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Dive into the research topics where Alicia M. Cole is active.

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Featured researches published by Alicia M. Cole.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2006

Rapid loss of intestinal crypts upon conditional deletion of the Wnt/Tcf-4 target gene c-Myc.

Vanesa Muncan; Owen J. Sansom; Leon Tertoolen; Toby J. Phesse; Harry Begthel; Elena Sancho; Alicia M. Cole; Alex Gregorieff; Ignacio Moreno de Alboran; Hans Clevers; Alan Richard Clarke

ABSTRACT Inhibition of the mutationally activated Wnt cascade in colorectal cancer cell lines induces a rapid G1 arrest and subsequent differentiation. This arrest can be overcome by maintaining expression of a single Tcf4 target gene, the proto-oncogene c-Myc. Since colorectal cancer cells share many molecular characteristics with proliferative crypt progenitors, we have assessed the physiological role of c-Myc in adult crypts by conditional gene deletion. c-Myc-deficient crypts are lost within weeks and replaced by c-Myc-proficient crypts through a fission process of crypts that have escaped gene deletion. Although c-Myc−/− crypt cells remain in the cell cycle, they are on average much smaller than wild-type cells, cycle slower, and divide at a smaller cell size. c-Myc appears essential for crypt progenitor cells to provide the necessary biosynthetic capacity to successfully progress through the cell cycle.


Nature Cell Biology | 2015

Hepatic progenitor cells of biliary origin with liver repopulation capacity

Wei-Yu Lu; Tom Bird; Luke Boulter; Atsunori Tsuchiya; Alicia M. Cole; Trevor Hay; Rachel Guest; Davina Wojtacha; Tak Yung Man; Alison C. MacKinnon; Rachel A. Ridgway; Timothy Kendall; Michael Williams; Thomas Jamieson; Alex Raven; David C. Hay; John P. Iredale; Alan Richard Clarke; Owen J. Sansom; Stuart J. Forbes

Hepatocytes and cholangiocytes self-renew following liver injury. Following severe injury hepatocytes are increasingly senescent, but whether hepatic progenitor cells (HPCs) then contribute to liver regeneration is unclear. Here, we describe a mouse model where the E3 ubiquitin ligase Mdm2 is inducibly deleted in more than 98% of hepatocytes, causing apoptosis, necrosis and senescence with nearly all hepatocytes expressing p21. This results in florid HPC activation, which is necessary for survival, followed by complete, functional liver reconstitution. HPCs isolated from genetically normal mice, using cell surface markers, were highly expandable and phenotypically stable in vitro. These HPCs were transplanted into adult mouse livers where hepatocyte Mdm2 was repeatedly deleted, creating a non-competitive repopulation assay. Transplanted HPCs contributed significantly to restoration of liver parenchyma, regenerating hepatocytes and biliary epithelia, highlighting their in vivo lineage potency. HPCs are therefore a potential future alternative to hepatocyte or liver transplantation for liver disease.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006

Loss of Apc allows phenotypic manifestation of the transforming properties of an endogenous K-ras oncogene in vivo

Owen J. Sansom; Valerie Meniel; Julie A. Wilkins; Alicia M. Cole; Karin A. Oien; Victoria Marsh; Thomas Jamieson; Carmen Guerra; Gabrielle H. Ashton; Mariano Barbacid; Alan Richard Clarke

Oncogenic mutations in the K-ras gene occur in ≈50% of human colorectal cancers. However, the precise role that K-ras oncogenes play in tumor formation is still unclear. To address this issue, we have conditionally expressed an oncogenic K-rasV12 allele in the small intestine of adult mice either alone or in the context of Apc deficiency. We found that expression of K-rasV12 does not affect normal intestinal homeostasis or the immediate phenotypes associated with Apc deficiency. Mechanistically we failed to find activation of the Raf/MEK/ERK pathway, which may be a consequence of the up-regulation of a number of negative feedback loops. However, K-rasV12 expression accelerates intestinal tumorigenesis and confers invasive properties after Apc loss over the long term. In renal epithelium, expression of the oncogenic K-rasV12 allele in the absence of Apc induces the rapid development of renal carcinoma. These tumors, unlike those of intestinal origin, display activation of the Raf/MEK/ERK and Akt signaling pathways. Taken together, these data indicate that normal intestinal and kidney epithelium are resistant to malignant transformation by an endogenous K-ras oncogene. However, activation of K-rasV12 after Apc loss results in increased tumorigenesis with distinct kinetics. Whereas the effect of K-ras oncogenes in the intestine can been observed only after long latencies, they result in rapid carcinogenesis in the kidney epithelium. These data imply a window of opportunity for anti-K-ras therapies after tumor initiation in preventing tumor growth and invasion.


Cancer Research | 2010

Cyclin D2–Cyclin-Dependent Kinase 4/6 Is Required for Efficient Proliferation and Tumorigenesis following Apc Loss

Alicia M. Cole; Kevin Myant; Karen Ruth Reed; Rachel A. Ridgway; Dimitris Athineos; Gijs R. van den Brink; Vanesa Muncan; Hans Clevers; Alan Richard Clarke; Peter Sicinski; Owen J. Sansom

Inactivation of the Apc gene is recognized as the key early event in the development of sporadic colorectal cancer (CRC), where its loss leads to constitutive activation of β-catenin/T-cell factor 4 signaling and hence transcription of Wnt target genes such as c-Myc. Our and other previous studies have shown that although cyclin D1 is required for adenoma formation, it is not immediately upregulated following Apc loss within the intestine, suggesting that proliferation following acute Apc loss may be dependent on another D-type cyclin. In this study, we investigated the expression and functional relevance of cyclin D2 following Apc loss in the intestinal epithelium. Cyclin D2 is upregulated immediately following Apc loss, which corresponded with a significant increase in cyclin-dependent kinase 4 (CDK4) and hyperphosphorylated Rb levels. Deficiency of cyclin D2 resulted in a reduction in enterocyte proliferation and crypt size within Apc-deficient intestinal epithelium. Moreover, cyclin D2 dramatically reduced tumor growth and development in Apc(Min/+) mice. Importantly, cyclin D2 knockout did not affect proliferation of normal enterocytes, and furthermore, CDK4/6 inhibition also suppressed the proliferation of adenomatous cells and not normal cells from Apc(Min/+) mice. Taken together, these results indicate that cyclin D-CDK4/6 complexes are required for the efficient proliferation of cells with deregulated Wnt signaling, and inhibiting this complex may be an effective chemopreventative strategy in CRC.


Cell Death & Differentiation | 2014

Endogenous c-Myc is essential for p53-induced apoptosis in response to DNA damage in vivo

Toby J. Phesse; Kevin Myant; Alicia M. Cole; Rachel A. Ridgway; Helen B. Pearson; Vanesa Muncan; G R van den Brink; Karen H. Vousden; Rosalie C. Sears; L . T . Vassilev; Alan Richard Clarke; Owen J. Sansom

Recent studies have suggested that C-MYC may be an excellent therapeutic cancer target and a number of new agents targeting C-MYC are in preclinical development. Given most therapeutic regimes would combine C-MYC inhibition with genotoxic damage, it is important to assess the importance of C-MYC function for DNA damage signalling in vivo. In this study, we have conditionally deleted the c-Myc gene in the adult murine intestine and investigated the apoptotic response of intestinal enterocytes to DNA damage. Remarkably, c-Myc deletion completely abrogated the immediate wave of apoptosis following both ionizing irradiation and cisplatin treatment, recapitulating the phenotype of p53 deficiency in the intestine. Consistent with this, c-Myc-deficient intestinal enterocytes did not upregulate p53. Mechanistically, this was linked to an upregulation of the E3 Ubiquitin ligase Mdm2, which targets p53 for degradation in c-Myc-deficient intestinal enterocytes. Further, low level overexpression of c-Myc, which does not impact on basal levels of apoptosis, elicited sustained apoptosis in response to DNA damage, suggesting c-Myc activity acts as a crucial cell survival rheostat following DNA damage. We also identify the importance of MYC during DNA damage-induced apoptosis in several other tissues, including the thymus and spleen, using systemic deletion of c-Myc throughout the adult mouse. Together, we have elucidated for the first time in vivo an essential role for endogenous c-Myc in signalling DNA damage-induced apoptosis through the control of the p53 tumour suppressor protein.


Embo Molecular Medicine | 2010

p21 loss blocks senescence following Apc loss and provokes tumourigenesis in the renal but not the intestinal epithelium

Alicia M. Cole; Rachel A. Ridgway; Sahra Derkits; Lee Parry; Nick Barker; Hans Clevers; Alan Richard Clarke; Owen J. Sansom

Senescence has been implicated as an important mechanism of tumour suppression in a number of human malignancies, including colorectal cancer (CRC). However, we still have a relatively poor understanding of how the underlying mutations that occur in cancer cause senescence and its relevance in vivo. The Apc gene is mutated in approximately 80% of CRC as the initiating event, but rarely elsewhere. In this study we have examined the capacity of Apc loss to induce senescence in the intestinal epithelium compared to the renal epithelium. Within the renal epithelium, loss of Apc function led to an induction of senescence, however, bypassing senescence through combined Apc and p21 or Ink4A gene deletion rapidly initiated renal carcinoma. Within the intestinal epithelium, loss of Apc did not induce senescence. Moreover, combined Apc and p21 or Ink4A loss had no impact upon tumourigenesis. Taken together, these results show that Apc loss in vivo invokes a senescence program in a context‐dependent fashion, and implies senescence may play a key barrier to tumourigenesis in the kidney. However, in CRC, escape from senescence is likely to only be a barrier in cancers initiated by other mutations.


BMC Cancer | 2008

A limited role for p53 in modulating the immediate phenotype of Apc loss in the intestine

Karen Ruth Reed; Valerie Meniel; Victoria Marsh; Alicia M. Cole; Owen J. Sansom; Alan Richard Clarke

Backgroundp53 is an important tumour suppressor with a known role in the later stages of colorectal cancer, but its relevance to the early stages of neoplastic initiation remains somewhat unclear. Although p53-dependent regulation of Wnt signalling activity is known to occur, the importance of these regulatory mechanisms during the early stages of intestinal neoplasia has not been demonstrated.MethodsWe have conditionally deleted the Adenomatous Polyposis coli gene (Apc) from the adult murine intestine in wild type and p53 deficient environments and subsequently compared the phenotype and transcriptome profiles in both genotypes.ResultsExpression of p53 was shown to be elevated following the conditional deletion of Apc in the adult small intestine. Furthermore, p53 status was shown to impact on the transcription profile observed following Apc loss. A number of key Wnt pathway components and targets were altered in the p53 deficient environment. However, the aberrant phenotype observed following loss of Apc (rapid nuclear localisation of β-catenin, increased levels of DNA damage, nuclear atypia, perturbed cell death, proliferation, differentiation and migration) was not significantly altered by the absence of p53.Conclusionp53 related feedback mechanisms regulating Wnt signalling activity are present in the intestine, and become activated following loss of Apc. However, the physiological Wnt pathway regulation by p53 appears to be overwhelmed by Apc loss and consequently the activity of these regulatory mechanisms is not sufficient to modulate the immediate phenotypes seen following Apc loss. Thus we are able to provide an explanation to the apparent contradiction that, despite having a Wnt regulatory capacity, p53 loss is not associated with early lesion development.


Oncogene | 2015

Apc and p53 interaction in DNA damage and genomic instability in hepatocytes

Valerie Meniel; Matthias Megges; Madeleine A. Young; Alicia M. Cole; Owen J. Sansom; Alan Richard Clarke

Disruption of Apc (adenomatous polyposis coli) within hepatocytes activates Wnt signalling, perturbs differentiation and ultimately leads to neoplasia. Apc negatively regulates Wnt signalling but is also involved in organizing the cytoskeleton and may have a role in chromosome segregation. In vitro studies have implicated Apc in the control of genomic stability. However, the relevance of this data has been questioned in vivo as Apc is lost earlier than the onset of genomic instability. Here we analyse the relationship between immediate loss of Apc and the acquisition of genomic instability in hepatocytes. We used Cre-lox technology to inactivate Apc and in combination with p53 in vivo, to define the consequences of gene loss on cell cycle regulation, proliferation, death and aneuploidy. We show that, although Apc loss leads to increased proliferation, it also leads to increased apoptosis, the accumulation of p53, p21 and markers of double-strand breaks and DNA repair. Flow cytometry revealed an increased 4N DNA content, consistent with a G2 arrest. Levels of anaphase bridges were also elevated, implicating failed chromosome segregation. This was accompanied by an increase in centrosome number, which demonstrates a role for Apc in maintaining euploidy. To address the role of p53 in these processes, we analysed combined loss of Apc and p53, which led to a further increase in proliferation, cell death, DNA damages and repair and a bypass of G2 arrest than was observed with Apc loss. However, we observed only a marginal effect on anaphase bridges and centrosome number, which could be due to increased cell death. Our data therefore establishes, in an in vivo setting, that APC loss leads to a DNA damage signature and genomic instability in the liver and that additional loss of p53 leads to an increase in the DNA damage signal but not to an immediate increase in the genomic instability phenotype.


Science Translational Medicine | 2018

TGFβ inhibition restores a regenerative response in acute liver injury by suppressing paracrine senescence

Tom Bird; Miryam Müller; Luke Boulter; David F. Vincent; Rachel A. Ridgway; Elena Lopez-Guadamillas; Wei-Yu Lu; Thomas Jamieson; Olivier Govaere; Andrew D. Campbell; Sofia Ferreira-Gonzalez; Alicia M. Cole; Trevor Hay; Kenneth J. Simpson; William Clark; Ann Hedley; Mairi Clarke; Pauline Gentaz; Colin Nixon; Steven Bryce; Christos Kiourtis; Joep Sprangers; Robert J. B. Nibbs; Nico van Rooijen; Laurent Bartholin; Steven R. McGreal; Udayan Apte; Simon T. Barry; John P. Iredale; Alan Richard Clarke

Inhibiting acute injury–induced senescence mediated by TGFβ signaling in regenerative epithelium improves liver regeneration. Setting liver regeneration free The liver is an excellent model of organ regeneration; however, regeneration may fail in a normal liver after acute severe injury such as acetaminophen poisoning. Bird and colleagues now show that a process that prevents proliferation termed senescence, which is classically associated with aging and carcinogenesis, inhibits the liver’s regenerative cells after acute injury. This senescence can be spread from cell to cell by the signaling molecule transforming growth factor–β (TGFβ). When TGFβ signaling was blocked during acetaminophen poisoning in mice, senescence was impeded, regeneration accelerated, and mouse survival increased. Therefore, targeting senescence induced by acute tissue injury is an attractive therapeutic approach to improve regeneration. Liver injury results in rapid regeneration through hepatocyte proliferation and hypertrophy. However, after acute severe injury, such as acetaminophen poisoning, effective regeneration may fail. We investigated how senescence may underlie this regenerative failure. In human acute liver disease, and murine models, p21-dependent hepatocellular senescence was proportionate to disease severity and was associated with impaired regeneration. In an acetaminophen injury mouse model, a transcriptional signature associated with the induction of paracrine senescence was observed within 24 hours and was followed by one of impaired proliferation. In mouse genetic models of hepatocyte injury and senescence, we observed transmission of senescence to local uninjured hepatocytes. Spread of senescence depended on macrophage-derived transforming growth factor–β1 (TGFβ1) ligand. In acetaminophen poisoning, inhibition of TGFβ receptor 1 (TGFβR1) improved mouse survival. TGFβR1 inhibition reduced senescence and enhanced liver regeneration even when delivered beyond the therapeutic window for treating acetaminophen poisoning. This mechanism, in which injury-induced senescence impairs liver regeneration, is an attractive therapeutic target for developing treatments for acute liver failure.


Journal of Hepatology | 2009

2 A NOVEL INDUCIBLE GENETIC MURINE MODEL OF HEPATOCYTE SENESCENCE CAUSES A MASSIVE HEPATIC OVAL CELL RESPONSE AND COMPLETE HEPATOCYTE REPLACEMENT FROM ENDOGENOUS PROGENITOR CELLS

Tom Bird; Alicia M. Cole; Trevor Hay; John P. Iredale; Alan Richard Clarke; Owen J. Sansom; Stuart J. Forbes

Background and aims: In severe advanced liver disease it is increasingly recognised that hepatic progenitor cells (HPCs) are a major source of parenchymal regeneration but may also be a cellular source of liver cancers. Murine liver injury models eliciting HPC activation frequently demonstrate relatively small and heterogeneous activation of HPCs, together with simultaneous hepatocyte proliferation. While purified HPCs from such models have been shown in transplant models to repopulate injured liver the full repopulation potential of endogenous HPC remains unclear. In order to investigate the role of HPCs directly it is necessary to specifically inhibit hepatocyte proliferation. Mdm2 is a key inhibitor of the tumour suppressor gene p53. P53 activation results in cell cycle arrest, therefore hepatocyte specific Mdm2 knockout using Cre Lox technology provides an opportunity to investigate HPC mediated liver regeneration. Methods: Hepatocyte specific loss of Mdm2 was achieved by i.p. administration of β-naphthoflavone to AhCre+ Mdm2fl/fl mice. Immunohistochemical analysis was performed for p21, p53, and the HPC marker panCK. Cellular proliferation was assessed using Ki67 and BrdU label incorporation. Serum was analysed for LFTs. Results: Hepatocytes, but not other non parenchymal hepatic cells, are p53hi and p21hi following induction of Mdm2 loss by recombination. Loss of hepatocyte proliferation and massive expansion of p53low HPCs rapidly occurs. This results in the production of phenotypically normal p53low/p21low hepatocytes and the restoration of normal liver function. PanCK+ progenitor cell expansion is over three times greater than is seen in CDE diet induced HPC expansion (Mean±SEM; Mdm2 212± 27.48 versus CDE 60.89 ± 17.59 versus control 13.85± 0.82). No cancers or significant fibrosis are observed following complete replacement of the hepatic parenchyma during long term follow up. Conclusions: Mdm2 knockout induces hepatocyte senescence and induces massive expansion of p53low HPCs resulting in complete regeneration of the liver parenchyma in the absence of long term sequelae. This novel model permits detailed examination of HPC mediated regeneration and demonstrates the physiological potential of HPCs and highlights their therapeutic potential.

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Tom Bird

University of Edinburgh

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Luke Boulter

University of Edinburgh

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Hans Clevers

Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences

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Wei-Yu Lu

University of Edinburgh

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