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Dive into the research topics where Andrea E. Murmann is active.

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Featured researches published by Andrea E. Murmann.


Endocrine-related Cancer | 2010

The role of let-7 in cell differentiation and cancer

Benjamin Boyerinas; Sun Mi Park; Annika Hau; Andrea E. Murmann; Marcus E. Peter

MicroRNAs (miRNAs or miRs) are small noncoding RNAs capable of regulating gene expression at the translational level. Current evidence suggests that a significant portion of the human genome is regulated by microRNAs, and many reports have demonstrated that microRNA expression is deregulated in human cancer. The let-7 family of microRNAs, first discovered in Caenorhabditis elegans, is functionally conserved from worms to humans. The human let-7 family contains 13 members located on nine different chromosomes, and many human cancers have deregulated let-7 expression. A growing body of evidence suggests that restoration of let-7 expression may be a useful therapeutic option in cancers, where its expression has been lost. In this review, we discuss the role of let-7 in normal development and differentiation, and provide an overview of the relationship between deregulated let-7 expression and tumorigenesis. The regulation of let-7 expression, cancer-relevant let-7 targets, and the relationship between let-7 and drug sensitivity are highlighted.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2002

Molecular Ordering of the Initial Signaling Events of CD95

Alicia Algeciras-Schimnich; Le Shen; Bryan C. Barnhart; Andrea E. Murmann; Janis K. Burkhardt; Marcus E. Peter

ABSTRACT Binding of either ligand or agonistic antibodies to the death receptor CD95 (APO-1/Fas) induces the formation of the death-inducing signaling complex (DISC). We now show that signal initiation of CD95 in type I cells can be further separated into at least four distinct steps. (i) The first step is ligand-induced formation of CD95 microaggregates at the cell surface. (ii) The second step is recruitment of FADD to form a DISC. This step is dependent on actin filaments. (iii) The third step involves formation of large CD95 surface clusters. This event is positively regulated by DISC-generated caspase 8. (iv) The fourth step is internalization of activated CD95 through an endosomal pathway. The latter step is again dependent on the presence of actin filaments. The data indicate that the signal initiation by CD95 is a complex process actively regulated at various levels, providing a number of new drug targets to specifically modulate CD95 signaling.


Cancer Discovery | 2012

MicroRNAs Reprogram Normal Fibroblasts into Cancer-Associated Fibroblasts in Ovarian Cancer

Anirban K. Mitra; Marion Zillhardt; Youjia Hua; Payal Tiwari; Andrea E. Murmann; Marcus E. Peter; Ernst Lengyel

UNLABELLED Cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAF) are a major constituent of the tumor stroma, but little is known about how cancer cells transform normal fibroblasts into CAFs. microRNAs (miRNA) are small noncoding RNA molecules that negatively regulate gene expression at a posttranscriptional level. Although it is clearly established that miRNAs are deregulated in human cancers, it is not known whether miRNA expression in resident fibroblasts is affected by their interaction with cancer cells. We found that in ovarian CAFs, miR-31 and miR-214 were downregulated, whereas miR-155 was upregulated when compared with normal or tumor-adjacent fibroblasts. Mimicking this deregulation by transfecting miRNAs and miRNA inhibitors induced a functional conversion of normal fibroblasts into CAFs, and the reverse experiment resulted in the reversion of CAFs into normal fibroblasts. The miRNA-reprogrammed normal fibroblasts and patient-derived CAFs shared a large number of upregulated genes highly enriched in chemokines, which are known to be important for CAF function. The most highly upregulated chemokine, CCL5, (C-C motif ligand 5) was found to be a direct target of miR-214. These results indicate that ovarian cancer cells reprogram fibroblasts to become CAFs through the action of miRNAs. Targeting these miRNAs in stromal cells could have therapeutic benefit. SIGNIFICANCE The mechanism by which quiescent fibroblasts are converted into CAFs is unclear. The present study identifies a set of 3 miRNAs that reprogram normal fibroblasts to CAFs. These miRNAs may represent novel therapeutic targets in the tumor microenvironment.


Molecular Cell | 2010

miR-200c regulates induction of apoptosis through CD95 by targeting FAP-1.

Robert Schickel; Sun Mi Park; Andrea E. Murmann; Marcus E. Peter

Tumor progression shares many characteristics with the process of epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT). Cells that have undergone an EMT are known to have an increased resistance to apoptosis. CD95/Fas is an apoptosis-inducing receptor expressed on many tissues and tumor cells. During tumor progression CD95 is frequently downregulated, and tumor cells lose apoptosis sensitivity. miR-200 microRNAs repress both the EMT-inducing ZEB1 and ZEB2 transcription factors. We now demonstrate that miR-200c sensitizes cells to apoptosis mediated by CD95. We have identified the apoptosis inhibitor FAP-1 as a target for miR-200c. FAP-1 was demonstrated to be responsible for the reduced sensitivity to CD95-mediated apoptosis in cells with inhibited miR-200. The identification of FAP-1 as an miR-200c target provides a molecular mechanism to explain both the downregulation of CD95 expression and the reduction in sensitivity of cells to CD95-mediated apoptosis that is observed in the context of reduced miR-200 expression during tumor progression.


International Journal of Cancer | 2012

Let-7 modulates acquired resistance of ovarian cancer to Taxanes via IMP-1-mediated stabilization of multidrug resistance 1.

Benjamin Boyerinas; Sun Mi Park; Andrea E. Murmann; Katja Gwin; Anton G. Montag; Marion Zillhardt; You Jia Hua; Ernst Lengyel; Marcus E. Peter

Ovarian cancer patients frequently develop resistance to chemotherapy regiments using Taxol and carboplatin. One of the resistance factors that protects cancer cells from Taxol‐based therapy is multidrug resistance 1 (MDR1). micro(mi)RNAs are small noncoding RNAs that negatively regulate protein expression. Members of the let‐7 family of miRNAs are downregulated in many human cancers, and low let‐7 expression has been correlated with resistance to microtubule targeting drugs (Taxanes), although little is known that would explain this activity. We now provide evidence that, although let‐7 is not a universal sensitizer of cancer cells to Taxanes, it affects acquired resistance of cells to this class of drugs by targeting IMP‐1, resulting in destabilization of the mRNA of MDR1. Introducing let‐7g into ADR‐RES cells expressing both IMP‐1 and MDR1 reduced expression of both proteins rendering the cells more sensitive to treatment with either Taxol or vinblastine without affecting the sensitivity of the cells to carboplatin, a non‐MDR1 substrate. This effect could be reversed by reintroducing IMP‐1 into let‐7g high/MDR1 low cells causing MDR1 to again become stabilized. Consistently, many relapsed ovarian cancer patients tested before and after chemotherapy were found to downregulate let‐7 and to co‐upregulate IMP‐1 and MDR1, and the increase in the expression levels of both proteins after chemotherapy negatively correlated with disease‐free time before recurrence. Our data point at IMP‐1 and MDR1 as indicators for response to therapy, and at IMP‐1 as a novel therapeutic target for overcoming multidrug resistance of ovarian cancer.


Cell Death & Differentiation | 2015

The role of CD95 and CD95 ligand in cancer.

Marcus E. Peter; Abbas Hadji; Andrea E. Murmann; Sonia Brockway; William Putzbach; Abhinandan Pattanayak; Paolo Ceppi

CD95 (Fas/APO-1) and its ligand, CD95L, have long been viewed as a death receptor/death ligand system that mediates apoptosis induction to maintain immune homeostasis. In addition, these molecules are important in the immune elimination of virus-infected cells and cancer cells. CD95L was, therefore, considered to be useful for cancer therapy. However, major side effects have precluded its systemic use. During the last 10 years, it has been recognized that CD95 and CD95L have multiple cancer-relevant nonapoptotic and tumor-promoting activities. CD95 and CD95L were discovered to be critical survival factors for cancer cells, and were found to protect and promote cancer stem cells. We now discuss five different ways in which inhibiting or eliminating CD95L, rather than augmenting, may be beneficial for cancer therapy alone or in combination with standard chemotherapy or immune therapy.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2009

Inverted duplications on acentric markers: mechanism of formation

Andrea E. Murmann; Donald F. Conrad; Heather Mashek; Chris A. Curtis; Raluca Nicolae; Carole Ober; Stuart Schwartz

Acentric inverted duplication (inv dup) markers, the largest group of chromosomal abnormalities with neocentromere formation, are found in patients both with idiopathic mental retardation and with cancer. The mechanism of their formation has been investigated by analyzing the breakpoints and the genotypes of 12 inv dup marker cases (three trisomic, six tetrasomic, two polysomic and one X chromosome derived marker) using a combination of fluorescence in situ hybridization, quantitative SNP array and microsatellite analysis. Inv dup markers were found to form either symmetrically with one breakpoint or asymmetrically with two distinct breakpoints. Genotype analyses revealed that all inv dup markers formed from one single chromatid end. This observation is incompatible with the previously suggested model by which the acentric inv dup markers form through inter-chromosomal U-type exchange. On the basis of the identification of DNA sequence motifs with inverted homologies within all observed breakpoint regions, a new general mechanism is proposed for the acentric inv dup marker formation: following a double-strand break an acentric fragment forms, during either meiosis or mitosis. The open DNA end of the acentric fragment is stabilized by the formation of an intra-chromosomal loop promoted by the presence of sequences with inverted homologies. Likely coinciding with the neocentromere formation, this stabilized fragment is duplicated during an early mitotic event, insuring the markers survival during cell division and its presence in all cells.


Cell Reports | 2014

Death Induced by CD95 or CD95 Ligand Elimination

Abbas Hadji; Paolo Ceppi; Andrea E. Murmann; Sonia Brockway; Abhinandan Pattanayak; Bhavneet Bhinder; Annika Hau; Shirley De Chant; Vamsi Parimi; Piotre Kolesza; Jo Anne S. Richards; Navdeep S. Chandel; Hakim Djaballah; Marcus E. Peter

CD95 (Fas/APO-1), when bound by its cognate ligand CD95L, induces cells to die by apoptosis. We now show that elimination of CD95 or CD95L results in a form of cell death that is independent of caspase-8, RIPK1/MLKL, and p53, is not inhibited by Bcl-xL expression, and preferentially affects cancer cells. All tumors that formed in mouse models of low-grade serous ovarian cancer or chemically induced liver cancer with tissue-specific deletion of CD95 still expressed CD95, suggesting that cancer cannot form in the absence of CD95. Death induced by CD95R/L elimination (DICE) is characterized by an increase in cell size, production of mitochondrial ROS, and DNA damage. It resembles a necrotic form of mitotic catastrophe. No single drug was found to completely block this form of cell death, and it could also not be blocked by the knockdown of a single gene, making it a promising way to kill cancer cells.


Nature Communications | 2014

CD95 and CD95L promote and protect cancer stem cells

Paolo Ceppi; Abbas Hadji; Frederick J. Kohlhapp; Abhinandan Pattanayak; Annika Hau; Xia Liu; Huiping Liu; Andrea E. Murmann; Marcus E. Peter

CD95 (APO-1/Fas) is a death receptor used by immune cells to kill cancer cells through induction of apoptosis. However, the elimination of CD95 or its ligand, CD95L, from cancer cells results in death induced by CD95R/L elimination (DICE), a type of cell death that resembles a necrotic form of mitotic catastrophe suggesting that CD95 protects cancer cells from cell death. We now report that stimulation of CD95 on cancer cells or reducing miR-200c levels increases the number of cancer stem cells (CSCs), which are more sensitive to induction of DICE than non-CSC, while becoming less sensitive to CD95-mediated apoptosis. In contrast, induction of DICE or overexpression of miR-200c reduces the number of CSCs. We demonstrate that CSCs and non-CSCs have differential sensitivities to CD95-mediated apoptosis and DICE, and that killing of cancer cells can be maximized by concomitant induction of both cell death mechanisms.


Cell Death & Differentiation | 2015

Erratum: The role of CD95 and CD95 ligand in cancer (Cell Death and Differentiation (2015) 22 (549-559) (DOI: 10.1038/cdd.2015.3))

Marcus E. Peter; Abbas Hadji; Andrea E. Murmann; Sonia Brockway; William Putzbach; Abhinandan Pattanayak; Paolo Ceppi

Correction to: Cell Death and Differentiation (2015) 22, 549–559; doi:10.1038/cdd.2015.3; published online 6 February 2015 Since the publication of this article the authors have noted that they have inadvertently failed to list an important paper in the field in Table 2. This work (Kleber et al.) has now been added to the revised Table 2 shown below.

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Monal Patel

Northwestern University

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Quan Q. Gao

Northwestern University

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Markus Hafner

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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Aishe A. Sarshad

National Institutes of Health

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