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Dive into the research topics where Andrew Koff is active.

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Featured researches published by Andrew Koff.


Cell | 1996

Enhanced Growth of Mice Lacking the Cyclin-Dependent Kinase Inhibitor Function of p27Kip1

Hiroaki Kiyokawa; Rhonda D. Kineman; Katia Manova-Todorova; Vera Soares; Eric S. Hoffman; Masao Ono; Dilruba Khanam; Adrian Hayday; Lawrence A. Frohman; Andrew Koff

SUMMARY Disruption of the cyclin-dependent kinase-inhibitory domain of p27 enhances growth of mice. Growth is attributed to an increase in cell number, due to increased cell proliferation, most obviously in tissues that ordinarily express p27 at the highest levels. Disruption of p27 function leads to nodular hyperplasia in the intermediate lobe of the pituitary. However, increased growth occurs without an increase in the amounts of either growth hormone or IGF-I. In addition, female mice were infertile. Luteal cell differentiation is impaired, and a disordered estrus cycle is detected. These results reflect a disturbance of the hypothalamic-pituitary-ovarian axis. The phenotypes of these mice suggest that loss of p27 causes an alteration in cell proliferation that can lead to specific endocrine dysfunction.


Nature Genetics | 2001

Pten and p27KIP1 cooperate in prostate cancer tumor suppression in the mouse

Antonio Di Cristofano; Marika De Acetis; Andrew Koff; Carlos Cordon-Cardo; Pier Paolo Pandolfi

The genetic bases underlying prostate tumorigenesis are poorly understood. Inactivation of the tumor-suppressor gene PTEN and lack of p27KIP1 expression have been detected in most advanced prostate cancers. But mice deficient for Cdkn1b (encoding p27Kip1) do not develop prostate cancer. PTEN activity leads to the induction of p27KIP1 expression, which in turn can negatively regulate the transition through the cell cycle. Thus, the inactivation of p27KIP1 may be epistatic to PTEN in the control of the cell cycle. Here we show that the concomitant inactivation of one Pten allele and one or both Cdkn1b alleles accelerates spontaneous neoplastic transformation and incidence of tumors of various histological origins. Cell proliferation, but not cell survival, is increased in Pten+/−/Cdkn1b−/− mice. Moreover, Pten+/−/Cdkn1b−/− mice develop prostate carcinoma at complete penetrance within three months from birth. These cancers recapitulate the natural history and pathological features of human prostate cancer. Our findings reveal the crucial relevance of the combined tumor-suppressive activity of Pten and p27Kip1 through the control of cell-cycle progression.


Gene | 2000

Cell-cycle inhibitors: three families united by a common cause

Anxo Vidal; Andrew Koff

In the cellular program leading to DNA synthesis, signals that drive cells into S-phase converge at the level of CDK activity. The products of at least three different gene families, Ink4, Cip/Kip and the pRb pocket-protein family, suppress S-phase entry. Ink4 proteins act by antagonizing the formation and activation of cyclin D-CDK4 complexes, of which the ultimate downstream target as related to S-phase entry appears to be pRb. Cip/Kip inhibitors impinge upon that pathway by inhibiting CDK2 kinases that participate in the inactivation of pRb and, like cyclin E, may also have roles independent of pRb. How the activities of these three classes of proteins are coordinated remains obscure. In recent years, development of mouse models has accelerated the elucidation of this complex network, showing roles that are sometimes cooperative and sometimes overlapping. We will discuss the interrelationships between Cip/Kip inhibitors and the components of the pRb pathway, and how their activities ultimately regulate cell proliferation.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1999

Targeted disruption of CDK4 delays cell cycle entry with enhanced p27(Kip1) activity.

Tateki Tsutsui; Bahar Hesabi; David S. Moons; Pier Paolo Pandolfi; Kimberly S. Hansel; Andrew Koff; Hiroaki Kiyokawa

ABSTRACT The mechanism by which cyclin-dependent kinase 4 (CDK4) regulates cell cycle progression is not entirely clear. Cyclin D/CDK4 appears to initiate phosphorylation of retinoblastoma protein (Rb) leading to inactivation of the S-phase-inhibitory action of Rb. However, cyclin D/CDK4 has been postulated to act in a noncatalytic manner to regulate the cyclin E/CDK2-inhibitory activity of p27Kip1 by sequestration. In this study we investigated the roles of CDK4 in cell cycle regulation by targeted disruption of the mouse CDK4gene. CDK4 −/− mice survived embryogenesis and showed growth retardation and reproductive dysfunction associated with hypoplastic seminiferous tubules in the testis and perturbed corpus luteum formation in the ovary. These phenotypes appear to be opposite to those of p27-deficient mice such as gigantism and gonadal hyperplasia. A majority of CDK4 −/− mice developed diabetes mellitus by 6 weeks, associated with degeneration of pancreatic islets. Fibroblasts from CDK4 −/−mouse embryos proliferated similarly to wild-type embryonic fibroblasts under conditions that promote continuous growth. However, quiescentCDK4 −/− fibroblasts exhibited a substantial (∼6-h) delay in S-phase entry after serum stimulation. This cell cycle perturbation by CDK4 disruption was associated with increased binding of p27 to cyclin E/CDK2 and diminished activation of CDK2 accompanied by impaired Rb phosphorylation. Importantly, fibroblasts from CDK4 −/− p27−/−embryos displayed partially restored kinetics of the G0-S transition, indicating the significance of the sequestration of p27 by CDK4. These results suggest that at least part of CDK4’s participation in the rate-limiting mechanism for the G0-S transition consists of controlling p27 activity.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1996

Rapamycin resistance tied to defective regulation of p27Kip1.

Yan Luo; Steven O. Marx; Hiroaki Kiyokawa; Andrew Koff; Joan Massagué; Andandrew R. Marks

The potent antiproliferative activity of the macrolide antibiotic rapamycin is known to involve binding of the drug to its cytosolic receptor, FKBP12, and subsequent interaction with targets of rapamycin, resulting in inhibition of p70 S6 kinase (p70S6K). However, the downstream events that lead to inhibition of cell cycle progression remain to be elucidated. The antiproliferative effects of rapamycin are associated with prevention of mitogen-induced downregulation of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p27Kip1, suggesting that the latter may play an important role in the growth pathway targeted by rapamycin. Murine BC3H1 cells, selected for resistance to growth inhibition by rapamycin, exhibited an intact p70S6K pathway but had abnormally low p27 levels that were no longer responsive to mitogens or rapamycin. Fibroblasts and T lymphocytes from mice with a targeted disruption of the p27Kip1 gene had impaired growth-inhibitory responses to rapamycin. These results suggest that the ability to regulate p27Kip1 levels is important for rapamycin to exert its antiproliferative effects.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1997

Enhanced Ribosomal Association of p27Kip1 mRNA Is a Mechanism Contributing to Accumulation during Growth Arrest

S. Sean Millard; Jie Shi Yan; Hoang Nguyen; Michele Pagano; Hiroaki Kiyokawa; Andrew Koff

p27Kip1 regulates the decision to enter into S-phase or withdraw from the cell cycle by establishing an inhibitory threshold above which G1 cyclin-dependent kinases accumulate before activation. We have used the HL-60 cell line to study regulation of p27 as cells withdraw from the cell cycle following treatment with 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA). We found that the amount of p27 is maximal in G0 cells, lower in G1 cells, and undetectable in S-phase cells. In contrast to the protein, the amount of p27 mRNA was the same in these populations, suggesting that accumulation of p27 during the cell cycle and as cells withdraw from the cell cycle is controlled by post-transcriptional mechanisms. In S-phase cells, the degradation of p27 appears to predominate as a regulatory mechanism. In G0 cells, there was an increase in the synthesis rate of p27. Our data demonstrate that, in G0 cells, accumulation of p27 is due to an increase in the amount of p27 mRNA in polyribosomes.


Molecular Cell | 2009

CUL4A Abrogation Augments DNA Damage Response and Protection against Skin Carcinogenesis

Liren Liu; Sharrell Lee; Jianxuan Zhang; Sara B. Peters; Jeffrey Hannah; Yue Zhang; Yan Yin; Andrew Koff; Liang Ma; Pengbo Zhou

It is intuitively obvious that the ability of a cell to repair DNA damage is saturable, either by limitation of enzymatic activities, the time allotted to achieve their function, or both. However, very little is known regarding the mechanisms that establish such a threshold. Here we demonstrate that the CUL4A ubiquitin ligase restricts the cellular repair capacity by orchestrating the concerted actions of nucleotide excision repair (NER) and the DNA damage-responsive G1/S checkpoint through selective degradation of the DDB2 and XPC DNA damage sensors and the p21/CIP1/WAF1 checkpoint effector. We generated Cul4a conditional knockout mice and observed that skin-specific Cul4a ablation dramatically increased resistance to UV-induced skin carcinogenesis. Our findings reveal that wild-type cells do not operate at their full DNA repair potential, underscore the critical role of CUL4A in establishing the cellular DNA repair threshold, and highlight the potential augmentation of cellular repair proficiency by pharmacological CUL4A inhibition.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2000

Bcl-2 Retards Cell Cycle Entry through p27Kip1, pRB Relative p130, and Altered E2F Regulation

Gino Vairo; Timothy J. Soos; Todd M. Upton; Juan Zalvide; James A. DeCaprio; Mark E. Ewen; Andrew Koff; Jerry M. Adams

ABSTRACT Independent of its antiapoptotic function, Bcl-2 can, through an undetermined mechanism, retard entry into the cell cycle. Cell cycle progression requires the phosphorylation by cyclin-dependent kinases (Cdks) of retinoblastoma protein (pRB) family members to free E2F transcription factors. We have explored whether retarded cycle entry is mediated by the Cdk inhibitor p27 or the pRB family. In quiescent fibroblasts, enforced Bcl-2 expression elevated levels of both p27 and the pRB relative p130. Bcl-2 still slowed G1 progression in cells deficient in pRB but not in those lacking p27 or p130. Hence, pRB is not required, but both p27 and p130 are essential mediators. The ability of p130 to form repressive complexes with E2F4 is implicated, because the retardation by Bcl-2 was accentuated by coexpressed E2F4. A plausible relevant target of p130/E2F4 is the E2F1 gene, because Bcl-2 expression delayed E2F1 accumulation during G1 progression and overexpression of E2F1 overrode the Bcl-2 inhibition. Hence, Bcl-2 appears to retard cell cycle entry by increasing p27 and p130 levels and maintaining repressive complexes of p130 with E2F4, perhaps to delay E2F1 expression.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2000

A U-Rich Element in the 5′ Untranslated Region Is Necessary for the Translation of p27 mRNA

S. Sean Millard; Anxo Vidal; Maurice Markus; Andrew Koff

ABSTRACT Increased translation of p27 mRNA correlates with withdrawal of cells from the cell cycle. This raised the possibility that antimitogenic signals might mediate their effects on p27 expression by altering complexes that formed on p27 mRNA, regulating its translation. In this report, we identify a U-rich sequence in the 5′ untranslated region (5′UTR) of p27 mRNA that is necessary for efficient translation in proliferating and nonproliferating cells. We show that a number of factors bind to the 5′UTR in vitro in a manner dependent on the U-rich element, and their availability in the cytosol is controlled in a growth- and cell cycle-dependent fashion. One of these factors is HuR, a protein previously implicated in mRNA stability, transport, and translation. Another is hnRNP C1 and C2, proteins implicated in mRNA processing and the translation of a specific subset of mRNAs expressed in differentiated cells. In lovastatin-treated MDA468 cells, the mobility of the associated hnRNP C1 and C2 proteins changed, and this correlated with increased p27 expression. Together, these data suggest that the U-rich dependent RNP complex on the 5′UTR may regulate the translation of p27 mRNA and may be a target of antimitogenic signals.


EMBO Reports | 2001

p21cip1 is required for the differentiation of oligodendrocytes independently of cell cycle withdrawal

Jürgen Zezula; Patrizia Casaccia-Bonnefil; Sergei A. Ezhevsky; Donna J. Osterhout; Joel M. Levine; Steve F. Dowdy; Moses V. Chao; Andrew Koff

Differentiation of most cell types requires both establishment of G1 arrest and the induction of a program related to achieving quiescence. We have chosen to study the differentiation of oligodendrocyte cells to determine the role of p27 and p21 in this process. Here we report that both p27 and p21 are required for the appropriate differentiation of these cells. p27 is required for proper withdrawal from the cell cycle, p21 is not. Instead, p21 is required for the establishment of the differentiation program following growth arrest. Similar observations were made in vivo. We show that p21−/− cells withdraw from the cell cycle similar to wild‐type cells; however, early in animal life, the brain is hypomyelinated, inferring that the loss of p21 delayed myelination in the cerebellum. We found that we could complement or bypass the differentiation failure in p21−/− cells with either PD98059, an inhibitor of Mek1, or by transducing them with a tat–p16Ink4a protein. We concluded that the two cdk inhibitors serve non‐redundant roles in this program of differentiation, with p27 being responsible for arrest and p21 having a function in differentiation independent of its ability to control exit from the cell cycle.

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Hiroaki Kiyokawa

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Nancy Yeh

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Carlos Cordon-Cardo

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Mary E. Klein

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Samuel Singer

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Howard I. Scher

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Marta Kovatcheva

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Yuhui Liu

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Aimee M. Crago

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Anxo Vidal

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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