Brian B. Liau
Harvard University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Brian B. Liau.
Nature | 2016
William A. Flavahan; Yotam Drier; Brian B. Liau; Shawn M. Gillespie; Andrew S. Venteicher; Anat Stemmer-Rachamimov; Mario L. Suvà; Bradley E. Bernstein
Gain-of-function IDH mutations are initiating events that define major clinical and prognostic classes of gliomas. Mutant IDH protein produces a new onco-metabolite, 2-hydroxyglutarate, which interferes with iron-dependent hydroxylases, including the TET family of 5′-methylcytosine hydroxylases. TET enzymes catalyse a key step in the removal of DNA methylation. IDH mutant gliomas thus manifest a CpG island methylator phenotype (G-CIMP), although the functional importance of this altered epigenetic state remains unclear. Here we show that human IDH mutant gliomas exhibit hypermethylation at cohesin and CCCTC-binding factor (CTCF)-binding sites, compromising binding of this methylation-sensitive insulator protein. Reduced CTCF binding is associated with loss of insulation between topological domains and aberrant gene activation. We specifically demonstrate that loss of CTCF at a domain boundary permits a constitutive enhancer to interact aberrantly with the receptor tyrosine kinase gene PDGFRA, a prominent glioma oncogene. Treatment of IDH mutant gliomaspheres with a demethylating agent partially restores insulator function and downregulates PDGFRA. Conversely, CRISPR-mediated disruption of the CTCF motif in IDH wild-type gliomaspheres upregulates PDGFRA and increases proliferation. Our study suggests that IDH mutations promote gliomagenesis by disrupting chromosomal topology and allowing aberrant regulatory interactions that induce oncogene expression.
Nature | 2015
Henry E. Pelish; Brian B. Liau; Ioana I. Nitulescu; Anupong Tangpeerachaikul; Zachary C. Poss; Diogo H. Da Silva; Brittany T. Caruso; Alexander Arefolov; Olugbeminiyi Fadeyi; Amanda L. Christie; Karrie Du; Deepti Banka; Elisabeth V. Schneider; Anja Jestel; Ge Zou; Chong Si; Christopher C. Ebmeier; Roderick T. Bronson; Andrei V. Krivtsov; Andrew G. Myers; Nancy E. Kohl; Andrew L. Kung; Scott A. Armstrong; Madeleine E. Lemieux; Dylan J. Taatjes; Matthew D. Shair
Super-enhancers (SEs), which are composed of large clusters of enhancers densely loaded with the Mediator complex, transcription factors and chromatin regulators, drive high expression of genes implicated in cell identity and disease, such as lineage-controlling transcription factors and oncogenes. BRD4 and CDK7 are positive regulators of SE-mediated transcription. By contrast, negative regulators of SE-associated genes have not been well described. Here we show that the Mediator-associated kinases cyclin-dependent kinase 8 (CDK8) and CDK19 restrain increased activation of key SE-associated genes in acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) cells. We report that the natural product cortistatin A (CA) selectively inhibits Mediator kinases, has anti-leukaemic activity in vitro and in vivo, and disproportionately induces upregulation of SE-associated genes in CA-sensitive AML cell lines but not in CA-insensitive cell lines. In AML cells, CA upregulated SE-associated genes with tumour suppressor and lineage-controlling functions, including the transcription factors CEBPA, IRF8, IRF1 and ETV6 (refs 6, 7, 8). The BRD4 inhibitor I-BET151 downregulated these SE-associated genes, yet also has anti-leukaemic activity. Individually increasing or decreasing the expression of these transcription factors suppressed AML cell growth, providing evidence that leukaemia cells are sensitive to the dosage of SE-associated genes. Our results demonstrate that Mediator kinases can negatively regulate SE-associated gene expression in specific cell types, and can be pharmacologically targeted as a therapeutic approach to AML.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010
Brian B. Liau; Matthew D. Shair
The first total synthesis of the Lycopodium alkaloid (+)-fastigiatine has been accomplished in 15 steps and 30% overall yield from known compounds. Noteworthy transformations include a convergent fragment coupling via a nucleophilic cyclopropane opening, a highly diastereoselective formal [3 + 3]-cycloaddition, and a transannular Mannich reaction to construct the core of the natural product.
Nature | 2017
Tyler E. Miller; Brian B. Liau; Lisa C Wallace; Andrew R. Morton; Qi Xie; Deobrat Dixit; Daniel C. Factor; Leo Kim; James J. Morrow; Qiulian Wu; Stephen C. Mack; Christopher G. Hubert; Shawn M. Gillespie; William A. Flavahan; Thomas Hoffmann; Rohit Thummalapalli; Michael T. Hemann; Patrick J. Paddison; Craig Horbinski; Johannes Zuber; Peter C. Scacheri; Bradley E. Bernstein; Paul J. Tesar; Jeremy N. Rich
Glioblastoma is a universally lethal cancer with a median survival time of approximately 15 months. Despite substantial efforts to define druggable targets, there are no therapeutic options that notably extend the lifespan of patients with glioblastoma. While previous work has largely focused on in vitro cellular models, here we demonstrate a more physiologically relevant approach to target discovery in glioblastoma. We adapted pooled RNA interference (RNAi) screening technology for use in orthotopic patient-derived xenograft models, creating a high-throughput negative-selection screening platform in a functional in vivo tumour microenvironment. Using this approach, we performed parallel in vivo and in vitro screens and discovered that the chromatin and transcriptional regulators needed for cell survival in vivo are non-overlapping with those required in vitro. We identified transcription pause–release and elongation factors as one set of in vivo-specific cancer dependencies, and determined that these factors are necessary for enhancer-mediated transcriptional adaptations that enable cells to survive the tumour microenvironment. Our lead hit, JMJD6, mediates the upregulation of in vivo stress and stimulus response pathways through enhancer-mediated transcriptional pause–release, promoting cell survival specifically in vivo. Targeting JMJD6 or other identified elongation factors extends survival in orthotopic xenograft mouse models, suggesting that targeting transcription elongation machinery may be an effective therapeutic strategy for glioblastoma. More broadly, this study demonstrates the power of in vivo phenotypic screening to identify new classes of ‘cancer dependencies’ not identified by previous in vitro approaches, and could supply new opportunities for therapeutic intervention.
Molecular Cell | 2016
Aaron D. Viny; Oren Ram; Russell J.H. Ryan; Matthew J. Cotton; Laura Donohue; Cem Sievers; Yotam Drier; Brian B. Liau; Shawn M. Gillespie; Kaitlin M. Carroll; Michael B. Cross; Ross L. Levine; Bradley E. Bernstein
Genome-wide profiling of histone modifications can provide systematic insight into the regulatory elements and programs engaged in a given cell type. However, conventional chromatin immunoprecipitation and sequencing (ChIP-seq) does not capture quantitative information on histone modification levels, requires large amounts of starting material, and involves tedious processing of each individual sample. Here, we address these limitations with a technology that leverages DNA barcoding to profile chromatin quantitatively and in multiplexed format. We concurrently map relative levels of multiple histone modifications across multiple samples, each comprising as few as a thousand cells. We demonstrate the technology by monitoring dynamic changes following inhibition of p300, EZH2, or KDM5, by linking altered epigenetic landscapes to chromatin regulator mutations, and by mapping active and repressive marks in purified human hematopoietic stem cells. Hence, this technology enables quantitative studies of chromatin state dynamics across rare cell types, genotypes, environmental conditions, and drug treatments.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014
Amy S. Lee; Brian B. Liau; Matthew D. Shair
A unique subset of the Lycopodium alkaloid natural products share a 7-membered-ring substructure and may potentially arise from a common biosynthetic precursor. To both explore and exploit these structural relationships, we sought to develop a unified biosynthetically inspired strategy to efficiently access these complex polycyclic alkaloids through the use of a cascade sequence. In pursuit of these goals, the first total synthesis of (+)-fastigiatine (2) was accomplished via a series of cascade reactions; we describe herein a full account of our efforts. Insight from these endeavors led to critical modifications of our synthetic strategy, which enabled the first total syntheses of (-)-himeradine A (1), (-)-lycopecurine (3), and (-)-dehydrolycopecurine (4), as well as the syntheses of (+)-lyconadin A (5) and (-)-lyconadin B (6). Our approach features a diastereoselective one-pot sequence for constructing the common 7-membered-ring core system, followed by either a biomimetic transannular Mannich reaction to access himeradine A (1), lycopecurine (3), and dehydrolycopecurine (4) or an imine reduction for lyconadins A (5) and B (6). This strategy may potentially enable access to all 7-membered-ring-containing Lycopodium alkaloids and provides additional insight into their biosynthetic origin.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2016
Qi Xie; Qiulian Wu; Leo Kim; Tyler E. Miller; Brian B. Liau; Stephen C. Mack; Kailin Yang; Daniel C. Factor; Xiaoguang Fang; Zhi Huang; Wenchao Zhou; Kareem Alazem; Xiuxing Wang; Bradley E. Bernstein; Shideng Bao; Jeremy N. Rich
Glioblastomas co-opt stem cell regulatory pathways to maintain brain tumor-initiating cells (BTICs), also known as cancer stem cells. NOTCH signaling has been a molecular target in BTICs, but NOTCH antagonists have demonstrated limited efficacy in clinical trials. Recombining binding protein suppressor of hairless (RBPJ) is considered a central transcriptional mediator of NOTCH activity. Here, we report that pharmacologic NOTCH inhibitors were less effective than targeting RBPJ in suppressing tumor growth. While NOTCH inhibitors decreased canonical NOTCH gene expression, RBPJ regulated a distinct profile of genes critical to BTIC stemness and cell cycle progression. RBPJ was preferentially expressed by BTICs and required for BTIC self-renewal and tumor growth. MYC, a key BTIC regulator, bound the RBPJ promoter and treatment with a bromodomain and extraterminal domain (BET) family bromodomain inhibitor decreased MYC and RBPJ expression. Proteomic studies demonstrated that RBPJ binds CDK9, a component of positive transcription elongation factor b (P-TEFb), to target gene promoters, enhancing transcriptional elongation. Collectively, RBPJ links MYC and transcriptional control through CDK9, providing potential nodes of fragility for therapeutic intervention, potentially distinct from NOTCH.
Cell Stem Cell | 2017
Brian B. Liau; Cem Sievers; Laura Donohue; Shawn M. Gillespie; William A. Flavahan; Tyler E. Miller; Andrew S. Venteicher; Christine Hebert; Christopher D. Carey; Scott J. Rodig; Sarah J. Shareef; Fadi J. Najm; Hiroaki Wakimoto; Daniel P. Cahill; Jeremy N. Rich; Mario L. Suvà; Anoop P. Patel; Bradley E. Bernstein
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012
Brian B. Liau; Benjamin C. Milgram; Matthew D. Shair
Organic Letters | 2011
Benjamin C. Milgram; Brian B. Liau; Matthew D. Shair