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Dive into the research topics where Andrew J. Aguirre is active.

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Featured researches published by Andrew J. Aguirre.


Nature | 2001

Loss of p16Ink4a with retention of p19 predisposes mice to tumorigenesis

Norman E. Sharpless; Nabeel Bardeesy; Kee Ho Lee; Daniel R. Carrasco; Diego H. Castrillon; Andrew J. Aguirre; Emily Wu; James W. Horner; Ronald A. DePinho

The cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p16INK4a can induce senescence of human cells, and its loss by deletion, mutation or epigenetic silencing is among the most frequently observed molecular lesions in human cancer. Overlapping reading frames in the INK4A/ARF gene encode p16INK4a and a distinct tumour-suppressor protein, p19ARF (ref. 3). Here we describe the generation and characterization of a p16Ink4a-specific knockout mouse that retains normal p19Arf function. Mice lacking p16Ink4a were born with the expected mendelian distribution and exhibited normal development except for thymic hyperplasia. T cells deficient in p16Ink4a exhibited enhanced mitogenic responsiveness, consistent with the established role of p16Ink4a in constraining cellular proliferation. In contrast to mouse embryo fibroblasts (MEFs) deficient in p19Arf (ref. 4), p16Ink4a-null MEFs possessed normal growth characteristics and remained susceptible to Ras-induced senescence. Compared with wild-type MEFs, p16Ink4a-null MEFs exhibited an increased rate of immortalization, although this rate was less than that observed previously for cells null for Ink4a/Arf, p19Arf or p53 (refs 4, 5). Furthermore, p16Ink4a deficiency was associated with an increased incidence of spontaneous and carcinogen-induced cancers. These data establish that p16Ink4a, along with p19Arf, functions as a tumour suppressor in mice.


Cancer Research | 2004

High-Resolution Global Profiling of Genomic Alterations with Long Oligonucleotide Microarray

Cameron Brennan; Yunyu Zhang; Christopher Leo; Bin Feng; Craig Cauwels; Andrew J. Aguirre; Minjung Kim; Alexei Protopopov; Lynda Chin

Cancer represents the phenotypic end point of multiple genetic lesions that endow cells with a full range of biological properties required for tumorigenesis. Among the hallmark features of the cancer genome are recurrent regional gains and losses that, upon detailed characterization, have provided highly productive discovery paths for new oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes. In this study, we describe the use of an oligonucleotide-based microarray platform and development of requisite assay conditions and bioinformatic mining tools that permits high-resolution genome-wide array-comparative genome hybridization profiling of human and mouse tumors. Using a commercially available 60-mer oligonucleotide microarray, we demonstrate that this platform provides sufficient sensitivity to detect single-copy difference in gene dosage of full complexity genomic DNA while offering high resolution. The commercial availability of the microarrays and associated reagents, along with the technical protocols and analytical tools described in this report, should provide investigators with the immediate capacity to perform DNA analysis of normal and diseased genomes in a global and detailed manner.


Cancer Discovery | 2016

Genomic Copy Number Dictates a Gene-Independent Cell Response to CRISPR/Cas9 Targeting

Andrew J. Aguirre; Robin M. Meyers; Barbara A. Weir; Francisca Vazquez; Cheng-Zhong Zhang; Uri Ben-David; April Cook; Gavin Ha; William F. Harrington; Mihir Doshi; Maria Kost-Alimova; Stanley Gill; Han Xu; Levi D. Ali; Guozhi Jiang; Sasha Pantel; Yenarae Lee; Amy Goodale; Andrew D. Cherniack; Coyin Oh; Gregory V. Kryukov; Glenn S. Cowley; Levi A. Garraway; Kimberly Stegmaier; Charles W. M. Roberts; Todd R. Golub; Matthew Meyerson; David E. Root; Aviad Tsherniak; William C. Hahn

UNLABELLED The CRISPR/Cas9 system enables genome editing and somatic cell genetic screens in mammalian cells. We performed genome-scale loss-of-function screens in 33 cancer cell lines to identify genes essential for proliferation/survival and found a strong correlation between increased gene copy number and decreased cell viability after genome editing. Within regions of copy-number gain, CRISPR/Cas9 targeting of both expressed and unexpressed genes, as well as intergenic loci, led to significantly decreased cell proliferation through induction of a G2 cell-cycle arrest. By examining single-guide RNAs that map to multiple genomic sites, we found that this cell response to CRISPR/Cas9 editing correlated strongly with the number of target loci. These observations indicate that genome targeting by CRISPR/Cas9 elicits a gene-independent antiproliferative cell response. This effect has important practical implications for the interpretation of CRISPR/Cas9 screening data and confounds the use of this technology for the identification of essential genes in amplified regions. SIGNIFICANCE We found that the number of CRISPR/Cas9-induced DNA breaks dictates a gene-independent antiproliferative response in cells. These observations have practical implications for using CRISPR/Cas9 to interrogate cancer gene function and illustrate that cancer cells are highly sensitive to site-specific DNA damage, which may provide a path to novel therapeutic strategies. Cancer Discov; 6(8); 914-29. ©2016 AACR.See related commentary by Sheel and Xue, p. 824See related article by Munoz et al., p. 900This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 803.


Nature Medicine | 2014

ARID1B is a specific vulnerability in ARID1A-mutant cancers

Katherine C. Helming; Xiaofeng Wang; Boris G. Wilson; Francisca Vazquez; Jeffrey R. Haswell; Haley E. Manchester; Youngha Kim; Gregory V. Kryukov; Mahmoud Ghandi; Andrew J. Aguirre; Zainab Jagani; Zhong Wang; Levi A. Garraway; William C. Hahn; Charles W. M. Roberts

Recent studies have revealed that ARID1A, encoding AT-rich interactive domain 1A (SWI-like), is frequently mutated across a variety of human cancers and also has bona fide tumor suppressor properties. Consequently, identification of vulnerabilities conferred by ARID1A mutation would have major relevance for human cancer. Here, using a broad screening approach, we identify ARID1B, an ARID1A homolog whose gene product is mutually exclusive with ARID1A in SWI/SNF complexes, as the number 1 gene preferentially required for the survival of ARID1A-mutant cancer cell lines. We show that loss of ARID1B in ARID1A-deficient backgrounds destabilizes SWI/SNF and impairs proliferation in both cancer cells and primary cells. We also find that ARID1A and ARID1B are frequently co-mutated in cancer but that ARID1A-deficient cancers retain at least one functional ARID1B allele. These results suggest that loss of ARID1A and ARID1B alleles cooperatively promotes cancer formation but also results in a unique functional dependence. The results further identify ARID1B as a potential therapeutic target for ARID1A-mutant cancers.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Genomic alterations link Rho family of GTPases to the highly invasive phenotype of pancreas cancer

Alec C. Kimmelman; Andrew J. Aguirre; Hongwu Zheng; Ji Hye Paik; Haoqiang Ying; Gerald C. Chu; Jean X. Zhang; Ergun Sahin; Giminna Yeo; Aditya Ponugoti; Roustem Nabioullin; Scott Deroo; Shenghong Yang; Xiaoxu Wang; John P. McGrath; Marina Protopopova; Elena Ivanova; Jianhua Zhang; Bin Feng; Ming S. Tsao; Mark Redston; Alexei Protopopov; Yonghong Xiao; P. Andrew Futreal; William C. Hahn; David S. Klimstra; Lynda Chin; Ronald A. DePinho

Pancreas ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is a highly lethal cancer that typically presents as advanced, unresectable disease. This invasive tendency, coupled with intrinsic resistance to standard therapies and genome instability, are major contributors to poor long-term survival. The genetic elements governing the invasive propensity of PDAC have not been well elucidated. Here, in the course of validating resident genes in highly recurrent and focal amplifications in PDAC, we have identified Rio Kinase 3 (RIOK3) as an amplified gene that alters cytoskeletal architecture as well as promotes pancreatic ductal cell migration and invasion. We determined that RIOK3 promotes its invasive activities through activation of the small G protein, Rac. This genomic and functional link to Rac signaling prompted a genome wide survey of other components of the Rho family network, revealing p21 Activated Kinase 4 (PAK4) as another amplified gene in PDAC tumors and cell lines. Like RIOK3, PAK4 promotes pancreas ductal cell motility and invasion. Together, the genomic and functional profiles establish the Rho family GTP-binding proteins as integral to the hallmark invasive nature of this lethal disease.


Nature | 2017

Dependency of a therapy-resistant state of cancer cells on a lipid peroxidase pathway

Vasanthi Viswanathan; Matthew J. Ryan; Harshil Dhruv; Shubhroz Gill; Ossia M. Eichhoff; Brinton Seashore-Ludlow; Samuel D. Kaffenberger; John K. Eaton; Kenichi Shimada; Andrew J. Aguirre; Srinivas R. Viswanathan; Shrikanta Chattopadhyay; Pablo Tamayo; Wan Seok Yang; Matthew G. Rees; Sixun Chen; Zarko V. Boskovic; Sarah Javaid; Cherrie Huang; Xiaoyun Wu; Yuen Yi Tseng; Elisabeth Roider; Dong Gao; James M. Cleary; Brian M. Wolpin; Jill P. Mesirov; Daniel A. Haber; Jeffrey A. Engelman; Jesse S. Boehm; Joanne Kotz

Plasticity of the cell state has been proposed to drive resistance to multiple classes of cancer therapies, thereby limiting their effectiveness. A high-mesenchymal cell state observed in human tumours and cancer cell lines has been associated with resistance to multiple treatment modalities across diverse cancer lineages, but the mechanistic underpinning for this state has remained incompletely understood. Here we molecularly characterize this therapy-resistant high-mesenchymal cell state in human cancer cell lines and organoids and show that it depends on a druggable lipid-peroxidase pathway that protects against ferroptosis, a non-apoptotic form of cell death induced by the build-up of toxic lipid peroxides. We show that this cell state is characterized by activity of enzymes that promote the synthesis of polyunsaturated lipids. These lipids are the substrates for lipid peroxidation by lipoxygenase enzymes. This lipid metabolism creates a dependency on pathways converging on the phospholipid glutathione peroxidase (GPX4), a selenocysteine-containing enzyme that dissipates lipid peroxides and thereby prevents the iron-mediated reactions of peroxides that induce ferroptotic cell death. Dependency on GPX4 was found to exist across diverse therapy-resistant states characterized by high expression of ZEB1, including epithelial–mesenchymal transition in epithelial-derived carcinomas, TGFβ-mediated therapy-resistance in melanoma, treatment-induced neuroendocrine transdifferentiation in prostate cancer, and sarcomas, which are fixed in a mesenchymal state owing to their cells of origin. We identify vulnerability to ferroptic cell death induced by inhibition of a lipid peroxidase pathway as a feature of therapy-resistant cancer cells across diverse mesenchymal cell-state contexts.


Science | 2017

Analysis of Fusobacterium persistence and antibiotic response in colorectal cancer

Susan Bullman; Chandra Sekhar Pedamallu; Ewa Sicinska; Thomas E. Clancy; Xiaoyang Zhang; Diana Cai; Donna Neuberg; Katherine H. Huang; Fatima Guevara; Timothy Nelson; Otari Chipashvili; Timothy Hagan; Mark Walker; Begoña Diosdado; Garazi Serna; Nuria Mulet; Stefania Landolfi; Santiago Ramón y Cajal; Roberta Fasani; Andrew J. Aguirre; Kimmie Ng; Elena Elez; Shuji Ogino; Josep Tabernero; Charles S. Fuchs; William C. Hahn; Paolo Nuciforo; Matthew Meyerson

Bacteria go the distance in cancer The bacterial species Fusobacterium nucleatum is associated with a subset of human colorectal cancers, but its role in tumorigenesis is unclear. Studying patient samples, Bullman et al. found that F. nucleatum and certain co-occurring bacteria were present not only in primary tumors but also in distant metastases. Preliminary evidence suggests that the bacterium is localized primarily within the metastatic cancer cells rather than in the stroma. Antibiotic treatment of mice carrying xenografts of F. nucleatum–positive human colorectal cancer slowed tumor growth, consistent with a causal role for the bacterium in tumorigenesis. Science, this issue p. 1443 The same bacteria present in primary tumors of patients with colorectal cancer are also present in liver metastases. Colorectal cancers comprise a complex mixture of malignant cells, nontransformed cells, and microorganisms. Fusobacterium nucleatum is among the most prevalent bacterial species in colorectal cancer tissues. Here we show that colonization of human colorectal cancers with Fusobacterium and its associated microbiome—including Bacteroides, Selenomonas, and Prevotella species—is maintained in distal metastases, demonstrating microbiome stability between paired primary and metastatic tumors. In situ hybridization analysis revealed that Fusobacterium is predominantly associated with cancer cells in the metastatic lesions. Mouse xenografts of human primary colorectal adenocarcinomas were found to retain viable Fusobacterium and its associated microbiome through successive passages. Treatment of mice bearing a colon cancer xenograft with the antibiotic metronidazole reduced Fusobacterium load, cancer cell proliferation, and overall tumor growth. These observations argue for further investigation of antimicrobial interventions as a potential treatment for patients with Fusobacterium-associated colorectal cancer.


Nature Biotechnology | 2016

Characterizing genomic alterations in cancer by complementary functional associations

Jong Wook Kim; Olga Botvinnik; Omar Abudayyeh; Chet Birger; Joseph Rosenbluh; Yashaswi Shrestha; M. Abazeed; Peter S. Hammerman; Daniel DiCara; David J. Konieczkowski; Cory M. Johannessen; Arthur Liberzon; Amir Reza Alizad-Rahvar; Gabriela Alexe; Andrew J. Aguirre; Mahmoud Ghandi; Heidi Greulich; Francisca Vazquez; Barbara A. Weir; Eliezer M. Van Allen; Aviad Tsherniak; Diane D. Shao; Travis I. Zack; Michael S. Noble; Gad Getz; Rameen Beroukhim; Levi A. Garraway; Masoud Ardakani; Chiara Romualdi; Gabriele Sales

Systematic efforts to sequence the cancer genome have identified large numbers of mutations and copy number alterations in human cancers. However, elucidating the functional consequences of these variants, and their interactions to drive or maintain oncogenic states, remains a challenge in cancer research. We developed REVEALER, a computational method that identifies combinations of mutually exclusive genomic alterations correlated with functional phenotypes, such as the activation or gene dependency of oncogenic pathways or sensitivity to a drug treatment. We used REVEALER to uncover complementary genomic alterations associated with the transcriptional activation of β-catenin and NRF2, MEK-inhibitor sensitivity, and KRAS dependency. REVEALER successfully identified both known and new associations, demonstrating the power of combining functional profiles with extensive characterization of genomic alterations in cancer genomes.


Journal of The Autonomic Nervous System | 1990

Interaction between respiratory and RR interval oscillations at low frequencies

Andrew J. Aguirre; George R. Wodicka; C. Maayan; Daniel C. Shannon

Oscillations in RR interval between 0.02 and 1.00 cycles per second (Hz) have been related to the action of the autonomic nervous system. Respiration has been shown to influence RR interval at normal breathing frequencies between approximately 0.16 and 0.5 Hz in children and adults--a phenomenon known as respiratory sinus arrhythmia. In this study we investigated the effect of respiration on RR interval in a lower frequency range between 0.02 and 0.12 Hz. Low frequency oscillations in respiration were induced in healthy sleeping adult subjects via the administration of a bolus of CO2 during inhalation. Power spectra of RR interval and respiration were obtained before and after the CO2 pulse, and the frequency content in the low frequency range was quantitatively compared. An increase in the spectral energy in both respiration and RR interval was observed for the group. However, this increase was accounted for by six of 29 epochs. We conclude that respiration (tidal volume) can influence RR interval at frequencies below those usually associated with respiratory sinus arrhythmia. This influence may be mediated through a sympathetic reflex. This result is applicable to the measurement and interpretation of heart rate variability and to autonomic influences of low frequency fluctuations in RR interval.


eLife | 2017

KEAP1 loss modulates sensitivity to kinase targeted therapy in lung cancer

Elsa Beyer Krall; Belinda Wang; Diana M Munoz; Nina Ilic; Srivatsan Raghavan; Matthew J. Niederst; Kristine Yu; David A. Ruddy; Andrew J. Aguirre; Jong Wook Kim; Amanda J. Redig; Justin F. Gainor; Juliet Williams; John M. Asara; John G. Doench; Pasi A. Jänne; Alice T. Shaw; Robert E McDonald; Jeffrey A. Engelman; Frank Stegmeier; Michael R. Schlabach; William C. Hahn

Inhibitors that target the receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK)/Ras/mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway have led to clinical responses in lung and other cancers, but some patients fail to respond and in those that do resistance inevitably occurs (Balak et al., 2006; Kosaka et al., 2006; Rudin et al., 2013; Wagle et al., 2011). To understand intrinsic and acquired resistance to inhibition of MAPK signaling, we performed CRISPR-Cas9 gene deletion screens in the setting of BRAF, MEK, EGFR, and ALK inhibition. Loss of KEAP1, a negative regulator of NFE2L2/NRF2, modulated the response to BRAF, MEK, EGFR, and ALK inhibition in BRAF-, NRAS-, KRAS-, EGFR-, and ALK-mutant lung cancer cells. Treatment with inhibitors targeting the RTK/MAPK pathway increased reactive oxygen species (ROS) in cells with intact KEAP1, and loss of KEAP1 abrogated this increase. In addition, loss of KEAP1 altered cell metabolism to allow cells to proliferate in the absence of MAPK signaling. These observations suggest that alterations in the KEAP1/NRF2 pathway may promote survival in the presence of multiple inhibitors targeting the RTK/Ras/MAPK pathway. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.18970.001

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Lynda Chin

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Cameron Brennan

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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