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Dive into the research topics where Andrew A. Lane is active.

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Featured researches published by Andrew A. Lane.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2009

Histone Deacetylase Inhibitors in Cancer Therapy

Andrew A. Lane; Bruce A. Chabner

PURPOSE Epigenetic processes are implicated in cancer causation and progression. The acetylation status of histones regulates access of transcription factors to DNA and influences levels of gene expression. Histone deacetylase (HDAC) activity diminishes acetylation of histones, causing compaction of the DNA/histone complex. This compaction blocks gene transcription and inhibits differentiation, providing a rationale for developing HDAC inhibitors. METHODS In this review, we explore the biology of the HDAC enzymes, summarize the pharmacologic properties of HDAC inhibitors, and examine results of selected clinical trials. We consider the potential of these inhibitors in combination therapy with targeted drugs and with cytotoxic chemotherapy. RESULTS HDAC inhibitors promote growth arrest, differentiation, and apoptosis of tumor cells, with minimal effects on normal tissue. In addition to decompaction of the histone/DNA complex, HDAC inhibition also affects acetylation status and function of nonhistone proteins. HDAC inhibitors have demonstrated antitumor activity in clinical trials, and one drug of this class, vorinostat, is US Food and Drug Administration approved for the treatment of cutaneous T-cell lymphoma. Other inhibitors in advanced stages of clinical development, including depsipeptide and MGCD0103, differ from vorinostat in structure and isoenzyme specificity, and have shown activity against lymphoma, leukemia, and solid tumors. Promising preclinical activity in combination with cytotoxics, inhibitors of heat shock protein 90, and inhibitors of proteasome function have led to combination therapy trials. CONCLUSION HDAC inhibitors are an important emerging therapy with single-agent activity against multiple cancers, and have significant potential in combination use.


Science | 2017

Single-cell RNA-seq reveals new types of human blood dendritic cells, monocytes, and progenitors

Alexandra-Chloé Villani; Rahul Satija; Gary Reynolds; Siranush Sarkizova; Karthik Shekhar; James Fletcher; Morgane Griesbeck; Andrew Butler; Shiwei Zheng; Suzan Lazo; Laura Jardine; David Dixon; Emily Stephenson; Emil Nilsson; Ida Grundberg; David McDonald; Andrew Filby; Weibo Li; Philip L. De Jager; Orit Rozenblatt-Rosen; Andrew A. Lane; Muzlifah Haniffa; Aviv Regev; Nir Hacohen

Whats in a drop of blood? Blood contains many types of cells, including many immune system components. Immune cells used to be characterized by marker-based assays, but now classification relies on the genes that cells express. Villani et al. used deep sequencing at the single-cell level and unbiased clustering to define six dendritic cell and four monocyte populations. This refined analysis has identified, among others, a previously unknown dendritic cell population that potently activates T cells. Further cell culture revealed possible differentiation progenitors within the different cell populations. Science, this issue p. eaah4573 Discovery of additional immune cell subtypes will help identify functions and immune monitoring during disease. INTRODUCTION Dendritic cells (DCs) and monocytes consist of multiple specialized subtypes that play a central role in pathogen sensing, phagocytosis, and antigen presentation. However, their identities and interrelationships are not fully understood, as these populations have historically been defined by a combination of morphology, physical properties, localization, functions, developmental origins, and expression of a restricted set of surface markers. RATIONALE To overcome this inherently biased strategy for cell identification, we performed single-cell RNA sequencing of ~2400 cells isolated from healthy blood donors and enriched for HLA-DR+ lineage− cells. This single-cell profiling strategy and unbiased genomic classification, together with follow-up profiling and functional and phenotypic characterization of prospectively isolated subsets, led us to identify and validate six DC subtypes and four monocyte subtypes, and thus revise the taxonomy of these cells. RESULTS Our study reveals: 1) A new DC subset, representing 2 to 3% of the DC populations across all 10 donors tested, characterized by the expression of AXL, SIGLEC1, and SIGLEC6 antigens, named AS DCs. The AS DC population further divides into two populations captured in the traditionally defined plasmacytoid DC (pDC) and CD1C+ conventional DC (cDC) gates. This split is further reflected through AS DC gene expression signatures spanning a spectrum between cDC-like and pDC-like gene sets. Although AS DCs share properties with pDCs, they more potently activate T cells. This discovery led us to reclassify pDCs as the originally described “natural interferon-producing cells (IPCs)” with weaker T cell proliferation induction ability. 2) A new subdivision within the CD1C+ DC subset: one defined by a major histocompatibility complex class II–like gene set and one by a CD14+ monocyte–like prominent gene set. These CD1C+ DC subsets, which can be enriched by combining CD1C with CD32B, CD36, and CD163 antigens, can both potently induce T cell proliferation. 3) The existence of a circulating and dividing cDC progenitor giving rise to CD1C+ and CLEC9A+ DCs through in vitro differentiation assays. This blood precursor is defined by the expression of CD100+CD34int and observed at a frequency of ~0.02% of the LIN–HLA-DR+ fraction. 4) Two additional monocyte populations: one expressing classical monocyte genes and cytotoxic genes, and the other with unknown functions. 5) Evidence for a relationship between blastic plasmacytoid DC neoplasia (BPDCN) cells and healthy DCs. CONCLUSION Our revised taxonomy will enable more accurate functional and developmental analyses as well as immune monitoring in health and disease. The discovery of AS DCs within the traditionally defined pDC population explains many of the cDC properties previously assigned to pDCs, highlighting the need to revisit the definition of pDCs. Furthermore, the discovery of blood cDC progenitors represents a new therapeutic target readily accessible in the bloodstream for manipulation, as well as a new source for better in vitro DC generation. Although the current results focus on DCs and monocytes, a similar strategy can be applied to build a comprehensive human immune cell atlas. Establishing a human blood monocyte and dendritic cell atlas. We isolated ~2400 cells enriched from the healthy human blood lineage− HLA-DR+ compartment and subjected them to single-cell RNA sequencing. This strategy, together with follow-up profiling and functional and phenotypic characterization, led us to update the original cell classification to include six DCs, four monocyte subtypes, and one conventional DC progenitor. Dendritic cells (DCs) and monocytes play a central role in pathogen sensing, phagocytosis, and antigen presentation and consist of multiple specialized subtypes. However, their identities and interrelationships are not fully understood. Using unbiased single-cell RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) of ~2400 cells, we identified six human DCs and four monocyte subtypes in human blood. Our study reveals a new DC subset that shares properties with plasmacytoid DCs (pDCs) but potently activates T cells, thus redefining pDCs; a new subdivision within the CD1C+ subset of DCs; the relationship between blastic plasmacytoid DC neoplasia cells and healthy DCs; and circulating progenitor of conventional DCs (cDCs). Our revised taxonomy will enable more accurate functional and developmental analyses as well as immune monitoring in health and disease.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1998

Nck Recruitment to Eph Receptor, EphB1/ELK, Couples Ligand Activation to c-Jun Kinase*

Elke Stein; Uyen Huynh-Do; Andrew A. Lane; Douglas Pat Cerretti; Thomas O. Daniel

Eph family receptor tyrosine kinases signal axonal guidance, neuronal bundling, and angiogenesis; yet the signaling systems that couple these receptors to targeting and cell-cell assembly responses are incompletely defined. Functional links to regulators of cytoskeletal structure are anticipated based on receptor mediated cell-cell aggregation and migratory responses. We used two-hybrid interaction cloning to identify EphB1-interactive proteins. Six independent cDNAs encoding the SH2 domain of the adapter protein, Nck, were recovered in a screen of a murine embryonic library. We mapped the EphB1 subdomain that binds Nck and itsDrosophila homologue, DOCK, to the juxtamembrane region. Within this subdomain, Tyr594 was required for Nck binding. In P19 embryonal carcinoma cells, activation of EphB1 (ELK) by its ligand, ephrin-B1/Fc, recruited Nck to native receptor complexes and activated c-Jun kinase (JNK/SAPK). Transient overexpression of mutant EphB1 receptors (Y594F) blocked Nck recruitment to EphB1, attenuated downstream JNK activation, and blocked cell attachment responses. These findings identify Nck as an important intermediary linking EphB1 signaling to JNK.


Blood | 2014

A targeted mutational landscape of angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphoma

Oreofe O. Odejide; Oliver Weigert; Andrew A. Lane; Dan Toscano; Matthew A. Lunning; Nadja Kopp; Sunhee Kim; Diederik van Bodegom; Sudha Bolla; Jonathan H. Schatz; Julie Teruya-Feldstein; Ephraim P. Hochberg; Abner Louissaint; David M. Dorfman; Kristen E. Stevenson; Scott J. Rodig; Pier Paolo Piccaluga; Eric D. Jacobsen; Stefano Pileri; Nancy Lee Harris; Simone Ferrero; Giorgio Inghirami; Steven M. Horwitz; David M. Weinstock

The genetics of angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphoma (AITL) are very poorly understood. We defined the mutational landscape of AITL across 219 genes in 85 cases from the United States and Europe. We identified ≥2 mutations in 34 genes, nearly all of which were not previously implicated in AITL. These included loss-of-function mutations in TP53 (n = 4), ETV6 (n = 3), CCND3 (n = 2), and EP300 (n = 5), as well as gain-of-function mutations in JAK2 (n = 2) and STAT3 (n = 4). TET2 was mutated in 65 (76%) AITLs, including 43 that harbored 2 or 3 TET2 mutations. DNMT3A mutations occurred in 28 (33%) AITLs; 100% of these also harbored TET2 mutations (P < .0001). Seventeen AITLs harbored IDH2 R172 substitutions, including 15 with TET2 mutations. In summary, AITL is characterized by high frequencies of overlapping mutations in epigenetic modifiers and targetable mutations in a subset of cases.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2012

Genetic resistance to JAK2 enzymatic inhibitors is overcome by HSP90 inhibition

Oliver Weigert; Andrew A. Lane; Liat Bird; Nadja Kopp; Bjoern Chapuy; Diederik van Bodegom; Angela V. Toms; Sachie Marubayashi; Amanda L. Christie; Michael R. McKeown; Ronald M. Paranal; James E. Bradner; Akinori Yoda; Christoph Gaul; Eric Vangrevelinghe; Vincent Romanet; Masato Murakami; Ralph Tiedt; Nicolas Ebel; Emeline Evrot; Alain De Pover; Catherine H. Regnier; Dirk Erdmann; Francesco Hofmann; Michael J. Eck; Stephen E. Sallan; Ross L. Levine; Andrew L. Kung; Fabienne Baffert; Thomas Radimerski

Hsp90 inhibition in B cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia overcomes resistance to JAK2 inhibitors.


Cancer Cell | 2016

The Public Repository of Xenografts Enables Discovery and Randomized Phase II-like Trials in Mice

Elizabeth Townsend; Mark A. Murakami; Alexandra N. Christodoulou; Amanda L. Christie; Johannes Köster; Tiffany DeSouza; Elizabeth A. Morgan; Scott P. Kallgren; Huiyun Liu; Shuo-Chieh Wu; Olivia Plana; Joan Montero; Kristen E. Stevenson; Prakash Rao; Raga Vadhi; Michael Andreeff; Philippe Armand; Karen K. Ballen; Patrizia Barzaghi-Rinaudo; Sarah Cahill; Rachael A. Clark; Vesselina G. Cooke; Matthew S. Davids; Daniel J. DeAngelo; David M. Dorfman; Hilary Eaton; Benjamin L. Ebert; Julia Etchin; Brant Firestone; David C. Fisher

More than 90% of drugs with preclinical activity fail in human trials, largely due to insufficient efficacy. We hypothesized that adequately powered trials of patient-derived xenografts (PDX) in mice could efficiently define therapeutic activity across heterogeneous tumors. To address this hypothesis, we established a large, publicly available repository of well-characterized leukemia and lymphoma PDXs that undergo orthotopic engraftment, called the Public Repository of Xenografts (PRoXe). PRoXe includes all de-identified information relevant to the primary specimens and the PDXs derived from them. Using this repository, we demonstrate that large studies of acute leukemia PDXs that mimic human randomized clinical trials can characterize drug efficacy and generate transcriptional, functional, and proteomic biomarkers in both treatment-naive and relapsed/refractory disease.


Cancer Discovery | 2012

Molecular Ontogeny of Donor-Derived Follicular Lymphomas Occurring after Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation

Oliver Weigert; Nadja Kopp; Andrew A. Lane; Akinori Yoda; Suzanne E. Dahlberg; Donna Neuberg; Anita Y. Bahar; Bjoern Chapuy; Jeffery L. Kutok; Janina A. Longtine; Frank C. Kuo; Terry Haley; Maura Salois; Timothy J. Sullivan; David C. Fisher; Edward A. Fox; Scott J. Rodig; Joseph H. Antin; David M. Weinstock

UNLABELLED The relative timing of genetic alterations that contribute to follicular lymphoma remains unknown. We analyzed a donor-recipient pair who both developed grade 2/3A follicular lymphoma 7 years after allogeneic transplantation and donor lymphocyte infusions. Both patients harbored identical BCL2/IGH rearrangements also present in 1 in 2,000 cells in the donor lymphocyte infusion, and the same V(D)J rearrangement, which underwent somatic hypermutation both before and after clonal divergence. Exome sequencing of both follicular lymphomas identified 15 shared mutations, of which 14 (including alterations in EP300 and KLHL6) were recovered from the donor lymphocyte infusion by ultra-deep sequencing (average read coverage, 361,723), indicating acquisition at least 7 years before clinical presentation. Six additional mutations were present in only one follicular lymphoma and not the donor lymphocyte infusion, including an ARID1A premature stop, indicating later acquisition during clonal divergence. Thus, ultrasensitive sequencing can map clonal evolution within rare subpopulations during human lymphomagenesis in vivo. SIGNIFICANCE For the first time, we define the molecular ontogeny of follicular lymphoma during clonal evolution in vivo. By using ultrasensitive mutation detection, we mapped the time-course of somatic alterations after passage of a malignant ancestor by hematopoietic cell transplantation.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2005

Neutrophil elastase is important for PML-retinoic acid receptor α activities in early myeloid cells

Andrew A. Lane; Timothy J. Ley

ABSTRACT Expression of the PML-retinoic acid receptor α (PML-RARα) fusion protein is the initiating genetic event for acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL), but the molecular mechanisms responsible for disease initiation are not yet clear. Several observations have suggested that early myeloid cells are uniquely susceptible to transformation by PML-RARα. Recently, we have shown that the early myeloid-specific protease neutrophil elastase is important for APL development in the mouse. To better understand the role of neutrophil elastase for the pathogenesis of APL, we examined the consequences of PML-RARα expression in early myeloid cells with or without neutrophil elastase. We found that high-level PML-RARα expression was associated with cellular toxicity that was dependent on the expression of neutrophil elastase; a mutant form of PML-RARα that resisted neutrophil elastase cleavage was not toxic. When PML-RARα was expressed at very low levels in the early myeloid cells of mice, it induced myeloid expansion and delayed myeloid maturation; neutrophil elastase was also required for these activities. The activities of PML-RARα in early myeloid cells are therefore strongly influenced by the presence of neutrophil elastase. To assure physiologic relevance, PML-RARα functions should be evaluated in neutrophil elastase-expressing early myeloid cells.


Leukemia | 2013

Low frequency clonal mutations recoverable by deep sequencing in patients with aplastic anemia

Andrew A. Lane; Oreofe O. Odejide; Nadja Kopp; Sunhee Kim; Akinori Yoda; Rachel Erlich; Nikhil Wagle; Gregory A. Abel; Scott J. Rodig; Joseph H. Antin; David M. Weinstock

Low frequency clonal mutations recoverable by deep sequencing in patients with aplastic anemia


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2004

Expression Profiling of Murine Acute Promyelocytic Leukemia Cells Reveals Multiple Model-Dependent Progression Signatures†

Matthew J. Walter; John S. Park; Steven K. M. Lau; Xia Li; Andrew A. Lane; Rakesh Nagarajan; William D. Shannon; Timothy J. Ley

ABSTRACT Leukemia results from the expansion of self-renewing hematopoietic cells that are thought to contain mutations that contribute to disease initiation and progression. Studies of the gene expression profiles of human acute myeloid leukemia samples has allowed their classification based on the presence of translocations and French-American-British subtypes, but it is not yet clear whether their molecular signatures reflect the initiating mutations or mutations acquired during progression. To begin to address this question, we examined the expression profiles of normal murine promyelocyte-enriched samples, nontransformed murine promyelocytes expressing human promyelocytic leukemia-retinoic acid receptor alpha (PML-RARα) fusion gene, and primary acute promyelocytic leukemia cells. The expression profile of nontransformed cells expressing PML-RARα was remarkably similar to that of wild-type promyelocytes. In contrast, the expression profiles of fully transformed cells from three acute promyelocytic leukemia model systems were all different, suggesting that the expression signature of acute promyelocytic leukemia cells reflects the genetic changes that contributed to progression. To further evaluate these progression events, we compared two high-penetrance acute promyelocytic leukemia models that both commonly acquire an interstitial deletion of chromosome 2 during progression. The two models exhibited distinct gene expression profiles, suggesting that the dominant molecular signatures of murine acute promyelocytic leukemia can be influenced by several independent progression events.

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Naveen Pemmaraju

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Scott J. Rodig

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Marina Konopleva

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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