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Dive into the research topics where Daniel P. Sejas is active.

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Featured researches published by Daniel P. Sejas.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2007

TNF-α induces leukemic clonal evolution ex vivo in Fanconi anemia group C murine stem cells

June Li; Daniel P. Sejas; Xiaoling Zhang; Yuhui Qiu; Kalpana Nattamai; Reena Rani; Keaney Rathbun; Hartmut Geiger; David A. Williams; Grover C. Bagby; Qishen Pang

The molecular pathogenesis of the myeloid leukemias that frequently occur in patients with Fanconi anemia (FA) is not well defined. Hematopoietic stem cells bearing inactivating mutations of FA complementation group C (FANCC) are genetically unstable and hypersensitive to apoptotic cytokine cues including IFN-γ and TNF-α, but neoplastic stem cell clones that arise frequently in vivo are resistant to these cytokines. Reasoning that the combination of genetic instability and cytokine hypersensitivity might create an environment supporting the emergence of leukemic stem cells, we tested the leukemia-promoting effects of TNF-α in murine stem cells. TNF-α exposure initially profoundly inhibited the growth of Fancc–/– stem cells. However, longer-term exposure of these cells promoted the outgrowth of cytogenetically abnormal clones that, upon transplantation into congenic WT mice, led to acute myelogenous leukemia. TNF-α induced ROS-dependent genetic instability in Fancc–/– but not in WT cells. The leukemic clones were TNF-α resistant but retained their characteristic hypersensitivity to mitomycin C and exhibited high levels of chromosomal instability. Expression of FANCC cDNA in Fancc–/– stem cells protected them from TNF-α–induced clonal evolution. We conclude that TNF-α exposure creates an environment in which somatically mutated preleukemic stem cell clones are selected and from which unaltered TNF-α–hypersensitive Fancc–/– stem cells are purged.


Journal of Cell Science | 2007

Inflammatory ROS promote and cooperate with the Fanconi anemia mutation for hematopoietic senescence

Xiaoling Zhang; Daniel P. Sejas; Yuhui Qiu; David A. Williams; Qishen Pang

The proinflammatory cytokine tumor necrosis factor α (TNFα) inhibits hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) expansion, interferes with HSC self-renewal and compromises the ability of HSC to reconstitute hematopoiesis. We have investigated mechanisms by which TNFα suppresses hematopoiesis using the genomic instability syndrome Fanconi anemia mouse model deficient for the complementation-group-C gene (Fancc). Examination of senescence makers, such as senescence-associated β-galactosidase, HP1-γ, p53 and p16INK4A shows that TNFα induces premature senescence in bone marrow HSCs and progenitor cells as well as other tissues of Fancc–/– mice. TNFα-induced senescence correlates with the accumulation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and oxidative DNA damage. Neutralization of TNFα or deletion of the TNF receptor in Fancc–/– mice (Fancc–/–;Tnfr1–/–) prevents excessive ROS production and hematopoietic senescence. Pretreatment of TNFα-injected Fancc–/– mice with a ROS scavenger significantly reduces oxidative base damage, DNA strand breaks and senescence. Furthermore, HSCs and progenitor cells from TNFα-treated Fancc–/– mice show increased chromosomal aberrations and have an impaired oxidative DNA-damage repair. These results indicate an intimate link between inflammatory reactive oxygen species and DNA-damage-induced premature senescence in HSCs and progenitor cells, which may play an important role in aging and anemia.


Journal of Immunology | 2007

Inflammatory Reactive Oxygen Species-Mediated Hemopoietic Suppression in Fancc-Deficient Mice

Daniel P. Sejas; Reena Rani; Yuhui Qiu; Xiaoling Zhang; Sara R. Fagerlie; Hiroyasu Nakano; David A. Williams; Qishen Pang

Patients with the genomic instability syndrome Fanconi anemia (FA) commonly develop progressive bone marrow (BM) failure and have a high risk of cancer. Certain manifestations of the disease suggest that the FA immune system is dysfunctional and may contribute to the pathogenesis of both BM failure and malignancies. In this study, we have investigated inflammation and innate immunity in FA hemopoietic cells using mice deficient in Fanconi complementation group C gene (Fancc). We demonstrate that Fancc-deficient mice exhibit enhanced inflammatory response and are hypersensitive to LPS-induced septic shock as a result of hemopoietic suppression. This exacerbated inflammatory phenotype is intrinsic to the hemopoietic system and can be corrected by the re-expression of a wild-type FANCC gene, suggesting a potential role of the FANCC protein in innate immunity. LPS-mediated hemopoietic suppression requires two major inflammatory agents, TNF-α and reactive oxygen species. In addition, LPS-induced excessive accumulation of reactive oxygen species in Fancc−/− BM cells overactivates the stress kinase p38 and requires prolonged activation of the JNK. Our data implicate a role of inflammation in pathogenesis of FA and BM failure diseases in general.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Nucleophosmin regulates cell cycle progression and stress response in hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells.

June Li; Daniel P. Sejas; Reena Rani; Tara Koretsky; Grover C. Bagby; Qishen Pang

Nucleophosmin (NPM) is a multifunctional protein frequently overexpressed in actively proliferating cells. Strong evidence indicates that NPM is required for embryonic development and genomic stability. Here we report that NPM enhances the proliferative potential of hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) and increases their survival upon stress challenge. Both short term liquid culture and clonogenic progenitor cell assays show a selective expansion of NPM-overexpressing HSCs. Interestingly, HSCs infected with NPM retrovirus show significantly reduced commitment to myeloid differentiation compared with vector-transduced cells, and majority of the NPM-overexpressing cells remains primitive during a 5-day culture. Bone marrow transplantation experiments demonstrate that NPM promotes the self-renewal of long term repopulating HSCs while attenuated their commitment to myeloid differentiation. NPM overexpression induces rapid entry of HSCs into the cell cycle and suppresses the expression of several negative cell cycle regulators that are associated with G1-to-S transition. NPM knockdown elevates expression of these negative regulators and exacerbates stress-induced cell cycle arrest. Finally, overexpression of NPM promotes the survival and recovery of HSCs and progenitors after exposure to DNA damage, oxidative stress, and hematopoietic injury both in vivo and in vitro. DNA repair kinetics study suggests that NPM has a role in reducing the susceptibility of chromosomal DNA to damage rather than promoting DNA damage repair. Together, these results indicate that NPM plays an important role in hematopoiesis via mechanisms involving modulation of HSC/progenitor cell cycle progression and stress response.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2004

Hypoxia-induced Nucleophosmin Protects Cell Death through Inhibition of p53

June Li; Xiaoling Zhang; Daniel P. Sejas; Grover C. Bagby; Qishen Pang


Leukemia Research | 2005

Negative regulation of p53 by nucleophosmin antagonizes stress-induced apoptosis in human normal and malignant hematopoietic cells.

June Li; Xiaoling Zhang; Daniel P. Sejas; Qishen Pang


Blood | 2005

Hypoxia-reoxygenation induces premature senescence in FA bone marrow hematopoietic cells.

Xiaoling Zhang; June Li; Daniel P. Sejas; Qishen Pang


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005

The ATM/p53/p21 Pathway Influences Cell Fate Decision between Apoptosis and Senescence in Reoxygenated Hematopoietic Progenitor Cells

Xiaoling Zhang; June Li; Daniel P. Sejas; Qishen Pang


Carcinogenesis | 2007

Nucleophosmin suppresses oncogene-induced apoptosis and senescence and enhances oncogenic cooperation in cells with genomic instability

June Li; Daniel P. Sejas; Sandeep Burma; David J. Chen; Qishen Pang


Blood | 2006

Tumor Necrosis Factor-Mediated Inflammation Exacerbates Genomic Instability and Promotes Leukemia Development.

June Li; Daniel P. Sejas; Xiaoling Zhang; Reena Rani; Qishen Pang

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Qishen Pang

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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June Li

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Xiaoling Zhang

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Reena Rani

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Xiaoling Zhang

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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David A. Williams

Boston Children's Hospital

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Yuhui Qiu

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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David J. Chen

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Kalpana Nattamai

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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