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Dive into the research topics where Jan-Hermen Dannenberg is active.

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Featured researches published by Jan-Hermen Dannenberg.


Blood | 2013

Dosage-dependent tumor suppression by histone deacetylases 1 and 2 through regulation of c-Myc collaborating genes and p53 function

Marinus R. Heideman; Roel H. Wilting; Eva Yanover; Arno Velds; Johann de Jong; Ron M. Kerkhoven; Heinz Jacobs; Lodewyk F. A. Wessels; Jan-Hermen Dannenberg

Histone deacetylases (HDACs) are epigenetic erasers of lysine-acetyl marks. Inhibition of HDACs using small molecule inhibitors (HDACi) is a potential strategy in the treatment of various diseases and is approved for treating hematological malignancies. Harnessing the therapeutic potential of HDACi requires knowledge of HDAC-function in vivo. Here, we generated a thymocyte-specific gradient of HDAC-activity using compound conditional knockout mice for Hdac1 and Hdac2. Unexpectedly, gradual loss of HDAC-activity engendered a dosage-dependent accumulation of immature thymocytes and correlated with the incidence and latency of monoclonal lymphoblastic thymic lymphomas. Strikingly, complete ablation of Hdac1 and Hdac2 abrogated lymphomagenesis due to a block in early thymic development. Genomic, biochemical and functional analyses of pre-leukemic thymocytes and tumors revealed a critical role for Hdac1/Hdac2-governed HDAC-activity in regulating a p53-dependent barrier to constrain Myc-overexpressing thymocytes from progressing into lymphomas by regulating Myc-collaborating genes. One Myc-collaborating and p53-suppressing gene, Jdp2, was derepressed in an Hdac1/2-dependent manner and critical for the survival of Jdp2-overexpressing lymphoma cells. Although reduced HDAC-activity facilitates oncogenic transformation in normal cells, resulting tumor cells remain highly dependent on HDAC-activity, indicating that a critical level of Hdac1 and Hdac2 governed HDAC-activity is required for tumor maintenance.


Oncogene | 2000

p27kip1-independent cell cycle regulation by MYC

Katrien Berns; Carla P. Martins; Jan-Hermen Dannenberg; Anton Berns; Hein te Riele; René Bernards

MYC transcription factors are potent stimulators of cell proliferation. It has been suggested that the CDK-inhibitor p27kip1 is a critical G1 phase cell cycle target of c-MYC. We show here that mouse embryo fibroblasts deficient for both p27kip1 and the related p21cip1 are still responsive to stimulation by c-MYC and can be arrested in G1 by a dominant negative mutant of c-MYC. This growth arrest can be overruled by ectopic expression of E2F or adenovirus E1A, but not by a mutant of E1A defective for binding to retinoblastoma family proteins. We show that fibroblasts with a genetic disruption of all three retinoblastoma family members (pRb, p107 and p130) are unresponsive to a dominant negative c-MYC mutant. These data indicate that p27kip1 is not the only rate limiting cell cycle target of c-MYC and suggest that regulation of E2F is also essential for c-MYCs mitogenic activity.


Haematologica | 2014

Sin3a associated Hdac1 and Hdac2 are essential for hematopoietic stem cell homeostasis and contribute differentially to hematopoiesis

Marinus R. Heideman; Cesare Lancini; Natalie Proost; Eva Yanover; Heinz Jacobs; Jan-Hermen Dannenberg

Class I histone deacetylases are critical regulators of gene transcription by erasing lysine acetylation. Targeting histone deacetylases using relative non-specific small molecule inhibitors is of major interest in the treatment of cancer, neurological disorders and acquired immune deficiency syndrome. Harnessing the therapeutic potential of histone deacetylase inhibitors requires full knowledge of individual histone deacetylases in vivo. As hematologic malignancies show increased sensitivity towards histone deacetylase inhibitors we targeted deletion of class I Hdac1 and Hdac2 to hematopoietic cell lineages. Here, we show that Hdac1 and Hdac2 together control hematopoietic stem cell homeostasis, in a cell-autonomous fashion. Simultaneous loss of Hdac1 and Hdac2 resulted in loss of hematopoietic stem cells and consequently bone marrow failure. Bone-marrow-specific deletion of Sin3a, a major Hdac1/2 co-repressor, phenocopied loss of Hdac1 and Hdac2 indicating that Sin3a-associated HDAC1/2-activity is essential for hematopoietic stem cell homeostasis. Although Hdac1 and Hdac2 show compensatory and overlapping functions in hematopoiesis, mice expressing mono-allelic Hdac1 or Hdac2 revealed that Hdac1 and Hdac2 contribute differently to the development of specific hematopoietic lineages.


Cell | 2010

Drugging Drug Resistance

Jan-Hermen Dannenberg; Anton Berns

Resistance to anticancer drugs is widely observed in vitro and in cancer patients, but its prevalence is too high to be solely explained by the acquisition of mutations. Sharma et al. (2010) now report that dynamic chromatin modifications may be an independent route to drug resistance in cancer cells that can be reversed by epigenetic drugs.


The FASEB Journal | 2015

HDAC1 and HDAC2 collectively regulate intestinal stem cell homeostasis

Cheryl Zimberlin; Cesare Lancini; Rachel Sno; Sanne Rosekrans; Chelsea M. McLean; Hanneke Vlaming; Gijs R. van den Brink; Michael Bots; Jan Paul Medema; Jan-Hermen Dannenberg

Histone deacetylases (HDACs) are post‐translational modifiers that deacetylate proteins. Despite their crucial role in numerous biological processes, the use of broad‐range HDAC inhibitors (HDACi), has shown clinical efficacy. However, undesired side effects highlight the necessity to better understand the biology of different HDACs and target the relevant HDACs. Using a novel mouse model, in which HDAC1 and HDAC2 can be simultaneously deleted in the intestine of adult mice, we show that the simultaneous deletion of HDAC1 and HDAC2 leads to a rapid loss of intestinal homeostasis. Importantly, this deletion cannot be sustained, and 8 days after initial ablation, stem cells that have escaped HDAC1 or HDAC2 deletion swiftly repopulate the intestinal lining. In vitro ablation of HDAC1 and HDAC2 using intestinal organoid cultures resulted in a down‐regulation of multiple intestinal stem cell markers and functional loss of clonogenic capacity. Importantly, treatment of wild‐type organoids with class I‐specific HDACi MS‐275 also induced a similar loss of stemness, providing a possible rationale for the gastrointestinal side effects often observed in HDACi‐treated patients. In conclusion, these data show that HDAC1 and HDAC2 have a redundant function and are essential to maintain intestinal homeostasis.—Zimberlin, C. D., Lancini, C., Sno, R., Rosekrans, S. L., McLean, C. M., Vlaming, H., van den Brink, G. R., Bots, M., Medema, J. P., Dannenberg, J.‐H. HDAC1 and HDAC2 collectively regulate intestinal stem cell homeostasis. FASEB J. 29, 2070‐2080 (2015). www.fasebj.org


Cancer Research | 2014

RB family tumor suppressor activity may not relate to active silencing of E2F target genes

Tinke L. Vormer; Kamila Wojciechowicz; Marleen Dekker; Sandra de Vries; Anja van der Wal; Elly Delzenne-Goette; Sjalin H. Naik; Ji-Ying Song; Jan-Hermen Dannenberg; Jacob B. Hansen; Hein te Riele

The retinoblastoma protein pRB and its two homologs p130 and p107 form the family of pocket proteins and play a major role in cell-cycle regulation and suppression of human and mouse tumorigenesis. Pocket proteins regulate the activity of E2F transcription factors during G1-S transition. Two mechanisms have been described: (i) pocket protein binding blocks the transactivation domain of activator E2Fs, inhibiting E2F-dependent transcription and (ii) E2F-bound pocket proteins can recruit chromatin remodeling proteins containing an LxCxE motif (x encoding any amino acid), resulting in active repression of E2F target genes. To investigate the importance of pRBs LxCxE-interacting motif in cell-cycle control and tumor suppression, we generated mouse embryonic fibroblasts and mice expressing a mutant pRB protein carrying an asparagine for phenylalanine substitution at position 750, abrogating LxCxE binding. Because p130 may compensate for loss of pRB, we studied pRB(N750F) activity in the presence and absence of p130. The pRB-LxCxE interaction was not required for cell-cycle arrest upon mitogen deprivation and cell-cell contact, but did contribute to RAS(V12)- and radiation-induced cell-cycle arrest. Remarkably, the pRB-LxCxE interaction was not required for suppression of in vitro and in vivo transformation, even in the absence of p130. These results indicate that pRBs tumor suppressor activity is not effectuated by active silencing of E2F target genes, but rather by regulation of activator E2Fs or another unidentified mechanism. Furthermore, the in vitro response of pocket protein-perturbed cells to mitogen deprivation and cell-cell contact seems a better predictor of tumor development than the response to ectopic RAS(V12) expression. Cancer Res; 74(18); 5266-76. ©2014 AACR.


Genes & Development | 2000

Ablation of the Retinoblastoma gene family deregulates G1 control causing immortalization and increased cell turnover under growth-restricting conditions

Jan-Hermen Dannenberg; Agnes van Rossum; Leontine Schuijff; Hein te Riele


Genes & Development | 1998

p107 is a suppressor of retinoblastoma development in pRb-deficient mice

Els Robanus-Maandag; Marleen Dekker; Martin van der Valk; Maria-Luisa Carrozza; Jean-Claude Jeanny; Jan-Hermen Dannenberg; Anton Berns; Hein te Riele


Genes & Development | 2002

E2F mediates cell cycle-dependent transcriptional repression in vivo by recruitment of an HDAC1/mSin3B corepressor complex

Joseph B. Rayman; Yasuhiko Takahashi; Vahan B. Indjeian; Jan-Hermen Dannenberg; Steven Catchpole; Roger J. Watson; Hein te Riele; Brian David Dynlacht


Drug Resistance Updates | 2012

Epigenetic mechanisms in tumorigenesis, tumor cell heterogeneity and drug resistance

Roel H. Wilting; Jan-Hermen Dannenberg

Collaboration


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Hein te Riele

Netherlands Cancer Institute

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Anton Berns

Netherlands Cancer Institute

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Eva Yanover

Netherlands Cancer Institute

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Heinz Jacobs

Netherlands Cancer Institute

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Marinus R. Heideman

Netherlands Cancer Institute

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Marleen Dekker

Netherlands Cancer Institute

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Roel H. Wilting

Netherlands Cancer Institute

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Arno Velds

Netherlands Cancer Institute

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Cesare Lancini

Netherlands Cancer Institute

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