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Dive into the research topics where Giles W. Robinson is active.

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Featured researches published by Giles W. Robinson.


Nature | 2010

Subtypes of medulloblastoma have distinct developmental origins.

Paul Gibson; Yiai Tong; Giles W. Robinson; Margaret C. Thompson; D. Spencer Currle; Christopher Eden; Tanya A. Kranenburg; Twala L. Hogg; Helen Poppleton; Julie Martin; David Finkelstein; Stanley Pounds; Aaron Weiss; Zoltan Patay; Matthew A. Scoggins; Robert J. Ogg; Yanxin Pei; Zeng-Jie Yang; Sonja N. Brun; Youngsoo Lee; Frederique Zindy; Janet C. Lindsey; Makoto M. Taketo; Frederick A. Boop; Robert A. Sanford; Amar Gajjar; Steven C. Clifford; Martine F. Roussel; Peter J. McKinnon; David H. Gutmann

Medulloblastoma encompasses a collection of clinically and molecularly diverse tumour subtypes that together comprise the most common malignant childhood brain tumour. These tumours are thought to arise within the cerebellum, with approximately 25% originating from granule neuron precursor cells (GNPCs) after aberrant activation of the Sonic Hedgehog pathway (hereafter, SHH subtype). The pathological processes that drive heterogeneity among the other medulloblastoma subtypes are not known, hindering the development of much needed new therapies. Here we provide evidence that a discrete subtype of medulloblastoma that contains activating mutations in the WNT pathway effector CTNNB1 (hereafter, WNT subtype) arises outside the cerebellum from cells of the dorsal brainstem. We found that genes marking human WNT-subtype medulloblastomas are more frequently expressed in the lower rhombic lip (LRL) and embryonic dorsal brainstem than in the upper rhombic lip (URL) and developing cerebellum. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and intra-operative reports showed that human WNT-subtype tumours infiltrate the dorsal brainstem, whereas SHH-subtype tumours are located within the cerebellar hemispheres. Activating mutations in Ctnnb1 had little impact on progenitor cell populations in the cerebellum, but caused the abnormal accumulation of cells on the embryonic dorsal brainstem which included aberrantly proliferating Zic1+ precursor cells. These lesions persisted in all mutant adult mice; moreover, in 15% of cases in which Tp53 was concurrently deleted, they progressed to form medulloblastomas that recapitulated the anatomy and gene expression profiles of human WNT-subtype medulloblastoma. We provide the first evidence, to our knowledge, that subtypes of medulloblastoma have distinct cellular origins. Our data provide an explanation for the marked molecular and clinical differences between SHH- and WNT-subtype medulloblastomas and have profound implications for future research and treatment of this important childhood cancer.


Nature | 2012

Novel mutations target distinct subgroups of medulloblastoma

Giles W. Robinson; Matthew Parker; Tanya A. Kranenburg; Charles Lu; Xiang Chen; Li Ding; Timothy N. Phoenix; Erin Hedlund; Lei Wei; Xiaoyan Zhu; Nader Chalhoub; Suzanne J. Baker; Robert Huether; Richard W. Kriwacki; Natasha Curley; Radhika Thiruvenkatam; Jianmin Wang; Gang Wu; Michael Rusch; Xin Hong; Jared Becksfort; Pankaj Gupta; Jing Ma; John Easton; Bhavin Vadodaria; Arzu Onar-Thomas; Tong Lin; Shaoyi Li; Stanley Pounds; Steven W. Paugh

Medulloblastoma is a malignant childhood brain tumour comprising four discrete subgroups. Here, to identify mutations that drive medulloblastoma, we sequenced the entire genomes of 37 tumours and matched normal blood. One-hundred and thirty-six genes harbouring somatic mutations in this discovery set were sequenced in an additional 56 medulloblastomas. Recurrent mutations were detected in 41 genes not yet implicated in medulloblastoma; several target distinct components of the epigenetic machinery in different disease subgroups, such as regulators of H3K27 and H3K4 trimethylation in subgroups 3 and 4 (for example, KDM6A and ZMYM3), and CTNNB1-associated chromatin re-modellers in WNT-subgroup tumours (for example, SMARCA4 and CREBBP). Modelling of mutations in mouse lower rhombic lip progenitors that generate WNT-subgroup tumours identified genes that maintain this cell lineage (DDX3X), as well as mutated genes that initiate (CDH1) or cooperate (PIK3CA) in tumorigenesis. These data provide important new insights into the pathogenesis of medulloblastoma subgroups and highlight targets for therapeutic development.


Cancer Cell | 2012

A mouse model of the most aggressive subgroup of human medulloblastoma

Daisuke Kawauchi; Giles W. Robinson; Tamar Uziel; Paul Gibson; Jerold E. Rehg; Cuilan Gao; David Finkelstein; Chunxu Qu; Stanley Pounds; David W. Ellison; Richard J. Gilbertson; Martine F. Roussel

Medulloblastomas that display a large cell/anaplastic morphology and overexpress the cellular c-MYC gene are highly aggressive and carry a very poor prognosis. This so-called MYC-subgroup differs in its histopathology, gene expression profile, and clinical behavior from other forms of medulloblastoma. We generated a mouse model of MYC-subgroup medulloblastoma by transducing Trp53-null cerebellar progenitor cells with Myc. The cardinal features of these mouse medulloblastomas closely mimic those of human MYC-subgroup tumors and significantly differ from mouse models of the Sonic-Hedgehog- and WNT-disease subgroups. This mouse model should significantly accelerate understanding and treatment of the most aggressive form of medulloblastoma and infers distinct roles for MYC and MYCN in tumorigenesis.


Nature | 2014

Enhancer hijacking activates GFI1 family oncogenes in medulloblastoma.

Paul A. Northcott; C A Lee; Thomas Zichner; Adrian M. Stütz; Serap Erkek; Daisuke Kawauchi; David Shih; Volker Hovestadt; Marc Zapatka; Dominik Sturm; David T. W. Jones; Marcel Kool; Marc Remke; Florence M.G. Cavalli; Scott Zuyderduyn; Gary D. Bader; Scott R. VandenBerg; Lourdes Adriana Esparza; Marina Ryzhova; Wei Wang; Andrea Wittmann; Sebastian Stark; Laura Sieber; Huriye Seker-Cin; Linda Linke; Fabian Kratochwil; Natalie Jäger; Ivo Buchhalter; Charles D. Imbusch; Gideon Zipprich

Medulloblastoma is a highly malignant paediatric brain tumour currently treated with a combination of surgery, radiation and chemotherapy, posing a considerable burden of toxicity to the developing child. Genomics has illuminated the extensive intertumoral heterogeneity of medulloblastoma, identifying four distinct molecular subgroups. Group 3 and group 4 subgroup medulloblastomas account for most paediatric cases; yet, oncogenic drivers for these subtypes remain largely unidentified. Here we describe a series of prevalent, highly disparate genomic structural variants, restricted to groups 3 and 4, resulting in specific and mutually exclusive activation of the growth factor independent 1 family proto-oncogenes, GFI1 and GFI1B. Somatic structural variants juxtapose GFI1 or GFI1B coding sequences proximal to active enhancer elements, including super-enhancers, instigating oncogenic activity. Our results, supported by evidence from mouse models, identify GFI1 and GFI1B as prominent medulloblastoma oncogenes and implicate ‘enhancer hijacking’ as an efficient mechanism driving oncogene activation in a childhood cancer.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2015

Vismodegib Exerts Targeted Efficacy Against Recurrent Sonic Hedgehog–Subgroup Medulloblastoma: Results From Phase II Pediatric Brain Tumor Consortium Studies PBTC-025B and PBTC-032

Giles W. Robinson; Brent A. Orr; Gang Wu; Sridharan Gururangan; Tong Lin; Ibrahim Qaddoumi; Roger J. Packer; Stewart Goldman; Michael D. Prados; Annick Desjardins; Murali Chintagumpala; Naoko Takebe; Sue C. Kaste; Michael Rusch; Sariah Allen; Arzu Onar-Thomas; Clinton F. Stewart; Maryam Fouladi; James M. Boyett; Richard J. Gilbertson; Tom Curran; David W. Ellison; Amar Gajjar

PURPOSE Two phase II studies assessed the efficacy of vismodegib, a sonic hedgehog (SHH) pathway inhibitor that binds smoothened (SMO), in pediatric and adult recurrent medulloblastoma (MB). PATIENTS AND METHODS Adult patients enrolled onto PBTC-025B and pediatric patients enrolled onto PBTC-032 were treated with vismodegib (150 to 300 mg/d). Protocol-defined response, which had to be sustained for 8 weeks, was confirmed by central neuroimaging review. Molecular tests to identify patterns of response and insensitivity were performed when tissue was available. RESULTS A total of 31 patients were enrolled onto PBTC-025B, and 12 were enrolled onto PBTC-032. Three patients in PBTC-025B and one in PBTC-032, all with SHH-subgroup MB (SHH-MB), exhibited protocol-defined responses. Progression-free survival (PFS) was longer in those with SHH-MB than in those with non-SHH-MB, and prolonged disease stabilization occurred in 41% of patient cases of SHH-MB. Among those with SHH-MB, loss of heterozygosity of PTCH1 was associated with prolonged PFS, and diffuse staining of P53 was associated with reduced PFS. Whole-exome sequencing identified mutations in SHH genes downstream from SMO in four of four tissue samples from nonresponders and upstream of SMO in two of four patients with favorable responses. CONCLUSION Vismodegib exhibits activity against adult recurrent SHH-MB but not against recurrent non-SHH-MB. Inadequate accrual of pediatric patients precluded conclusions in this population. Molecular analyses support the hypothesis that SMO inhibitor activity depends on the genomic aberrations within the tumor. Such inhibitors should be advanced in SHH-MB studies; however, molecular and genomic work remains imperative to identify target populations that will truly benefit.


Nature | 2017

The whole-genome landscape of medulloblastoma subtypes

Paul A. Northcott; Ivo Buchhalter; A. Sorana Morrissy; Volker Hovestadt; Joachim Weischenfeldt; Tobias Ehrenberger; Susanne Gröbner; Maia Segura-Wang; Thomas Zichner; Vasilisa A. Rudneva; Hans-Jörg Warnatz; Nikos Sidiropoulos; Aaron H. Phillips; Steven E. Schumacher; Kortine Kleinheinz; Sebastian M. Waszak; Serap Erkek; David Jones; Barbara C. Worst; Marcel Kool; Marc Zapatka; Natalie Jäger; Lukas Chavez; Barbara Hutter; Matthias Bieg; Nagarajan Paramasivam; Michael Heinold; Zuguang Gu; Naveed Ishaque; Christina Jäger-Schmidt

Current therapies for medulloblastoma, a highly malignant childhood brain tumour, impose debilitating effects on the developing child, and highlight the need for molecularly targeted treatments with reduced toxicity. Previous studies have been unable to identify the full spectrum of driver genes and molecular processes that operate in medulloblastoma subgroups. Here we analyse the somatic landscape across 491 sequenced medulloblastoma samples and the molecular heterogeneity among 1,256 epigenetically analysed cases, and identify subgroup-specific driver alterations that include previously undiscovered actionable targets. Driver mutations were confidently assigned to most patients belonging to Group 3 and Group 4 medulloblastoma subgroups, greatly enhancing previous knowledge. New molecular subtypes were differentially enriched for specific driver events, including hotspot in-frame insertions that target KBTBD4 and ‘enhancer hijacking’ events that activate PRDM6. Thus, the application of integrative genomics to an extensive cohort of clinical samples derived from a single childhood cancer entity revealed a series of cancer genes and biologically relevant subtype diversity that represent attractive therapeutic targets for the treatment of patients with medulloblastoma.


Nature Reviews Clinical Oncology | 2014

Medulloblastoma—translating discoveries from the bench to the bedside

Amar Gajjar; Giles W. Robinson

Medulloblastoma is a form of brain cancer that mainly arises during infancy and childhood. Our understanding of this disease has transitioned rapidly; what was once thought of as a single disease entity is now known to be a compendium comprising at least four distinct subtypes of tumour (Wnt, sonic hedgehog [SHH], group 3, and group 4 medulloblastomas) that have characteristic molecular signatures, distinctive clinical features, and are associated with different outcomes. Importantly, medulloblastomas occurring in infants (aged up to 3 years) and adults have unique characteristics, which distinguish the disease from that seen in children aged >3 years. Accordingly, modern treatment approaches in medulloblastoma integrate the molecular and clinical features of the disease to enable provision of the most-effective therapies for each patient, and to reduce long-term sequelae. This Review discusses our current knowledge of medulloblastoma. In particular, we present the genetic and histological features, patient demographics, prognosis, and therapeutic options for each the four molecular tumour subtypes that comprise this disease entity. In addition, the unique features of medulloblastoma in infants and in adults, as compared with childhood and/or adolescent forms, are described.


Cold Spring Harbor Perspectives in Medicine | 2013

Role of MYC in Medulloblastoma

Martine F. Roussel; Giles W. Robinson

Since its discovery as an oncogene carried by the avian acute leukemia virus MC29 in myelocytomatosis (Roussel et al. 1979) and its cloning (Vennstrom et al. 1982), c-MYC (MYC), as well as its paralogs MYCN and MYCL1, has been shown to play essential roles in cycling progenitor cells born from proliferating zones during embryonic development, and in all proliferating cells after birth. MYC deletion induces cell-cycle exit or cell death, depending on the cell type and milieu, whereas MYC and MYCN amplification or overexpression promotes cell proliferation and occurs in many cancers. Here, we review the relationship of MYC family proteins to the four molecularly distinct medulloblastoma subgroups, discuss the possible roles MYC plays in each of these subgroups and in the developing cells of the posterior fossa, and speculate on possible therapeutic strategies targeting MYC.


Cancer Cell | 2014

Pemetrexed and gemcitabine as combination therapy for the treatment of Group3 medulloblastoma.

Marie Morfouace; Anang A. Shelat; Megan O. Jacus; Burgess B. Freeman; David C. Turner; Sarah Robinson; Frederique Zindy; Yong Dong Wang; David Finkelstein; Olivier Ayrault; Laure Bihannic; Stéphanie Puget; Xiao Nan Li; James M. Olson; Giles W. Robinson; R. Kiplin Guy; Clinton F. Stewart; Amar Gajjar; Martine F. Roussel

We devised a high-throughput, cell-based assay to identify compounds to treat Group3 medulloblastoma (G3 MB). Mouse G3 MBs neurospheres were screened against a library of approximately 7,000 compounds including US Food and Drug Administration-approved drugs. We found that pemetrexed and gemcitabine preferentially inhibited G3 MB proliferation in vitro compared to control neurospheres and substantially inhibited G3 MB proliferation in vivo. When combined, these two drugs significantly increased survival of mice bearing cortical implants of mouse and human G3 MBs that overexpress MYC compared to each agent alone, while having little effect on mouse MBs of the sonic hedgehog subgroup. Our findings strongly suggest that combination therapy with pemetrexed and gemcitabine is a promising treatment for G3 MBs.


Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 2013

The Role of Inherited TPMT and COMT Genetic Variation in Cisplatin‐Induced Ototoxicity in Children With Cancer

Jun Yang; Joshua Yew-Suang Lim; Jie Huang; Johnnie K. Bass; J Wu; C Wang; J Fang; E Stewart; E H Harstead; Giles W. Robinson; William E. Evans; A Pappo; Jian Zuo; Mary V. Relling; Arzu Onar-Thomas; Amar Gajjar; Clinton F. Stewart

Ototoxicity is a debilitating side effect of platinating agents with substantial interpatient variability. We sought to evaluate the association of thiopurine S‐methyltransferase (TPMT) and catechol O‐methyltransferase (COMT) genetic variations with cisplatin‐related hearing damage in the context of frontline pediatric cancer treatment protocols. In 213 children from the St. Jude Medulloblastoma‐96 and −03 protocols, hearing loss was related to younger age (P = 0.013) and craniospinal irradiation (P = 0.001), but did not differ by TPMT or COMT variants. Results were similar in an independent cohort of 41 children from solid‐tumor frontline protocols. Functional hearing loss or hair cell damage was not different in TPMT knockout vs. wild‐type mice following cisplatin treatment, and neither TPMT nor COMT variant was associated with cisplatin cytotoxicity in lymphoblastoid cell lines. In conclusion, our results indicated that TPMT or COMT genetic variation was not related to cisplatin ototoxicity in children with cancer and did not influence cisplatin‐induced hearing damage in laboratory models.

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Amar Gajjar

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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Arzu Onar-Thomas

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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Brent A. Orr

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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Richard J. Gilbertson

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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David W. Ellison

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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Martine F. Roussel

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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Clinton F. Stewart

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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Tim Hassall

Royal Children's Hospital

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Alberto Broniscer

Beth Israel Medical Center

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Daniel C. Bowers

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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