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Dive into the research topics where Agnieszka Zagozdzon is active.

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Featured researches published by Agnieszka Zagozdzon.


Cell | 2004

Mouse Development and Cell Proliferation in the Absence of D-Cyclins

Katarzyna Kozar; Maria A. Ciemerych; Vivienne I. Rebel; Hirokazu Shigematsu; Agnieszka Zagozdzon; Ewa Sicinska; Yan Geng; Qunyan Yu; Shoumo Bhattacharya; Roderick T. Bronson; Koichi Akashi; Piotr Sicinski

D-type cyclins (cyclins D1, D2, and D3) are regarded as essential links between cell environment and the core cell cycle machinery. We tested the requirement for D-cyclins in mouse development and in proliferation by generating mice lacking all D-cyclins. We found that these cyclin D1(-/-)D2(-/-)D3(-/-) mice develop until mid/late gestation and die due to heart abnormalities combined with a severe anemia. Our analyses revealed that the D-cyclins are critically required for the expansion of hematopoietic stem cells. In contrast, cyclin D-deficient fibroblasts proliferate nearly normally but show increased requirement for mitogenic stimulation in cell cycle re-entry. We found that the proliferation of cyclin D1(-/-)D2(-/-)D3(-/-) cells is resistant to the inhibition by p16(INK4a), but it critically depends on CDK2. Lastly, we found that cells lacking D-cyclins display reduced susceptibility to the oncogenic transformation. Our results reveal the presence of alternative mechanisms that allow cell cycle progression in a cyclin D-independent fashion.


The EMBO Journal | 2009

Prdx1 inhibits tumorigenesis via regulating PTEN/AKT activity.

Juxiang Cao; Jennifer Schulte; Alexander Knight; Nick R. Leslie; Agnieszka Zagozdzon; Roderick T. Bronson; Yefim Manevich; Craig Beeson; Carola A. Neumann

It is widely accepted that reactive oxygen species (ROS) promote tumorigenesis. However, the exact mechanisms are still unclear. As mice lacking the peroxidase peroxiredoxin1 (Prdx1) produce more cellular ROS and die prematurely of cancer, they offer an ideal model system to study ROS‐induced tumorigenesis. Prdx1 ablation increased the susceptibility to Ras‐induced breast cancer. We, therefore, investigated the role of Prdx1 in regulating oncogenic Ras effector pathways. We found Akt hyperactive in fibroblasts and mammary epithelial cells lacking Prdx1. Investigating the nature of such elevated Akt activation established a novel role for Prdx1 as a safeguard for the lipid phosphatase activity of PTEN, which is essential for its tumour suppressive function. We found binding of the peroxidase Prdx1 to PTEN essential for protecting PTEN from oxidation‐induced inactivation. Along those lines, Prdx1 tumour suppression of Ras‐ or ErbB‐2‐induced transformation was mediated mainly via PTEN.


Nature | 2011

A function for cyclin D1 in DNA repair uncovered by protein interactome analyses in human cancers

Siwanon Jirawatnotai; Yiduo Hu; Wojciech Michowski; Joshua E. Elias; Lisa Becks; Frédéric Bienvenu; Agnieszka Zagozdzon; Tapasree Goswami; Yaoyu E. Wang; Alan B. Clark; Thomas A. Kunkel; Tanja van Harn; Bing Xia; Mick Correll; John Quackenbush; David M. Livingston; Steven P. Gygi; Piotr Sicinski

Cyclin D1 is a component of the core cell cycle machinery. Abnormally high levels of cyclin D1 are detected in many human cancer types. To elucidate the molecular functions of cyclin D1 in human cancers, we performed a proteomic screen for cyclin D1 protein partners in several types of human tumours. Analyses of cyclin D1 interactors revealed a network of DNA repair proteins, including RAD51, a recombinase that drives the homologous recombination process. We found that cyclin D1 directly binds RAD51, and that cyclin D1–RAD51 interaction is induced by radiation. Like RAD51, cyclin D1 is recruited to DNA damage sites in a BRCA2-dependent fashion. Reduction of cyclin D1 levels in human cancer cells impaired recruitment of RAD51 to damaged DNA, impeded the homologous recombination-mediated DNA repair, and increased sensitivity of cells to radiation in vitro and in vivo. This effect was seen in cancer cells lacking the retinoblastoma protein, which do not require D-cyclins for proliferation. These findings reveal an unexpected function of a core cell cycle protein in DNA repair and suggest that targeting cyclin D1 may be beneficial also in retinoblastoma-negative cancers which are currently thought to be unaffected by cyclin D1 inhibition.


Nature | 2010

Transcriptional role of cyclin D1 in development revealed by a genetic-proteomic screen

Frédéric Bienvenu; Siwanon Jirawatnotai; Joshua E. Elias; Clifford A. Meyer; Karolina Mizeracka; Alexander Marson; Garrett M. Frampton; Megan F. Cole; Duncan T. Odom; Junko Odajima; Yan Geng; Agnieszka Zagozdzon; Marie Jecrois; Richard A. Young; X. Shirley Liu; Constance L. Cepko; Steven P. Gygi; Piotr Sicinski

Cyclin D1 belongs to the core cell cycle machinery, and it is frequently overexpressed in human cancers. The full repertoire of cyclin D1 functions in normal development and oncogenesis is unclear at present. Here we developed Flag- and haemagglutinin-tagged cyclin D1 knock-in mouse strains that allowed a high-throughput mass spectrometry approach to search for cyclin D1-binding proteins in different mouse organs. In addition to cell cycle partners, we observed several proteins involved in transcription. Genome-wide location analyses (chromatin immunoprecipitation coupled to DNA microarray; ChIP-chip) showed that during mouse development cyclin D1 occupies promoters of abundantly expressed genes. In particular, we found that in developing mouse retinas—an organ that critically requires cyclin D1 function—cyclin D1 binds the upstream regulatory region of the Notch1 gene, where it serves to recruit CREB binding protein (CBP) histone acetyltransferase. Genetic ablation of cyclin D1 resulted in decreased CBP recruitment, decreased histone acetylation of the Notch1 promoter region, and led to decreased levels of the Notch1 transcript and protein in cyclin D1-null (Ccnd1-/-) retinas. Transduction of an activated allele of Notch1 into Ccnd1-/- retinas increased proliferation of retinal progenitor cells, indicating that upregulation of Notch1 signalling alleviates the phenotype of cyclin D1-deficiency. These studies show that in addition to its well-established cell cycle roles, cyclin D1 has an in vivo transcriptional function in mouse development. Our approach, which we term ‘genetic–proteomic’, can be used to study the in vivo function of essentially any protein.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2018

Kinase-independent function of E-type cyclins in liver cancer

Yan Geng; Wojciech Michowski; Joel M. Chick; Yaoyu E. Wang; M. Emmanuelle Jecrois; Katharine E. Sweeney; Lijun Liu; Richard C. Han; Nan Ke; Agnieszka Zagozdzon; Ewa Sicinska; Roderick T. Bronson; Steven P. Gygi; Piotr Sicinski

Significance Amplification of the cyclin E genes and overexpression of cyclin E proteins is very frequent in several human tumor types. In particular, overexpression of E cyclins was implicated in the pathogenesis of liver cancers. According to the current cell division models, E cyclins drive tumor cell proliferation by activating its kinase partner, the cyclin-dependent kinase 2 (CDK2). In this study, we demonstrate that E cyclins are dispensable for adult mouse physiology, but essential for liver cancer progression. Surprisingly, we found that the function of E cyclins in liver tumorigenesis is kinase independent. Our study suggests that agents targeting E cyclins would be efficacious in liver cancer treatment, as they would halt proliferation of tumor cells while sparing normal tissues. E-type cyclins (cyclins E1 and E2) are components of the core cell cycle machinery and are overexpressed in many human tumor types. E cyclins are thought to drive tumor cell proliferation by activating the cyclin-dependent kinase 2 (CDK2). The cyclin E1 gene represents the site of recurrent integration of the hepatitis B virus in the pathogenesis of hepatocellular carcinoma, and this event is associated with strong up-regulation of cyclin E1 expression. Regardless of the underlying mechanism of tumorigenesis, the majority of liver cancers overexpress E-type cyclins. Here we used conditional cyclin E knockout mice and a liver cancer model to test the requirement for the function of E cyclins in liver tumorigenesis. We show that a ubiquitous, global shutdown of E cyclins did not visibly affect postnatal development or physiology of adult mice. However, an acute ablation of E cyclins halted liver cancer progression. We demonstrated that also human liver cancer cells critically depend on E cyclins for proliferation. In contrast, we found that the function of the cyclin E catalytic partner, CDK2, is dispensable in liver cancer cells. We observed that E cyclins drive proliferation of tumor cells in a CDK2- and kinase-independent mechanism. Our study suggests that compounds which degrade or inhibit cyclin E might represent a highly selective therapeutic strategy for patients with liver cancer, as these compounds would selectively cripple proliferation of tumor cells, while sparing normal tissues.


Archive | 2008

A Novel Function for Cyclin E in Cell Cycle Progression

Yan Geng; Young-mi Lee; Markus Welcker; Jherek Swanger; Agnieszka Zagozdzon; James M. Roberts; Philipp Kaldis; Bruce E. Clurman; Piotr Sicinski

In this study we demonstrated the presence of a kinase-independent function for cyclin E. Specifically, weobserved that a kinase-deficient cyclin E1mutant can reconstitute cyclin E’s function in cyclin E-null cells. Kinase-deficient cyclin E1 is loaded onto chromatin during G0 → S progression, it restores MCM incorporation and it facilitates S phase entry of cyclin E-null cells. We also observed that, in wild-type cells, cyclin E is loaded onto DNA during the G0 → S transition, and it co-localizes with MCM on chromatin. We demonstrated a physical interaction between cyclin E and MCM. We propose that the DNA-bound fraction of cyclin E facilitates MCM loading in a kinase-independent fashion. Our work indicates that, in addition to their well-established function as activators of cyclin-dependent kinases, E-cyclins play a kinase-independent function in cell cycle progression.


Cancer Cell | 2006

Requirement for CDK4 kinase function in breast cancer

Qunyan Yu; Ewa Sicinska; Yan Geng; Marie Ahnström; Agnieszka Zagozdzon; Yinxin Kong; Humphrey Gardner; Hiroaki Kiyokawa; Lyndsay Harris; Olle Stål; Piotr Sicinski


Molecular Cell | 2007

Kinase-Independent Function of Cyclin E

Yan Geng; Young Mi Lee; Markus Welcker; Jherek Swanger; Agnieszka Zagozdzon; Joel D. Winer; James M. Roberts; Philipp Kaldis; Bruce E. Clurman; Piotr Sicinski


Nature Cell Biology | 2014

Cyclin C is a haploinsufficient tumour suppressor.

Na Li; Anne Fassl; Joel M. Chick; Hiroyuki Inuzuka; Xiaoyu Li; Marc R. Mansour; Lijun Liu; Haizhen Wang; Bryan King; Shavali Shaik; Alejandro Gutierrez; Alban Ordureau; Tobias Otto; Taras Kreslavsky; Lukas Baitsch; Leah Bury; Clifford A. Meyer; Nan Ke; Kristin Mulry; Michael J. Kluk; Moni Roy; Sunkyu Kim; Xiaowu Zhang; Yan Geng; Agnieszka Zagozdzon; Sarah Jenkinson; Rosemary E. Gale; David C. Linch; Jean Zhao; Charles G. Mullighan


PMC | 2010

Transcriptional role of cyclin D1 in development revealed by a “genetic-proteomic” screen

Frédéric Bienvenu; Siwanon Jirawatnotai; Joshua E. Elias; Clifford A. Meyer; Karolina Mizeracka; Alexander Marson; Garrett M. Frampton; Megan F. Cole; Duncan T. Odom; Junko Odajima; Yan Geng; Agnieszka Zagozdzon; Marie Jecrois; Richard A. Young; X. Shirley Liu; Constance L. Cepko; Steven P. Gygi; Piotr Sicinski

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