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Dive into the research topics where Emmanouela Repapi is active.

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Featured researches published by Emmanouela Repapi.


Cancer Research | 2012

Alternate Splicing of the p53 Inhibitor HDMX Offers a Superior Prognostic Biomarker than p53 Mutation in Human Cancer

Kristiaan Lenos; Anna M. Grawenda; Kirsten Lodder; Marieke L. Kuijjer; Amina Teunisse; Emmanouela Repapi; Lukasz F. Grochola; Frank Bartel; Pancras C.W. Hogendoorn; Peter Wuerl; Helge Taubert; Anne-Marie Cleton-Jansen; Gareth L. Bond; Aart G. Jochemsen

Conventional high-grade osteosarcoma is the most common primary bone malignancy. Although altered expression of the p53 inhibitor HDMX (Mdmx/Mdm4) is associated with cancer risk, progression, and outcome in other tumor types, little is known about its role in osteosarcoma. High expression of the Hdmx splice variant HDMX-S relative to the full-length transcript (the HDMX-S/HDMX-FL ratio) correlates with reduced HDMX protein expression, faster progression, and poorer survival in several cancers. Here, we show that the HDMX-S/HDMX-FL ratio positively correlates with less HDMX protein expression, faster metastatic progression, and a trend to worse overall survival in osteosarcomas. We found that the HDMX-S/HDMX-FL ratio associated with common somatic genetic lesions connected with p53 inhibition, such as p53 mutation and HDM2 overexpression in osteosarcoma cell lines. Interestingly, this finding was not limited to osteosarcomas as we observed similar associations in breast cancer and a variety of other cancer cell lines, as well as in tumors from patients with soft tissue sarcoma. The HDMX-S/HDMX-FL ratio better defined patients with sarcoma with worse survival rates than p53 mutational status. We propose a novel role for alternative splicing of HDMX, whereby it serves as a mechanism by which HDMX protein levels are reduced in cancer cells that have already inhibited p53 activity. Alternative splicing of HDMX could, therefore, serve as a more effective biomarker for p53 pathway attenuation in cancers than p53 gene mutation.


Leukemia | 2016

Cryptic splicing events in the iron transporter ABCB7 and other key target genes in SF3B1 -mutant myelodysplastic syndromes

Hamid Dolatshad; Andrea Pellagatti; Fabio Liberante; Miriam Llorian; Emmanouela Repapi; Violetta Steeples; Swagata Roy; L Scifo; Richard N. Armstrong; J Shaw; Bon Ham Yip; Sally Killick; Rajko Kusec; Stephen Taylor; Ken I. Mills; Kienan Savage; Christopher W. J. Smith; Jacqueline Boultwood

The splicing factor SF3B1 is the most frequently mutated gene in myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), and is strongly associated with the presence of ring sideroblasts (RS). We have performed a systematic analysis of cryptic splicing abnormalities from RNA sequencing data on hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) of SF3B1-mutant MDS cases with RS. Aberrant splicing events in many downstream target genes were identified and cryptic 3′ splice site usage was a frequent event in SF3B1-mutant MDS. The iron transporter ABCB7 is a well-recognized candidate gene showing marked downregulation in MDS with RS. Our analysis unveiled aberrant ABCB7 splicing, due to usage of an alternative 3′ splice site in MDS patient samples, giving rise to a premature termination codon in the ABCB7 mRNA. Treatment of cultured SF3B1-mutant MDS erythroblasts and a CRISPR/Cas9-generated SF3B1-mutant cell line with the nonsense-mediated decay (NMD) inhibitor cycloheximide showed that the aberrantly spliced ABCB7 transcript is targeted by NMD. We describe cryptic splicing events in the HSCs of SF3B1-mutant MDS, and our data support a model in which NMD-induced downregulation of the iron exporter ABCB7 mRNA transcript resulting from aberrant splicing caused by mutant SF3B1 underlies the increased mitochondrial iron accumulation found in MDS patients with RS.


Developmental Cell | 2016

Transforming Growth Factor β Drives Hemogenic Endothelium Programming and the Transition to Hematopoietic Stem Cells.

Rui Monteiro; Philip Pinheiro; Nicola Joseph; Tessa Peterkin; Jana Koth; Emmanouela Repapi; Florian Bonkhofer; Arif Kirmizitas; Roger Patient

Summary Hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) are self-renewing multipotent stem cells that generate mature blood lineages throughout life. They, together with hematopoietic progenitor cells (collectively known as HSPCs), emerge from hemogenic endothelium in the floor of the embryonic dorsal aorta by an endothelial-to-hematopoietic transition (EHT). Here we demonstrate that transforming growth factor β (TGFβ) is required for HSPC specification and that it regulates the expression of the Notch ligand Jagged1a in endothelial cells prior to EHT, in a striking parallel with the epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT). The requirement for TGFβ is two fold and sequential: autocrine via Tgfβ1a and Tgfβ1b produced in the endothelial cells themselves, followed by a paracrine input of Tgfβ3 from the notochord, suggesting that the former programs the hemogenic endothelium and the latter drives EHT. Our findings have important implications for the generation of HSPCs from pluripotent cells in vitro.


AIDS | 2015

Interferon-induced transmembrane protein-3 rs12252-C is associated with rapid progression of acute HIV-1 infection in Chinese MSM cohort

Yonghong Zhang; Shokouh Makvandi-Nejad; Ling Qin; Yan Zhao; Tong Zhang; L. Wang; Emmanouela Repapi; Stephen Taylor; Andrew J. McMichael; Ning Li; Tao Dong; Hao Wu

Background:The interferon-inducible transmembrane protein-3 (IFITM3) is a protein that restricts multiple pathogenic viruses such as influenza virus. The single-nucleotide polymorphism rs12252-C, which is rare in Caucasian populations, but much more common in the Han Chinese population, has been found in much higher homozygous frequency in patients with severe acute influenza. Until now, there has been no study on the effect of this genetic variant on the clinical control of other viral infections. Objectives:To investigate the impact of IFITM3-rs12252 genotypes on primary HIV-1 infection progression in an acute HIV-1-infected cohort in Beijing (PRIMO), China. Design and methods:We identified IFITM3-rs12252 genotypes of 178 acute HIV-1-infected patients and 196 HIV-negative candidates from the PRIMO cohort. HIV-1 viral load and CD4+ T-cell counts were monitored at multiple time points during the first year of infection, and the association between IFITM3-rs12252 genotype and disease progression was evaluated. Results:The current study shows that the IFITM3-rs12252 genetic variant affects the progression of HIV-1 infection, but not the acquisition. A significantly higher frequency of the CC/CT genotypes was found in rapid progressors compared to nonprogressors. Patients with CC/CT genotypes showed an elevated peak viremia level and significantly lower CD4+ T-cell count at multiple time points during the first year of primary infection, and a significantly higher risk of rapid decline of the CD4+ T-cell count to below 350 cells/&mgr;l. Conclusion:A novel association between IFITM3 gene polymorphism and rapid disease progression is reported in an acute HIV-1-infected MSM cohort in China.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2017

The U2AF1S34F mutation induces lineage-specific splicing alterations in myelodysplastic syndromes

Bon Ham Yip; Violetta Steeples; Emmanouela Repapi; Richard N. Armstrong; Miriam Llorian; Swagata Roy; J Shaw; Hamid Dolatshad; Stephen Taylor; Amit Verma; Matthias Bartenstein; Paresh Vyas; Nicholas C.P. Cross; Luca Malcovati; Mario Cazzola; Eva Hellström-Lindberg; Seishi Ogawa; Christopher W. J. Smith; Andrea Pellagatti; Jacqueline Boultwood

Mutations of the splicing factor–encoding gene U2AF1 are frequent in the myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), a myeloid malignancy, and other cancers. Patients with MDS suffer from peripheral blood cytopenias, including anemia, and an increasing percentage of bone marrow myeloblasts. We studied the impact of the common U2AF1S34F mutation on cellular function and mRNA splicing in the main cell lineages affected in MDS. We demonstrated that U2AF1S34F expression in human hematopoietic progenitors impairs erythroid differentiation and skews granulomonocytic differentiation toward granulocytes. RNA sequencing of erythroid and granulomonocytic colonies revealed that U2AF1S34F induced a higher number of cassette exon splicing events in granulomonocytic cells than in erythroid cells. U2AF1S34F altered mRNA splicing of many transcripts that were expressed in both cell types in a lineage-specific manner. In hematopoietic progenitors, the introduction of isoform changes identified in the U2AF1S34F target genes H2AFY, encoding an H2A histone variant, and STRAP, encoding serine/threonine kinase receptor–associated protein, recapitulated phenotypes associated with U2AF1S34F expression in erythroid and granulomonocytic cells, suggesting a causal link. Furthermore, we showed that isoform modulation of H2AFY and STRAP rescues the erythroid differentiation defect in U2AF1S34F MDS cells, suggesting that splicing modulators could be used therapeutically. These data have critical implications for understanding MDS phenotypic heterogeneity and support the development of therapies targeting splicing abnormalities.


Nature Immunology | 2018

Single-cell analysis reveals the continuum of human lympho-myeloid progenitor cells.

Dimitris Karamitros; Bilyana Stoilova; Zahra Aboukhalil; Fiona Hamey; Andreas Reinisch; Marina Samitsch; Lynn Quek; Georg W. Otto; Emmanouela Repapi; Jessica Doondeea; Batchimeg Usukhbayar; Julien Calvo; Stephen Taylor; Nicolas Goardon; Emmanuelle Six; Françoise Pflumio; Catherine Porcher; Ravindra Majeti; Berthold Göttgens; Paresh Vyas

The human hemopoietic progenitor hierarchy producing lymphoid and granulocytic-monocytic (myeloid) lineages is unclear. Multiple progenitor populations produce lymphoid and myeloid cells, but remain incompletely characterized. Here, we demonstrated cord blood lympho-myeloid containing progenitor populations - the lymphoid-primed multi-potential progenitor (LMPP), granulocyte-macrophage progenitor (GMP) and multi-lymphoid progenitor (MLP) - were functionally and transcriptionally distinct and heterogeneous at the clonal level, with progenitors of many different functional potentials present. Though most progenitors had uni-lineage myeloid or lymphoid potential, bi- and rarer multi-lineage progenitors occurred in LMPP, GMP and MLP. This, coupled with single cell expression analyses, suggested a continuum of progenitors execute lymphoid and myeloid differentiation rather than only uni-lineage progenitors being present downstream of stem cells.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2017

Niche-mediated depletion of the normal hematopoietic stem cell reservoir by Flt3-ITD-induced myeloproliferation.

Adam Mead; Wen Hao Neo; Nikolaos Barkas; S Matsuoka; Alice Giustacchini; R Facchini; Supat Thongjuea; Lauren Jamieson; Booth Cag.; N Fordham; C Di Genua; Deborah Atkinson; Onima Chowdhury; Emmanouela Repapi; Nicki Gray; Shabnam Kharazi; Clark S-A.; T Bouriez; Petter S. Woll; T Suda; Claus Nerlov; Jacobsen Sew.

Although previous studies suggested that the expression of FMS-like tyrosine kinase 3 (Flt3) initiates downstream of mouse hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs), FLT3 internal tandem duplications (FLT3 ITDs) have recently been suggested to intrinsically suppress HSCs. Herein, single-cell interrogation found Flt3 mRNA expression to be absent in the large majority of phenotypic HSCs, with a strong negative correlation between Flt3 and HSC-associated gene expression. Flt3-ITD knock-in mice showed reduced numbers of phenotypic HSCs, with an even more severe loss of long-term repopulating HSCs, likely reflecting the presence of non-HSCs within the phenotypic HSC compartment. Competitive transplantation experiments established that Flt3-ITD compromises HSCs through an extrinsically mediated mechanism of disrupting HSC-supporting bone marrow stromal cells, with reduced numbers of endothelial and mesenchymal stromal cells showing increased inflammation-associated gene expression. Tumor necrosis factor (TNF), a cell-extrinsic potent negative regulator of HSCs, was overexpressed in bone marrow niche cells from FLT3-ITD mice, and anti-TNF treatment partially rescued the HSC phenotype. These findings, which establish that Flt3-ITD–driven myeloproliferation results in cell-extrinsic suppression of the normal HSC reservoir, are of relevance for several aspects of acute myeloid leukemia biology.


JCI insight | 2017

M1-like monocytes are a major immunological determinant of severity in previously healthy adults with life-threatening influenza

Suzanne L. Cole; Jake Dunning; Wai Ling Kok; Kambez Hajipouran Benam; Adel Benlahrech; Emmanouela Repapi; Fernando O. Martinez; Lydia Drumright; Timothy J. Powell; Michael S. Bennett; Ruth A. Elderfield; Catherine Thomas; Tao Dong; John W. McCauley; Foo Y. Liew; Stephen Taylor; Maria Zambon; Wendy S. Barclay; Vincenzo Cerundolo; Peter J. M. Openshaw; Andrew J. McMichael; Ling-Pei Ho

In each influenza season, a distinct group of young, otherwise healthy individuals with no risk factors succumbs to life-threatening infection. To better understand the cause for this, we analyzed a broad range of immune responses in blood from a unique cohort of patients, comprising previously healthy individuals hospitalized with and without respiratory failure during one influenza season, and infected with one specific influenza A strain. This analysis was compared with similarly hospitalized influenza patients with known risk factors (total of n = 60 patients recruited). We found a sustained increase in a specific subset of proinflammatory monocytes, with high TNF-α expression and an M1-like phenotype (independent of viral titers), in these previously healthy patients with severe disease. The relationship between M1-like monocytes and immunopathology was strengthened using murine models of influenza, in which severe infection generated using different models (including the high-pathogenicity H5N1 strain) was also accompanied by high levels of circulating M1-like monocytes. Additionally, a raised M1/M2 macrophage ratio in the lungs was observed. These studies identify a specific subtype of monocytes as a modifiable immunological determinant of disease severity in this subgroup of severely ill, previously healthy patients, offering potential novel therapeutic avenues.In each influenza season, a distinct group of young, otherwise healthy individuals with no risk factors succumbs to life-threatening infection. To better understand the cause for this, we analyzed a broad range of immune responses in blood from a unique cohort of patients, comprising previously healthy individuals hospitalized with and without respiratory failure during one influenza season, and infected with one specific influenza A strain. This analysis was compared with similarly hospitalized influenza patients with known risk factors (total of n = 60 patients recruited). We found a sustained increase in a specific subset of proinflammatory monocytes, with high TNF-α expression and an M1-like phenotype (independent of viral titers), in these previously healthy patients with severe disease. The relationship between M1-like monocytes and immunopathology was strengthened using murine models of influenza, in which severe infection generated using different models (including the high-pathogenicity H5N1 strain) was also accompanied by high levels of circulating M1-like monocytes. Additionally, a raised M1/M2 macrophage ratio in the lungs was observed. These studies identify a specific subtype of monocytes as a modifiable immunological determinant of disease severity in this subgroup of severely ill, previously healthy patients, offering potential novel therapeutic avenues.


Cell Reports | 2017

MLL-AF4 Spreading Identifies Binding Sites that Are Distinct from Super-Enhancers and that Govern Sensitivity to DOT1L Inhibition in Leukemia

Jon Kerry; Laura Godfrey; Emmanouela Repapi; Marta Tapia; Neil P. Blackledge; Helen Ma; Erica Ballabio; Sorcha O'Byrne; Frida Ponthan; Olaf Heidenreich; Anindita Roy; Irene Roberts; Marina Konopleva; Robert J. Klose; Huimin Geng; Thomas A. Milne

Summary Understanding the underlying molecular mechanisms of defined cancers is crucial for effective personalized therapies. Translocations of the mixed-lineage leukemia (MLL) gene produce fusion proteins such as MLL-AF4 that disrupt epigenetic pathways and cause poor-prognosis leukemias. Here, we find that at a subset of gene targets, MLL-AF4 binding spreads into the gene body and is associated with the spreading of Menin binding, increased transcription, increased H3K79 methylation (H3K79me2/3), a disruption of normal H3K36me3 patterns, and unmethylated CpG regions in the gene body. Compared to other H3K79me2/3 marked genes, MLL-AF4 spreading gene expression is downregulated by inhibitors of the H3K79 methyltransferase DOT1L. This sensitivity mediates synergistic interactions with additional targeted drug treatments. Therefore, epigenetic spreading and enhanced susceptibility to epidrugs provides a potential marker for better understanding combination therapies in humans.


Structure and Infrastructure Engineering | 2017

Fundamental period of infilled reinforced concrete frame structures

Panagiotis G. Asteris; Constantinos C. Repapis; Emmanouela Repapi; Liborio Cavaleri

Abstract The fundamental period of vibration appears to be one of the most critical parameters for the seismic design and assessment of structures. In the present paper, the results of a large-scale analytical investigation on the parameters that affect the fundamental period of reinforced concrete structures are presented. The influence of the number of storeys, the number of spans, the span length, the infill wall panel stiffness and the percentage of openings within the infill panel on the fundamental period of infilled RC frames was investigated. Based on these results, a regression analysis is applied in order to propose a new empirical equation for the estimation of the fundamental period. The derived equation is shown to have better predictive power compared with equations available in the literature.

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