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Dive into the research topics where Alexandra Sullivan is active.

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Featured researches published by Alexandra Sullivan.


Cancer Cell | 2003

p53 polymorphism influences response in cancer chemotherapy via modulation of p73-dependent apoptosis

Daniele Bergamaschi; Milena Gasco; Louise Hiller; Alexandra Sullivan; Nelofer Syed; Giuseppe Trigiante; Isik G. Yulug; M. Merlano; Gianmauro Numico; Alberto Comino; Marlene Attard; Olivier Reelfs; Barry A. Gusterson; Alexandra K. Bell; Victoria J. Heath; Mahvash Tavassoli; Paul J. Farrell; Paul Smith; Xin Lu; Tim Crook

Intact p73 function is shown to be an important determinant of cellular sensitivity to anticancer agents. Inhibition of p73 function by dominant-negative proteins or by mutant p53 abrogates apoptosis and cytotoxicity induced by these agents. A polymorphism encoding either arginine (72R) or proline (72P) at codon 72 of p53 influences inhibition of p73 by a range of p53 mutants identified in squamous cancers. Clinical response following cisplatin-based chemo-radiotherapy for advanced head and neck cancer is influenced by this polymorphism, cancers expressing 72R mutants having lower response rates than those expressing 72P mutants. Polymorphism in p53 may influence individual responsiveness to cancer therapy.


Oncogene | 2004

Polymorphism in wild-type p53 modulates response to chemotherapy in vitro and in vivo

Alexandra Sullivan; Nelofer Syed; Milena Gasco; Daniele Bergamaschi; Giuseppe Trigiante; Marlene Attard; Louise Hiller; Paul J. Farrell; Paul J. Smith; Xin Lu; Tim Crook

A single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) in exon 4 results in expression of either arginine (72R) or proline (72P) at codon 72 of p53. We demonstrate that the in vitro response of cells exposed to anticancer agents is strongly influenced by this SNP in wild-type p53. In inducible systems and in cells expressing the endogenous protein, expression of 72P wild-type p53 results in a predominant G1 arrest, with only a minor apoptosis, at drug concentrations causing extensive apoptosis in cells expressing the 72R wild-type variant. The superior apoptosis-inducing activity of the 72R form correlates with more efficient induction of specific apoptosis-associated genes, and is maximal in the presence of serine 46 (S46). In vivo, the outcome of chemo-radiotherapy of squamous carcinomas is more favourable in cancers retaining a wild-type 72R allele, such cases having higher response rates and longer survival than those with wild-type 72P. Together, these results reveal that this SNP is an important determinant of response to anticancer agents in cells expressing wild-type p53. Analysis of complete p53 genotype (mutation and SNP) merits detailed investigation as a simple means for prediction of treatment response and survival in clinical oncology.


Nature Genetics | 2006

iASPP preferentially binds p53 proline-rich region and modulates apoptotic function of codon 72–polymorphic p53

Daniele Bergamaschi; Yardena Samuels; Alexandra Sullivan; Marketa Zvelebil; Hilde Breyssens; Andrea Bisso; Giannino Del Sal; Nelofer Syed; Paul Smith; Milena Gasco; Tim Crook; Xin Lu

iASPP is one of the most evolutionarily conserved inhibitors of p53, whereas ASPP1 and ASPP2 are activators of p53. We show here that, in addition to the DNA-binding domain, the ASPP family members also bind to the proline-rich region of p53, which contains the most common p53 polymorphism at codon 72. Furthermore, the ASPP family members, particularly iASPP, bind to and regulate the activity of p53Pro72 more efficiently than that of p53Arg72. Hence, escape from negative regulation by iASPP is a newly identified mechanism by which p53Arg72 activates apoptosis more efficiently than p53Pro72.


British Journal of Cancer | 2007

ASPP: a new family of oncogenes and tumour suppressor genes

Alexandra Sullivan; Xin Lu

The apoptosis stimulating proteins of p53 (ASPP) family consists of three members, ASPP1, ASPP2 and iASPP. They bind to proteins that are key players in controlling apoptosis (p53, Bcl-2 and RelA/p65) and cell growth (APCL, PP1). So far, the best-known function of the ASPP family members is their ability to regulate the apoptotic function of p53 and its family members, p63 and p73. Biochemical and genetic evidence has shown that ASPP1 and ASPP2 activate, whereas iASPP inhibits, the apoptotic but not the cell-cycle arrest function of p53. The p53 tumour suppressor gene, one of the most frequently mutated genes in human cancer, is capable of suppressing tumour growth through its ability to induce apoptosis or cell-cycle arrest. Thus, the ASPP family of proteins helps to determine how cells choose to die and may therefore be a novel target for cancer therapy.


Oncogene | 2002

Concomitant inactivation of p53 and Chk2 in breast cancer

Alexandra Sullivan; Martin Yuille; Claire Repellin; Archana Reddy; Olivier Reelfs; Alexandra K. Bell; Barbara Dunne; Barry A. Gusterson; Peter Osin; Paul J. Farrell; Isik G. Yulug; Abigail Evans; Tayfun Ozcelik; Milena Gasco; Tim Crook

The structure and expression of the human Rad53 homologue Chk2 was analysed in breast cancer. The previously described silent polymorphism at nucleotide 252 in codon 84 (GAA>GAG) was observed in 5/141 cases. Somatic Chk2 coding mutations were detected in 7/141 cases, these occurring in 4/18 BRCA1-associated breast cancers, 1/78 sporadic breast cancers and 2/25 typical medullary carcinomas. Each of the BRCA1-associated cancers with Chk2 mutations also contained mutations in p53, whereas the single sporadic cancer with Chk2 mutation was wild-type for p53. Expression of Chk2 was ubiquitously detected in normal ductal epithelium of the breast, but there was loss of expression in a significant proportion of breast carcinomas, and this occurred in cancers both with and without p53 mutation. A CpG island was identified 5′ of the Chk2 transcriptional start site, but there was no evidence of cytosine methylation in any of the cancers with down-regulated Chk2 expression. Analysis of the germ-line of 45 individuals with hereditary or early onset breast cancer revealed wild-type Chk2 sequence in all cases. Thus, despite the rarity of somatic mutations in Chk2 in sporadic breast carcinomas, our results nevertheless reveal that concomitant loss of function in Chk2 (via down-regulation of expression) and p53 (via mutation) occurs in a proportion of sporadic cases. However, consistent with other studies, we show that germ-line mutations in Chk2 are unlikely to account for a significant proportion of non BRCA1-, non BRCA2-associated hereditary breast cancers.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Autophagic activity dictates the cellular response to oncogenic RAS

Yihua Wang; Xiao Dan Wang; Eleonora Lapi; Alexandra Sullivan; Wei Jia; You-Wen He; Indrika Ratnayaka; Shan Zhong; Robert Goldin; Christoph G. Goemans; Aviva M. Tolkovsky; Xin Lu

RAS is frequently mutated in human cancers and has opposing effects on autophagy and tumorigenesis. Identifying determinants of the cellular responses to RAS is therefore vital in cancer research. Here, we show that autophagic activity dictates the cellular response to oncogenic RAS. N-terminal Apoptosis-stimulating of p53 protein 2 (ASPP2) mediates RAS-induced senescence and inhibits autophagy. Oncogenic RAS-expressing ASPP2(Δ3/Δ3) mouse embryonic fibroblasts that escape senescence express a high level of ATG5/ATG12. Consistent with the notion that autophagy levels control the cellular response to oncogenic RAS, overexpressing ATG5, but not autophagy-deficient ATG5 mutant K130R, bypasses RAS-induced senescence, whereas ATG5 or ATG3 deficiency predisposes to it. Mechanistically, ASPP2 inhibits RAS-induced autophagy by competing with ATG16 to bind ATG5/ATG12 and preventing ATG16/ATG5/ATG12 formation. Hence, ASPP2 modulates oncogenic RAS-induced autophagic activity to dictate the cellular response to RAS: to proliferate or senesce.


Journal of Virology | 2002

Expression of transcription factor AML-2 (RUNX3, CBF(alpha)-3) is induced by Epstein-Barr virus EBNA-2 and correlates with the B-cell activation phenotype.

Lindsay C. Spender; Georgina H. Cornish; Alexandra Sullivan; Paul J. Farrell

ABSTRACT To identify cell proteins regulated by the Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) transcription factor EBNA-2, we analyzed a cell line with conditional EBNA-2 activity by using microarray expression profiling. This led to the identification of two novel target genes induced by EBNA-2. The first of these, interleukin-16, is an immunomodulatory cytokine involved in the regulation of CD4 T cells. The second, AML-2, is a member of the Runt domain family of transcription factors. Quiescent B cells initially expressed AML-1 but, 48 h after virus infection, the levels of AML-1 decreased dramatically, whereas the amount of AML-2 protein increased. Analysis of a panel of B-cell lines indicated that AML-2 expression is normally predominant in EBV latency III, whereas AML-1 is associated with EBV latency I or EBV-negative cells. The AML genes are the first example of cell transcription factors whose expression correlates with the latency I/III phenotype.


British Journal of Cancer | 2001

p73 is over-expressed in vulval cancer principally as the Delta 2 isoform.

Jenny O'Nions; Louise Brooks; Alexandra Sullivan; Alexandra K. Bell; Barbara Dunne; M Rozycka; A Reddy; John A. Tidy; D J Evans; Paul J. Farrell; A Evans; Milena Gasco; Barry A. Gusterson; Tim Crook

p73 was studied in squamous cancers and precursor lesions of the vulva. Over-expression of p73 occurred commonly in both human papillomavirus (HPV)-positive and -negative squamous cell cancers (SCC) and high-grade premalignant lesions. Whereas expression in normal vulval epithelium was detected only in the basal and supra-basal layers, expression in neoplastic epithelium increased with grade of neoplasia, being maximal at both protein and RNA levels in SCC. p73 Δ2 was the principal over-expressed isoform in the majority of cases of vulval SCC and often the sole form expressed in SCC. Over-expression of p73 was associated with expression of HPV-encoded E7 or with hypermethylation or mutation of p16INK4a in HPV-negative cases. There was a close correlation between expression of p73 and p14ARF in cancers with loss of p53 function. The frequent over-expression of p73 Δ2 in neoplastic but not normal vulval epithelium, and its co-ordinate deregulation with other E2F-1 responsive genes suggests a role in the oncogenic process.


British Journal of Cancer | 2002

Analysis of CHK2 in vulval neoplasia.

A Reddy; Martin Yuille; Alexandra Sullivan; Claire Repellin; Alexandra K. Bell; John A. Tidy; D J Evans; Paul J. Farrell; Barry A. Gusterson; Milena Gasco; Tim Crook

Structure and expression of the Rad53 homologue CHK2 were studied in vulval neoplasia. We identified the previously described silent polymorphism at codon 84 (A>G at nucleotide 252) in the germ-line of six out of 72, and somatic mutations in two out of 40 cases of vulval squamous cell carcinomas and none of 32 cases of vulval intraepithelial neoplasia. One mutation introduced a premature stop codon in the kinase domain of CHK2, whereas the second resulted in an amino acid substitution in the kinase domain. The two squamous cell carcinomas with mutations in CHK2 also expressed mutant p53. A CpG island was identified close to the putative CHK2 transcriptional start site, but methylation-specific PCR did not detect methylation in any of 40 vulval squamous cell carcinomas, irrespective of human papillomavirus or p53 status. Consistent with this observation, no cancer exhibited loss of CHK2 expression at mRNA or protein level. Taken together, these observations reveal that genetic but not epigenetic changes in CHK2 occur in a small proportion of vulval squamous cell carcinomas.


British Journal of Cancer | 2002

E7 proteins from oncogenic human papillomavirus types transactivate p73: role in cervical intraepithelial neoplasia

Louise Brooks; Alexandra Sullivan; Jenny O'Nions; Alexandra K. Bell; Barbara Dunne; John A. Tidy; D J Evans; Pinchas Osin; K H Vousden; Barry A. Gusterson; Paul J. Farrell; A Storey; Milena Gasco; Toshiyuki Sakai; Tim Crook

In common with other E2F1 responsive genes such as p14ARF and B-myb, the promoter of p73 is shown to be positively regulated in cell lines and primary human keratinocytes by E7 proteins from oncogenic human papillomavirus (HPV) types 16, 18, 31 and 33, but not HPV 6. Mutational analysis revealed that transactivation of the p73 promoter by HPV 16E7 requires association with pRb. Expression of p73 in normal cervical epithelium is confined to the basal and supra-basal layers. In contrast, expression in neoplastic lesions is detected throughout the epithelium and increases with grade of neoplasia, being maximal in squamous cell cancers (SCC). Deregulation of expression of the N-terminal splice variant p73Δ2 was observed in a significant proportion of cancers, but not in normal epithelium. The frequent over-expression of p73Δ2, which has recognized transdominant properties, in malignant and pre-malignant lesions suggests a role in the oncogenic process in cervical epithelium.

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Tim Crook

Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research

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Xin Lu

Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research

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Paul J. Farrell

Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research

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Nelofer Syed

Institute of Cancer Research

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Paul J. Farrell

Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research

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Daniele Bergamaschi

Queen Mary University of London

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John A. Tidy

Northern General Hospital

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