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Dive into the research topics where Emma Young is active.

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Featured researches published by Emma Young.


Blood | 2016

Whole-exome sequencing in relapsing chronic lymphocytic leukemia: clinical impact of recurrent RPS15 mutations

Viktor Ljungström; Diego Cortese; Emma Young; Tatjana Pandzic; Larry Mansouri; Karla Plevová; Stavroula Ntoufa; Panagiotis Baliakas; Ruth Clifford; Lesley Ann Sutton; Stuart Blakemore; Niki Stavroyianni; Andreas Agathangelidis; Davide Rossi; Martin Höglund; Jana Kotašková; Gunnar Juliusson; Chrysoula Belessi; Nicholas Chiorazzi; Panagiotis Panagiotidis; Anton W. Langerak; Karin E. Smedby; David Oscier; Gianluca Gaidano; Anna Schuh; Frederic Davi; Christiane Pott; Jonathan C. Strefford; Livio Trentin; Šárka Pospíšilová

Fludarabine, cyclophosphamide, and rituximab (FCR) is first-line treatment of medically fit chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) patients; however, despite good response rates, many patients eventually relapse. Although recent high-throughput studies have identified novel recurrent genetic lesions in adverse prognostic CLL, the mechanisms leading to relapse after FCR therapy are not completely understood. To gain insight into this issue, we performed whole-exome sequencing of sequential samples from 41 CLL patients who were uniformly treated with FCR but relapsed after a median of 2 years. In addition to mutations with known adverse-prognostic impact (TP53, NOTCH1, ATM, SF3B1, NFKBIE, and BIRC3), a large proportion of cases (19.5%) harbored mutations in RPS15, a gene encoding a component of the 40S ribosomal subunit. Extended screening, totaling 1119 patients, supported a role for RPS15 mutations in aggressive CLL, with one-third of RPS15-mutant cases also carrying TP53 aberrations. In most cases, selection of dominant, relapse-specific subclones was observed over time. However, RPS15 mutations were clonal before treatment and remained stable at relapse. Notably, all RPS15 mutations represented somatic missense variants and resided within a 7 amino-acid, evolutionarily conserved region. We confirmed the recently postulated direct interaction between RPS15 and MDM2/MDMX and transient expression of mutant RPS15 revealed defective regulation of endogenous p53 compared with wild-type RPS15. In summary, we provide novel insights into the heterogeneous genetic landscape of CLL relapsing after FCR treatment and highlight a novel mechanism underlying clinical aggressiveness involving a mutated ribosomal protein, potentially representing an early genetic lesion in CLL pathobiology.


Haematologica | 2015

Targeted next-generation sequencing in chronic lymphocytic leukemia: a high-throughput yet tailored approach will facilitate implementation in a clinical setting

Lesley-Ann Sutton; Viktor Ljungström; Larry Mansouri; Emma Young; Diego Cortese; Veronika Navrkalová; Jitka Malčíková; Alice F. Muggen; Martin Trbušek; Panagiotis Panagiotidis; Frederic Davi; Chrysoula Belessi; Anton W. Langerak; Paolo Ghia; Šárka Pospíšilová; Kostas Stamatopoulos; Richard Rosenquist

Next-generation sequencing has revealed novel recurrent mutations in chronic lymphocytic leukemia, particularly in patients with aggressive disease. Here, we explored targeted re-sequencing as a novel strategy to assess the mutation status of genes with prognostic potential. To this end, we utilized HaloPlex targeted enrichment technology and designed a panel including nine genes: ATM, BIRC3, MYD88, NOTCH1, SF3B1 and TP53, which have been linked to the prognosis of chronic lymphocytic leukemia, and KLHL6, POT1 and XPO1, which are less characterized but were found to be recurrently mutated in various sequencing studies. A total of 188 chronic lymphocytic leukemia patients with poor prognostic features (unmutated IGHV, n=137; IGHV3-21 subset #2, n=51) were sequenced on the HiSeq 2000 and data were analyzed using well-established bioinformatics tools. Using a conservative cutoff of 10% for the mutant allele, we found that 114/180 (63%) patients carried at least one mutation, with mutations in ATM, BIRC3, NOTCH1, SF3B1 and TP53 accounting for 149/177 (84%) of all mutations. We selected 155 mutations for Sanger validation (variant allele frequency, 10–99%) and 93% (144/155) of mutations were confirmed; notably, all 11 discordant variants had a variant allele frequency between 11–27%, hence at the detection limit of conventional Sanger sequencing. Technical precision was assessed by repeating the entire HaloPlex procedure for 63 patients; concordance was found for 77/82 (94%) mutations. In summary, this study demonstrates that targeted next-generation sequencing is an accurate and reproducible technique potentially suitable for routine screening, eventually as a stand-alone test without the need for confirmation by Sanger sequencing.


Haematologica | 2016

Different spectra of recurrent gene mutations in subsets of chronic lymphocytic leukemia harboring stereotyped B-cell receptors

Lesley Ann Sutton; Emma Young; Panagiotis Baliakas; Anastasia Hadzidimitriou; Theodoros Moysiadis; Karla Plevová; Davide Rossi; Jana Kmínková; Evangelia Stalika; Lone Bredo Pedersen; Jitka Malčíková; Andreas Agathangelidis; Zadie Davis; Larry Mansouri; Lydia Scarfò; Myriam Boudjoghra; Alba Navarro; Alice F. Muggen; Xiao Jie Yan; Marta Larrayoz; Panagiotis Panagiotidis; Nicholas Chiorazzi; Carsten U. Niemann; Chrysoula Belessi; Elias Campo; Jonathan C. Strefford; Anton W. Langerak; David Oscier; Gianluca Gaidano; Šárka Pospíšilová

We report on markedly different frequencies of genetic lesions within subsets of chronic lymphocytic leukemia patients carrying mutated or unmutated stereotyped B-cell receptor immunoglobulins in the largest cohort (n=565) studied for this purpose. By combining data on recurrent gene mutations (BIRC3, MYD88, NOTCH1, SF3B1 and TP53) and cytogenetic aberrations, we reveal a subset-biased acquisition of gene mutations. More specifically, the frequency of NOTCH1 mutations was found to be enriched in subsets expressing unmutated immunoglobulin genes, i.e. #1, #6, #8 and #59 (22–34%), often in association with trisomy 12, and was significantly different (P<0.001) to the frequency observed in subset #2 (4%, aggressive disease, variable somatic hypermutation status) and subset #4 (1%, indolent disease, mutated immunoglobulin genes). Interestingly, subsets harboring a high frequency of NOTCH1 mutations were found to carry few (if any) SF3B1 mutations. This starkly contrasts with subsets #2 and #3 where, despite their immunogenetic differences, SF3B1 mutations occurred in 45% and 46% of cases, respectively. In addition, mutations within TP53, whilst enriched in subset #1 (16%), were rare in subsets #2 and #8 (both 2%), despite all being clinically aggressive. All subsets were negative for MYD88 mutations, whereas BIRC3 mutations were infrequent. Collectively, this striking bias and skewed distribution of mutations and cytogenetic aberrations within specific chronic lymphocytic leukemia subsets implies that the mechanisms underlying clinical aggressiveness are not uniform, but rather support the existence of distinct genetic pathways of clonal evolution governed by a particular stereotyped B-cell receptor selecting a certain molecular lesion(s).


Haematologica | 2017

T cells in chronic lymphocytic leukemia display dysregulated expression of immune checkpoints and activation markers

Marzia Palma; Giusy Gentilcore; Kia Heimersson; Fariba Mozaffari; Barbro Näsman-Glaser; Emma Young; Richard Rosenquist; Lotta Hansson; Anders Österborg; Håkan Mellstedt

Chronic lymphocytic leukemia is characterized by impaired immune functions largely due to profound T-cell defects. T-cell functions also depend on co-signaling receptors, inhibitory or stimulatory, known as immune checkpoints, including cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated antigen-4 (CTLA-4) and programmed death-1 (PD-1). Here we analyzed the T-cell phenotype focusing on immune checkpoints and activation markers in chronic lymphocytic leukemia patients (n=80) with different clinical characteristics and compared them to healthy controls. In general, patients had higher absolute numbers of CD3+ cells and the CD8+ subset was particularly expanded in previously treated patients. Progressive patients had higher numbers of CD4+ and CD8+ cells expressing PD-1 compared to healthy controls, which was more pronounced in previously treated patients (P=0.0003 and P=0.001, respectively). A significant increase in antigen-experienced T cells was observed in patients within both the CD4+ and CD8+ subsets, with a significantly higher PD-1 expression. Higher numbers of CD4+ and CD8+ cells with intracellular CTLA-4 were observed in patients, as well as high numbers of proliferating (Ki67+) and activated (CD69+) CD4+ and CD8+ cells, more pronounced in patients with active disease. The numbers of Th1, Th2, Th17 and regulatory T cells were substantially increased in patients compared to controls (P<0.05), albeit decreasing to low levels in pre-treated patients. In conclusion, chronic lymphocytic leukemia T cells display increased expression of immune checkpoints, abnormal subset distribution, and a higher proportion of proliferating cells compared to healthy T cells. Disease activity and previous treatment shape the T-cell profile of chronic lymphocytic leukemia patients in different ways.


Leukemia | 2017

EGR2 mutations define a new clinically aggressive subgroup of chronic lymphocytic leukemia

Emma Young; Daniel Noerenberg; Larry Mansouri; Viktor Ljungström; Mareike Frick; Lesley-Ann Sutton; Stuart Blakemore; J Galan-Sousa; Karla Plevová; P. Baliakas; Davide Rossi; Ruth Clifford; Damien Roos-Weil; Veronika Navrkalová; Bernd Dörken; Clemens A. Schmitt; Karin E. Smedby; Gunnar Juliusson; Brian Giacopelli; James S. Blachly; C. Belessi; Panagiotis Panagiotidis; Nicholas Chiorazzi; Frederic Davi; A W Langerak; David Oscier; Anna Schuh; G. Gaidano; Paolo Ghia; W Xu

Recurrent mutations within EGR2 were recently reported in advanced-stage chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) patients and associated with a worse outcome. To study their prognostic impact, 2403 CLL patients were examined for mutations in the EGR2 hotspot region including a screening (n=1283) and two validation cohorts (UK CLL4 trial patients, n=366; CLL Research Consortium (CRC) patients, n=490). Targeted deep-sequencing of 27 known/postulated CLL driver genes was also performed in 38 EGR2-mutated patients to assess concurrent mutations. EGR2 mutations were detected in 91/2403 (3.8%) investigated cases, and associated with younger age at diagnosis, advanced clinical stage, high CD38 expression and unmutated IGHV genes. EGR2-mutated patients frequently carried ATM lesions (42%), TP53 aberrations (18%) and NOTCH1/FBXW7 mutations (16%). EGR2 mutations independently predicted shorter time-to-first-treatment (TTFT) and overall survival (OS) in the screening cohort; they were confirmed associated with reduced TTFT and OS in the CRC cohort and independently predicted short OS from randomization in the UK CLL4 cohort. A particularly dismal outcome was observed among EGR2-mutated patients who also carried TP53 aberrations. In summary, EGR2 mutations were independently associated with an unfavorable prognosis, comparable to CLL patients carrying TP53 aberrations, suggesting that EGR2-mutated patients represent a new patient subgroup with very poor outcome.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2017

Drug-perturbation-based stratification of blood cancer

Sascha Dietrich; Małgorzata Oleś; Junyan Lu; Leopold Sellner; Simon Anders; Britta Velten; Bian Wu; Jennifer Hüllein; Michelle da Silva Liberio; Tatjana Walther; Lena Wagner; Sophie Rabe; Sonja Ghidelli-Disse; Marcus Bantscheff; Andrzej K. Oleś; Mikolaj Slabicki; Andreas Mock; Christopher C. Oakes; Shihui Wang; Sina Oppermann; Marina Lukas; Vladislav Kim; Martin Sill; Axel Benner; Anna Jauch; Lesley Ann Sutton; Emma Young; Richard Rosenquist; Xiyang Liu; Alexander Jethwa

As new generations of targeted therapies emerge and tumor genome sequencing discovers increasingly comprehensive mutation repertoires, the functional relationships of mutations to tumor phenotypes remain largely unknown. Here, we measured ex vivo sensitivity of 246 blood cancers to 63 drugs alongside genome, transcriptome, and DNA methylome analysis to understand determinants of drug response. We assembled a primary blood cancer cell encyclopedia data set that revealed disease-specific sensitivities for each cancer. Within chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), responses to 62% of drugs were associated with 2 or more mutations, and linked the B cell receptor (BCR) pathway to trisomy 12, an important driver of CLL. Based on drug responses, the disease could be organized into phenotypic subgroups characterized by exploitable dependencies on BCR, mTOR, or MEK signaling and associated with mutations, gene expression, and DNA methylation. Fourteen percent of CLLs were driven by mTOR signaling in a non–BCR-dependent manner. Multivariate modeling revealed immunoglobulin heavy chain variable gene (IGHV) mutation status and trisomy 12 as the most important modulators of response to kinase inhibitors in CLL. Ex vivo drug responses were associated with outcome. This study overcomes the perception that most mutations do not influence drug response of cancer, and points to an updated approach to understanding tumor biology, with implications for biomarker discovery and cancer care.


Haematologica | 2016

ATM mutations in major stereotyped subsets of chronic lymphocytic leukemia: enrichment in subset #2 is associated with markedly short telomeres

Veronika Navrkalová; Emma Young; Panagiotis Baliakas; Lenka Radová; Lesley Ann Sutton; Karla Plevová; Larry Mansouri; Viktor Ljungström; Stavroula Ntoufa; Zadie Davis; Gunnar Juliusson; Karin E. Smedby; Chrysoula Belessi; Panagiotis Panagiotidis; Tasoula Touloumenidou; Frederic Davi; Anton W. Langerak; Paolo Ghia; Jonathan C. Strefford; David Oscier; Jiri Mayer; Kostas Stamatopoulos; Šárka Pospíšilová; Richard Rosenquist; Martin Trbušek

ATM mutations in major stereotyped subsets of chronic lymphocytic leukemia: enrichment in subset 2 is associated with markedly short telomeres, ATM mutations in major stereotyped subsets of chronic lymphocytic leukemia: enrichment in subset 2 is associated with markedly short telomeres, ATM mutations in major stereotyped subsets of chronic lymphocytic leukemia: enrichment in subset 2 is associated with markedly short telomeres.


Haematologica | 2018

Tailored approaches grounded on immunogenetic features for refined prognostication in chronic lymphocytic leukemia

Panagiotis Baliakas; Theodoros Moysiadis; Anastasia Hadzidimitriou; Aliki Xochelli; Sabine Jeromin; Andreas Agathangelidis; Mattias Mattsson; Lesley-Ann Sutton; Eva Minga; Lydia Scarfò; Davide Rossi; Zadie Davis; Neus Villamor; Helen Parker; Jana Kotašková; Evangelia Stalika; Karla Plevová; Larry Mansouri; Diego Cortese; Alba Navarro; Julio Delgado; Marta Larrayoz; Emma Young; Achilles Anagnostopoulos; Karin E. Smedby; Gunnar Juliusson; Oonagh Sheehy; Mark A. Catherwood; Jonathan C. Strefford; Niki Stavroyianni

Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) patients with differential somatic hypermutation status of the immunoglobulin heavy variable genes, namely mutated or unmutated, display fundamental clinico-biological differences. Considering this, we assessed prognosis separately within mutated (M-CLL) and unmutated (U-CLL) CLL in 3015 patients, hypothesizing that the relative significance of relevant indicators may differ between these two categories. Within Binet A M-CLL patients, besides TP53 abnormalities, trisomy 12 and stereotyped subset #2 membership were equivalently associated with the shortest time-to-first-treatment and a treatment probability at five and ten years after diagnosis of 40% and 55%, respectively; the remaining cases exhibited 5-year and 10-year treatment probability of 12% and 25%, respectively. Within Binet A U-CLL patients, besides TP53 abnormalities, del(11q) and/or SF3B1 mutations were associated with the shortest time-to-first-treatment (5- and 10-year treatment probability: 78% and 98%, respectively); in the remaining cases, males had a significantly worse prognosis than females. In conclusion, the relative weight of indicators that can accurately risk stratify early-stage CLL patients differs depending on the somatic hypermutation status of the immunoglobulin heavy variable genes of each patient. This finding highlights the fact that compartmentalized approaches based on immunogenetic features are necessary to refine and tailor prognostication in CLL.


Blood | 2016

Frequent NFKBIE deletions are associated with poor outcome in primary mediastinal B-cell lymphoma.

Larry Mansouri; Daniel Noerenberg; Emma Young; Elena Mylonas; Maysaa Abdulla; Mareike Frick; Fazila Asmar; Viktor Ljungström; Markus Schneider; Kenichi Yoshida; Aron Skaftason; Tatjana Pandzic; Blanca Sanchez Gonzalez; Anna Tasidou; Nils Waldhueter; Alfredo Rivas-Delgado; Maria K. Angelopoulou; Marita Ziepert; Christopher Maximilian Arends; Lucile Couronné; Dido Lenze; Claudia D. Baldus; Christian Bastard; Jessica Okosun; Jude Fitzgibbon; Bernd Dörken; Hans G. Drexler; Damien Roos-Weil; Clemens A. Schmitt; Helga Duverger Munch-Petersen


Blood | 2016

Tailored Approaches for Refined Prognostication in Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia Patients with Mutated Versus Unmutated Immunoglobulin Receptors

Panagiotis Baliakas; Theodoros Moysiadis; Anastasia Hadzidimitriou; Aliki Xochelli; Mattias Mattsson; Lesley-Ann Sutton; M. Minga; Lydia Scarfò; Davide Rossi; Zadie Davis; Andreas Agathangelidis; Neus Villamor; Helen Parker; Jana Kotašková; Evangelia Stalika; Karla Plevová; Larry Mansouri; Diego Cortese; A. Navaro Lopez; Julio Delgado; Marta Larrayoz; Emma Young; Achilles Anagnostopoulos; K. Smedby; Gunnar Juliusson; Mark A. Catherwood; Jon C. Strefford; Niki Stavroyianni; C. Belessi; Šárka Pospíšilová

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Karla Plevová

Central European Institute of Technology

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Šárka Pospíšilová

Central European Institute of Technology

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Davide Rossi

University of Eastern Piedmont

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Richard Rosenquist

The Feinstein Institute for Medical Research

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Zadie Davis

Royal Bournemouth Hospital

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Panagiotis Panagiotidis

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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Anton W. Langerak

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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Veronika Navrkalová

Central European Institute of Technology

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