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Dive into the research topics where Daniel Zingg is active.

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Featured researches published by Daniel Zingg.


Nature Cell Biology | 2012

Sox10 promotes the formation and maintenance of giant congenital naevi and melanoma

Olga Shakhova; Daniel Zingg; Simon M. Schaefer; Lisette Hari; Gianluca Civenni; Jacqueline Blunschi; Stéphanie Claudinot; Michal Okoniewski; Friedrich Beermann; Daniela Mihic-Probst; Holger Moch; Michael Wegner; Reinhard Dummer; Yann Barrandon; Paolo Cinelli; Lukas Sommer

Giant congenital naevi are pigmented childhood lesions that frequently lead to melanoma, the most aggressive skin cancer. The mechanisms underlying this malignancy are largely unknown, and there are no effective therapies. Here we describe a mouse model for giant congenital naevi and show that naevi and melanoma prominently express Sox10, a transcription factor crucial for the formation of melanocytes from the neural crest. Strikingly, Sox10 haploinsufficiency counteracts NrasQ61K-driven congenital naevus and melanoma formation without affecting the physiological functions of neural crest derivatives in the skin. Moreover, Sox10 is also crucial for the maintenance of neoplastic cells in vivo. In human patients, virtually all congenital naevi and melanomas are SOX10 positive. Furthermore, SOX10 silencing in human melanoma cells suppresses neural crest stem cell properties, counteracts proliferation and cell survival, and completely abolishes in vivo tumour formation. Thus, SOX10 represents a promising target for the treatment of congenital naevi and melanoma in human patients.


Nature Communications | 2015

The epigenetic modifier EZH2 controls melanoma growth and metastasis through silencing of distinct tumour suppressors

Daniel Zingg; Julien Debbache; Simon M. Schaefer; Eylul Tuncer; Sandra C Frommel; Phil F. Cheng; Natalia Arenas-Ramirez; Jessica Haeusel; Yudong Zhang; Mario Bonalli; Michael T. McCabe; Caretha L. Creasy; Mitchell P. Levesque; Onur Boyman; Raffaella Santoro; Olga Shakhova; Reinhard Dummer; Lukas Sommer

Increased activity of the epigenetic modifier EZH2 has been associated with different cancers. However, evidence for a functional role of EZH2 in tumorigenesis in vivo remains poor, in particular in metastasizing solid cancers. Here we reveal central roles of EZH2 in promoting growth and metastasis of cutaneous melanoma. In a melanoma mouse model, conditional Ezh2 ablation as much as treatment with the preclinical EZH2 inhibitor GSK503 stabilizes the disease through inhibition of growth and virtually abolishes metastases formation without affecting normal melanocyte biology. Comparably, in human melanoma cells, EZH2 inactivation impairs proliferation and invasiveness, accompanied by re-expression of tumour suppressors connected to increased patient survival. These EZH2 target genes suppress either melanoma growth or metastasis in vivo, revealing the dual function of EZH2 in promoting tumour progression. Thus, EZH2-mediated epigenetic repression is highly relevant especially during advanced melanoma progression, which makes EZH2 a promising target for novel melanoma therapies.


Oncogene | 2004

Degradation of PKB/Akt protein by inhibition of the VEGF receptor/mTOR pathway in endothelial cells.

Oliver Riesterer; Daniel Zingg; Jörg Hummerjohann; Stephan Bodis; Martin Pruschy

An intact VEGF receptor/PI3K/PKB/Akt signaling cascade protects endothelial cells from apoptotic stress-stimuli and mediates the formation of new blood vessels in pathological conditions such as cancer. Therefore, downregulation of this signaling cascade is of clinical interest for antiangiogenic cancer therapy. In this report, we demonstrate that VEGF controls the protein stability of the serine–threonine kinase PKB/Akt via inhibition of PKB/Akt protein degradation. VEGF deprivation or blockage of the VEGF signal transduction cascade with the VEGF receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitor PTK787/ZK222584 resulted in a specific decrease of the PKB/Akt protein level and subsequent cellular restimulation with VEGF rescued its stability. Real-time quantitative RT–PCR analysis demonstrated that VEGF does not regulate PKB/Akt gene expression. On the other hand, broad range inhibitors of caspases and the proteasome complex prevented VEGF-dependent downregulation of the PKB/Akt protein level indicating that PKB/Akt protein stability is regulated by VEGF-controlled proteolysis. Inhibition of the VEGF receptor and PKB/Akt-downstream PIK-related mTOR-kinase by rapamycin also neutralized the VEGF-protective effect in an PKB/Akt gene expression-independent way but results in proteolysis-dependent reduction of PKB/Akt protein stability. These results demonstrate a novel regulatory mechanism of the activated VEGF receptor/mTOR-signal transduction pathway to control the protein stability of PKB/Akt and survival threshold in endothelial cells.


Cancer Research | 2004

Differential Activation of the Phosphatidylinositol 3′-Kinase/Akt Survival Pathway by Ionizing Radiation in Tumor and Primary Endothelial Cells

Daniel Zingg; Oliver Riesterer; Doriano Fabbro; Christoph Glanzmann; Stephan Bodis; Martin Pruschy

Ionizing radiation induces an intracellular stress response via activation of the phosphatidylinositol 3′-kinase (PI3K)/Akt survival pathway. In tumor cells, the PI3K/Akt pathway is induced through activation of members of ErbB receptor tyrosine kinases. Here, we investigated the receptor dependence of radiation-induced PI3K/Akt activation in tumor cells and in endothelial cells. The integrity of both the ErbB and the vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) ligand-activated PI3K/Akt pathway in endothelial cells was demonstrated using specific ErbB and VEGF receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitors. Irradiation of endothelial cells resulted in protein kinase B (PKB)/Akt activation in a similar time course as observed in response to VEGF. More importantly, radiation-induced PKB/Akt phosphorylation in endothelial cells was strongly down-regulated by the VEGF receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitor, whereas the ErbB receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitor did not affect PKB/Akt stimulation in response to irradiation. An opposite receptor dependence for radiation-induced PKB/Akt phosphorylation was observed in ErbB receptor-overexpressing A431 tumor cells. Furthermore, direct VEGF receptor phosphorylation was detected after irradiation in endothelial cells in absence of VEGF, which was almost completely inhibited after irradiation in presence of the VEGF receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitor. These data demonstrate that ionizing radiation induces VEGF ligand-independent but VEGF receptor-dependent PKB/Akt activation in endothelial cells and that PI3K/Akt pathway activation by radiation occurs in a differential cell type and receptor-dependent pattern.


PLOS Genetics | 2015

Antagonistic cross-regulation between Sox9 and Sox10 controls an anti-tumorigenic program in melanoma.

Olga Shakhova; Phil F. Cheng; Pravin J. Mishra; Daniel Zingg; Simon M. Schaefer; Julien Debbache; Jessica Häusel; Claudia Matter; Theresa Guo; Sean Davis; Paul S. Meltzer; Daniela Mihic-Probst; Holger Moch; Michael Wegner; Glenn Merlino; Mitchell P. Levesque; Reinhard Dummer; Raffaella Santoro; Paolo Cinelli; Lukas Sommer

Melanoma is the most fatal skin cancer, but the etiology of this devastating disease is still poorly understood. Recently, the transcription factor Sox10 has been shown to promote both melanoma initiation and progression. Reducing SOX10 expression levels in human melanoma cells and in a genetic melanoma mouse model, efficiently abolishes tumorigenesis by inducing cell cycle exit and apoptosis. Here, we show that this anti-tumorigenic effect functionally involves SOX9, a factor related to SOX10 and upregulated in melanoma cells upon loss of SOX10. Unlike SOX10, SOX9 is not required for normal melanocyte stem cell function, the formation of hyperplastic lesions, and melanoma initiation. To the contrary, SOX9 overexpression results in cell cycle arrest, apoptosis, and a gene expression profile shared by melanoma cells with reduced SOX10 expression. Moreover, SOX9 binds to the SOX10 promoter and induces downregulation of SOX10 expression, revealing a feedback loop reinforcing the SOX10 low/SOX9 high ant,m/ii-tumorigenic program. Finally, SOX9 is required in vitro and in vivo for the anti-tumorigenic effect achieved by reducing SOX10 expression. Thus, SOX10 and SOX9 are functionally antagonistic regulators of melanoma development.


Genome Biology | 2015

Methylation-dependent SOX9 expression mediates invasion in human melanoma cells and is a negative prognostic factor in advanced melanoma

Phil F. Cheng; Olga Shakhova; Daniel S. Widmer; Ossia M. Eichhoff; Daniel Zingg; Sandra C Frommel; Benedetta Belloni; Marieke I.G. Raaijmakers; Simone M. Goldinger; Raffaella Santoro; Silvio Hemmi; Lukas Sommer; Reinhard Dummer; Mitchell P. Levesque

BackgroundMelanoma is the most fatal skin cancer displaying a high degree of molecular heterogeneity. Phenotype switching is a mechanism that contributes to melanoma heterogeneity by altering transcription profiles for the transition between states of proliferation/differentiation and invasion/stemness. As phenotype switching is reversible, epigenetic mechanisms, like DNA methylation, could contribute to the changes in gene expression.ResultsIntegrative analysis of methylation and gene expression datasets of five proliferative and five invasion melanoma cell cultures reveal two distinct clusters. SOX9 is methylated and lowly expressed in the highly proliferative group. SOX9 overexpression results in decreased proliferation but increased invasion in vitro. In a B16 mouse model, sox9 overexpression increases the number of lung metastases. Transcriptional analysis of SOX9-overexpressing melanoma cells reveals enrichment in epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT) pathways. Survival analysis of The Cancer Genome Atlas melanoma dataset shows that metastatic patients with high expression levels of SOX9 have significantly worse survival rates. Additional survival analysis on the targets of SOX9 reveals that most SOX9 downregulated genes have survival benefit for metastatic patients.ConclusionsOur genome-wide DNA methylation and gene expression study of 10 early passage melanoma cell cultures reveals two phenotypically distinct groups. One of the genes regulated by DNA methylation between the two groups is SOX9. SOX9 induces melanoma cell invasion and metastasis and decreases patient survival. A number of genes downregulated by SOX9 have a negative impact on patient survival. In conclusion, SOX9 is an important gene involved in melanoma invasion and negatively impacts melanoma patient survival.


Science Translational Medicine | 2016

Improved cancer immunotherapy by a CD25-mimobody conferring selectivity to human interleukin-2

Natalia Arenas-Ramirez; Chao Zou; Simone Popp; Daniel Zingg; Barbara Brannetti; Emmanuelle Wirth; Thomas Calzascia; Jiri Kovarik; Lukas Sommer; Gerhard Zenke; Janine Woytschak; Catherine H. Regnier; Andreas Katopodis; Onur Boyman

An antibody to human IL-2 phenocopies CD25 and improves IL-2–based cancer immunotherapy. Running interference Interleukin-2 (IL-2) binds to receptors on multiple different types of T cells. CD8 T cells, which can kill tumor cells, have IL-2 receptors with two subunits. When IL-2 binds to these, it promotes the T cells’ activation. In contrast, regulatory T cells dampen the antitumor immune response, and they express a different type of IL-2 receptor, which contains CD25 in addition to the other two subunits. CD25 binds IL-2 tightly but does not signal. To address this, Arenas-Ramirez et al. developed an anti–IL-2 antibody that can block CD25, such that delivering the antibody together with IL-2 allows IL-2 to bind specifically to the two-subunit IL-2 receptors and promote an antitumor immune response without interference from regulatory T cells. Interleukin-2 (IL-2) immunotherapy is an attractive approach in treating advanced cancer. However, by binding to its IL-2 receptor α (CD25) subunit, IL-2 exerts unwanted effects, including stimulation of immunosuppressive regulatory T cells (Tregs) and contribution to vascular leak syndrome. We used a rational approach to develop a monoclonal antibody to human IL-2, termed NARA1, which acts as a high-affinity CD25 mimic, thereby minimizing association of IL-2 with CD25. The structure of the IL-2–NARA1 complex revealed that NARA1 occupies the CD25 epitope of IL-2 and precisely overlaps with CD25. Association of NARA1 with IL-2 occurs with 10-fold higher affinity compared to CD25 and forms IL-2/NARA1 complexes, which, in vivo, preferentially stimulate CD8+ T cells while disfavoring CD25+ Tregs and improving the benefit–to–adverse effect ratio of IL-2. In two transplantable and one spontaneous metastatic melanoma model, IL-2/NARA1 complex immunotherapy resulted in efficient expansion of tumor-specific and polyclonal CD8+ T cells. These CD8+ T cells showed robust interferon-γ production and expressed low levels of exhaustion markers programmed cell death protein-1, lymphocyte activation gene-3, and T cell immunoglobulin and mucin domain-3. These effects resulted in potent anticancer immune responses and prolonged survival in the tumor models. Collectively, our data demonstrate that NARA1 acts as a CD25-mimobody that confers selectivity and increased potency to IL-2 and warrant further assessment of NARA1 as a therapeutic.


Cancer Cell | 2018

EZH2-Mediated Primary Cilium Deconstruction Drives Metastatic Melanoma Formation

Daniel Zingg; Julien Debbache; Rodrigo Peña-Hernández; Ana T. Antunes; Simon M. Schaefer; Phil F. Cheng; Dario Zimmerli; Jessica Haeusel; Raquel R. Calçada; Eylul Tuncer; Yudong Zhang; Raphaël Bossart; Kwok-Kin Wong; Konrad Basler; Reinhard Dummer; Raffaella Santoro; Mitchell P. Levesque; Lukas Sommer

Human melanomas frequently harbor amplifications of EZH2. However, the contribution of EZH2 to melanoma formation has remained elusive. Taking advantage of murine melanoma models, we show that EZH2 drives tumorigenesis from benign BrafV600E- or NrasQ61K-expressing melanocytes by silencing of genes relevant for the integrity of the primary cilium, a signaling organelle projecting from the surface of vertebrate cells. Consequently, gain of EZH2 promotes loss of primary cilia in benign melanocytic lesions. In contrast, blockade of EZH2 activity evokes ciliogenesis and cilia-dependent growth inhibition in malignant melanoma. Finally, we demonstrate that loss of cilia enhances pro-tumorigenic WNT/β-catenin signaling, and is itself sufficient to drive metastatic melanoma in benign cells. Thus, primary cilia deconstruction is a key process in EZH2-driven melanomagenesis.


Cancer Research | 2001

The Phosphatidylinositide 3′-Kinase/Akt Survival Pathway Is a Target for the Anticancer and Radiosensitizing Agent PKC412, an Inhibitor of Protein Kinase C

Angela Tenzer; Daniel Zingg; Sonia Rocha; Brian A. Hemmings; Doriano Fabbro; Christoph Glanzmann; P. August Schubiger; Stephan Bodis; Martin Pruschy


Cell Reports | 2017

The Histone Methyltransferase Ezh2 Controls Mechanisms of Adaptive Resistance to Tumor Immunotherapy

Daniel Zingg; Natalia Arenas-Ramirez; Dilara Sahin; Rodney A. Rosalia; Ana T. Antunes; Jessica Haeusel; Lukas Sommer; Onur Boyman

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Lukas Sommer

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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