Alice Loo
Novartis
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Publication
Featured researches published by Alice Loo.
Nature | 2010
Rameen Beroukhim; Craig H. Mermel; Dale Porter; Guo Wei; Soumya Raychaudhuri; Jerry Donovan; Jordi Barretina; Jesse S. Boehm; Jennifer Dobson; Mitsuyoshi Urashima; Kevin T. Mc Henry; Reid M. Pinchback; Azra H. Ligon; Yoon-Jae Cho; Leila Haery; Heidi Greulich; Michael R. Reich; Wendy Winckler; Michael S. Lawrence; Barbara A. Weir; Kumiko Tanaka; Derek Y. Chiang; Adam J. Bass; Alice Loo; Carter Hoffman; John R. Prensner; Ted Liefeld; Qing Gao; Derek Yecies; Sabina Signoretti
A powerful way to discover key genes with causal roles in oncogenesis is to identify genomic regions that undergo frequent alteration in human cancers. Here we present high-resolution analyses of somatic copy-number alterations (SCNAs) from 3,131 cancer specimens, belonging largely to 26 histological types. We identify 158 regions of focal SCNA that are altered at significant frequency across several cancer types, of which 122 cannot be explained by the presence of a known cancer target gene located within these regions. Several gene families are enriched among these regions of focal SCNA, including the BCL2 family of apoptosis regulators and the NF-κΒ pathway. We show that cancer cells containing amplifications surrounding the MCL1 and BCL2L1 anti-apoptotic genes depend on the expression of these genes for survival. Finally, we demonstrate that a large majority of SCNAs identified in individual cancer types are present in several cancer types.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008
Susan Wee; Dmitri Wiederschain; Sauveur Michel Maira; Alice Loo; Christine Miller; Rosalie deBeaumont; Frank Stegmeier; Yung Mae Yao; Christoph Lengauer
Deregulation of the PI3K signaling pathway is observed in many human cancers and occurs most frequently through loss of PTEN phosphatase tumor suppressor function or through somatic activating mutations in the Class IA PI3K, PIK3CA. Tumors harboring activated p110α, the protein product of PIK3CA, require p110α activity for growth and survival and hence are expected to be responsive to inhibitors of its lipid kinase activity. Whether PTEN-deficient cancers similarly depend on p110α activity to sustain activation of the PI3K pathway has been unclear. In this study, we used a single-vector lentiviral inducible shRNA system to selectively inactivate the three Class IA PI3Ks, PIK3CA, PIK3CB, and PIK3CD, to determine which PI3K isoforms are responsible for driving the abnormal proliferation of PTEN-deficient cancers. Down-regulation of PIK3CA in colorectal cancer cells harboring mutations in PIK3CA inhibited downstream PI3K signaling and cell growth. Surprisingly, PIK3CA depletion affected neither PI3K signaling nor cell growth in 3 PTEN-deficient cancer cell lines. In contrast, down-regulation of the PIK3CB isoform, which encodes p110β, resulted in pathway inactivation and subsequent inhibition of growth in both cell-based and in vivo settings. This essential function of PIK3CB in PTEN-deficient cancer cells required its lipid kinase activity. Our findings demonstrate that although p110α activation is required to sustain the proliferation of established PIK3CA-mutant tumors, PTEN-deficient tumors are dependent instead on p110β signaling. This unexpected finding demonstrates the need to tailor therapeutic approaches to the genetic basis of PI3K pathway activation to achieve optimal treatment response.
Cancer Research | 2009
Susan Wee; Zainab Jagani; Kay Xiaoqin Xiang; Alice Loo; Marion Dorsch; Yung-Mae Yao; William R. Sellers; Christoph Lengauer; Frank Stegmeier
The RAS pathway is one of the most frequently deregulated pathways in cancer. RAS signals through multiple effector pathways, including the RAF/mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK)/extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) kinase (MEK)/ERK MAPK and phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K)-AKT signaling cascades. The oncogenic potential of these effector pathways is illustrated by the frequent occurrence of activating mutations in BRAF and PIK3CA as well as loss-of-function mutations in the tumor suppressor PTEN, a negative regulator of PI3K. Previous studies have found that whereas BRAF mutant cancers are highly sensitive to MEK inhibition, RAS mutant cancers exhibit a more variable response. The molecular mechanisms responsible for this heterogeneous response remain unclear. In this study, we show that PI3K pathway activation strongly influences the sensitivity of RAS mutant cells to MEK inhibitors. Activating mutations in PIK3CA reduce the sensitivity to MEK inhibition, whereas PTEN mutations seem to cause complete resistance. We further show that down-regulation of PIK3CA resensitizes cells with co-occurring KRAS and PIK3CA mutations to MEK inhibition. At the molecular level, the dual inhibition of both pathways seems to be required for complete inhibition of the downstream mammalian target of rapamycin effector pathway and results in the induction of cell death. Finally, we show that whereas inactivation of either the MEK or PI3K pathway leads to partial tumor growth inhibition, targeted inhibition of both pathways is required to achieve tumor stasis. Our study provides molecular insights that help explain the heterogeneous response of KRAS mutant cancers to MEK pathway inhibition and presents a strong rationale for the clinical testing of combination MEK and PI3K targeted therapies.
Nature Medicine | 2015
Hui Gao; Joshua Korn; Stephane Ferretti; John E. Monahan; Youzhen Wang; Mallika Singh; Chao Zhang; Christian Schnell; Guizhi Yang; Yun Zhang; O Alejandro Balbin; Stéphanie Barbe; Hongbo Cai; Fergal Casey; Susmita Chatterjee; Derek Y. Chiang; Shannon Chuai; Shawn M Cogan; Scott D Collins; Ernesta Dammassa; Nicolas Ebel; Millicent Embry; John Green; Audrey Kauffmann; Colleen Kowal; Rebecca J. Leary; Joseph Lehar; Ying Liang; Alice Loo; Edward Lorenzana
Profiling candidate therapeutics with limited cancer models during preclinical development hinders predictions of clinical efficacy and identifying factors that underlie heterogeneous patient responses for patient-selection strategies. We established ∼1,000 patient-derived tumor xenograft models (PDXs) with a diverse set of driver mutations. With these PDXs, we performed in vivo compound screens using a 1 × 1 × 1 experimental design (PDX clinical trial or PCT) to assess the population responses to 62 treatments across six indications. We demonstrate both the reproducibility and the clinical translatability of this approach by identifying associations between a genotype and drug response, and established mechanisms of resistance. In addition, our results suggest that PCTs may represent a more accurate approach than cell line models for assessing the clinical potential of some therapeutic modalities. We therefore propose that this experimental paradigm could potentially improve preclinical evaluation of treatment modalities and enhance our ability to predict clinical trial responses.
Cell Cycle | 2009
Dmitri Wiederschain; Susan Wee; Lin Chen; Alice Loo; Guizhi Yang; Alan Huang; Yan Chen; Giordano Caponigro; Yung Mae Yao; Christoph Lengauer; William R. Sellers; John D. Benson
The use of RNA interference (RNAi) has enabled loss-of-function studies in mammalian cancer cells and has hence become critical for identifying and validating cancer drug targets. Current transient siRNA and stable shRNA systems, however, have limited utility in accurately assessing the cancer dependency due to their short-lived effects and limited in vivo utility, respectively. In this study, a single-vector lentiviral, Tet-inducible shRNA system (pLKO-Tet-On) was generated to allow for the rapid generation of multiple stable cell lines with regulatable shRNA expression. We demonstrate the advantages and versatility of this system by targeting two polycomb group proteins, Bmi-1 and Mel-18, in a number of cancer cell lines. Our data show that pLKO-Tet-On-mediated knockdown is tightly regulated by the inducer tetracycline and its derivative, doxycycline, in a concentration- and time-dependent manner. Furthermore, target gene expression is fully restored upon withdrawal of the inducing agent. An additional, 17 distinct gene products have been targeted by inducible shRNAs with robust regulation in all cases. Importantly, we functionally validate the ability of the pLKO-Tet-On vector to reversibly silence targeted transcripts in vivo. The versatile and robust inducible lentiviral RNAi system reported herein can therefore serve as a powerful tool to rapidly reveal tumor cell dependence.
Cancer Research | 2011
Tara L. Naylor; Huaping Tang; Boris A. Ratsch; Andreas Enns; Alice Loo; Liqing Chen; Peter Lenz; Nigel J. Waters; Walter Schuler; Bernd Dörken; Yung-Mae Yao; Markus Warmuth; Georg Lenz; Frank Stegmeier
The activated B-cell-like (ABC) subtype of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) correlates with poor prognosis. The ABC subtype of DLBCL is associated with constitutive activation of the NF-κB pathway, and oncogenic lesions have been identified in its regulators, including CARD11/CARMA1 (caspase recruitment domain-containing protein 11), A20/TNFAIP3, and CD79A/B. In this study, we offer evidence of therapeutic potential for the selective PKC (protein kinase C) inhibitor sotrastaurin (STN) in preclinical models of DLBCL. A significant fraction of ABC DLBCL cell lines exhibited strong sensitivity to STN, and we found that the molecular nature of NF-κB pathway lesions predicted responsiveness. CD79A/B mutations correlated with STN sensitivity, whereas CARD11 mutations rendered ABC DLBCL cell lines insensitive. Growth inhibitory effects of PKC inhibition correlated with NF-κB pathway inhibition and were mediated by induction of G₁-phase cell-cycle arrest and/or cell death. We found that STN produced significant antitumor effects in a mouse xenograft model of CD79A/B-mutated DLBCL. Collectively, our findings offer a strong rationale for the clinical evaluation of STN in ABC DLBCL patients who harbor CD79 mutations also illustrating the necessity to stratify DLBCL patients according to their genetic abnormalities.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011
Alix Scholer-Dahirel; Michael R. Schlabach; Alice Loo; Linda Bagdasarian; Ronald Meyer; Ribo Guo; Steve Woolfenden; Kristine Yu; Judit Markovits; Karen Killary; Dmitry Sonkin; Yung-Mae Yao; Markus Warmuth; William R. Sellers; Robert A. Schlegel; Frank Stegmeier; Rebecca Mosher; Margaret McLaughlin
Persistent expression of certain oncogenes is required for tumor maintenance. This phenotype is referred to as oncogene addiction and has been clinically validated by anticancer therapies that specifically inhibit oncoproteins such as BCR-ABL, c-Kit, HER2, PDGFR, and EGFR. Identifying additional genes that are required for tumor maintenance may lead to new targets for anticancer drugs. Although the role of aberrant Wnt pathway activation in the initiation of colorectal cancer has been clearly established, it remains unclear whether sustained Wnt pathway activation is required for colorectal tumor maintenance. To address this question, we used inducible β-catenin shRNAs to temporally control Wnt pathway activation in vivo. Here, we show that active Wnt/β-catenin signaling is required for maintenance of colorectal tumor xenografts harboring APC mutations. Reduced tumor growth upon β-catenin inhibition was due to cell cycle arrest and differentiation. Upon reactivation of the Wnt/β-catenin pathway colorectal cancer cells resumed proliferation and reacquired a crypt progenitor phenotype. In human colonic adenocarcinomas, high levels of nuclear β-catenin correlated with crypt progenitor but not differentiation markers, suggesting that the Wnt/β-catenin pathway may also control colorectal tumor cell fate during the maintenance phase of tumors in patients. These results support efforts to treat human colorectal cancer by pharmacological inhibition of the Wnt/β-catenin pathway.
Molecular Cancer Therapeutics | 2013
Sunkyu Kim; Alice Loo; Rajiv Chopra; Giordano Caponigro; Alan Huang; Sadhna Vora; Sudha Parasuraman; Steve Howard; Nicholas Keen; William R. Sellers; Christopher Thomas Brain
The tumor suppressor Retinoblastoma protein (Rb) is often inactivated in cancer. In many tumors, the Rb protein itself is retained but functionally inactivated by increased CDK4/6 kinase activity. A number of key oncogenic aberrations can result in this increased activity, including inactivation of CDKN2A (p16), translocation or amplification of D-cyclins, amplification of CDK4/6 and mutations/deletions upstream of cyclin D, such as activating mutations of BRAF/PIK3CA and PTEN deletion. Abolishing CDK4/6 kinase activity and subsequent reactivation of Rb in these tumors has been demonstrated to inhibit tumor initiation and growth. Here we will describe LEE011- an orally bioavailable, selective small molecule inhibitor of CDK4/6 kinases. LEE011 inhibits CDK4/6 kinase activity with nM IC50 and is highly selective for these targets. In a number of preclinical tumor models, LEE011 demonstrates a dose dependent anti-tumor activity that tracks well with CDK4/6 inhibition. The primary mechanism for growth inhibitory effect appears to be G1 arrest in vitro , although, in some sensitive in vivo models, regressions are observed. Importantly, given the role of CDK4/6 downstream of other oncogenic driver mutations, LEE011 shows single agent activity in melanomas with activating mutations of BRAF or NRAS, and in breast cancers with intact estrogen receptor and/or activating aberrations of PIK3CA/Her-2. Combining LEE011 with LGX818, a V600E BRAF specific inhibitor, leads to robust anti-tumor activity in melanoma models that are both sensitive and, importantly, those that are resistant to LGX818. Furthermore, combining LEE011 with BYL719, a PIK3CA specific inhibitor, also leads to significant anti-tumor activity in breast cancer models both sensitive and resistant to BYL719. Several clinical studies evaluating LEE011 as single agent and in combinations are underway. Citation Information: Mol Cancer Ther 2013;12(11 Suppl):PR02. Citation Format: Sunkyu Kim, Alice Loo, Rajiv Chopra, Giordano Caponigro, Alan Huang, Sadhna Vora, Sudha Parasuraman, Steve Howard, Nicholas Keen, William Sellers, Christopher Brain. LEE011: An orally bioavailable, selective small molecule inhibitor of CDK4/6– Reactivating Rb in cancer. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the AACR-NCI-EORTC International Conference: Molecular Targets and Cancer Therapeutics; 2013 Oct 19-23; Boston, MA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Mol Cancer Ther 2013;12(11 Suppl):Abstract nr PR02.
Cancer Research | 2010
Zainab Jagani; Dmitri Wiederschain; Alice Loo; Dan He; Rebecca Mosher; Paul Fordjour; John E. Monahan; Michael Morrissey; Yung Mae Yao; Christoph Lengauer; Markus Warmuth; William R. Sellers; Marion Dorsch
Bmi-1 is a member of the Polycomb group family of proteins that function in the epigenetic silencing of genes governing self-renewal, differentiation, and proliferation. Bmi-1 was first identified through its ability to accelerate c-Myc-induced lymphomagenesis. Subsequent studies have further supported an oncogenic role for Bmi-1 in several cancers including those of the breast, lung, prostate, and brain. Using a stable and inducible shRNA system to silence Bmi-1 gene expression, we show a novel role for Bmi-1 in regulating the growth and clonogenic capacity of multiple myeloma cells both in vitro and in vivo. Moreover, to elucidate novel gene targets controlled by Bmi-1, global transcriptional profiling studies were performed in the setting of induced loss of Bmi-1 function. We found that the expression of the proapoptotic gene Bim is negatively regulated by Bmi-1 and that Bim knockdown functionally rescues the apoptotic phenotype induced upon loss of Bmi-1. Therefore, these studies not only highlight Bmi-1 as a cancer-dependent factor in multiple myeloma, but also elucidate a novel antiapoptotic mechanism for Bmi-1 function involving the suppression of Bim.
Nature | 2017
Andrew Wylie; Joseph Schoepfer; Wolfgang Jahnke; Sandra W. Cowan-Jacob; Alice Loo; Pascal Furet; Andreas Marzinzik; Xavier Francois Andre Pelle; Jerry Donovan; Wenjing Zhu; Silvia Buonamici; A. Quamrul Hassan; Franco Lombardo; Varsha Iyer; Michael Palmer; Giuliano Berellini; Stephanie Dodd; Sanjeev Thohan; Hans Bitter; Susan Branford; David M. Ross; Timothy P. Hughes; Lilli Petruzzelli; K. Gary Vanasse; Markus Warmuth; Francesco Hofmann; Nicholas Keen; William R. Sellers
Chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML) is driven by the activity of the BCR–ABL1 fusion oncoprotein. ABL1 kinase inhibitors have improved the clinical outcomes for patients with CML, with over 80% of patients treated with imatinib surviving for more than 10 years. Second-generation ABL1 kinase inhibitors induce more potent molecular responses in both previously untreated and imatinib-resistant patients with CML. Studies in patients with chronic-phase CML have shown that around 50% of patients who achieve and maintain undetectable BCR–ABL1 transcript levels for at least 2 years remain disease-free after the withdrawal of treatment. Here we characterize ABL001 (asciminib), a potent and selective allosteric ABL1 inhibitor that is undergoing clinical development testing in patients with CML and Philadelphia chromosome-positive (Ph+) acute lymphoblastic leukaemia. In contrast to catalytic-site ABL1 kinase inhibitors, ABL001 binds to the myristoyl pocket of ABL1 and induces the formation of an inactive kinase conformation. ABL001 and second-generation catalytic inhibitors have similar cellular potencies but distinct patterns of resistance mutations, with genetic barcoding studies revealing pre-existing clonal populations with no shared resistance between ABL001 and the catalytic inhibitor nilotinib. Consistent with this profile, acquired resistance was observed with single-agent therapy in mice; however, the combination of ABL001 and nilotinib led to complete disease control and eradicated CML xenograft tumours without recurrence after the cessation of treatment.