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Dive into the research topics where Gero Knittel is active.

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Featured researches published by Gero Knittel.


Cancer Discovery | 2014

A functional cancer genomics screen identifies a druggable synthetic lethal interaction between MSH3 and PRKDC.

Felix Dietlein; Lisa Thelen; Mladen Jokic; Ron D. Jachimowicz; Laura Ivan; Gero Knittel; Uschi Leeser; Johanna van Oers; Winfried Edelmann; Lukas C. Heukamp; H. Christian Reinhardt

Here, we use a large-scale cell line-based approach to identify cancer cell-specific mutations that are associated with DNA-dependent protein kinase catalytic subunit (DNA-PKcs) dependence. For this purpose, we profiled the mutational landscape across 1,319 cancer-associated genes of 67 distinct cell lines and identified numerous genes involved in homologous recombination-mediated DNA repair, including BRCA1, BRCA2, ATM, PAXIP, and RAD50, as being associated with non-oncogene addiction to DNA-PKcs. Mutations in the mismatch repair gene MSH3, which have been reported to occur recurrently in numerous human cancer entities, emerged as the most significant predictors of DNA-PKcs addiction. Concordantly, DNA-PKcs inhibition robustly induced apoptosis in MSH3-mutant cell lines in vitro and displayed remarkable single-agent efficacy against MSH3-mutant tumors in vivo. Thus, we here identify a therapeutically actionable synthetic lethal interaction between MSH3 and the non-homologous end joining kinase DNA-PKcs. Our observations recommend DNA-PKcs inhibition as a therapeutic concept for the treatment of human cancers displaying homologous recombination defects.


Blood | 2016

B-cell-specific conditional expression of Myd88(p.L252P) leads to the development of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma in mice

Gero Knittel; P. Liedgens; D. Korovkina; J.M. Seeger; Y. Al-Baldawi; Mona Al-Maarri; C. Fritz; K. Vlantis; S. Bezhanova; A.H. Scheel; Oliver Wolz; Maurice Reimann; Peter Möller; Cristina López; Matthias Schlesner; Philipp Lohneis; Alexander N.R. Weber; Lorenz Trümper; Louis M. Staudt; M. Ortmann; Manolis Pasparakis; Reiner Siebert; Clemens A. Schmitt; A.R. Klatt; F.T. Wunderlich; S.C. Schäfer; T. Persigehl; M. Montesinos-Rongen; M. Odenthal; R. Büttner

The adaptor protein MYD88 is critical for relaying activation of Toll-like receptor signaling to NF-κB activation. MYD88 mutations, particularly the p.L265P mutation, have been described in numerous distinct B-cell malignancies, including diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL). Twenty-nine percent of activated B-cell-type DLBCL (ABC-DLBCL), which is characterized by constitutive activation of the NF-κB pathway, carry the p.L265P mutation. In addition, ABC-DLBCL frequently displays focal copy number gains affecting BCL2 Here, we generated a novel mouse model in which Cre-mediated recombination, specifically in B cells, leads to the conditional expression of Myd88(p.L252P) (the orthologous position of the human MYD88(p.L265P) mutation) from the endogenous locus. These mice develop a lymphoproliferative disease and occasional transformation into clonal lymphomas. The clonal disease displays the morphologic and immunophenotypical characteristics of ABC-DLBCL. Lymphomagenesis can be accelerated by crossing in a further novel allele, which mediates conditional overexpression of BCL2 Cross-validation experiments in human DLBCL samples revealed that both MYD88 and CD79B mutations are substantially enriched in ABC-DLBCL compared with germinal center B-cell DLBCL. Furthermore, analyses of human DLBCL genome sequencing data confirmed that BCL2 amplifications frequently co-occurred with MYD88 mutations, further validating our approach. Finally, in silico experiments revealed that MYD88-mutant ABC-DLBCL cells in particular display an actionable addiction to BCL2. Altogether, we generated a novel autochthonous mouse model of ABC-DLBCL that could be used as a preclinical platform for the development and validation of novel therapeutic approaches for the treatment of ABC-DLBCL.


Cancer Research | 2017

ATM Deficiency Is Associated with Sensitivity to PARP1- and ATR Inhibitors in Lung Adenocarcinoma

Anna Schmitt; Gero Knittel; Daniela Welcker; Tsun-Po Yang; Julie George; Michael Nowak; Uschi Leeser; Reinhard Büttner; Sven Perner; Martin Peifer; Hans Christian Reinhardt

Defects in maintaining genome integrity are a hallmark of cancer. The DNA damage response kinase ATM is frequently mutated in human cancer, but the significance of these events to chemotherapeutic efficacy has not been examined deeply in whole organism models. Here we demonstrate that bi-allelic Atm deletion in mouse models of Kras-mutant lung adenocarcinoma does not affect cisplatin responses. In marked contrast, Atm-deficient tumors displayed an enhanced response to the topoisomerase-II poison etoposide. Moreover, Atm-deficient cells and tumors were sensitive to the PARP inhibitor olaparib. This actionable molecular addiction to functional PARP1 signaling was preserved in models that were proficient or deficient in p53, resembling standard or high-risk genetic constellations, respectively. Atm deficiency also markedly enhanced sensitivity to the ATR inhibitor VE-822. Taken together, our results provide a functional rationale to profile human tumors for disabling ATM mutations, particularly given their impact on PARP1 and ATR inhibitors. Cancer Res; 77(11); 3040-56. ©2017 AACR.


Frontiers in Genetics | 2015

Targeting ATM-deficient CLL through interference with DNA repair pathways.

Gero Knittel; Paul Liedgens; Hans Christian Reinhardt

Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) is the most common form of leukemia in the Western world and accounts for approximately 30% of adult leukemias and 25% of non-Hodgkin lymphomas. The median age at diagnosis is 72 years. During recent years numerous genetic aberrations have been identified that are associated with an aggressive course of the disease and resistance against genotoxic chemotherapies. The DNA damage-responsive proapoptotic ATM-CHK2-p53 signaling pathway is frequently mutationally inactivated in CLL either through large deletions on chromosome 11q (ATM) or 17p (TP53), or through protein-damaging mutations. Here, we focus on the role of ATM signaling for the immediate DNA damage response, DNA repair and leukemogenesis. We further discuss novel therapeutic concepts for the targeted treatment of ATM-defective CLLs. We specifically highlight the potential use of PARP1 and DNA-PKcs inhibitors for the treatment of ATM-mutant CLL clones. Lastly, we briefly discuss the current state of genetically engineered mouse models of the disease and emphasize the use of these preclinical tools as a common platform for the development and validation of novel therapeutic agents.


Nature Communications | 2017

Two mouse models reveal an actionable PARP1 dependence in aggressive chronic lymphocytic leukemia

Gero Knittel; Tim Rehkämper; Darya Korovkina; Paul Liedgens; Christian Fritz; Alessandro Torgovnick; Yussor Al-Baldawi; Mona Al-Maarri; Yupeng Cun; Oleg Fedorchenko; Arina Riabinska; Filippo Beleggia; Phuong-Hien Nguyen; F. Thomas Wunderlich; Monika Ortmann; Manuel Montesinos-Rongen; Eugen Tausch; Stephan Stilgenbauer; Lukas P. Frenzel; Marco Herling; Carmen D. Herling; Jasmin Bahlo; Michael Hallek; Martin Peifer; Reinhard Buettner; Thorsten Persigehl; H. Christian Reinhardt

Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) remains an incurable disease. Two recurrent cytogenetic aberrations, namely del(17p), affecting TP53, and del(11q), affecting ATM, are associated with resistance against genotoxic chemotherapy (del17p) and poor outcome (del11q and del17p). Both del(17p) and del(11q) are also associated with inferior outcome to the novel targeted agents, such as the BTK inhibitor ibrutinib. Thus, even in the era of targeted therapies, CLL with alterations in the ATM/p53 pathway remains a clinical challenge. Here we generated two mouse models of Atm- and Trp53-deficient CLL. These animals display a significantly earlier disease onset and reduced overall survival, compared to controls. We employed these models in conjunction with transcriptome analyses following cyclophosphamide treatment to reveal that Atm deficiency is associated with an exquisite and genotype-specific sensitivity against PARP inhibition. Thus, we generate two aggressive CLL models and provide a preclinical rational for the use of PARP inhibitors in ATM-affected human CLL.ATM and TP53 mutations are associated with poor prognosis in chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL). Here the authors generate mouse models of Tp53- and Atm-defective CLL mimicking the high-risk form of human disease and show that Atm-deficient CLL is sensitive to PARP1 inhibition.


Leukemia | 2017

Targeting transcription-coupled nucleotide excision repair overcomes resistance in chronic lymphocytic leukemia

Gregor Lohmann; E. Vasyutina; Johannes Bloehdorn; N. Reinart; Jennifer I. Schneider; Vipin Babu; Gero Knittel; G. Crispatzu; P. Mayer; C. Prinz; Julienne K. Muenzner; Bernhard Biersack; D. G. Efremov; L. Chessa; C. D. Herling; S. Stilgenbauer; M. Hallek; Rainer Schobert; Hans Christian Reinhardt; Björn Schumacher; Markus M. Herling

Treatment resistance becomes a challenge at some point in the course of most patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). This applies to fludarabine-based regimens, and is also an increasing concern in the era of more targeted therapies. As cells with low-replicative activity rely on repair that triggers checkpoint-independent noncanonical pathways, we reasoned that targeting the nucleotide excision repair (NER) reaction addresses a vulnerability of CLL and might even synergize with fludarabine, which blocks the NER gap-filling step. We interrogated here especially the replication-independent transcription-coupled-NER ((TC)-NER) in prospective trial patients, primary CLL cultures, cell lines and mice. We screen selected (TC)-NER-targeting compounds as experimental (illudins) or clinically approved (trabectedin) drugs. They inflict transcription-stalling DNA lesions requiring TC-NER either for their removal (illudins) or for generation of lethal strand breaks (trabectedin). Genetically defined systems of NER deficiency confirmed their specificity. They selectively and efficiently induced cell death in CLL, irrespective of high-risk cytogenetics, IGHV status or clinical treatment history, including resistance. The substances induced ATM/p53-independent apoptosis and showed marked synergisms with fludarabine. Trabectedin additionally perturbed stromal-cell protection and showed encouraging antileukemic profiles even in aggressive and transforming murine CLL. This proof-of-principle study established (TC)-NER as a mechanism to be further exploited to resensitize CLL cells.


Current Opinion in Hematology | 2018

DNA damage pathways and B-cell lymphomagenesis.

Gero Knittel; Tim Rehkämper; Pascal Nieper; Anna Schmitt; Ruth Flümann; H. Christian Reinhardt


Cell Reports | 2018

The Cdkn1aSUPER Mouse as a Tool to Study p53-Mediated Tumor Suppression

Alessandro Torgovnick; Jan Michel Heger; Vasiliki Liaki; Jörg Isensee; Anna Schmitt; Gero Knittel; Arina Riabinska; Filippo Beleggia; Lucie Laurien; Uschi Leeser; Christian Jüngst; Florian Siedek; Wenzel Vogel; Niklas Klümper; Hendrik Nolte; Maike Wittersheim; Lars Tharun; Roberta Castiglione; Marcus Krüger; Astrid Schauss; Sven Perner; Manolis Pasparakis; Reinhard Büttner; Thorsten Persigehl; Tim Hucho; Grit Sophie Herter-Sprie; Björn Schumacher; Hans Christian Reinhardt


Blood | 2016

Loss of TOSO Promotes Richter's Transformation of TCL1A Driven CLL

Alexandra da Palma Guerreiro; Cornelia Dorweiler; Laurent Kintzelé; Dunja Baatout; Malte Huelsemann; Valeska Berg; Olaf Merkel; Nina Reinart; Guenter Fingerle-Rowson; Gero Knittel; Christian P. Pallasch; Hans Christian Reinhardt; Clemens M. Wendtner; Michael Hallek; Lukas P. Frenzel


Blood | 2016

Transformation of Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia Towards Richter´s Syndrome Is Induced By AKT Activation

Nadine Nickel; Mona Al-Maarri; Martin Pal; Andreas Roth; Gero Knittel; Carmen D. Herling; Nina Reinart; Stephan Schäfer; Elena Hartmann; Andreas Rosenwald; Wolfram Klapper; Reinhard Büttner; Marco Herling; Jens Bruening; Christian Reinhardt; Michael Hallek; Thomas Wunderlich; Christian P. Pallasch

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