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Dive into the research topics where G te Kronnie is active.

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Featured researches published by G te Kronnie.


Leukemia | 2009

New insights to the MLL recombinome of acute leukemias

Claus Meyer; E. Kowarz; J. Hofmann; Aline Renneville; Jan Zuna; Jan Trka; R. Ben Abdelali; Elizabeth Macintyre; E De Braekeleer; M. De Braekeleer; E. Delabesse; M. P. de Oliveira; H Cavé; Emmanuelle Clappier; J J M van Dongen; Brian V. Balgobind; M.M. van den Heuvel-Eibrink; H B Beverloo; Renate Panzer-Grümayer; A. Teigler-Schlegel; J. Harbott; E. Kjeldsen; S. Schnittger; U. Koehl; Bernd Gruhn; Olaf Heidenreich; Li Chong Chan; S. F. Yip; Martin Krzywinski; Cornelia Eckert

Chromosomal rearrangements of the human MLL gene are associated with high-risk pediatric, adult and therapy-associated acute leukemias. These patients need to be identified, treated appropriately and minimal residual disease was monitored by quantitative PCR techniques. Genomic DNA was isolated from individual acute leukemia patients to identify and characterize chromosomal rearrangements involving the human MLL gene. A total of 760 MLL-rearranged biopsy samples obtained from 384 pediatric and 376 adult leukemia patients were characterized at the molecular level. The distribution of MLL breakpoints for clinical subtypes (acute lymphoblastic leukemia, acute myeloid leukemia, pediatric and adult) and fused translocation partner genes (TPGs) will be presented, including novel MLL fusion genes. Combined data of our study and recently published data revealed 104 different MLL rearrangements of which 64 TPGs are now characterized on the molecular level. Nine TPGs seem to be predominantly involved in genetic recombinations of MLL: AFF1/AF4, MLLT3/AF9, MLLT1/ENL, MLLT10/AF10, MLLT4/AF6, ELL, EPS15/AF1P, MLLT6/AF17 and SEPT6, respectively. Moreover, we describe for the first time the genetic network of reciprocal MLL gene fusions deriving from complex rearrangements.


Leukemia | 2011

The Interlaboratory RObustness of Next-generation sequencing (IRON) study: a deep sequencing investigation of TET2 , CBL and KRAS mutations by an international consortium involving 10 laboratories

Alexander Kohlmann; Hans-Ulrich Klein; Sandra Weissmann; Silvia Bresolin; T. Chaplin; H. Cuppens; Elisabeth Haschke-Becher; B. Garicochea; Vera Grossmann; B. Hanczaruk; Katja Hebestreit; Christian Gabriel; Ilaria Iacobucci; Joop H. Jansen; G te Kronnie; L.T.F. van de Locht; Giovanni Martinelli; K. McGowan; Michal R. Schweiger; Bernd Timmermann; Peter Vandenberghe; Bryan D. Young; Martin Dugas; T Haferlach

Massively parallel pyrosequencing allows sensitive deep sequencing to detect molecular aberrations. Thus far, data are limited on the technical performance in a clinical diagnostic setting. Here, we investigated as an international consortium the robustness, precision and reproducibility of amplicon next-generation deep sequencing across 10 laboratories in eight countries. In a cohort of 18 chronic myelomonocytic leukemia patients, mutational analyses were performed on TET2, a frequently mutated gene in myeloproliferative neoplasms. Additionally, hotspot regions of CBL and KRAS were investigated. The study was executed using GS FLX sequencing instruments and the small volume 454 Life Sciences Titanium emulsion PCR setup. We report a high concordance in mutation detection across all laboratories, including a robust detection of novel variants, which were undetected by standard Sanger sequencing. The sensitivity to detect low-level variants present with as low as 1–2% frequency, compared with the 20% threshold for Sanger-based sequencing is increased. Together with the output of high-quality long reads and fast run time, we demonstrate the utility of deep sequencing in clinical applications. In conclusion, this multicenter analysis demonstrated that amplicon-based deep sequencing is technically feasible, achieves high concordance across multiple laboratories and allows a broad and in-depth molecular characterization of cancer specimens with high diagnostic sensitivity.


Leukemia | 2012

Identification of germline susceptibility loci in ETV6-RUNX1-rearranged childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia.

Eva Ellinghaus; Martin Stanulla; Gesa M. Richter; David Ellinghaus; G te Kronnie; Gunnar Cario; G Cazzaniga; M Horstmann; R Panzer Grümayer; Hélène Cavé; Jan Trka; O Cinek; Andrea Teigler-Schlegel; Abdou ElSharawy; Robert Häsler; Almut Nebel; B Meissner; Thies Bartram; Francesco Lescai; Claudio Franceschi; Marco Giordan; Peter Nürnberg; B Heinzow; Maya Zimmermann; Stefan Schreiber; Martin Schrappe; Andre Franke

Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is a malignant disease of the white blood cells. The etiology of ALL is believed to be multifactorial and likely to involve an interplay of environmental and genetic variables. We performed a genome-wide association study of 355 750 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 474 controls and 419 childhood ALL cases characterized by a t(12;21)(p13;q22) — the most common chromosomal translocation observed in childhood ALL — which leads to an ETV6–RUNX1 gene fusion. The eight most strongly associated SNPs were followed-up in 951 ETV6-RUNX1-positive cases and 3061 controls from Germany/Austria and Italy, respectively. We identified a novel, genome-wide significant risk locus at 3q28 (TP63, rs17505102, PCMH=8.94 × 10−9, OR=0.65). The separate analysis of the combined German/Austrian sample only, revealed additional genome-wide significant associations at 11q11 (OR8U8, rs1945213, P=9.14 × 10−11, OR=0.69) and 8p21.3 (near INTS10, rs920590, P=6.12 × 10−9, OR=1.36). These associations and another association at 11p11.2 (PTPRJ, rs3942852, P=4.95 × 10−7, OR=0.72) remained significant in the German/Austrian replication panel after correction for multiple testing. Our findings demonstrate that germline genetic variation can specifically contribute to the risk of ETV6–RUNX1-positive childhood ALL. The identification of TP63 and PTPRJ as susceptibility genes emphasize the role of the TP53 gene family and the importance of proteins regulating cellular processes in connection with tumorigenesis.


Leukemia | 2012

Poor prognosis for P2RY8-CRLF2 fusion but not for CRLF2 over-expression in children with intermediate risk B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia

Chiara Palmi; Elena Vendramini; Daniela Silvestri; Giulia Longinotti; D. Frison; Gunnar Cario; Chen Shochat; Martin Stanulla; V. Rossi; A Di Meglio; T. Villa; Emanuela Giarin; Grazia Fazio; Anna Leszl; Martin Schrappe; G Basso; Andrea Biondi; Shai Izraeli; Valentino Conter; Maria Grazia Valsecchi; Gianni Cazzaniga; G te Kronnie

Pediatric B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (BCP-ALL) has achieved an 80% cure rate as a result of a risk-adapted therapy largely based on minimal residual disease (MRD) monitoring. However, relapse is still the most frequent adverse event, occurring mainly in the patients with intermediate MRD levels (intermediate risk, IR), emphasizing the need for new prognostic markers. We analyzed the prognostic impact of cytokine receptor-like factor 2 (CRLF2) over-expression and P2RY8-CRLF2 fusion in 464 BCP-ALL patients (not affected by Down syndrome and BCR-ABL negative) enrolled in the AIEOP-BFM ALL2000 study in Italy. In 22/464 (4.7%) samples, RQ-PCR showed CRLF2 over-expression (⩾20 times higher than the overall median). P2RY8-CRLF2 fusion was detected in 22/365 (6%) cases, with 10/22 cases also showing CRLF2 over-expression. P2RY8-CRLF2 fusion was the most relevant prognostic factor independent of CRLF2 over-expression with a threefold increase in risk of relapse. Significantly, the cumulative incidence of relapse of the P2RY8-CRLF2+ patients in the IR group was high (61.1%±12.9 vs 17.6%±2.6, P<0.0001), similar to high-risk patients in AIEOP-BFM ALL2000 study. These results were confirmed in a cohort of patients treated in Germany. In conclusion, P2RY8-CRLF2 identifies a subset of BCP-ALL patients currently stratified as IR that could be considered for treatment intensification.


Cell Death and Disease | 2013

Wnt activation promotes neuronal differentiation of Glioblastoma

Elena Rampazzo; Luca Persano; Francesca Pistollato; Enrico Moro; Chiara Frasson; Patrizia Porazzi; A. Della Puppa; Silvia Bresolin; Giusy Battilana; S Indraccolo; G te Kronnie; Francesco Argenton; Natascia Tiso; G Basso

One of the biggest challenges in tumour research is the possibility to reprogram cancer cells towards less aggressive phenotypes. In this study, we reprogrammed primary Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM)-derived cells towards a more differentiated and less oncogenic phenotype by activating the Wnt pathway in a hypoxic microenvironment. Hypoxia usually correlates with malignant behaviours in cancer cells, but it has been recently involved, together with Wnt signalling, in the differentiation of embryonic and neural stem cells. Here, we demonstrate that treatment with Wnt ligands, or overexpression of β-catenin, mediate neuronal differentiation and halt proliferation in primary GBM cells. An hypoxic environment cooperates with Wnt-induced differentiation, in line with our finding that hypoxia inducible factor-1α (HIF-1α) is instrumental and required to sustain the expression of β-catenin transcriptional partners TCF-1 and LEF-1. In addition, we also found that Wnt-induced GBM cell differentiation inhibits Notch signalling, and thus gain of Wnt and loss of Notch cooperate in the activation of a pro-neuronal differentiation program. Intriguingly, the GBM sub-population enriched of cancer stem cells (CD133+ fraction) is the primary target of the pro-differentiating effects mediated by the crosstalk between HIF-1α, Wnt, and Notch signalling. By using zebrafish transgenics and mutants as model systems to visualize and manipulate in vivo the Wnt pathway, we confirm that Wnt pathway activation is able to promote neuronal differentiation and inhibit Notch signalling of primary human GBM cells also in this in vivo set-up. In conclusion, these findings shed light on an unsuspected crosstalk between hypoxia, Wnt and Notch signalling in GBM, and suggest the potential to manipulate these microenvironmental signals to blunt GBM malignancy.


Leukemia | 2003

Computational analysis of flow-cytometry antigen expression profiles in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia: an MLL/AF4 identification

L De Zen; Silvio Bicciato; G te Kronnie; G Basso

Precursor B-acute lymphoblastic leukemia (pB-ALL) is a heterogeneous disease and multiparameter flow cytometry, molecular genetics, and cytogenetic studies have all contributed to classification of subgroups with prognostic significance. Recently, gene expression microarray technology has been used to investigate lymphoblastic leukemias, demonstrating that known and novel pB-ALL subclasses can be separated on the basis of gene expression profiles. The strength of microarray technique lays in part in the multivariate nature of the expression data. We propose a parallel multiparametric approach based on immunophenotypic flow-cytometry expression data for the analysis of leukemia patients. Specifically, we tested the potential of this approach on a data set of 145 samples of pediatric pB-ALL that included 46 samples positive for mixed lineage leukemia (MLL) translocations (MLL+) and 99 control pB-ALLs, negative for this translocation (MLL−). The expression levels of 16 marker proteins have been monitored by four-color flow cytometry using a standardized diagnostic panel of antibodies. The protein expression database has been then analyzed using those univariate and multivariate computational techniques normally applied to mine and model large microarray data sets. Marker protein expression profiling not only allowed separating pB-ALL cases with an MLL rearrangement from other ALLs, but also demonstrates that MLL+ leukemias constitute a heterogeneous group in which MLL/AF4 leukemias represent a homogenous subclass described by a specific expression fingerprint.


Leukemia | 2013

AMPK inhibition enhances apoptosis in MLL-rearranged pediatric B-acute lymphoblastic leukemia cells

Benedetta Accordi; Luisa Galla; M Curtarello; Valentina Serafin; V. Lissandron; Giampietro Viola; G te Kronnie; R De Maria; Emanuel F. Petricoin; Lance A. Liotta; S Indraccolo; G Basso

The serine/threonine kinase AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) and its downstream effectors, including endothelial nitric oxide synthase and BCL-2, are hyperactivated in B-cell precursor-acute lymphoblastic leukemia (BCP-ALL) cells with MLL gene rearrangements. We investigated the role of activated AMPK in supporting leukemic cell survival and evaluated AMPK as a potential drug target. Exposure of leukemic cells to the commercial AMPK inhibitor compound C resulted in massive apoptosis only in cells with MLL gene rearrangements. These results were confirmed by targeting AMPK with specific short hairpin RNAs. Compound C-induced apoptosis was associated with mitochondrial membrane depolarization, reactive oxygen species production, cytochrome c release and caspases cleavage, indicating intrinsic apoptosis pathway activation. Treatment with low concentrations of compound C resulted in a strong antileukemic activity, together with cytochrome c release and cleavage of caspases and poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase, also in MLL-rearranged primary BCP-ALL samples. Moreover, AMPK inhibition in MLL-rearranged cell lines synergistically enhanced the antiproliferative effects of vincristine, daunorubicin, cytarabine, dexamethasone and L-asparaginase in most of the evaluated conditions. Taken together, these results indicate that the activation of the AMPK pathway directly contributes to the survival of MLL-rearranged BCP-ALL cells and AMPK inhibitors could represent a new therapeutic strategy for this high-risk leukemia.


Blood Cancer Journal | 2016

CircRNAs in hematopoiesis and hematological malignancies

A Bonizzato; Enrico Gaffo; G te Kronnie; Stefania Bortoluzzi

Cell states in hematopoiesis are controlled by master regulators and by complex circuits of a growing family of RNA species impacting cell phenotype maintenance and plasticity. Circular RNAs (circRNAs) are rapidly gaining the status of particularly stable transcriptome members with distinctive qualities. RNA-seq identified thousands of circRNAs with developmental stage- and tissue-specific expression corroborating earlier suggestions that circular isoforms are a natural feature of the cell expression program. CircRNAs are abundantly expressed also in the hematopoietic compartment. There are a number of studies on circRNAs in blood cells, a specific overview is however lacking. In this review we first present current insight in circRNA biogenesis discussing the relevance for hematopoiesis of the highly interleaved processes of splicing and circRNA biogenesis. Regarding molecular functions circRNAs modulate host gene expression, but also compete for binding of microRNAs, RNA-binding proteins or translation initiation and participate in regulatory circuits. We examine circRNA expression in the hematopoietic compartment and in hematologic malignancies and review the recent breakthrough study that identified pathogenic circRNAs derived from leukemia fusion genes. CircRNA high and regulated expression in blood cell types indicate that further studies are warranted to inform the position of these regulators in normal and malignant hematopoiesis.


Leukemia | 2011

MLL partner genes drive distinct gene expression profiles and genomic alterations in pediatric acute myeloid leukemia: an AIEOP study

Martina Pigazzi; Riccardo Masetti; Silvia Bresolin; A Beghin; A Di Meglio; Sabrina Gelain; Luca Trentin; E Baron; Marco Giordan; Andrea Zangrando; Barbara Buldini; Anna Leszl; Maria Caterina Putti; Carmelo Rizzari; F Locatelli; Annalisa Pession; G te Kronnie; G Basso

MLL partner genes drive distinct gene expression profiles and genomic alterations in pediatric acute myeloid leukemia: an AIEOP study


Leukemia | 2013

PAX5/ETV6 alters the gene expression profile of precursor B cells with opposite dominant effect on endogenous PAX5.

G Fazio; Valeria Cazzaniga; Chiara Palmi; Marta Galbiati; Marco Giordan; G te Kronnie; A Rolink; Andrea Biondi; G Cazzaniga

PAX5/ETV6 alters the gene expression profile of precursor B cells with opposite dominant effect on endogenous PAX5

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Andrea Biondi

University of Milano-Bicocca

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G Cazzaniga

University of Milano-Bicocca

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