Ilya B. Leskov
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
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Publication
Featured researches published by Ilya B. Leskov.
Cell | 2011
Noa Novershtern; Aravind Subramanian; Lee N. Lawton; Raymond H. Mak; W. Nicholas Haining; Marie McConkey; Naomi Habib; Nir Yosef; Cindy Y. Chang; Tal Shay; Garrett M. Frampton; Adam Drake; Ilya B. Leskov; Björn Nilsson; Fred Preffer; David Dombkowski; John W. Evans; Ted Liefeld; John S. Smutko; Jianzhu Chen; Nir Friedman; Richard A. Young; Todd R. Golub; Aviv Regev; Benjamin L. Ebert
Though many individual transcription factors are known to regulate hematopoietic differentiation, major aspects of the global architecture of hematopoiesis remain unknown. Here, we profiled gene expression in 38 distinct purified populations of human hematopoietic cells and used probabilistic models of gene expression and analysis of cis-elements in gene promoters to decipher the general organization of their regulatory circuitry. We identified modules of highly coexpressed genes, some of which are restricted to a single lineage but most of which are expressed at variable levels across multiple lineages. We found densely interconnected cis-regulatory circuits and a large number of transcription factors that are differentially expressed across hematopoietic states. These findings suggest a more complex regulatory system for hematopoiesis than previously assumed.
Cell | 2014
Christian P. Pallasch; Ilya B. Leskov; Christian Braun; Daniela Vorholt; Adam Drake; Yadira M. Soto-Feliciano; Eric H. Bent; Janine Schwamb; Bettina P. Iliopoulou; Nadine Kutsch; Nico van Rooijen; Lukas P. Frenzel; Clemens M. Wendtner; Lukas C. Heukamp; Karl Anton Kreuzer; Michael Hallek; Jianzhu Chen; Michael T. Hemann
Therapy-resistant microenvironments represent a major barrier toward effective elimination of disseminated malignancies. Here, we show that select microenvironments can underlie resistance to antibody-based therapy. Using a humanized model of treatment refractory B cell leukemia, we find that infiltration of leukemia cells into the bone marrow rewires the tumor microenvironment to inhibit engulfment of antibody-targeted tumor cells. Resistance to macrophage-mediated killing can be overcome by combination regimens involving therapeutic antibodies and chemotherapy. Specifically, the nitrogen mustard cyclophosphamide induces an acute secretory activating phenotype (ASAP), releasing CCL4, IL8, VEGF, and TNFα from treated tumor cells. These factors induce macrophage infiltration and phagocytic activity in the bone marrow. Thus, the acute induction of stress-related cytokines can effectively target cancer cells for removal by the innate immune system. This synergistic chemoimmunotherapeutic regimen represents a potent strategy for using conventional anticancer agents to alter the tumor microenvironment and promote the efficacy of targeted therapeutics.
Stem Cells and Development | 2011
Maroun Khoury; Adam Drake; Qingfeng Chen; Di Dong; Ilya B. Leskov; Maria F. Fragoso; Yan Li; Bettina P. Iliopoulou; William Ying Khee Hwang; Harvey F. Lodish; Jianzhu Chen
Clinical and preclinical applications of human hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) are often limited by scarcity of cells. Expanding human HSCs to increase their numbers while maintaining their stem cell properties has therefore become an important area of research. Here, we report a robust HSC coculture system wherein cord blood CD34(+) CD133(+) cells were cocultured with mesenchymal stem cells engineered to express angiopoietin-like-5 in a defined medium. After 11 days of culture, SCID repopulating cells were expanded ~60-fold by limiting dilution assay in NOD-scid Il2rg(-/-) (NSG) mice. The cultured CD34(+) CD133(+) cells had similar engraftment potential to uncultured CD34(+) CD133(+) cells in competitive repopulation assays and were capable of efficient secondary reconstitution. Further, the expanded cells supported a robust multilineage reconstitution of human blood cells in NSG recipient mice, including a more efficient T-cell reconstitution. These results demonstrate that the expanded CD34(+) CD133(+) cells maintain both short-term and long-term HSC activities. To our knowledge, this ~60-fold expansion of SCID repopulating cells is the best expansion of human HSCs reported to date. Further development of this coculture method for expanding human HSCs for clinical and preclinical applications is therefore warranted.
PLOS ONE | 2011
Adam Drake; Maroun Khoury; Ilya B. Leskov; Bettina P. Iliopoulou; Maria F. Fragoso; Harvey F. Lodish; Jianzhu Chen
Increasing demand for human hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) in clinical and research applications necessitates expansion of HSCs in vitro. Before these cells can be used they must be carefully evaluated to assess their stem cell activity. Here, we expanded cord blood CD34+ CD133+ cells in a defined medium containing angiopoietin like 5 and insulin-like growth factor binding protein 2 and evaluated the cells for stem cell activity in NOD-SCID Il2rg−/− (NSG) mice by multi-lineage engraftment, long term reconstitution, limiting dilution and serial reconstitution. The phenotype of expanded cells was characterized by flow cytometry during the course of expansion and following engraftment in mice. We show that the SCID repopulating activity resides in the CD34+ CD133+ fraction of expanded cells and that CD34+ CD133+ cell number correlates with SCID repopulating activity before and after culture. The expanded cells mediate long-term hematopoiesis and serial reconstitution in NSG mice. Furthermore, they efficiently reconstitute not only neonate but also adult NSG recipients, generating human blood cell populations similar to those reported in mice reconstituted with uncultured human HSCs. These findings suggest an expansion of long term HSCs in our culture and show that expression of CD34 and CD133 serves as a marker for HSC activity in human cord blood cell cultures. The ability to expand human HSCs in vitro should facilitate clinical use of HSCs and large-scale construction of humanized mice from the same donor for research applications.
Oncogene | 2013
Ilya B. Leskov; Christian P. Pallasch; Adam Drake; Bettina P. Iliopoulou; Amanda Souza; Ching-Hung Shen; Carmen D. Schweighofer; Lynne V. Abruzzo; Lukas P. Frenzel; Clemens M. Wendtner; Michael T. Hemann; Jianzhu Chen
Although numerous mouse models of B-cell malignancy have been developed via the enforced expression of defined oncogenic lesions, the feasibility of generating lineage-defined human B-cell malignancies using mice reconstituted with modified human hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) remains unclear. In fact, whether human cells can be transformed as readily as murine cells by simple oncogene combinations is a subject of considerable debate. Here, we describe the development of humanized mouse model of MYC/BCL2-driven ‘double-hit’ lymphoma. By engrafting human HSCs transduced with the oncogene combination into immunodeficient mice, we generate a fatal B malignancy with complete penetrance. This humanized-MYC/BCL2-model (hMB) accurately recapitulates the histopathological and clinical aspects of steroid-, chemotherapy- and rituximab-resistant human ‘double-hit’ lymphomas that involve the MYC and BCL2 loci. Notably, this model can serve as a platform for the evaluation of antibody-based therapeutics. As a proof of principle, we used this model to show that the anti-CD52 antibody alemtuzumab effectively eliminates lymphoma cells from the spleen, liver and peripheral blood, but not from the brain. The hMB humanized mouse model underscores the synergy of MYC and BCL2 in ‘double-hit’ lymphomas in human patients. Additionally, our findings highlight the utility of humanized mouse models in interrogating therapeutic approaches, particularly human-specific monoclonal antibodies.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010
Ching-Hung Shen; Oezcan Talay; Vinay S. Mahajan; Ilya B. Leskov; Herman N. Eisen; Jianzhu Chen
Memory T cells of the effector type (TEM) account for the characteristic rapidity of memory T-cell responses, whereas memory T cells of the central type (TCM) account for long-lasting, vigorously proliferating memory T-cell responses. How antigen-stimulated (primed) T cells develop into different memory T-cell subsets with diverse tissue distributions is largely unknown. Here we show that after respiratory tract infection of mice with influenza virus, viral antigen associated with dendritic cells (DCs) was abundant in lung-draining lymph nodes (DLN) and the spleen for more than a week but was scant and transient in nondraining lymph nodes (NDLN). Correspondingly, activated CD8 T cells proliferated extensively in DLN and the spleen but minimally in NDLN. Strikingly, however, although most persisting CD8 T cells in DLN and spleen exhibited the TEM phenotype, those persisting in NDLN exhibited the TCM phenotype. Reducing antigen exposure by depleting DCs at the peak of primary T-cell responses enhanced the development of TCM, whereas subjecting primed CD8 T cells from NDLN to additional antigen stimulation inhibited TCM development. These findings demonstrate that differences in persistence of antigen-bearing DCs in various tissues regulate the tissue-specific pattern of memory CD8 T-cell development. The findings have significant implications for design of vaccines and immunization strategies.
Cellular & Molecular Immunology | 2005
Vinay S. Mahajan; Ilya B. Leskov; Jianzhu Chen
Archive | 2010
Maroun Khoury; Adam Drake; Ilya B. Leskov; Jianzhu Chen
Archive | 2010
Ilya B. Leskov; Adam Drake; Maroun Khoury; Jianzhu Chen; Christian P. Pallasch; Michael T. Hemann
PMC | 2010
Adam Drake; Qingfeng Chen; Di Dong; Ilya B. Leskov; Maria F. Fragoso; Yan Li; Bettina P. Iliopoulou; William Ying Khee Hwang; Harvey F. Lodish; Jianzhu Chen