Friederike Göke
University of Bonn
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Featured researches published by Friederike Göke.
Modern Pathology | 2012
Hans-Ulrich Schildhaus; Lukas C. Heukamp; Sabine Merkelbach-Bruse; Katharina Riesner; Katja Schmitz; Elke Binot; Ellen Paggen; Kerstin Albus; Wolfgang Schulte; Yon-Dschun Ko; Andreas Schlesinger; Sascha Ansén; Walburga Engel-Riedel; Michael Brockmann; Monika Serke; Ulrich Gerigk; Sebastian Huss; Friederike Göke; Sven Perner; Khosro Hekmat; Konrad Frank; Marcel Reiser; Roland Schnell; Marc Bos; Christian Mattonet; Martin L. Sos; Erich Stoelben; Jürgen Wolf; Thomas Zander; Reinhard Buettner
We recently reported fibroblast growth factor receptor-type 1 (FGFR1) amplification to be associated with therapeutically tractable FGFR1 dependency in squamous cell lung cancer. This makes FGFR1 a novel target for directed therapy in these tumors. To reproducibly identify patients for clinical studies, we developed a standardized reading and evaluation strategy for FGFR1 fluorescence in-situ hybridization (FISH) and propose evaluation criteria, describe different patterns of low- and high-level amplifications and report on the prevalence of FGFR1 amplifications in pulmonary carcinomas. A total of 420 lung cancer patients including 307 squamous carcinomas, 100 adenocarcinomas of the lung and 13 carcinomas of other types were analyzed for FGFR1 amplification using a dual color FISH. We found heterogeneous and different patterns of gene copy numbers. FGFR1 amplifications were observed in 20% of pulmonary squamous carcinomas but not in adenocarcinomas. High-level amplification (as defined by an FGFR1/centromer 8 (CEN8) ratio ≥2.0, or average number of FGFR1 signals per tumor cell nucleus ≥6, or the percentage of tumor cells containing ≥15 FGFR1 signals or large clusters ≥10%) was detected at a frequency of 16% and low-level amplification (as defined by ≥5 FGFR1 signals in ≥50% of tumor cells) at a frequency of 4%. We conclude that FGFR1 amplification is one of the most frequent therapeutically tractable genetic lesions in pulmonary carcinomas. Standardized reporting of FGFR1 amplification in squamous carcinomas of the lung will become increasingly important to correlate therapeutic responses with FGFR1 inhibitors in clinical studies. Thus, our reading and evaluation strategy might serve as a basis for identifying patients for ongoing and upcoming clinical trials.
Chest | 2012
Friederike Göke; Alina Franzen; Roopika Menon; Diane Goltz; Robert Kirsten; Diana Boehm; Wenzel Vogel; Antonia Göke; Veit Scheble; Joerg Ellinger; Ulrich Gerigk; Falko Fend; Patrick Wagner; Andreas Schroeck; Sven Perner
BACKGROUND We previously identified amplification of the fibroblast growth factor receptor 1 gene (FGFR1) as a potential therapeutic target for small-molecule inhibitor therapy in squamous cell lung cancer (L-SCC). Currently, clinical phase I trials are underway to examine whether patients with FGFR1-amplified L-SCC benefit from a targeted therapy approach using small-molecule inhibitors. Because most patients with lung cancer present with metastatic disease, we investigated whether lymph node metastases in L-SCC share the FGFR1 amplification status of their corresponding primary tumor. METHODS The study cohort consisted of 72 patients with L-SCC, 39 with regional lymph node metastases. Tissue microarrays were constructed from formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue of the primary tumors and, where present, of the corresponding lymph node metastasis. A biotin-labeled target probe spanning the FGFR1 locus (8p11.22-23) was used to determine the FGFR1 amplification status by fluorescence in situ hybridization. RESULTS FGFR1 amplification was detected in 16% (12 of 72) of all primary L-SCCs. In metastatic tumors, 18% (seven of 39) of the lymph node metastases displayed FGFR1 amplification with an exact correlation of FGFR1 amplification status between tumor and metastatic tissue. CONCLUSIONS FGFR1 amplification is a common genetic event occurring at a frequency of 16% in L-SCCs. Moreover, lymph node metastases derived from FGFR1-amplified L-SCCs also exhibit FGFR1 amplification. Therefore, we suggest that the FGFR1 amplification is a clonal event in tumor progression. Beyond this biologically relevant observation, the findings carry potential therapeutic implications in that small-molecule inhibitors may be applicable to the treatment of a subset of patients with metastatic L-SCC.
Clinical Cancer Research | 2015
Friederike Göke; Alina Franzen; Trista K. Hinz; Lindsay Marek; Petros Yoon; Rakesh Sharma; Maike Bode; Anne Von Maessenhausen; Brigitte Lankat-Buttgereit; Antonia Göke; Carsten Golletz; Robert Kirsten; Diana Boehm; Wenzel Vogel; Emily K. Kleczko; Justin R. Eagles; Fred R. Hirsch; Tobias van Bremen; Friedrich Bootz; Andreas Schroeck; Jihye Kim; Aik Choon Tan; Antonio Jimeno; Lynn E. Heasley; Sven Perner
Purpose: FGFR1 copy-number gain (CNG) occurs in head and neck squamous cell cancers (HNSCC) and is used for patient selection in FGFR-specific inhibitor clinical trials. This study explores FGFR1 mRNA and protein levels in HNSCC cell lines, primary tumors, and patient-derived xenografts (PDX) as predictors of sensitivity to the FGFR inhibitor, NVP-BGJ398. Experimental Design: FGFR1 status, expression levels, and BGJ398 sensitive growth were measured in 12 HNSCC cell lines. Primary HNSCCs (n = 353) were assessed for FGFR1 CNG and mRNA levels, and HNSCC TCGA data were interrogated as an independent sample set. HNSCC PDXs (n = 39) were submitted to FGFR1 copy-number detection and mRNA assays to identify putative FGFR1-dependent tumors. Results: Cell line sensitivity to BGJ398 is associated with FGFR1 mRNA and protein levels, not FGFR1 CNG. Thirty-one percent of primary HNSCC tumors expressed FGFR1 mRNA, 18% exhibited FGFR1 CNG, 35% of amplified tumors were also positive for FGFR1 mRNA. This relationship was confirmed with the TCGA dataset. Using high FGFR1 mRNA for selection, 2 HNSCC PDXs were identified, one of which also exhibited FGFR1 CNG. The nonamplified tumor with high mRNA levels exhibited in vivo sensitivity to BGJ398. Conclusions: FGFR1 expression associates with BGJ398 sensitivity in HNSCC cell lines and predicts tyrosine kinase inhibitor sensitivity in PDXs. Our results support FGFR1 mRNA or protein expression, rather than FGFR1 CNG as a predictive biomarker for the response to FGFR inhibitors in a subset of patients suffering from HNSCC. Clin Cancer Res; 21(19); 4356–64. ©2015 AACR.
Genome Biology | 2015
Lynnette Fernandez-Cuesta; Ruping Sun; Roopika Menon; Julie George; Susanne Lorenz; Leonardo A. Meza-Zepeda; Martin Peifer; Dennis Plenker; Johannes M. Heuckmann; Frauke Leenders; Thomas Zander; Ilona Dahmen; Mirjam Koker; Jakob Schöttle; Roland T. Ullrich; Janine Altmüller; Christian Becker; Peter Nürnberg; Henrik Seidel; Diana Böhm; Friederike Göke; Sascha Ansén; Prudence A. Russell; Gavin Wright; Zoe Wainer; Benjamin sss Solomon; Iver Petersen; Joachim H. Clement; Jörg Sänger; Odd-Terje Brustugun
Genomic translocation events frequently underlie cancer development through generation of gene fusions with oncogenic properties. Identification of such fusion transcripts by transcriptome sequencing might help to discover new potential therapeutic targets. We developed TRUP (Tumor-specimen suited RNA-seq Unified Pipeline) (https://github.com/ruping/TRUP), a computational approach that combines split-read and read-pair analysis with de novo assembly for the identification of chimeric transcripts in cancer specimens. We apply TRUP to RNA-seq data of different tumor types, and find it to be more sensitive than alternative tools in detecting chimeric transcripts, such as secondary rearrangements in EML4-ALK-positive lung tumors, or recurrent inactivating rearrangements affecting RASSF8.
Carcinogenesis | 2014
Andreas Schröck; Maike Bode; Friederike Göke; Petra M. Bareiss; Rebekka Schairer; Hui Wang; Wilko Weichert; Alina Franzen; Robert Kirsten; Tobias van Bremen; Angela Queisser; Glen Kristiansen; Lynn E. Heasley; Friedrich Bootz; Claudia Lengerke; Sven Perner
Recently, SOX2 has been identified as a potential lineage-specific oncogene in lung squamous cell carcinomas. Since head and neck squamous cell carcinomas (HNSCC) are morphologically and clinically highly related to lung squamous cell carcinomas, we hypothesized that SOX2 also plays an oncogenic role in this tumor entity. We assembled a cohort of 496 patients with HNSCC, including 253 metastases and 135 recurrences. SOX2 amplification (FISH) and SOX2 protein expression (immunohistochemistry) were correlated with molecular and clinicopathological parameters. In order to investigate the functional role of SOX2 in human HNSCC, SOX2 knockdown and overexpression in SCC-25 cells were generated by lentiviral constructs and subjected to cell cycle analysis, proliferation and apoptosis assays. Furthermore, SOX2 expression was correlated with the expression of proliferation and apoptosis-related proteins in primary HNSCC samples. SOX2 amplification was detected in 21% of primary HNSCC and mostly observed in a concordant manner between primary tumors and corresponding metastatic tissues. Overall, SOX2 amplification resulted in protein overexpression and was mutually exclusive with human papillomavirus infection. SOX2 protein overexpression was associated with clinicopathological parameters of worse outcome. Functionally, SOX2 induced the expression of the antiapoptotic protein BCL-2 and enhanced resistance to apoptosis-inducing agents including cisplatin, indicating SOX2 as a mediator of therapy resistance in human HNSCC. Targeting SOX2 and related molecular downstream pathways such as BCL-2 may enhance therapy efficacy in SOX2-expressing HNSCC.
PLOS ONE | 2013
A. Schröck; Friederike Göke; Patrick L. Wagner; Maike Bode; Alina Franzen; Martin Braun; Sebastian Huss; Abbas Agaimy; Stephan Ihrler; Ropika Menon; Robert Kirsten; Glen Kristiansen; Friedrich Bootz; Claudia Lengerke; Sven Perner
Objectives The transcription factor SOX2 (3q26.3-q27) is an embryonic stem cell factor contributing to the induction of pluripotency in terminally differentiated somatic cells. Recently, amplification of the SOX2 gene locus has been described in squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) of different organ sites. Aim of this study was to investigate amplification and expression status of SOX2 in sinonasal carcinomas and to correlate the results with clinico-pathological data. Materials and Methods A total of 119 primary tumor samples from the sinonasal region were assessed by fluorescence in-situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry for SOX2 gene amplification and protein expression, respectively. Of these, 59 were SSCs, 18 sinonasal undifferentiated carcinomas (SNUC), 10 carcinomas associated with an inverted papilloma (INVC), 19 adenocarcinomas (AD) and 13 adenoid cystic carcinomas (ACC). Results SOX2 amplifications were found in subsets of SCCs (37.5%), SNUCs (35.3%), INVCs (37.5%) and ADs (8.3%) but not in ACCs. SOX2 amplification resulted in increased protein expression. Patients with SOX2-amplified sinonasal carcinomas showed a significantly higher rate of tumor recurrences than SOX2 non-amplified tumors. Conclusion This is the first study assessing SOX2 amplification and expression in a large cohort of sinonasal carcinomas. As opposed to AD and ACC, SOX2 amplifications were detected in more than 1/3 of all SCCs, SNUCs and INVCs. We therefore suggest that SNUCs are molecularly closely related to SCCs and INVCs and that these entities represent a subgroup of sinonasal carcinomas relying on SOX2 acquisition during oncogenesis. SOX2 amplification appears to identify sinonasal carcinomas that are more likely to relapse after primary therapy, suggesting that these patients might benefit from a more aggressive therapy regime.
Digestion | 2013
Friederike Göke; Antonia Göke; Anne von Mässenhausen; Alina Franzen; Rakesh Sharma; Robert Kirsten; Diana Böhm; Glen Kristiansen; Albrecht Stenzinger; Murry W. Wynes; Fred R. Hirsch; Wilko Weichert; Lynn E. Heasley; Reinhard Buettner; Sven Perner
Background/Aims: Resembling a potential therapeutic drug target, fibroblast growth factor receptor 1 (FGFR1) amplification and expression was assessed in 515 human colorectal cancer (CRC) tissue samples, lymph node metastases and CRC cell lines. Methods: FGFR1 amplification status was determined using fluorescence in situ hybridization. Additionally, we assessed protein levels employing Western blots and immunohistochemistry. The FGFR1 mRNA localization was analyzed using mRNA in situ hybridization. Functional studies employed the FGFR inhibitor NVP-BGJ398. Results: Of 454 primary CRCs, 24 displayed FGFR1 amplification. 92/94 lymph node metastases presented the same amplification status as the primary tumor. Of 99 investigated tumors, 18 revealed membranous activated pFGFR1 protein. FGFR1 mRNA levels were independent of the amplification status or pFGFR1 protein occurrence. In vitro, a strong antiproliferative effect of NVP-BGJ398 could be detected in cell lines exhibiting high FGFR1 protein. Conclusion: FGFR1 is a potential therapeutic target in a subset of CRC. FGFR1 protein is likely to represent a central factor limiting the efficacy of FGFR inhibitors. The lack of correlation between its evaluation at genetic/mRNA level and its protein occurrence indicates that the assessment of the receptor at an immunohistochemical level most likely represents a suitable way to assess FGFR1 as a predictive biomarker for patient selection in future clinical trials.
Head and Neck-journal for The Sciences and Specialties of The Head and Neck | 2014
A. Schröck; Friederike Göke; Patrick L. Wagner; Maike Bode; Alina Franzen; Sebastian Huss; Abbas Agaimy; Stephan Ihrler; Robert Kirsten; Glen Kristiansen; Friedrich Bootz; Claudia Lengerke; Sven Perner
Despite multimodal treatment, sinonasal malignancies have an unfavorable prognosis. The purpose of this study was to elucidate if these tumors harbor amplifications of the fibroblast growth factor receptor 1 (FGFR1) gene, which has recently been identified as a potential therapeutic target in squamous cell lung cancer.
Urologia Internationalis | 2014
Jörg Ellinger; Anne Bachmann; Friederike Göke; Turang E. Behbahani; Claudia Baumann; Lukas C. Heukamp; Sebastian Rogenhofer; Stefan Müller
Background: Epigenetic alterations, including histone modifications, play an important role during carcinogenesis. This study was designed to systematically investigate histone H3K9 and H3K27 methylation levels in bladder cancer (BCa) tissue. Methods: A tissue microarray with urothelial BCa (150 non-muscle-invasive BCa, NMIBC; 121 muscle-invasive BCa, MIBC; 31 metastatic BCa, MET) and normal urothelium (29, CTRL) specimen was used to determine the global levels of H3K9 and H3K27 mono-, di- and tri-methylation. Results: Global levels of H3K9 and H3K27 methylation were significantly higher in CTRL than in BCa, and levels in NMIBC were higher compared to MIBC. Histone methylation levels of MET resembled MIBC. We observed furthermore a correlation of histone methylation levels with pT stage (H3K9me1, H3K9me2, H3K9me3, H3K27me1, H3K27me3) and grade (H3K9me2, H3K9me3, H3K27me1) in NMIBC. H3K9me1, H3K9me3, H3K27me1 and H3K27me3 levels were also correlated with pT stage in MIBC. Histone modifications were not associated with recurrence-free or cancer-specific survival. Conclusions: Global histone H3K9 and H3K27 methylation levels are altered in BCa.
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2012
Nicolas Fischer; Friederike Göke; Vera Splittstößer; Brigitte Lankat-Buttgereit; Stefan Müller; Jörg Ellinger
BACKGROUND We investigated the role of the programmed cell death 4 (PDCD4) tumor suppressor gene in specimens of transitional cell carcinoma and of healthy individuals. METHODS PDCD4 immunohistochemical expression was investigated in 294 cases in histologically proven transitional cell carcinoma in different tumorous stages (28 controls, 122 non-muscle invasive urothelial carcinoma, stages Tis-T1, 119 invasive transitional cell carcinoma stages T2-T4 and 25 metastases). MiR-21 expression, an important PDCD4 regulator, was assessed with real-time PCR analysis and showed inverse correlation to tissue PDCD4 expression. RESULTS Nuclear and cytoplasmatic PDCD4 immunostaining decreased significantly with histopathological progression of the tumor (p<0001). Controls showed strong nuclear and cytoplasmatic immunohistochemical staining. MiR-21 up regulation in tissue corresponded to PDCD4 suppression. CONCLUSIONS These data support a decisive role for PDCD4 down regulation in transitional cell carcinoma and confirm miR-21 as a negative regulator for PDCD4. Additionally, PDCD4 immunohistochemical staining turns out to be a possible diagnostic marker for transitional cell carcinoma.