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Featured researches published by Garry Ashton.


Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention | 2010

Standard Preanalytical Coding for Biospecimens: Defining the Sample PREanalytical Code

Fotini Betsou; Sylvain Lehmann; Garry Ashton; Michael G. Barnes; Erica E. Benson; Domenico Coppola; Yvonne DeSouza; James Eliason; Barbara Glazer; Fiorella Guadagni; Keith Harding; David J. Horsfall; Cynthia Kleeberger; Umberto Nanni; Anil Prasad; Kathi Shea; Amy P.N. Skubitz; Stella Somiari; Elaine Gunter

Background: Management and traceability of biospecimen preanalytical variations are necessary to provide effective and efficient interconnectivity and interoperability between Biobanks. Methods: Therefore, the International Society for Biological and Environmental Repositories Biospecimen Science Working Group developed a “Standard PREanalytical Code” (SPREC) that identifies the main preanalytical factors of clinical fluid and solid biospecimens and their simple derivatives. Results: The SPREC is easy to implement and can be integrated into Biobank quality management systems and databases. It can also be extended to nonhuman biorepository areas. Its flexibility allows integration of new novel technological developments in future versions. SPREC version 01 is presented in this article. Conclusions and Impact: Implementation of the SPREC is expected to facilitate and consolidate international multicenter biomarker identification research and biospecimen research in the clinical Biobank environment. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev; 19(4); 1004–11. ©2010 AACR.


Cancer Cell | 2015

Paradox-Breaking RAF Inhibitors that Also Target SRC Are Effective in Drug-Resistant BRAF Mutant Melanoma

Maria Romina Girotti; Filipa Lopes; Natasha Preece; Dan Niculescu-Duvaz; Alfonso Zambon; Lawrence Davies; Steven Whittaker; Grazia Saturno; Amaya Viros; Malin Pedersen; Bart M. J. M. Suijkerbuijk; Delphine Menard; Robert McLeary; Louise Johnson; Laura Fish; Sarah Ejiama; Berta Sanchez-Laorden; Juliane Hohloch; Neil O. Carragher; Kenneth G MacLeod; Garry Ashton; Anna A. Marusiak; Alberto Fusi; John Brognard; Margaret C. Frame; Paul Lorigan; Richard Marais; Caroline J. Springer

Summary BRAF and MEK inhibitors are effective in BRAF mutant melanoma, but most patients eventually relapse with acquired resistance, and others present intrinsic resistance to these drugs. Resistance is often mediated by pathway reactivation through receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK)/SRC-family kinase (SFK) signaling or mutant NRAS, which drive paradoxical reactivation of the pathway. We describe pan-RAF inhibitors (CCT196969, CCT241161) that also inhibit SFKs. These compounds do not drive paradoxical pathway activation and inhibit MEK/ERK in BRAF and NRAS mutant melanoma. They inhibit melanoma cells and patient-derived xenografts that are resistant to BRAF and BRAF/MEK inhibitors. Thus, paradox-breaking pan-RAF inhibitors that also inhibit SFKs could provide first-line treatment for BRAF and NRAS mutant melanomas and second-line treatment for patients who develop resistance.


Biopreservation and Biobanking | 2012

Standard preanalytical coding for biospecimens: review and implementation of the Sample PREanalytical Code (SPREC).

Sabine Lehmann; Fiorella Guadagni; Helen M. Moore; Garry Ashton; Michael G. Barnes; Erica E. Benson; Judith A. Clements; Iren Koppandi; Domenico Coppola; Sara Yasemin Demiroglu; Yvonne DeSouza; Annemieke De Wilde; Jacko Duker; James Eliason; Barbara Glazer; Keith Harding; Jae Pil Jeon; Joseph Kessler; Theresa J. Kokkat; Umberto Nanni; Kathi Shea; Amy P.N. Skubitz; Stella Somiari; Gunnel Tybring; Elaine Gunter; Fotini Betsou

The first version of the Standard PREanalytical Code (SPREC) was developed in 2009 by the International Society for Biological and Environmental Repositories (ISBER) Biospecimen Science Working Group to facilitate documentation and communication of the most important preanalytical quality parameters of different types of biospecimens used for research. This same Working Group has now updated the SPREC to version 2.0, presented here, so that it contains more options to allow for recent technological developments. Existing elements have been fine tuned. An interface to the Biospecimen Reporting for Improved Study Quality (BRISQ) has been defined, and informatics solutions for SPREC implementation have been developed. A glossary with SPREC-related definitions has also been added.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2007

Eotaxin-2 and Colorectal Cancer: A Potential Target for Immune Therapy

Eleanor J. Cheadle; Kallingal Riyad; Daren Subar; Dominic G. Rothwell; Garry Ashton; Hayley Batha; David J Sherlock; Robert E. Hawkins; David E. Gilham

Purpose: To study the production of chemokines by colorectal hepatic metastases. Experimental Design: Biopsies of resected colorectal hepatic metastases and nonneoplastic adjacent liver tissue were screened for chemokines using protein arrays and results were confirmed by ELISA and immunohistochemistry. Results: Two chemokines, eotaxin-2 and MCP-1, were found at elevated levels within the tumor biopsy compared with adjacent liver. The relative increase in expression from tumor was much higher for eotaxin-2 than MCP-1, with 10 of 25 donors having a >100-fold increase in expression compared with 0 of 24 donors for MCP-1. In a parallel analysis, eotaxin-2 was also found at elevated levels in the tumor region of primary colorectal cancer biopsies. Immunohistochemical staining indicated that carcinoembryonic antigen–positive tumor cells stained strongly for eotaxin-2, implicating these cells as the predominant source of the chemokine. In vitro studies confirmed that several colorectal tumor lines produce eotaxin-2 and that secretion of this chemokine could be depressed by IFN-γ and enhanced by the Th2-type cytokines interleukin-4 and interleukin-13. Jurkat T cells were engineered to express the receptor for eotaxin-2 (CCR3). These cells effectively migrated in response to eotaxin-2 protein, suggesting that immune cells gene modified to express a chemokine receptor may have improved abilities to home to tumor. Conclusions: Taken together, these observations confirm eotaxin-2 as a chemokine strongly associated with primary and metastatic tumors of colorectal origin. Furthermore, the importance of this result may be a useful tool in the development of targeted therapeutic approaches to colorectal tumors.


Blood | 2011

RAC2, AEP, and ICAM1 expression are associated with CNS disease in a mouse model of pre-B childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia

Mark Holland; Fernanda Castro; Seema Alexander; Duncan L. Smith; Jizhong Liu; Michael Walker; Danny A Bitton; Kate Mulryan; Garry Ashton; Morgan Blaylock; Steven Bagley; Yvonne Connolly; John S. Bridgeman; Crispin J. Miller; Shekhar Krishnan; Clare Dempsey; Ashish Masurekar; Peter L. Stern; Anthony D. Whetton; Vaskar Saha

We developed a murine model of CNS disease to obtain a better understanding of the pathogenesis of CNS involvement in pre-B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). Semiquantitative proteomic discovery-based approaches identified unique expression of asparaginyl endopeptidase (AEP), intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (ICAM1), and ras-related C3 botulinum toxin substrate 2 (RAC2), among others, in an invasive pre-B-cell line that produced CNS leukemia in NOD-SCID mice. Targeting RAC2 significantly inhibited in vitro invasion and delayed disease onset in mice. Induced expression of RAC2 in cell lines with low/absent expression of AEP and ICAM1 did not result in an invasive phenotype or murine CNS disease. Flow cytometric analysis identified an enriched population of blast cells expressing ICAM1/lymphocyte function associated antigen-1 (LFA-1)/CD70 in the CD10(+)/CD19(+) fraction of bone marrow aspirates obtained from relapsed compared with normal controls and those with primary disease. CD10(+)/CD19(+) fractions obtained from relapsed patients also express RAC2 and give rise to CNS disease in mice. Our data suggest that combinations of processes are involved in the pathogenesis of CNS disease in pre-B-cell ALL, support a model in which CNS disease occurs as a result of external invasion, and suggest that targeting the processes of adhesion and invasion unique to pre-B cells may prevent recurrences within the CNS.


Journal of Immunotherapy | 2009

Eradication of established B-cell lymphoma by CD19-specific murine T cells is dependent on host lymphopenic environment and can be mediated by CD4+ and CD8+ T cells.

Eleanor J. Cheadle; Robert E. Hawkins; Hayley Batha; Dominic G. Rothwell; Garry Ashton; David E. Gilham

B-cell malignancies seem to be particularly amenable to immunotherapy and as such make particularly attractive targets for adoptive T-cell therapy. Murine T cells gene-modified to express a chimeric immune receptor specific for CD19 (aCD19z) efficiently kill CD19+ B-cell lymphoma cells in vitro. aCD19z T cells also secrete high levels of interleukin-2 during culture with target cells in a CD86 independent manner. aCD19z T cells proved effective at eradicating established B-cell lymphoma in a syngeneic model system when combined with a lymphodepleting preconditioning regimen. In mice deficient of T, B, and natural killer cells (severe combined immunodeficient/Beige), aCD19z T cells efficiently eradicated long-term (13 d) established tumors with 100% of treated animals remaining tumor free for greater than 77 days. Although gene-modified CD4+ and CD8+ were both active in this setting, poor engraftment by CD8+ T cells coupled with the rigorous expansion of CD4+ cells in the Balb/c background suggests that CD4+ T cells may be playing a predominant role in lymphoma rejection in this model. Taken together, the therapeutic effectiveness of aCD19z T cells in this model supports a recently opened phase 1 trial of this receptor in non-Hodgkin lymphoma.


Cancer Cell | 2017

TIAM1 Antagonizes TAZ/YAP Both in the Destruction Complex in the Cytoplasm and in the Nucleus to Inhibit Invasion of Intestinal Epithelial Cells

Zoi Diamantopoulou; Gavin White; Muhammad Z.H. Fadlullah; Marcel Dreger; Karen Pickering; Joe Maltas; Garry Ashton; Ruth MacLeod; George S. Baillie; Valerie Kouskoff; Georges Lacaud; Graeme I. Murray; Owen J. Sansom; Adam Hurlstone; Angeliki Malliri

Summary Aberrant WNT signaling drives colorectal cancer (CRC). Here, we identify TIAM1 as a critical antagonist of CRC progression through inhibiting TAZ and YAP, effectors of WNT signaling. We demonstrate that TIAM1 shuttles between the cytoplasm and nucleus antagonizing TAZ/YAP by distinct mechanisms in the two compartments. In the cytoplasm, TIAM1 localizes to the destruction complex and promotes TAZ degradation by enhancing its interaction with βTrCP. Nuclear TIAM1 suppresses TAZ/YAP interaction with TEADs, inhibiting expression of TAZ/YAP target genes implicated in epithelial-mesenchymal transition, cell migration, and invasion, and consequently suppresses CRC cell migration and invasion. Importantly, high nuclear TIAM1 in clinical specimens associates with increased CRC patient survival. Together, our findings suggest that in CRC TIAM1 suppresses tumor progression by regulating YAP/TAZ activity.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Loss of ATF2 Function Leads to Cranial Motoneuron Degeneration during Embryonic Mouse Development

Julien Ackermann; Garry Ashton; Steve Lyons; Dominic I. James; Jean Pierre Hornung; Nic Jones; Wolfgang Breitwieser

The AP-1 family transcription factor ATF2 is essential for development and tissue maintenance in mammals. In particular, ATF2 is highly expressed and activated in the brain and previous studies using mouse knockouts have confirmed its requirement in the cerebellum as well as in vestibular sense organs. Here we present the analysis of the requirement for ATF2 in CNS development in mouse embryos, specifically in the brainstem. We discovered that neuron-specific inactivation of ATF2 leads to significant loss of motoneurons of the hypoglossal, abducens and facial nuclei. While the generation of ATF2 mutant motoneurons appears normal during early development, they undergo caspase-dependent and independent cell death during later embryonic and foetal stages. The loss of these motoneurons correlates with increased levels of stress activated MAP kinases, JNK and p38, as well as aberrant accumulation of phosphorylated neurofilament proteins, NF-H and NF-M, known substrates for these kinases. This, together with other neuropathological phenotypes, including aberrant vacuolisation and lipid accumulation, indicates that deficiency in ATF2 leads to neurodegeneration of subsets of somatic and visceral motoneurons of the brainstem. It also confirms that ATF2 has a critical role in limiting the activities of stress kinases JNK and p38 which are potent inducers of cell death in the CNS.


Journal of Immunology | 2014

Differential role of Th1 and Th2 cytokines in autotoxicity driven by CD19-specific second-generation chimeric antigen receptor T cells in a mouse model

Eleanor J. Cheadle; Victoria Sheard; Dominic G. Rothwell; John S. Bridgeman; Garry Ashton; Vivien Hanson; A. Wasat Mansoor; Robert E. Hawkins; David E. Gilham

T cells engrafted with chimeric AgRs (CAR) are showing exciting potential for targeting B cell malignancies in early-phase clinical trials. To determine whether the second-generation CAR was essential for optimal antitumor activity, two CD28-based CAR constructs targeting CD19 were tested for their ability to redirect mouse T cell function against established B cell lymphoma in a BALB/c syngeneic model system. T cells armed with either CAR eliminated A20 B cell lymphoma in vivo; however, one construct induced a T cell dose-dependent acute toxicity associated with a raised serum Th1 type cytokine profile on transfer into preconditioned mice. Moreover, a chronic toxicity manifested as granuloma-like formation in spleen, liver, and lymph nodes was observed in animals receiving T cells bearing either CD28 CAR, albeit with different kinetics dependent upon the specific receptor used. This phenotype was associated with an expansion of CD4+CAR+ T cells and CD11b+Gr-1+ myeloid cells and increased serum Th2-type cytokines, including IL-10 and IL-13. Mouse T cells engrafted with a first-generation CAR failed to develop such autotoxicity, whereas toxicity was not apparent when T cells bearing the same receptors were transferred into C57BL/6 or C3H animals. In summary, the adoptive transfer of second-generation CD19-specific CAR T cells can result in a cell dose–dependent acute toxicity, whereas the prolonged secretion of high levels of Th2 cytokines from these CAR T cells in vivo drives a granulomatous reaction resulting in chronic toxicity. Strategies that prevent a prolonged Th2-cytokine biased CAR T cell response are clearly warranted.


Histopathology | 2011

Effect of prolonged formalin fixation on immunohistochemical staining for the proliferation marker Ki67

Elizabeth R Hitchman; Cassandra L Hodgkinson; Darren Roberts; Garry Ashton; Zaira Yunus; Richard Byers; Timothy H Ward; Chris Womack; Caroline Dive

Sir: I read with interest the report by Ip et al. on Rosai–Dorfman disease-like changes in mesenteric lymph nodes secondary to Salmonella infection. For the sake of fairness, I would like to point out that similar changes had been described by Story and Hanbury as early as 1957, and that A. Templeton, at the time Pathologist-in-Chief of Makerere University Hospital, Kampala, Uganda, suggested to me in 1961 the possibility of Rosai–Dorfman disease being a form of salmonellosis, in view of the morphology of the histiocytes and the lymphophagocytosis.

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Richard Marais

University of Manchester

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Amaya Viros

University of Manchester

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Paul Lorigan

University of Manchester

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Caroline Dive

University of Manchester

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