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Dive into the research topics where Gillian Cowan is active.

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Featured researches published by Gillian Cowan.


Blood | 2013

Clinical drug resistance linked to interconvertible phenotypic and functional states of tumor-propagating cells in multiple myeloma

Aristeidis Chaidos; C. Barnes; Gillian Cowan; Pc May; Melo; Evdoxia Hatjiharissi; M Papaioannou; H Harrington; H Doolittle; Evangelos Terpos; M. A. Dimopoulos; S Abdalla; H Yarranton; Kikkeri N. Naresh; Letizia Foroni; Alistair Reid; Amin Rahemtulla; Michael P. H. Stumpf; Irene Roberts; Anastasios Karadimitris

The phenotype and function of cells enriched in tumor-propagating activity and their relationship to the phenotypic architecture in multiple myeloma (MM) are controversial. Here, in a cohort of 30 patients, we show that MM composes 4 hierarchically organized, clonally related subpopulations, which, although phenotypically distinct, share the same oncogenic chromosomal abnormalities as well as immunoglobulin heavy chain complementarity region 3 area sequence. Assessed in xenograft assays, myeloma-propagating activity is the exclusive property of a population characterized by its ability for bidirectional transition between the dominant CD19(-)CD138(+) plasma cell (PC) and a low frequency CD19(-)CD138(-) subpopulation (termed Pre-PC); in addition, Pre-PCs are more quiescent and unlike PCs, are primarily localized at extramedullary sites. As shown by gene expression profiling, compared with PCs, Pre-PCs are enriched in epigenetic regulators, suggesting that epigenetic plasticity underpins the phenotypic diversification of myeloma-propagating cells. Prospective assessment in paired, pretreatment, and posttreatment bone marrow samples shows that Pre-PCs are up to 300-fold more drug-resistant than PCs. Thus, clinical drug resistance in MM is linked to reversible, bidirectional phenotypic transition of myeloma-propagating cells. These novel biologic insights have important clinical implications in relation to assessment of minimal residual disease and development of alternative therapeutic strategies in MM.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Perturbation of fetal liver hematopoietic stem and progenitor cell development by trisomy 21

Anindita Roy; Gillian Cowan; Adam Mead; Sarah Filippi; Georg Bohn; Aristeidis Chaidos; Oliver Tunstall; Jerry Chan; Mahesh Choolani; Phillip R. Bennett; Sailesh Kumar; Deborah Atkinson; Josephine Wyatt-Ashmead; Ming Hu; Michael P. H. Stumpf; Katerina Goudevenou; David F. O'Connor; Stella T. Chou; Mitchell J. Weiss; Anastasios Karadimitris; Sten Eirik W. Jacobsen; Paresh Vyas; Irene Roberts

The 40-fold increase in childhood megakaryocyte-erythroid and B-cell leukemia in Down syndrome implicates trisomy 21 (T21) in perturbing fetal hematopoiesis. Here, we show that compared with primary disomic controls, primary T21 fetal liver (FL) hematopoietic stem cells (HSC) and megakaryocyte-erythroid progenitors are markedly increased, whereas granulocyte-macrophage progenitors are reduced. Commensurately, HSC and megakaryocyte-erythroid progenitors show higher clonogenicity, with increased megakaryocyte, megakaryocyte-erythroid, and replatable blast colonies. Biased megakaryocyte-erythroid–primed gene expression was detected as early as the HSC compartment. In lymphopoiesis, T21 FL lymphoid-primed multipotential progenitors and early lymphoid progenitor numbers are maintained, but there was a 10-fold reduction in committed PreproB-lymphoid progenitors and the functional B-cell potential of HSC and early lymphoid progenitor is severely impaired, in tandem with reduced early lymphoid gene expression. The same pattern was seen in all T21 FL samples and no samples had GATA1 mutations. Therefore, T21 itself causes multiple distinct defects in FL myelo- and lymphopoiesis.


Blood Cells Molecules and Diseases | 2013

The impact of trisomy 21 on foetal haematopoiesis

Irene Roberts; David F. O'Connor; Anindita Roy; Gillian Cowan; Paresh Vyas

The high frequency of a unique neonatal preleukaemic syndrome, transient abnormal myelopoiesis (TAM), and subsequent acute myeloid leukaemia in early childhood in patients with trisomy 21 (Down syndrome) points to a specific role for trisomy 21 in transforming foetal haematopoietic cells. N-terminal truncating mutations in the key haematopoietic transcription factor GATA1 are acquired during foetal life in virtually every case. These mutations are not leukaemogenic in the absence of trisomy 21. In mouse models, deregulated expression of chromosome 21-encoded genes is implicated in leukaemic transformation, but does not recapitulate the effects of trisomy 21 in a human context. Recent work using primary human foetal liver and bone marrow cells, human embryonic stem cells and iPS cells shows that prior to acquisition of GATA1 mutations, trisomy 21 itself alters human foetal haematopoietic stem cell and progenitor cell biology causing multiple abnormalities in myelopoiesis and B-lymphopoiesis. The molecular basis by which trisomy 21 exerts these effects is likely to be extremely complex, to be tissue-specific and lineage-specific and to be dependent on ontogeny-related characteristics of the foetal microenvironment.


Blood | 2013

GATA1-mutant clones are frequent and often unsuspected in babies with Down syndrome: identification of a population at risk of leukemia

Irene Roberts; Kate A. Alford; Georgina W. Hall; Gaetan Juban; Helen Richmond; Alice Norton; Grant Vallance; Kelly J. Perkins; Emanuele Marchi; Simon J. McGowan; Anindita Roy; Gillian Cowan; Mark Anthony; Amit Gupta; John Ho; Sabita Uthaya; Anna Curley; Shree Vishna Rasiah; Timothy J. Watts; Richard Nicholl; Alison Bedford-Russell; Raoul Blumberg; Angela Thomas; Brenda Gibson; Chris Halsey; Pek-Wan Lee; Sunit Godambe; C Sweeney; Neha Bhatnagar; Anne Goriely


Cell Cycle | 2013

The impact of trisomy 21 on early human hematopoiesis

Anindita Roy; Gillian Cowan; Paresh Vyas; Irene Roberts


Haematologica | 2016

GENOME WIDE DYSREGULATION OF GENE EXPRESSION BY TRISOMY 21 IN FETAL LIVER HAEMATOPOIETIC STEM AND PROGENITOR CELLS

Anindita Roy; Binbin Liu; Katerina Goudevenou; Georg Bohn; Sarah Filippi; N Elliott; Gillian Cowan; David F. O'Connor; Neha Bhatnagar; Stella T. Chou; Mitchell J. Weiss; Paresh Vyas; Anastasios Karadimitris; Irene Roberts


Blood | 2010

Trilineage Perturbation of Hematopoiesis In Neonates with Down Syndrome

Alice Norton; Georgina W. Hall; Helen Richmond; Anindita Roy; Gillian Cowan; Kate A. Alford; Keelin O'Donoghue; Oliver Tunstall; Aristeidis Chaidos; Anastasios Karadimitris; Paresh Vyas; Irene Roberts


Blood | 2014

Trisomy 21-Associated Abnormalities in IGF Signalling and the Fetal Microenvironment Both Contribute to Disruption of Fetal Hematopoiesis in Down Syndrome

David F. O'Connor; Binbin Liu; Gillian Cowan; Anindita Roy; Katerina Goudevenou; Neha Bhatnagar; Oliver Tunstall; J de la Fuente; Anastasios Karadimitris; Irene Roberts


Blood | 2014

Developmental Stage Specific B-Progenitor Expansion in Normal Fetal Bone Marrow Is Absent in Down Syndrome: Implications for Infant ALL

Anindita Roy; Georg Bohn; Katerina Goudevenou; Gillian Cowan; Neha Bhatnagar; David F. O'Connor; Oliver Tunstall; Jerry Chan; Phillip R. Bennett; Sailesh Kumar; D Iskander; Sarah Inglott; Binbin Liu; Philip Ancliff; Anastasios Karadimitris; Irene Roberts


Blood | 2012

Gene-Selective Histone Hyperacetylation and Enhanced Sp1 Occupancy Underpin Transcriptional Modulation of Genes of the Glycolytic-Pentose Phosphate Pathway in Response to Histone Deacetylase Inhibitors - Therapeutic Implications

Kalliopi Makarona; Valentina Caputo; David Roper; Joana R. Costa; Gillian Cowan; Aristeidis Chaidos; David F. O'Connor; Elisabeth Georgiou; Maria Papaioannou; Mark Layton; Irene Roberts; Anastasios Karadimitris

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Anindita Roy

Imperial College London

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Oliver Tunstall

Bristol Royal Hospital for Children

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Georg Bohn

Hannover Medical School

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