30 results on '"Brenet F"'
Search Results
2. Fundbericht 2022 — Chronique archéologique 2022 — Cronaca archeologica 2022
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Ackermann, R., Aebersold, S., Allemann, H., Amoroso, H., Andereggen, M., André, I., Andres, B., Ansermet, Ch., Aschwanden, S., Auf der Maur, Ch., Baerlocher, J., Balet, J., Baur, Ch., Beeler, P., Benazeth, I., Bertschi, M., Berweger, M., Bondi, C., Braillard, S., Bregnard, L., Brenet, F., Broillet-Ramjoué, E., Bucher, J., Bucher, R., Buess, M., Burkhardt, L., Cardani Vergani, R., Casaulta, M., Chamberlain, S., Chaudet, V., Chauvière, F.-X., Chevassu, V., Colaizzi, I., Consagra, G., Constantin, Th., Cornelissen, M., Cortese, R., de Chambrier, A., de Weck, A., Deák, J., Debard, J., Desarzens, N., Dorthe, A., Doswald, St., Fahrni, M.-J., Fallet, C., Fankhauser, J., Fischer, A., Flück, M., Freitag, A., Freitag, L., Frey, J., Gallay, A., Gantner, M., Gerber, Ch., Giger, M., Gillioz, M., Giozza, G., Glaus, M., Gollnick, U., Graber, S., Grutsch, C., Guex, M.-P., Guichon, R., Gut, C., Harb, Ch., Hart, B., Heinzle, B., Held, J., Henny, Ch., Hertig, N., Hervé, C., Heubi, O., Hodel, C., Höpfer, B., Huber, A., Huber, R., Imhof, W., Jakob, B., Janke, R., Javet, R., Jecker, D., Jobin, P., Junod, O., Käch, D., Kaufmann, S., Kienholz, A., Kissling, C., Klingen, S., Koch, P., König, K., Kramer, L., Kraus, S., Kündig, Ch., Langenegger, F., Lanthemann, F., Lanzicher, A. F., Leuzinger, U., Liboutet, M., Liechti, U., Locatelli, D., Löckher, C., Luisoni, G., Lüscher, R., Maciejczak, M., Maibach, J., Maise, Ch., Margot, W., Maroelli, D., Marti, A., Marti, R., Martin, E., McCullough, F., Meier Mohamed, G., Menna, F., Messner, F., Michel, Ch., Monnier, J., Mosetti, L., Motschi, A., Müller, W., Näf, N., Nagy, P., Nicolet, G., Nieberle, M., Nogara, G., Oberhänsli, M., Obrecht, J., Papucci, L., Pedrucci, A., Peter, M., Petit, X., Pfyffer, J., Pignolet, A., Pilloud, R., Pittet, B., Pradervand, A.-L., Presset, O., Reinhard, J., Reitmaier-Naef, L., Reitmaier, Th., Richner, L., Rubeli, L., Rüedi, K., Ruffieux, M., Savary, J., Schaeren, G., Schäppi, K., Schärer, L., Scheiber, E., Schenk, A., Schindler, M. P., Schmelzbach, C., Schmidig, R., Schmidt, V., Schopfer, A., Schwind, S., Segond, A.-L., Sele, R., Signer, A., Sliwinski, A., Spielmann, J., Spiess, C., Steiner, L., Steinhauser, R., Șuteu, C., Tenud, A., Thomas, P., Thorimbert, S., Tortoli, F., Trumm, J., Tuchschmid, F., van Willigen, S., Vigneau, H., von Wartburg, J., Wälchi, D., Walser, Ch., Wegmüller, F., Wimmer, J., Winkler, A., Wulf, D., and Wyss, B.
- Abstract
Der archäologische Fundbericht enthält Nachrichten und Notizen über Neufunde und Grabungen in der Schweiz. Wir danken allen Autoren, die Beiträge und Bildmaterial zur Verfügung gestellt haben. La chronique archéologique renseigne sur des fouilles et des découvertes récentes en Suisse. Nous remercions tous ceux qui ont mis à notre disposition leurs rapports et leurs illustrations. La cronaca archeologica informa su scoperte recenti e scavi in Svizzera. A tutti lizzare le loro relazioni e documentazioni fotografiche.
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- 2023
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3. Akt phosphorylation of La regulates specific mRNA translation in glial progenitors
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Brenet, F, Socci, N D, Sonenberg, N, and Holland, E C
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- 2009
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4. Identification of secondary structure in the 5′-untranslated region of the human adrenomedullin mRNA with implications for the regulation of mRNA translation
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Brenet, F, Dussault, N, Delfino, C, Boudouresque, F, Chinot, O, Martin, P-M, and Ouafik, L H
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- 2006
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5. SRSF2-p95 hotspot mutation is highly associated with advanced forms of mastocytosis and mutations in epigenetic regulator genes
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Hanssens, K., primary, Brenet, F., additional, Agopian, J., additional, Georgin-Lavialle, S., additional, Damaj, G., additional, Cabaret, L., additional, Chandesris, M. O., additional, de Sepulveda, P., additional, Hermine, O., additional, Dubreuil, P., additional, and Soucie, E., additional
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- 2014
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6. Akt phosphorylation of La regulates specific mRNA translation in glial progenitors
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Brenet, F, primary, Socci, N D, additional, Sonenberg, N, additional, and Holland, E C, additional
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- 2008
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7. Comparison of prognostic scores according to WHO classification in 170 patients with advanced mastocytosis and C-finding treated with midostaurin.
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Heiblig M, Gourguechon C, Guilpain P, Bulai-Livideanu C, Barete S, Chantran Y, Agopian J, Brenet F, Dubreuil P, Lespinasse J, Lemal R, Tournilhac O, Terriou L, Launay D, Bouillet L, Chatain C, Damaj G, Ballul T, Greco C, Polivka L, Frenzel L, Meni C, Bouktit H, Benabou D, Gaudy-Marqueste C, Gousseff M, Le Mouel E, Neel A, Ranta D, Jaussaud R, Molina TJ, Bruneau J, Villarese P, Lhermitte L, Maouche-Chrétien L, Temple M, Kosmider O, Javier RM, Pelletier F, Castelain F, Retornaz F, Cabrera Q, Zunic P, Gourin MP, Wierzbicka-Hainaut E, Viallard JF, Lavigne C, Hoarau C, Durieu I, Dimicoli-Salazar S, Torregrosa-Diaz JM, Wemeau M, Soria A, Arock M, Bodemer C, Lortholary O, Hermine O, and Rossignol J
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- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Aged, Retrospective Studies, Prognosis, Adult, World Health Organization, Aged, 80 and over, Protein Kinase Inhibitors therapeutic use, Leukemia, Mast-Cell drug therapy, Hematologic Neoplasms drug therapy, Hematologic Neoplasms mortality, Staurosporine analogs & derivatives, Staurosporine therapeutic use, Mastocytosis, Systemic drug therapy, Mastocytosis, Systemic mortality, Mastocytosis, Systemic classification, Mastocytosis, Systemic diagnosis
- Abstract
Advanced systemic mastocytosis (AdvSM) encompasses heterogeneous mastocytosis subtypes and is associated with poor outcomes. Although midostaurin was the first tyrosine kinase inhibitor to be approved for AdvSM patients, long-lasting responses are limited. The mutation-Adjusted Risk Score (MARS), the International Prognostic Scoring System for mastocytosis (IPSM) and the Global Prognostic Score for Systemic Mastocytosis (GPSM) have been established to characterize the outcomes of patients with overall AdvSM. However, given the outcome's dependency on the AdvSM subtype, prognostic characterization within each subtype is critical. We aimed to study the predictive ability using Harrell's concordance index of prognostic scores according to the AdvSM subtype. We conducted a nationwide retrospective study using the French mastocytosis reference center's registry and included all midostaurin-treated patients with C finding. Overall, 170 patients were identified: 46 aggressive SM (ASM), 11 mast cell leukemia (MCL), and 113 SM with associated hematological neoplasm (SM-AHN). All risk scores improved their discriminative value for overall survival (OS) when combined with the AdvSM subtype. The best predictive value was for adjusted MARS (C-index = 0.689), followed by GPSM (C-index = 0.677) and IPSM (C-index = 0.618). In a multivariable analysis, MARS stratification and the AdvSM subtype were both prognostic for OS. Accordingly, five subgroups of patients with AdvSM and a different median OS were identified: 9.9 months for MCL, 24 months for intermediate/high-risk SM-AHN, 33 months for intermediate/high-risk ASM, 58 months for low-risk SM-AHN and was not reached for low-risk ASM (p < 0.001). The AdvSM subtype and the MARS are the most predictive of OS and should prompt specific management., (© 2024 The Author(s). American Journal of Hematology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2024
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8. An immersive virtual reality tool for assessing left and right unilateral spatial neglect.
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Thomasson M, Perez-Marcos D, Crottaz-Herbette S, Brenet F, Saj A, Bernati T, Serino A, Tadi T, Blanke O, and Ronchi R
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- Humans, Male, Female, Aged, Middle Aged, Neuropsychological Tests, Adult, Space Perception physiology, Aged, 80 and over, Perceptual Disorders etiology, Perceptual Disorders diagnosis, Virtual Reality, Functional Laterality physiology
- Abstract
The reported rate of the occurrence of unilateral spatial neglect (USN) is highly variable likely due to the lack of validity and low sensitivity of classical tools used to assess it. Virtual reality (VR) assessments try to overcome these limitations by proposing immersive and complex environments. Nevertheless, existing VR-based tasks are mostly focused only on near space and lack analysis of psychometric properties and/or clinical validation. The present study evaluates the clinical validity and sensitivity of a new immersive VR-based task to assess USN in the extra-personal space and examines the neuronal correlates of deficits of far space exploration. The task was administrated to two groups of patients with right (N = 28) or left (N = 11) hemispheric brain lesions, also undergoing classical paper-and-pencil assessment, as well as a group of healthy participants. Our VR-based task detected 44% of neglect cases compared to 31% by paper-and-pencil tests in the total sample. Importantly, 30% of the patients (with right or left brain lesions) with no clear sign of USN on the paper-and-pencil tests performed outside the normal range in the VR-based task. Voxel lesion-symptom mapping revealed that deficits detected in VR were associated with lesions in insular and temporal cortex, part of the neural network involved in spatial processing. These results show that our immersive VR-based task is efficient and sensitive in detecting mild to strong manifestations of USN affecting the extra-personal space, which may be undetected using standard tools., (© 2024 The British Psychological Society.)
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- 2024
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9. Characteristics and outcomes associated with CD2 and CD25 expression on bone marrow mast cells in patients with systemic mastocytosis.
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Rossignol J, Georgin-Lavialle S, Canioni D, Beganovic O, Brouzes C, Fain O, Heiblig M, Gourguechon C, Guilpain P, Bulai-Livideanu C, Barete S, Agopian J, Brenet F, Dubreuil P, Lemal R, Tournilhac O, Terriou L, Launay D, Bouillet L, Chatain C, Damaj G, Ballul T, Greco C, Polivka L, Frenzel L, Meni C, Bouktit H, Benabou D, Devin C, Gaudy-Marqueste C, Gousseff M, Le Mouel E, Neel A, Ranta D, Jaussaud R, Jo Molina T, Bruneau J, Javier RM, Pelletier F, Castelain F, Retornaz F, Cabrera Q, Zunic P, Gourin MP, Wierzbicka-Hainaut E, Viallard JF, Lavigne C, Hoarau C, Durieu I, Dimicoli-Salazar S, Torregrosa-Diaz JM, Duval A, Garcelon N, Lespinasse J, Soria A, Chantran Y, Arock M, Bodemer C, Lortholary O, Asnafi V, Hermine O, and Lhermitte L
- Abstract
Not available.
- Published
- 2024
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10. Histological characterization of liver involvement in systemic mastocytosis.
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Rossignol J, Canioni D, Aouba A, Bulai-Livideanu C, Barete S, Lancesseur C, Polivka L, Madrange M, Ballul T, Neuraz A, Greco C, Agopian J, Brenet F, Dubreuil P, Lemal R, Tournilhac O, Terriou L, Launay D, Bouillet L, Gourguechon C, Frenzel L, Meni C, Gaudy-Marqueste C, Gousseff M, Le Mouel E, Hamidou M, Neel A, Ranta D, Jaussaud R, Guilpain P, Molina TJ, Bruneau J, Lhermitte L, Garcelon N, Javier RM, Pelletier F, Castelain F, Retornaz F, Cabrera Q, Zunic P, Gourin MP, Wierzbicka-Hainaut E, Viallard JF, Lavigne C, Hoarau C, Durieu I, Heiblig M, Dimicoli-Salazar S, Torregrosa-Diaz JM, Soria A, Arock M, Lortholary O, Bodemer C, Pol S, Mallet V, Hermine O, and Damaj G
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- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Female, Male, Middle Aged, Adult, Biopsy, Aged, Hypertension, Portal pathology, Hypertension, Portal etiology, France, Liver Cirrhosis pathology, Mast Cells pathology, Alkaline Phosphatase blood, Prognosis, Mastocytosis, Systemic pathology, Mastocytosis, Systemic complications, Liver pathology, Hepatomegaly pathology, Hepatomegaly etiology
- Abstract
Background and Aims: Systemic mastocytosis (SM) is characterized by the accumulation of atypical mast cells (MCs) in organs. Liver histology of SM has been marginally described and accurate histological classification is critical, given the consequences of aggressive SM diagnosis. We aimed to describe the histological features associated with liver SM using updated tools., Methods: Using the database of the French Reference Centre for Mastocytosis, we retrospectively identified patients with a liver biopsy (LB) and a diagnosis of SM. All LB procedures were performed according to the local physician in charge and centrally reviewed by an expert pathologist., Results: A total of 28 patients were included: 6 had indolent SM, 9 had aggressive SM, and 13 had SM with an associated hematologic neoplasm. Twenty-five (89%) patients presented hepatomegaly, and 19 (68%) had portal hypertension. The LB frequently showed slight sinusoid dilatation (82%). Fibrosis was observed in 3/6 indolent SM and in almost all advanced SM cases (21/22), but none of them showed cirrhosis. A high MC burden (>50 MCs/high-power field) was correlated with elevated blood alkaline phosphatase levels (p = .030). The presence of portal hypertension was associated with a higher mean fibrosis grade (1.6 vs. 0.8 in its absence; p = .026). In advanced SM, the presence of nodular regenerative hyperplasia (NRH) was associated with decreased overall survival (9.5 vs. 46.3 months, p = .002)., Conclusions: MC infiltration induced polymorphic hepatic lesions and the degree of fibrosis is associated with portal hypertension. NRH identifies a poor prognosis subgroup of patients with advanced SM. Assessing liver histology can aid in SM prognostic evaluation., (© 2024 The Authors. Liver International published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2024
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11. Pathophysiologic implications of elevated prevalence of hereditary alpha-tryptasemia in all mastocytosis subtypes.
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Polivka L, Madrange M, Bulai-Livideanu C, Barete S, Ballul T, Neuraz A, Greco C, Agopian J, Brenet F, Dubreuil P, Burdet C, Lemal R, Tournilhac O, Terriou L, Launay D, Bouillet L, Gourguechon C, Damaj G, Frenzel L, Meni C, Bouktit H, Collange AF, Gaudy-Marqueste C, Gousseff M, Le Mouel E, Hamidou M, Neel A, Ranta D, Jaussaud R, Guilpain P, Canioni D, Molina TJ, Bruneau J, Lhermitte L, Garcelon N, Javier RM, Pelletier F, Castelain F, Retornaz F, Cabrera Q, Zunic P, Gourin MP, Wierzbicka-Hainaut E, Viallard JF, Lavigne C, Hoarau C, Durieu I, Heiblig M, Dimicoli-Salazar S, Torregrosa-Diaz JM, Soria A, Arock M, Lortholary O, Bodemer C, Hermine O, and Rossignol J
- Subjects
- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Prevalence, Mast Cells pathology, Tryptases genetics, Mastocytosis, Systemic epidemiology, Mastocytosis, Systemic genetics, Mastocytosis, Systemic pathology, Mastocytosis epidemiology, Mastocytosis genetics, Mastocytosis pathology, Anaphylaxis pathology
- Abstract
Background: Mastocytosis and monoclonal mast cell (MC) activation syndrome (MMAS) are heterogeneous conditions characterized by the accumulation of atypical MCs. Despite the recurrent involvement of KIT mutations, the pathophysiologic origin of mastocytosis and MMAS is unclear. Although hereditary α-tryptasemia (HαT, related to TPSAB1 gene duplication) is abnormally frequent in these diseases, it is not known whether the association is coincidental or causal., Objective: We evaluated the prevalence of HαT in all mastocytosis subtypes and MMAS and assessed the pathophysiologic association with HαT., Methods: Clinical data, laboratory data, KIT mutations, TPSAB1 duplication (assessed by droplet digital PCR), and HαT prevalence were retrospectively recorded for all patients with mastocytosis and MMAS registered in the French national referral center database and compared to a control cohort. To increase the power of our analysis for advanced systemic mastocytosis (advSM), we pooled our cohort with literature cases., Results: We included 583 patients (27 with MMAS and 556 with mastocytosis). The prevalence of HαT in mastocytosis was 12.6%, significantly higher than in the general population (5.7%, P = .002) and lower than in MMAS (33.3%, P = .02). HαT
+ patients were more likely to have anaphylactic reactions and less likely to have cutaneous lesions than HαT- patients (43.0% vs 24.4%, P = .006; 57.7% vs 75.6%, respectively, P = .006). In the pooled analysis, the prevalence of HαT was higher in advSM (11.5%) than in control cohorts (5.2%, P = .01)., Conclusion: Here we confirm the increase incidence of anaphylaxis in HαT+ mastocytosis patients. The increased prevalence of HαT in all subtypes of systemic mastocytosis (including advSM) is suggestive of pathophysiologic involvement., (Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2024
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12. An immersive virtual reality system for ecological assessment of peripersonal and extrapersonal unilateral spatial neglect.
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Perez-Marcos D, Ronchi R, Giroux A, Brenet F, Serino A, Tadi T, and Blanke O
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- Adult, Humans, Space Perception, Neuropsychological Tests, Functional Laterality, Perceptual Disorders diagnosis, Perceptual Disorders etiology, Stroke complications, Virtual Reality
- Abstract
Background: Unilateral spatial neglect (USN) is a debilitating neuropsychological syndrome that often follows brain injury, in particular a stroke affecting the right hemisphere. In current clinical practice, the assessment of neglect is based on old-fashioned paper-and-pencil and behavioral tasks, and sometimes relies on the examiner's subjective judgment. Therefore, there is a need for more exhaustive, objective and ecological assessments of USN., Methods: In this paper, we present two tasks in immersive virtual reality to assess peripersonal and extrapersonal USN. The tasks are designed with several levels of difficulty to increase sensitivity of the assessment. We then validate the feasibility of both assessments in a group of healthy adult participants., Results: We report data from a study with a group of neurologically unimpaired participants (N = 39). The results yield positive feedback on comfort, usability and design of the tasks. We propose new objective scores based on participant's performance captured by head gaze and hand position information, including, for instance, time of exploration, moving time towards left/right and time-to-reach, which could be used for the evaluation of the attentional spatial bias with neurological patients. Together with the number of omissions, the new proposed parameters can result in lateralized index ratios as a measure of asymmetry in space exploration., Conclusions: We presented two innovative assessments for USN based on immersive virtual reality, evaluating the far and the near space, using ecological tasks in multimodal, realistic environments. The proposed protocols and objective scores can help distinguish neurological patients with and without USN., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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13. GlcNAc is a mast-cell chromatin-remodeling oncometabolite that promotes systemic mastocytosis aggressiveness.
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Agopian J, Da Costa Q, Nguyen QV, Scorrano G, Kousteridou P, Yuan M, Chelbi R, Goubard A, Castellano R, Maurizio J, Teodosio C, De Sepulveda P, Asara JM, Orfao A, Hermine O, Dubreuil P, and Brenet F
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- Acetylglucosamine metabolism, Adult, Animals, Disease Progression, Humans, Mast Cells metabolism, Mastocytosis, Systemic genetics, Mastocytosis, Systemic metabolism, Metabolome, Mice, SCID, Prospective Studies, Mice, Acetylglucosamine analysis, Chromatin Assembly and Disassembly, Mast Cells pathology, Mastocytosis, Systemic pathology
- Abstract
Systemic mastocytosis (SM) is a KIT-driven hematopoietic neoplasm characterized by the excessive accumulation of neoplastic mast cells (MCs) in various organs and, mainly, the bone marrow (BM). Multiple genetic and epigenetic mechanisms contribute to the onset and severity of SM. However, little is known to date about the metabolic underpinnings underlying SM aggressiveness, which has thus far impeded the development of strategies to leverage metabolic dependencies when existing KIT-targeted treatments fail. Here, we show that plasma metabolomic profiles were able to discriminate indolent from advanced forms of the disease. We identified N-acetyl-d-glucosamine (GlcNAc) as the most predictive metabolite of SM severity. High plasma levels of GlcNAc in patients with advanced SM correlated with the activation of the GlcNAc-fed hexosamine biosynthesis pathway in patients BM aspirates and purified BM MCs. At the functional level, GlcNAc enhanced human neoplastic MCs proliferation and promoted rapid health deterioration in a humanized mouse model of SM. In addition, in the presence of GlcNAc, immunoglobulin E-stimulated MCs triggered enhanced release of proinflammatory cytokines and a stronger acute response in a mouse model of passive cutaneous anaphylaxis. Mechanistically, elevated GlcNAc levels promoted the transcriptional accessibility of chromatin regions that contain genes encoding mediators of receptor tyrosine kinases cascades and inflammatory responses, thus leading to a more aggressive phenotype. Therefore, GlcNAc is an oncometabolite driver of SM aggressiveness. This study suggests the therapeutic potential for targeting metabolic pathways in MC-related diseases to manipulate MCs effector functions., (© 2021 by The American Society of Hematology.)
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- 2021
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14. Megakaryocyte TGFβ1 partitions erythropoiesis into immature progenitor/stem cells and maturing precursors.
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Di Giandomenico S, Kermani P, Mollé N, Yabut MM, Abu-Zeinah G, Stephens T, Messali N, Schreiner R, Brenet F, Rafii S, and Scandura JM
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- Animals, Apoptosis drug effects, Bone Marrow pathology, Erythroid Precursor Cells metabolism, Erythropoietin pharmacology, Gene Knockout Techniques, Hematopoietic Stem Cells cytology, Hematopoietic Stem Cells metabolism, Immunophenotyping, Megakaryocyte-Erythroid Progenitor Cells cytology, Megakaryocyte-Erythroid Progenitor Cells metabolism, Megakaryocytes metabolism, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Mice, Transgenic, Radiation Chimera, Recombinant Proteins pharmacology, Transforming Growth Factor beta1 antagonists & inhibitors, Transforming Growth Factor beta1 genetics, Transforming Growth Factor beta1 pharmacology, Erythroid Precursor Cells cytology, Erythropoiesis physiology, Megakaryocytes cytology, Transforming Growth Factor beta1 physiology
- Abstract
Erythropoietin (EPO) provides the major survival signal to maturing erythroid precursors (EPs) and is essential for terminal erythropoiesis. Nonetheless, progenitor cells can irreversibly commit to an erythroid fate well before EPO acts, risking inefficiency if these progenitors are unneeded to maintain red blood cell (RBC) counts. We identified a new modular organization of erythropoiesis and, for the first time, demonstrate that the pre-EPO module is coupled to late EPO-dependent erythropoiesis by megakaryocyte (Mk) signals. Disrupting megakaryocytic transforming growth factor β1 (Tgfb1) disorganized hematopoiesis by expanding the pre-EPO pool of progenitor cells and consequently triggering significant apoptosis of EPO-dependent EPs. Similarly, pharmacologic blockade of TGFβ signaling in normal mice boosted the pre-EPO module, leading to apoptosis of EPO-sensitive EPs. Subsequent treatment with low-dose EPO triggered robust RBC production in both models. This work reveals modular regulation of erythropoiesis and offers a new strategy for overcoming chronic anemias., (© 2020 by The American Society of Hematology.)
- Published
- 2020
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15. SRC-Family Kinases in Acute Myeloid Leukaemia and Mastocytosis.
- Author
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Voisset E, Brenet F, Lopez S, and de Sepulveda P
- Abstract
Protein tyrosine kinases have been recognized as important actors of cell transformation and cancer progression, since their discovery as products of viral oncogenes. SRC-family kinases (SFKs) play crucial roles in normal hematopoiesis. Not surprisingly, they are hyperactivated and are essential for membrane receptor downstream signaling in hematological malignancies such as acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and mastocytosis. The precise roles of SFKs are difficult to delineate due to the number of substrates, the functional redundancy among members, and the use of tools that are not selective. Yet, a large num ber of studies have accumulated evidence to support that SFKs are rational therapeutic targets in AML and mastocytosis. These two pathologies are regulated by two related receptor tyrosine kinases, which are well known in the field of hematology: FLT3 and KIT. FLT3 is one of the most frequently mutated genes in AML, while KIT oncogenic mutations occur in 80-90% of mastocytosis. Studies on oncogenic FLT3 and KIT signaling have shed light on specific roles for members of the SFK family. This review highlights the central roles of SFKs in AML and mastocytosis, and their interconnection with FLT3 and KIT oncoproteins.
- Published
- 2020
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16. Familial hematological malignancies: new IDH2 mutation.
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Hamadou WS, Bourdon V, Létard S, Brenet F, Laarif S, Besbes S, Paci A, David M, Penard-Lacronique V, Youssef YB, Laatiri MA, Eisinger F, Mari V, Gesta P, Dreyfus H, Bonadona V, Dugast C, Zattara H, Faivre L, Noguchi T, Khélif A, Salem CB, Dubreuil P, Sobol H, and Soua Z
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Hematologic Neoplasms diagnosis, Hematologic Neoplasms genetics, Isocitrate Dehydrogenase genetics, Mutation genetics
- Abstract
Isocitrate dehydrogenase IDH 1 and IDH 2 mutations were reported in several cancer forms, especially in hematological malignancies, but were never been investigated in familial aggregation. The aim of this study is to determine whether germline isocitrate dehydrogenase genes mutations are involved.We targeted IDH1 and IDH2 genes in 104 familial cases belonging to Tunisian and French populations, including several forms of hematological malignancies and cosegregated solid tumors.We report one IDH1 variant: c.315 G>T, p.Gly105Gly in 15 % of cases, which was assigned to the worst outcome in several studies. Three IDH2 variants were found, among them, one intronic substitution c.543+45 G>A (rs142033117) and two new variants not previously described: c.389 A>T, p.Lys130Met and c.414 T>C, p.Thr138Thr. The p.Lys130Met was found in one case diagnosed with Waldenstrom's disease with familial history of cancer. The enrolled in silico analysis, the functional study, and the absence of this variant in control population strengthen the hypothesis of its deleterious effect.From an extended number of candidate genes analyzed in familial hematological malignancies, IDH2 might be considerably involved since we reported a potential damaging effect.
- Published
- 2016
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17. Cutting the brakes on hematopoietic regeneration by blocking TGFβ to limit chemotherapy-induced myelosuppression.
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Brenet F and Scandura JM
- Abstract
Hematopoietic stressors such as infection, bleeding, or toxic injury trigger a hematopoietic adaptation that sacrifices hematopoietic stem and progenitor cell (HSPC) quiescence to meet an urgent need for new blood cell production. Once the hematopoietic demands are adequately met, homeostasis must be restored. Transforming growth factor β (TGFβ) signaling is a central mediator mandating the return of HSPCs to quiescence after stress. Blockade of TGFβ signaling after hematopoietic stress delays the return of cycling HSPCs to quiescence and in so doing promotes hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) self-renewal and accelerates hematopoietic reconstitution. These findings open the door to new therapeutics that modulate the hematopoietic adaptation to stress. In this review, we will discuss the complex context-dependent activities of TGFβ in hematopoiesis and the potential benefits and limitations of using TGFβ pathway inhibitors to promote multilineage hematopoietic reconstitution after myelosuppressive chemotherapy.
- Published
- 2015
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18. Molecular basis of mast cell disease.
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Soucie E, Brenet F, and Dubreuil P
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- DNA-Binding Proteins genetics, Dioxygenases, Humans, Isocitrate Dehydrogenase genetics, Mastocytosis immunology, Mutation, Nuclear Proteins genetics, Phosphoproteins genetics, Proto-Oncogene Proteins genetics, Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-kit genetics, RNA Splicing Factors, Repressor Proteins genetics, Ribonucleoprotein, U2 Small Nuclear genetics, Ribonucleoproteins genetics, Serine-Arginine Splicing Factors, Splicing Factor U2AF, Mast Cells immunology, Mastocytosis genetics
- Abstract
Mastocytosis is an incurable and sometimes fatal haematological disorder grossly described as the accumulation of abnormal mast cells in the bone marrow and other organs causing tissue and organ damage. The clinical manifestations of this disease are extremely variable; disease phenotypes range from indolent to aggressive, and often present with associated non-mast cell haematological disorders (AHNMD), mainly myeloproliferative neoplasm and myelodysplastic syndromes. Recent efforts to genetically dissect the mechanisms that define aggressive and non-aggressive mastocytosis have generated a list of recurrent somatic mutations in mastocytosis patients that are associated with and may predict the evolution towards aggressive disease phenotypes. Here we review these mutations and discuss the molecular mechanisms associated with these mutations in an effort to better understand the biology of this disease and to predict its onset and evolution, with the ultimate goal of devising new and improved treatment strategies., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
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19. Molecular defects in mastocytosis: KIT and beyond KIT.
- Author
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Bibi S, Langenfeld F, Jeanningros S, Brenet F, Soucie E, Hermine O, Damaj G, Dubreuil P, and Arock M
- Subjects
- Bone Marrow drug effects, Bone Marrow metabolism, Bone Marrow pathology, Cell Proliferation, DNA-Binding Proteins genetics, DNA-Binding Proteins metabolism, Dioxygenases, Exons, Hematologic Neoplasms diagnosis, Hematologic Neoplasms drug therapy, Hematologic Neoplasms pathology, Humans, Mast Cells drug effects, Mast Cells pathology, Mastocytosis diagnosis, Mastocytosis drug therapy, Mastocytosis pathology, Mutation, Protein Kinase Inhibitors therapeutic use, Proto-Oncogene Proteins genetics, Proto-Oncogene Proteins metabolism, Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-kit metabolism, Repressor Proteins genetics, Repressor Proteins metabolism, Signal Transduction, Spliceosomes metabolism, Spliceosomes pathology, Stem Cell Factor genetics, Stem Cell Factor metabolism, Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic, Hematologic Neoplasms genetics, Mast Cells metabolism, Mastocytosis genetics, Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-kit genetics, Spliceosomes genetics
- Abstract
In all variants of mastocytosis, activating KIT mutations are frequently found. In adults, neoplastic mast cells (MCs) cells show the KIT mutation D816V, whereas in children, MCs invading the skin are frequently positive for non-KIT D816V mutations. The clinical course and prognosis of the disease vary among patients with systemic mastocytosis (SM). Additional KIT-independent molecular defects might cause progression. Additional oncogenic lesions have recently been identified in advanced SM. In advanced SM the presence of additional genetic lesions or altered signaling worsening the prognosis might lead to the use of alternative therapies such as combined antisignaling targeted treatments or stem cell transplantation., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. The Rad50 hook domain regulates DNA damage signaling and tumorigenesis.
- Author
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Roset R, Inagaki A, Hohl M, Brenet F, Lafrance-Vanasse J, Lange J, Scandura JM, Tainer JA, Keeney S, and Petrini JH
- Subjects
- Animals, Ataxia Telangiectasia Mutated Proteins metabolism, Carcinogenesis metabolism, Cell Cycle Checkpoints physiology, DNA Repair, DNA Repair Enzymes metabolism, DNA-Binding Proteins metabolism, Germ Cells pathology, MRE11 Homologue Protein, Mice, Mutation, Phenotype, Protein Structure, Tertiary, Carcinogenesis genetics, DNA Damage, Signal Transduction genetics
- Abstract
The Mre11 complex (Mre11, Rad50, and Nbs1) is a central component of the DNA damage response (DDR), governing both double-strand break repair and DDR signaling. Rad50 contains a highly conserved Zn(2+)-dependent homodimerization interface, the Rad50 hook domain. Mutations that inactivate the hook domain produce a null phenotype. In this study, we analyzed mutants with reduced hook domain function in an effort to stratify hook-dependent Mre11 complex functions. One of these alleles, Rad50(46), conferred reduced Zn(2+) affinity and dimerization efficiency. Homozygous Rad50(46/46) mutations were lethal in mice. However, in the presence of wild-type Rad50, Rad50(46) exerted a dominant gain-of-function phenotype associated with chronic DDR signaling. At the organismal level, Rad50(+/46) exhibited hydrocephalus, liver tumorigenesis, and defects in primitive hematopoietic and gametogenic cells. These outcomes were dependent on ATM, as all phenotypes were mitigated in Rad50(+/46) Atm(+/-) mice. These data reveal that the murine Rad50 hook domain strongly influences Mre11 complex-dependent DDR signaling, tissue homeostasis, and tumorigenesis.
- Published
- 2014
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- View/download PDF
21. [TGFβ contribution to hematopoietic regeneration after myelosuppressive chemotherapy].
- Author
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Brenet F and Scandura JM
- Subjects
- Animals, Bone Marrow Cells physiology, Hematopoiesis drug effects, Hematopoietic Stem Cells physiology, Humans, Antineoplastic Agents adverse effects, Hematopoiesis physiology, Regeneration, Transforming Growth Factor beta physiology
- Published
- 2013
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- View/download PDF
22. TGFβ restores hematopoietic homeostasis after myelosuppressive chemotherapy.
- Author
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Brenet F, Kermani P, Spektor R, Rafii S, and Scandura JM
- Subjects
- Animals, Cyclin-Dependent Kinase Inhibitor p57 analysis, Hematopoietic Stem Cells physiology, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Mice, Knockout, Signal Transduction, Transforming Growth Factor beta antagonists & inhibitors, Antineoplastic Agents toxicity, Bone Marrow drug effects, Hematopoiesis drug effects, Homeostasis, Transforming Growth Factor beta physiology
- Abstract
Myelosuppression is a life-threatening complication of antineoplastic therapy, but treatment is restricted to a few cytokines with unilineage hematopoietic activity. Although hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) are predominantly quiescent during homeostasis, they are rapidly recruited into cell cycle by stresses, including myelosuppressive chemotherapy. Factors that induce HSCs to proliferate during stress have been characterized, but it is not known how HSC quiescence is then reestablished. In this study, we show that TGFβ signaling is transiently activated in hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs) during hematopoietic regeneration. Blockade of TGFβ signaling after chemotherapy accelerates hematopoietic reconstitution and delays the return of cycling HSCs to quiescence. In contrast, TGFβ blockade during homeostasis fails to induce cycling of HSPCs. We identified the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor Cdkn1c (p57) as a key downstream mediator of TGFβ during regeneration because the recovery of chimeric mice, incapable of expressing p57 in HSPCs, phenocopies blockade of TGFβ signaling after chemotherapy. This study demonstrates that context-dependent activation of TGFβ signaling is central to an unrecognized counterregulatory mechanism that promotes homeostasis once hematopoiesis has sufficiently recovered from myelosuppressive chemotherapy. These results open the door to new, potentially superior, approaches to promote multilineage hematopoietic recovery by blocking the TGFβ signaling that dampens regeneration.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. RARγ is essential for retinoic acid induced chromatin remodeling and transcriptional activation in embryonic stem cells.
- Author
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Kashyap V, Laursen KB, Brenet F, Viale AJ, Scandura JM, and Gudas LJ
- Subjects
- Cells, Cultured, Chromatin Assembly and Disassembly genetics, Humans, Receptors, Retinoic Acid genetics, Transcriptional Activation drug effects, Transcriptional Activation genetics, Retinoic Acid Receptor gamma, Chromatin Assembly and Disassembly drug effects, Embryonic Stem Cells drug effects, Embryonic Stem Cells metabolism, Receptors, Retinoic Acid metabolism, Tretinoin pharmacology
- Abstract
We have utilized retinoic acid receptor γ (gamma) knockout (RARγ(-/-)) embryonic stem (ES) cells as a model system to analyze RARγ mediated transcriptional regulation of stem cell differentiation. Most of the transcripts regulated by all-trans retinoic acid (RA) in ES cells are dependent upon functional RARγ signaling. Notably, many of these RA-RARγ target genes are implicated in retinoid uptake and metabolism. For instance, Lrat (lecithin:retinol acyltransferase), Stra6 (stimulated by retinoic acid 6), Crabp2 (cellular retinoic acid binding protein 2), and Cyp26a1 (cytochrome p450 26a1) transcripts are induced in wild type (WT), but not in RARγ(-/-) cells. Transcripts for the transcription factors Pbx1 (pre-B cell leukemia homeobox-1), Wt1 (Wilm's tumor gene-1), and Meis1 (myeloid ecotropic viral integration site-1) increase upon RA treatment of WT, but not RARγ(-/-) cells. In contrast, Stra8, Dleu7, Leftb, Pitx2, and Cdx1 mRNAs are induced by RA even in the absence of RARγ. Mapping of the epigenetic signature of Meis1 revealed that RA induces a rapid increase in the H3K9/K14ac epigenetic mark at the proximal promoter and at two sites downstream of the transcription start site in WT, but not in RARγ(-/-) cells. Thus, RA-associated increases in H3K9/K14ac epigenetic marks require RARγ and are associated with increased Meis1 transcript levels, whereas H3K4me3 is present at the Meis1 proximal promoter even in the absence of RARγ. In contrast, at the Lrat proximal promoter primarily the H3K4me3 mark, and not the H3K9/K14ac mark, increases in response to RA, independently of the presence of RARγ. Our data show major epigenetic changes associated with addition of the RARγ agonist RA in ES cells.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Epigenetic expansion of VHL-HIF signal output drives multiorgan metastasis in renal cancer.
- Author
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Vanharanta S, Shu W, Brenet F, Hakimi AA, Heguy A, Viale A, Reuter VE, Hsieh JJ, Scandura JM, and Massagué J
- Subjects
- Animals, Base Sequence, Carcinoma, Renal Cell genetics, Carcinoma, Renal Cell pathology, Cell Line, Tumor, DNA Methylation, Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic, Histones metabolism, Humans, Kidney Neoplasms genetics, Mice, Mice, Inbred NOD, Mice, SCID, Neoplasm Metastasis, Polycomb Repressive Complex 2 genetics, Receptors, CXCR4 genetics, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Transcription Factors genetics, Carcinoma, Renal Cell metabolism, Carcinoma, Renal Cell secondary, Hypoxia-Inducible Factor 1 metabolism, Kidney Neoplasms metabolism, Kidney Neoplasms pathology, Receptors, CXCR4 metabolism, Transcription Factors metabolism, Von Hippel-Lindau Tumor Suppressor Protein metabolism
- Abstract
Inactivation of the von Hippel-Lindau tumor suppressor gene, VHL, is an archetypical tumor-initiating event in clear cell renal carcinoma (ccRCC) that leads to the activation of hypoxia-inducible transcription factors (HIFs). However, VHL mutation status in ccRCC is not correlated with clinical outcome. Here we show that during ccRCC progression, cancer cells exploit diverse epigenetic alterations to empower a branch of the VHL-HIF pathway for metastasis, and the strength of this activation is associated with poor clinical outcome. By analyzing metastatic subpopulations of VHL-deficient ccRCC cells, we discovered an epigenetically altered VHL-HIF response that is specific to metastatic ccRCC. Focusing on the two most prominent pro-metastatic VHL-HIF target genes, we show that loss of Polycomb repressive complex 2 (PRC2)-dependent histone H3 Lys27 trimethylation (H3K27me3) activates HIF-driven chemokine (C-X-C motif) receptor 4 (CXCR4) expression in support of chemotactic cell invasion, whereas loss of DNA methylation enables HIF-driven cytohesin 1 interacting protein (CYTIP) expression to protect cancer cells from death cytokine signals. Thus, metastasis in ccRCC is based on an epigenetically expanded output of the tumor-initiating pathway.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Frequent alterations and epigenetic silencing of differentiation pathway genes in structurally rearranged liposarcomas.
- Author
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Taylor BS, DeCarolis PL, Angeles CV, Brenet F, Schultz N, Antonescu CR, Scandura JM, Sander C, Viale AJ, Socci ND, and Singer S
- Subjects
- Apoptosis genetics, Base Sequence, CCAAT-Enhancer-Binding Proteins genetics, Cell Line, Tumor, Cell Proliferation, DNA Methylation, Epigenesis, Genetic, Female, Gene Silencing, Histone Deacetylase 1 genetics, Humans, Liposarcoma pathology, Male, Molecular Sequence Data, Mutation, Signal Transduction, Cell Differentiation genetics, Gene Rearrangement, Liposarcoma genetics
- Abstract
Unlabelled: We explored diverse alterations contributing to liposarcomagenesis by sequencing the genome, exome, transcriptome, and cytosine methylome of a primary and recurrent dedifferentiated liposarcoma (DLPS) from distinct chemotherapy/radiotherapy-naïve patients. The liposarcoma genomes had complex structural rearrangements, but in different patterns, and with varied effects on the structure and expression of affected genes. While the point mutation rate was modest, integrative analyses and additional screening identified somatic mutations in HDAC1 in 8.3% of DLPS. Liposarcoma methylomes revealed alterations in differentiation pathway genes, including CEBPA methylation in 24% of DLPS. Treatment with demethylating agents, which restored CEBPA expression in DLPS cells, was anti-proliferative and pro-apoptotic in vitro and reduced tumor growth in vivo. Both genetic and epigenetic abnormalities established a role for small RNAs in liposarcomagenesis, typified by methylation-induced silencing of microRNA-193b in DLPS but not its well-differentiated counterpart. These findings reveal an unanticipated role for epigenetic abnormalities in DLPS tumors and suggest demethylating agents as potential therapeutics., Significance: Multimodality sequence analysis of DLPS revealed recurrent mutations and epigenetic abnormalities critical to liposarcomagenesis and to the suppression of adipocyte differentiation. Pharmacologic inhibition of DNA methylation promoted apoptosis and differentiated DLPS cells in vitro and inhibited tumor growth in vivo, providing a rationale for investigating methylation inhibitors in this disease.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Phase 1 study of epigenetic priming with decitabine prior to standard induction chemotherapy for patients with AML.
- Author
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Scandura JM, Roboz GJ, Moh M, Morawa E, Brenet F, Bose JR, Villegas L, Gergis US, Mayer SA, Ippoliti CM, Curcio TJ, Ritchie EK, and Feldman EJ
- Subjects
- Acute Disease, Adult, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols adverse effects, Azacitidine administration & dosage, Azacitidine adverse effects, Azacitidine analogs & derivatives, Cytarabine administration & dosage, Cytarabine adverse effects, Daunorubicin administration & dosage, Daunorubicin adverse effects, Decitabine, Diarrhea chemically induced, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Drug Administration Schedule, Female, Fever chemically induced, Humans, Infections chemically induced, Kaplan-Meier Estimate, Leukemia, Myeloid pathology, Male, Middle Aged, Nausea chemically induced, Neutropenia chemically induced, Treatment Outcome, Young Adult, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols therapeutic use, DNA Methylation drug effects, Leukemia, Myeloid drug therapy, Leukemia, Myeloid genetics
- Abstract
We conducted an open-label phase 1 study exploring the feasibility, safety, and biologic activity of epigenetic priming with decitabine before standard induction chemotherapy in patients with less-than-favorable risk of acute myelogenous leukemia (AML). We directly compared the clinical and DNA-hypomethylating activity of decitabine delivered at 20 mg/m² by either a 1-hour infusion (Arm A) or a continuous infusion (Arm B) for 3, 5, or 7 days before a single, standard induction with infusional cytarabine (100 mg/m² for 7 days) and daunorubicin (60 mg/m² × 3 doses). Toxicity was similar to that of standard induction chemotherapy alone. Although we did not identify a maximum tolerated dose, there was more gastro-intestinal toxicity with 7 days of decitabine priming. Decitabine induced DNA hypomethylation at all dose levels and there was a trend toward greater hypomethylation in CD34(+) bone marrow cells when decitabine was delivered by a short pulse (Arm A). Twenty-seven subjects (90%) responded to therapy: 17 with complete remission (57%) and 10 with partial remission (33%). Of the patients with partial remission to protocol treatment, 8 achieved remission to their next therapy, bringing the overall complete remission rate to 83%. We conclude that epigenetic priming of intensive chemotherapy can be safely delivered in an attempt to improve response rates. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as NCT00538876.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Epigenomic reorganization of the clustered Hox genes in embryonic stem cells induced by retinoic acid.
- Author
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Kashyap V, Gudas LJ, Brenet F, Funk P, Viale A, and Scandura JM
- Subjects
- Animals, Chromosomes, Genes, Homeobox genetics, Mice, Multigene Family, Receptors, Retinoic Acid metabolism, Response Elements, Transcription, Genetic, Transcriptional Activation, Retinoic Acid Receptor gamma, Embryonic Stem Cells cytology, Epigenomics, Genes, Homeobox drug effects, Homeodomain Proteins genetics, Transcription Factors genetics
- Abstract
Retinoic acid (RA) regulates clustered Hox gene expression during embryogenesis and is required to establish the anterior-posterior body plan. Using mutant embryonic stem cell lines deficient in the RA receptor γ (RARγ) or Hoxa1 3'-RA-responsive element, we studied the kinetics of transcriptional and epigenomic patterning responses to RA. RARγ is essential for RA-induced Hox transcriptional activation, and deletion of its binding site in the Hoxa1 enhancer attenuates transcriptional and epigenomic activation of both Hoxa and Hoxb gene clusters. The kinetics of epigenomic reorganization demonstrate that complete erasure of the polycomb repressive mark H3K27me3 is not necessary to initiate Hox transcription. RARγ is not required to establish the bivalent character of Hox clusters, but RA/RARγ signaling is necessary to erase H3K27me3 from activated Hox genes during embryonic stem cell differentiation. Highly coordinated, long range epigenetic Hox cluster reorganization is closely linked to transcriptional activation and is triggered by RARγ located at the Hoxa1 3'-RA-responsive element.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. DNA methylation of the first exon is tightly linked to transcriptional silencing.
- Author
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Brenet F, Moh M, Funk P, Feierstein E, Viale AJ, Socci ND, and Scandura JM
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Line, Tumor, Gene Expression Profiling, Genome, Humans, Promoter Regions, Genetic, Transcription Initiation Site, DNA Methylation genetics, Exons, Gene Silencing, Transcription, Genetic
- Abstract
Tissue specific patterns of methylated cytosine residues vary with age, can be altered by environmental factors, and are often abnormal in human disease yet the cellular consequences of DNA methylation are incompletely understood. Although the bodies of highly expressed genes are often extensively methylated in plants, the relationship between intragenic methylation and expression is less clear in mammalian cells. We performed genome-wide analyses of DNA methylation and gene expression to determine how the pattern of intragenic methylation correlates with transcription and to assess the relationship between methylation of exonic and intronic portions of the gene body. We found that dense exonic methylation is far more common than previously recognized or expected statistically, yet first exons are relatively spared compared to more downstream exons and introns. Dense methylation surrounding the transcription start site (TSS) is uncoupled from methylation within more downstream regions suggesting that there are at least two classes of intragenic methylation. Whereas methylation surrounding the TSS is tightly linked to transcriptional silencing, methylation of more downstream regions is unassociated with the magnitude of gene expression. Notably, we found that DNA methylation downstream of the TSS, in the region of the first exon, is much more tightly linked to transcriptional silencing than is methylation in the upstream promoter region. These data provide direct evidence that DNA methylation is interpreted dissimilarly in different regions of the gene body and suggest that first exon methylation blocks transcript initiation, or vice versa. Our data also show that once initiated, downstream methylation is not a significant impediment to polymerase extension. Thus, the consequences of most intragenic DNA methylation must extend beyond the modulation of transcription magnitude.Sequencing data and gene expression microarray data have been submitted to the GEO online database (accession number SRA012081.1). Supporting information including expanded methods and ten additional figures in support of the manuscript is provided.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Mammalian peptidylglycine alpha-amidating monooxygenase mRNA expression can be modulated by the La autoantigen.
- Author
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Brenet F, Dussault N, Borch J, Ferracci G, Delfino C, Roepstorff P, Miquelis R, and Ouafik L
- Subjects
- Amino Acid Sequence, Animals, Autoantigens chemistry, Binding Sites, Cell Line, Genes, Reporter genetics, Humans, Ligands, Mass Spectrometry, Molecular Sequence Data, Poly U genetics, Protein Binding, RNA, Messenger genetics, RNA, Messenger metabolism, Rats, Recombinant Fusion Proteins genetics, Ribonucleoproteins chemistry, SS-B Antigen, Autoantigens metabolism, Gene Expression Regulation genetics, Mixed Function Oxygenases genetics, Multienzyme Complexes genetics, Ribonucleoproteins metabolism
- Abstract
Peptidylglycine alpha-amidating monooxygenase (PAM; EC 1.14.17.3) catalyzes the COOH-terminal alpha-amidation of peptidylglycine substrates, yielding amidated products. We have previously reported a putative regulatory RNA binding protein (PAM mRNA-BP) that binds specifically to the 3' untranslated region (UTR) of PAM-mRNA. Here, the PAM mRNA-BP was isolated and revealed to be La protein using affinity purification onto a 3' UTR PAM RNA, followed by tandem mass spectrometry identification. We determined that the core binding sequence is approximately 15-nucleotides (nt) long and is located 471 nt downstream of the stop codon. Moreover, we identified the La autoantigen as a protein that specifically binds the 3' UTR of PAM mRNA in vivo and in vitro. Furthermore, La protein overexpression caused a nuclear retention of PAM mRNAs and resulted in the down-regulation of endogenous PAM activity. Most interestingly, the nuclear retention of PAM mRNA is lost upon expressing the La proteins that lack a conserved nuclear retention element, suggesting a direct association between PAM mRNA and La protein in vivo. Reporter assays using a chimeric mRNA that combined luciferase and the 3' UTR of PAM mRNA demonstrated a decrease of the reporter activity due to an increase in the nuclear localization of reporter mRNAs, while the deletion of the 15-nt La binding site led to their clear-cut cytoplasmic relocalization. The results suggest an important role for the La protein in the modulation of PAM expression, possibly by mechanisms that involve a nuclear retention and perhaps a processing of pre-PAM mRNA molecules.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Solving the rod-and-frame test in a tachistoscopic presentation: effects of stimulus size and perceptual style.
- Author
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Marendaz C, Brenet F, Ohlmann T, and Raphel C
- Subjects
- Adult, Cues, Female, Humans, Male, Field Dependence-Independence, Form Perception, Orientation, Pattern Recognition, Visual, Problem Solving
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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