Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Eric Kowarz is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Eric Kowarz.


Blood | 2009

The MLL recombinome of adult CD10-negative B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia: results from the GMALL study group

Thomas Burmeister; Claus Meyer; Stefan Schwartz; Julia Hofmann; Mara Molkentin; Eric Kowarz; Björn Schneider; Thorsten Raff; Richard Reinhardt; Nicola Gökbuget; Dieter Hoelzer; Eckhard Thiel; Rolf Marschalek

MLL translocations in adult B-cell precursor (BCP) acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) are largely restricted to the immature CD10(-) immunophenotypes. MLL-AF4 is known to be the most frequent fusion transcript, but the exact frequencies of MLL aberrations in CD10(-) adult BCP-ALL are unknown. We present a genetic characterization of 184 BCR-ABL(-) CD10(-) adult ALL cases (156 cyIg(-), 28 cyIg(+)) diagnosed between 2001 and 2007 at the central diagnostic laboratory of the GMALL study group. Patient samples were investigated by RT-PCR for MLL-AF4, MLL-ENL, and MLL-AF9 and by long-distance inverse polymerase chain reaction, thus also allowing the identification of unknown MLL fusion partners at the genomic level. MLL-AF4 was detected in 101 (54.9%) and MLL-ENL in 11 (6.0%) cases. In addition, rare MLL fusion genes were found: 2 MLL-TET1 cases, not previously reported in ALL, 1 MLL-AF9, 1 MLL-PTD, a novel MLL-ACTN4, and an MLL-11q23 fusion. Chromosomal breakpoints were determined in all 118 positive cases, revealing 2 major breakpoint cluster regions in the MLL gene. Characteristic features of MLL(+) patients were significantly lower CD10 expression, expression of the NG2 antigen, a higher white blood count at diagnosis, and female sex. Proposals are made for diagnostic assessment.


Leukemia | 2007

Complex MLL rearrangements in t(4;11) leukemia patients with absent AF4.MLL fusion allele.

Eric Kowarz; Thomas Burmeister; Luca Lo Nigro; Mieke W. J. C. Jansen; Eric Delabesse; Thomas Klingebiel; Theodor Dingermann; Claus Meyer; Rolf Marschalek

The human mixed lineage leukemia (MLL) gene is frequently involved in genetic rearrangements with more than 55 different translocation partner genes, all associated with acute leukemia. Reciprocal chromosomal translocations generate two MLL fusion alleles, where 5′- and 3′-portions of MLL are fused to gene segments of given fusion partners. In case of t(4;11) patients, about 80% of all patients exhibit both reciprocal fusion alleles, MLL·AF4 and AF4·MLL, respectively. By contrast, 20% of all t(4;11) patients seem to encode only the MLL·AF4 fusion allele. Here, we analyzed these ’MLL·AF4+/AF4·MLL−’ patients at the genomic DNA level to unravel their genetic situation. Cryptic translocations and three-way translocations were found in this group of t(4;11) patients. Reciprocal MLL fusions with novel translocation partner genes, for example NF-KB1 and RABGAP1L, were identified and actively transcribed in leukemic cells. In other patients, the reciprocal 3′-MLL gene segment was fused out-of-frame to PBX1, ELF2, DSCAML1 and FXYD6. The latter rearrangements caused haploinsufficiency of genes that are normally expressed in hematopoietic cells. Finally, patients were identified that encode only solitary 3′-MLL gene segments on the reciprocal allele. Based on these data, we propose that all t(4;11) patients exhibit reciprocal MLL alleles, but due to the individual recombination events, provide different pathological disease mechanisms.


Biotechnology Journal | 2015

Optimized Sleeping Beauty transposons rapidly generate stable transgenic cell lines

Eric Kowarz; Denise Löscher; Rolf Marschalek

Stable gene expression in mammalian cells is a prerequisite for many in vitro and in vivo experiments. However, either the integration of plasmids into mammalian genomes or the use of retro-/lentiviral systems have intrinsic limitations. The use of transposable elements, e.g. the Sleeping Beauty system (SB), circumvents most of these drawbacks (integration sites, size limitations) and allows the quick generation of stable cell lines. The integration process of SB is catalyzed by a transposase and the handling of this gene transfer system is easy, fast and safe. Here, we report our improvements made to the existing SB vector system and present two new vector types for robust constitutive or inducible expression of any gene of interest. Both types are available in 16 variants with different selection marker (puromycin, hygromycin, blasticidin, neomycin) and fluorescent protein expression (GFP, RFP, BFP) to fit most experimental requirements. With this system it is possible to generate cell lines from stable transfected cells quickly and reliably in a medium-throughput setting (three to five days). Cell lines robustly express any gene-of-interest, either constitutively or tightly regulated by doxycycline. This allows many laboratory experiments to speed up generation of data in a rapid and robust manner.


Cancer Letters | 2013

Functional analysis of the two reciprocal fusion genes MLL-NEBL and NEBL-MLL reveal their oncogenic potential.

Mariana Emerenciano; Eric Kowarz; Katharina Karl; Bruno de Almeida Lopes; Bastian Scholz; Silvia Bracharz; Claus Meyer; Maria S. Pombo-de-Oliveira; Rolf Marschalek

MLL gene aberrations are frequently diagnosed in infant acute myeloid leukemia (AML). We previously described the MLL-NEBL and NEBL-MLL genomic fusions in an infant AML patient with a chromosomal translocation t(10;11)(p12;q23). NEBL was the second Nebulin family member (LASP1, NEBL) which was found to be involved in MLL rearrangements. Here, we report on our attempts to unravel the oncogenic properties of both fusion genes. First, RT-PCR analyses revealed the presence of the MLL-NEBL and NEBL-MLL mRNAs in the diagnostic sample of the patient. Next, expression cassettes for MLL-NEBL and NEBL-MLL were cloned into a sleeping beauty vector backbone. After stable transfection, the biological effects of MLL-NEBL, NEBL-MLL or the combination of both fusion proteins were investigated in a conditional cell culture model. NEBL-MLL but also co-transfected cells displayed significantly higher growth rates according to the data obtained by cell proliferation assay. The focus formation experiments revealed differences in the shape and number of colonies when comparing MLL-NEBL, NEBL-MLL- and co-transfected cells. The results obtained in this study suggest that the reciprocal fusion genes of the Nebulin gene family might be of biological importance.


Cancer Letters | 2014

Functional characterisation of different MLL fusion proteins by using inducible Sleeping Beauty vectors

Katharina Wächter; Eric Kowarz; Rolf Marschalek

Our focus is the identification, characterisation and functional analysis of different MLL fusions. In general, MLL fusion proteins are encoded by large cDNA cassettes that are difficult to transduce into haematopoietic stem cells. This is due to the size limitations of the packaging process of those vector-encoded RNAs into retro- or lentiviral particles. Here, we present our efforts in establishing a universal vector system to analyse different MLL fusions. The universal cloning system was embedded into the backbone of the Sleeping Beauty transposable element. This transposon has no size limitation and displays no integration preference, thereby avoiding the integration into active genes or their promoter regions. We utilised this novel system to test different MLL fusion alleles (MLL-NEBL, NEBL-MLL, MLL-LASP1, LASP1-MLL, MLL-MAML2, MAML2-MLL, MLL-SMAP1 and SMAP1-MLL) in appropriate cell lines. Stable cell lines were analysed for their growth behaviour, focus formation and colony formation capacity and ectopic Hoxa gene transcription. Our results show that only 1/4 tested direct MLL fusions, but 3/4 tested reciprocal MLL fusions exhibit oncogenic functions. From these pilot experiments, we conclude that a systematic analysis of more MLL fusions will result in a more differentiated picture about the oncogenic capacity of distinct MLL fusions.


EBioMedicine | 2015

Unraveling the Activation Mechanism of Taspase1 which Controls the Oncogenic AF4–MLL Fusion Protein

Samaneh Sabiani; Tim Geppert; Christian Engelbrecht; Eric Kowarz; Gisbert Schneider; Rolf Marschalek

We have recently demonstrated that Taspase1-mediated cleavage of the AF4–MLL oncoprotein results in the formation of a stable multiprotein complex which forms the key event for the onset of acute proB leukemia in mice. Therefore, Taspase1 represents a conditional oncoprotein in the context of t(4;11) leukemia. In this report, we used site-directed mutagenesis to unravel the molecular events by which Taspase1 becomes sequentially activated. Monomeric pro-enzymes form dimers which are autocatalytically processed into the enzymatically active form of Taspase1 (αββα). The active enzyme cleaves only very few target proteins, e.g., MLL, MLL4 and TFIIA at their corresponding consensus cleavage sites (CSTasp1) as well as AF4–MLL in the case of leukemogenic translocation. This knowledge was translated into the design of a dominant-negative mutant of Taspase1 (dnTASP1). As expected, simultaneous expression of the leukemogenic AF4–MLL and dnTASP1 causes the disappearance of the leukemogenic oncoprotein, because the uncleaved AF4–MLL protein (328 kDa) is subject to proteasomal degradation, while the cleaved AF4–MLL forms a stable oncogenic multi-protein complex with a very long half-life. Moreover, coexpression of dnTASP1 with a BFP-CSTasp1-GFP FRET biosensor effectively inhibits cleavage. The impact of our findings on future drug development and potential treatment options for t(4;11) leukemia will be discussed.


Cancers | 2012

Do non-genomically encoded fusion transcripts cause recurrent chromosomal translocations?

Eric Kowarz; Theodor Dingermann; Rolf Marschalek

We among others have recently demonstrated that normal cells produce “fusion mRNAs”. These fusion mRNAs do not derive from rearranged genomic loci, but rather they are derived from “early-terminated transcripts” (ETTs). Premature transcriptional termination takes place in intronic sequences that belong to “breakpoint cluster regions”. One important property of ETTs is that they exhibit an unsaturated splice donor site. This results in: (1) splicing to “cryptic exons” present in the final intron; (2) Splicing to another transcript of the same gene (intragenic trans-splicing), resulting in “exon repetitions”; (3) splicing to a transcript of another gene (intergenic trans-splicing), leading to “non-genomically encoded fusion transcripts” (NGEFTs). These NGEFTs bear the potential risk to influence DNA repair processes, since they share identical nucleotides with their DNA of origin, and thus, could be used as “guidance RNA” for DNA repair processes. Here, we present experimental data about four other genes. Three of them are associated with hemato-malignancies (ETV6, NUP98 and RUNX1), while one is associated with solid tumors (EWSR1). Our results demonstrate that all genes investigated so far (MLL, AF4, AF9, ENL, ELL, ETV6, NUP98, RUNX1 and EWSR1) display ETTs and produce transpliced mRNA species, indicating that this is a genuine property of translocating genes.


Cancer Genetics and Cytogenetics | 2007

C/EBPβ suppression by interruption of CUGBP1 resulting from a complex rearrangement of MLL

William T. Choi; Matthew R. Folsom; Mohammed F. Azim; Claus Meyer; Eric Kowarz; Rolf Marschalek; Nikolai A. Timchenko; Rizwan Naeem; Dean A. Lee


Biotechnology Journal | 2006

Genomic DNA of leukemic patients: target for clinical diagnosis of MLL rearrangements.

Claus Meyer; Eric Kowarz; Björn Schneider; Clarissa Oehm; Thomas Klingebiel; Theo Dingermann; Rolf Marschalek


American journal of blood research | 2011

Premature transcript termination, trans-splicing and DNA repair: a vicious path to cancer.

Eric Kowarz; Jennifer Merkens; Michael Karas; Theo Dingermann; Rolf Marschalek

Collaboration


Dive into the Eric Kowarz's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Rolf Marschalek

Goethe University Frankfurt

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Claus Meyer

Goethe University Frankfurt

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Theo Dingermann

Goethe University Frankfurt

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Thomas Klingebiel

Goethe University Frankfurt

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Julia Hofmann

Goethe University Frankfurt

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Theodor Dingermann

Goethe University Frankfurt

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Bastian Scholz

Goethe University Frankfurt

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Dieter Hoelzer

Goethe University Frankfurt

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge