Adrienne M. Dorrance
Boston Children's Hospital
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Publication
Featured researches published by Adrienne M. Dorrance.
Blood | 2012
Margaret Nieborowska-Skorska; Piotr Kopinski; Regina Ray; Grazyna Hoser; Danielle Ngaba; Sylwia Flis; Kimberly Cramer; Mamatha M. Reddy; Mateusz Koptyra; Tyrone Penserga; Eliza Glodkowska-Mrowka; Elisabeth Bolton; Tessa L. Holyoake; Connie J. Eaves; Sabine Cerny-Reiterer; Peter Valent; Andreas Hochhaus; Timothy P. Hughes; Heiko van der Kuip; Martin Sattler; Wieslaw Wiktor-Jedrzejczak; Charles C. Richardson; Adrienne M. Dorrance; Tomasz Stoklosa; David A. Williams; Tomasz Skorski
Chronic myeloid leukemia in chronic phase (CML-CP) is induced by BCR-ABL1 oncogenic tyrosine kinase. Tyrosine kinase inhibitors eliminate the bulk of CML-CP cells, but fail to eradicate leukemia stem cells (LSCs) and leukemia progenitor cells (LPCs) displaying innate and acquired resistance, respectively. These cells may accumulate genomic instability, leading to disease relapse and/or malignant progression to a fatal blast phase. In the present study, we show that Rac2 GTPase alters mitochondrial membrane potential and electron flow through the mitochondrial respiratory chain complex III (MRC-cIII), thereby generating high levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in CML-CP LSCs and primitive LPCs. MRC-cIII-generated ROS promote oxidative DNA damage to trigger genomic instability, resulting in an accumulation of chromosomal aberrations and tyrosine kinase inhibitor-resistant BCR-ABL1 mutants. JAK2(V617F) and FLT3(ITD)-positive polycythemia vera cells and acute myeloid leukemia cells also produce ROS via MRC-cIII. In the present study, inhibition of Rac2 by genetic deletion or a small-molecule inhibitor and down-regulation of mitochondrial ROS by disruption of MRC-cIII, expression of mitochondria-targeted catalase, or addition of ROS-scavenging mitochondria-targeted peptide aptamer reduced genomic instability. We postulate that the Rac2-MRC-cIII pathway triggers ROS-mediated genomic instability in LSCs and primitive LPCs, which could be targeted to prevent the relapse and malignant progression of CML.
Blood | 2013
Christopher Hickey; Sebastian Schwind; Hanna S. Radomska; Adrienne M. Dorrance; Ramasamy Santhanam; Anjali Mishra; Yue-Zhong Wu; Houda Alachkar; K. Maharry; Nicolet D; Krzysztof Mrózek; Alison Walker; Anna M. Eiring; Susan P. Whitman; Heiko Becker; Danilo Perrotti; Lai-Chu Wu; Xiaobin Zhao; Todd A. Fehniger; Ravi Vij; John C. Byrd; William Blum; Ly James Lee; Michael A. Caligiuri; Clara D. Bloomfield; Ramiro Garzon; Guido Marcucci
Recently, we showed that increased miR-181a expression was associated with improved outcomes in cytogenetically normal acute myeloid leukemia (CN-AML). Interestingly, miR-181a expression was increased in CN-AML patients harboring CEBPA mutations, which are usually biallelic and associate with better prognosis. CEBPA encodes the C/EBPα transcription factor. We demonstrate here that the presence of N-terminal CEBPA mutations and miR-181a expression are linked. Indeed, the truncated C/EBPα-p30 isoform, which is produced from the N-terminal mutant CEBPA gene or from the differential translation of wild-type CEBPA mRNA and is commonly believed to have no transactivation activity, binds to the miR-181a-1 promoter and up-regulates the microRNA expression. Furthermore, we show that lenalidomide, a drug approved for myelodysplastic syndromes and multiple myeloma, enhances translation of the C/EBPα-p30 isoform, resulting in higher miR-181a levels. In xenograft mouse models, ectopic miR-181a expression inhibits tumor growth. Similarly, lenalidomide exhibits antitumorigenic activity paralleled by increased miR-181a expression. This regulatory pathway may explain an increased sensitivity to apoptosis-inducing chemotherapy in subsets of AML patients. Altogether, our data provide a potential explanation for the improved clinical outcomes observed in CEBPA-mutated CN-AML patients, and suggest that lenalidomide treatment enhancing the C/EBPα-p30 protein levels and in turn miR-181a may sensitize AML blasts to chemotherapy.
Blood | 2012
Steven W. Lane; Serena De Vita; Kylie A. Alexander; Ruchan Karaman; Michael D. Milsom; Adrienne M. Dorrance; Amy Purdon; Leeann Louis; Mary L. Bouxsein; David A. Williams
Hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) interact with osteoblastic, stromal, and vascular components of the BM hematopoietic microenvironment (HM) that are required for the maintenance of long-term self-renewal in vivo. Osteoblasts have been reported to be a critical cell type making up the HSC niche in vivo. Rac1 GTPase has been implicated in adhesion, spreading, and differentiation of osteoblast cell lines and is critical for HSC engraftment and retention. Recent data suggest a differential role of GTPases in endosteal/osteoblastic versus perivascular niche function. However, whether Rac signaling pathways are also necessary in the cell-extrinsic control of HSC function within the HM has not been examined. In the present study, genetic and inducible models of Rac deletion were used to demonstrate that Rac depletion causes impaired proliferation and induction of apoptosis in the OP9 cell line and in primary BM stromal cells. Deletion of Rac proteins caused reduced trabecular and cortical long bone growth in vivo. Surprisingly, HSC function and maintenance of hematopoiesis in vivo was preserved despite these substantial cell-extrinsic changes. These data have implications for therapeutic strategies to target Rac signaling in HSC mobilization and in the treatment of leukemia and provide clarification to our evolving concepts of HSC-HM interactions.
Blood | 2010
Nicholas Zorko; Susan P. Whitman; Kelsie M. Bernot; Myntee T. Ngangana; Ronald F. Siebenaler; Shujun Liu; Yue-Zhong Wu; Chidimma Kalu; Xiaoli Zhang; David Jarjoura; Zhiliang Xie; Kenneth K. Chan; Adrienne M. Dorrance; Benjamin H. Lee; Roger Briesewitz; Danilo Perrotti; Guido Marcucci; Michael A. Caligiuri
Blood | 2011
Margaret Nieborowska-Skorska; Piotr Kopinski; Regina Ray; Grazyna Hoser; Danielle Ngaba; Sylwia Flis; Kimberly Cramer; Mamatha M. Reddy; Mateusz Koptyra; Tyrone Penserga; Eliza Glodkowska-Mrowka; Magdalena Ambrozek; Ilona Seferynska; Joanna Niesiobedzka-Krezel; Elisabeth Bolton; Artur Slupianek; Tessa L. Holyoake; Connie J. Eaves; Sabine Cerny-Reiterer; Peter Valent; Andreas Hochhaus; Timothy P. Hughes; Heiko van der Kuip; Martin Sattler; Wieslaw Wiktor-Jedrzejczak; Charles C. Richardson; Adrienne M. Dorrance; Tomasz Stoklosa; David A. Williams; Tomasz Skorski
Archive | 2014
Daniel L. Brook; Nicholas Zorko; Adrienne M. Dorrance; Daniel A. Yanes; Kelsie M. Bernot; Susan P. Whitman; Elshafa H. Ahmed; Kathleen McConnell; Patricia Ernst; Gang Huang; Guido Marcucci; Michael A. Caligiuri
Archive | 2013
Clara D. Bloomfield; Ramiro Garzon; Guido Marcucci Wu; Xi Zhao; Todd A. Fehniger; Ravi Vij; John C. Byrd; William Blum; L. James Lee; Alison Walker; Anna M. Eiring; Susan P. Whitman; Heiko Becker; Danilo Perrotti; Anjali Mishra; Yue-Zhong Wu; Houda Alachkar; Kati Maharry; Deedra Nicolet; Christopher Hickey; Sebastian Schwind; Hanna S. Radomska; Adrienne M. Dorrance
Archive | 2012
Tomasz Skorski; Charles C. Richardson; Adrienne M. Dorrance; Tomasz Stoklosa; David A. Williams; Peter Valent; Andreas Hochhaus; Timothy Hughes; Heiko van der Kuip; Martin Sattler; Elisabeth Bolton; Tessa L. Holyoake; Connie J. Eaves; Sabine Cerny-Reiterer; Kimberly Cramer; Mamatha R. Reddy; Mateusz Koptyra; Tyrone Penserga; Piotr Kopinski; Grazyna Hoser; Danielle Ngaba
Blood | 2011
Adrienne M. Dorrance; Rachelle Kosoff; Meaghan McGuinness; Chad E. Harris; Serena De Vita; Ronald Mathieu; Steven W. Lane; Michael D. Milsom; Jonathan Chernoff; David A. Williams
Archive | 2010
Rebecca B. Klisovic; Christoph Plass; Clara D. Bloomfield; Guido Marcucci; Michael A. Caligiuri Klisovic; Kati Maharry; Martin Guimond; Matthew P. Strout; Brian Becknell; Adrienne M. Dorrance; Susan P. Whitman; Shujun Liu; Tamara Vukosavljevic; Laura J. Rush; Yun Ping Li; Chunhui Liu; Istvan E. Marko