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Dive into the research topics where Dan Grandér is active.

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Featured researches published by Dan Grandér.


Journal of Molecular Medicine | 2005

Clinical significance of EGFR amplification and the aberrant EGFRvIII transcript in conventionally treated astrocytic gliomas

Lu Liu; L. Magnus Bäcklund; B. Nilsson; Dan Grandér; Koichi Ichimura; Helena M. Goike; V. Peter Collins

The aim of this study was to evaluate the clinical value of assessing epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) amplification and the common 5′ rearrangement of EGFR resulting in the EGFRvIII transcript in astrocytic gliomas. Data from 221 tumours were correlated with patient survival. The majority of previous studies evaluated amplification alone and provided contradictory results. Amplification was analysed by a densitometry of Southern blot analysis or quantitative polymerase chain reaction (PCR). EGFR transcripts were examined by reverse transcription PCR and subsequent sequencing. A ribonuclease (RNase) protection assay was carried out on a subgroup to confirm PCR results. Amplification of EGFR was found in 41% (65/160) of glioblastomas (GBs) and 10% (4/41) of anaplastic astrocytomas (AAs). The EGFRvIII rearrangement was identified in 54% (35/65) of GBs and 75% (3/4) of AAs with amplification, as well as in 8% (8/95) of GBs and 5% (2/37) of AAs without amplification (confirmed by RNase protection assay). There were no abnormalities of the EFGR or its transcript in grade II astrocytoma (AII). We found no significant association between EGFR amplification or rearrangement, and age or survival in the 160 GB patients. We noted a tendency towards decreased survival with any EGFR abnormality in the 41 patients with AAs. This was most marked in the five cases with the EGFRvIII transcript (p=0.069), but these were significantly older than those without (p=0.023). No abnormalities of EGFR were identified in AII patients. We conclude that neither EGFR amplification nor the presence of the EGFRvIII transcript predicts patient outcome in conventionally treated GBs. However, in AAs, although uncommon, EGFR aberrations appear to be associated with shorter survival.


Leukemia & Lymphoma | 2008

Characterization of 6q deletions in mature B cell lymphomas and childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia

Emma Flordal Thelander; Koichi Ichimura; Martin Corcoran; Gisela Barbany; Ann Nordgren; Mats Heyman; Mattias Berglund; Andy Mungall; Richard Rosenquist; V. Peter Collins; Dan Grandér; Catharina Larsson; Svetlana Lagercrantz

The study was undertaken with the aim to outline deletion patterns involving the long arm of chromosome 6, a common abnormality in lymphoproliferative disorders. Using a chromosome 6 specific tile path array, 60 samples from in total 49 cases with mantle cell lymphoma (MCL), de novo diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), transformed DLBCL as well as preceding follicular lymphoma (FL), and childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), were characterized. Twenty-six of the studied cases, representing all diagnoses, showed a 6q deletion among which 85% involved a 3 Mb region in 6q21. The minimal deleted interval in 6q21 encompasses the FOXO3A, PRDM1 and HACE1 candidate genes. The PRDM1 gene was found homozygously deleted in a case of DLBCL. Moreover, in two DLBCL cases, an overlapping homozygous deletion was identified in 6q23.3 – 24.1, encompassing the TNFAIP3 gene among others. Taken together, we refined the deletion pattern within the long arm of chromosome 6 in four different types of hematological malignances, suggesting the location of tumor suppressor genes involved in the tumor progression.


Leukemia & Lymphoma | 2013

Orphan receptor tyrosine kinases ROR1 and ROR2 in hematological malignancies

Amir Hossein Daneshmanesh; Anna Porwit; Mohammad Hojjat-Farsangi; Mahmood Jeddi-Tehrani; Katja Pokrovskaja Tamm; Dan Grandér; Sören Lehmann; Stefan Norin; Fazel Shokri; Hodjattallah Rabbani; Håkan Mellstedt; Anders Österborg

Abstract The receptor tyrosine kinase ROR1 has been shown to be overexpressed in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). The aim of this study was to further characterize the expression of ROR1 and the other member of the ROR family, ROR2, in other lymphoid and myeloid malignancies. Normal white blood cells and reactive lymph nodes were negative for ROR1 and ROR2. A significantly high and uniform surface expression of ROR1 was found in CLL/hairy cell leukemia (HCL) compared to mantle cell lymphoma (MCL), marginal zone lymphoma (MZL), diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), follicular lymphoma (FL), myelomas, acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and myeloid leukemias (p = 0.02 to < 0.001). The lowest proportion of ROR1+ cells was seen in FL, whereas CLL, HCL and CML had significantly higher numbers of ROR1+ cells. Longitudinal follow-up of individual patients with CLL revealed that ROR1+ cells remained stable over time in non-progressive patients, but increased when the disease progressed (p < 0.05). Thus, a variable staining pattern of ROR1 ranging from very high (CLL, HCL) and high (CML) to intermediate (myeloma and DLBCL) or low (FL) was noted. ROR2 was not detected in hematological malignancies.


International Journal of Molecular Medicine | 2013

MicroRNA-9 regulates the expression of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor δ in human monocytes during the inflammatory response.

Petra Thulin; Tianling Wei; O. Werngren; Louisa Cheung; Rachel M. Fisher; Dan Grandér; Martin Corcoran; Ewa Ehrenborg

PPARδ is involved in the inflammatory response and its expression is induced by cytokines, however, limited knowledge has been produced regarding its regulation. Since recent findings have shown that microRNAs, which are small non-coding RNAs that regulate gene expression, are involved in the immune response, we set out to investigate whether PPARδ can be regulated by microRNAs expressed in monocytes. Bioinformatic analysis identified a putative miR-9 target site within the 3′-UTR of PPARδ that was subsequently verified to be functional using reporter constructs. Primary human monocytes stimulated with LPS showed a downregulation of PPARδ and its target genes after 4 h while the expression of miR-9 was induced. Analysis of pro-inflammatory (M1) and anti-inflammatory (M2) macrophages showed that human PPARδ mRNA as well as miR-9 expression was higher in M1 compared to M2 macrophages. Furthermore, treatment with the PPARδ agonist, GW501516, induced the expression of PPARδ target genes in the pro-inflammatory M1 macrophages while no change was observed in the anti-inflammatory M2 macrophages. Taken together, these data suggest that PPARδ is regulated by miR-9 in monocytes and that activation of PPARδ may be of importance in M1 pro-inflammatory but not in M2 anti-inflammatory macrophages in humans.


Leukemia | 2007

Tiling-resolution array-CGH reveals the pattern of DNA copy number alterations in acute lymphoblastic leukemia with 21q amplification: the result of telomere dysfunction and breakage/fusion/breakage cycles?

Ekaterina Kuchinskaya; Ann Nordgren; Mats Heyman; Jacqueline Schoumans; Martin Corcoran; Johan Staaf; Åke Borg; Stefan Söderhäll; Dan Grandér; Magnus Nordenskjöld; Elisabeth Blennow

Tiling-resolution array-CGH reveals the pattern of DNA copy number alterations in acute lymphoblastic leukemia with 21q amplification: the result of telomere dysfunction and breakage/fusion/breakage cycles?


Experimental Cell Research | 2013

An activated JAK/STAT3 pathway and CD45 expression are associated with sensitivity to Hsp90 inhibitors in multiple myeloma.

Huiqiong Lin; Iryna Kolosenko; Ann-Charlotte Björklund; Darya Protsyuk; Anders Österborg; Dan Grandér; Katja Pokrovskaja Tamm

The molecular chaperone Hsp90 is required to maintain the activity of many signaling proteins, including members of the JAK/STAT and the PI3K pathways. Inhibitors of Hsp90 (Hsp90-Is) demonstrated varying activity against multiple myeloma (MM) in clinical trials. We aimed to determine which signaling pathways that account for the differential sensitivity to the Hsp90-I 17DMAG on a panel of MM cell lines and freshly obtained MM cells. Three CD45(+) cell lines with an activated JAK/STAT3 pathway were sensitive to 17DMAG and underwent prominent apoptosis upon treatment, while the majority of CD45(-) cell lines, that were dependent on the activated PI3K pathway, were more resistant to the drug. Culturing the most resistant cell line, LP1, in the presence of IL-6 resulted in up-regulation of CD45 and pSTAT3, and sensitized to 17DMAG-induced apoptosis, primarily in the induced CD45(+) sub-population of cells. The high CD45 expressers among primary myeloma cells also expressed significantly higher levels of pSTAT3, as compared to the low CD45 expressers. Ex vivo treatment of primary myeloma cells with 17DMAG resulted in a stronger caspase3 activation in tumor samples with the prevalence of high CD45 expressers. STAT3 activity was efficiently inhibited by Hsp90-Is in both cell lines and primary cells suggesting an importance of STAT3 inactivation for the pro-apoptotic effects of HSP90-Is. Indeed, over-expression of STAT3C, a variant with an increased DNA binding activity, in U266 cells protected them from 17DMAG-induced cell death. The down-regulation of the STAT3 target gene Mcl-1 at both the mRNA and protein levels following 17DMAG treatment was significantly attenuated in STAT3C-expressing cells, and transient over-expression of Mcl-1 protected U266 cells from 17DMAG-induced cell death. The finding that CD45(+) MM cells with an IL-6-activated JAK/STAT3 pathway are particularly sensitive to Hsp90-Is as compared to the low CD45 expressers may provide a rational basis for selection of MM patients amenable to Hsp90-I treatment.


International Journal of Cancer | 2005

Parathyroid adenoma and primary CNS tumors

L. Magnus Bäcklund; Dan Grandér; Lena Brandt; Per Hall; Anders Ekbom

Hyperparathyroidism onset at a young age is one feature in multiple endocrine neoplasia (MEN) type 1 and MEN type 2A cancer syndromes. There are several case reports of MEN Type 1‐associated central nervous system (CNS) tumors. To determine if there is an association between parathyroid adenomas and CNS tumors, we used Swedish registry data to identify all individuals operated on for parathyroid adenomas between 1958–99 (n = 12,468). Follow‐up for the occurrence of CNS tumors in these individuals was through linkage with the Swedish Cancer Registry. There were 70 observed cases of a CNS tumor diagnosed after a parathyroid adenoma, to be compared to 35 expected (standard incidence ratio [SIR] = 2.0; 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.5–2.5). This increased risk was independent of duration of follow‐up and was confined to meningiomas (SIR = 2.4, 95% CI = 1.7–3.4) and neurinomas (SIR = 3.4, 95% CI = 1.5–6.8). These results strongly indicate an association between these tumor forms that may be genetic, environmental (such as radiation) or a combination of both.


British Journal of Haematology | 2013

TRIM13 (RFP2) downregulation decreases tumour cell growth in multiple myeloma through inhibition of NF Kappa B pathway and proteasome activity.

Moshe E. Gatt; Kohichi Takada; Mala Mani; Mikael Lerner; Marjorie Pick; Teru Hideshima; Daniel E. Carrasco; Alexei Protopopov; Elena Ivanova; Olle Sangfelt; Dan Grandér; Bart Barlogie; John D. Shaughnessy; Kenneth C. Anderson; Daniel R. Carrasco

Multiple myeloma (MM) is an incurable neoplasm caused by proliferation of malignant plasma cells in the bone marrow (BM). MM is characterized frequently by a complete or partial deletion of chromosome 13q14, seen in more than 50% of patients at diagnosis. Within this deleted region the tripartite motif containing 13 (TRIM13, also termed RFP2) gene product has been proposed to be a tumour suppressor gene (TSG). Here, we show that low expression levels of TRIM13 in MM are associated with chromosome 13q deletion and poor clinical outcome. We present a functional analysis of TRIM13 using a loss‐of‐function approach, and demonstrate that TRIM13 downregulation decreases tumour cell survival as well as cell cycle progression and proliferation of MM cells. In addition, we provide evidence for the involvement of TRIM13 downregulation in inhibiting the NF kappa B pathway and the activity of the 20S proteasome. Although this data does not support a role of TRIM13 as a TSG, it substantiates important roles of TRIM13 in MM tumour survival and proliferation, underscoring its potential role as a novel target for therapeutic intervention.


Bioinformatics | 2017

ClusterSignificance: a bioconductor package facilitating statistical analysis of class cluster separations in dimensionality reduced data.

Jason T Serviss; Jesper R. Gådin; Per Eriksson; Lasse Folkersen; Dan Grandér

Summary: Multi‐dimensional data generated via high‐throughput experiments is increasingly used in conjunction with dimensionality reduction methods to ascertain if resulting separations of the data correspond with known classes. This is particularly useful to determine if a subset of the variables, e.g. genes in a specific pathway, alone can separate samples into these established classes. Despite this, the evaluation of class separations is often subjective and performed via visualization. Here we present the ClusterSignificance package; a set of tools designed to assess the statistical significance of class separations downstream of dimensionality reduction algorithms. In addition, we demonstrate the design and utility of the ClusterSignificance package and utilize it to determine the importance of long non‐coding RNA expression in the identity of multiple hematological malignancies. Availability and implementation: ClusterSignificance is an R package available via Bioconductor (https://bioconductor.org/packages/ClusterSignificance) under GPL‐3. Contact: [email protected] Supplementary information: Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Expression of the p53 target Wig-1 is associated with HPV status and patient survival in cervical carcinoma.

Li-Di Xu; Susanne Muller; Srinivasan R. Thoppe; Fredrik Hellborg; Lena Kanter; Mikael Lerner; Biying Zheng; Svetlana Lagercrantz; Dan Grandér; Keng Ling Wallin; Klas G. Wiman; Catharina Larsson; Sonia Andersson

The p53 target gene WIG-1 (ZMAT3) is located in chromosomal region 3q26, that is frequently amplified in human tumors, including cervical cancer. We have examined the status of WIG-1 and the encoded Wig-1 protein in cervical carcinoma cell lines and tumor tissue samples. Our analysis of eight cervical cancer lines (Ca Ski, ME-180, MS751, SiHa, SW756, C-4I, C-33A, and HT-3) by spectral karyotype, comparative genomic hybridization and Southern blotting revealed WIG-1 is not the primary target for chromosome 3 gains. However, WIG-1/Wig-1 were readily expressed and WIG-1 mRNA expression was higher in the two HPV-negative cervical cell lines (C33-A, HT-3) than in HPV-positive lines. We then assessed Wig-1 expression by immunohistochemistry in 38 cervical tumor samples. We found higher nuclear Wig-1 expression levels in HPV-negative compared to HPV positive cases (pu200a=u200a0.002) and in adenocarcinomas as compared to squamous cell lesions (p<0.0001). Cases with moderate nuclear Wig-1 staining and positive cytoplasmic Wig-1 staining showed longer survival than patients with strong nuclear and negative cytoplasmic staining (pu200a=u200a0.042). Nuclear Wig-1 expression levels were positively associated with age at diagnosis (pu200a=u200a0.023) and histologic grade (pu200a=u200a0.034). These results are consistent with a growth-promoting and/or anti-cell death function of nuclear Wig-1 and suggest that Wig-1 expression can serve as a prognostic marker in cervical carcinoma.

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Mats Heyman

Karolinska University Hospital

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Katja Pokrovskaja Tamm

Karolinska University Hospital

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Stefan Söderhäll

Karolinska University Hospital

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Anders Österborg

Karolinska University Hospital

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