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Featured researches published by Ginette Schiby.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2008

LMO2 Protein Expression Predicts Survival in Patients With Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma Treated With Anthracycline-Based Chemotherapy With and Without Rituximab

Yasodha Natkunam; Pedro Farinha; Eric D. Hsi; Christine P. Hans; Robert Tibshirani; Laurie H. Sehn; Joseph M. Connors; Dita Gratzinger; Manuel F. Rosado; Shuchun Zhao; Brad Pohlman; Nicholas Wongchaowart; Martin Bast; Abraham Avigdor; Ginette Schiby; Arnon Nagler; Gerald E. Byrne; Ronald Levy; Randy D. Gascoyne; Izidore S. Lossos

PURPOSE The heterogeneity of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) has prompted the search for new markers that can accurately separate prognostic risk groups. We previously showed in a multivariate model that LMO2 mRNA was a strong predictor of superior outcome in DLBCL patients. Here, we tested the prognostic impact of LMO2 protein expression in DLBCL patients treated with anthracycline-based chemotherapy with or without rituximab. PATIENTS AND METHODS DLBCL patients treated with anthracycline-based chemotherapy alone (263 patients) or with the addition of rituximab (80 patients) were studied using immunohistochemistry for LMO2 on tissue microarrays of original biopsies. Staining results were correlated with outcome. RESULTS In anthracycline-treated patients, LMO2 protein expression was significantly correlated with improved overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival (PFS) in univariate analyses (OS, P = .018; PFS, P = .010) and was a significant predictor independent of the clinical International Prognostic Index (IPI) in multivariate analysis. Similarly, in patients treated with the combination of anthracycline-containing regimens and rituximab, LMO2 protein expression was also significantly correlated with improved OS and PFS (OS, P = .005; PFS, P = .009) and was a significant predictor independent of the IPI in multivariate analysis. CONCLUSION We conclude that LMO2 protein expression is a prognostic marker in DLBCL patients treated with anthracycline-based regimens alone or in combination with rituximab. After further validation, immunohistologic analysis of LMO2 protein expression may become a practical assay for newly diagnosed DLBCL patients to optimize their clinical management.


Laboratory Investigation | 2008

Prognostic significance of VEGF, VEGF receptors, and microvessel density in diffuse large B cell lymphoma treated with anthracycline-based chemotherapy

Dita Gratzinger; Shuchun Zhao; Robert Tibshirani; Eric D. Hsi; Christine P. Hans; Brad Pohlman; Martin Bast; Abraham Avigdor; Ginette Schiby; Arnon Nagler; Gerald E. Byrne; Izidore S. Lossos; Yasodha Natkunam

Vascular endothelial growth factor-mediated signaling has at least two potential roles in diffuse large B cell lymphoma: potentiation of angiogenesis, and potentiation of lymphoma cell proliferation and/or survival induced by autocrine vascular endothelial growth factor receptor-mediated signaling. We have recently shown that diffuse large B cell lymphomas expressing high levels of vascular endothelial growth factor protein also express high levels of vascular endothelial growth factor receptor-1 and vascular endothelial growth factor receptor-2. We have now assessed a larger multi-institutional cohort of patients with de novo diffuse large B cell lymphoma treated with anthracycline-based therapy to address whether tumor vascularity, or expression of vascular endothelial growth factor protein and its receptors, contribute to patient outcomes. Our results show that increased tumor vascularity is associated with poor overall survival (P=0.047), and is independent of the international prognostic index. High expression of vascular endothelial growth factor receptor-1 by lymphoma cells by contrast is associated with improved overall survival (P=0.044). The combination of high vascular endothelial growth factor and vascular endothelial growth factor receptor-1 protein expression by lymphoma cells identifies a subgroup of patients with improved overall (P=0.003) and progression-free (P=0.026) survival; these findings are also independent of the international prognostic index. The prognostic significance of overexpression of this ligand-receptor pair suggests that autocrine signaling via vascular endothelial growth factor receptor-1 may represent a survival or proliferation pathway in diffuse large B cell lymphoma. Dependence on autocrine vascular endothelial growth factor receptor-1-mediated signaling may render a subset of diffuse large B-cell lymphomas susceptible to anthracycline-based therapy.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2013

A congenital neutrophil defect syndrome associated with mutations in VPS45

Thierry Vilboux; Atar Lev; May Christine V. Malicdan; Amos J. Simon; Päivi M Järvinen; Tomas Racek; Jacek Puchałka; Raman Sood; Blake Carrington; Kevin Bishop; James C. Mullikin; Marjan Huizing; Ben Zion Garty; Eran Eyal; Baruch Wolach; Ronit Gavrieli; Amos Toren; Michalle Soudack; Osama M. Atawneh; Tatiana Babushkin; Ginette Schiby; Andrew R. Cullinane; Camila Avivi; Sylvie Polak-Charcon; Iris Barshack; Ninette Amariglio; Gideon Rechavi; Jutte van der Werff ten Bosch; Yair Anikster; Christoph Klein

BACKGROUND Neutrophils are the predominant phagocytes that provide protection against bacterial and fungal infections. Genetically determined neutrophil disorders confer a predisposition to severe infections and reveal novel mechanisms that control vesicular trafficking, hematopoiesis, and innate immunity. METHODS We clinically evaluated seven children from five families who had neutropenia, neutrophil dysfunction, bone marrow fibrosis, and nephromegaly. To identify the causative gene, we performed homozygosity mapping using single-nucleotide polymorphism arrays, whole-exome sequencing, immunoblotting, immunofluorescence, electron microscopy, a real-time quantitative polymerase-chain-reaction assay, immunohistochemistry, flow cytometry, fibroblast motility assays, measurements of apoptosis, and zebrafish models. Correction experiments were performed by transfecting mutant fibroblasts with the nonmutated gene. RESULTS All seven affected children had homozygous mutations (Thr224Asn or Glu238Lys, depending on the childs ethnic origin) in VPS45, which encodes a protein that regulates membrane trafficking through the endosomal system. The level of VPS45 protein was reduced, as were the VPS45 binding partners rabenosyn-5 and syntaxin-16. The level of β1 integrin was reduced on the surface of VPS45-deficient neutrophils and fibroblasts. VPS45-deficient fibroblasts were characterized by impaired motility and increased apoptosis. A zebrafish model of vps45 deficiency showed a marked paucity of myeloperoxidase-positive cells (i.e., neutrophils). Transfection of patient cells with nonmutated VPS45 corrected the migration defect and decreased apoptosis. CONCLUSIONS Defective endosomal intracellular protein trafficking due to biallelic mutations in VPS45 underlies a new immunodeficiency syndrome involving impaired neutrophil function. (Funded by the National Human Genome Research Institute and others.).


Blood | 2013

Genome-scale expression and transcription factor binding profiles reveal therapeutic targets in transgenic ERG myeloid leukemia

Liat Goldberg; Marloes R. Tijssen; Yehudit Birger; Rebecca Hannah; Sarah Kinston; Judith Schütte; Dominik Beck; Kathy Knezevic; Ginette Schiby; Jasmine Jacob-Hirsch; Anat Biran; Guido Marcucci; Clara D. Bloomfield; Peter D. Aplan; John E. Pimanda; Berthold Göttgens; Shai Izraeli

The ETS transcription factor ERG plays a central role in definitive hematopoiesis, and its overexpression in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is associated with a stem cell signature and poor prognosis. Yet how ERG causes leukemia is unclear. Here we show that pan-hematopoietic ERG expression induces an early progenitor myeloid leukemia in transgenic mice. Integrated genome-scale analysis of gene expression and ERG binding profiles revealed that ERG activates a transcriptional program similar to human AML stem/progenitor cells and to human AML with high ERG expression. This transcriptional program was associated with activation of RAS that was required for leukemia cells growth in vitro and in vivo. We further show that ERG induces expression of the Pim1 kinase oncogene through a novel hematopoietic enhancer validated in transgenic mice and human CD34(+) normal and leukemic cells. Pim1 inhibition disrupts growth and induces apoptosis of ERG-expressing leukemic cells. The importance of the ERG/PIM1 axis is further underscored by the poorer prognosis of AML highly expressing ERG and PIM1. Thus, integrative genomic analysis demonstrates that ERG causes myeloid progenitor leukemia characterized by an induction of leukemia stem cell transcriptional programs. Pim1 and the RAS pathway are potential therapeutic targets of these high-risk leukemias.


British Journal of Haematology | 2013

Cytogenetics of extramedullary manifestations in multiple myeloma

Eva Maria Murga Penas; Annette M. May; Monika Engelhardt; Arnon Nagler; Merav Leiba; Ginette Schiby; Nicolaus Kröger; Jozef Zustin; Andreas Marx; Jakob Matschke; Markus Tiemann; Eray Goekkurt; Hans Heinrich Heidtmann; Eik Vettorazzi; Judith Dierlamm; Carsten Bokemeyer; Georgia Schilling

Extramedullary disease in patients with multiple myeloma is a rare event, occurring mostly in advanced disease or relapse. Outcome is poor and prognostic factors predicting the development of extramedullary disease have not been defined. We investigated cytogenetic alterations of myeloma cells in different extramedullary manifestations by adapting the fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) technique in combination with cytoplasmic immunoglobulin staining to study the cytogenetics of plasma cell tumours on paraffin embedded material. Thirty six patients were investigated: 19 with extramedullary disease, 11 with skeletal extramedullary disease and six with solitary extramedullary plasmacytoma. The first two groups showed the following results: del(17p13) 32% vs. 27%, del(13q14) 35% vs. 27%, MYC‐overrepresentation 28% vs. 18% and t(4;14) 37% vs. 18%. We detected an overall higher incidence of del(17p13) in both groups compared to data from bone marrow samples of multiple myeloma reported to date (range 7–16%). The solitary extramedullary plasmacytomas presented overall less cytogenetic aberrations than the other groups. Most important, three patients with extramedullary disease and one with skeletal extramedullary disease presented different FISH findings in the extramedullary tumour compared to their bone marrow plasma cells. del(17p13), occurring additional in three of four cases, seems a strong marker for extramedullary progression of myeloma.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2016

Mutations in STN1 cause Coats plus syndrome and are associated with genomic and telomere defects

Amos J. Simon; Atar Lev; Yong Zhang; Batia Weiss; Anna Rylova; Eran Eyal; Nitzan Kol; Ortal Barel; Keren Cesarkas; Michalle Soudack; Noa Greenberg-Kushnir; Michele Rhodes; David L. Wiest; Ginette Schiby; Iris Barshack; Shulamit Katz; Elon Pras; Hana Poran; Haike Reznik-Wolf; Elena Ribakovsky; Carlos Simon; Wadi Hazou; Yechezkel Sidi; Avishay Lahad; Hagar Katzir; Shira Sagie; Haifa A. Aqeilan; Galina Glousker; Ninette Amariglio; Yehuda Tzfati

Somech and colleagues identify two new mutations in STN1 that causes Coats plus syndrome and telomere abnormalities in human, recapitulated in a zebra fish model.


Blood | 2013

Perturbation of fetal hematopoiesis in a mouse model of Down syndrome’s transient myeloproliferative disorder

Yehudit Birger; Liat Goldberg; Timothy M. Chlon; Benjamin Goldenson; Inna Muler; Ginette Schiby; Jasmin Jacob-Hirsch; Gideon Rechavi; John D. Crispino; Shai Izraeli

Children with Down syndrome develop a unique congenital clonal megakaryocytic proliferation disorder (transient myeloproliferative disorder [TMD]). It is caused by an expansion of fetal megakaryocyte-erythroid progenitors (MEPs) triggered by trisomy of chromosome 21 and is further enhanced by the somatic acquisition of a mutation in GATA1. These mutations result in the expression of a short-isoform GATA1s lacking the N-terminal domain. To examine the hypothesis that the Hsa21 ETS transcription factor ERG cooperates with GATA1s in this process, we generated double-transgenic mice expressing hERG and Gata1s. We show that increased expression of ERG by itself is sufficient to induce expansion of MEPs in fetal livers. Gata1s expression synergizes with ERG in enhancing the expansion of fetal MEPs and megakaryocytic precursors, resulting in hepatic fibrosis, transient postnatal thrombocytosis, anemia, a gene expression profile that is similar to that of human TMD and progression to progenitor myeloid leukemia by 3 months of age. This ERG/Gata1s transgenic mouse model also uncovers an essential role for the N terminus of Gata1 in erythropoiesis and the antagonistic role of ERG in fetal erythroid differentiation and survival. The human relevance of this finding is underscored by the recent discovery of similar mutations in GATA1 in patients with Diamond-Blackfan anemia.


European Journal of Immunology | 2008

B‐cell clonal diversification and gut‐lymph node trafficking in ulcerative colitis revealed using lineage tree analysis

Hilla Tabibian-Keissar; Neta S. Zuckerman; Michal Barak; Deborah K. Dunn-Walters; Avital Steiman-Shimony; Yehuda Chowers; Efrat Ofek; Kinneret Rosenblatt; Ginette Schiby; Ramit Mehr; Iris Barshack

In studies of inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD), research has so far focused mainly on the role of T cells. Despite evidence suggesting that B cells and the production of autoantibodies may play a significant role in IBD pathogenesis, the role of B cells in gut inflammation has not yet been thoroughly investigated. In the present study we used the new approach of lineage tree analysis for studying immunoglobulin variable region gene diversification in B cells found in the inflamed intestinal tissue of two ulcerative colitis patients as well as B cells from mucosa‐associated lymph nodes (LN) in the same patients. Healthy intestinal tissue of three patients with carcinoma of the colon was used as normal control. Lineage tree shapes revealed active immune clonal diversification processes occurring in ulcerative colitis patients, which were quantitatively similar to those in healthy controls. B cells from intestinal tissues and the associated LN are shown here to be clonally related, thus supplying the first direct evidence supporting B‐cell trafficking between gut and associated LN in IBD and control tissues.


Fertility and Sterility | 2009

Combined jugular and subclavian vein thrombosis following assisted reproductive technology—new observation

Ophira Salomon; Ginette Schiby; Zehava Heiman; Kamila Avivi; Carol Sigal; David Levran; Jeushua Dor; Yacov Itzchak

OBJECTIVE To study the predilection of jugular and subclavian vein thrombosis in patients going through assisted reproductive technology (ART). This technology puts women at high risk of developing the ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome (OHSS) and thrombotic events. DESIGN Study cases. SETTING Large Academic Medical Center. PATIENT(S) Five women who developed jugular and subclavian vein thrombosis following ART were included in the study. INTERVENTION(S) The deep vein thrombosis was demonstrated by ultrasound Doppler or computerized tomography angiography. All women were interviewed and data obtained from outpatient and hospital medical charts. Magnetic resonance imaging and complete thrombophilic profile workup was performed in each woman. Open biopsy from the lesions was taken from one of the women. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S) Correlation between mechanical branchial cysts filled with fluid during OHSS and jugular and subclavian vein thrombosis. RESULT(S) Five women developed jugular and subclavian vein thrombosis following ART. They were found to harbor clusters of rudimentary branchial cysts filled with fluid at the time of OHSS, which compressed the jugular and subclavian veins at their junction at the base of the neck. Four patients (80%) were found to be carriers of factor V Leiden. CONCLUSION(S) Predilection of jugular and subclavian vein thrombosis early in pregnancy is the result of mechanical compression mediated by rudimentary branchial cysts filled with fluid during OHSS, particularly in subjects who are carriers of factor V Leiden.


American Journal of Hematology | 1998

Instability of dinucleotide repeats in Hodgkin's disease

Ziva Mark; Amos Toren; Ninette Amariglio; Ginette Schiby; Frida Brok-Simoni; Gideon Rechavi

Tumorigenesis has been shown to proceed through a series of genetic alterations involving protooncogenes and tumor suppressor genes. However, the investigation of genomic instability of microsatellites has disclosed a new mechanism for human carcinogenesis, which is involved not only in hereditary nonpolyposis colon cancer (HNPCC) but in a number of other malignancies as well. To determine whether microsatellite instability is involved in Hodgkins disease, we screened 16 such tumors using 7 microsatellite marker loci on 6 chromosome arms 4, 5, 9p, 9q, 11, 14, and 17. Using the polymerase chain reaction method, DNA samples from the tumors and from normal peripheral blood leukocytes from each patient were compared for the allelic pattern produced at each locus. Five cases of genomic instability were identified, suggesting that this mechanism is relevant to the pathogenesis of HD. Am. J. Hematol. 57:148–152, 1998.

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Atar Lev

Sheba Medical Center

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