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Dive into the research topics where Elizabeth P. McDowell is active.

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Featured researches published by Elizabeth P. McDowell.


Cell | 2007

FoxOs Are Critical Mediators of Hematopoietic Stem Cell Resistance to Physiologic Oxidative Stress

Zuzana Tothova; Ramya Kollipara; Brian J. P. Huntly; Benjamin H. Lee; Diego H. Castrillon; Dana E. Cullen; Elizabeth P. McDowell; Suzan Lazo-Kallanian; Ifor R. Williams; Christopher Sears; Scott A. Armstrong; Emmanuelle Passegué; Ronald A. DePinho; D. Gary Gilliland

To understand the role of FoxO family members in hematopoiesis, we conditionally deleted FoxO1, FoxO3, and FoxO4 in the adult hematopoietic system. FoxO-deficient mice exhibited myeloid lineage expansion, lymphoid developmental abnormalities, and a marked decrease of the lineage-negative Sca-1+, c-Kit+ (LSK) compartment that contains the short- and long-term hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) populations. FoxO-deficient bone marrow had defective long-term repopulating activity that correlated with increased cell cycling and apoptosis of HSC. Notably, there was a marked context-dependent increase in reactive oxygen species (ROS) in FoxO-deficient HSC compared with wild-type HSC that correlated with changes in expression of genes that regulate ROS. Furthermore, in vivo treatment with the antioxidative agent N-acetyl-L-cysteine resulted in reversion of the FoxO-deficient HSC phenotype. Thus, FoxO proteins play essential roles in the response to physiologic oxidative stress and thereby mediate quiescence and enhanced survival in the HSC compartment, a function that is required for its long-term regenerative potential.


PLOS Medicine | 2006

MPLW515L Is a Novel Somatic Activating Mutation in Myelofibrosis with Myeloid Metaplasia

Yana Pikman; Benjamin H. Lee; Thomas Mercher; Elizabeth P. McDowell; Benjamin L. Ebert; Maricel Gozo; Adam Cuker; Gerlinde Wernig; Sandra Moore; Ilene Galinsky; Daniel J. DeAngelo; Jennifer J. Clark; Stephanie J. Lee; Todd R. Golub; Martha Wadleigh; D. Gary Gilliland; Ross L. Levine

Background The JAK2V617F allele has recently been identified in patients with polycythemia vera (PV), essential thrombocytosis (ET), and myelofibrosis with myeloid metaplasia (MF). Subsequent analysis has shown that constitutive activation of the JAK-STAT signal transduction pathway is an important pathogenetic event in these patients, and that enzymatic inhibition of JAK2V617F may be of therapeutic benefit in this context. However, a significant proportion of patients with ET or MF are JAK2V617F-negative. We hypothesized that activation of the JAK-STAT pathway might also occur as a consequence of activating mutations in certain hematopoietic-specific cytokine receptors, including the erythropoietin receptor (EPOR), the thrombopoietin receptor (MPL), or the granulocyte-colony stimulating factor receptor (GCSFR). Methods and Findings DNA sequence analysis of the exons encoding the transmembrane and juxtamembrane domains of EPOR, MPL, and GCSFR, and comparison with germline DNA derived from buccal swabs, identified a somatic activating mutation in the transmembrane domain of MPL (W515L) in 9% (4/45) of JAKV617F-negative MF. Expression of MPLW515L in 32D, UT7, or Ba/F3 cells conferred cytokine-independent growth and thrombopoietin hypersensitivity, and resulted in constitutive phosphorylation of JAK2, STAT3, STAT5, AKT, and ERK. Furthermore, a small molecule JAK kinase inhibitor inhibited MPLW515L-mediated proliferation and JAK-STAT signaling in vitro. In a murine bone marrow transplant assay, expression of MPLW515L, but not wild-type MPL, resulted in a fully penetrant myeloproliferative disorder characterized by marked thrombocytosis (Plt count 1.9–4.0 × 10 12/L), marked splenomegaly due to extramedullary hematopoiesis, and increased reticulin fibrosis. Conclusions Activation of JAK-STAT signaling via MPLW515L is an important pathogenetic event in patients with JAK2V617F-negative MF. The bone marrow transplant model of MPLW515L-mediated myeloproliferative disorders (MPD) exhibits certain features of human MF, including extramedullary hematopoiesis, splenomegaly, and megakaryocytic proliferation. Further analysis of positive and negative regulators of the JAK-STAT pathway is warranted in JAK2V617F-negative MPD.


Cancer Cell | 2008

Efficacy of TG101348, a Selective JAK2 Inhibitor, in Treatment of a Murine Model of JAK2V617F-Induced Polycythemia Vera

Gerlinde Wernig; Michael G. Kharas; Rachel Okabe; Sandra Moore; Dena S. Leeman; Dana E. Cullen; Maricel Gozo; Elizabeth P. McDowell; Ross L. Levine; John Doukas; Chi Ching Mak; Glenn Noronha; Michael Martin; Yon Ko; Benjamin H. Lee; Richard Soll; Ayalew Tefferi; John Hood; D. Gary Gilliland

We report that TG101348, a selective small-molecule inhibitor of JAK2 with an in vitro IC50 of approximately 3 nM, shows therapeutic efficacy in a murine model of myeloproliferative disease induced by the JAK2V617F mutation. In treated animals, there was a statistically significant reduction in hematocrit and leukocyte count, a dose-dependent reduction/elimination of extramedullary hematopoiesis, and, at least in some instances, evidence for attenuation of myelofibrosis. There were no apparent toxicities and no effect on T cell number. In vivo responses were correlated with surrogate endpoints, including reduction/elimination of JAK2V617F disease burden assessed by quantitative genomic PCR, suppression of endogenous erythroid colony formation, and in vivo inhibition of JAK-STAT signal transduction as assessed by flow cytometric measurement of phosphorylated Stat5.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006

Cdx4 dysregulates Hox gene expression and generates acute myeloid leukemia alone and in cooperation with Meis1a in a murine model

Dimple Bansal; Claudia Scholl; Stefan Fröhling; Elizabeth P. McDowell; Benjamin H. Lee; Konstanze Döhner; Patricia Ernst; Alan J. Davidson; George Q. Daley; Leonard I. Zon; D. Gary Gilliland; Brian J. P. Huntly

HOX genes have emerged as critical effectors of leukemogenesis, but the mechanisms that regulate their expression in leukemia are not well understood. Recent data suggest that the caudal homeobox transcription factors CDX1, CDX2, and CDX4, developmental regulators of HOX gene expression, may contribute to HOX gene dysregulation in leukemia. We report here that CDX4 is expressed normally in early hematopoietic progenitors and is expressed aberrantly in ≈25% of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patient samples. Cdx4 regulates Hox gene expression in the adult murine hematopoietic system and dysregulates Hox genes that are implicated in leukemogenesis. Furthermore, bone marrow progenitors that are retrovirally engineered to express Cdx4 serially replate in methylcellulose cultures, grow in liquid culture, and generate a partially penetrant, long-latency AML in bone marrow transplant recipients. Coexpression of the Hox cofactor Meis1a accelerates the Cdx4 AML phenotype and renders it fully penetrant. Structure–function analysis demonstrates that leukemic transformation requires intact Cdx4 transactivation and DNA-binding domains but not the putative Pbx cofactor interaction motif. Together, these data indicate that Cdx4 regulates Hox gene expression in adult hematopoiesis and may serve as an upstream regulator of Hox gene expression in the induction of acute leukemia. Inasmuch as many human leukemias show dysregulated expression of a spectrum of HOX family members, these collective findings also suggest a central role for CDX4 expression in the genesis of acute leukemia.


Cancer Cell | 2007

FLT3 mutations confer enhanced proliferation and survival properties to multipotent progenitors in a murine model of chronic myelomonocytic leukemia

Benjamin H. Lee; Zuzana Tothova; Ross L. Levine; Kristina Anderson; Natalija Buza-Vidas; Dana E. Cullen; Elizabeth P. McDowell; Jennifer Adelsperger; Stefan Fröhling; Brian J. P. Huntly; Miloslav Beran; Sten Eirik W. Jacobsen; D. Gary Gilliland


Blood | 2005

The small molecule tyrosine kinase inhibitor AMN107 inhibits TEL-PDGFRbeta and FIP1L1-PDGFRalpha in vitro and in vivo

Elizabeth H. Stover; Jing Chen; Benjamin H. Lee; Jan Cools; Elizabeth P. McDowell; Jennifer Adelsperger; Dana E. Cullen; Allison Coburn; Sandra Moore; Rachel Okabe; Doriano Fabbro; Paul W. Manley; James D. Griffin; D. Gary Gilliland


Blood | 2007

Efficacy of TG101348, a Selective JAK2 Inhibitor, in Treatment of a Murine Model of JAK2V617F-Induced Polycythemia Vera.

Gerlinde Wernig; Michael G. Kharas; Rachel Okabe; Sandra Moore; Dena S. Leeman; Dana E. Cullen; Maricel Gozo; Elizabeth P. McDowell; Ross L. Levine; John Doukas; Chi Ching Mak; Glenn Noronha; Michael Martin; Yon Ko; Benjamin H. Lee; Richard Soll; Ayalew Tefferi; John Hood; D. Gary Gilliland


Blood | 2006

Cdx4 Upregulates Hox Gene Expression and Generates Acute Myeloid Leukemia Alone and in Cooperation with Meis1a in a Murine Model.

Dimple Bansal; Claudia Scholl; Stefan Fröhling; Elizabeth P. McDowell; Benjamin H. Lee; Konstanze Döhner; Patricia Ernst; Alan J. Davidson; George Q. Daley; Leonard I. Zon; D. Gary Gilliland; Brian J. P. Huntly


Blood | 2006

FoxO Are Critical Mediators of Hematopoietic Stem Cell Resistance to Physiologic Oxidative Stress.

Zuzana Tothova; Ramya Kollipara; Brian J. P. Huntly; Benjamin H. Lee; Diego H. Castrillon; Emmanuelle Passegué; Dana E. Cullen; Elizabeth P. McDowell; Suzan Lazo-Kallanian; Ifor R. Williams; Ronald A. DePinho; D. Gary Gilliland


Blood | 2007

Leukemogenic FLT3 Mutations Confer Enhanced Proliferation and Survival Properties to Multipotent Progenitor Cells in a Murine Model of Chronic Myelomonocytic Leukemia.

Benjamin H. Lee; Zuzana Tothova; Ross L. Levine; Kristina Anderson; Natalija Buza-Vidas; Dana E. Cullen; Elizabeth P. McDowell; Jennifer Adelsperger; Stefan Fröhling; Brian J. P. Huntly; Miloslav Beran; Sten Eirik W. Jacobsen; D. Gary Gilliland

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Dana E. Cullen

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Maricel Gozo

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Sandra Moore

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Gerlinde Wernig

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Jennifer Adelsperger

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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