22 results on '"Luana D'Artista"'
Search Results
2. Data from MYC- and MIZ1-Dependent Vesicular Transport of Double-Strand RNA Controls Immune Evasion in Pancreatic Ductal Adenocarcinoma
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Martin Eilers, Elmar Wolf, Lars Zender, Stefan Bauer, Mathias T. Rosenfeldt, Georg Gasteiger, Armin Wiegering, Luana D'Artista, Peter Gallant, Ursula Eilers, Apoorva Baluapuri, Emilia Vendelova, Florian Roehrig, Abdallah Gaballa, Carsten P. Ade, Anneli Gebhardt-Wolf, and Bastian Krenz
- Abstract
Deregulated expression of the MYC oncoprotein enables tumor cells to evade immune surveillance, but the mechanisms underlying this surveillance are poorly understood. We show here that endogenous MYC protects pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) driven by KRASG12D and TP53R172H from eradication by the immune system. Deletion of TANK-binding kinase 1 (TBK1) bypassed the requirement for high MYC expression. TBK1 was active due to the accumulation of double-stranded RNA (dsRNA), which was derived from inverted repetitive elements localized in introns of nuclear genes. Nuclear-derived dsRNA is packaged into extracellular vesicles and subsequently recognized by toll-like receptor 3 (TLR3) to activate TBK1 and downstream MHC class I expression in an autocrine or paracrine manner before being degraded in lysosomes. MYC suppressed loading of dsRNA onto TLR3 and its subsequent degradation via association with MIZ1. Collectively, these findings suggest that MYC and MIZ1 suppress a surveillance pathway that signals perturbances in mRNA processing to the immune system, which facilitates immune evasion in PDAC.Significance:This study identifies a TBK1-dependent pathway that links dsRNA metabolism to antitumor immunity and shows that suppression of TBK1 is a critical function of MYC in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma.
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- 2023
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3. Figure S2 from MYC- and MIZ1-Dependent Vesicular Transport of Double-Strand RNA Controls Immune Evasion in Pancreatic Ductal Adenocarcinoma
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Martin Eilers, Elmar Wolf, Lars Zender, Stefan Bauer, Mathias T. Rosenfeldt, Georg Gasteiger, Armin Wiegering, Luana D'Artista, Peter Gallant, Ursula Eilers, Apoorva Baluapuri, Emilia Vendelova, Florian Roehrig, Abdallah Gaballa, Carsten P. Ade, Anneli Gebhardt-Wolf, and Bastian Krenz
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Histological analyses of transplanted tumors.
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- 2023
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4. Figure S5 from MYC- and MIZ1-Dependent Vesicular Transport of Double-Strand RNA Controls Immune Evasion in Pancreatic Ductal Adenocarcinoma
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Martin Eilers, Elmar Wolf, Lars Zender, Stefan Bauer, Mathias T. Rosenfeldt, Georg Gasteiger, Armin Wiegering, Luana D'Artista, Peter Gallant, Ursula Eilers, Apoorva Baluapuri, Emilia Vendelova, Florian Roehrig, Abdallah Gaballa, Carsten P. Ade, Anneli Gebhardt-Wolf, and Bastian Krenz
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Characterization of dsRNA and ssDNA in KPC cells.
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- 2023
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5. Figure S4 from MYC- and MIZ1-Dependent Vesicular Transport of Double-Strand RNA Controls Immune Evasion in Pancreatic Ductal Adenocarcinoma
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Martin Eilers, Elmar Wolf, Lars Zender, Stefan Bauer, Mathias T. Rosenfeldt, Georg Gasteiger, Armin Wiegering, Luana D'Artista, Peter Gallant, Ursula Eilers, Apoorva Baluapuri, Emilia Vendelova, Florian Roehrig, Abdallah Gaballa, Carsten P. Ade, Anneli Gebhardt-Wolf, and Bastian Krenz
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Characterization of MYC depletion.
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- 2023
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6. Figure S7 from MYC- and MIZ1-Dependent Vesicular Transport of Double-Strand RNA Controls Immune Evasion in Pancreatic Ductal Adenocarcinoma
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Martin Eilers, Elmar Wolf, Lars Zender, Stefan Bauer, Mathias T. Rosenfeldt, Georg Gasteiger, Armin Wiegering, Luana D'Artista, Peter Gallant, Ursula Eilers, Apoorva Baluapuri, Emilia Vendelova, Florian Roehrig, Abdallah Gaballa, Carsten P. Ade, Anneli Gebhardt-Wolf, and Bastian Krenz
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Role of MIZ1 in gene regulation.
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- 2023
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7. Figure S6 from MYC- and MIZ1-Dependent Vesicular Transport of Double-Strand RNA Controls Immune Evasion in Pancreatic Ductal Adenocarcinoma
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Martin Eilers, Elmar Wolf, Lars Zender, Stefan Bauer, Mathias T. Rosenfeldt, Georg Gasteiger, Armin Wiegering, Luana D'Artista, Peter Gallant, Ursula Eilers, Apoorva Baluapuri, Emilia Vendelova, Florian Roehrig, Abdallah Gaballa, Carsten P. Ade, Anneli Gebhardt-Wolf, and Bastian Krenz
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Further characterization of dsRNA species.
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- 2023
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8. Figure S3 from MYC- and MIZ1-Dependent Vesicular Transport of Double-Strand RNA Controls Immune Evasion in Pancreatic Ductal Adenocarcinoma
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Martin Eilers, Elmar Wolf, Lars Zender, Stefan Bauer, Mathias T. Rosenfeldt, Georg Gasteiger, Armin Wiegering, Luana D'Artista, Peter Gallant, Ursula Eilers, Apoorva Baluapuri, Emilia Vendelova, Florian Roehrig, Abdallah Gaballa, Carsten P. Ade, Anneli Gebhardt-Wolf, and Bastian Krenz
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Characterization of MYC depletion.
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- 2023
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9. Figure S8 from MYC- and MIZ1-Dependent Vesicular Transport of Double-Strand RNA Controls Immune Evasion in Pancreatic Ductal Adenocarcinoma
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Martin Eilers, Elmar Wolf, Lars Zender, Stefan Bauer, Mathias T. Rosenfeldt, Georg Gasteiger, Armin Wiegering, Luana D'Artista, Peter Gallant, Ursula Eilers, Apoorva Baluapuri, Emilia Vendelova, Florian Roehrig, Abdallah Gaballa, Carsten P. Ade, Anneli Gebhardt-Wolf, and Bastian Krenz
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TBK1-dependent regulation of NF-kB-dependent gene expression.
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- 2023
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10. MYC determines lineage commitment in KRAS-driven primary liver cancer development
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Luana D’Artista, Athina Anastasia Moschopoulou, Iros Barozzi, Amanda J. Craig, Marco Seehawer, Lea Herrmann, Martina Minnich, Tae-Won Kang, Elke Rist, Melanie Henning, Sabrina Klotz, Florian Heinzmann, Jule Harbig, Bence Sipos, Thomas Longerich, Martin Eilers, Daniel Dauch, Johannes Zuber, Xin Wei Wang, and Lars Zender
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Hepatology - Published
- 2023
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11. MYC- and MIZ1-Dependent Vesicular Transport of Double-Strand RNA Controls Immune Evasion in Pancreatic Ductal Adenocarcinoma
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Lars Zender, Carsten P. Ade, Mathias T. Rosenfeldt, Emilia Vendelova, Ursula Eilers, Bastian Krenz, Elmar Wolf, Anneli Gebhardt-Wolf, Armin Wiegering, Peter Gallant, Abdallah Gaballa, Apoorva Baluapuri, Stefan Bauer, Florian Roehrig, Luana D’Artista, Georg Gasteiger, and Martin Eilers
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Cancer Research ,Kruppel-Like Transcription Factors ,Mice, Nude ,Biology ,Adenocarcinoma ,Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases ,Article ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-myc ,03 medical and health sciences ,Paracrine signalling ,Mice ,0302 clinical medicine ,Immune system ,TANK-binding kinase 1 ,Mice, Inbred NOD ,MHC class I ,Animals ,Humans ,Autocrine signalling ,030304 developmental biology ,Immune Evasion ,RNA, Double-Stranded ,Cell Nucleus ,0303 health sciences ,Mice, Inbred BALB C ,RNA ,Biological Transport ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,Introns ,Cell biology ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Pancreatic Neoplasms ,RNA silencing ,HEK293 Cells ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Immune System ,TLR3 ,biology.protein ,Tumor Suppressor Protein p53 ,Gene Deletion ,Carcinoma, Pancreatic Ductal - Abstract
Deregulated expression of the MYC oncoprotein enables tumor cells to evade immune surveillance, but the mechanisms underlying this surveillance are poorly understood. We show here that endogenous MYC protects pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) driven by KRASG12D and TP53R172H from eradication by the immune system. Deletion of TANK-binding kinase 1 (TBK1) bypassed the requirement for high MYC expression. TBK1 was active due to the accumulation of double-stranded RNA (dsRNA), which was derived from inverted repetitive elements localized in introns of nuclear genes. Nuclear-derived dsRNA is packaged into extracellular vesicles and subsequently recognized by toll-like receptor 3 (TLR3) to activate TBK1 and downstream MHC class I expression in an autocrine or paracrine manner before being degraded in lysosomes. MYC suppressed loading of dsRNA onto TLR3 and its subsequent degradation via association with MIZ1. Collectively, these findings suggest that MYC and MIZ1 suppress a surveillance pathway that signals perturbances in mRNA processing to the immune system, which facilitates immune evasion in PDAC. Significance: This study identifies a TBK1-dependent pathway that links dsRNA metabolism to antitumor immunity and shows that suppression of TBK1 is a critical function of MYC in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma.
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- 2021
12. LXRα activation and Raf inhibition trigger lethal lipotoxicity in liver cancer
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Thales Kronenberger, Antti Poso, Liudmyla Taranets, Nikita Popov, Elias Einig, Daniel Dauch, Jule Harbig, Ramona Rudalska, Michael Forster, Sabrina Klotz, Florian Heinzmann, Werner Schmitz, Wei Cui, Lars Zender, Almut Schulze, Agata Dylawerska, Michael Bitzer, Luana D’Artista, Mathias T. Rosenfeldt, Nisar P. Malek, Marteinn Thor Snaebjornsson, Tae-Won Kang, Bernd J. Pichler, Martina Hinterleitner, Stefan Zwirner, and Stefan Laufer
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Sorafenib ,Cancer Research ,Carcinoma, Hepatocellular ,business.industry ,Fatty Acids ,Liver Neoplasms ,Cancer ,medicine.disease ,digestive system diseases ,Metabolic pathway ,Disease Models, Animal ,Mice ,Oncology ,Lipotoxicity ,Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease ,Hepatocellular carcinoma ,medicine ,Cancer research ,Animals ,Humans ,Treatment resistance ,Liver cancer ,Liver X receptor ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The success of molecular therapies targeting specific metabolic pathways in cancer is often limited by the plasticity and adaptability of metabolic networks. Here we show that pharmacologically induced lipotoxicity represents a promising therapeutic strategy for the treatment of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). LXRα-induced liponeogenesis and Raf-1 inhibition are synthetic lethal in HCC owing to a toxic accumulation of saturated fatty acids. Raf-1 was found to bind and activate SCD1, and conformation-changing DFG-out Raf inhibitors could disrupt this interaction, thereby blocking fatty acid desaturation and inducing lethal lipotoxicity. Studies in genetically engineered and nonalcoholic steatohepatitis-induced HCC mouse models and xenograft models of human HCC revealed that therapies comprising LXR agonists and Raf inhibitors were well tolerated and capable of overcoming therapy resistance in HCC. Conceptually, our study suggests pharmacologically induced lipotoxicity as a new mode for metabolic targeting of liver cancer. Zender, Dauch and colleagues demonstrate that pharmacologically induced lipotoxicity by activating LXRα and Raf-1 inhibition provides a metabolic therapeutic strategy for hepatocellular carcinoma.
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- 2020
13. Pin1 is required for sustained B cell proliferation upon oncogenic activation of Myc
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Stefano Campaner, Andrea Piontini, Alessandro Verrecchia, Theresia R. Kress, Andrea Bisso, Bruno Amati, Mirko Doni, Giannino Del Sal, Marco J. Morelli, and Luana D'Artista
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0301 basic medicine ,Genetically modified mouse ,Lymphoma ,proliferation ,Mice, Transgenic ,Biology ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-myc ,Dephosphorylation ,03 medical and health sciences ,Pin1 ,0302 clinical medicine ,c-myc ,Transcription (biology) ,Animals ,Gene silencing ,Cells, Cultured ,Cell Proliferation ,Mice, Knockout ,B-Lymphocytes ,Gene Expression Profiling ,Fibroblasts ,Cell cycle ,Embryo, Mammalian ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,NIMA-Interacting Peptidylprolyl Isomerase ,030104 developmental biology ,Oncology ,Apoptosis ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Cancer research ,PIN1 ,Phosphorylation ,RNA Interference ,Research Paper - Abstract
The c-myc proto-oncogene is activated by translocation in Burkitt's lymphoma and substitutions in codon 58 stabilize the Myc protein or augment its oncogenic potential. In wild-type Myc, phosphorylation of Ser 62 and Thr 58 provides a landing pad for the peptidyl prolyl-isomerase Pin1, which in turn promotes Ser 62 dephosphorylation and Myc degradation. However, the role of Pin1 in Myc-induced lymphomagenesis remains unknown. We show here that genetic ablation of Pin1 reduces lymphomagenesis in Eμ-myc transgenic mice. In both Pin1-deficient B-cells and MEFs, the proliferative response to oncogenic Myc was selectively impaired, with no alterations in Myc-induced apoptosis or mitogen-induced cell cycle entry. This proliferative defect wasn't attributable to alterations in either Ser 62 phosphorylation or Myc-regulated transcription, but instead relied on the activity of the ARF-p53 pathway. Pin1 silencing in lymphomas retarded disease progression in mice, making Pin1 an attractive therapeutic target in Myc-driven tumors.
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- 2016
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14. TNFα sensitizes hepatocytes to FasL-induced apoptosis by NFκB-mediated Fas upregulation
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Chun-Hao Huang, Luana D’Artista, Darjus F. Tschaharganeh, Simon Neumann, Lukas Peintner, Lars Zender, Florian Heinzmann, Tae-Won Kang, Sabine Mac Nelly, Ulrich Maurer, Thomas Brunner, Laura Faletti, Scott W. Lowe, Christoph Borner, Irmgard Merfort, Thomas Grabinger, Sandra Sandler, University of Zurich, and Borner, Christoph
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0301 basic medicine ,Cancer Research ,2804 Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Apoptosis ,Fas ligand ,10052 Institute of Physiology ,1307 Cell Biology ,Mice ,0302 clinical medicine ,1306 Cancer Research ,lcsh:Cytology ,Kinase ,Chemistry ,3T3 Cells ,Hep G2 Cells ,Up-Regulation ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Liver ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Hepatocyte ,Tumor necrosis factor alpha ,Signal transduction ,Signal Transduction ,Transcriptional Activation ,Programmed cell death ,Fas Ligand Protein ,Immunology ,610 Medicine & health ,Article ,Cell Line ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Downregulation and upregulation ,Cell Line, Tumor ,ddc:570 ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,fas Receptor ,lcsh:QH573-671 ,2403 Immunology ,Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha ,Transcription Factor RelA ,Cell Biology ,HEK293 Cells ,030104 developmental biology ,Hepatocytes ,Cancer research ,570 Life sciences ,biology - Abstract
Although it is well established that TNFα contributes to hepatitis, liver failure and associated hepatocarcinogenesis via the regulation of inflammation, its pro-apoptotic role in the liver has remained enigmatic. On its own, TNFα is unable to trigger apoptosis. However, when combined with the transcriptional inhibitor GaLN, it can cause hepatocyte apoptosis and liver failure in mice. Moreover, along with others, we have shown that TNFα is capable of sensitizing cells to FasL- or drug-induced cell death via c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) activation and phosphorylation/activation of the BH3-only protein Bim. In this context, TNFα could exacerbate hepatocyte cell death during simultaneous inflammatory and T-cell-mediated immune responses in the liver. Here we show that TNFα sensitizes primary hepatocytes, established hepatocyte cell lines and mouse embryo fibroblasts to FasL-induced apoptosis by the transcriptional induction and higher surface expression of Fas via the NFκB pathway. Genetic deletion, diminished expression or dominant-negative inhibition of the NFκB subunit p65 resulted in lower Fas expression and inhibited TNFα-induced Fas upregulation and sensitization to FasL-induced cell death. By hydrodynamic injection of p65 shRNA into the tail vein of mice, we confirm that Fas upregulation by TNFα is also NFκB-mediated in the liver. In conclusion, TNFα sensitization of FasL-induced apoptosis in the liver proceeds via two parallel signaling pathways, activation of JNK and Bim phosphorylation and NFκB-mediated Fas upregulation.
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- 2018
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15. Necroptosis microenvironment directs lineage commitment in liver cancer
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Rishabh Chawla, Lisa Hoenicke, Nir Rozenblum, Jule Harbig, Johannes Zuber, Marco Seehawer, Gregory J. Dore, Hien Dang, Pierre-François Roux, Florian Heinzmann, Mihael Vucur, Thomas Longerich, Tom Luedde, Bence Sipos, Oliver Bischof, Tae-Won Kang, Xin Wei Wang, Lucas Robinson, Mathias Heikenwalder, Sabrina Klotz, Mareike Roth, Thorsten Buch, Luana D’Artista, Lars Zender, Universitätsklinikum Tübingen - University Hospital of Tübingen, Eberhard Karls Universität Tübingen = Eberhard Karls University of Tuebingen, Organisation Nucléaire et Oncogenèse / Nuclear Organization and Oncogenesis, Institut Pasteur [Paris]-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), Equipe labellisée Ligue contre le Cancer, National Cancer Institute [Bethesda] (NCI-NIH), National Institutes of Health [Bethesda] (NIH), Universität Zürich [Zürich] = University of Zurich (UZH), Universitätsklinikum RWTH Aachen - University Hospital Aachen [Aachen, Germany] (UKA), RWTH Aachen University, Vienna Biocenter - VBC [Austria], University of Tübingen, Heidelberg University Hospital [Heidelberg], German Cancer Research Center - Deutsches Krebsforschungszentrum [Heidelberg] (DKFZ), German Cancer Consortium [Heidelberg] (DKTK), This work was supported by the ERC Consolidator Grant ‘CholangioConcept’ (to L.Z.), the German Research Foundation (DFG): grants FOR2314, SFB685, SFB/TR209 and the Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Program (to L.Z.). Further funding was provided by the German Ministry for Education and Research (BMBF) (e:Med/Multiscale HCC), the German Universities Excellence Initiative (third funding line: ‘future concept’), the German Center for Translational Cancer Research (DKTK), the German-Israeli Cooperation in Cancer Research (DKFZ-MOST) (to L.Z.) and the Intramural Research Program of the Centre for Cancer Research, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health (to X.W.W.). The group of O.B. is supported by grants from ANR-BMFT, Fondation ARC pour la recherche sur le Cancer, INSERM, and the National Cancer Institute of the National Institutes of Health under Award Number R01CA136533. O.B. is a CNRS fellow., We thank E. Rist, P. Schiemann, C. Fellmeth, C.-J. Hsieh, D. Heide and J. Hetzer for technical help or assistance. We thank A. Weber for providing TLR2 and TLR4 knockout mice and W. S. Alexander and The Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research for providing Mlklfl/fl mice. The Cas9n–p19Arf sgRNA vector was provided by W. Xue. We thank the c.ATG facility of Tuebingen University and CeGaT Tuebingen for exome sequencing and data analysis., Institut Pasteur [Paris] (IP)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), Rheinisch-Westfälische Technische Hochschule Aachen University (RWTH), University of Zurich, and Zender, Lars
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0301 basic medicine ,MESH: Necrosis*/genetics ,Cellular differentiation ,MESH: Cell Lineage*/genetics ,MESH: Carcinoma, Hepatocellular/pathology ,MESH: Tumor Microenvironment ,10239 Institute of Laboratory Animal Science ,MESH: Animals ,Cancer epigenetics ,MESH: Apoptosis*/genetics ,MESH: Transcription Factors/metabolism ,MESH: Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-akt/genetics ,Multidisciplinary ,MESH: Carcinoma, Hepatocellular/genetics ,MESH: Cyclin-Dependent Kinase Inhibitor p16/deficiency ,3. Good health ,MESH: Carcinogenesis/genetics ,MESH: Cholangiocarcinoma/genetics ,MESH: Mosaicism ,MESH: T-Box Domain Proteins/genetics ,Liver cancer ,Cancer microenvironment ,MESH: Cell Differentiation ,Necroptosis ,MESH: Cholangiocarcinoma/pathology ,MESH: Liver Neoplasms/pathology ,Context (language use) ,610 Medicine & health ,[SDV.CAN]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Cancer ,Biology ,MESH: DNA-Binding Proteins/metabolism ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,MESH: DNA Transposable Elements/genetics ,MESH: Gene Expression Profiling ,MESH: Hepatocytes/metabolism ,medicine ,MESH: Transcription Factors/genetics ,MESH: Mice ,MESH: Genes, myc ,MESH: Liver Neoplasms/genetics ,Tumor microenvironment ,1000 Multidisciplinary ,MESH: DNA-Binding Proteins/genetics ,MESH: Humans ,Epigenome ,medicine.disease ,MESH: Male ,digestive system diseases ,MESH: Genes, ras ,030104 developmental biology ,MESH: Hepatocytes/pathology ,Cancer research ,Hepatic stellate cell ,570 Life sciences ,biology ,MESH: Epigenesis, Genetic/genetics ,MESH: Cytokines/metabolism ,MESH: Disease Models, Animal ,MESH: Female ,MESH: T-Box Domain Proteins/metabolism - Abstract
Comment in :- Neighbourhood deaths cause a switch in cancer subtype. [Nature. 2018]- Neighbourly deaths dictate fate. [Nat Rev Cancer. 2018]- Bad neighborhoods: apoptotic and necroptotic microenvironments determine liver cancer subtypes. [Hepatobiliary Surg Nutr. 2019]- Viewpoint: necroptosis influences the type of liver cancer via changes of hepatic microenvironment. [Hepatobiliary Surg Nutr. 2019]; International audience; Primary liver cancer represents a major health problem. It comprises hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (ICC), which differ markedly with regards to their morphology, metastatic potential and responses to therapy. However, the regulatory molecules and tissue context that commit transformed hepatic cells towards HCC or ICC are largely unknown. Here we show that the hepatic microenvironment epigenetically shapes lineage commitment in mosaic mouse models of liver tumorigenesis. Whereas a necroptosis-associated hepatic cytokine microenvironment determines ICC outgrowth from oncogenically transformed hepatocytes, hepatocytes containing identical oncogenic drivers give rise to HCC if they are surrounded by apoptotic hepatocytes. Epigenome and transcriptome profiling of mouse HCC and ICC singled out Tbx3 and Prdm5 as major microenvironment-dependent and epigenetically regulated lineage-commitment factors, a function that is conserved in humans. Together, our results provide insight into lineage commitment in liver tumorigenesis, and explain molecularly why common liver-damaging risk factors can lead to either HCC or ICC.
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- 2018
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16. The Worst from Both Worlds: cHCC-ICC
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Marco Seehawer, Luana D’Artista, and Lars Zender
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0301 basic medicine ,Oncology ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Cell Biology ,digestive system diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Text mining ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Internal medicine ,Cancer cell ,medicine ,Histopathology ,Primary liver cancer ,business ,neoplasms - Abstract
Prognosis of combined hepatocellular carcinoma-intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma, a type of primary liver cancer comprising areas with HCC and ICC histopathology, is dismal, and it is unclear if such tumors develop clonally and how they should be treated. In this issue of Cancer Cell, Xue et al. (2019) provide answers to these questions.
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- 2019
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17. A non-redundant function of cyclin E1 in hematopoietic stem cells
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Domenico Sardella, Bruno Amati, Francesca De Franco, Andrea Viale, Serena De Fazio, Pier Giuseppe Pelicci, Stefano Campaner, Mirko Doni, and Luana D'Artista
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Cdk2 ,Cyclin E ,Genotype ,Antimetabolites ,Cell Survival ,Bone Marrow Cells ,HSC ,Biology ,Mice ,Cell Cycle News & Views ,medicine ,Animals ,Transplantation, Homologous ,quiescence ,Progenitor cell ,Molecular Biology ,Bone Marrow Transplantation ,Cyclin ,Mice, Knockout ,Oncogene Proteins ,Cell Cycle Checkpoints ,Cell Biology ,Cell cycle ,Hematopoietic Stem Cells ,hematopoiesis ,Cell biology ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Transplantation ,Cyclin E1 ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,hematopoietic stem cell ,cell cycle ,Fluorouracil ,Bone marrow ,Stem cell ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
A precise balance between quiescence and proliferation is crucial for the lifelong function of hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs). Cyclins E1 and E2 regulate exit from quiescence in fibroblasts, but their role in HSCs remains unknown. Here, we report a non-redundant role for cyclin E1 in mouse HSCs. A long-term culture-initiating cell (LTC-IC) assay indicated that the loss of cyclin E1, but not E2, compromised the colony-forming activity of primitive hematopoietic progenitors. Ccne1(-/-) mice showed normal hematopoiesis in vivo under homeostatic conditions but a severe impairment following myeloablative stress induced by 5-fluorouracil (5-FU). Under these conditions, Ccne1(-/-) HSCs were less efficient in entering the cell cycle, resulting in decreased hematopoiesis and reduced survival of mutant mice upon weekly 5-FU treatment. The role of cyclin E1 in homeostatic conditions became apparent in aged mice, where HSC quiescence was increased in Ccne1(-/-) animals. On the other hand, loss of cyclin E1 provided HSCs with a competitive advantage in bone marrow serial transplantation assays, suggesting that a partial impairment of cell cycle entry may exert a protective role by preventing premature depletion of the HSC compartment. Our data support a role for cyclin E1 in controlling the exit from quiescence in HSCs. This activity, depending on the physiological context, can either jeopardize or protect the maintenance of hematopoiesis.
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- 2013
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18. OmoMYC blunts promoter invasion by oncogenic MYC to inhibit gene expression characteristic of MYC-dependent tumors
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Elmar Wolf, Gerard I. Evan, Luana D’Artista, Lars Zender, Sebastian Letschert, Lisa Anna Jung, W. Koelmel, Caroline Kisker, Andrew V. Biankin, Markus Sauer, Susanne Walz, B von Eyss, Jochen Kuper, Carsten P. Ade, Martin Eilers, C Redel, and Anneli Gebhardt
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0301 basic medicine ,Models, Molecular ,Cancer Research ,Sequence Homology ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Molecular oncology ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-myc ,03 medical and health sciences ,Transcription (biology) ,Neoplasms ,Gene expression ,Genetics ,medicine ,Humans ,Promoter Regions, Genetic ,Molecular Biology ,Psychological repression ,Cells, Cultured ,Genes, Dominant ,Regulation of gene expression ,Binding Sites ,Tumor Suppressor Proteins ,DNA ,Cell cycle ,Peptide Fragments ,Chromatin ,Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic ,030104 developmental biology ,Cancer research ,Protein Multimerization ,Carcinogenesis ,Transcriptome - Abstract
MYC genes have both essential roles during normal development and exert oncogenic functions during tumorigenesis. Expression of a dominant-negative allele of MYC, termed OmoMYC, can induce rapid tumor regression in mouse models with little toxicity for normal tissues. How OmoMYC discriminates between physiological and oncogenic functions of MYC is unclear. We have solved the crystal structure of OmoMYC and show that it forms a stable homodimer and as such recognizes DNA in the same manner as the MYC/MAX heterodimer. OmoMYC attenuates both MYC-dependent activation and repression by competing with MYC/MAX for binding to chromatin, effectively lowering MYC/MAX occupancy at its cognate binding sites. OmoMYC causes the largest decreases in promoter occupancy and changes in expression on genes that are invaded by oncogenic MYC levels. A signature of OmoMYC-regulated genes defines subgroups with high MYC levels in multiple tumor entities and identifies novel targets for the eradication of MYC-driven tumors.
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- 2016
19. Exploiting oncogene-induced replicative stress for the selective killing of Myc-driven tumors
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Oscar Fernandez-Capetillo, Thomas Schleker, Maria F Montaña, Andrés J. López-Contreras, Rebeca Soria, Stefano Campaner, Luana D'Artista, Matilde Murga, Luis I. Toledo, Bruno Amati, Mariano Barbacid, Elena García, Manuel Hidalgo, and Carmen Guerra
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Lymphoma ,DNA damage ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Apoptosis ,Cell Cycle Proteins ,Ataxia Telangiectasia Mutated Proteins ,Adenocarcinoma ,Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases ,Biology ,Article ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-myc ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Stress, Physiological ,Structural Biology ,medicine ,Animals ,CHEK1 ,Protein Kinase Inhibitors ,Molecular Biology ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Oncogene ,Anatomy ,medicine.disease ,3. Good health ,Pancreatic Neoplasms ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Checkpoint Kinase 1 ,Cancer cell ,Cancer research ,biological phenomena, cell phenomena, and immunity ,Protein Kinases ,DNA Damage - Abstract
Oncogene-induced replicative stress activates an Atr- and Chk1-dependent response, which has been proposed to be widespread in tumors. We explored whether the presence of replicative stress could be exploited for the selective elimination of cancer cells. To this end, we evaluated the impact of targeting the replicative stress-response on cancer development. In mice (Mus musculus), the reduced levels of Atr found on a mouse model of the Atr-Seckel syndrome completely prevented the development of Myc-induced lymphomas or pancreatic tumors, both of which showed abundant levels of replicative stress. Moreover, Chk1 inhibitors were highly effective in killing Myc-driven lymphomas. By contrast, pancreatic adenocarcinomas initiated by K-Ras(G12V) showed no detectable evidence of replicative stress and were nonresponsive to this therapy. Besides its impact on cancer, Myc overexpression aggravated the phenotypes of Atr-Seckel mice, revealing that oncogenes can modulate the severity of replicative stress-associated diseases.
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- 2011
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20. Author Correction: Necroptosis microenvironment directs lineage commitment in liver cancer
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Lars Zender, Florian Heinzmann, Xin Wei Wang, Tae-Won Kang, Lisa Hoenicke, Mathias Heikenwalder, Lucas Robinson, Sabrina Klotz, Marco Seehawer, Hien Dang, Johannes Zuber, Bence Sipos, Tom Luedde, Oliver Bischof, Mareike Roth, Mihael Vucur, Gregory J. Dore, Thomas Longerich, Thorsten Buch, Pierre-François Roux, Nir Rozenblum, Jule Harbig, Rishabh Chawla, and Luana D’Artista
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0301 basic medicine ,Multidisciplinary ,Lineage commitment ,Necroptosis ,AKT1 ,Biology ,medicine.disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,embryonic structures ,Cancer research ,medicine ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Liver cancer - Abstract
In this Article, the pCaMIN construct consisted of ‘mouse MYC and mouse NrasG12V’ instead of ‘mouse Myc and human NRASG12V; and the pCAMIA construct consisted of ‘mouse Myc and human AKT1’ instead of ‘mouse Myc and Akt1’ this has been corrected online.
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- 2018
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21. Abstract B03: Pin1 is required for sustained B cell proliferation upon oncogenic activation of Myc
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Luana D'Artista, Alessandro Verrecchia, Marco J. Morelli, Andrea Piontini, Bruno Amati, Stefano Campaner, Mirko Doni, and Theresia R. Kress
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Genetically modified mouse ,Cancer Research ,Chromosomal translocation ,Cell cycle ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Dephosphorylation ,Oncology ,Apoptosis ,Cancer research ,PIN1 ,medicine ,Phosphorylation ,Carcinogenesis ,Molecular Biology - Abstract
The c-myc proto-oncogene is activated by translocation in Burkitt's lymphoma, where it is also frequently subject to secondary mutations. Substitutions in codon 58, in particular, stabilize the Myc protein and augment its oncogenic potential. In wild-type Myc, phosphorylation of Ser 62 primes phosphorylation of Thr 58, providing a landing pad for the peptidyl prolyl-isomerase Pin1, which in turn promotes Ser 62 dephosphorylation and Myc degradation. However, genetic data are missing to address whether Pin1 influences Myc-induced lymphomagenesis. Here, we show that genetic ablation of Pin1 in Eµ-myc transgenic mice starkly reduced lymphoma onset and penetrance. In pre-malignant Pin1 deficient B cells, the proliferative response to Myc was selectively impaired, while Myc-induced apoptosis was intact. This phenotype was not the result of deregulated levels of Ser 62 phosphorylation in the Pin1-/- background. Similar results were observed in Pin1-/- mouse embryo fibroblasts (MEFs), where prolonged Myc activation inhibited proliferation. In either B cells or MEFs, loss of Pin1 did not affect mitogen-induced cell cycle entry, an effect that relies on endogenous Myc activity. Thus, our data unravel the existence of a synthetic-lethal interaction between deletion of Pin1 and oncogenic activation of Myc. Myc-induced oncogenic stress is linked to the induction of the Arf/p53 pathway, which is critical for tumor suppression in Eµ-myc mice. The selective pressure to inactivate Arf/p53 axis was preserved in Eµ-myc Pin1-/- lymphomas. In the absence of Arf or p53, the Pin1 deletion no longer reduced Myc-induced tumorigenesis or proliferation. Thus the proliferative arrest of pre-tumoral Eµ-myc Pin1-/- B cells required an active ARF-p53 dependent cytostatic response. Our data demonstrate that Pin1 is required to support the oncogenic activity of Myc in B cells and warrant further assessment of Pin1 as a therapeutic target in Myc-dependent malignancies. Citation Format: Luana D'Artista, Andrea Piontini, Theresia Kress, Marco Morelli, Alessandro Verrecchia, Mirko Doni, Stefano Campaner, Bruno Amati. Pin1 is required for sustained B cell proliferation upon oncogenic activation of Myc. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the AACR Special Conference on Myc: From Biology to Therapy; Jan 7-10, 2015; La Jolla, CA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Mol Cancer Res 2015;13(10 Suppl):Abstract nr B03.
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- 2015
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22. Abstract A27: Epigenomic and transcriptional analyses in a Tet-Myc driven mouse model of liver cancer
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Bruno Amati, Paola Nicoli, Luana D'Artista, Enrico Radaelli, Valerio Bianchi, Mirko Doni, and Theresia R. Kress
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Cancer Research ,Hepatoblastoma ,Transgene ,Wnt signaling pathway ,Cancer ,Biology ,medicine.disease ,medicine.disease_cause ,Oncology ,Tumor progression ,medicine ,Cancer research ,H3K4me3 ,Carcinogenesis ,Molecular Biology ,Epigenomics - Abstract
The c-myc proto-oncogene is frequently overexpressed in human hepatoblastoma due to gene amplification or constitutively active Wnt signaling. High Myc levels characterize an aggressive hepatoblastoma subtype, reproduced in mice with a liver-specific tetracyclin-regulated c-myc transgene (1, 2). Here, we used an analogous mouse model (tetO-MYC/Lap-tTA; ref. 3) to study the epigenomic and transcriptional mechanisms underlying tumor progression and maintenance. Tet-Myc induction in utero resulted in rapid and fully penetrant tumorigenesis by the age of six weeks. Pre-tumoral changes were detectable already at a late embryonic stage (E18.5) with increased liver size and hepatoblast fraction. As previously described (2), tumors remained dependent on the constitutive expression of the transgene. To study transcriptional changes during tumor progression and regression, we established RNA-seq profiles in control hepatoblasts, pre-tumoral Tet-Myc hepatoblasts and tumor nodules, in the latter before and after short-term inactivation of Tet-Myc. In parallel, we used ChIP-seq to profile the genome-wide distribution of Myc, RNAPII and several histone marks (H3K4me1, H3K4me3, H3K27ac), yielding comprehensive maps of Myc binding to regulatory elements (promoters and enhancers). This unique dataset is providing the basis for mechanistic studies addressing how Myc deregulates its target genes during liver tumorigenesis: comparison of differentially expressed mRNAs and Myc-binding profiles enables us to discriminate between directly and potentially indirectly regulated genes, for which we are currently investigating the underlying molecular basis. Furthermore, our genome-wide data are allowing us to unravel potentially druggable genes and pathways regulated by Myc during hepatoblastoma progression and maintenance. Our progress in characterizing this model will be presented at the meeting. References: 1. Cairo S et al. 2008, Cancer Cell, 14:471-84 2. Shachaf CM et al. 2004, Nature, 431:1112-7 3. van Riggelen J et al. 2010, Genes Dev, 24:1281-94 Citation Format: Theresia Kress, Valerio Bianchi, Luana D'Artista, Paola Nicoli, Mirko Doni, Enrico Radaelli, Bruno Amati. Epigenomic and transcriptional analyses in a Tet-Myc driven mouse model of liver cancer. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the AACR Special Conference on Myc: From Biology to Therapy; Jan 7-10, 2015; La Jolla, CA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Mol Cancer Res 2015;13(10 Suppl):Abstract nr A27.
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- 2015
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