Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Fritz Lai is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Fritz Lai.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2011

MEK-Independent Survival of B-RAFV600E Melanoma Cells Selected for Resistance to Apoptosis Induced by the RAF Inhibitor PLX4720

Chen Chen Jiang; Fritz Lai; Rick F. Thorne; Fan Yang; Hao Liu; Peter Hersey; Xu Dong Zhang

Purpose: To examine mechanisms that determine long-term responses of B-RAFV600E melanoma cells to B-RAF inhibitors. Experimental Design: B-RAFV600E melanoma cells were exposed to the B-RAF inhibitor PLX4720 for prolonged periods to select for cells resistant to apoptosis induced by the inhibitor. The resultant cells were analyzed for activation of extracellular signal regulated kinase (ERK), MAP/ERK kinase (MEK), and Akt, and related signals. Their roles in survival of the cells were also examined. Results: B-RAFV600E melanoma cells selected for resistant to PLX4720-induced apoptosis retained the V600E mutation in B-RAF, and proliferated steadily in the presence of the inhibitor, albeit with slow growth rate. These cells displayed high levels of ERK activation, that is, at least in part, independent of the conventional RAF/MEK/ERK pathway, as MEK activation was low and inhibition of MEK did not significantly block activation of ERK. In contrast, extracellular signals appeared involved. This was associated with elevated activation of the phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3k)/Akt pathway and could be inhibited by serum starvation and inhibition of PI3k/Akt. Inhibition of MEK did not impact on survival of these cells, whereas serum starvation, inhibition of PI3K/Akt, and inhibition of ERK1/2 reduced their viability. Conclusions: These results indicate that sensitivity to induction of apoptosis may be a major determinant of long-term responses of B-RAFV600E melanomas to specific inhibitors and suggest that rebound melanoma growth after initial treatment with the inhibitors may not be responsive to MEK inhibitors, but may be susceptible to inhibition of the PI3k/Akt pathway. Clin Cancer Res; 17(4); 1–10. ©2010 AACR.


Cell Death and Disease | 2010

Apoptosis of human melanoma cells induced by inhibition of B-RAFV600E involves preferential splicing of bimS

Chen Chen Jiang; Fritz Lai; Kwang Hong Tay; Croft A; Helen Rizos; Therese M. Becker; Feng Mei Yang; Howgwei Liu; Rick F. Thorne; Peter Hersey; Xu Dong Zhang

Bim is known to be critical in killing of melanoma cells by inhibition of the RAF/MEK/ERK pathway. However, the potential role of the most potent apoptosis-inducing isoform of Bim, BimS, remains largely unappreciated. Here, we show that inhibition of the mutant B-RAFV600E triggers preferential splicing to produce BimS, which is particularly important in induction of apoptosis in B-RAFV600E melanoma cells. Although the specific B-RAFV600E inhibitor PLX4720 upregulates all three major isoforms of Bim, BimEL, BimL, and BimS, at the protein and mRNA levels in B-RAFV600E melanoma cells, the increase in the ratios of BimS mRNA to BimEL and BimL mRNA indicates that it favours BimS splicing. Consistently, enforced expression of B-RAFV600E in wild-type B-RAF melanoma cells and melanocytes inhibits BimS expression. The splicing factor SRp55 appears necessary for the increase in BimS splicing, as SRp55 is upregulated, and its inhibition by small interfering RNA blocks induction of BimS and apoptosis induced by PLX4720. The PLX4720-induced, SRp55-mediated increase in BimS splicing is also mirrored in freshly isolated B-RAFV600E melanoma cells. These results identify a key mechanism for induction of apoptosis by PLX4720, and are instructive for sensitizing melanoma cells to B-RAFV600E inhibitors.


Carcinogenesis | 2013

The BH3-mimetic ABT-737 sensitizes human melanoma cells to apoptosis induced by selective BRAF inhibitors but does not reverse acquired resistance

David Wroblewski; Branka Mijatov; Nethia Mohana-Kumaran; Fritz Lai; Stuart J. Gallagher; Nikolas K. Haass; Xu Dong Zhang; Peter Hersey

Although the introduction of selective v-Raf murine sarcoma viral oncogene homolog B1 (BRAF) inhibitors has been a major advance in treatment of metastatic melanoma, approximately 50% of patients have limited responses including stabilization of disease or no response at all. This study aims to identify a novel means of overcoming resistance of melanoma to killing by BRAF inhibitors. We examined the influence of the BH3-mimetic ABT-737 on induction of apoptosis by the selective BRAF inhibitor PLX4720 in melanoma cells with or without BRAF V600E mutation. Included were cell lines established from four patients before and during treatment with selective BRAF inhibitors and 3D spheroids derived from these cell lines. Cell lines with no or low sensitivity to PLX4720 underwent synergistic increases and increased rates of apoptosis when combined with ABT-737. This degree of synergism was not seen in cell lines without BRAF V600E mutations. Apoptosis was mediated through the mitochondrial pathway and was due in part to upregulation of Bim as shown by inhibition of apoptosis following small interfering RNA knockdown of Bim. Similar effects were seen in cell lines established from patients prior to treatment but not in lines from patients clinically resistant to the selective BRAF inhibitors and in 3D spheroids derived from these cell lines. These results suggest that combination of selective BRAF inhibitors with ABT-737 or the related orally available compound ABT-263 may increase the degree and rate of responses in previously untreated patients with V600E melanoma but not in those with acquired resistance to these agents.


Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 2014

Oncogenic Activation of MEK/ERK Primes Melanoma Cells for Adaptation to Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress

Amanda Croft; Kwang H. Tay; Suzanah C. Boyd; Su T. Guo; Chen C. Jiang; Fritz Lai; Hsin Yi Tseng; Lei Jin; Helen Rizos; Peter Hersey; Xu D. Zhang

Cancer cells commonly undergo chronic endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress, to which the cells have to adapt for survival and proliferation. We report here that in melanoma cells intrinsic activation of the ER stress response/unfolded protein response (UPR) is, at least in part, caused by increased outputs of protein synthesis driven by oncogenic activation of mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase/extracellular signal-regulated kinase (MEK/ERK) and promotes proliferation and protects against apoptosis induced by acute ER stress. Inhibition of oncogenic BRAF(V600E) or MEK-attenuated activation of inositol-requiring enzyme 1 (IRE1) and activating transcription factor 6 (ATF6) signaling of the UPR in melanoma cells. This was associated with decreased phosphorylation of eukaryotic initiation factor 4E (eIF4E) and nascent protein synthesis and was recapitulated by knockdown of eIF4E. In line with this, introduction of BRAF(V600E) into melanocytes led to increases in eIF4E phosphorylation and protein production and triggered activation of the UPR. Similar to knockdown of glucose-regulated protein 78 (GRP78), inhibition of XBP1 decelerated melanoma cell proliferation and enhanced apoptosis induced by the pharmacological ER stress inducers tunicamycin and thapasigargin. Collectively, these results reveal that potentiation of adaptation to chronic ER stress is another mechanism by which oncogenic activation of the MEK/ERK pathway promotes the pathogenesis of melanoma.


Cell Death and Disease | 2013

Cotargeting histone deacetylases and oncogenic BRAF synergistically kills human melanoma cells by necrosis independently of RIPK1 and RIPK3

Fritz Lai; St T. Guo; Lei Jin; Cc C. Jiang; Wang Cy; Croft A; Mn N. Chi; Hsin-Yi Tseng; Margaret Farrelly; Bernard Atmadibrata; J. Norman; Tao Liu; Peter Hersey; Xd D. Zhang

Past studies have shown that histone deacetylase (HDAC) and mutant BRAF (v-Raf murine sarcoma viral oncogene homolog B1) inhibitors synergistically kill melanoma cells with activating mutations in BRAF. However, the mechanism(s) involved remains less understood. Here, we report that combinations of HDAC and BRAF inhibitors kill BRAFV600E melanoma cells by induction of necrosis. Cotreatment with the HDAC inhibitor suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid (SAHA) or panobinostat (LBH589) and the BRAF inhibitor PLX4720 activated the caspase cascade, but caspases appeared dispensable for killing, in that inhibition of caspases did not invariably block induction of cell death. The majority of dying cells acquired propidium iodide positivity instantly when they became positive for Annexin V, suggesting induction of necrosis. This was supported by caspase-independent release of high-mobility group protein B1, and further consolidated by rupture of the plasma membrane and loss of nuclear and cytoplasmic contents, as manifested by transmission electron microscopic analysis. Of note, neither the necrosis inhibitor necrostatin-1 nor the small interference RNA (siRNA) knockdown of receptor-interacting protein kinase 3 (RIPK3) inhibited cell death, suggesting that RIPK1 and RIPK3 do not contribute to induction of necrosis by combinations of HDAC and BRAF inhibitors in BRAFV600E melanoma cells. Significantly, SAHA and the clinically available BRAF inhibitor vemurafenib cooperatively inhibited BRAFV600E melanoma xenograft growth in a mouse model even when caspase-3 was inhibited. Taken together, these results indicate that cotreatment with HDAC and BRAF inhibitors can bypass canonical cell death pathways to kill melanoma cells, which may be of therapeutic advantage in the treatment of melanoma.


Cancer Research | 2015

RIP1 kinase is an oncogenic driver in melanoma

Xiao Ying Liu; Fritz Lai; Xu Guang Yan; Chen Chen Jiang; Su Tang Guo; Chun Yan Wang; Amanda Croft; Hsin-Yi Tseng; James S. Wilmott; Richard A. Scolyer; Lei Jin; Xu Dong Zhang

Although many studies have uncovered an important role for the receptor-binding protein kinase RIP1 in controlling cell death signaling, its possible contributions to cancer pathogenesis have been little explored. Here, we report that RIP1 functions as an oncogenic driver in human melanoma. Although RIP1 was commonly upregulated in melanoma, RIP1 silencing inhibited melanoma cell proliferation in vitro and retarded the growth of melanoma xenografts in vivo. Conversely, while inducing apoptosis in a small proportion of melanoma cells, RIP1 overexpression enhanced proliferation in the remaining cells. Mechanistic investigations revealed that the proliferative effects of RIP1 overexpression were mediated by NF-κB activation. Strikingly, ectopic expression of RIP1 enhanced the proliferation of primary melanocytes, triggering their anchorage-independent cell growth in an NF-κB-dependent manner. We identified DNA copy-number gain and constitutive ubiquitination by a TNFα autocrine loop mechanism as two mechanisms of RIP1 upregulation in human melanomas. Collectively, our findings define RIP1 as an oncogenic driver in melanoma, with potential implications for targeting its NF-κB-dependent activation mechanism as a novel approach to treat this disease.


Advances in pharmacology | 2012

Histone Deacetylases (HDACs) as Mediators of Resistance to Apoptosis in Melanoma and as Targets for Combination Therapy with Selective BRAF Inhibitors

Fritz Lai; Lei Jin; Stuart J. Gallagher; Branka Mijatov; Xu Dong Zhang; Peter Hersey

HDACs are viewed as enzymes used by cancer cells to inhibit tumor suppressor mechanisms. In particular, we discuss their role as suppressors of apoptosis in melanoma cells and as mediators of resistance to selective BRAF inhibitors. Synergistic increases in apoptosis are seen when pan-HDAC inhibitors are combined with selective BRAF inhibitors. Moreover, cell lines from patients with acquired resistance to Vemurafenib undergo PLX4720 induced apoptosis when combined with pan-HDAC inhibitors. The mechanisms of upregulation of HDACs and the mechanisms involved in HDACi reversal of resistance to apoptosis are as yet poorly understood.


Autophagy | 2015

RIPK1 regulates survival of human melanoma cells upon endoplasmic reticulum stress through autophagy

Qi Luan; Lei Jin; Chen Chen Jiang; Kwang Hong Tay; Fritz Lai; Xiao Ying Liu; Yi Lun Liu; Su Tang Guo; Chun Ying Li; Xu Guang Yan; Hsin-Yi Tseng; Xu Dong Zhang

Although RIPK1 (receptor [TNFRSF]-interacting protein kinase 1) is emerging as a critical determinant of cell fate in response to cellular stress resulting from activation of death receptors and DNA damage, its potential role in cell response to endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress remains undefined. Here we report that RIPK1 functions as an important prosurvival mechanism in melanoma cells undergoing pharmacological ER stress induced by tunicamycin (TM) or thapsigargin (TG) through activation of autophagy. While treatment with TM or TG upregulated RIPK1 and triggered autophagy in melanoma cells, knockdown of RIPK1 inhibited autophagy and rendered the cells sensitive to killing by TM or TG, recapitulating the effect of inhibition of autophagy. Consistently, overexpression of RIPK1 enhanced induction of autophagy and conferred resistance of melanoma cells to TM- or TG-induced cell death. Activation of MAPK8/JNK1 or MAPK9/JNK2, which phosphorylated BCL2L11/BIM leading to its dissociation from BECN1/Beclin 1, was involved in TM- or TG-induced, RIPK1-mediated activation of autophagy; whereas, activation of the transcription factor HSF1 (heat shock factor protein 1) downstream of the ERN1/IRE1-XBP1 axis of the unfolded protein response was responsible for the increase in RIPK1 in melanoma cells undergoing pharmacological ER stress. Collectively, these results identify upregulation of RIPK1 as an important resistance mechanism of melanoma cells to TM- or TG-induced ER stress by protecting against cell death through activation of autophagy, and suggest that targeting the autophagy-activating mechanism of RIPK1 may be a useful strategy to enhance sensitivity of melanoma cells to therapeutic agents that induce ER stress.


Melanoma Research | 2012

Evidence for upregulation of Bim and the splicing factor SRp55 in melanoma cells from patients treated with selective BRAF inhibitors

Fritz Lai; Chen Chen Jiang; Margaret Farrelly; Xu Dong Zhang; Peter Hersey

Relatively little attention has been paid to the activity of selective BRAF inhibitors in the induction of apoptosis in melanoma, particularly in vivo. In the present study, we have isolated cultures from biopsies taken from four patients before and during the treatment of their melanoma. We report that the cell lines taken during treatment show varying degrees of upregulation of the proapoptotic BH3 protein Bim and its splice forms, downregulation of Mcl-1, and upregulation of the splicing factor SRp55 as reported in previous in-vitro studies. There was also evidence of ongoing apoptotic signaling despite the continued growth of the cultures. The cultures established during the treatment were largely resistant to the selective BRAF inhibitor PLX4720, consistent with the acquired resistance of melanoma in the treated patients. These results provide further insights into the mechanism of action of these agents against melanoma.


Oncogene | 2016

INPP4B is an oncogenic regulator in human colon cancer.

Su Tang Guo; Mengna Chi; Rose Yang; Xiang Yun Guo; Zan Lk; Wang Cy; Xi Yf; Lei Jin; Croft A; Hsin-Yi Tseng; Xu Guang Yan; Margaret Farrelly; Fan Wang; Fritz Lai; Jiaxu Wang; Yuenan Li; Stephen P. Ackland; Rodney J. Scott; Agoulnik Iu; Hubert Hondermarck; Rick F. Thorne; Tao Liu; Xu Dong Zhang; Chen Chen Jiang

Inositol polyphosphate 4-phosphatase type II (INPP4B) negatively regulates phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase signaling and is a tumor suppressor in some types of cancers. However, we have found that it is frequently upregulated in human colon cancer cells. Here we show that silencing of INPP4B blocks activation of Akt and serum- and glucocorticoid-regulated kinase 3 (SGK3), inhibits colon cancer cell proliferation and retards colon cancer xenograft growth. Conversely, overexpression of INPP4B increases proliferation and triggers anchorage-independent growth of normal colon epithelial cells. Moreover, we demonstrate that the effect of INPP4B on Akt and SGK3 is associated with inactivation of phosphate and tensin homolog through its protein phosphatase activity and that the increase in INPP4B is due to Ets-1-mediated transcriptional upregulation in colon cancer cells. Collectively, these results suggest that INPP4B may function as an oncogenic driver in colon cancer, with potential implications for targeting INPP4B as a novel approach to treat this disease.

Collaboration


Dive into the Fritz Lai's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lei Jin

University of Sydney

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Su Tang Guo

University of Newcastle

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Xu Guang Yan

University of Newcastle

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge