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Featured researches published by A Bursen.


Blood | 2010

The AF4.MLL fusion protein is capable of inducing ALL in mice without requirement of MLL.AF4.

A Bursen; Karen Schwabe; Brigitte Rüster; Reinhard Henschler; Martin Ruthardt; Theo Dingermann; Rolf Marschalek

The chromosomal translocation t(4;11)(q21;q23) is the most frequent genetic aberration of the human MLL gene, resulting in high-risk acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). To elucidate the leukemogenic potential of the fusion proteins MLL.AF4 and AF4.MLL, Lin(-)/Sca1(+) purified cells (LSPCs) were retrovirally transduced with either both fusion genes or with MLL.AF4 or AF4.MLL alone. Recipients of AF4.MLL- or double-transduced LSPCs developed pro-B ALL, B/T biphenotypic acute leukemia, or mixed lineage leukemia. Transplantation of MLL.AF4- or mock-transduced LSPCs did not result in disease development during an observation period of 13 months. These findings indicate that the expression of the AF4.MLL fusion protein is capable of inducing acute lymphoblastic leukemia even in the absence of the MLL.AF4 fusion protein. In view of recent findings, these results may imply that t(4;11) leukemia is based on 2 oncoproteins, providing an explanation for the very early onset of disease in humans.


Oncogene | 2004

Interaction of AF4 wild-type and AF4.MLL fusion protein with SIAH proteins: indication for t(4;11) pathobiology?

A Bursen; Sven Moritz; Anne Gaussmann; Sören Moritz; Theo Dingermann; Rolf Marschalek

The human AF4 (ALL-1 fused gene on chromosome 4) gene (4q11) is recurrently involved in reciprocal translocations to the MLL (mixed lineage leukemia) gene (11q23), correlated with high-risk acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) in infants and early childhood. The t(4;11) translocation is one of the most frequent MLL translocations known today. In general, MLL translocations are the result of an illegitimate recombination process leading to reciprocal fusions of unrelated translocation partner (TP) genes with the MLL gene. Owing to the constant presence of the derivative (11) product, it was hypothesised that only MLL·TP fusion genes are responsible for the leukemogenic process. This concept has been successfully tested for some known MLL fusions, while other MLL fusions failed. Here, we demonstrate growth-transforming potential of AF4 wild-type and the AF4·MLL fusion protein. The underlying oncogenic mechanism involves the two E3 ubiquitin ligases SIAH1 and SIAH2, the N-terminal portion of AF4 and the protection of the AF4·MLL fusion protein against proteosomal degradation.


Leukemia | 2011

The leukemogenic AF4–MLL fusion protein causes P-TEFb kinase activation and altered epigenetic signatures

A Benedikt; S Baltruschat; Bastian Scholz; A Bursen; T N Arrey; B Meyer; L Varagnolo; A M Müller; Michael Karas; Theodor Dingermann; Rolf Marschalek

Expression of the AF4–MLL fusion protein in murine hematopoietic progenitor/stem cells results in the development of proB acute lymphoblastic leukemia. In this study, we affinity purified the AF4–MLL and AF4 protein complexes to elucidate their function. We observed that the AF4 complex consists of 11 binding partners and exhibits positive transcription elongation factor b (P-TEFb)-mediated activation of promoter-arrested RNA polymerase (pol) II in conjunction with several chromatin-modifying activities. In contrast, the AF4–MLL complex consists of at least 16 constituents including P-TEFb kinase, H3K4me3 and H3K79me3 histone methyltransferases (HMT), a protein arginine N-methyltransferase and a histone acetyltransferase. These findings suggest that the AF4-MLL protein disturbs the fine-tuned activation cycle of promoter-arrested RNA Pol II and causes altered histone methylation signatures. Thus, we propose that these two processes are key to trigger cellular reprogramming that leads to the onset of acute leukemia.


Oncogene | 2007

Transcription linked to recombination : a gene-internal promoter coincides with the recombination hot spot II of the human MLL gene

S Scharf; J Zech; A Bursen; D Schraets; P L Oliver; S Kliem; E Pfitzner; E Gillert; Theo Dingermann; Rolf Marschalek

The MLL gene is frequently involved in chromosomal translocations associated with high-risk acute leukaemia. Infant and therapy-related acute leukaemia patients display chromosomal breakpoints preferentially clustered in the telomeric portion of the MLL breakpoint cluster region (SCII). Here, we demonstrate that SCII colocalizes with a gene-internal promoter element in the mouse and human MLL gene, respectively. The mRNA generated encodes an N-terminally truncated version of MLL that still exhibits many functional regions, including the C-terminal SET-domain. Etoposide-induced DNA double-strand breaks colocalize with the binding site of RNA polymerase II and the transcription initiation region, but not with a nearby Topo II consensus sequence. Thus, the observed genomic instability of the human MLL gene is presumably linked to transcriptional processes. The consequences of this novel finding for the creation of chromosomal translocations, the biology of the MLL protein and for MLL-mediated acute leukaemia are discussed.


Oncogene | 2007

Combined effects of the two reciprocal t(4;11) fusion proteins MLL. AF4 and AF4. MLL confer resistance to apoptosis, cell cycling capacity and growth transformation

A Gaussmann; T Wenger; Irina Eberle; A Bursen; Silvia Bracharz; I Herr; Theodor Dingermann; Rolf Marschalek

The reciprocal chromosomal translocation t(4;11) is correlated with infant, childhood, adult and therapy-related high-risk acute leukemia. Here, we investigated the biological effects of MLL·AF4, AF4·MLL or the combination of both reciprocal fusion proteins in a conditional in vitro cell culture model system. Several parameters like cell growth, cell cycling capacity, apoptotic behavior and growth transformation were investigated under physiological and stress conditions. Co-transfected cells displayed the highest resistance against apoptotic triggers, cell cycling capacity and loss-of-contact inhibition. These analyses were complemented by gene expression profiling experiments and specific gene signatures were established for each of the three cell lines. Interestingly, co-transfected cells strongly upregulate the homeobox gene Nanog. In combination with Oct4, the Nanog homeoprotein is steering maintenance of pluripotency and self-renewal in embryonic stem cells. Transcription of Nanog and other stem cell factors, like Oct4 and Bmi1, was verified in biopsy material of t(4;11) patient cells which express both reciprocal t(4;11) fusion genes. In conclusion, the presence of both reciprocal MLL fusion proteins confers biological properties known from t(4;11) leukemia, suggesting that each of the two fusion proteins contribute specific properties and, in combination, also synergistic effects to the leukemic phenotype.


Leukemia | 2013

Secondary mutations in t(4;11) leukemia patients

C Prelle; A Bursen; Theodor Dingermann; Rolf Marschalek

MLL rearrangements are a genetic hallmark of acute leukemia patients, which exhibit a particular poor outcome. To date, more than 70 MLL rearrangements have been described at the molecular level.1 For the most frequently diagnosed MLL rearrangements, for example, AF4-MLL, MLL-AF9, MLL-AF10 or MLL-ENL, it has been shown that these fusion proteins are sufficient for acute leukemia onset in murine model systems.2 However, these models had a latency time of 4–12 months for the disease phenotype to become overt. This argues in favor of pre-leukemic clones that carry the fusion genes, but need, in addition, complementing mutations to develop a malignant disease.


Journal of Chromatography B | 2003

Multidimensional gas chromatography-mass spectrometry for tracer studies of fatty acid metabolism via stable isotopes in cultured human trophoblast cells.

Alexandra Muth; Armin Mosandl; A Bursen; Rolf Marschalek; Adrian C. Sewell; Hans Böhles

The determination of placental fatty acid metabolism using stable isotope-labeled tracers was investigated in the human placental choriocarcinoma (JAR) cell line. Stable isotope incorporation was measured by MDGC-MS. The cultured trophoblast cells incorporated and metabolized the essential fatty acids to long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids. The described method enables the detection of a low Delta(6)-desaturase activity in this human placental cell line. The developed MDGC-MS method allows the assessment of long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acid biosynthesis in cultured cells with high sensitivity and selectivity. In this respect, tracer studies with MDGC-MS will be a powerful tool to clarify the significance of placental fatty acid metabolism.


Oncotarget | 2017

The AF4-MLL fusion transiently augments multilineage hematopoietic engraftment but is not sufficient to initiate leukemia in cord blood CD34 + cells

Cristina Prieto; Rolf Marschalek; Alessa Kühn; A Bursen; Clara Bueno; Pablo Menendez

The translocation t(4;11)(q21;q23) is the hallmark genetic abnormality associated with infant pro-B acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL) and has the highest frequency of rearrangement in Mixed-lineage leukemia (MLL) leukemias. Unlike other MLL translocations, MLL-AF4-induced proB-ALL is exceptionally difficult to model in mice/humans. Previous work has investigated the relevance of the reciprocal translocation fusion protein AF4-MLL for t(4;11) leukemia, finding that AF4-MLL is capable of inducing proB-ALL without requirement for MLL-AF4 when expressed in murine hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells (HSPCs). Therefore, AF4-MLL might represent a key genetic lesion contributing to t(4;11)-driven leukemogenesis. Here, we aimed to establish a humanized mouse model by using AF4-MLL to analyze its transformation potential in human cord blood-derived CD34+ HSPCs. We show that AF4-MLL-expressing human CD34+ HSPCs provide enhanced long-term hematopoietic reconstitution in primary immunodeficient recipients but are not endowed with subsequent self-renewal ability upon serial transplantation. Importantly, expression of AF4-MLL in primary neonatal CD34+ HSPCs failed to render any phenotypic or hematological sign of disease, and was therefore not sufficient to initiate leukemia within a 36-week follow-up. Species-specific (epi)-genetic intrinsic determinants may underlie the different outcome observed when AF4-MLL is expressed in murine or human HSPCs.The translocation t(4;11)(q21;q23) is the hallmark genetic abnormality associated with infant pro-B acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL) and has the highest frequency of rearrangement in Mixed-lineage leukemia (MLL) leukemias. Unlike other MLL translocations, MLL-AF4-induced proB-ALL is exceptionally difficult to model in mice/humans. Previous work has investigated the relevance of the reciprocal translocation fusion protein AF4-MLL for t(4;11) leukemia, finding that AF4-MLL is capable of inducing proB-ALL without requirement for MLL-AF4 when expressed in murine hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells (HSPCs). Therefore, AF4-MLL might represent a key genetic lesion contributing to t(4;11)-driven leukemogenesis. Here, we aimed to establish a humanized mouse model by using AF4-MLL to analyze its transformation potential in human cord blood-derived CD34+ HSPCs. We show that AF4-MLL-expressing human CD34+ HSPCs provide enhanced long-term hematopoietic reconstitution in primary immunodeficient recipients but are not endowed with subsequent self-renewal ability upon serial transplantation. Importantly, expression of AF4-MLL in primary neonatal CD34+ HSPCs failed to render any phenotypic or hematological sign of disease, and was therefore not sufficient to initiate leukemia within a 36-week follow-up. Species-specific (epi)-genetic intrinsic determinants may underlie the different outcome observed when AF4-MLL is expressed in murine or human HSPCs.


Blood | 2008

AF4-MLL Expression Is Necessary and Sufficient for Leukemia Onset in Mice

A Bursen; Karen Schwabe; Brigitte Rüster; Anne Wenger; Martin Ruthardt; Reinhard Henschler; Theo Dingermann; Rolf Marschalek


Blood | 2004

Interaction of AF4 Wildtype and AF4•MLL Fusion Protein with SIAH Proteins: Indication for T(4;11) Pathobiology?.

A Bursen; Moritz Sven; Gaussmann Anne; Dingermann Theo; Marschalek Rolf

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Rolf Marschalek

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Theodor Dingermann

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Theo Dingermann

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Karen Schwabe

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Martin Ruthardt

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Reinhard Henschler

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Clara Bueno

University of Barcelona

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