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Dive into the research topics where Elodie Pronier is active.

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Featured researches published by Elodie Pronier.


Blood | 2011

Inhibition of TET2-mediated conversion of 5-methylcytosine to 5-hydroxymethylcytosine disturbs erythroid and granulomonocytic differentiation of human hematopoietic progenitors

Elodie Pronier; Carole Almire; Hayat Mokrani; Aparna Vasanthakumar; Audrey Simon; Barbara da Costa Reis Monte Mor; Aline Masse; Jean-Pierre Le Couedic; Frédéric Pendino; Bruno Carbonne; Jérôme Larghero; Jean-Luc Ravanat; Nicole Casadevall; Olivier A. Bernard; Nathalie Droin; Eric Solary; Lucy A. Godley; William Vainchenker; Isabelle Plo; François Delhommeau

TET2 converts 5-methylcytosine to 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (5-hmC) in DNA and is frequently mutated in myeloid malignancies, including myeloproliferative neoplasms. Here we show that the level of 5-hmC is decreased in granulocyte DNA from myeloproliferative neoplasm patients with TET2 mutations compared with granulocyte DNA from healthy patients. Inhibition of TET2 by RNA interference decreases 5-hmC levels in both human leukemia cell lines and cord blood CD34(+) cells. These results confirm the enzymatic function of TET2 in human hematopoietic cells. Knockdown of TET2 in cord blood CD34(+) cells skews progenitor differentiation toward the granulomonocytic lineage at the expense of lymphoid and erythroid lineages. In addition, by monitoring in vitro granulomonocytic development we found a decreased granulocytic differentiation and an increase in monocytic cells. Our results indicate that TET2 disruption affects 5-hmC levels in human myeloid cells and participates in the pathogenesis of myeloid malignancies through the disturbance of myeloid differentiation.


Nature Medicine | 2016

DNMT3A mutations promote anthracycline resistance in acute myeloid leukemia via impaired nucleosome remodeling

Olga A. Guryanova; Kaitlyn Shank; Barbara Spitzer; Luisa Luciani; Richard Koche; Francine E. Garrett-Bakelman; Chezi Ganzel; Benjamin H. Durham; Abhinita Mohanty; Gregor Hoermann; Sharon A. Rivera; Alan Chramiec; Elodie Pronier; Lennart Bastian; Matthew Keller; Daniel Tovbin; Evangelia Loizou; Abby Weinstein; Adriana Rodriguez Gonzalez; Yen K. Lieu; Jacob M. Rowe; Friederike Pastore; Anna Sophia McKenney; Andrei V. Krivtsov; Wolfgang R. Sperr; Justin R. Cross; Christopher E. Mason; Martin S. Tallman; Maria E. Arcila; Omar Abdel-Wahab

Although the majority of patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) initially respond to chemotherapy, many of them subsequently relapse, and the mechanistic basis for AML persistence following chemotherapy has not been determined. Recurrent somatic mutations in DNA methyltransferase 3A (DNMT3A), most frequently at arginine 882 (DNMT3AR882), have been observed in AML and in individuals with clonal hematopoiesis in the absence of leukemic transformation. Patients with DNMT3AR882 AML have an inferior outcome when treated with standard-dose daunorubicin-based induction chemotherapy, suggesting that DNMT3AR882 cells persist and drive relapse. We found that Dnmt3a mutations induced hematopoietic stem cell expansion, cooperated with mutations in the FMS-like tyrosine kinase 3 gene (Flt3ITD) and the nucleophosmin gene (Npm1c) to induce AML in vivo, and promoted resistance to anthracycline chemotherapy. In patients with AML, the presence of DNMT3AR882 mutations predicts minimal residual disease, underscoring their role in AML chemoresistance. DNMT3AR882 cells showed impaired nucleosome eviction and chromatin remodeling in response to anthracycline treatment, which resulted from attenuated recruitment of histone chaperone SPT-16 following anthracycline exposure. This defect led to an inability to sense and repair DNA torsional stress, which resulted in increased mutagenesis. Our findings identify a crucial role for DNMT3AR882 mutations in driving AML chemoresistance and highlight the importance of chromatin remodeling in response to cytotoxic chemotherapy.


Nature Communications | 2016

Genetic hierarchy and temporal variegation in the clonal history of acute myeloid leukaemia

Pierre Hirsch; Yanyan Zhang; Ruoping Tang; Virginie Joulin; Hélène Boutroux; Elodie Pronier; Hannah Moatti; Pascale Flandrin; Christophe Marzac; Dominique Bories; Fanny Fava; Hayat Mokrani; Aline Betems; Florence Lorre; Rémi Favier; Frédéric Féger; Mohamad Mohty; Luc Douay; Ollivier Legrand; Chrystèle Bilhou-Nabera; Fawzia Louache; François Delhommeau

In acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) initiating pre-leukaemic lesions can be identified through three major hallmarks: their early occurrence in the clone, their persistence at relapse and their ability to initiate multilineage haematopoietic repopulation and leukaemia in vivo. Here we analyse the clonal composition of a series of AML through these characteristics. We find that not only DNMT3A mutations, but also TET2, ASXL1 mutations, core-binding factor and MLL translocations, as well as del(20q) mostly fulfil these criteria. When not eradicated by AML treatments, pre-leukaemic cells with these lesions can re-initiate the leukaemic process at various stages until relapse, with a time-dependent increase in clonal variegation. Based on the nature, order and association of lesions, we delineate recurrent genetic hierarchies of AML. Our data indicate that first lesions, variegation and treatment selection pressure govern the expansion and adaptive behaviour of the malignant clone, shaping AML in a time-dependent manner.


Haematologica | 2011

JAK2V617F/TET2 mutations: does the order matter?

Elodie Pronier; Cyril Quivoron; Olivier Bernard; Jean-Luc Villeval

According to the World Health Organization classification, myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPN) include chronic myelogenous leukemia, also known as BCR-ABL1 –positive MPN, classic BCR-ABL1 -negative MPN including polycythemia vera (PV), essential thrombocythemia (ET) and primary myelofibrosis (PMF


Cancer Cell | 2018

Cooperative Epigenetic Remodeling by TET2 Loss and NRAS Mutation Drives Myeloid Transformation and MEK Inhibitor Sensitivity

Hiroyoshi Kunimoto; Cem Meydan; Abbas Nazir; Justin Whitfield; Kaitlyn Shank; Franck Rapaport; Rebecca Maher; Elodie Pronier; Sara C. Meyer; Francine E. Garrett-Bakelman; Martin S. Tallman; Ari Melnick; Ross L. Levine; Alan H. Shih

Mutations in epigenetic modifiers and signaling factors often co-occur in myeloid malignancies, including TET2 and NRAS mutations. Concurrent Tet2 loss and NrasG12D expression in hematopoietic cells induced myeloid transformation, with a fully penetrant, lethal chronic myelomonocytic leukemia (CMML), which was serially transplantable. Tet2 loss and Nras mutation cooperatively led to decrease in negative regulators of mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) activation, including Spry2, thereby causing synergistic activation of MAPK signaling by epigenetic silencing. Tet2/Nras double-mutant leukemia showed preferential sensitivity to MAPK kinase (MEK) inhibition in both mouse model and patient samples. These data provide insights into how epigenetic and signaling mutations cooperate in myeloid transformation and provide a rationale for mechanism-based therapy in CMML patients with these high-risk genetic lesions.


Blood | 2017

Aid is a key regulator of myeloid/erythroid differentiation and DNA methylation in hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells

Hiroyoshi Kunimoto; Anna Sophia McKenney; Cem Meydan; Kaitlyn Shank; Abbas Nazir; Franck Rapaport; Benjamin H. Durham; Francine E. Garrett-Bakelman; Elodie Pronier; Alan H. Shih; Ari Melnick; Jayanta Chaudhuri; Ross L. Levine

Recent studies have reported that activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID) and ten-eleven-translocation (TET) family members regulate active DNA demethylation. Genetic alterations of TET2 occur in myeloid malignancies, and hematopoietic-specific loss of Tet2 induces aberrant hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) self-renewal/differentiation, implicating TET2 as a master regulator of normal and malignant hematopoiesis. Despite the functional link between AID and TET in epigenetic gene regulation, the role of AID loss in hematopoiesis and myeloid transformation remains to be investigated. Here, we show that Aid loss in mice leads to expansion of myeloid cells and reduced erythroid progenitors resulting in anemia, with dysregulated expression of Cebpa and Gata1, myeloid/erythroid lineage-specific transcription factors. Consistent with data in the murine context, silencing of AID in human bone marrow cells skews differentiation toward myelomonocytic lineage. However, in contrast to Tet2 loss, Aid loss does not contribute to enhanced HSC self-renewal or cooperate with Flt3-ITD to induce myeloid transformation. Genome-wide transcription and differential methylation analysis uncover the critical role of Aid as a key epigenetic regulator. These results indicate that AID and TET2 share common effects on myeloid and erythroid lineage differentiation, however, their role is nonredundant in regulating HSC self-renewal and in myeloid transformation.


Cancer Cell | 2015

IDH1/2 mutations and BCL-2 dependence: an unexpected Chink in AML's armour.

Elodie Pronier; Ross L. Levine

There is a pressing need to develop novel, mechanism-based therapeutic approaches that can be used to improve therapies for genetically defined tumor subtypes. Chan and colleagues have demonstrated recently that BCL-2 inhibitors can target IDH1/2 mutant cancers through a mutant-specific dependency in metabolic regulation.


Cell Reports | 2014

DNA hydroxymethylation profiling reveals that WT1 mutations result in loss of TET2 function in acute myeloid leukemia

Raajit Rampal; Altuna Alkalin; Jozef Madzo; Aparna Vasanthakumar; Elodie Pronier; Jay Patel; Yushan Li; Jihae Ahn; Omar Abdel-Wahab; Alan Shih; Chao Lu; Patrick S. Ward; Jennifer J. Tsai; Todd Hricik; Valeria Tosello; Jacob Tallman; Xinyang Zhao; Danette L. Daniels; Qing Dai; Luisa Ciminio; Iannis Aifantis; Chuan He; François Fuks; Martin S. Tallman; Adolfo A. Ferrando; Stephen D. Nimer; Elisabeth Paietta; Craig B. Thompson; Jonathan D. Licht; Christopher E. Mason


Blood | 2010

Inhibition of TET2 Conversion of 5-Methylcytosine to 5-Hydroxymethylcytosine Disturbs Myelopoiesis and Granulo-Monocytic Differentiation.

Elodie Pronier; Carole Almire; Barbara da Costa Reis Monte Mor; Audrey Simon; Aline Masse; Hayat Mokrani; Nicole Casadevall; Jean-Luc Ravanat; Eric Solary; William Vainchenker; Isabelle Plo; François Delhommeau


Blood | 2018

Genetic and epigenetic evolution as a contributor to WT1-mutant leukemogenesis

Elodie Pronier; Robert L. Bowman; Jihae Ahn; Jacob L. Glass; Cyriac Kandoth; Tiffany R. Merlinsky; Justin Whitfield; Benjamin H. Durham; Antoine Gruet; Amritha Varshini Hanasoge Somasundara; Raajit Rampal; Ari Melnick; Richard Koche; Barry S. Taylor; Ross L. Levine

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Ross L. Levine

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Alan H. Shih

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Kaitlyn Shank

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Martin S. Tallman

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Abbas Nazir

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Benjamin H. Durham

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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