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Dive into the research topics where Gregory McAllister is active.

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Featured researches published by Gregory McAllister.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Functional epigenetics approach identifies BRM/SMARCA2 as a critical synthetic lethal target in BRG1-deficient cancers

Gregory R. Hoffman; Rami Rahal; Frank P. Buxton; Kay Xiang; Gregory McAllister; Elizabeth Frias; Linda Bagdasarian; Janina Huber; Alicia Lindeman; Dongshu Chen; Rodrigo Romero; Nadire Ramadan; Tanushree Phadke; Kristy Haas; Mariela Jaskelioff; Boris G. Wilson; Matthew John Meyer; Veronica Saenz-Vash; Huili Zhai; Vic E. Myer; Jeffery A. Porter; Nicholas Keen; Margaret E. McLaughlin; Craig Mickanin; Charles W. M. Roberts; Frank Stegmeier; Zainab Jagani

Significance Mammalian SWI/SNF (mSWI/SNF) alterations are highly prevalent, now estimated to occur in 20% of cancers. The inactivating nature of mSWI/SNF mutations presents a challenge for devising strategies to target these epigenetic lesions. By performing a comprehensive pooled shRNA screen of the epigenome using a unique deep coverage design shRNA (DECODER) library across a large cancer cell line panel, we identified that BRG1/SMARCA4 mutant cancer cells are highly sensitive to BRM/SMARCA2 depletion. Our study provides important mechanistic insight into the BRM/BRG1 synthetic lethal relationship, shows this finding translates in vivo, and highlights BRM as a promising therapeutic target for the treatment BRG1-mutant cancers. Defects in epigenetic regulation play a fundamental role in the development of cancer, and epigenetic regulators have recently emerged as promising therapeutic candidates. We therefore set out to systematically interrogate epigenetic cancer dependencies by screening an epigenome-focused deep-coverage design shRNA (DECODER) library across 58 cancer cell lines. This screen identified BRM/SMARCA2, a DNA-dependent ATPase of the mammalian SWI/SNF (mSWI/SNF) chromatin remodeling complex, as being essential for the growth of tumor cells that harbor loss of function mutations in BRG1/SMARCA4. Depletion of BRM in BRG1-deficient cancer cells leads to a cell cycle arrest, induction of senescence, and increased levels of global H3K9me3. We further demonstrate the selective dependency of BRG1-mutant tumors on BRM in vivo. Genetic alterations of the mSWI/SNF chromatin remodeling complexes are the most frequent among chromatin regulators in cancers, with BRG1/SMARCA4 mutations occurring in ∼10–15% of lung adenocarcinomas. Our findings position BRM as an attractive therapeutic target for BRG1 mutated cancers. Because BRG1 and BRM function as mutually exclusive catalytic subunits of the mSWI/SNF complex, we propose that such synthetic lethality may be explained by paralog insufficiency, in which loss of one family member unveils critical dependence on paralogous subunits. This concept of “cancer-selective paralog dependency” may provide a more general strategy for targeting other tumor suppressor lesions/complexes with paralogous subunits.


Cancer Discovery | 2016

CRISPR Screens Provide a Comprehensive Assessment of Cancer Vulnerabilities but Generate False-Positive Hits for Highly Amplified Genomic Regions

Diana M Munoz; Pamela J. Cassiani; Li Li; Eric Billy; Joshua Korn; Michael D. Jones; Javad Golji; David A. Ruddy; Kristine Yu; Gregory McAllister; Antoine deWeck; Dorothee Abramowski; Jessica Wan; Matthew D. Shirley; Sarah Y. Neshat; Daniel Rakiec; Rosalie de Beaumont; Odile Weber; Audrey Kauffmann; E. Robert McDonald; Nicholas Keen; Francesco Hofmann; William R. Sellers; Tobias Schmelzle; Frank Stegmeier; Michael R. Schlabach

UNLABELLED CRISPR/Cas9 has emerged as a powerful new tool to systematically probe gene function. We compared the performance of CRISPR to RNAi-based loss-of-function screens for the identification of cancer dependencies across multiple cancer cell lines. CRISPR dropout screens consistently identified more lethal genes than RNAi, implying that the identification of many cellular dependencies may require full gene inactivation. However, in two aneuploid cancer models, we found that all genes within highly amplified regions, including nonexpressed genes, scored as lethal by CRISPR, revealing an unanticipated class of false-positive hits. In addition, using a CRISPR tiling screen, we found that sgRNAs targeting essential domains generate the strongest lethality phenotypes and thus provide a strategy to rapidly define the protein domains required for cancer dependence. Collectively, these findings not only demonstrate the utility of CRISPR screens in the identification of cancer-essential genes, but also reveal the need to carefully control for false-positive results in chromosomally unstable cancer lines. SIGNIFICANCE We show in this study that CRISPR-based screens have a significantly lower false-negative rate compared with RNAi-based screens, but have specific liabilities particularly in the interrogation of regions of genome amplification. Therefore, this study provides critical insights for applying CRISPR-based screens toward the systematic identification of new cancer targets. Cancer Discov; 6(8); 900-13. ©2016 AACR.See related commentary by Sheel and Xue, p. 824See related article by Aguirre et al., p. 914This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 803.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Macroautophagy is dispensable for growth of KRAS mutant tumors and chloroquine efficacy

Christina H. Eng; Zuncai Wang; Diane Tkach; Lourdes Toral-Barza; Savuth Ugwonali; Shanming Liu; Stephanie Fitzgerald; Elizabeth George; Elizabeth Frias; Nadire R. Cochran; Rowena De Jesus; Gregory McAllister; Gregory R. Hoffman; Kevin Bray; Luanna Lemon; Judy Lucas; Valeria R. Fantin; Robert T. Abraham; Leon O. Murphy; Beat Nyfeler

Significance Kirsten rat sarcoma (KRAS) mutant tumors are believed to depend on autophagy for growth and survival. This study details the unexpected finding that autophagy-related 7, an enzyme essential for macroautophagy, can be deleted in several KRAS-driven cancer lines without affecting growth in vitro or in vivo. These data indicate that KRAS mutation status does not predict cell-autonomous addiction to autophagy. Furthermore, this report addresses a long-standing question regarding the mechanism of chloroquine, a lysosomotropic agent often used to interrogate effects of autophagy inhibition. Although chloroquine is antiproliferative and synergizes with targeted anticancer drugs, these effects are independent of macroautophagy. Future studies are needed to identify appropriate genetic stratification parameters to predict efficacy toward chloroquine and to characterize such agents further as anticancer combination partners. Macroautophagy is a key stress-response pathway that can suppress or promote tumorigenesis depending on the cellular context. Notably, Kirsten rat sarcoma (KRAS)-driven tumors have been reported to rely on macroautophagy for growth and survival, suggesting a potential therapeutic approach of using autophagy inhibitors based on genetic stratification. In this study, we evaluated whether KRAS mutation status can predict the efficacy to macroautophagy inhibition. By profiling 47 cell lines with pharmacological and genetic loss-of-function tools, we were unable to confirm that KRAS-driven tumor lines require macroautophagy for growth. Deletion of autophagy-related 7 (ATG7) by genome editing completely blocked macroautophagy in several tumor lines with oncogenic mutations in KRAS but did not inhibit cell proliferation in vitro or tumorigenesis in vivo. Furthermore, ATG7 knockout did not sensitize cells to irradiation or to several anticancer agents tested. Interestingly, ATG7-deficient and -proficient cells were equally sensitive to the antiproliferative effect of chloroquine, a lysosomotropic agent often used as a pharmacological tool to evaluate the response to macroautophagy inhibition. Moreover, both cell types manifested synergistic growth inhibition when treated with chloroquine plus the tyrosine kinase inhibitors erlotinib or sunitinib, suggesting that the antiproliferative effects of chloroquine are independent of its suppressive actions on autophagy.


Nature Medicine | 2018

p53 inhibits CRISPR–Cas9 engineering in human pluripotent stem cells

Robert J. Ihry; Kathleen A. Worringer; Max R. Salick; Elizabeth Frias; Daniel Ho; Kraig Theriault; Sravya Kommineni; Julie Chen; Marie Sondey; Chaoyang Ye; Ranjit Randhawa; Tripti Kulkarni; Zinger Yang; Gregory McAllister; Carsten Russ; John S. Reece-Hoyes; William Forrester; Gregory R. Hoffman; Ricardo E. Dolmetsch; Ajamete Kaykas

CRISPR/Cas9 has revolutionized our ability to engineer genomes and conduct genome-wide screens in human cells1–3. Whereas some cell types are amenable to genome engineering, genomes of human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs) have been difficult to engineer, with reduced efficiencies relative to tumour cell lines or mouse embryonic stem cells3–13. Here, using hPSC lines with stable integration of Cas9 or transient delivery of Cas9-ribonucleoproteins (RNPs), we achieved an average insertion or deletion (indel) efficiency greater than 80%. This high efficiency of indel generation revealed that double-strand breaks (DSBs) induced by Cas9 are toxic and kill most hPSCs. In previous studies, the toxicity of Cas9 in hPSCs was less apparent because of low transfection efficiency and subsequently low DSB induction3. The toxic response to DSBs was P53/TP53-dependent, such that the efficiency of precise genome engineering in hPSCs with a wild-type P53 gene was severely reduced. Our results indicate that Cas9 toxicity creates an obstacle to the high-throughput use of CRISPR/Cas9 for genome engineering and screening in hPSCs. Moreover, as hPSCs can acquire P53 mutations14, cell replacement therapies using CRISPR/Cas9-enginereed hPSCs should proceed with caution, and such engineered hPSCs should be monitored for P53 function.CRISPR–Cas9-induced DNA damage triggers p53 to limit the efficiency of gene editing in human pluripotent cells.


eLife | 2016

Functional CRISPR screening identifies the ufmylation pathway as a regulator of SQSTM1/p62

Rowena DeJesus; Francesca Moretti; Gregory McAllister; Zuncai Wang; Phil Bergman; Shanming Liu; Elizabeth Frias; John Alford; John S. Reece-Hoyes; Alicia Lindeman; Jennifer Kelliher; Carsten Russ; Judith Knehr; Walter Carbone; Martin Beibel; Guglielmo Roma; Aylwin Ng; John A. Tallarico; Jeffery A. Porter; Ramnik J. Xavier; Craig Mickanin; Leon O. Murphy; Gregory R. Hoffman; Beat Nyfeler

SQSTM1 is an adaptor protein that integrates multiple cellular signaling pathways and whose expression is tightly regulated at the transcriptional and post-translational level. Here, we describe a forward genetic screening paradigm exploiting CRISPR-mediated genome editing coupled to a cell selection step by FACS to identify regulators of SQSTM1. Through systematic comparison of pooled libraries, we show that CRISPR is superior to RNAi in identifying known SQSTM1 modulators. A genome-wide CRISPR screen exposed MTOR signalling and the entire macroautophagy machinery as key regulators of SQSTM1 and identified several novel modulators including HNRNPM, SLC39A14, SRRD, PGK1 and the ufmylation cascade. We show that ufmylation regulates SQSTM1 by eliciting a cell type-specific ER stress response which induces SQSTM1 expression and results in its accumulation in the cytosol. This study validates pooled CRISPR screening as a powerful method to map the repertoire of cellular pathways that regulate the fate of an individual target protein. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.17290.001


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2016

Tankyrase Inhibitor Sensitizes Lung Cancer Cells to Endothelial Growth Factor Receptor (EGFR) Inhibition via Stabilizing Angiomotins and Inhibiting YAP Signaling.

Hui Wang; Bo Lu; Johnny Castillo; Yue Zhang; Zinger Yang; Gregory McAllister; Alicia Lindeman; John S. Reece-Hoyes; John A. Tallarico; Carsten Russ; Greg Hoffman; Wenqing Xu; Markus Schirle; Feng Cong

YAP signaling pathway plays critical roles in tissue homeostasis, and aberrant activation of YAP signaling has been implicated in cancers. To identify tractable targets of YAP pathway, we have performed a pathway-based pooled CRISPR screen and identified tankyrase and its associated E3 ligase RNF146 as positive regulators of YAP signaling. Genetic ablation or pharmacological inhibition of tankyrase prominently suppresses YAP activity and YAP target gene expression. Using a proteomic approach, we have identified angiomotin family proteins, which are known negative regulators of YAP signaling, as novel tankyrase substrates. Inhibition of tankyrase or depletion of RNF146 stabilizes angiomotins. Angiomotins physically interact with tankyrase through a highly conserved motif at their N terminus, and mutation of this motif leads to their stabilization. Tankyrase inhibitor-induced stabilization of angiomotins reduces YAP nuclear translocation and decreases downstream YAP signaling. We have further shown that knock-out of YAP sensitizes non-small cell lung cancer to EGFR inhibitor Erlotinib. Tankyrase inhibitor, but not porcupine inhibitor, which blocks Wnt secretion, enhances growth inhibitory activity of Erlotinib. This activity is mediated by YAP inhibition and not Wnt/β-catenin inhibition. Our data suggest that tankyrase inhibition could serve as a novel strategy to suppress YAP signaling for combinatorial targeted therapy.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Identification of Elongation Factor G as the Conserved Cellular Target of Argyrin B

Beat Nyfeler; Dominic Hoepfner; Deborah Palestrant; Christina A. Kirby; Lewis Whitehead; Robert Yu; Gejing Deng; Ruth E. Caughlan; Angela L. Woods; Adriana K. Jones; S. Whitney Barnes; John R. Walker; Swann Gaulis; Ervan Hauy; Saskia M. Brachmann; Philipp Krastel; Christian Studer; Ralph Riedl; David Estoppey; Thomas Aust; N. Rao Movva; Zuncai Wang; Michael Salcius; Gregory A. Michaud; Gregory McAllister; Leon O. Murphy; John A. Tallarico; Christopher J. Wilson; Charles R. Dean

Argyrins, produced by myxobacteria and actinomycetes, are cyclic octapeptides with antibacterial and antitumor activity. Here, we identify elongation factor G (EF-G) as the cellular target of argyrin B in bacteria, via resistant mutant selection and whole genome sequencing, biophysical binding studies and crystallography. Argyrin B binds a novel allosteric pocket in EF-G, distinct from the known EF-G inhibitor antibiotic fusidic acid, revealing a new mode of protein synthesis inhibition. In eukaryotic cells, argyrin B was found to target mitochondrial elongation factor G1 (EF-G1), the closest homologue of bacterial EF-G. By blocking mitochondrial translation, argyrin B depletes electron transport components and inhibits the growth of yeast and tumor cells. Further supporting direct inhibition of EF-G1, expression of an argyrin B-binding deficient EF-G1 L693Q variant partially rescued argyrin B-sensitivity in tumor cells. In summary, we show that argyrin B is an antibacterial and cytotoxic agent that inhibits the evolutionarily conserved target EF-G, blocking protein synthesis in bacteria and mitochondrial translation in yeast and mammalian cells.


Cancer Research | 2015

Inhibition of casein kinase 1 alpha prevents acquired drug resistance to erlotinib in EGFR-mutant non-small cell lung cancer

Alexandra B. Lantermann; Dongshu Chen; Kaitlin J McCutcheon; Gregory R. Hoffman; Elizabeth Frias; David A. Ruddy; Daniel Rakiec; Joshua Korn; Gregory McAllister; Frank Stegmeier; Matthew John Meyer; Sreenath V. Sharma

Patients with lung tumors harboring activating mutations in the EGF receptor (EGFR) show good initial treatment responses to the EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKI) erlotinib or gefitinib. However, acquired resistance invariably develops. Applying a focused shRNA screening approach to identify genes whose knockdown can prevent and/or overcome acquired resistance to erlotinib in several EGFR-mutant non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) cell lines, we identified casein kinase 1 α (CSNK1A1, CK1α). We found that CK1α suppression inhibits the NF-κB prosurvival signaling pathway. Furthermore, downregulation of NF-κB signaling by approaches independent of CK1α knockdown can also attenuate acquired erlotinib resistance, supporting a role for activated NF-κB signaling in conferring acquired drug resistance. Importantly, CK1α suppression prevented erlotinib resistance in an HCC827 xenograft model in vivo. Our findings suggest that patients with EGFR-mutant NSCLC might benefit from a combination of EGFR TKIs and CK1α inhibition to prevent acquired drug resistance and to prolong disease-free survival.


Cell Reports | 2017

Autophagy-Independent Lysosomal Targeting Regulated by ULK1/2-FIP200 and ATG9

Jonathan M Goodwin; William E. Dowdle; Rowena DeJesus; Zuncai Wang; Philip Bergman; Marek Kobylarz; Alicia Lindeman; Ramnik J. Xavier; Gregory McAllister; Beat Nyfeler; Gregory R. Hoffman; Leon O. Murphy

Iron is vital for many homeostatic processes, and its liberation from ferritin nanocages occurs in the lysosome. Studies indicate that ferritin and its binding partner nuclear receptor coactivator-4 (NCOA4) are targeted to lysosomes by a form of selective autophagy. By using genome-scale functional screening, we identify an alternative lysosomal transport pathway for ferritin that requires FIP200, ATG9A, VPS34, and TAX1BP1 but lacks involvement of the ATG8 lipidation machinery that constitutes classical macroautophagy. TAX1BP1 binds directly to NCOA4 and is required for lysosomal trafficking of ferritin under basal and iron-depleted conditions. Under basal conditions ULK1/2-FIP200 controls ferritin turnover, but its deletion leads to TAX1BP1-dependent activation of TBK1 that regulates redistribution of ATG9A to the Golgi enabling continued trafficking of ferritin. Cells expressing an amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS)-associated TBK1 allele are incapable of degrading ferritin suggesting a molecular mechanism that explains the presence of iron deposits in patient brain biopsies.


Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2013

The Multidimensional Perturbation Value A Single Metric to Measure Similarity and Activity of Treatments in High-Throughput Multidimensional Screens

Janna Hutz; Thomas Nelson; Hua Wu; Gregory McAllister; Ioannis K. Moutsatsos; Savina Jaeger; Somnath Bandyopadhyay; Florian Nigsch; Ben Cornett; Jeremy L. Jenkins; Douglas W. Selinger

Screens using high-throughput, information-rich technologies such as microarrays, high-content screening (HCS), and next-generation sequencing (NGS) have become increasingly widespread. Compared with single-readout assays, these methods produce a more comprehensive picture of the effects of screened treatments. However, interpreting such multidimensional readouts is challenging. Univariate statistics such as t-tests and Z-factors cannot easily be applied to multidimensional profiles, leaving no obvious way to answer common screening questions such as “Is treatment X active in this assay?” and “Is treatment X different from (or equivalent to) treatment Y?” We have developed a simple, straightforward metric, the multidimensional perturbation value (mp-value), which can be used to answer these questions. Here, we demonstrate application of the mp-value to three data sets: a multiplexed gene expression screen of compounds and genomic reagents, a microarray-based gene expression screen of compounds, and an HCS compound screen. In all data sets, active treatments were successfully identified using the mp-value, and simulations and follow-up analyses supported the mp-value’s statistical and biological validity. We believe the mp-value represents a promising way to simplify the analysis of multidimensional data while taking full advantage of its richness.

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