Christian Ruiz
University of Basel
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Featured researches published by Christian Ruiz.
Modern Pathology | 2010
Veit Scheble; Martin Braun; Rameen Beroukhim; Craig H. Mermel; Christian Ruiz; Theresia Wilbertz; Ann-Cathrin Stiedl; Karen Petersen; Markus Reischl; Rainer Kuefer; David Schilling; Falko Fend; Glen Kristiansen; Matthew Meyerson; Mark A. Rubin; Lukas Bubendorf; Sven Perner
Identification of specific somatic gene alterations is crucial for the insight into the development, progression, and clinical behavior of individual cancer types. The recently discovered recurrent ERG rearrangement in prostate cancer might represent a prostate cancer-specific alteration that has not been systematically assessed in tumors other than prostate cancer. Aim of this study was to assess, whether the ERG rearrangement and the distinct deletion site between TMPRSS2 and ERG, both predominantly resulting in a TMPRSS2–ERG fusion, occur in tumors other than prostate cancer. We assessed 54 different tumor types (2942 samples in total) for their ERG rearrangement status by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH). To calibrate, we analyzed 285 prostate cancer samples for the ERG rearrangement frequency. Additionally, we interrogated a high-resolution single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) data set across 3131 cancer specimens (26 tumor types) for copy number alterations. None of the 54 different tumor types assessed by FISH harbored an ERG rearrangement, whereas the prostate cancer samples revealed an ERG rearrangement in 49.5% of cases. Furthermore, within the 26 tumor types assessed for copy number alterations by SNP, the distinct deletion site between TMPRSS2 and ERG (21q22.2–3) was detectable exclusively in prostate cancer. Although Ewings sarcoma and AML have known rearrangements rarely involving ERG, we hypothesize that the ERG rearrangement as well as the distinct deletion site on 21q22.2–3 between TMPRSS2 and ERG are prostate-cancer-specific genomic alterations. These observations provide further insight into the oncogenesis of prostate cancer and might be critical for the development of ERG rearrangement assessment as a clinical tool.
International Journal of Cancer | 2006
Christian Ruiz; Silvia Seibt; Khawla Al Kuraya; Abdul K. Siraj; Martina Mirlacher; Peter Schraml; Robert Maurer; Hanspeter Spichtin; Joachim Torhorst; Savelina Popovska; Ronald Simon; Guido Sauter
Tissue microarrays (TMAs) are potentially suited to find associations between molecular features and clinical outcome. Enhanced cell proliferation, as measured by Ki67 immunohistochemistry, is related to poor patient prognosis in many different tumor types. Ki67 expression shows considerable intratumoral heterogeneity. It is unclear if the TMA format is suitable for the analysis of potentially heterogeneous markers because of the small size of TMA spots. We have analyzed a breast cancer TMA containing 2,517 breast tissues, including 2,222 neoplastic and 295 normal or premalignant samples, for Ki67 labeling index (Ki67 LI) and additional markers with a known relationship to Ki67 LI by immunohistochemistry (ER, PR, Bcl‐2, Egfr, p16, p53) and Fluorescence in situ hybridization (HER2, MDM2, CCND1, MYC). A high Ki67 LI was linked to tumor phenotype including grade (p < 0.0001), stage (p < 0.0001), nodal stage (p = 0.0018), and patient prognosis (p < 0.0001), elevated protein levels of p53, p16 and Egfr, reduced levels of Bcl2, ER, and PR (p < 0.0001 each), as well as amplifications of HER2, MYC, CCND1 and MDM2 (p < 0.0001 each). In summary, all expected associations between Ki67 and the analyzed molecular markers could be reproduced with high statistical significance using a TMA containing only one tissue sample per tumor, measuring 0.6 mm in diameter. We conclude that associations with cell proliferation can be reliably analyzed in a TMA format.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011
Christian Ruiz; Elizabeth Lenkiewicz; Lisa Evers; Tara Holley; Alex Robeson; Jeffrey Kiefer; Michael J. Demeure; Michael A. Hollingsworth; Michael Shen; Donna Prunkard; Peter S. Rabinovitch; Tobias Zellweger; Spyro Mousses; Jeffrey M. Trent; John D. Carpten; Lukas Bubendorf; Daniel D. Von Hoff; Michael T. Barrett
Cancers frequently arise as a result of an acquired genomic instability and the subsequent clonal evolution of neoplastic cells with variable patterns of genetic aberrations. Thus, the presence and behaviors of distinct clonal populations in each patients tumor may underlie multiple clinical phenotypes in cancers. We applied DNA content-based flow sorting to identify and isolate the nuclei of clonal populations from tumor biopsies, which was coupled with array CGH and targeted resequencing. The results produced high-definition genomic profiles of clonal populations from 40 pancreatic adenocarcinomas and a set of prostate adenocarcinomas, including serial biopsies from a patient who progressed to androgen-independent metastatic disease. The genomes of clonal populations were found to have patient-specific aberrations of clinical relevance. Furthermore, we identified genomic aberrations specific to therapeutically responsive and resistant clones arising during the evolution of androgen-independent metastatic prostate adenocarcinoma. We also distinguished divergent clonal populations within single biopsies and mapped aberrations in multiple aneuploid populations arising in primary and metastatic pancreatic adenocarcinoma. We propose that our high-definition analyses of the genomes of distinct clonal populations of cancer cells in patients in vivo can help guide diagnoses and tailor approaches to personalized treatment.
Cancer Research | 2004
Christian Ruiz; Wentao Huang; Monika E. Hegi; Katrin Lange; Marie-France Hamou; Erika Fluri; Ruth Chiquet-Ehrismann; Gertraud Orend
Tenascin-C is an adhesion-modulating extracellular matrix molecule that is highly expressed in tumor stroma and stimulates tumor cell proliferation. Adhesion of T98G glioblastoma cells to a fibronectin substratum is inhibited by tenascin-C. To address the mechanism of action, we performed a RNA expression analysis of T89G cells grown in the presence or absence of tenascin-C and found that tenascin-C down-regulates tropomyosin-1. Upon overexpression of tropomyosin-1, cell spreading on a fibronectin/tenascin-C substratum was restored, indicating that tenascin-C destabilizes actin stress fibers through down-regulation of tropomyosin-1. Tenascin-C also increased the expression of the endothelin receptor type A and stimulated the corresponding mitogen-activated protein kinase signaling pathway, which triggers extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2 phosphorylation and c-Fos expression. Tenascin-C additionally caused down-regulation of the Wnt inhibitor Dickkopf 1. In consequence, Wnt signaling was enhanced through stabilization of β-catenin and stimulated the expression of the β-catenin target Id2. Finally, our in vivo data derived from astrocytoma tissue arrays link increased tenascin-C and Id2 expression with high malignancy. Because increased endothelin and Wnt signaling, as well as reduced tropomyosin-1 expression, are closely linked to transformation and tumorigenesis, we suggest that tenascin-C specifically modulates these signaling pathways to enhance proliferation of glioma cells.
PLOS ONE | 2012
Christian Ruiz; Joana Raquel Martins; Florian Rudin; Sandra Schneider; Tanja Dietsche; Claude Fischer; Luigi Tornillo; Luigi Terracciano; Rainer Schreiber; Lukas Bubendorf; Karl Kunzelmann
Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) has the potential for early metastasis and is associated with poor survival. Ano1 (Dog1) is an established and sensitive marker for the diagnosis of gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GIST) and has recently been identified as a Ca2+ activated Cl− channel. Although the ANO1 gene is located on the 11q13 locus, a region which is known to be amplified in different types of human carcinomas, a detailed analysis of Ano1 amplification and expression in HNSCC has not been performed. It is thus still unclear how Ano1 contributes to malignancy in HNSCC. We analyzed genomic amplification of the 11q13 locus and Ano1 together with Ano1-protein expression in a large collection of HNSCC samples. We detected a highly significant correlation between amplification and expression of Ano1 and showed that HNSCC patients with Ano1 protein expression have a poor overall survival. We further analyzed the expression of the Ano1 protein in more than 4′000 human samples from 80 different tumor types and 76 normal tissue types and detected that besides HNSCC and GISTs, Ano1 was rarely expressed in other tumor samples or healthy human tissues. In HNSCC cell lines, expression of Ano1 caused Ca2+ activated Cl− currents, which induced cell motility and cell migration in wound healing and in real time migration assays, respectively. In contrast, knockdown of Ano1 did not affect intracellular Ca2+ signaling and surprisingly did not reduce cell proliferation in BHY cells. Further, expression and activity of Ano1 strongly correlated with the ability of HNSCC cells to regulate their volume. Thus, poor survival in HNSCC patients is correlated with the presence of Ano1. Our results further suggest that Ano1 facilitates regulation of the cell volume and causes cell migration, which both can contribute to metastatic progression in HNSCC.
Cancer Research | 2007
Katrin Lange; Martial Kammerer; Monika E. Hegi; Stefan Grotegut; Antje Dittmann; Wentao Huang; Erika Fluri; George Wai-Cheong Yip; Martin Götte; Christian Ruiz; Gertraud Orend
Tenascin-C, an extracellular matrix molecule of the tumor-specific microenvironment, counteracts the tumor cell proliferation-suppressing effect of fibronectin by blocking the integrin alpha(5)beta(1)/syndecan-4 complex. This causes cell rounding and stimulates tumor cell proliferation. Tenascin-C also stimulates endothelin receptor type A (EDNRA) expression. Here, we investigated whether signaling through endothelin receptors affects tenascin-C-induced cell rounding. We observed that endothelin receptor type B (EDNRB) activation inhibited cell rounding by tenascin-C and induced spreading by restoring expression and function of focal adhesion kinase (FAK), paxillin, RhoA, and tropomyosin-1 (TM1) via activation of epidermal growth factor receptor, phospholipase C, c-Jun NH(2)-terminal kinase, and the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase pathway. In contrast to EDNRB, signaling through EDNRA induced cell rounding, which correlated with FAK inhibition and TM1 and RhoA protein destabilization in the presence of tenascin-C. This occurred in a mitogen-activated protein kinase/extracellular signal-regulated kinase kinase-dependent manner. Thus, tumorigenesis might be enhanced by tenascin-C involving EDNRA signaling. Inhibition of tenascin-C in combination with blocking both endothelin receptors could present a strategy for sensitization of cancer and endothelial cells toward anoikis.
Cancer Research | 2007
Martin Degen; Florence Brellier; Renate Kain; Christian Ruiz; Luigi Terracciano; Gertraud Orend; Ruth Chiquet-Ehrismann
This is the first report about human tenascin-W, the fourth and final member of the extracellular matrix protein family of tenascins. Sixty-three human breast tumor extracts were analyzed by Western blotting for the presence of tenascin-W and compared with tenascin-C, an established marker of tumor stroma. Interestingly, we found tenascin-W expression in the majority of the tumor tissues, but no detectable expression in the normal mammary parenchyma. Eighty-one percent of the breast tumor samples were tenascin-W positive and 86% showed expression of tenascin-C. However, tenascin-W and tenascin-C amounts varied greatly between tumors and some contained either tenascin-W or tenascin-C exclusively, indicating independent mechanisms regulating their expression. Although there was no difference between high- or low-grade tumors with respect to the presence of tenascin-C, tenascin-W was more prominent in low-grade tumors. For 42 of the breast cancer tissues, a frozen tumor microarray was available to confirm the Western blot data by immunohistochemistry. Similar to tenascin-C, tenascin-W was detected in the tumor stroma. Fibroblasts adhered to tenascin-W in a beta(1) integrin-dependent manner and spread with a distinctive morphology under conditions where they remained round on tenascin-C. CHOB2 cells expressing alpha(v)beta(1) or alpha4beta(1) integrins were able to spread on tenascin-W. Furthermore, addition of tenascin-W to the culture medium increased migration of breast cancer cells toward a fibronectin substratum in vitro. These data imply that tenascin-W expression in the activated tumor stroma facilitates tumorigenesis by supporting the migratory behavior of breast cancer cells.
Oncogene | 2006
Martin Oeggerli; Peter Schraml; Christian Ruiz; M Bloch; Hedvika Novotny; Martina Mirlacher; Guido Sauter; Ronald Simon
Amplification of 6p22 occurs in about 10–20% of bladder cancers and is associated with enhanced tumour cell proliferation. Candidate target genes for the 6p22 amplicon include E2F3 and the adjacent gene NM_017774. To clarify which gene is representing the main target, we compared the prevalence of the amplification and the functional role of both genes. Amplification of E2F3 and NM_017774 was analysed by fluorescence in situ hybridization on a bladder cancer tissue microarray composed of 2317 cancer samples. Both genes showed amplification in 104 of 893 (11.6%) interpretable tumours and were exclusively found co-amplified. Additional gene expression analysis by real-time polymerase chain reaction in 12 tumour-derived cell lines revealed that amplification of 6p22 was always associated with co-overexpression of E2F3 and NM_017774. Furthermore, RNA interference was used to study the influence of reduced gene expression on cell growth. In tumour cells with and without the 6p22 amplicon, knockdown of E2F3 always lead to unequivocal reduction of proliferation, whereas knockdown of NM_017774 was only capable to slow down cell proliferation in non-amplified cells. Our findings point out that E2F3 but not NM_017774 is driving enhanced proliferation of 6p22 amplified tumour cells. We conclude that E2F3 must be responsible for the growth advantage of 6p22 amplified bladder cancer cells.
PLOS ONE | 2012
Martin Oeggerli; Yuemin Tian; Christian Ruiz; Barbara Wijker; Guido Sauter; Ellen C. Obermann; Uwe Güth; Inti Zlobec; Matthias Sausbier; Karl Kunzelmann; Lukas Bubendorf
KCNMA1 encodes the α-subunit of the large conductance, voltage and Ca2+-activated (BK) potassium channel and has been reported as a target gene of genomic amplification at 10q22 in prostate cancer. To investigate the prevalence of the amplification in other human cancers, the copy number of KCNMA1 was analyzed by fluorescence-in-situ-hybridization (FISH) in 2,445 tumors across 118 different tumor types. Amplification of KCNMA1 was restricted to a small but distinct fraction of breast, ovarian and endometrial cancer with the highest prevalence in invasive ductal breast cancers and serous carcinoma of ovary and endometrium (3–7%). We performed an extensive analysis on breast cancer tissue microarrays (TMA) of 1,200 tumors linked to prognosis. KCNMA1 amplification was significantly associated with high tumor stage, high grade, high tumor cell proliferation, and poor prognosis. Immunofluorescence revealed moderate or strong KCNMA1 protein expression in 8 out of 9 human breast cancers and in the breast cancer cell line MFM223. KCNMA1-function in breast cancer cell lines was confirmed by whole-cell patch clamp recordings and proliferation assays, using siRNA-knockdown, BK channel activators such as 17ß-estradiol and the BK-channel blocker paxilline. Our findings revealed that enhanced expression of KCNMA1 correlates with and contributes to high proliferation rate and malignancy of breast cancer.
PLOS ONE | 2012
Tara Holley; Elizabeth Lenkiewicz; Lisa Evers; Waibhav Tembe; Christian Ruiz; Joël R. Gsponer; Cyrill A. Rentsch; Lukas Bubendorf; Mark Stapleton; Doug Amorese; Christophe Legendre; Heather E. Cunliffe; Ann E. McCullough; Barbara A. Pockaj; David Craig; John D. Carpten; Daniel D. Von Hoff; Christine A. Iacobuzio-Donahue; Michael T. Barrett
Formalin fixed paraffin embedded (FFPE) tissues are a vast resource of annotated clinical samples. As such, they represent highly desirable and informative materials for the application of high definition genomics for improved patient management and to advance the development of personalized therapeutics. However, a limitation of FFPE tissues is the variable quality of DNA extracted for analyses. Furthermore, admixtures of non-tumor and polyclonal neoplastic cell populations limit the number of biopsies that can be studied and make it difficult to define cancer genomes in patient samples. To exploit these valuable tissues we applied flow cytometry-based methods to isolate pure populations of tumor cell nuclei from FFPE tissues and developed a methodology compatible with oligonucleotide array CGH and whole exome sequencing analyses. These were used to profile a variety of tumors (breast, brain, bladder, ovarian and pancreas) including the genomes and exomes of matching fresh frozen and FFPE pancreatic adenocarcinoma samples.