would lead to altered gene transcript expression. Using RNA-seq, we detected 460 downregulated and 168 upregulated genes in the Dnmt3afl/fl B1a cells compared to WT B1a cells (FDR2). Consistent with the methylation data, differentially expressed genes were likewise enriched for JAK/STAT3 signaling, Wnt Signaling and Notch signaling, supporting a direct influence of dysregulated methylation on downstream signaling cascades. We investigated the changes in methylomes of the CLL cells arising from the Dnmt3afl/fl animals. Compared to WT B1a cells, Dnmt3afl/fl CLL cells generated 1335 hypomethylated and 2369 hypermethylated DMRs in. Focusing on genes that were hypomethylated in CLL compared to WT B1a cells, we found that these were highly enriched for several oncogenic signaling pathways including Notch signaling and Wnt Signaling, consistent with the pre-leukemia findings. RNA-seq analysis identified more upregulated (n=2801) than downregulated (n=1244) genes in CLL cells compared to WT B1a cells (FDR2), supporting a role of Dnmt3a depletion in transcriptional activation. We observed a general upregulation of Notch signaling genes and the downstream Notch targets, implicating Notch activation in this CLL mouse model. Of note, we showed Dnmt3a-depleted CLL cells to be highly sensitive to Notch inhibitor DAPT both in vitro and in a transplantable mouse model. Consistently, primary human CLL cells with low DNMT3A expression were more sensitive to DAPT than those with higher DNMT3A expression (P=0.005, Spearman correlation), despite similar sensitivity to ibrutinib and venetoclax. Together, our results have confirmed the causal role of Dnmt3a downregulation in CLL generation. We provide evidence in support of the interaction between Dnmt3a-dependent methylation changes and hyperactivation of Notch signaling in transcriptional reprogramming and transformation of B1a cells into CLL. Furthermore, we demonstrate differential sensitivity of DNMT3A high and low expressing primary CLLs to Notch inhibition, indicative of consistent dependencies of human and murine CLLs. Thus, the Dnmt3a models provides a unique opportunity for the study of non-mutational Notch activation, and a useful platform for the study of Notch-signaling targeted therapeutics. Disclosures Kipps: Abbott Laboratories: Consultancy, Research Funding; Celgene Corporation: Consultancy, Honoraria, Research Funding; Pharmacyclics LLC, an Abbvie Company: Consultancy, Honoraria, Other: Travel, Accommodations, Expenses, Research Funding, Speakers Bureau; Genentech, Inc.: Honoraria, Research Funding, Speakers Bureau; Gilead Sciences, Inc.: Honoraria, Research Funding; GlaxoSmithKline: Research Funding; MedImmune Inc: Research Funding; Moores Cancer Center: Current Employment; Oncternal Therapeutics, Inc.: Current holder of stock options in a privately-held company, Other: Stock or other ownership, Patents & Royalties: Cirmtuzumab was developed by Thomas J. Kipps in the Thomas J. Kipps laboratory and licensed by the University of California to Oncternal Therapeutics, Inc., which provided stock options and research funding to the Thomas J. Kipps laboratory., Research Funding; AbbVie: Consultancy, Honoraria, Other, Speakers Bureau; DAVAOncology: Consultancy, Honoraria, Other; DAVA Pharmaceuticals: Speakers Bureau; Bionest Partner: Other; Celgene: Consultancy, Honoraria, Other, Research Funding; Genetech: Honoraria, Other; Genentech-Roche: Consultancy; Gilead Sciences: Consultancy, Honoraria, Other, Speakers Bureau; Janssen: Consultancy, Honoraria, Other, Research Funding, Speakers Bureau; Roche: Honoraria, Other; MD Anderson Cancer Center: Research Funding; Velos: Research Funding; CRIM: Research Funding; Indy Hematology Review: Other; TG Therapeutics: Other; Verstem: Other, Speakers Bureau; University of California, San Diego: Current Employment; Pharmacyclics/AbbVie: Honoraria, Research Funding; Breast Cancer Research Foundation: Research Funding; SCOR - The Leukemia and Lymphoma Society: Research Funding; National Cancer Institute/NIH: Honoraria, Research Funding; Genentech/Roche: Honoraria; European Research Initiative on CLL (ERIC): Honoraria. Neuberg: Madrigal Pharmaceuticals: Other: Stock ownership; Pharmacyclics: Research Funding. Letai: Flash Therapeutics: Other: equity holding member of the scientific advisory board; Dialectic Therapeutics: Other: equity holding member of the scientific advisory board; Zentalis Pharmaceuticals: Other: equity holding member of the scientific advisory board. Wu: BioNTech: Current equity holder in publicly-traded company; Pharmacyclics: Research Funding.
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- 2021
12. Prophylactic maintenance with venetoclax/azacitidine after reduced-intensity conditioning allogeneic transplant for high-risk MDS and AML
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Garcia, Jacqueline S., Kim, Haesook T., Murdock, H. Moses, Ansuinelli, Michela, Brock, Jennifer, Cutler, Corey S., Gooptu, Mahasweta, Ho, Vincent T., Koreth, John, Nikiforow, Sarah, Romee, Rizwan, Shapiro, Roman, DeAngelo, Daniel J., Stone, Richard M., Bat-Erdene, Denbaa, Ryan, Jeremy, Contreras, Manuel E., Fell, Geoffrey, Letai, Anthony, Ritz, Jerome, Lindsley, R. Coleman, Soiffer, Robert J., and Antin, Joseph H.
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- 2024
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13. Heterogeneity and transcriptional drivers of triple-negative breast cancer
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Bojana Jovanović, Daniel Temko, Laura E. Stevens, Marco Seehawer, Anne Fassl, Katherine Murphy, Jayati Anand, Kodie Garza, Anushree Gulvady, Xintao Qiu, Nicholas W. Harper, Veerle W. Daniels, Huang Xiao-Yun, Jennifer Y. Ge, Maša Alečković, Jason Pyrdol, Kunihiko Hinohara, Shawn B. Egri, Malvina Papanastasiou, Raga Vadhi, Alba Font-Tello, Robert Witwicki, Guillermo Peluffo, Anne Trinh, Shaokun Shu, Benedetto Diciaccio, Muhammad B. Ekram, Ashim Subedee, Zachary T. Herbert, Kai W. Wucherpfennig, Anthony G. Letai, Jacob D. Jaffe, Piotr Sicinski, Myles Brown, Deborah Dillon, Henry W. Long, Franziska Michor, and Kornelia Polyak
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CP: Cancer ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Summary: Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) is a heterogeneous disease with limited treatment options. To characterize TNBC heterogeneity, we defined transcriptional, epigenetic, and metabolic subtypes and subtype-driving super-enhancers and transcription factors by combining functional and molecular profiling with computational analyses. Single-cell RNA sequencing revealed relative homogeneity of the major transcriptional subtypes (luminal, basal, and mesenchymal) within samples. We found that mesenchymal TNBCs share features with mesenchymal neuroblastoma and rhabdoid tumors and that the PRRX1 transcription factor is a key driver of these tumors. PRRX1 is sufficient for inducing mesenchymal features in basal but not in luminal TNBC cells via reprogramming super-enhancer landscapes, but it is not required for mesenchymal state maintenance or for cellular viability. Our comprehensive, large-scale, multiplatform, multiomics study of both experimental and clinical TNBC is an important resource for the scientific and clinical research communities and opens venues for future investigation.
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- 2023
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14. Multifunctional barcoding with ClonMapper enables high-resolution study of clonal dynamics during tumor evolution and treatment
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Gutierrez, Catherine, Al’Khafaji, Aziz M, Brenner, Eric, Johnson, Kaitlyn E, Gohil, Satyen H, Lin, Ziao, Knisbacher, Binyamin A, Durrett, Russell E, Li, Shuqiang, Parvin, Salma, Biran, Anat, Zhang, Wandi, Rassenti, Laura, Kipps, Thomas J, Livak, Kenneth J, Neuberg, Donna, Letai, Anthony, Getz, Gad, Wu, Catherine J, and Brock, Amy
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Cancer ,Biotechnology ,Hematology ,Human Genome ,Emerging Infectious Diseases ,Genetics ,Cell Line ,Clone Cells ,Genomics ,Humans ,Leukemia ,Lymphocytic ,Chronic ,B-Cell ,Transcriptome - Abstract
Lineage-tracing methods have enabled characterization of clonal dynamics in complex populations, but generally lack the ability to integrate genomic, epigenomic and transcriptomic measurements with live-cell manipulation of specific clones of interest. We developed a functionalized lineage-tracing system, ClonMapper, which integrates DNA barcoding with single-cell RNA sequencing and clonal isolation to comprehensively characterize thousands of clones within heterogeneous populations. Using ClonMapper, we identified subpopulations of a chronic lymphocytic leukemia cell line with distinct clonal compositions, transcriptional signatures and chemotherapy survivorship trajectories; patterns that were also observed in primary human chronic lymphocytic leukemia. The ability to retrieve specific clones before, during and after treatment enabled direct measurements of clonal diversification and durable subpopulation transcriptional signatures. ClonMapper is a powerful multifunctional approach to dissect the complex clonal dynamics of tumor progression and therapeutic response.
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- 2021
15. Heterogeneity and transcriptional drivers of triple-negative breast cancer
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Jovanović, Bojana, Temko, Daniel, Stevens, Laura E., Seehawer, Marco, Fassl, Anne, Murphy, Katherine, Anand, Jayati, Garza, Kodie, Gulvady, Anushree, Qiu, Xintao, Harper, Nicholas W., Daniels, Veerle W., Xiao-Yun, Huang, Ge, Jennifer Y., Alečković, Maša, Pyrdol, Jason, Hinohara, Kunihiko, Egri, Shawn B., Papanastasiou, Malvina, Vadhi, Raga, Font-Tello, Alba, Witwicki, Robert, Peluffo, Guillermo, Trinh, Anne, Shu, Shaokun, Diciaccio, Benedetto, Ekram, Muhammad B., Subedee, Ashim, Herbert, Zachary T., Wucherpfennig, Kai W., Letai, Anthony G., Jaffe, Jacob D., Sicinski, Piotr, Brown, Myles, Dillon, Deborah, Long, Henry W., Michor, Franziska, and Polyak, Kornelia
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- 2023
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16. Dynamic BH3 profiling identifies pro-apoptotic drug combinations for the treatment of malignant pleural mesothelioma
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Danielle S. Potter, Ruochen Du, Stephan R. Bohl, Kin-Hoe Chow, Keith L. Ligon, Raphael Bueno, and Anthony Letai
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Science - Abstract
Abstract Malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) has relatively ineffective first/second-line therapy for advanced disease and only 18% five-year survival for early disease. Drug-induced mitochondrial priming measured by dynamic BH3 profiling identifies efficacious drugs in multiple disease settings. We use high throughput dynamic BH3 profiling (HTDBP) to identify drug combinations that prime primary MPM cells derived from patient tumors, which also prime patient derived xenograft (PDX) models. A navitoclax (BCL-xL/BCL-2/BCL-w antagonist) and AZD8055 (mTORC1/2 inhibitor) combination demonstrates efficacy in vivo in an MPM PDX model, validating HTDBP as an approach to identify efficacious drug combinations. Mechanistic investigation reveals AZD8055 treatment decreases MCL-1 protein levels, increases BIM protein levels, and increases MPM mitochondrial dependence on BCL-xL, which is exploited by navitoclax. Navitoclax treatment increases dependency on MCL-1 and increases BIM protein levels. These findings demonstrate that HTDBP can be used as a functional precision medicine tool to rationally construct combination drug regimens in MPM and other cancers.
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- 2023
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17. Quantifying requirements for mitochondrial apoptosis in CAR T killing of cancer cells
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Alexandra L. Pourzia, Michael L. Olson, Stefanie R. Bailey, Angela C. Boroughs, Aditi Aryal, Jeremy Ryan, Marcela V. Maus, and Anthony Letai
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Cytology ,QH573-671 - Abstract
Abstract Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapy is an FDA-approved treatment for several hematologic malignancies, yet not all patients respond to this treatment. While some resistance mechanisms have been identified, cell death pathways in target cancer cells remain underexplored. Impairing mitochondrial apoptosis via knockout of Bak and Bax, forced Bcl-2 and Bcl-XL expression, or caspase inhibition protected several tumor models from CAR T killing. However, impairing mitochondrial apoptosis in two liquid tumor cell lines did not protect target cells from CAR T killing. We found that whether a cell was Type I or Type II in response to death ligands explained the divergence of these results, so that mitochondrial apoptosis was dispensable for CART killing of cells that were Type I but not Type II. This suggests that the apoptotic signaling induced by CAR T cells bears important similarities to that induced by drugs. Combinations of drug and CAR T therapies will therefore require tailoring to the specific cell death pathways activated by CAR T cells in different types of cancer cells.
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- 2023
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18. Targeting conditioned media dependencies and FLT-3 in chronic lymphocytic leukemia
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Parvin, Salma, Aryal, Aditi, Yin, Shanye, Fell, Geoffrey G., Davids, Matthew S., Wu, Catherine J., and Letai, Anthony
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- 2023
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19. Indispensable biomolecules for plant defense against pathogens: NBS-LRR and “nitrogen pool” alkaloids
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Liu, Qian, Zhang, Chunhong, Fang, Huiyong, Yi, Letai, and Li, Minhui
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- 2023
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20. CDK4/6 inhibition reprograms the breast cancer enhancer landscape by stimulating AP-1 transcriptional activity
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Watt, April C, Cejas, Paloma, DeCristo, Molly J, Metzger-Filho, Otto, Lam, Enid YN, Qiu, Xintao, BrinJones, Haley, Kesten, Nikolas, Coulson, Rhiannon, Font-Tello, Alba, Lim, Klothilda, Vadhi, Raga, Daniels, Veerle W, Montero, Joan, Taing, Len, Meyer, Clifford A, Gilan, Omer, Bell, Charles C, Korthauer, Keegan D, Giambartolomei, Claudia, Pasaniuc, Bogdan, Seo, Ji-Heui, Freedman, Matthew L, Ma, Cynthia, Ellis, Matthew J, Krop, Ian, Winer, Eric, Letai, Anthony, Brown, Myles, Dawson, Mark A, Long, Henry W, Zhao, Jean J, and Goel, Shom
- Subjects
Genetics ,Breast Cancer ,Cancer ,Development of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,5.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Animals ,Breast Neoplasms ,Cell Cycle Checkpoints ,Cyclin-Dependent Kinase 4 ,Female ,Genes ,cdc ,Humans ,Mice ,Transcription Factor AP-1 - Abstract
Pharmacologic inhibitors of cyclin-dependent kinases 4 and 6 (CDK4/6) were designed to induce cancer cell cycle arrest. Recent studies have suggested that these agents also exert other effects, influencing cancer cell immunogenicity, apoptotic responses, and differentiation. Using cell-based and mouse models of breast cancer together with clinical specimens, we show that CDK4/6 inhibitors induce remodeling of cancer cell chromatin characterized by widespread enhancer activation, and that this explains many of these effects. The newly activated enhancers include classical super-enhancers that drive luminal differentiation and apoptotic evasion, as well as a set of enhancers overlying endogenous retroviral elements that is enriched for proximity to interferon-driven genes. Mechanistically, CDK4/6 inhibition increases the level of several Activator Protein-1 (AP-1) transcription factor proteins, which are in turn implicated in the activity of many of the new enhancers. Our findings offer insights into CDK4/6 pathway biology and should inform the future development of CDK4/6 inhibitors.
- Published
- 2021
21. 533 Survival mechanisms common to immunotherapy and drug tolerant persister tumor cells
- Author
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Marcela Maus, Anthony Letai, Cloud Paweletz, Michael Olson, Maria Davern, David Barbie, Brenda Chan, Lara Bencsics, Jasmine Yun-Tong Kung, Michael Yorsz, Gabriella Stone, Patrick Lizotte, and Patrick Bhola
- Subjects
Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. BH3 profiling as pharmacodynamic biomarker for the activity of BH3 mimetics
- Author
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Rongqing Aaron Pan, Youzhen Wang, Shumei Qiu, Mariana Villalobos-Ortiz, Jeremy Ryan, Erick Morris, Ensar Halilovic, and Anthony Letai
- Subjects
Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs ,RC633-647.5 - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. An evaluation of the qualitative superiority of the Mongolian medicinal herb hurdan-tsagaan (Platycodi Radix) from five different geographic origins based on anti-inflammatory effects
- Author
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Si, Qin, Su, Longga, Wang, Dong, De, Bao-Jun, Na, Risu, He, Nagongbilige, Byambaa, Tserentsoo, Dalkh, Tserendagva, Bao, Xilinqiqige, and Yi, Letai
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Quantifying requirements for mitochondrial apoptosis in CAR T killing of cancer cells
- Author
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Pourzia, Alexandra L., Olson, Michael L., Bailey, Stefanie R., Boroughs, Angela C., Aryal, Aditi, Ryan, Jeremy, Maus, Marcela V., and Letai, Anthony
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. P324: CELL PLASTICITY PREDETERMINES TREATMENT RESPONSE IN T-ALL
- Author
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Valeriya Dimitrova, Julia Frede, Anna Montanaro, Sayalee Potdar, Hannah Stuart, Noori Sotoudeh, Alexandria Van Scoyk, Shruti Bhatt, Anthony Letai, Jon Aster, Jens Lohr, and Birgit Knoechel
- Subjects
Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs ,RC633-647.5 - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Comparative analysis of Bcl-2 family protein overexpression in CAR T cells alone and in combination with BH3 mimetics
- Author
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Korell, Felix, primary, Olson, Michael L., additional, Salas-Benito, Diego, additional, Leick, Mark B., additional, Larson, Rebecca C., additional, Bouffard, Amanda, additional, Silva, Harrison, additional, Gasparetto, Alessandro, additional, Berger, Trisha R., additional, Kann, Michael C., additional, Mergen, Markus, additional, Kienka, Tamina, additional, Wehrli, Marc, additional, Haradhvala, Nicholas J., additional, Bailey, Stefanie R., additional, Letai, Anthony, additional, and Maus, Marcela V., additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. JAK3 mutations and mitochondrial apoptosis resistance in T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia
- Author
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Bodaar, Kimberly, Yamagata, Natsuko, Barthe, Anais, Landrigan, Jack, Chonghaile, Triona Ni, Burns, Melissa, Stevenson, Kristen E., Devidas, Meenakshi, Loh, Mignon L., Hunger, Stephen P., Wood, Brent, Silverman, Lewis B., Teachey, David T., Meijerink, Jules P., Letai, Anthony, and Gutierrez, Alejandro
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Mitochondrial apoptotic priming is a key determinant of cell fate upon p53 restoration
- Author
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Sánchez-Rivera, Francisco J., Ryan, Jeremy, Soto-Feliciano, Yadira M., Beytagh, Mary Clare, Xuan, Lucius, Feldser, David M., Hemann, Michael T., Zamudio, Jesse, Dimitrova, Nadya, Letai, Anthony, and Jacks, Tyler
- Published
- 2021
29. PRC2 loss induces chemoresistance by repressing apoptosis in T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia
- Author
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Ariës, Ingrid M, Bodaar, Kimberly, Karim, Salmaan A, Chonghaile, Triona Ni, Hinze, Laura, Burns, Melissa A, Pfirrmann, Maren, Degar, James, Landrigan, Jack T, Balbach, Sebastian, Peirs, Sofie, Menten, Björn, Isenhart, Randi, Stevenson, Kristen E, Neuberg, Donna S, Devidas, Meenakshi, Loh, Mignon L, Hunger, Stephen P, Teachey, David T, Rabin, Karen R, Winter, Stuart S, Dunsmore, Kimberly P, Wood, Brent L, Silverman, Lewis B, Sallan, Stephen E, Van Vlierberghe, Pieter, Orkin, Stuart H, Knoechel, Birgit, Letai, Anthony G, and Gutierrez, Alejandro
- Subjects
Childhood Leukemia ,Hematology ,Genetics ,Cancer ,Stem Cell Research ,Pediatric ,Rare Diseases ,Pediatric Cancer ,Development of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,1.1 Normal biological development and functioning ,Underpinning research ,5.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Apoptosis ,Cell Line ,Tumor ,Drug Resistance ,Neoplasm ,Female ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Leukemic ,Humans ,Male ,Mitochondria ,Neoplasm Proteins ,Polycomb Repressive Complex 2 ,Precursor T-Cell Lymphoblastic Leukemia-Lymphoma ,Transcription ,Genetic ,Up-Regulation ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Immunology - Abstract
The tendency of mitochondria to undergo or resist BCL2-controlled apoptosis (so-called mitochondrial priming) is a powerful predictor of response to cytotoxic chemotherapy. Fully exploiting this finding will require unraveling the molecular genetics underlying phenotypic variability in mitochondrial priming. Here, we report that mitochondrial apoptosis resistance in T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) is mediated by inactivation of polycomb repressive complex 2 (PRC2). In T-ALL clinical specimens, loss-of-function mutations of PRC2 core components (EZH2, EED, or SUZ12) were associated with mitochondrial apoptosis resistance. In T-ALL cells, PRC2 depletion induced resistance to apoptosis induction by multiple chemotherapeutics with distinct mechanisms of action. PRC2 loss induced apoptosis resistance via transcriptional up-regulation of the LIM domain transcription factor CRIP2 and downstream up-regulation of the mitochondrial chaperone TRAP1 These findings demonstrate the importance of mitochondrial apoptotic priming as a prognostic factor in T-ALL and implicate mitochondrial chaperone function as a molecular determinant of chemotherapy response.
- Published
- 2018
30. IKAROS and MENIN coordinate therapeutically actionable leukemogenic gene expression in MLL-r acute myeloid leukemia
- Author
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Aubrey, Brandon J., Cutler, Jevon A., Bourgeois, Wallace, Donovan, Katherine A., Gu, Shengqing, Hatton, Charlie, Perlee, Sarah, Perner, Florian, Rahnamoun, Homa, Theall, Alexandra C. P., Henrich, Jill A., Zhu, Qian, Nowak, Radosław P., Kim, Young Joon, Parvin, Salma, Cremer, Anjali, Olsen, Sarah Naomi, Eleuteri, Nicholas A., Pikman, Yana, McGeehan, Gerard M., Stegmaier, Kimberly, Letai, Anthony, Fischer, Eric S., Liu, X. Shirley, and Armstrong, Scott A.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Combination therapy targeting Erk1/2 and CDK4/6i in relapsed refractory multiple myeloma
- Author
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Adamia, Sophia, Bhatt, Shruti, Wen, Kenneth, Chyra, Zuzana, Fell, Geoffrey G., Tai, Yu-Tzu, Pioso, Marisa S., Abiatari, Ivane, Letai, Anthony, Dorfman, David M., Hideshima, Teru, and Anderson, Kenneth C.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Correction: Activation of RAS/MAPK pathway confers MCL-1 mediated acquired resistance to BCL-2 inhibitor venetoclax in acute myeloid leukemia
- Author
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Zhang, Qi, Riley-Gillis, Bridget, Han, Lina, Jia, Yannan, Lodi, Alessia, Zhang, Haijiao, Ganesan, Saravanan, Pan, Rongqing, Konoplev, Sergej N., Sweeney, Shannon R., Ryan, Jeremy A., Jitkova, Yulia, Dunner, Jr, Kenneth, Grosskurth, Shaun E., Vijay, Priyanka, Ghosh, Sujana, Lu, Charles, Ma, Wencai, Kurtz, Stephen, Ruvolo, Vivian R., Ma, Helen, Weng, Connie C., Ramage, Cassandra L., Baran, Natalia, Shi, Ce, Cai, Tianyu, Davis, Richard Eric, Battula, Venkata L., Mi, Yingchang, Wang, Jing, DiNardo, Courtney D., Andreeff, Michael, Tyner, Jeffery W., Schimmer, Aaron, Letai, Anthony, Padua, Rose Ann, Bueso-Ramos, Carlos E., Tiziani, Stefano, Leverson, Joel, Popovic, Relja, and Konopleva, Marina
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Activation of RAS/MAPK pathway confers MCL-1 mediated acquired resistance to BCL-2 inhibitor venetoclax in acute myeloid leukemia
- Author
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Zhang, Qi, Riley-Gillis, Bridget, Han, Lina, Jia, Yannan, Lodi, Alessia, Zhang, Haijiao, Ganesan, Saravanan, Pan, Rongqing, Konoplev, Sergej N., Sweeney, Shannon R., Ryan, Jeremy A., Jitkova, Yulia, Dunner, Jr, Kenneth, Grosskurth, Shaun E., Vijay, Priyanka, Ghosh, Sujana, Lu, Charles, Ma, Wencai, Kurtz, Stephen, Ruvolo, Vivian R., Ma, Helen, Weng, Connie C., Ramage, Cassandra L., Baran, Natalia, Shi, Ce, Cai, Tianyu, Davis, Richard Eric, Battula, Venkata L., Mi, Yingchang, Wang, Jing, DiNardo, Courtney D., Andreeff, Michael, Tyner, Jeffery W., Schimmer, Aaron, Letai, Anthony, Padua, Rose Ann, Bueso-Ramos, Carlos E., Tiziani, Stefano, Leverson, Joel, Popovic, Relja, and Konopleva, Marina
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Dissection of Targeting Molecular Mechanisms of Celastrol-induced Nephrotoxicity via A Combined Deconvolution Strategy of Chemoproteomics and Metabolomics.
- Author
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Xueying Liu, Qian Zhang, Peili Wang, Xin Peng, Yehai An, Junhui Chen, Jingnan Huang, Shuanglin Qin, Hengkai He, Mingjing Hao, Jiahang Tian, Letai Yi, Ming Lei, Piao Luo, Jigang Wang, and Xinzhou Zhang
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Activation of RAS/MAPK pathway confers MCL-1 mediated acquired resistance to BCL-2 inhibitor venetoclax in acute myeloid leukemia
- Author
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Qi Zhang, Bridget Riley-Gillis, Lina Han, Yanan Jia, Alessia Lodi, Haijiao Zhang, Saravanan Ganesan, Rongqing Pan, Sergej N. Konoplev, Shannon R. Sweeney, Jeremy A. Ryan, Yulia Jitkova, Kenneth Dunner, Shaun E. Grosskurth, Priyanka Vijay, Sujana Ghosh, Charles Lu, Wencai Ma, Stephen Kurtz, Vivian R. Ruvolo, Helen Ma, Connie C. Weng, Cassandra L. Ramage, Natalia Baran, Ce Shi, Tianyu Cai, Richard Eric Davis, Venkata L. Battula, Yingchang Mi, Jing Wang, Courtney D. DiNardo, Michael Andreeff, Jeffery W. Tyner, Aaron Schimmer, Anthony Letai, Rose Ann Padua, Carlos E. Bueso-Ramos, Stefano Tiziani, Joel Leverson, Relja Popovic, and Marina Konopleva
- Subjects
Medicine ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Abstract Despite high initial response rates, acute myeloid leukemia (AML) treated with the BCL-2–selective inhibitor venetoclax (VEN) alone or in combinations commonly acquires resistance. We performed gene/protein expression, metabolomic and methylation analyses of isogenic AML cell lines sensitive or resistant to VEN, and identified the activation of RAS/MAPK pathway, leading to increased stability and higher levels of MCL-1 protein, as a major acquired mechanism of VEN resistance. MCL-1 sustained survival and maintained mitochondrial respiration in VEN-RE cells, which had impaired electron transport chain (ETC) complex II activity, and MCL-1 silencing or pharmacologic inhibition restored VEN sensitivity. In support of the importance of RAS/MAPK activation, we found by single-cell DNA sequencing rapid clonal selection of RAS-mutated clones in AML patients treated with VEN-containing regimens. In summary, these findings establish RAS/MAPK/MCL-1 and mitochondrial fitness as key survival mechanisms of VEN-RE AML and provide the rationale for combinatorial strategies effectively targeting these pathways.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Aneuploidy increases resistance to chemotherapeutics by antagonizing cell division
- Author
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Replogle, John Michael, Zhou, Wen, Amaro, Adrianna E., McFarland, James M., Villalobos-Ortiz, Mariana, Ryan, Jeremy, Letai, Anthony, Yilmaz, Omer, Sheltzer, Jason, Lippard, Stephen J., Ben-David, Uri, and Amon, Angelika
- Published
- 2020
37. Splicing modulation sensitizes chronic lymphocytic leukemia cells to venetoclax by remodeling mitochondrial apoptotic dependencies
- Author
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Hacken, Elisa ten, Valentin, Rebecca, Regis, Fara Faye D, Sun, Jing, Yin, Shanye, Werner, Lillian, Deng, Jing, Gruber, Michaela, Wong, Jessica, Zheng, Mei, Gill, Amy L, Seiler, Michael, Smith, Peter, Thomas, Michael, Buonamici, Silvia, Ghia, Emanuela M, Kim, Ekaterina, Rassenti, Laura Z, Burger, Jan A, Kipps, Thomas J, Meyerson, Matthew L, Bachireddy, Pavan, Wang, Lili, Reed, Robin, Neuberg, Donna, Carrasco, Ruben D, Brooks, Angela N, Letai, Anthony, Davids, Matthew S, and Wu, Catherine J
- Subjects
Hematology ,Genetics ,Cancer ,Rare Diseases ,Orphan Drug ,Clinical Research ,Lymphoma ,Adult ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Alternative Splicing ,Animals ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,Apoptosis ,Bridged Bicyclo Compounds ,Heterocyclic ,Disease Models ,Animal ,Drug Resistance ,Neoplasm ,Drug Screening Assays ,Antitumor ,Epoxy Compounds ,Female ,Humans ,Leukemia ,Lymphocytic ,Chronic ,B-Cell ,Macrolides ,Male ,Mice ,Mice ,Transgenic ,Middle Aged ,Mitochondria ,Mutation ,Myeloid Cell Leukemia Sequence 1 Protein ,Phosphoproteins ,Primary Cell Culture ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-bcl-2 ,Pyrimidines ,RNA Splicing Factors ,Spliceosomes ,Sulfonamides ,Thiophenes ,Apoptosis inhibitors ,Therapeutics ,Transcription - Abstract
The identification of targetable vulnerabilities in the context of therapeutic resistance is a key challenge in cancer treatment. We detected pervasive aberrant splicing as a characteristic feature of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), irrespective of splicing factor mutation status, which was associated with sensitivity to the spliceosome modulator, E7107. Splicing modulation affected CLL survival pathways, including members of the B cell lymphoma-2 (BCL2) family of proteins, remodeling antiapoptotic dependencies of human and murine CLL cells. E7107 treatment decreased myeloid cell leukemia-1 (MCL1) dependence and increased BCL2 dependence, sensitizing primary human CLL cells and venetoclax-resistant CLL-like cells from an Eμ-TCL1-based adoptive transfer murine model to treatment with the BCL2 inhibitor venetoclax. Our data provide preclinical rationale to support the combination of venetoclax with splicing modulators to reprogram apoptotic dependencies in CLL for treating venetoclax-resistant CLL cases.
- Published
- 2018
38. Statins enhance efficacy of venetoclax in blood cancers.
- Author
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Lee, J Scott, Roberts, Andrew, Juarez, Dennis, Vo, Thanh-Trang T, Bhatt, Shruti, Herzog, Lee-Or, Mallya, Sharmila, Bellin, Richard J, Agarwal, Suresh K, Salem, Ahmed Hamed, Xu, Tu, Jia, Jia, Li, Lingxiao, Hanna, John R, Davids, Matthew S, Fleischman, Angela G, O'Brien, Susan, Lam, Lloyd T, Leverson, Joel D, Letai, Anthony, Schatz, Jonathan H, and Fruman, David A
- Abstract
Statins have shown promise as anticancer agents in experimental and epidemiologic research. However, any benefit that they provide is likely context-dependent, for example, applicable only to certain cancers or in combination with specific anticancer drugs. We report that inhibition of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase (HMGCR) using statins enhances the proapoptotic activity of the B cell lymphoma-2 (BCL2) inhibitor venetoclax (ABT-199) in primary leukemia and lymphoma cells but not in normal human peripheral blood mononuclear cells. By blocking mevalonate production, HMGCR inhibition suppressed protein geranylgeranylation, resulting in up-regulation of proapoptotic protein p53 up-regulated modulator of apoptosis (PUMA). In support of these findings, dynamic BH3 profiling confirmed that statins primed cells for apoptosis. Furthermore, in retrospective analyses of three clinical studies of chronic lymphocytic leukemia, background statin use was associated with enhanced response to venetoclax, as demonstrated by more frequent complete responses. Together, this work provides mechanistic justification and clinical evidence to warrant prospective clinical investigation of this combination in hematologic malignancies.
- Published
- 2018
39. Adding venetoclax to fludarabine/busulfan RIC transplant for high-risk MDS and AML is feasible, safe, and active
- Author
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Garcia, Jacqueline S., Kim, Haesook T., Murdock, H. Moses, Cutler, Corey S., Brock, Jennifer, Gooptu, Mahasweta, Ho, Vincent T., Koreth, John, Nikiforow, Sarah, Romee, Rizwan, Shapiro, Roman, Loschi, Fiona, Ryan, Jeremy, Fell, Geoffrey, Karp, Hannah Q., Lucas, Fabienne, Kim, Annette S., Potter, Danielle, Mashaka, Thelma, Stone, Richard M., DeAngelo, Daniel J., Letai, Anthony, Lindsley, R. Coleman, Soiffer, Robert J., and Antin, Joseph H.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Mechanism and clinical role of TIMP-2 and IGFBP-7 in cardiac surgery-associated acute kidney injury: A review
- Author
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Leng, Jiajie, primary, Li, Letai, additional, Tu, Hongwen, additional, Luo, Yuxiang, additional, Cao, Zhenrui, additional, Zhou, Kun, additional, Rizvi, Syed M Musa, additional, Tie, Hongtao, additional, and Jiang, Yingjiu, additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Figure S11 from Acquired Multidrug Resistance in AML Is Caused by Low Apoptotic Priming in Relapsed Myeloblasts
- Author
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Olesinski, Elyse A., primary, Bhatia, Karanpreet Singh, primary, Wang, Chuqi, primary, Pioso, Marissa S., primary, Lin, Xiao Xian, primary, Mamdouh, Ahmed M., primary, Ng, Shu Xuan, primary, Sandhu, Vedant, primary, Jasdanwala, Shaista Shabbir, primary, Yilma, Binyam, primary, Bohl, Stephan, primary, Ryan, Jeremy A., primary, Malani, Disha, primary, Luskin, Marlise R., primary, Kallioniemi, Olli, primary, Porkka, Kimmo, primary, Adamia, Sophia, primary, Chng, Wee Joo, primary, Osato, Motomi, primary, Weinstock, David M., primary, Garcia, Jacqueline S., primary, Letai, Anthony, primary, and Bhatt, Shruti, primary
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Data from Acquired Multidrug Resistance in AML Is Caused by Low Apoptotic Priming in Relapsed Myeloblasts
- Author
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Olesinski, Elyse A., primary, Bhatia, Karanpreet Singh, primary, Wang, Chuqi, primary, Pioso, Marissa S., primary, Lin, Xiao Xian, primary, Mamdouh, Ahmed M., primary, Ng, Shu Xuan, primary, Sandhu, Vedant, primary, Jasdanwala, Shaista Shabbir, primary, Yilma, Binyam, primary, Bohl, Stephan, primary, Ryan, Jeremy A., primary, Malani, Disha, primary, Luskin, Marlise R., primary, Kallioniemi, Olli, primary, Porkka, Kimmo, primary, Adamia, Sophia, primary, Chng, Wee Joo, primary, Osato, Motomi, primary, Weinstock, David M., primary, Garcia, Jacqueline S., primary, Letai, Anthony, primary, and Bhatt, Shruti, primary
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Collateral deletion of the mitochondrial AAA+ ATPase ATAD1 sensitizes cancer cells to proteasome dysfunction
- Author
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Jacob M Winter, Heidi L Fresenius, Corey N Cunningham, Peng Wei, Heather R Keys, Jordan Berg, Alex Bott, Tarun Yadav, Jeremy Ryan, Deepika Sirohi, Sheryl R Tripp, Paige Barta, Neeraj Agarwal, Anthony Letai, David M Sabatini, Matthew L Wohlever, and Jared Rutter
- Subjects
mitochondria ,proteasome ,synthetic lethality ,cancer ,apoptosis ,Medicine ,Science ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
The tumor suppressor gene PTEN is the second most commonly deleted gene in cancer. Such deletions often include portions of the chromosome 10q23 locus beyond the bounds of PTEN itself, which frequently disrupts adjacent genes. Coincidental loss of PTEN-adjacent genes might impose vulnerabilities that could either affect patient outcome basally or be exploited therapeutically. Here, we describe how the loss of ATAD1, which is adjacent to and frequently co-deleted with PTEN, predisposes cancer cells to apoptosis triggered by proteasome dysfunction and correlates with improved survival in cancer patients. ATAD1 directly and specifically extracts the pro-apoptotic protein BIM from mitochondria to inactivate it. Cultured cells and mouse xenografts lacking ATAD1 are hypersensitive to clinically used proteasome inhibitors, which activate BIM and trigger apoptosis. This work furthers our understanding of mitochondrial protein homeostasis and could lead to new therapeutic options for the hundreds of thousands of cancer patients who have tumors with chromosome 10q23 deletion.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Comparing syngeneic and autochthonous models of breast cancer to identify tumor immune components that correlate with response to immunotherapy in breast cancer
- Author
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Jessica Castrillon Lal, Madeline G. Townsend, Anita K. Mehta, Madisson Oliwa, Eric Miller, Alaba Sotayo, Emily Cheney, Elizabeth A. Mittendorf, Anthony Letai, and Jennifer L. Guerriero
- Subjects
Breast cancer ,Immunotherapy ,Immune checkpoint blockade ,Syngeneic tumor models ,Preclinical mouse models ,Jessica Castrillon Lal and Madeline G. Townsend contributed equally to this work ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background The heterogeneity of the breast tumor microenvironment (TME) may contribute to the lack of durable responses to immune checkpoint blockade (ICB); however, mouse models to test this are currently lacking. Proper selection and use of preclinical models are necessary for rigorous, preclinical studies to rapidly move laboratory findings into the clinic. Methods Three versions of a common syngeneic model derived from the MMTV-PyMT autochthonous model were generated by inoculating 1E6, 1E5, or 1E4 cells derived from the MMTV-PyMT mouse into wildtype recipient mice. To elucidate how tumor latency and TME heterogeneity contribute to ICB resistance, comprehensive characterization of the TME using quantitative flow-cytometry and RNA expression analysis (NanoString) was performed. Subsequently, response to ICB was tested. These procedures were repeated using the EMT6 breast cancer model. Results The 3 syngeneic versions of the MMTV-PyMT model had vastly different TMEs that correlated to ICB response. The number of cells used to generate syngeneic tumors significantly influenced tumor latency, infiltrating leukocyte populations, and response to ICB. These results were confirmed using the EMT6 breast cancer model. Compared to the MMTV-PyMT autochthonous model, all 3 MMTV-PyMT syngeneic models had significantly more tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs; CD3+, CD4+, and CD8+) and higher proportions of PD-L1-positive myeloid cells, whereas the MMTV-PyMT autochthonous model had the highest frequency of myeloid cells out of total leukocytes. Increased TILs correlated with response to anti-PD-L1 and anti-CTLA-4 therapy, but PD-L1expression on tumor cells or PD-1 expression of T cells did not. Conclusions These studies reveal that tumor cell number correlates with tumor latency, TME, and response to ICB. ICB-sensitive and resistant syngeneic breast cancer models were identified, in which the 1E4 syngeneic model was most resistant to ICB. Given the lack of benefit from ICB in breast cancer, identifying robust murine models presented here provides the opportunity to further interrogate the TME for breast cancer treatment and provide novel insights into therapeutic combinations to overcome ICB resistance.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Dynamic BH3 profiling identifies active BH3 mimetic combinations in non-small cell lung cancer
- Author
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Danielle S. Potter, Ruochen Du, Patrick Bhola, Raphael Bueno, and Anthony Letai
- Subjects
Cytology ,QH573-671 - Abstract
Abstract Conventional chemotherapy is still of great utility in oncology and rationally constructing combinations with it remains a top priority. Drug-induced mitochondrial apoptotic priming, measured by dynamic BH3 profiling (DBP), has been shown in multiple cancers to identify drugs that promote apoptosis in vivo. We therefore hypothesized that we could use DBP to identify drugs that would render cancers more sensitive to conventional chemotherapy. We found that targeted agents that increased priming of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) tumor cells resulted in increased sensitivity to chemotherapy in vitro. To assess whether targeted agents that increase priming might enhance the efficacy of cytotoxic agents in vivo as well, we carried out an efficacy study in a PC9 xenograft mouse model. The BH3 mimetic navitoclax, which antagonizes BCL-xL, BCL-w, and BCL-2, consistently primed NSCLC tumors in vitro and in vivo. The BH3 mimetic venetoclax, which electively antagonizes BCL-2, did not. Combining navitoclax with etoposide significantly reduced tumor burden compared to either single agent, while adding venetoclax to etoposide had no effect on tumor burden. Next, we assessed priming of primary patient NSCLC tumor cells on drugs from a clinically relevant oncology combination screen (CROCS). Results confirmed for the first time the utility of BCL-xL inhibition by navitoclax in priming primary NSCLC tumor cells and identified combinations that primed further. This is a demonstration of the principle that DBP can be used as a functional precision medicine tool to rationally construct combination drug regimens that include BH3 mimetics in solid tumors like NSCLC.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Comprehensive CRISPR-Cas9 screens identify genetic determinants of drug responsiveness in multiple myeloma
- Author
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Bohl, Stephan R., Schmalbrock, Laura K., Bauhuf, Imke, Meyer, Tatjana, Dolnik, Anna, Szyska, Martin, Blätte, Tamara J., Knödler, Sarah, Röhner, Linda, Miller, Denise, Kull, Miriam, Langer, Christian, Döhner, Hartmut, Letai, Anthony, Damm, Frederik, Heckl, Dirk, Bullinger, Lars, and Krönke, Jan
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Cytoplasmic p53 couples oncogene-driven glucose metabolism to apoptosis and is a therapeutic target in glioblastoma
- Author
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Mai, Wilson X, Gosa, Laura, Daniels, Veerle W, Ta, Lisa, Tsang, Jonathan E, Higgins, Brian, Gilmore, W Blake, Bayley, Nicholas A, Harati, Mitra Dehghan, Lee, Jason T, Yong, William H, Kornblum, Harley I, Bensinger, Steven J, Mischel, Paul S, Rao, P Nagesh, Clark, Peter M, Cloughesy, Timothy F, Letai, Anthony, and Nathanson, David A
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Cancer ,Rare Diseases ,Biomedical Imaging ,Genetics ,Neurosciences ,Brain Disorders ,Brain Cancer ,Development of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,5.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Aetiology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Animals ,Apoptosis ,Brain Neoplasms ,Cytoplasm ,ErbB Receptors ,Female ,Glioblastoma ,Glucose ,Humans ,Mice ,Mice ,Inbred NOD ,Tumor Cells ,Cultured ,Tumor Suppressor Protein p53 ,Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Immunology ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
Cross-talk among oncogenic signaling and metabolic pathways may create opportunities for new therapeutic strategies in cancer. Here we show that although acute inhibition of EGFR-driven glucose metabolism induces only minimal cell death, it lowers the apoptotic threshold in a subset of patient-derived glioblastoma (GBM) cells. Mechanistic studies revealed that after attenuated glucose consumption, Bcl-xL blocks cytoplasmic p53 from triggering intrinsic apoptosis. Consequently, targeting of EGFR-driven glucose metabolism in combination with pharmacological stabilization of p53 with the brain-penetrant small molecule idasanutlin resulted in synthetic lethality in orthotopic glioblastoma xenograft models. Notably, neither the degree of EGFR-signaling inhibition nor genetic analysis of EGFR was sufficient to predict sensitivity to this therapeutic combination. However, detection of rapid inhibitory effects on [18F]fluorodeoxyglucose uptake, assessed through noninvasive positron emission tomography, was an effective predictive biomarker of response in vivo. Together, these studies identify a crucial link among oncogene signaling, glucose metabolism, and cytoplasmic p53, which may potentially be exploited for combination therapy in GBM and possibly other malignancies.
- Published
- 2017
48. Developmental Regulation of Mitochondrial Apoptosis by c-Myc Governs Age- and Tissue-Specific Sensitivity to Cancer Therapeutics.
- Author
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Sarosiek, Kristopher, Fraser, Cameron, Muthalagu, Nathiya, Bhola, Patrick, Chang, Weiting, McBrayer, Samuel, Cantlon, Adam, Fisch, Sudeshna, Golomb-Mello, Gail, Ryan, Jeremy, Deng, Jing, Jian, Brian, Corbett, Chris, Goldenberg, Marti, Madsen, Joseph, Liao, Ronglih, Walsh, Dominic, Sedivy, John, Murphy, Daniel, Carrasco, Daniel, Robinson, Shenandoah, Moslehi, Javid, and Letai, Anthony
- Subjects
apoptosis ,c-Myc ,cardiotoxicity ,cell death regulation ,chemosensitivity ,neurotoxicity ,pediatric cancer ,radiosensitivity ,side effects of chemotherapy ,side effects of radiation therapy ,Age Factors ,Animals ,Apoptosis ,Doxorubicin ,Humans ,Mice ,Mitochondria ,Neoplasms ,Organ Specificity ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-myc ,bcl-2 Homologous Antagonist-Killer Protein ,bcl-2-Associated X Protein - Abstract
It is not understood why healthy tissues can exhibit varying levels of sensitivity to the same toxic stimuli. Using BH3 profiling, we find that mitochondria of many adult somatic tissues, including brain, heart, and kidneys, are profoundly refractory to pro-apoptotic signaling, leading to cellular resistance to cytotoxic chemotherapies and ionizing radiation. In contrast, mitochondria from these tissues in young mice and humans are primed for apoptosis, predisposing them to undergo cell death in response to genotoxic damage. While expression of the apoptotic protein machinery is nearly absent by adulthood, in young tissues its expression is driven by c-Myc, linking developmental growth to cell death. These differences may explain why pediatric cancer patients have a higher risk of developing treatment-associated toxicities.
- Published
- 2017
49. The effect of air temperature on hospital admission of adults with community acquired pneumonia in Baotou, China
- Author
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Wenfang Guo, Letai Yi, Peng Wang, Baojun Wang, and Minhui Li
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract The relationship between air temperature and the hospital admission of adult patients with community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) was analyzed. The hospitalization data pertaining to adult CAP patients (age ≥ 18 years) in two tertiary comprehensive hospitals in Baotou, Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, China from 2014 to 2018 and meteorological data there in the corresponding period were collected. The exposure–response relationship between the daily average temperature and the hospital admission of adult CAP patients was quantified by using a distributed lag non-linear model. A total of 4466 cases of adult patients with CAP were admitted. After eliminating some confounding factors such as relative humidity, wind speed, air pressure, long-term trend, and seasonal trend, a lower temperature was found to be associated with a higher risk of adult CAP. Compared to 21 °C, lower temperature range of 4 to –12 °C was associated with a greater number of CAP hospitalizations among those aged ≥ 65 years, and the highest relative risk (RR) was 2.80 (95% CI 1.15–6.80) at a temperature of − 10 °C. For those
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Photoimmunotherapy-Induced Pyroptosis Remodels the Microenvironment to Enhance Cancer Immunotherapy.
- Author
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Zhang, Wenqiao, Yuan, Haitao, Wang, Peili, Yi, Letai, Wen, Qinglian, Zhou, Runhua, Bai, Yunmeng, Ma, Jingbo, Wang, Xiaoxian, Liang, Yanting, Liang, Zhen, Peng, Xin, Wang, Jigang, and Xiao, Wei
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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