Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Anastasia K. Yocum is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Anastasia K. Yocum.


Cancer Cell | 2011

Mechanistic Rationale for Inhibition of Poly(ADP-Ribose) Polymerase in ETS Gene Fusion-Positive Prostate Cancer

J. Chad Brenner; Bushra Ateeq; Yong Li; Anastasia K. Yocum; Qi Cao; Irfan A. Asangani; Sonam Patel; Xiaoju Wang; Hallie Liang; Jindan Yu; Nallasivam Palanisamy; Javed Siddiqui; Wei Yan; Xuhong Cao; Rohit Mehra; Aaron Sabolch; Venkatesha Basrur; Robert J. Lonigro; Jun Yang; Scott A. Tomlins; Christopher A. Maher; Kojo S.J. Elenitoba-Johnson; Maha Hussain; Nora M. Navone; Kenneth J. Pienta; Sooryanarayana Varambally; Felix Y. Feng; Arul M. Chinnaiyan

Recurrent fusions of ETS genes are considered driving mutations in a diverse array of cancers, including Ewings sarcoma, acute myeloid leukemia, and prostate cancer. We investigate the mechanisms by which ETS fusions mediate their effects, and find that the product of the predominant ETS gene fusion, TMPRSS2:ERG, interacts in a DNA-independent manner with the enzyme poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase 1 (PARP1) and the catalytic subunit of DNA protein kinase (DNA-PKcs). ETS gene-mediated transcription and cell invasion require PARP1 and DNA-PKcs expression and activity. Importantly, pharmacological inhibition of PARP1 inhibits ETS-positive, but not ETS-negative, prostate cancer xenograft growth. Finally, overexpression of the TMPRSS2:ERG fusion induces DNA damage, which is potentiated by PARP1 inhibition in a manner similar to that of BRCA1/2 deficiency.


Briefings in Functional Genomics and Proteomics | 2009

Current affairs in quantitative targeted proteomics: multiple reaction monitoring–mass spectrometry

Anastasia K. Yocum; Arul M. Chinnaiyan

Quantitative targeted proteomics has recently taken front stage in the proteomics community. Centered on multiple reaction monitoring-mass spectrometry (MRM-MS) methodologies, quantitative targeted proteomics is being used in the verification of global proteomics data, the discovery of lower abundance proteins, protein post-translational modifications, discrimination of select highly homologous protein isoforms and as the final step in biomarker discovery. An older methodology utilized with small molecule analysis, the proteomics community is making great technological strides to develop MRM-MS as the next method to address previously challenging issues in global proteomics experimentation, namely dynamic range, identification of post-translational modifications, sensitivity and selectivity of measurement which will undoubtedly further biomedical knowledge. This brief review will provide a general introduction of MRM-MS and highlight its novel application for targeted quantitative proteomic experimentations.


Cancer Discovery | 2011

Characterization of KRAS Rearrangements in Metastatic Prostate Cancer

Xiaosong Wang; Sunita Shankar; Saravana M. Dhanasekaran; Bushra Ateeq; Atsuo T. Sasaki; Xiaojun Jing; Dan R. Robinson; Qi Cao; John R. Prensner; Anastasia K. Yocum; Rui Wang; Daniel F. Fries; Bo Han; Irfan A. Asangani; Xuhong Cao; Yong Li; Gilbert S. Omenn; Dorothee Pflueger; Anuradha Gopalan; Victor E. Reuter; Emily Rose Kahoud; Lewis C. Cantley; Mark A. Rubin; Nallasivam Palanisamy; Sooryanarayana Varambally; Arul M. Chinnaiyan

UNLABELLED Using an integrative genomics approach called amplification breakpoint ranking and assembly analysis, we nominated KRAS as a gene fusion with the ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme UBE2L3 in the DU145 cell line, originally derived from prostate cancer metastasis to the brain. Interestingly, analysis of tissues revealed that 2 of 62 metastatic prostate cancers harbored aberrations at the KRAS locus. In DU145 cells, UBE2L3-KRAS produces a fusion protein, a specific knockdown of which attenuates cell invasion and xenograft growth. Ectopic expression of the UBE2L3-KRAS fusion protein exhibits transforming activity in NIH 3T3 fibroblasts and RWPE prostate epithelial cells in vitro and in vivo. In NIH 3T3 cells, UBE2L3-KRAS attenuates MEK/ERK signaling, commonly engaged by oncogenic mutant KRAS, and instead signals via AKT and p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathways. This is the first report of a gene fusion involving the Ras family, suggesting that this aberration may drive metastatic progression in a rare subset of prostate cancers. SIGNIFICANCE This is the first description of an oncogenic gene fusion of KRAS, one of the most studied proto-oncogenes. KRAS rearrangement may represent the driving mutation in a rare subset of metastatic prostate cancers, emphasizing the importance of RAS-RAF-MAPK signaling in this disease.


Nature Medicine | 2015

Targeting the MLL complex in castration resistant prostate cancer

Rohit Malik; Amjad P. Khan; Irfan A. Asangani; Marcin Cieślik; John R. Prensner; Xiaoju Wang; Matthew K. Iyer; Xia Jiang; Dmitry Borkin; June Escara-Wilke; Rachell Stender; Yi-Mi Wu; Yashar S. Niknafs; Xiaojun Jing; Yuanyuan Qiao; Nallasivam Palanisamy; Lakshmi P. Kunju; Pranathi Meda Krishnamurthy; Anastasia K. Yocum; Dattatreya Mellacheruvu; Alexey I. Nesvizhskii; Xuhong Cao; Saravana M. Dhanasekaran; Felix Y. Feng; Jolanta Grembecka; Tomasz Cierpicki; Arul M. Chinnaiyan

Resistance to androgen deprivation therapies and increased androgen receptor (AR) activity are major drivers of castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC). Although prior work has focused on targeting AR directly, co-activators of AR signaling, which may represent new therapeutic targets, are relatively underexplored. Here we demonstrate that the mixed-lineage leukemia protein (MLL) complex, a well-known driver of MLL fusion–positive leukemia, acts as a co-activator of AR signaling. AR directly interacts with the MLL complex via the menin–MLL subunit. Menin expression is higher in CRPC than in both hormone-naive prostate cancer and benign prostate tissue, and high menin expression correlates with poor overall survival of individuals diagnosed with prostate cancer. Treatment with a small-molecule inhibitor of menin–MLL interaction blocks AR signaling and inhibits the growth of castration-resistant tumors in vivo in mice. Taken together, this work identifies the MLL complex as a crucial co-activator of AR and a potential therapeutic target in advanced prostate cancer.


Nature Communications | 2014

The central role of EED in the orchestration of polycomb group complexes

Qi Cao; Xiaoju Wang; Meng Zhao; Rendong Yang; Rohit Malik; Yuanyuan Qiao; Anton Poliakov; Anastasia K. Yocum; Yong-Yong Li; Wei-Wei Chen; Xuhong Cao; Xia Jiang; Arun Dahiya; Clair Harris; Felix Y. Feng; Sundeep Kalantry; Zhaohui S. Qin; Saravana M. Dhanasekaran; Arul M. Chinnaiyan

Polycomb Repressive Complexes 1 and 2 (PRC1 and 2) play a critical role in the epigenetic regulation of transcription during cellular differentiation, stem cell pluripotency, and neoplastic progression. Here we show that the Polycomb Group protein EED, a core component of PRC2, physically interacts with and functions as part of PRC1. Components of PRC1 and PRC2 compete for EED binding. EED functions to recruit PRC1 to H3K27me3 loci and enhances PRC1 mediated H2A ubiquitin E3 ligase activity. Taken together, we suggest an integral role for EED as an epigenetic exchange factor coordinating the activities of PRC1 and 2.


Proteomics | 2011

Abacus: A computational tool for extracting and pre-processing spectral count data for label-free quantitative proteomic analysis

Damian Fermin; Venkatesha Basrur; Anastasia K. Yocum; Alexey I. Nesvizhskii

We describe Abacus, a computational tool for extracting spectral counts from MS/MS data sets. The program aggregates data from multiple experiments, adjusts spectral counts to accurately account for peptides shared across multiple proteins, and performs common normalization steps. It can also output the spectral count data at the gene level, thus simplifying the integration and comparison between gene and protein expression data. Abacus is compatible with the widely used Trans‐Proteomic Pipeline suite of tools and comes with a graphical user interface making it easy to interact with the program. The main aim of Abacus is to streamline the analysis of spectral count data by providing an automated, easy to use solution for extracting this information from proteomic data sets for subsequent, more sophisticated statistical analysis.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2009

Comparison of MS 2-Only, MSA, and MS 2/MS 3 methodologies for phosphopeptide identification

Peter J. Ulintz; Anastasia K. Yocum; Bernd Bodenmiller; Ruedi Aebersold; Philip C. Andrews; Alexey I. Nesvizhskii

Current mass spectrometers provide a number of alternative methodologies for producing tandem mass spectra specifically for phosphopeptide analysis. In particular, generation of MS(3) spectra in a data-dependent manner upon detection of the neutral loss of a phosphoric acid in MS(2) spectra is a popular technique for circumventing the problem of poor phosphopeptide backbone fragmentation. The newer Multistage Activation method provides another option. Both these strategies require additional cycle time on the instrument and therefore reduce the number of spectra that can be measured in the same amount of time. Additional informatics is often required to make most efficient use of the additional information provided by these spectra as well. This work presents a comparison of several commonly used mass spectrometry methods for the study of phosphopeptide-enriched samples: an MS(2)-only method, a Multistage Activation method, and an MS(2)/MS(3) data-dependent neutral loss method. Several strategies for dealing effectively with the resulting MS(3) data in the latter approach are also presented and compared. The overall goal is to infer whether any one methodology performs significantly better than another for identifying phosphopeptides. On data presented here, the Multistage Activation methodology is demonstrated to perform optimally and does not result in significant loss of unique peptide identifications.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2008

Coupled Global and Targeted Proteomics of Human Embryonic Stem Cells during Induced Differentiation

Anastasia K. Yocum; Theresa E. Gratsch; N.S. Leff; John R. Strahler; Christie L. Hunter; Angela K. Walker; George Michailidis; Gilbert S. Omenn; K. Sue O'Shea; Philip C. Andrews

Elucidating the complex combinations of growth factors and signaling molecules that maintain pluripotency or, alternatively, promote the controlled differentiation of human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) has important implications for the fundamental understanding of human development, devising cell replacement therapies, and cancer cell biology. hESCs are commonly grown on irradiated mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) or in conditioned medium from MEFs. These culture conditions interfere with many experimental conclusions and limit the ability to perform conclusive proteomics studies. The current investigation avoided the use of MEFs or MEF-conditioned medium for hESC culture, allowing global proteomics analysis without these confounding conditions, and elucidated neural cell-specific signaling pathways involved in noggin-induced hESC differentiation. Based on these analyses, we propose the following early markers of hESC neural differentiation: collapsin response mediator proteins 2 and 4 and the nuclear autoantigenic sperm protein as a marker of pluripotent hESCs. We then developed a directed mass spectrometry assay using multiple reaction monitoring (MRM) to identify and quantify these markers and in addition the epidermal ectoderm marker cytokeratin-8. Analysis of global proteomics, quantitative RT-PCR, and MRM data led to testing the isoform interference hypothesis where redundant peptides dilute quantification measurements of homologous proteins. These results show that targeted MRM analysis on non-redundant peptides provides more exact quantification of homologous proteins. This study describes the facile transition from discovery proteomics to targeted MRM analysis and allowed us to identify and verify several potential biomarkers for hESCs during noggin-induced neural and BMP4-induced epidermal ectoderm differentiation.


Disease Markers | 2010

Alternative splice variants, a new class of protein cancer biomarker candidates: Findings in pancreatic cancer and breast cancer with systems biology implications

Gilbert S. Omenn; Anastasia K. Yocum; Rajasree Menon

Alternative splicing plays an important role in protein diversity without increasing genome size. Earlier thought to be uncommon, splicing appears to affect the majority of genes. Alternative splice variants have been detected at the mRNA level in many diseases. We have designed and demonstrated a discovery pipeline for alternative splice variant (ASV) proteins from tandem MS/MS datasets. We created a modified ECgene database with entries from exhaustive three-frame translation of Ensembl transcripts and gene models from ECgene, with periodic updates. The human database has 14 million entries; the mouse database, 10 million entries. We match MS/MS findings against these potential translation products to identify and quantify known and novel ASVs. In this review, we summarize findings and systems biology implications of biomarker candidates from a mouse model of human pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma [28] and a mouse model of human Her2/neu-induced breast cancer [27]. The same approach is being applied to human tumors, plasma, and cell line studies of other cancers.


Nature Communications | 2014

TRIP13 promotes error-prone nonhomologous end joining and induces chemoresistance in head and neck cancer

Rajat Banerjee; Nickole Russo; Min Liu; Venkatesha Basrur; Emily Bellile; Nallasivam Palanisamy; Christina Springstead Scanlon; Elizabeth Van Tubergen; Ronald Inglehart; Tarek Metwally; Ram Shankar Mani; Anastasia K. Yocum; Mukesh K. Nyati; Rogerio M. Castilho; Sooryanarayana Varambally; Arul M. Chinnaiyan; Nisha J. D’Silva

Head and neck cancer (SCCHN) is a common, aggressive, treatment-resistant cancer with a high recurrence rate and mortality, but the mechanism of treatment-resistance remains unclear. Here we describe a mechanism where the AAA-ATPase TRIP13 promotes treatment-resistance. Overexpression of TRIP13 in non-malignant cells results in malignant transformation. High expression of TRIP13 in SCCHN leads to aggressive, treatment-resistant tumors and enhanced repair of DNA damage. Using mass spectrometry, we identify DNA-PKcs complex proteins that mediate non homologous end joining (NHEJ), as TRIP13 binding partners. Using repair-deficient reporter systems, we show that TRIP13 promotes NHEJ, even when homologous recombination is intact. Importantly, overexpression of TRIP13 sensitizes SCCHN to an inhibitor of DNA-PKcs. Thus, this study defines a new mechanism of treatment resistance in SCCHN and underscores the importance of targeting NHEJ to overcome treatment failure in SCCHN and potentially in other cancers that overexpress TRIP13.

Collaboration


Dive into the Anastasia K. Yocum's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Xuhong Cao

University of Michigan

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sooryanarayana Varambally

University of Alabama at Birmingham

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge