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Dive into the research topics where Anders M. Lindroth is active.

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Featured researches published by Anders M. Lindroth.


Nature | 2012

Driver mutations in histone H3.3 and chromatin remodelling genes in paediatric glioblastoma

Jeremy Schwartzentruber; Andrey Korshunov; Xiao Yang Liu; David T. W. Jones; Elke Pfaff; Karine Jacob; Dominik Sturm; Adam M. Fontebasso; Dong Anh Khuong Quang; Martje Tönjes; Volker Hovestadt; Steffen Albrecht; Marcel Kool; André Nantel; Carolin Konermann; Anders M. Lindroth; Natalie Jäger; Tobias Rausch; Marina Ryzhova; Jan O. Korbel; Thomas Hielscher; Péter Hauser; Miklós Garami; Almos Klekner; László Bognár; Martin Ebinger; Martin U. Schuhmann; Wolfram Scheurlen; Arnulf Pekrun; Michael C. Frühwald

Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is a lethal brain tumour in adults and children. However, DNA copy number and gene expression signatures indicate differences between adult and paediatric cases. To explore the genetic events underlying this distinction, we sequenced the exomes of 48 paediatric GBM samples. Somatic mutations in the H3.3-ATRX-DAXX chromatin remodelling pathway were identified in 44% of tumours (21/48). Recurrent mutations in H3F3A, which encodes the replication-independent histone 3 variant H3.3, were observed in 31% of tumours, and led to amino acid substitutions at two critical positions within the histone tail (K27M, G34R/G34V) involved in key regulatory post-translational modifications. Mutations in ATRX (α-thalassaemia/mental retardation syndrome X-linked) and DAXX (death-domain associated protein), encoding two subunits of a chromatin remodelling complex required for H3.3 incorporation at pericentric heterochromatin and telomeres, were identified in 31% of samples overall, and in 100% of tumours harbouring a G34R or G34V H3.3 mutation. Somatic TP53 mutations were identified in 54% of all cases, and in 86% of samples with H3F3A and/or ATRX mutations. Screening of a large cohort of gliomas of various grades and histologies (n = 784) showed H3F3A mutations to be specific to GBM and highly prevalent in children and young adults. Furthermore, the presence of H3F3A/ATRX-DAXX/TP53 mutations was strongly associated with alternative lengthening of telomeres and specific gene expression profiles. This is, to our knowledge, the first report to highlight recurrent mutations in a regulatory histone in humans, and our data suggest that defects of the chromatin architecture underlie paediatric and young adult GBM pathogenesis.


Cancer Cell | 2012

Hotspot Mutations in H3F3A and IDH1 Define Distinct Epigenetic and Biological Subgroups of Glioblastoma

Dominik Sturm; Hendrik Witt; Volker Hovestadt; Dong Anh Khuong-Quang; David T. W. Jones; Carolin Konermann; Elke Pfaff; Martje Tönjes; Martin Sill; Sebastian Bender; Marcel Kool; Marc Zapatka; Natalia Becker; Manuela Zucknick; Thomas Hielscher; Xiao Yang Liu; Adam M. Fontebasso; Marina Ryzhova; Steffen Albrecht; Karine Jacob; Marietta Wolter; Martin Ebinger; Martin U. Schuhmann; Timothy Van Meter; Michael C. Frühwald; Holger Hauch; Arnulf Pekrun; Bernhard Radlwimmer; Tim Niehues; Gregor Von Komorowski

Glioblastoma (GBM) is a brain tumor that carries a dismal prognosis and displays considerable heterogeneity. We have recently identified recurrent H3F3A mutations affecting two critical amino acids (K27 and G34) of histone H3.3 in one-third of pediatric GBM. Here, we show that each H3F3A mutation defines an epigenetic subgroup of GBM with a distinct global methylation pattern, and that they are mutually exclusive with IDH1 mutations, which characterize a third mutation-defined subgroup. Three further epigenetic subgroups were enriched for hallmark genetic events of adult GBM and/or established transcriptomic signatures. We also demonstrate that the two H3F3A mutations give rise to GBMs in separate anatomic compartments, with differential regulation of transcription factors OLIG1, OLIG2, and FOXG1, possibly reflecting different cellular origins.


Cancer Cell | 2013

Reduced H3K27me3 and DNA Hypomethylation Are Major Drivers of Gene Expression in K27M Mutant Pediatric High-Grade Gliomas

Sebastian Bender; Yujie Tang; Anders M. Lindroth; Volker Hovestadt; David T. W. Jones; Marcel Kool; Marc Zapatka; Paul A. Northcott; Dominik Sturm; Wei Wang; Bernhard Radlwimmer; Jonas W. Højfeldt; Nathalene Truffaux; David Castel; Simone Schubert; Marina Ryzhova; Huriye Şeker-Cin; Jan Gronych; Pascal-David Johann; Sebastian Stark; Jochen Meyer; Till Milde; Martin U. Schuhmann; Martin Ebinger; Camelia Maria Monoranu; Anitha Ponnuswami; Spenser Chen; Chris Jones; Olaf Witt; V. Peter Collins

Two recurrent mutations, K27M and G34R/V, within histone variant H3.3 were recently identified in ∼50% of pHGGs. Both mutations define clinically and biologically distinct subgroups of pHGGs. Here, we provide further insight about the dominant-negative effect of K27M mutant H3.3, leading to a global reduction of the repressive histone mark H3K27me3. We demonstrate that this is caused by aberrant recruitment of the PRC2 complex to K27M mutant H3.3 and enzymatic inhibition of the H3K27me3-establishing methyltransferase EZH2. By performing chromatin immunoprecipitation followed by next-generation sequencing and whole-genome bisulfite sequencing in primary pHGGs, we show that reduced H3K27me3 levels and DNA hypomethylation act in concert to activate gene expression in K27M mutant pHGGs.


Nature Medicine | 2013

BCAT1 promotes cell proliferation through amino acid catabolism in gliomas carrying wild-type IDH1

Martje Tönjes; Sebastian Barbus; Yoon Jung Park; Wei Wang; Magdalena Schlotter; Anders M. Lindroth; Sabrina Pleier; Alfa H.C. Bai; Daniela Karra; Rosario M. Piro; Jörg Felsberg; Adele Addington; Dieter Lemke; Irene Weibrecht; Volker Hovestadt; Claudio G. Rolli; Benito Campos; Sevin Turcan; Dominik Sturm; Hendrik Witt; Timothy A. Chan; Christel Herold-Mende; Ralf Kemkemer; Rainer König; Kathrin V. Schmidt; William Edmund Hull; Stefan M. Pfister; Manfred Jugold; Susan M. Hutson; Christoph Plass

Here we show that glioblastoma express high levels of branched-chain amino acid transaminase 1 (BCAT1), the enzyme that initiates the catabolism of branched-chain amino acids (BCAAs). Expression of BCAT1 was exclusive to tumors carrying wild-type isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 (IDH1) and IDH2 genes and was highly correlated with methylation patterns in the BCAT1 promoter region. BCAT1 expression was dependent on the concentration of α-ketoglutarate substrate in glioma cell lines and could be suppressed by ectopic overexpression of mutant IDH1 in immortalized human astrocytes, providing a link between IDH1 function and BCAT1 expression. Suppression of BCAT1 in glioma cell lines blocked the excretion of glutamate and led to reduced proliferation and invasiveness in vitro, as well as significant decreases in tumor growth in a glioblastoma xenograft model. These findings suggest a central role for BCAT1 in glioma pathogenesis, making BCAT1 and BCAA metabolism attractive targets for the development of targeted therapeutic approaches to treat patients with glioblastoma.


Embo Molecular Medicine | 2013

Alterations in cardiac DNA methylation in human dilated cardiomyopathy.

Jan Haas; Karen Frese; Yoon Jung Park; Andreas Keller; Britta Vogel; Anders M. Lindroth; Dieter Weichenhan; Jennifer Franke; Simon Fischer; Andrea Bauer; Sabine Marquart; Farbod Sedaghat-Hamedani; Elham Kayvanpour; Doreen Köhler; Nadine M. Wolf; Sarah Hassel; Rouven Nietsch; Thomas Wieland; Philipp Ehlermann; Jobst Hendrik Schultz; Andreas Dösch; Derliz Mereles; Stefan E. Hardt; Johannes Backs; Jörg D. Hoheisel; Christoph Plass; Hugo A. Katus; Benjamin Meder

Dilated cardiomyopathies (DCM) show remarkable variability in their age of onset, phenotypic presentation, and clinical course. Hence, disease mechanisms must exist that modify the occurrence and progression of DCM, either by genetic or epigenetic factors that may interact with environmental stimuli. In the present study, we examined genome‐wide cardiac DNA methylation in patients with idiopathic DCM and controls. We detected methylation differences in pathways related to heart disease, but also in genes with yet unknown function in DCM or heart failure, namely Lymphocyte antigen 75 (LY75), Tyrosine kinase‐type cell surface receptor HER3 (ERBB3), Homeobox B13 (HOXB13) and Adenosine receptor A2A (ADORA2A). Mass‐spectrometric analysis and bisulphite‐sequencing enabled confirmation of the observed DNA methylation changes in independent cohorts. Aberrant DNA methylation in DCM patients was associated with significant changes in LY75 and ADORA2A mRNA expression, but not in ERBB3 and HOXB13. In vivo studies of orthologous ly75 and adora2a in zebrafish demonstrate a functional role of these genes in adaptive or maladaptive pathways in heart failure.


Molecular Cell | 2014

Long Noncoding RNA TARID Directs Demethylation and Activation of the Tumor Suppressor TCF21 via GADD45A

Khelifa Arab; Yoon Jung Park; Anders M. Lindroth; Andrea Schäfer; Christopher C. Oakes; Dieter Weichenhan; Annekatrin Lukanova; Eva Lundin; Angela Risch; Michael Meister; Hendrik Dienemann; Gerhard Dyckhoff; Christel Herold-Mende; Ingrid Grummt; Christof Niehrs; Christoph Plass

DNA methylation is a dynamic and reversible process that governs gene expression during development and disease. Several examples of active DNA demethylation have been documented, involving genome-wide and gene-specific DNA demethylation. How demethylating enzymes are targeted to specific genomic loci remains largely unknown. We show that an antisense lncRNA, termed TARID (for TCF21 antisense RNA inducing demethylation), activates TCF21 expression by inducing promoter demethylation. TARID interacts with both the TCF21 promoter and GADD45A (growth arrest and DNA-damage-inducible, alpha), a regulator of DNA demethylation. GADD45A in turn recruits thymine-DNA glycosylase for base excision repair-mediated demethylation involving oxidation of 5-methylcytosine to 5-hydroxymethylcytosine in the TCF21 promoter by ten-eleven translocation methylcytosine dioxygenase proteins. The results reveal a function of lncRNAs, serving as a genomic address label for GADD45A-mediated demethylation of specific target genes.


PLOS Genetics | 2008

Antagonism between DNA and H3K27 Methylation at the Imprinted Rasgrf1 Locus

Anders M. Lindroth; Yoon Jung Park; Chelsea M. McLean; Gregoriy A. Dokshin; Jenna Persson; Herry Herman; Diego Pasini; Xavier Miró; Mary E. Donohoe; Jeannie T. Lee; Kristian Helin; Paul D. Soloway

At the imprinted Rasgrf1 locus in mouse, a cis-acting sequence controls DNA methylation at a differentially methylated domain (DMD). While characterizing epigenetic marks over the DMD, we observed that DNA and H3K27 trimethylation are mutually exclusive, with DNA and H3K27 methylation limited to the paternal and maternal sequences, respectively. The mutual exclusion arises because one mark prevents placement of the other. We demonstrated this in five ways: using 5-azacytidine treatments and mutations at the endogenous locus that disrupt DNA methylation; using a transgenic model in which the maternal DMD inappropriately acquired DNA methylation; and by analyzing materials from cells and embryos lacking SUZ12 and YY1. SUZ12 is part of the PRC2 complex, which is needed for placing H3K27me3, and YY1 recruits PRC2 to sites of action. Results from each experimental system consistently demonstrated antagonism between H3K27me3 and DNA methylation. When DNA methylation was lost, H3K27me3 encroached into sites where it had not been before; inappropriate acquisition of DNA methylation excluded normal placement of H3K27me3, and loss of factors needed for H3K27 methylation enabled DNA methylation to appear where it had been excluded. These data reveal the previously unknown antagonism between H3K27 and DNA methylation and identify a means by which epigenetic states may change during disease and development.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2005

Rasgrf1 imprinting is regulated by a CTCF-dependent methylation-sensitive enhancer blocker.

Bong June Yoon; Herry Herman; Benjamin Hu; Yoon Jung Park; Anders M. Lindroth; Adam C. Bell; Adam G. West; Yanjie Chang; Aimee Stablewski; Jessica C. Piel; Dmitri Loukinov; Victor Lobanenkov; Paul D. Soloway

ABSTRACT Imprinted methylation of the paternal Rasgrf1 allele in mice occurs at a differentially methylated domain (DMD) 30 kbp 5′ of the promoter. A repeated sequence 3′ of the DMD regulates imprinted methylation, which is required for imprinted expression. Here we identify the mechanism by which methylation controls imprinting. The DMD is an enhancer blocker that binds CTCF in a methylation-sensitive manner. CTCF bound to the unmethylated maternal allele silences expression. CTCF binding to the paternal allele is prevented by repeat-mediated methylation, allowing expression. Optimal in vitro enhancer-blocking activity requires CTCF binding sites. The enhancer blocker can be bypassed in vivo and imprinting abolished by placing an extra enhancer proximal to the promoter. Together, the repeats and the DMD constitute a binary switch that regulates Rasgrf1 imprinting.


Nature Genetics | 2017

DNMT and HDAC inhibitors induce cryptic transcription start sites encoded in long terminal repeats

David Brocks; Christopher R. Schmidt; Michael Daskalakis; Hyo Sik Jang; Nakul M. Shah; Daofeng Li; Jing Li; Bo Zhang; Yiran Hou; Sara Laudato; Daniel B. Lipka; Johanna Schott; Holger Bierhoff; Yassen Assenov; Monika Helf; Alzbeta Ressnerova; Saiful Islam; Anders M. Lindroth; Simon Haas; Marieke Essers; Charles D. Imbusch; Benedikt Brors; Ina Oehme; Olaf Witt; Michael Lübbert; Jan-Philipp Mallm; Karsten Rippe; Rainer Will; Dieter Weichenhan; Georg Stoecklin

Several mechanisms of action have been proposed for DNA methyltransferase and histone deacetylase inhibitors (DNMTi and HDACi), primarily based on candidate-gene approaches. However, less is known about their genome-wide transcriptional and epigenomic consequences. By mapping global transcription start site (TSS) and chromatin dynamics, we observed the cryptic transcription of thousands of treatment-induced non-annotated TSSs (TINATs) following DNMTi and HDACi treatment. The resulting transcripts frequently splice into protein-coding exons and encode truncated or chimeric ORFs translated into products with predicted abnormal or immunogenic functions. TINAT transcription after DNMTi treatment coincided with DNA hypomethylation and gain of classical promoter histone marks, while HDACi specifically induced a subset of TINATs in association with H2AK9ac, H3K14ac, and H3K23ac. Despite this mechanistic difference, both inhibitors convergently induced transcription from identical sites, as we found TINATs to be encoded in solitary long terminal repeats of the ERV9/LTR12 family, which are epigenetically repressed in virtually all normal cells.


BMC Genomics | 2014

Relationship between genome and epigenome--challenges and requirements for future research.

Geneviève Almouzni; Lucia Altucci; Bruno Amati; Neil Ashley; David C. Baulcombe; Nathalie Beaujean; Christoph Bock; Erik Bongcam-Rudloff; Jean Bousquet; Sigurd Braun; Brigitte Bressac-de Paillerets; M.J.G. Bussemakers; Laura Clarke; Ana Conesa; Xavier Estivill; Alireza Fazeli; Neza Grgurevic; Ivo Gut; Bastiaan T. Heijmans; Sylvie Hermouet; Jeanine J. Houwing-Duistermaat; Ilaria Iacobucci; Janez Ilaš; Raju Kandimalla; Susanne Krauss-Etschmann; Paul Lasko; Soeren Lehmann; Anders M. Lindroth; Gregor Majdic; Eric Marcotte

Understanding the links between genetic, epigenetic and non-genetic factors throughout the lifespan and across generations and their role in disease susceptibility and disease progression offer entirely new avenues and solutions to major problems in our society. To overcome the numerous challenges, we have come up with nine major conclusions to set the vision for future policies and research agendas at the European level.

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Christoph Plass

German Cancer Research Center

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Dominik Sturm

German Cancer Research Center

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Volker Hovestadt

German Cancer Research Center

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David T. W. Jones

German Cancer Research Center

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Marcel Kool

German Cancer Research Center

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Dieter Weichenhan

German Cancer Research Center

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Marc Zapatka

German Cancer Research Center

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Marina Ryzhova

German Cancer Research Center

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