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Dive into the research topics where Christopher G. Peña is active.

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Featured researches published by Christopher G. Peña.


Nature | 2012

A murine lung cancer co-clinical trial identifies genetic modifiers of therapeutic response

Zhao Chen; Katherine A. Cheng; Zandra E. Walton; Yuchuan Wang; Hiromichi Ebi; Takeshi Shimamura; Yan Liu; Tanya Tupper; Jing Ouyang; Jie Li; Peng Gao; Michele S. Woo; Chunxiao Xu; Masahiko Yanagita; Abigail Altabef; Shumei Wang; Charles Lee; Yuji Nakada; Christopher G. Peña; Yanping Sun; Yoko Franchetti; Catherine Yao; Amy Saur; Michael D. Cameron; Mizuki Nishino; D. Neil Hayes; Matthew D. Wilkerson; Patrick J. Roberts; Carrie B. Lee; Nabeel Bardeesy

Targeted therapies have demonstrated efficacy against specific subsets of molecularly defined cancers. Although most patients with lung cancer are stratified according to a single oncogenic driver, cancers harbouring identical activating genetic mutations show large variations in their responses to the same targeted therapy. The biology underlying this heterogeneity is not well understood, and the impact of co-existing genetic mutations, especially the loss of tumour suppressors, has not been fully explored. Here we use genetically engineered mouse models to conduct a ‘co-clinical’ trial that mirrors an ongoing human clinical trial in patients with KRAS-mutant lung cancers. This trial aims to determine if the MEK inhibitor selumetinib (AZD6244) increases the efficacy of docetaxel, a standard of care chemotherapy. Our studies demonstrate that concomitant loss of either p53 (also known as Tp53) or Lkb1 (also known as Stk11), two clinically relevant tumour suppressors, markedly impaired the response of Kras-mutant cancers to docetaxel monotherapy. We observed that the addition of selumetinib provided substantial benefit for mice with lung cancer caused by Kras and Kras and p53 mutations, but mice with Kras and Lkb1 mutations had primary resistance to this combination therapy. Pharmacodynamic studies, including positron-emission tomography (PET) and computed tomography (CT), identified biological markers in mice and patients that provide a rationale for the differential efficacy of these therapies in the different genotypes. These co-clinical results identify predictive genetic biomarkers that should be validated by interrogating samples from patients enrolled on the concurrent clinical trial. These studies also highlight the rationale for synchronous co-clinical trials, not only to anticipate the results of ongoing human clinical trials, but also to generate clinically relevant hypotheses that can inform the analysis and design of human studies.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2014

PAX7 expression defines germline stem cells in the adult testis

Gina M. Aloisio; Yuji Nakada; Hatice D. Saatcioglu; Christopher G. Peña; Michael D. Baker; Edward Tarnawa; Jishnu Mukherjee; Hema Manjunath; Abhijit Bugde; Anita Sengupta; James F. Amatruda; Ileana Cuevas; F. Kent Hamra; Diego H. Castrillon

Spermatogenesis is a complex, multistep process that maintains male fertility and is sustained by rare germline stem cells. Spermatogenic progression begins with spermatogonia, populations of which express distinct markers. The identity of the spermatogonial stem cell population in the undisturbed testis is controversial due to a lack of reliable and specific markers. Here we identified the transcription factor PAX7 as a specific marker of a rare subpopulation of A(single) spermatogonia in mice. PAX7+ cells were present in the testis at birth. Compared with the adult testis, PAX7+ cells constituted a much higher percentage of neonatal germ cells. Lineage tracing in healthy adult mice revealed that PAX7+ spermatogonia self-maintained and produced expanding clones that gave rise to mature spermatozoa. Interestingly, in mice subjected to chemotherapy and radiotherapy, both of which damage the vast majority of germ cells and can result in sterility, PAX7+ spermatogonia selectively survived, and their subsequent expansion contributed to the recovery of spermatogenesis. Finally, PAX7+ spermatogonia were present in the testes of a diverse set of mammals. Our data indicate that the PAX7+ subset of A(single) spermatogonia functions as robust testis stem cells that maintain fertility in normal spermatogenesis in healthy mice and mediate recovery after severe germline injury, such as occurs after cancer therapy.


Nature | 2017

CPS1 maintains pyrimidine pools and DNA synthesis in KRAS/LKB1-mutant lung cancer cells

Jiyeon Kim; Zeping Hu; Ling Cai; Kailong Li; Eunhee Choi; Brandon Faubert; Divya Bezwada; Jaime Rodriguez-Canales; Pamela Villalobos; Yu Fen Lin; Min Ni; Kenneth Huffman; Luc Girard; Lauren Averett Byers; Keziban Unsal-Kacmaz; Christopher G. Peña; John V. Heymach; Els Wauters; Johan Vansteenkiste; Diego H. Castrillon; Benjamin P C Chen; Ignacio I. Wistuba; Diether Lambrechts; Jian Xu; John D. Minna; Ralph J. DeBerardinis

Metabolic reprogramming by oncogenic signals promotes cancer initiation and progression. The oncogene KRAS and tumour suppressor STK11, which encodes the kinase LKB1, regulate metabolism and are frequently mutated in non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Concurrent occurrence of oncogenic KRAS and loss of LKB1 (KL) in cells specifies aggressive oncological behaviour. Here we show that human KL cells and tumours share metabolomic signatures of perturbed nitrogen handling. KL cells express the urea cycle enzyme carbamoyl phosphate synthetase-1 (CPS1), which produces carbamoyl phosphate in the mitochondria from ammonia and bicarbonate, initiating nitrogen disposal. Transcription of CPS1 is suppressed by LKB1 through AMPK, and CPS1 expression correlates inversely with LKB1 in human NSCLC. Silencing CPS1 in KL cells induces cell death and reduces tumour growth. Notably, cell death results from pyrimidine depletion rather than ammonia toxicity, as CPS1 enables an unconventional pathway of nitrogen flow from ammonia into pyrimidines. CPS1 loss reduces the pyrimidine to purine ratio, compromises S-phase progression and induces DNA-polymerase stalling and DNA damage. Exogenous pyrimidines reverse DNA damage and rescue growth. The data indicate that the KL oncological genotype imposes a metabolic vulnerability related to a dependence on a cross-compartmental pathway of pyrimidine metabolism in an aggressive subset of NSCLC.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2015

LKB1 loss promotes endometrial cancer progression via CCL2-dependent macrophage recruitment

Christopher G. Peña; Yuji Nakada; Hatice D. Saatcioglu; Gina M. Aloisio; Ileana Cuevas; Song Zhang; David Miller; Jayanthi S. Lea; Kwok-Kin Wong; Ralph J. DeBerardinis; Antonio L. Amelio; Rolf A. Brekken; Diego H. Castrillon

Endometrial cancer is the most common gynecologic malignancy and the fourth most common malignancy in women. For most patients in whom the disease is confined to the uterus, treatment results in successful remission; however, there are no curative treatments for tumors that have progressed beyond the uterus. The serine/threonine kinase LKB1 has been identified as a potent suppressor of uterine cancer, but the biological modes of action of LKB1 in this context remain incompletely understood. Here, we have shown that LKB1 suppresses tumor progression by altering gene expression in the tumor microenvironment. We determined that LKB1 inactivation results in abnormal, cell-autonomous production of the inflammatory cytokine chemokine (C-C motif) ligand 2 (CCL2) within tumors, which leads to increased recruitment of macrophages with prominent tumor-promoting activities. Inactivation of Ccl2 in an Lkb1-driven mouse model of endometrial cancer slowed tumor progression and increased survival. In human primary endometrial cancers, loss of LKB1 protein was strongly associated with increased CCL2 expression by tumor cells as well as increased macrophage density in the tumor microenvironment. These data demonstrate that CCL2 is a potent effector of LKB1 loss in endometrial cancer, creating potential avenues for therapeutic opportunities.


PLOS ONE | 2013

The LKB1 tumor suppressor as a biomarker in mouse and human tissues.

Yuji Nakada; Thomas G. Stewart; Christopher G. Peña; Song Zhang; Ni Zhao; Nabeel Bardeesy; Norman E. Sharpless; Kwok-Kin Wong; D. Neil Hayes; Diego H. Castrillon

Germline mutations in the LKB1 gene (also known as STK11) cause the Peutz-Jeghers Syndrome, and somatic loss of LKB1 has emerged as causal event in a wide range of human malignancies, including melanoma, lung cancer, and cervical cancer. The LKB1 protein is a serine-threonine kinase that phosphorylates AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) and other downstream targets. Conditional knockout studies in mouse models have consistently shown that LKB1 loss promotes a highly-metastatic phenotype in diverse tissues, and human studies have demonstrated a strong association between LKB1 inactivation and tumor recurrence. Furthermore, LKB1 deficiency confers sensitivity to distinct classes of anticancer drugs. The ability to reliably identify LKB1-deficient tumors is thus likely to have important prognostic and predictive implications. Previous research studies have employed polyclonal antibodies with limited success, and there is no widely-employed immunohistochemical assay for LKB1. Here we report an assay based on a rabbit monoclonal antibody that can reliably detect endogenous LKB1 protein (and its absence) in mouse and human formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissues. LKB1 protein levels determined through this assay correlated strongly with AMPK phosphorylation both in mouse and human tumors, and with mRNA levels in human tumors. Our studies fully validate this immunohistochemical assay for LKB1 in paraffin-embedded formalin tissue sections. This assay should be broadly useful for research studies employing mouse models and also for the development of human tissue-based assays for LKB1 in diverse clinical settings.


Oncogene | 2013

Cooperation between p53 and the telomere-protecting shelterin component Pot1a in endometrial carcinogenesis.

Esra A. Akbay; Christopher G. Peña; D. Ruder; J. A. Michel; Yuji Nakada; Sen Pathak; Asha S. Multani; Sandy Chang; Diego H. Castrillon

Type II endometrial cancer (EMCA) represents only 10% of all EMCAs, but accounts for 40% of EMCA-related mortality. Previous studies of human tumors have shown an association between Type II tumors and damaged telomeres. We hypothesized that the lack of murine Type II EMCA models is due to the extremely long telomeres in laboratory mouse strains. We previously showed that telomerase-null mice with critically short telomeres developed endometrial lesions histologically resembling endometrial intraepithelial carcinoma (EIC), the accepted precursor for Type II EMCA. However, these mice did not develop invasive endometrial adenocarcinoma, and instead succumbed prematurely to multi-organ failure. Here, we modeled critical telomere attrition by conditionally inactivating Pot1a, a component of the shelterin complex that stabilizes telomeres, within endometrial epithelium. Inactivation of Pot1a by itself did not stimulate endometrial carcinogenesis, and did not result in detectable DNA damage or apoptosis in endometrium. However, simultaneous inactivation of Pot1a and p53 resulted in EIC-like lesions by 9 months indistinguishable from those seen in late generation telomerase-null mice. These lesions progressed to invasive endometrial adenocarcinomas as early as 9 months of age with metastatic disease in 100% of the animals by 15 months. These tumors were poorly differentiated endometrial adenocarcinomas with prominent nuclear atypia, resembling human Type II cancers. Furthermore, these tumors were aneuploid with double-stranded DNA breaks and end-to-end telomere fusions and most were tetraploid or near-tetraploid. These studies lend further support to the hypothesis that telomeric instability has a critical role in Type II endometrial carcinogenesis and provides an intriguing in-vivo correlate to recent studies implicating telomere-dependent tetraploidization as an important mechanism in carcinogenesis.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2017

Visualization and Lineage Tracing of Pax7 + Spermatogonial Stem Cells in the Mouse

Gina M. Aloisio; Ileana Cuevas; Yuji Nakada; Christopher G. Peña; Diego H. Castrillon

The precise identity of spermatogonial stem cells-the germline stem cell of the adult testis-remains a controversial topic. Technical limitations have included the lack of specific markers and methods for lineage tracing of Asingle spermatogonia and their subsets. Immunolocalization of proteins in tissue sections has been a standard tool for the in situ identification and visualization of rare cellular subsets. However, these studies are limited by the need for faithful and reliable protein markers to define these cell types, as well as the availability of specific antibodies to these markers. Here we describe the use of a monoclonal antibody to Pax7 as a means to detect spermatogonial stem cells (SSCs) both in tissue sections and in intact seminiferous tubules. Furthermore, we describe methods for lineage tracing as an alternative method to visualize Pax7+ spermatogonial stem cells and their progeny.


Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology | 2017

LKB1 as a Tumor Suppressor in Uterine Cancer: Mouse Models and Translational Studies

Christopher G. Peña; Diego H. Castrillon

The LKB1 tumor suppressor was identified in 1998 as the gene mutated in the Peutz-Jeghers Syndrome (PJS), a hereditary cancer predisposition characterized by gastrointestinal polyposis and a high incidence of cancers, particularly carcinomas, at a variety of anatomic sites including the gastrointestinal tract, lung, and female reproductive tract. Women with PJS have a high incidence of carcinomas of the uterine corpus (endometrium) and cervix. The LKB1 gene is also somatically mutated in human cancers arising at these sites. Work in mouse models has highlighted the potency of LKB1 as an endometrial tumor suppressor and its distinctive roles in driving invasive and metastatic growth. These in vivo models represent tractable experimental systems for the discovery of underlying biological principles and molecular processes regulated by LKB1 in the context of tumorigenesis and also serve as useful preclinical model systems for experimental therapeutics. Here we review LKB1s known roles in mTOR signaling, metabolism, and cell polarity, with an emphasis on human pathology and mouse models relevant to uterine carcinogenesis, including cancers of the uterine corpus and cervix.


Cancer Research | 2013

Abstract 1277: Utilizing uterine cancer models to study malignant transformation driven by Lkb1 loss.

Christopher G. Peña; Yuji Nakada; Diego H. Castrillon

The serine-threonine kinase LKB1 is an upstream component of the AMPK-mTOR pathway and regulates cell survival and growth. Inherited germline mutations in LKB1 predispose women to endocervical malignancies whereas somatic mutations in LKB1 promote cervical cancer progression. Our lab has shown that tissue specific knockout of Lkb1 in the endometrial epithelium of mice facilitates growth of highly invasive, lethal tumors that are well differentiated and retain structural polarity. Additionally, stable shRNA mediated knockdown of LKB1 in human immortalized endocervical cells drives anchorage-independent growth. To investigate potential pathways involved in LKB1 mediated oncogenic transformation, we have employed a microarray based approach comparing hits from human immortalized endocervical cell lines and mouse tissue to identify specific genes that are differentially regulated when LKB1 function is absent. Preliminary data suggests that pro-angiogenic and inflammatory mediators are upregulated in LKB1 deficient cells. We are currently assessing the overall contribution of these factors to growth and invasiveness in our model systems and the mechanisms by which Lkb1 loss facilitates their activation. These pathways can be potential therapeutic targets in other cancers characterized by Lkb1 loss of function mutations. Citation Format: Christopher G. Pena, Yuji Nakada, Diego Castrillon. Utilizing uterine cancer models to study malignant transformation driven by Lkb1 loss. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 104th Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research; 2013 Apr 6-10; Washington, DC. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2013;73(8 Suppl):Abstract nr 1277. doi:10.1158/1538-7445.AM2013-1277


Journal of Assisted Reproduction and Genetics | 2015

Regulation of FOXO3 subcellular localization by Kit ligand in the neonatal mouse ovary.

Majid Ezzati; Michael D. Baker; Hatice D. Saatcioglu; Gina M. Aloisio; Christopher G. Peña; Yuji Nakada; Ileana Cuevas; Bruce R. Carr; Diego H. Castrillon

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Diego H. Castrillon

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Yuji Nakada

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Gina M. Aloisio

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Ileana Cuevas

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Hatice D. Saatcioglu

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Michael D. Baker

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Bruce R. Carr

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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D. Neil Hayes

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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