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Dive into the research topics where Aliaksandra Maroz is active.

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Featured researches published by Aliaksandra Maroz.


Genes & Development | 2010

miR-125b-2 is a potential oncomiR on human chromosome 21 in megakaryoblastic leukemia.

Jan-Henning Klusmann; Zhe Li; Katarina Böhmer; Aliaksandra Maroz; Mia Lee Koch; Stephan Emmrich; Frank J. Godinho; Stuart H. Orkin; Dirk Reinhardt

Children with trisomy 21/Down syndrome (DS) are at high risk to develop acute megakaryoblastic leukemia (DS-AMKL) and the related transient leukemia (DS-TL). The factors on human chromosome 21 (Hsa21) that confer this predisposing effect, especially in synergy with consistently mutated transcription factor GATA1 (GATA1s), remain poorly understood. Here, we investigated the role of Hsa21-encoded miR-125b-2, a microRNA (miRNA) overexpressed in DS-AMKL/TL, in hematopoiesis and leukemogenesis. We identified a function of miR-125b-2 in increasing proliferation and self-renewal of human and mouse megakaryocytic progenitors (MPs) and megakaryocytic/erythroid progenitors (MEPs). miR-125b-2 overexpression did not affect megakaryocytic and erythroid differentiation, but severely perturbed myeloid differentiation. The proproliferative effect of miR-125b-2 on MEPs accentuated the Gata1s mutation, whereas growth of DS-AMKL/TL cells was impaired upon miR-125b repression, suggesting synergism during leukemic transformation in GATA1s-mutated DS-AMKL/TL. Integrative transcriptome analysis of hematopoietic cells upon modulation of miR-125b expression levels uncovered a set of miR-125b target genes, including DICER1 and ST18 as direct targets. Gene Set Enrichment Analysis revealed that this target gene set is down-regulated in DS-AMKL patients highly expressing miR-125b. Thus, we propose miR-125b-2 as a positive regulator of megakaryopoiesis and an oncomiR involved in the pathogenesis of trisomy 21-associated megakaryoblastic leukemia.


Genes & Development | 2010

Developmental stage-specific interplay of GATA1 and IGF signaling in fetal megakaryopoiesis and leukemogenesis

Jan-Henning Klusmann; Frank J. Godinho; Kirsten Heitmann; Aliaksandra Maroz; Mia Lee Koch; Dirk Reinhardt; Stuart H. Orkin; Zhe Li

Oncogene-mediated transformation of hematopoietic cells has been studied extensively, but little is known about the molecular basis for restriction of oncogenes to certain target cells and differential cellular context-specific requirements for oncogenic transformation between infant and adult leukemias. Understanding cell type-specific interplay of signaling pathways and oncogenes is essential for developing targeted cancer therapies. Here, we address the vexing issue of how developmental restriction is achieved in Down syndrome acute megakaryoblastic leukemia (DS-AMKL), characterized by the triad of fetal origin, mutated GATA1 (GATA1s), and trisomy 21. We demonstrate overactivity of insulin-like growth factor (IGF) signaling in authentic human DS-AMKL and in a DS-AMKL mouse model generated through retroviral insertional mutagenesis. Fetal but not adult megakaryocytic progenitors are dependent on this pathway. GATA1 restricts IGF-mediated activation of the E2F transcription network to coordinate proliferation and differentiation. Failure of a direct GATA1-E2F interaction in mutated GATA1s converges with overactive IGF signaling to promote cellular transformation of DS fetal progenitors, revealing a complex, fetal stage-specific regulatory network. Our study underscores context-dependent requirements during oncogenesis, and explains resistance to transformation of ostensibly similar adult progenitors.


Genes & Development | 2014

miR-99a/100~125b tricistrons regulate hematopoietic stem and progenitor cell homeostasis by shifting the balance between TGFβ and Wnt signaling.

Stephan Emmrich; Mareike Rasche; Jennifer Schöning; Christina Reimer; Sarva Keihani; Aliaksandra Maroz; Ying Xie; Zhe Li; Axel Schambach; Dirk Reinhardt; Jan-Henning Klusmann

Although regulation of stem cell homeostasis by microRNAs (miRNAs) is well studied, it is unclear how individual miRNAs genomically encoded within an organized polycistron can interact to induce an integrated phenotype. miR-99a/100, let-7, and miR-125b paralogs are encoded in two tricistrons on human chromosomes 11 and 21. They are highly expressed in hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) and acute megakaryoblastic leukemia (AMKL), an aggressive form of leukemia with poor prognosis. Here, we show that miR-99a/100∼125b tricistrons are transcribed as a polycistronic message transactivated by the homeobox transcription factor HOXA10. Integrative analysis of global gene expression profiling, miRNA target prediction, and pathway architecture revealed that miR-99a/100, let-7, and miR-125b functionally converge at the combinatorial block of the transforming growth factor β (TGFβ) pathway by targeting four receptor subunits and two SMAD signaling transducers. In addition, down-regulation of tumor suppressor genes adenomatous polyposis coli (APC)/APC2 stabilizes active β-catenin and enhances Wnt signaling. By switching the balance between Wnt and TGFβ signaling, the concerted action of these tricistronic miRNAs promoted sustained expansion of murine and human HSCs in vitro or in vivo while favoring megakaryocytic differentiation. Hence, our study explains the high phylogenetic conservation of the miR-99a/100∼125b tricistrons controlling stem cell homeostasis, the deregulation of which contributes to the development of AMKL.


Leukemia | 2014

GATA1s induces hyperproliferation of eosinophil precursors in Down syndrome transient leukemia

Aliaksandra Maroz; Lena Stachorski; Stephan Emmrich; Katarina Reinhardt; Jian Xu; Zhen Shao; Sebastian Käbler; Tobias Dertmann; Johann Hitzler; Irene Roberts; Paresh Vyas; Gaetan Juban; Christian Hennig; Gesine Hansen; Zhe Li; Stuart H. Orkin; Dirk Reinhardt; Jan-Henning Klusmann

Transient leukemia (TL) is evident in 5–10% of all neonates with Down syndrome (DS) and associated with N-terminal truncating GATA1 mutations (GATA1s). Here we report that TL-cell clones generate abundant eosinophils in a substantial fraction of patients. Sorted eosinophils from patients with TL and eosinophilia carried the same GATA1s mutations as sorted TL blasts, consistent with their clonal origin. TL blasts exhibited a genetic program characteristic of eosinophils and differentiated along the eosinophil lineage in vitro. Similarly, ectopic expression of Gata1s, but not Gata1, in wild-type CD34+-hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells induced hyperproliferation of eosinophil promyelocytes in vitro. Although GATA1s retained the function of GATA1 to induce eosinophil genes by occupying their promoter regions, GATA1s was impaired in its ability to repress oncogenic MYC and the pro-proliferative E2F transcription network. Chromatin Immunoprecipitation Sequencing (ChIP-seq) indicated reduced GATA1s occupancy at the MYC promoter. Knockdown of MYC, or the obligate E2F-cooperation partner DP1, rescued the GATA1s-induced hyperproliferative phenotype. In agreement, terminal eosinophil maturation was blocked in Gata1Δe2 knockin mice, exclusively expressing Gata1s, leading to accumulation of eosinophil precursors in blood and bone marrow. These data suggest a direct relationship between the N-terminal truncating mutations of GATA1 and clonal eosinophilia in DS patients.


Nature Communications | 2017

The non-coding RNA landscape of human hematopoiesis and leukemia

Adrian Schwarzer; Stephan Emmrich; Franziska Schmidt; Dominik Beck; Michelle Ng; Christina Reimer; Felix F. Adams; Sarah Grasedieck; Damian Witte; Sebastian Käbler; Jason Wong; Anushi Shah; Yizhou Huang; Razan Jammal; Aliaksandra Maroz; Mojca Jongen-Lavrencic; Axel Schambach; Florian Kuchenbauer; John E. Pimanda; Dirk Reinhardt; Dirk Heckl; Jan-Henning Klusmann

Non-coding RNAs have emerged as crucial regulators of gene expression and cell fate decisions. However, their expression patterns and regulatory functions during normal and malignant human hematopoiesis are incompletely understood. Here we present a comprehensive resource defining the non-coding RNA landscape of the human hematopoietic system. Based on highly specific non-coding RNA expression portraits per blood cell population, we identify unique fingerprint non-coding RNAs—such as LINC00173 in granulocytes—and assign these to critical regulatory circuits involved in blood homeostasis. Following the incorporation of acute myeloid leukemia samples into the landscape, we further uncover prognostically relevant non-coding RNA stem cell signatures shared between acute myeloid leukemia blasts and healthy hematopoietic stem cells. Our findings highlight the importance of the non-coding transcriptome in the formation and maintenance of the human blood hierarchy.While micro-RNAs are known regulators of haematopoiesis and leukemogenesis, the role of long non-coding RNAs is less clear. Here the authors provide a non-coding RNA expression landscape of the human hematopoietic system, highlighting their role in the formation and maintenance of the human blood hierarchy.


Blood | 2015

Integrated Analysis of the Human Hematopoietic Non-Coding RNA Landscape Reveals Lnc-RNA Stem Cell Signature in AML

Adrian Schwarzer; Stephan Emmrich; Franziska Schmidt; Damian Witte; Aliaksandra Maroz; Dirk Reinhardt; Jan-Henning Klusmann


Blood | 2014

GATA1-Centered Genetic Network on Chromosome 21 Drives Down Syndrome Acute Megakaryoblastic Leukemia

Lena Stachorski; Dirk Heckl; Veera Raghavan Thangapandi; Aliaksandra Maroz; Dirk Reinhardt; Jan-Henning Klusmann


Klinische Padiatrie | 2013

Finding the molecular basis for developmental-stage specific differences in hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells

T Dertmann; Aliaksandra Maroz; Jan-Henning Klusmann


Blood | 2013

Lncrna Hematlas Defines Blood Lineage-Specific RNA Expression Signatures and Novel Lincrna Biomarkers

Franziska Schmidt; Ramesh Chandra Pandey; Aliaksandra Maroz; Dirk Reinhardt; Jan-Henning Klusmann


Klinische Padiatrie | 2012

Formation of atypical, hyperproliferating eosinophilic precursors by overexpression of GATA1s

Aliaksandra Maroz; C Hennig; B Van Handel; Hanna Mikkola; Dirk Reinhardt; Jan-Henning Klusmann

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Zhe Li

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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