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Dive into the research topics where Jason T. Huse is active.

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Featured researches published by Jason T. Huse.


Nature | 2012

IDH1 mutation is sufficient to establish the glioma hypermethylator phenotype

Sevin Turcan; Daniel Rohle; Anuj Goenka; Logan A. Walsh; Fang Fang; Emrullah Yilmaz; Carl Campos; Armida W. M. Fabius; Chao Lu; Patrick S. Ward; Craig B. Thompson; Andrew Kaufman; Olga A. Guryanova; Ross L. Levine; Adriana Heguy; Agnes Viale; Luc G. T. Morris; Jason T. Huse; Ingo K. Mellinghoff; Timothy A. Chan

Both genome-wide genetic and epigenetic alterations are fundamentally important for the development of cancers, but the interdependence of these aberrations is poorly understood. Glioblastomas and other cancers with the CpG island methylator phenotype (CIMP) constitute a subset of tumours with extensive epigenomic aberrations and a distinct biology. Glioma CIMP (G-CIMP) is a powerful determinant of tumour pathogenicity, but the molecular basis of G-CIMP remains unresolved. Here we show that mutation of a single gene, isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 (IDH1), establishes G-CIMP by remodelling the methylome. This remodelling results in reorganization of the methylome and transcriptome. Examination of the epigenome of a large set of intermediate-grade gliomas demonstrates a distinct G-CIMP phenotype that is highly dependent on the presence of IDH mutation. Introduction of mutant IDH1 into primary human astrocytes alters specific histone marks, induces extensive DNA hypermethylation, and reshapes the methylome in a fashion that mirrors the changes observed in G-CIMP-positive lower-grade gliomas. Furthermore, the epigenomic alterations resulting from mutant IDH1 activate key gene expression programs, characterize G-CIMP-positive proneural glioblastomas but not other glioblastomas, and are predictive of improved survival. Our findings demonstrate that IDH mutation is the molecular basis of CIMP in gliomas, provide a framework for understanding oncogenesis in these gliomas, and highlight the interplay between genomic and epigenomic changes in human cancers.


Nature Medicine | 2013

CSF-1R inhibition alters macrophage polarization and blocks glioma progression

Stephanie M. Pyonteck; Leila Akkari; Alberto J. Schuhmacher; Robert L. Bowman; Lisa Sevenich; Daniela F. Quail; Oakley C. Olson; Marsha L. Quick; Jason T. Huse; Virginia Teijeiro; Manu Setty; Christina S. Leslie; Yoko Oei; Alicia Pedraza; Jianan Zhang; Cameron Brennan; James Sutton; Eric C. Holland; Dylan Daniel; Johanna A. Joyce

Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) comprises several molecular subtypes, including proneural GBM. Most therapeutic approaches targeting glioma cells have failed. An alternative strategy is to target cells in the glioma microenvironment, such as tumor-associated macrophages and microglia (TAMs). Macrophages depend on colony stimulating factor-1 (CSF-1) for differentiation and survival. We used an inhibitor of the CSF-1 receptor (CSF-1R) to target TAMs in a mouse proneural GBM model, which significantly increased survival and regressed established tumors. CSF-1R blockade additionally slowed intracranial growth of patient-derived glioma xenografts. Surprisingly, TAMs were not depleted in treated mice. Instead, glioma-secreted factors, including granulocyte-macrophage CSF (GM-CSF) and interferon-γ (IFN-γ), facilitated TAM survival in the context of CSF-1R inhibition. Expression of alternatively activated M2 markers decreased in surviving TAMs, which is consistent with impaired tumor-promoting functions. These gene signatures were associated with enhanced survival in patients with proneural GBM. Our results identify TAMs as a promising therapeutic target for proneural gliomas and establish the translational potential of CSF-1R inhibition for GBM.


Cell Stem Cell | 2009

PTEN/PI3K/Akt pathway regulates the side population phenotype and ABCG2 activity in glioma tumor stem-like cells

Anne Marie Bleau; Dolores Hambardzumyan; Tatsuya Ozawa; Elena I. Fomchenko; Jason T. Huse; Cameron Brennan; Eric C. Holland

In normal brain, the side population (SP) phenotype is generated by ABC transporter activity and identifies stem cell and endothelial cell subpopulations by dye exclusion. By drug efflux, the ABCG2 transporter provides chemoresistance in stem cells and contributes to the blood brain barrier (BBB) when active in endothelial cells. We investigated the SP phenotype of mouse and human gliomas. In glioma endothelial cells, ABC transporter function is impaired, corresponding to disruption of the BBB in these tumors. By contrast, the SP phenotype is increased in nonendothelial cells that form neurospheres and are highly tumorigenic. In this cell population, Akt, but not its downstream target mTOR, regulates ABCG2 activity, and loss of PTEN increases the SP. This Akt-induced ABCG2 activation results from its transport to the plasma membrane. Temozolomide, the standard treatment of gliomas, although not an ABCG2 substrate, increases the SP in glioma cells, especially in cells missing PTEN.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2015

Glioma Groups Based on 1p/19q, IDH, and TERT Promoter Mutations in Tumors

Jeanette E. Eckel-Passow; Daniel H. Lachance; Annette M. Molinaro; Kyle M. Walsh; Paul A. Decker; Hugues Sicotte; Melike Pekmezci; Terri Rice; Matt L. Kosel; Ivan Smirnov; Gobinda Sarkar; Alissa Caron; Thomas M. Kollmeyer; Corinne Praska; Anisha R. Chada; Chandralekha Halder; Helen M. Hansen; Lucie McCoy; Paige M. Bracci; Roxanne Marshall; Shichun Zheng; Gerald F. Reis; Alexander R. Pico; Brian Patrick O’Neill; Jan C. Buckner; Caterina Giannini; Jason T. Huse; Arie Perry; Tarik Tihan; Mitchell S. Berger

BACKGROUND The prediction of clinical behavior, response to therapy, and outcome of infiltrative glioma is challenging. On the basis of previous studies of tumor biology, we defined five glioma molecular groups with the use of three alterations: mutations in the TERT promoter, mutations in IDH, and codeletion of chromosome arms 1p and 19q (1p/19q codeletion). We tested the hypothesis that within groups based on these features, tumors would have similar clinical variables, acquired somatic alterations, and germline variants. METHODS We scored tumors as negative or positive for each of these markers in 1087 gliomas and compared acquired alterations and patient characteristics among the five primary molecular groups. Using 11,590 controls, we assessed associations between these groups and known glioma germline variants. RESULTS Among 615 grade II or III gliomas, 29% had all three alterations (i.e., were triple-positive), 5% had TERT and IDH mutations, 45% had only IDH mutations, 7% were triple-negative, and 10% had only TERT mutations; 5% had other combinations. Among 472 grade IV gliomas, less than 1% were triple-positive, 2% had TERT and IDH mutations, 7% had only IDH mutations, 17% were triple-negative, and 74% had only TERT mutations. The mean age at diagnosis was lowest (37 years) among patients who had gliomas with only IDH mutations and was highest (59 years) among patients who had gliomas with only TERT mutations. The molecular groups were independently associated with overall survival among patients with grade II or III gliomas but not among patients with grade IV gliomas. The molecular groups were associated with specific germline variants. CONCLUSIONS Gliomas were classified into five principal groups on the basis of three tumor markers. The groups had different ages at onset, overall survival, and associations with germline variants, which implies that they are characterized by distinct mechanisms of pathogenesis. (Funded by the National Institutes of Health and others.).


Nature Reviews Cancer | 2010

Targeting brain cancer: advances in the molecular pathology of malignant glioma and medulloblastoma

Jason T. Huse; Eric C. Holland

Malignant brain tumours continue to be the cause of a disproportionate level of morbidity and mortality across a wide range of individuals. The most common variants in the adult and paediatric populations — malignant glioma and medulloblastoma, respectively — have been the subject of increasingly intensive research over the past two decades that has led to considerable advances in the understanding of their basic biology and pathogenesis. This Review summarizes these developments in the context of the evolving notion of molecular pathology and discusses the implications that this work has on the design of new treatment regimens.


Genes & Development | 2009

The PTEN-regulating microRNA miR-26a is amplified in high-grade glioma and facilitates gliomagenesis in vivo

Jason T. Huse; Cameron Brennan; Dolores Hambardzumyan; Boyoung Wee; John Pena; Sara H. Rouhanifard; Cherin Sohn-Lee; Carlos le Sage; Reuven Agami; Thomas Tuschl; Eric C. Holland

Activated oncogenic signaling is central to the development of nearly all forms of cancer, including the most common class of primary brain tumor, glioma. Research over the last two decades has revealed the particular importance of the Akt pathway, and its molecular antagonist PTEN (phosphatase and tensin homolog), in the process of gliomagenesis. Recent studies have also demonstrated that microRNAs (miRNAs) may be responsible for the modulation of cancer-implicated genes in tumors. Here we report the identification miR-26a as a direct regulator of PTEN expression. We also show that miR-26a is frequently amplified at the DNA level in human glioma, most often in association with monoallelic PTEN loss. Finally, we demonstrate that miR-26a-mediated PTEN repression in a murine glioma model both enhances de novo tumor formation and precludes loss of heterozygosity and the PTEN locus. Our results document a new epigenetic mechanism for PTEN regulation in glioma and further highlight dysregulation of Akt signaling as crucial to the development of these tumors.


Cell | 2016

Molecular Profiling Reveals Biologically Discrete Subsets and Pathways of Progression in Diffuse Glioma

Michele Ceccarelli; Floris P. Barthel; Tathiane Maistro Malta; Thais S. Sabedot; Sofie R. Salama; Bradley A. Murray; Olena Morozova; Yulia Newton; Amie Radenbaugh; Stefano Maria Pagnotta; Samreen Anjum; Jiguang Wang; Ganiraju C. Manyam; Pietro Zoppoli; Shiyun Ling; Arjun A. Rao; Mia Grifford; Andrew D. Cherniack; Hailei Zhang; Laila M. Poisson; Carlos Gilberto Carlotti; Daniela Tirapelli; Arvind Rao; Tom Mikkelsen; Ching C. Lau; W. K. Alfred Yung; Raul Rabadan; Jason T. Huse; Daniel J. Brat; Norman L. Lehman

Therapy development for adult diffuse glioma is hindered by incomplete knowledge of somatic glioma driving alterations and suboptimal disease classification. We defined the complete set of genes associated with 1,122 diffuse grade II-III-IV gliomas from The Cancer Genome Atlas and used molecular profiles to improve disease classification, identify molecular correlations, and provide insights into the progression from low- to high-grade disease. Whole-genome sequencing data analysis determined that ATRX but not TERT promoter mutations are associated with increased telomere length. Recent advances in glioma classification based on IDH mutation and 1p/19q co-deletion status were recapitulated through analysis of DNA methylation profiles, which identified clinically relevant molecular subsets. A subtype of IDH mutant glioma was associated with DNA demethylation and poor outcome; a group of IDH-wild-type diffuse glioma showed molecular similarity to pilocytic astrocytoma and relatively favorable survival. Understanding of cohesive disease groups may aid improved clinical outcomes.


Cell | 2014

Serpins promote cancer cell survival and vascular co-option in brain metastasis.

Manuel Valiente; Anna C. Obenauf; Xin Jin; Qing Chen; Xiang H.-F. Zhang; Derek Lee; Jamie E. Chaft; Mark G. Kris; Jason T. Huse; Edi Brogi; Joan Massagué

Brain metastasis is an ominous complication of cancer, yet most cancer cells that infiltrate the brain die of unknown causes. Here, we identify plasmin from the reactive brain stroma as a defense against metastatic invasion, and plasminogen activator (PA) inhibitory serpins in cancer cells as a shield against this defense. Plasmin suppresses brain metastasis in two ways: by converting membrane-bound astrocytic FasL into a paracrine death signal for cancer cells, and by inactivating the axon pathfinding molecule L1CAM, which metastatic cells express for spreading along brain capillaries and for metastatic outgrowth. Brain metastatic cells from lung cancer and breast cancer express high levels of anti-PA serpins, including neuroserpin and serpin B2, to prevent plasmin generation and its metastasis-suppressive effects. By protecting cancer cells from death signals and fostering vascular co-option, anti-PA serpins provide a unifying mechanism for the initiation of brain metastasis in lung and breast cancers.


Nature Genetics | 2013

The mutational landscape of adenoid cystic carcinoma

Allen S. Ho; Kasthuri Kannan; David M Roy; Luc G. T. Morris; Ian Ganly; Nora Katabi; Deepa Ramaswami; Logan A. Walsh; Stephanie Eng; Jason T. Huse; Jianan Zhang; Igor Dolgalev; Kety Huberman; Adriana Heguy; Agnes Viale; Marija Drobnjak; Margaret Leversha; Christine E Rice; Bhuvanesh Singh; N. Gopalakrishna Iyer; C. René Leemans; Elisabeth Bloemena; Robert L. Ferris; Raja R. Seethala; Benjamin E. Gross; Yupu Liang; Rileen Sinha; Luke Peng; Benjamin J. Raphael; Sevin Turcan

Adenoid cystic carcinomas (ACCs) are among the most enigmatic of human malignancies. These aggressive salivary gland cancers frequently recur and metastasize despite definitive treatment, with no known effective chemotherapy regimen. Here we determined the ACC mutational landscape and report the exome or whole-genome sequences of 60 ACC tumor-normal pairs. These analyses identified a low exonic somatic mutation rate (0.31 non-silent events per megabase) and wide mutational diversity. Notably, we found mutations in genes encoding chromatin-state regulators, such as SMARCA2, CREBBP and KDM6A, suggesting that there is aberrant epigenetic regulation in ACC oncogenesis. Mutations in genes central to the DNA damage response and protein kinase A signaling also implicate these processes. We observed MYB-NFIB translocations and somatic mutations in MYB-associated genes, solidifying the role of these aberrations as critical events in ACC. Lastly, we identified recurrent mutations in the FGF-IGF-PI3K pathway (30% of tumors) that might represent new avenues for therapy. Collectively, our observations establish a molecular foundation for understanding and exploring new treatments for ACC.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2014

Benefit From Procarbazine, Lomustine, and Vincristine in Oligodendroglial Tumors Is Associated With Mutation of IDH

J. Gregory Cairncross; Meihua Wang; Robert B. Jenkins; Edward G. Shaw; Caterina Giannini; David Brachman; Jan C. Buckner; Karen Fink; Luis Souhami; Normand Laperriere; Jason T. Huse; Minesh P. Mehta; Walter J. Curran

PURPOSE Patients with 1p/19q codeleted anaplastic oligodendroglial tumors who participated in RTOG (Radiation Therapy Oncology Group) 9402 lived much longer after chemoradiotherapy (CRT) than radiation therapy (RT) alone. However, some patients with noncodeleted tumors also benefited from CRT; survival curves separated after the median had been reached, and significantly more patients lived ≥ 10 years after CRT than RT. Thus, 1p/19q status may not identify all responders to CRT. PATIENTS AND METHODS Using trial data, we inquired whether an IDH mutation or germ-line polymorphism associated with IDH-mutant gliomas identified the patients in RTOG 9402 who benefited from CRT. RESULTS IDH status was evaluable in 210 of 291 patients; 156 (74%) had mutations. rs55705857 was evaluable in 245 patients; 76 (31%) carried the G risk allele. Both were associated with longer progression-free survival after CRT, and mutant IDH was associated with longer overall survival (9.4 v 5.7 years; hazard ratio [HR], 0.59; 95% CI, 0.40 to 0.86; P = .006). For those with wild-type tumors, CRT did not prolong median survival (1.3 v 1.8 years; HR, 1.14; 95% CI, 0.63 to 2.04; P = .67) or 10-year survival rate (CRT, 6% v RT, 4%). Patients with codeleted mutated tumors (14.7 v 6.8 years; HR, 0.49; 95% CI, 0.28 to 0.85; P = .01) and noncodeleted mutated tumors (5.5 v 3.3 years; HR, 0.56; 95% CI, 0.32 to 0.99; P < .05) lived longer after CRT than RT. CONCLUSION IDH mutational status identified patients with oligodendroglial tumors who did (and did not) benefit from alkylating-agent chemotherapy with RT. Although patients with codeleted tumors lived longest, patients with noncodeleted IDH-mutated tumors also lived longer after CRT.

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Cameron Brennan

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Timothy A. Chan

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Eric C. Holland

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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Antonio Omuro

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Marc K. Rosenblum

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Amy B. Heimberger

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Carla Danussi

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Ingo K. Mellinghoff

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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