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Dive into the research topics where Adam S. Adler is active.

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Featured researches published by Adam S. Adler.


Cell | 2009

SIRT6 Links Histone H3 Lysine 9 Deacetylation to NF-κB-Dependent Gene Expression and Organismal Life Span

Tiara L.A. Kawahara; Eriko Michishita; Adam S. Adler; Mara Damian; Elisabeth Berber; Meihong Lin; Ron A. McCord; Kristine C.L. Ongaigui; Lisa D. Boxer; Howard Y. Chang; Katrin F. Chua

Members of the sirtuin (SIRT) family of NAD-dependent deacetylases promote longevity in multiple organisms. Deficiency of mammalian SIRT6 leads to shortened life span and an aging-like phenotype in mice, but the underlying molecular mechanisms are unclear. Here we show that SIRT6 functions at chromatin to attenuate NF-kappaB signaling. SIRT6 interacts with the NF-kappaB RELA subunit and deacetylates histone H3 lysine 9 (H3K9) at NF-kappaB target gene promoters. In SIRT6-deficient cells, hyperacetylation of H3K9 at these target promoters is associated with increased RELA promoter occupancy and enhanced NF-kappaB-dependent modulation of gene expression, apoptosis, and cellular senescence. Computational genomics analyses revealed increased activity of NF-kappaB-driven gene expression programs in multiple Sirt6-deficient tissues in vivo. Moreover, haploinsufficiency of RelA rescues the early lethality and degenerative syndrome of Sirt6-deficient mice. We propose that SIRT6 attenuates NF-kappaB signaling via H3K9 deacetylation at chromatin, and hyperactive NF-kappaB signaling may contribute to premature and normal aging.


Nature Biotechnology | 2007

Decoding global gene expression programs in liver cancer by noninvasive imaging

Eran Segal; Claude B. Sirlin; Clara Ooi; Adam S. Adler; Jeremy Gollub; Xin Chen; Bryan K Chan; George R. Matcuk; Christopher Barry; Howard Y. Chang; Michael D. Kuo

Paralleling the diversity of genetic and protein activities, pathologic human tissues also exhibit diverse radiographic features. Here we show that dynamic imaging traits in non-invasive computed tomography (CT) systematically correlate with the global gene expression programs of primary human liver cancer. Combinations of twenty-eight imaging traits can reconstruct 78% of the global gene expression profiles, revealing cell proliferation, liver synthetic function, and patient prognosis. Thus, genomic activity of human liver cancers can be decoded by noninvasive imaging, thereby enabling noninvasive, serial and frequent molecular profiling for personalized medicine.


Nature Genetics | 2006

Genetic regulators of large-scale transcriptional signatures in cancer

Adam S. Adler; Meihong Lin; Hugo M. Horlings; Dimitry S.A. Nuyten; Marc J. van de Vijver; Howard Y. Chang

Gene expression signatures encompassing dozens to hundreds of genes have been associated with many important parameters of cancer, but mechanisms of their control are largely unknown. Here we present a method based on genetic linkage that can prospectively identify functional regulators driving large-scale transcriptional signatures in cancer. Using this method we show that the wound response signature, a poor-prognosis expression pattern of 512 genes in breast cancer, is induced by coordinate amplifications of MYC and CSN5 (also known as JAB1 or COPS5). This information enabled experimental recapitulation, functional assessment and mechanistic elucidation of the wound signature in breast epithelial cells.


Genes & Development | 2010

The histone demethylase UTX enables RB-dependent cell fate control

Jordon K. Wang; Miao Chih Tsai; Gino Poulin; Adam S. Adler; Shuzhen Chen; Helen Liu; Yang Shi; Howard Y. Chang

Trimethylation of histone H3 on Lys 27 (H3K27me3) is key for cell fate regulation. The H3K27me3 demethylase UTX functions in development and tumor suppression with undefined mechanisms. Here, genome-wide chromatin occupancy analysis of UTX and associated histone modifications reveals distinct classes of UTX target genes, including genes encoding Retinoblastoma (RB)-binding proteins. UTX removes H3K27me3 and maintains expression of several RB-binding proteins, enabling cell cycle arrest. Genetic interactions in mammalian cells and Caenorhabditis elegans show that UTX regulates cell fates via RB-dependent pathways. Thus, UTX defines an evolutionarily conserved mechanism to enable coordinate transcription of a RB network in cell fate control.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2009

Molecular Framework for Response to Imatinib Mesylate in Systemic Sclerosis

Lorinda Chung; David Fiorentino; Maya J. BenBarak; Adam S. Adler; Melissa Mariano; Ricardo T. Paniagua; Ausra Milano; M. Kari Connolly; Boris D. Ratiner; Robert L. Wiskocil; Michael L. Whitfield; Howard Y. Chang; William H. Robinson

Systemic sclerosis (SSc) is an autoimmune disease in which the tyrosine kinases platelet-derived growth factor receptor (PDGFR) and Abl are hypothesized to contribute to the fibrosis and vasculopathy of the skin and internal organs. Herein we describe 2 patients with early diffuse cutaneous SSc (dcSSc) who experienced reductions in cutaneous sclerosis in response to therapy with the tyrosine kinase inhibitor imatinib mesylate. Immunohistochemical analyses of skin biopsy specimens demonstrated reductions of phosphorylated PDGFRbeta and Abl with imatinib therapy. By gene expression profiling, an imatinib-responsive signature specific to dcSSc was identified (P < 10(-8)). The response of these patients and the findings of the analyses suggest that PDGFRbeta and Abl play critical, synergistic roles in the pathogenesis of SSc, and that imatinib targets a gene expression program that is frequently dysregulated in dcSSc.


Cancer Research | 2006

MYC Can Induce DNA Breaks In vivo and In vitro Independent of Reactive Oxygen Species

Suma Ray; Kondala R. Atkuri; Debabrita Deb-Basu; Adam S. Adler; Howard Y. Chang; Leonore A. Herzenberg; Dean W. Felsher

MYC overexpression is thought to initiate tumorigenesis by inducing cellular proliferation and growth and to be restrained from causing tumorigenesis by inducing cell cycle arrest, cellular senescence, and/or apoptosis. Here we show that MYC can induce DNA breaks both in vitro and in vivo independent of increased production of reactive oxygen species (ROS). We provide an insight into the specific circumstances under which MYC generates ROS in vitro and propose a possible mechanism. We found that MYC induces DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) independent of ROS production in murine lymphocytes in vivo as well as in normal human foreskin fibroblasts (NHFs) in vitro in normal (10%) serum, as measured by gammaH2AX staining. However, NHFs cultured in vitro in low serum (0.05%) and/or ambient oxygen saturation resulted in ROS-associated oxidative damage and DNA single-strand breaks (SSBs), as measured by Ape-1 staining. In NHFs cultured in low versus normal serum, MYC induced increased expression of CYP2C9, a gene product well known to be associated with ROS production. Specific inhibition of CYP2C9 by small interfering RNA was shown to partially inhibit MYC-induced ROS production. Hence, MYC overexpression can induce ROS and SSBs under some conditions, but generally induces widespread DSBs in vivo and in vitro independent of ROS production.


Cell Cycle | 2008

Reversal of aging by NFκB blockade

Adam S. Adler; Tiara L.A. Kawahara; Eran Segal; Howard Y. Chang

Genetic studies in model organisms such as yeast, worms, flies, and mice leading to lifespan extension suggest that longevity is subject to regulation. In addition, various system-wide interventions in old animals can reverse features of aging. To better understand these processes, much effort has been put into the study of aging on a molecular level. In particular, genome-wide microarray analysis of differently aged individual organisms or tissues has been used to track the global expression changes that occur during normal aging. Although these studies consistently implicate specific pathways in aging processes, there is little conservation between the individual genes that change. To circumvent this problem, we have recently developed a novel computational approach to discover transcription factors that may be responsible for driving global expression changes with age. We identified the transcription factor NfκB as a candidate activator of aging-related transcriptional changes in multiple human and mouse tissues. Genetic blockade of NFκB in the skin of chronologically aged mice reversed the global gene expression program and tissue characteristics to those of young mice, demonstrating for the first time that disruption of a single gene is sufficient to reverse features of aging, at least for the short-term.


PLOS ONE | 2008

Global Expression Profiling in Atopic Eczema Reveals Reciprocal Expression of Inflammatory and Lipid Genes

Annika Sääf; Maria Tengvall-Linder; Howard Y. Chang; Adam S. Adler; Carl-Fredrik Wahlgren; Annika Scheynius; Magnus Nordenskjöld; Maria Bradley

Background Atopic eczema (AE) is a common chronic inflammatory skin disorder. In order to dissect the genetic background several linkage and genetic association studies have been performed. Yet very little is known about specific genes involved in this complex skin disease, and the underlying molecular mechanisms are not fully understood. Methodology/Findings We used human DNA microarrays to identify a molecular picture of the programmed responses of the human genome to AE. The transcriptional program was analyzed in skin biopsy samples from lesional and patch-tested skin from AE patients sensitized to Malassezia sympodialis (M. sympodialis), and corresponding biopsies from healthy individuals. The most notable feature of the global gene-expression pattern observed in AE skin was a reciprocal expression of induced inflammatory genes and repressed lipid metabolism genes. The overall transcriptional response in M. sympodialis patch-tested AE skin was similar to the gene-expression signature identified in lesional AE skin. In the constellation of genes differentially expressed in AE skin compared to healthy control skin, we have identified several potential susceptibility genes that may play a critical role in the pathological condition of AE. Many of these genes, including genes with a role in immune responses, lipid homeostasis, and epidermal differentiation, are localized on chromosomal regions previously linked to AE. Conclusions/Significance Through genome-wide expression profiling, we were able to discover a distinct reciprocal expression pattern of induced inflammatory genes and repressed lipid metabolism genes in skin from AE patients. We found a significant enrichment of differentially expressed genes in AE with cytobands associated to the disease, and furthermore new chromosomal regions were found that could potentially guide future region-specific linkage mapping in AE. The full data set is available at http://microarray-pubs.stanford.edu/eczema.


Cancer Research | 2012

An Integrated Genomic Screen Identifies LDHB as an Essential Gene for Triple-Negative Breast Cancer

Mark L. McCleland; Adam S. Adler; Yonglei Shang; Thomas Hunsaker; Tom Truong; David Peterson; Eric Torres; Li Li; Benjamin Haley; Jean-Philippe Stephan; Marcia Belvin; Georgia Hatzivassiliou; Elizabeth Blackwood; Laura Corson; Marie Evangelista; Jiping Zha; Ron Firestein

Breast cancer has been redefined into three clinically relevant subclasses: (i) estrogen/progesterone receptor positive (ER+/PR+), (ii) HER2/ERRB2 positive, and (iii) those lacking expression of all three markers (triple negative or basal-like). While targeted therapies for ER+/PR+ and HER2+ tumors have revolutionized patient treatment and increased lifespan, an urgent need exists for identifying novel targets for triple-negative breast cancers. Here, we used integrative genomic analysis to identify candidate oncogenes in triple-negative breast tumors and assess their function through loss of function screening. Using this approach, we identify lactate dehydrogenase B (LDHB), a component of glycolytic metabolism, as an essential gene in triple-negative breast cancer. Loss of LDHB abrogated cell proliferation in vitro and arrested tumor growth in fully formed tumors in vivo. We find that LDHB and other related glycolysis genes are specifically upregulated in basal-like/triple-negative breast cancers as compared with other subtypes, suggesting that these tumors are distinctly glycolytic. Consistent with this, triple-negative breast cancer cell lines were more dependent on glycolysis for growth than luminal cell lines. Finally, we find that patients with breast cancer and high LDHB expression in their tumors had a poor clinical outcome. While previous studies have focused on the ubiquitous role of LDHA in tumor metabolism and growth, our data reveal that LDHB is upregulated and required only in certain cancer genotypes. These findings suggest that targeting LDHB or other components of lactate metabolism would be of clinical benefit in triple-negative breast cancer.


Genome Research | 2008

Systematic functional characterization of cis-regulatory motifs in human core promoters

Saurabh Sinha; Adam S. Adler; Yair Field; Howard Y. Chang; Eran Segal

A large number of cis-regulatory motifs involved in transcriptional control have been identified, but the regulatory context and biological processes in which many of them function are unknown. Here, we computationally identify the sets of human core promoters targeted by motifs, and systematically characterize their function by using a robust gene-set-based approach and diverse sources of biological data. We find that the target sets of most motifs contain both genes with similar function and genes that are coregulated in vivo, thereby suggesting both the biological process regulated by the motifs and the conditions in which this regulation may occur. Our analysis also identifies many motifs whose target sets are predicted to be regulated by a common microRNA, suggesting a connection between transcriptional and post-transcriptional control processes. Finally, we predict novel roles for uncharacterized motifs in the regulation of specific biological processes and certain types of human cancer, and experimentally validate four such predictions, suggesting regulatory roles for four uncharacterized motifs in cell cycle progression. Our analysis thus provides a concrete framework for uncovering the biological function of cis-regulatory motifs genome wide.

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Eran Segal

Weizmann Institute of Science

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