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Dive into the research topics where Ann Hedley is active.

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Featured researches published by Ann Hedley.


Nature | 2011

Haem oxygenase is synthetically lethal with the tumour suppressor fumarate hydratase

Christian Frezza; Liang Zheng; Ori Folger; Kartik N. Rajagopalan; Elaine D. MacKenzie; Livnat Jerby; Massimo Micaroni; Barbara Chaneton; Julie Adam; Ann Hedley; Gabriela Kalna; Ian Tomlinson; Patrick J. Pollard; Watson Dg; Ralph J. DeBerardinis; Tomer Shlomi; Eytan Ruppin; Eyal Gottlieb

Fumarate hydratase (FH) is an enzyme of the tricarboxylic acid cycle (TCA cycle) that catalyses the hydration of fumarate into malate. Germline mutations of FH are responsible for hereditary leiomyomatosis and renal-cell cancer (HLRCC). It has previously been demonstrated that the absence of FH leads to the accumulation of fumarate, which activates hypoxia-inducible factors (HIFs) at normal oxygen tensions. However, so far no mechanism that explains the ability of cells to survive without a functional TCA cycle has been provided. Here we use newly characterized genetically modified kidney mouse cells in which Fh1 has been deleted, and apply a newly developed computer model of the metabolism of these cells to predict and experimentally validate a linear metabolic pathway beginning with glutamine uptake and ending with bilirubin excretion from Fh1-deficient cells. This pathway, which involves the biosynthesis and degradation of haem, enables Fh1-deficient cells to use the accumulated TCA cycle metabolites and permits partial mitochondrial NADH production. We predicted and confirmed that targeting this pathway would render Fh1-deficient cells non-viable, while sparing wild-type Fh1-containing cells. This work goes beyond identifying a metabolic pathway that is induced in Fh1-deficient cells to demonstrate that inhibition of haem oxygenation is synthetically lethal when combined with Fh1 deficiency, providing a new potential target for treating HLRCC patients.


Nature Communications | 2015

Fumarate induces redox-dependent senescence by modifying glutathione metabolism

Liang Zheng; Simone Cardaci; Livnat Jerby; Elaine D. MacKenzie; Marco Sciacovelli; T. Isaac Johnson; Edoardo Gaude; Ayala King; Joshua Leach; RuAngelie Edrada-Ebel; Ann Hedley; Nicholas A. Morrice; Galbriela Kalna; Karen Blyth; Eytan Ruppin; Christian Frezza; Eyal Gottlieb

Mutations in the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle enzyme fumarate hydratase (FH) are associated with a highly malignant form of renal cancer. We combined analytical chemistry and metabolic computational modelling to investigate the metabolic implications of FH loss in immortalized and primary mouse kidney cells. Here, we show that the accumulation of fumarate caused by the inactivation of FH leads to oxidative stress that is mediated by the formation of succinicGSH, a covalent adduct between fumarate and glutathione. Chronic succination of GSH, caused by the loss of FH, or by exogenous fumarate, leads to persistent oxidative stress and cellular senescence in vitro and in vivo. Importantly, the ablation of p21, a key mediator of senescence, in Fh1-deficient mice resulted in the transformation of benign renal cysts into a hyperplastic lesion, suggesting that fumarate-induced senescence needs to be bypassed for the initiation of renal cancers.


Cancer and Metabolism | 2013

Reversed argininosuccinate lyase activity in fumarate hydratase-deficient cancer cells

Liang Zheng; Elaine D. MacKenzie; Saadia A. Karim; Ann Hedley; Karen Blyth; Gabriela Kalna; David G. Watson; Peter W. Szlosarek; Christian Frezza; Eyal Gottlieb

BackgroundLoss of function of fumarate hydratase (FH), the mitochondrial tumor suppressor and tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle enzyme, is associated with a highly malignant form of papillary and collecting duct renal cell cancer. The accumulation of fumarate in these cells has been linked to the tumorigenic process. However, little is known about the overall effects of the loss of FH on cellular metabolism.MethodsWe performed comprehensive metabolomic analyses of urine from Fh1- deficient mice and stable isotopologue tracing from human and mouse FH-deficient cell lines to investigate the biochemical signature of the loss of FH.ResultsThe metabolomics analysis revealed that the urea cycle metabolite argininosuccinate is a common metabolic biomarker of FH deficiency. Argininosuccinate was found to be produced from arginine and fumarate by the reverse activity of the urea cycle enzyme argininosuccinate lyase (ASL), making these cells auxotrophic for arginine. Depleting arginine from the growth media by the addition of pegylated arginine deiminase (ADI-PEG 20) decreased the production of argininosuccinate in FH-deficient cells and reduced cell survival and proliferation.ConclusionsThese results unravel a previously unidentified correlation between fumarate accumulation and the urea cycle enzyme ASL in FH-deficient cells. The finding that FH-deficient cells become auxotrophic for arginine opens a new therapeutic perspective for the cure of hereditary leiomyomatosis and renal cell cancer (HLRCC).


The EMBO Journal | 2015

E‐cadherin can limit the transforming properties of activating β‐catenin mutations

David J. Huels; Rachel A. Ridgway; Sorina Radulescu; Marc Leushacke; Andrew D. Campbell; Sujata Biswas; Simon Leedham; Stefano Serra; Runjan Chetty; Guenievre Moreaux; Lee Parry; James Matthews; Fei Song; Ann Hedley; Gabriela Kalna; Fatih Ceteci; Karen Ruth Reed; Valerie Meniel; Aoife Maguire; Brendan Doyle; Ola Söderberg; Nick Barker; Alastair J.M. Watson; Lionel Larue; Alan Richard Clarke; Owen J. Sansom

Wnt pathway deregulation is a common characteristic of many cancers. Only colorectal cancer predominantly harbours mutations in APC, whereas other cancer types (hepatocellular carcinoma, solid pseudopapillary tumours of the pancreas) have activating mutations in β‐catenin (CTNNB1). We have compared the dynamics and the potency of β‐catenin mutations in vivo. Within the murine small intestine (SI), an activating mutation of β‐catenin took much longer to achieve Wnt deregulation and acquire a crypt‐progenitor cell (CPC) phenotype than Apc or Gsk3 loss. Within the colon, a single activating mutation of β‐catenin was unable to drive Wnt deregulation or induce the CPC phenotype. This ability of β‐catenin mutation to differentially transform the SI versus the colon correlated with higher expression of E‐cadherin and a higher number of E‐cadherin:β‐catenin complexes at the membrane. Reduction in E‐cadherin synergised with an activating mutation of β‐catenin resulting in a rapid CPC phenotype within the SI and colon. Thus, there is a threshold of β‐catenin that is required to drive transformation, and E‐cadherin can act as a buffer to sequester mutated β‐catenin.


Molecular Cell | 2017

Bromodomain Protein BRD4 Is a Transcriptional Repressor of Autophagy and Lysosomal Function

Jun-ichi Sakamaki; Simon Wilkinson; Marcel Hahn; Nilgun Tasdemir; Jim O’Prey; William Clark; Ann Hedley; Colin Nixon; Jaclyn S. Long; Maria New; Tim Van Acker; Sharon A. Tooze; Scott W. Lowe; Ivan Dikic; Kevin M. Ryan

Summary Autophagy is a membrane-trafficking process that directs degradation of cytoplasmic material in lysosomes. The process promotes cellular fidelity, and while the core machinery of autophagy is known, the mechanisms that promote and sustain autophagy are less well defined. Here we report that the epigenetic reader BRD4 and the methyltransferase G9a repress a TFEB/TFE3/MITF-independent transcriptional program that promotes autophagy and lysosome biogenesis. We show that BRD4 knockdown induces autophagy in vitro and in vivo in response to some, but not all, situations. In the case of starvation, a signaling cascade involving AMPK and histone deacetylase SIRT1 displaces chromatin-bound BRD4, instigating autophagy gene activation and cell survival. Importantly, this program is directed independently and also reciprocally to the growth-promoting properties of BRD4 and is potently repressed by BRD4-NUT, a driver of NUT midline carcinoma. These findings therefore identify a distinct and selective mechanism of autophagy regulation.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Sleeping Beauty screen reveals Pparg activation in metastatic prostate cancer

Imran Ahmad; Ernest Mui; Laura Galbraith; Rachana Patel; Ee Hong Tan; Mark Salji; Alistair G. Rust; Peter Repiscak; Ann Hedley; Elke Markert; Carolyn Loveridge; Louise van der Weyden; Joanne Edwards; Owen J. Sansom; David J. Adams; Hing Y. Leung

Significance Using an unbiased forward mutagenesis screen, we were able to successfully identify candidate genes that drive advanced and metastatic prostate cancer (CaP). Alterations of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma (PPARG), encoding a regulator crucial of lipid metabolism, appear to play a role in the development of metastatic CaP in both humans and mice. Prostate cancer (CaP) is the most common adult male cancer in the developed world. The paucity of biomarkers to predict prostate tumor biology makes it important to identify key pathways that confer poor prognosis and guide potential targeted therapy. Using a murine forward mutagenesis screen in a Pten-null background, we identified peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma (Pparg), encoding a ligand-activated transcription factor, as a promoter of metastatic CaP through activation of lipid signaling pathways, including up-regulation of lipid synthesis enzymes [fatty acid synthase (FASN), acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACC), ATP citrate lyase (ACLY)]. Importantly, inhibition of PPARG suppressed tumor growth in vivo, with down-regulation of the lipid synthesis program. We show that elevated levels of PPARG strongly correlate with elevation of FASN in human CaP and that high levels of PPARG/FASN and PI3K/pAKT pathway activation confer a poor prognosis. These data suggest that CaP patients could be stratified in terms of PPARG/FASN and PTEN levels to identify patients with aggressive CaP who may respond favorably to PPARG/FASN inhibition.


Cell Death & Differentiation | 2017

TGFβ pathway limits dedifferentiation following WNT and MAPK pathway activation to suppress intestinal tumourigenesis

Patrizia Cammareri; David F. Vincent; Michael C. Hodder; Rachel A. Ridgway; Claudio Murgia; Max Nobis; Andrew D. Campbell; Julia Varga; David J. Huels; Chithra Subramani; Katie L H Prescott; Colin Nixon; Ann Hedley; Simon T. Barry; Florian R. Greten; Gareth J. Inman; Owen J. Sansom

Recent studies have suggested increased plasticity of differentiated cells within the intestine to act both as intestinal stem cells (ISCs) and tumour-initiating cells. However, little is known of the processes that regulate this plasticity. Our previous work has shown that activating mutations of Kras or the NF-κB pathway can drive dedifferentiation of intestinal cells lacking Apc. To investigate this process further, we profiled both cells undergoing dedifferentiation in vitro and tumours generated from these cells in vivo by gene expression analysis. Remarkably, no clear differences were observed in the tumours; however, during dedifferentiation in vitro we found a marked upregulation of TGFβ signalling, a pathway commonly mutated in colorectal cancer (CRC). Genetic inactivation of TGFβ type 1 receptor (Tgfbr1/Alk5) enhanced the ability of KrasG12D/+ mutation to drive dedifferentiation and markedly accelerated tumourigenesis. Mechanistically this is associated with a marked activation of MAPK signalling. Tumourigenesis from differentiated compartments is potently inhibited by MEK inhibition. Taken together, we show that tumours arising in differentiated compartments will be exposed to different suppressive signals, for example, TGFβ and blockade of these makes tumourigenesis more efficient from this compartment.


Science Translational Medicine | 2018

TGFβ inhibition restores a regenerative response in acute liver injury by suppressing paracrine senescence

Tom Bird; Miryam Müller; Luke Boulter; David F. Vincent; Rachel A. Ridgway; Elena Lopez-Guadamillas; Wei-Yu Lu; Thomas Jamieson; Olivier Govaere; Andrew D. Campbell; Sofia Ferreira-Gonzalez; Alicia M. Cole; Trevor Hay; Kenneth J. Simpson; William Clark; Ann Hedley; Mairi Clarke; Pauline Gentaz; Colin Nixon; Steven Bryce; Christos Kiourtis; Joep Sprangers; Robert J. B. Nibbs; Nico van Rooijen; Laurent Bartholin; Steven R. McGreal; Udayan Apte; Simon T. Barry; John P. Iredale; Alan Richard Clarke

Inhibiting acute injury–induced senescence mediated by TGFβ signaling in regenerative epithelium improves liver regeneration. Setting liver regeneration free The liver is an excellent model of organ regeneration; however, regeneration may fail in a normal liver after acute severe injury such as acetaminophen poisoning. Bird and colleagues now show that a process that prevents proliferation termed senescence, which is classically associated with aging and carcinogenesis, inhibits the liver’s regenerative cells after acute injury. This senescence can be spread from cell to cell by the signaling molecule transforming growth factor–β (TGFβ). When TGFβ signaling was blocked during acetaminophen poisoning in mice, senescence was impeded, regeneration accelerated, and mouse survival increased. Therefore, targeting senescence induced by acute tissue injury is an attractive therapeutic approach to improve regeneration. Liver injury results in rapid regeneration through hepatocyte proliferation and hypertrophy. However, after acute severe injury, such as acetaminophen poisoning, effective regeneration may fail. We investigated how senescence may underlie this regenerative failure. In human acute liver disease, and murine models, p21-dependent hepatocellular senescence was proportionate to disease severity and was associated with impaired regeneration. In an acetaminophen injury mouse model, a transcriptional signature associated with the induction of paracrine senescence was observed within 24 hours and was followed by one of impaired proliferation. In mouse genetic models of hepatocyte injury and senescence, we observed transmission of senescence to local uninjured hepatocytes. Spread of senescence depended on macrophage-derived transforming growth factor–β1 (TGFβ1) ligand. In acetaminophen poisoning, inhibition of TGFβ receptor 1 (TGFβR1) improved mouse survival. TGFβR1 inhibition reduced senescence and enhanced liver regeneration even when delivered beyond the therapeutic window for treating acetaminophen poisoning. This mechanism, in which injury-induced senescence impairs liver regeneration, is an attractive therapeutic target for developing treatments for acute liver failure.


Science Translational Medicine | 2018

The ERBB network facilitates KRAS-driven lung tumorigenesis

Björn Kruspig; Tiziana Monteverde; Sarah Neidler; A Hock; Emma M. Kerr; Colin Nixon; William Clark; Ann Hedley; Sarah Laing; Seth B. Coffelt; John Le Quesne; Craig Dick; Karen H. Vousden; Carla P. Martins; Daniel J. Murphy

G12 mutant KRAS requires tonic ERBB network activity for initiation and maintenance of lung cancer. A new role for kinase inhibitors The KRAS oncogene is frequently mutated in a variety of cancer types, including lung cancer. Lung cancers with KRAS mutations are usually difficult to target, and conventional thinking dictates that these tumors are resistant to receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitors because those act upstream of the constitutively active KRAS protein. However, it appears that receptor tyrosine kinase signaling may have an effect on KRAS-driven lung tumors after all, by amplifying their growth beyond the effects of KRAS alone. Kruspig et al. and Moll et al. independently reached this conclusion and identified approved multi-kinase inhibitors that are effective in the setting of KRAS-mutant lung cancer in multiple mouse models, suggesting that this may be a potential treatment strategy for human patients as well. KRAS is the most frequently mutated driver oncogene in human adenocarcinoma of the lung. There are presently no clinically proven strategies for treatment of KRAS-driven lung cancer. Activating mutations in KRAS are thought to confer independence from upstream signaling; however, recent data suggest that this independence may not be absolute. We show that initiation and progression of KRAS-driven lung tumors require input from ERBB family receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs): Multiple ERBB RTKs are expressed and active from the earliest stages of KRAS-driven lung tumor development, and treatment with a multi-ERBB inhibitor suppresses formation of KRASG12D-driven lung tumors. We present evidence that ERBB activity amplifies signaling through the core RAS pathway, supporting proliferation of KRAS-mutant tumor cells in culture and progression to invasive disease in vivo. Brief pharmacological inhibition of the ERBB network enhances the therapeutic benefit of MEK (mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase) inhibition in an autochthonous tumor setting. Our data suggest that lung cancer patients with KRAS-driven disease may benefit from inclusion of multi-ERBB inhibitors in rationally designed treatment strategies.


Oncogene | 2018

Calcium signalling links MYC to NUAK1

Tiziana Monteverde; J Tait-Mulder; Ann Hedley; John R. P. Knight; Owen J. Sansom; Daniel J. Murphy

NUAK1 is a member of the AMPK-related family of kinases. Recent evidence suggests that NUAK1 is an important regulator of cell adhesion and migration, cellular and organismal metabolism, and regulation of TAU stability. As such, NUAK1 may play key roles in multiple diseases ranging from neurodegeneration to diabetes and metastatic cancer. Previous work revealed a crucial role for NUAK1 in supporting viability of tumour cells specifically when MYC is overexpressed. This role is surprising, given that NUAK1 is activated by the tumour suppressor LKB1. Here we show that, in tumour cells lacking LKB1, NUAK1 activity is maintained by an alternative pathway involving calcium-dependent activation of PKCα. Calcium/PKCα-dependent activation of NUAK1 supports engagement of the AMPK-TORC1 metabolic checkpoint, thereby protecting tumour cells from MYC-driven cell death, and indeed, MYC selects for this pathway in part via transcriptional regulation of PKCα and ITPR. Our data point to a novel role for calcium in supporting tumour cell viability and clarify the synthetic lethal interaction between NUAK1 and MYC.

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Gabriela Kalna

University of Strathclyde

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