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Dive into the research topics where Ashley Cass is active.

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Featured researches published by Ashley Cass.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2013

Host immunity contributes to the anti-melanoma activity of BRAF inhibitors

Deborah A. Knight; Shin Foong Ngiow; Ming Li; Tiffany J. Parmenter; Stephen Mok; Ashley Cass; Nicole M. Haynes; Kathryn M. Kinross; Hideo Yagita; Richard C. Koya; Thomas G. Graeber; Antoni Ribas; Grant A. McArthur; Mark J. Smyth

The BRAF mutant, BRAF(V600E), is expressed in nearly half of melanomas, and oral BRAF inhibitors induce substantial tumor regression in patients with BRAF(V600E) metastatic melanoma. The inhibitors are believed to work primarily by inhibiting BRAF(V600E)-induced oncogenic MAPK signaling; however, some patients treated with BRAF inhibitors exhibit increased tumor immune infiltration, suggesting that a combination of BRAF inhibitors and immunotherapy may be beneficial. We used two relatively resistant variants of Braf(V600E)-driven mouse melanoma (SM1 and SM1WT1) and melanoma-prone mice to determine the role of host immunity in type I BRAF inhibitor PLX4720 antitumor activity. We found that PLX4720 treatment downregulated tumor Ccl2 gene expression and decreased tumor CCL2 expression in both Braf(V600E) mouse melanoma transplants and in de novo melanomas in a manner that was coincident with reduced tumor growth. While PLX4720 did not directly increase tumor immunogenicity, analysis of SM1 tumor-infiltrating leukocytes in PLX4720-treated mice demonstrated a robust increase in CD8(+) T/FoxP3(+)CD4(+) T cell ratio and NK cells. Combination therapy with PLX4720 and anti-CCL2 or agonistic anti-CD137 antibodies demonstrated significant antitumor activity in mouse transplant and de novo tumorigenesis models. These data elucidate a role for host CCR2 in the mechanism of action of type I BRAF inhibitors and support the therapeutic potential of combining BRAF inhibitors with immunotherapy.


Nature Medicine | 2016

The long noncoding RNA Chaer defines an epigenetic checkpoint in cardiac hypertrophy.

Zhihua Wang; Xiao-Jing Zhang; Yan-Xiao Ji; Peng Zhang; Ke-Qiong Deng; Jun Gong; Shuxun Ren; Xinghua Wang; Iris Chen; He Wang; Chen Gao; Tomohiro Yokota; Yen Sin Ang; Shen Li; Ashley Cass; Thomas M. Vondriska; Guangping Li; Arjun Deb; Deepak Srivastava; Huang-Tian Yang; Xinshu Xiao; Hongliang Li; Yibin Wang

Epigenetic reprogramming is a critical process of pathological gene induction during cardiac hypertrophy and remodeling, but the underlying regulatory mechanisms remain to be elucidated. Here we identified a heart-enriched long noncoding (lnc)RNA, named cardiac-hypertrophy-associated epigenetic regulator (Chaer), which is necessary for the development of cardiac hypertrophy. Mechanistically, Chaer directly interacts with the catalytic subunit of polycomb repressor complex 2 (PRC2). This interaction, which is mediated by a 66-mer motif in Chaer, interferes with PRC2 targeting to genomic loci, thereby inhibiting histone H3 lysine 27 methylation at the promoter regions of genes involved in cardiac hypertrophy. The interaction between Chaer and PRC2 is transiently induced after hormone or stress stimulation in a process involving mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1, and this interaction is a prerequisite for epigenetic reprogramming and induction of genes involved in hypertrophy. Inhibition of Chaer expression in the heart before, but not after, the onset of pressure overload substantially attenuates cardiac hypertrophy and dysfunction. Our study reveals that stress-induced pathological gene activation in the heart requires a previously uncharacterized lncRNA-dependent epigenetic checkpoint.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Doxycycline Alters Metabolism and Proliferation of Human Cell Lines

Ethan Ahler; William J. Sullivan; Ashley Cass; Daniel Braas; Autumn G. York; Steven J. Bensinger; Thomas G. Graeber; Heather R. Christofk

The tetracycline antibiotics are widely used in biomedical research as mediators of inducible gene expression systems. Despite many known effects of tetracyclines on mammalian cells–including inhibition of the mitochondrial ribosome–there have been few reports on potential off-target effects at concentrations commonly used in inducible systems. Here, we report that in human cell lines, commonly used concentrations of doxycycline change gene expression patterns and concomitantly shift metabolism towards a more glycolytic phenotype, evidenced by increased lactate secretion and reduced oxygen consumption. We also show that these concentrations are sufficient to slow proliferation. These findings suggest that researchers using doxycycline in inducible expression systems should design appropriate controls to account for potential confounding effects of the drug on cellular metabolism.


Molecular Oncology | 2014

COX-2 inhibition prevents the appearance of cutaneous squamous cell carcinomas accelerated by BRAF inhibitors.

Helena Escuin-Ordinas; Mohammad Atefi; Yong Fu; Ashley Cass; Charles Ng; Rong Rong Huang; Sharona Yashar; Begonya Comin-Anduix; Earl Avramis; Alistair J. Cochran; Richard Marais; Roger S. Lo; Thomas G. Graeber; Harvey R. Herschman; Antoni Ribas

Keratoacanthomas (KAs) and cutaneous squamous cell carcinomas (cuSCCs) develop in 15–30% of patients with BRAFV600E metastatic melanoma treated with BRAF inhibitors (BRAFi). These lesions resemble mouse skin tumors induced by the two‐stage DMBA/TPA skin carcinogenesis protocol; in this protocol BRAFi accelerates tumor induction. Since prior studies demonstrated cyclooxygenase 2 (COX‐2) is necessary for DMBA/TPA tumor induction, we hypothesized that COX‐2 inhibition might prevent BRAFi‐accelerated skin tumors. Celecoxib, a COX‐2 inhibitor, significantly delayed tumor acceleration by the BRAFi inhibitor PLX7420 and decreased tumor number by 90%. Tumor gene expression profiling demonstrated that celecoxib partially reversed the PLX4720‐induced gene signature. In PDV cuSCC cells, vemurafenib (a clinically approved BRAFi) increased ERK phosphorylation and soft agar colony formation; both responses were greatly decreased by celecoxib. In clinical trials trametinib, a MEK inhibitor (MEKi) increases BRAFi therapy efficacy in BRAFV600E melanomas and reduces BRAFi‐induced KA and cuSCC frequency. Trametinib also reduced vemurafenib‐induced PDV soft agar colonies, but less efficiently than celecoxib. The trametinb/celecoxib combination was more effective than either inhibitor alone. In conclusion, celecoxib suppressed both BRAFi‐accelerated skin tumors and soft‐agar colonies, warranting its testing as a chemopreventive agent for non‐melanoma skin lesions in patients treated with BRAFi alone or in combination with MEKi.


The EMBO Journal | 2015

The Sm protein methyltransferase PRMT5 is not required for primordial germ cell specification in mice

Ziwei Li; Juehua Yu; Linzi Hosohama; Kevin Nee; Sofia Gkountela; Sonal Chaudhari; Ashley Cass; Xinshu Xiao; Amander T. Clark

PRMT5 is a type II protein arginine methyltransferase with roles in stem cell biology, reprograming, cancer and neurogenesis. During embryogenesis in the mouse, it was hypothesized that PRMT5 functions with the master germline determinant BLIMP1 to promote primordial germ cell (PGC) specification. Using a Blimp1‐Cre germline conditional knockout, we discovered that Prmt5 has no major role in murine germline specification, or the first global epigenetic reprograming event involving depletion of cytosine methylation from DNA and histone H3 lysine 9 dimethylation from chromatin. Instead, we discovered that PRMT5 functions at the conclusion of PGC reprograming I to promote proliferation, survival and expression of the gonadal germline program as marked by MVH. We show that PRMT5 regulates gene expression by promoting methylation of the Sm spliceosomal proteins and significantly altering the spliced repertoire of RNAs in mammalian embryonic cells and primordial cells.


Molecular Systems Biology | 2017

Recurrent patterns of DNA copy number alterations in tumors reflect metabolic selection pressures

Nicholas A. J. Graham; Aspram Minasyan; Anastasia Lomova; Ashley Cass; Nikolas G. Balanis; Michael C. Friedman; Shawna Chan; Sophie Zhao; Adrian Delgado; James Go; Lillie Beck; Christian Hurtz; Carina Ng; Rong Qiao; Johanna ten Hoeve; Nicolaos Palaskas; Hong Wu; Markus Müschen; Asha S Multani; Elisa R. Port; Steven M. Larson; Nikolaus Schultz; Daniel Braas; Heather R. Christofk; Ingo K. Mellinghoff; Thomas G. Graeber

Copy number alteration (CNA) profiling of human tumors has revealed recurrent patterns of DNA amplifications and deletions across diverse cancer types. These patterns are suggestive of conserved selection pressures during tumor evolution but cannot be fully explained by known oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes. Using a pan‐cancer analysis of CNA data from patient tumors and experimental systems, here we show that principal component analysis‐defined CNA signatures are predictive of glycolytic phenotypes, including 18F‐fluorodeoxy‐glucose (FDG) avidity of patient tumors, and increased proliferation. The primary CNA signature is enriched for p53 mutations and is associated with glycolysis through coordinate amplification of glycolytic genes and other cancer‐linked metabolic enzymes. A pan‐cancer and cross‐species comparison of CNAs highlighted 26 consistently altered DNA regions, containing 11 enzymes in the glycolysis pathway in addition to known cancer‐driving genes. Furthermore, exogenous expression of hexokinase and enolase enzymes in an experimental immortalization system altered the subsequent copy number status of the corresponding endogenous loci, supporting the hypothesis that these metabolic genes act as drivers within the conserved CNA amplification regions. Taken together, these results demonstrate that metabolic stress acts as a selective pressure underlying the recurrent CNAs observed in human tumors, and further cast genomic instability as an enabling event in tumorigenesis and metabolic evolution.


Circulation-cardiovascular Genetics | 2016

Decoding the Long Noncoding RNA during Cardiac Maturation: A Roadmap for Functional Discovery

Marlin Touma; Xuedong Kang; Yan Zhao; Ashley Cass; Fuying Gao; Reshma Biniwale; Giovanni Coppola; Xinshu Xiao; Brian Reemtsen; Yibin Wang

Background—Cardiac maturation during perinatal transition of heart is critical for functional adaptation to hemodynamic load and nutrient environment. Perturbation in this process has major implications in congenital heart defects. Transcriptome programming during perinatal stages is an important information but incomplete in current literature, particularly, the expression profiles of the long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) are not fully elucidated. Methods and Results—From comprehensive analysis of transcriptomes derived from neonatal mouse heart left and right ventricles, a total of 45 167 unique transcripts were identified, including 21 916 known and 2033 novel lncRNAs. Among these lncRNAs, 196 exhibited significant dynamic regulation along maturation process. By implementing parallel weighted gene co-expression network analysis of mRNA and lncRNA data sets, several lncRNA modules coordinately expressed in a developmental manner similar to protein coding genes, while few lncRNAs revealed chamber-specific patterns. Out of 2262 lncRNAs located within 50 kb of protein coding genes, 5% significantly correlate with the expression of their neighboring genes. The impact of Ppp1r1b-lncRNA on the corresponding partner gene Tcap was validated in cultured myoblasts. This concordant regulation was also conserved in human infantile hearts. Furthermore, the Ppp1r1b-lncRNA/Tcap expression ratio was identified as a molecular signature that differentiated congenital heart defect phenotypes. Conclusions—The study provides the first high-resolution landscape on neonatal cardiac lncRNAs and reveals their potential interaction with mRNA transcriptome during cardiac maturation. Ppp1r1b-lncRNA was identified as a regulator of Tcap expression, with dynamic interaction in postnatal cardiac development and congenital heart defects.


JCI insight | 2017

Wnt11 regulates cardiac chamber development and disease during perinatal maturation

Marlin Touma; Xuedong Kang; Fuying Gao; Yan Zhao; Ashley Cass; Reshma Biniwale; Xinshu Xiao; Mansuoreh Eghbali; Giovanni Coppola; Brian Reemtsen; Yibin Wang

Ventricular chamber growth and development during perinatal circulatory transition is critical for functional adaptation of the heart. However, the chamber-specific programs of neonatal heart growth are poorly understood. We used integrated systems genomic and functional biology analyses of the perinatal chamber specific transcriptome and we identified Wnt11 as a prominent regulator of chamber-specific proliferation. Importantly, downregulation of Wnt11 expression was associated with cyanotic congenital heart defect (CHD) phenotypes and correlated with O2 saturation levels in hypoxemic infants with Tetralogy of Fallot (TOF). Perinatal hypoxia treatment in mice suppressed Wnt11 expression and induced myocyte proliferation more robustly in the right ventricle, modulating Rb1 protein activity. Wnt11 inactivation was sufficient to induce myocyte proliferation in perinatal mouse hearts and reduced Rb1 protein and phosphorylation in neonatal cardiomyocytes. Finally, downregulated Wnt11 in hypoxemic TOF infantile hearts was associated with Rb1 suppression and induction of proliferation markers. This study revealed a previously uncharacterized function of Wnt11-mediated signaling as an important player in programming the chamber-specific growth of the neonatal heart. This function influences the chamber-specific development and pathogenesis in response to hypoxia and cyanotic CHDs. Defining the underlying regulatory mechanism may yield chamber-specific therapies for infants born with CHDs.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2016

Global analyses of endonucleolytic cleavage in mammals reveal expanded repertoires of cleavage-inducing small RNAs and their targets

Ashley Cass; Jae Hoon Bahn; Jae-Hyung Lee; Christopher Greer; Xianzhi Lin; Yong Kim; Yun-Hua Esther Hsiao; Xinshu Xiao

In mammals, small RNAs are important players in post-transcriptional gene regulation. While their roles in mRNA destabilization and translational repression are well appreciated, their involvement in endonucleolytic cleavage of target RNAs is poorly understood. Very few microRNAs are known to guide RNA cleavage. Endogenous small interfering RNAs are expected to induce target cleavage, but their target genes remain largely unknown. We report a systematic study of small RNA-mediated endonucleolytic cleavage in mouse through integrative analysis of small RNA and degradome sequencing data without imposing any bias toward known small RNAs. Hundreds of small cleavage-inducing RNAs and their cognate target genes were identified, significantly expanding the repertoire of known small RNA-guided cleavage events. Strikingly, both small RNAs and their target sites demonstrated significant overlap with retrotransposons, providing evidence for the long-standing speculation that retrotransposable elements in mRNAs are leveraged as signals for gene targeting. Furthermore, our analysis showed that the RNA cleavage pathway is also present in human cells but affecting a different repertoire of retrotransposons. These results show that small RNA-guided cleavage is more widespread than previously appreciated. Their impact on retrotransposons in non-coding regions shed light on important aspects of mammalian gene regulation.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2013

Erratum: Host immunity contributes to the anti-melanoma activity of BRAF inhibitors (American Society for Clinical Investigation (2013) 123:3 (1371-1381) DOI 10.1172/JCI66236)

Deborah A. Knight; Shin Foong Ngiow; Ming Li; Tiffany J. Parmenter; Stephen Mok; Ashley Cass; Nicole M. Haynes; Kathryn M. Kinross; Hideo Yagita; Richard C. Koya; Thomas G. Graeber; Antoni Ribas; Grant A. McArthur; Mark J. Smyth

3182 The Journal of Clinical Investigation http://www.jci.org Volume 123 Number 7 July 2013 Erratum Host immunity contributes to the anti-melanoma activity of BRAF inhibitors Deborah A. Knight, Shin Foong Ngiow, Ming Li, Tiffany Parmenter, Stephen Mok, Ashley Cass, Nicole M. Haynes, Kathryn Kinross, Hideo Yagita, Richard C. Koya, Thomas G. Graeber, Antoni Ribas, Grant A. McArthur, and Mark J. Smyth Original citation: J Clin Invest. 2013;123(3):1371–1381. doi:10.1172/JCI66236. Citation for this erratum: J Clin Invest. 2013;123(7):3182. doi:10.1172/JCI70645. During preparation of the manuscript, Figure 9 was labeled incorrectly. The correct figure is below. The JCI regrets the error.

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Xinshu Xiao

University of California

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Yibin Wang

University of California

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Brian Reemtsen

University of California

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Marlin Touma

University of California

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Xuedong Kang

University of California

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Yan Zhao

University of California

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Fuying Gao

University of California

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