Joanne I. Adamkewicz
Exelixis
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Featured researches published by Joanne I. Adamkewicz.
Assay and Drug Development Technologies | 2013
Morten A. Karsdal; M.J. Nielsen; Jannie Marie Bülow Sand; Kim Henriksen; Federica Genovese; A.-C. Bay-Jensen; Victoria Smith; Joanne I. Adamkewicz; Claus Christiansen; Diana Julie Leeming
Increased attention is paid to the structural components of tissues. These components are mostly collagens and various proteoglycans. Emerging evidence suggests that altered components and noncoded modifications of the matrix may be both initiators and drivers of disease, exemplified by excessive tissue remodeling leading to tissue stiffness, as well as by changes in the signaling potential of both intact matrix and fragments thereof. Although tissue structure until recently was viewed as a simple architecture anchoring cells and proteins, this complex grid may contain essential information enabling the maintenance of the structure and normal functioning of tissue. The aims of this review are to (1) discuss the structural components of the matrix and the relevance of their mutations to the pathology of diseases such as fibrosis and cancer, (2) introduce the possibility that post-translational modifications (PTMs), such as protease cleavage, citrullination, cross-linking, nitrosylation, glycosylation, and isomerization, generated during pathology, may be unique, disease-specific biochemical markers, (3) list and review the range of simple enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISAs) that have been developed for assessing the extracellular matrix (ECM) and detecting abnormal ECM remodeling, and (4) discuss whether some PTMs are the cause or consequence of disease. New evidence clearly suggests that the ECM at some point in the pathogenesis becomes a driver of disease. These pathological modified ECM proteins may allow insights into complicated pathologies in which the end stage is excessive tissue remodeling, and provide unique and more pathology-specific biochemical markers.
European Respiratory Journal | 2014
Jason W. Chien; Thomas J. Richards; Kevin F. Gibson; Yingze Zhang; Kathleen O. Lindell; Lixin Shao; Susan K. Lyman; Joanne I. Adamkewicz; Victoria Smith; Naftali Kaminski; Thomas O’Riordan
We evaluated whether lysyl oxidase-like 2 (LOXL2), which promotes cross-linking of collagen in pathological stroma, was detectable in serum from idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) patients, and assessed its relationship with IPF disease progression. Patients from the ARTEMIS-IPF (n=69) and the Genomic and Proteomic Analysis of Disease Progression in IPF (GAP) (n=104) studies were analysed. Baseline serum LOXL2 (sLOXL2) levels were compared with baseline clinical and physiological surrogates of disease severity, and the association with IPF disease progression was assessed using a classification and regression tree (CART) method. sLOXL2 correlated weakly with forced vital capacity and carbon monoxide diffusion capacity (r -0.24–0.05) in both cohorts. CART-determined thresholds were similar: ARTEMIS-IPF 800 pg·mL−1 and GAP 700 pg·mL−1. In ARTEMIS-IPF, higher sLOXL2 (>800 pg·mL−1) was associated with increased risk for disease progression (hazard ratio (HR) 5.41, 95% CI 1.65–17.73). Among GAP subjects with baseline spirometric data (n=70), higher sLOXL2 levels (>700 pg·mL−1) were associated with more disease progression events (HR 1.78, 95% CI 1.01–3.11). Among all GAP subjects, higher sLOXL2 levels were associated with increased risk for mortality (HR 2.28, 95% CI 1.18–4.38). These results suggest that higher sLOXL2 levels are associated with increased risk for IPF disease progression. However, due to multiple limitations, these results require validation. Higher baseline sLOXL2 levels: no correlation with IPF severity, but association with disease progression http://ow.ly/sEbGW
PLOS ONE | 2015
Derek Marshall; Susan K. Lyman; Scott McCauley; Maria Kovalenko; Rhyannon Spangler; Chian Liu; Michael Lee; Christopher O’Sullivan; Vivian Barry-Hamilton; Haben Ghermazien; Amanda Mikels-Vigdal; Carlos Aurelio Garcia; Brett Jorgensen; Arleene C. Velayo; Ruth Wang; Joanne I. Adamkewicz; Victoria C. Smith
Expression of matrix metalloproteinase 9 (MMP9) is elevated in a variety of inflammatory and oncology indications, including ulcerative colitis and colorectal cancer. MMP9 is a downstream effector and an upstream mediator of pathways involved in growth and inflammation, and has long been viewed as a promising therapeutic target. However, previous efforts to target matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), including MMP9, have utilized broad-spectrum or semi-selective inhibitors. While some of these drugs showed signs of efficacy in patients, all MMP-targeted inhibitors have been hampered by dose-limiting toxicity or insufficient clinical benefit, likely due to their lack of specificity. Here, we show that selective inhibition of MMP9 did not induce musculoskeletal syndrome (a characteristic toxicity of pan-MMP inhibitors) in a rat model, but did reduce disease severity in a dextran sodium sulfate-induced mouse model of ulcerative colitis. We also found that MMP9 inhibition decreased tumor growth and metastases incidence in a surgical orthotopic xenograft model of colorectal carcinoma, and that inhibition of either tumor- or stroma-derived MMP9 was sufficient to reduce primary tumor growth. Collectively, these data suggest that selective MMP9 inhibition is a promising therapeutic strategy for treatment of inflammatory and oncology indications in which MMP9 is upregulated and is associated with disease pathology, such as ulcerative colitis and colorectal cancer. In addition, we report the development of a potent and highly selective allosteric MMP9 inhibitor, the humanized monoclonal antibody GS-5745, which can be used to evaluate the therapeutic potential of MMP9 inhibition in patients.
Nature Communications | 2016
Jin Yang; Konstantinos Savvatis; Jong Seok Kang; Peidong Fan; Hongyan Zhong; Karen Schwartz; Vivian E. Barry; Amanda Mikels-Vigdal; Serge Karpinski; Dmytro Kornyeyev; Joanne I. Adamkewicz; Xuhui Feng; Qiong Zhou; Ching Shang; Praveen Kumar; Dillon Phan; Mario Kasner; Begoña López; Javier Díez; Keith C. Wright; Roxanne L. Kovacs; Peng Sheng Chen; Thomas Quertermous; Victoria Smith; Lina Yao; Carsten Tschöpe; Ching Pin Chang
Interstitial fibrosis plays a key role in the development and progression of heart failure. Here, we show that an enzyme that crosslinks collagen—Lysyl oxidase-like 2 (Loxl2)—is essential for interstitial fibrosis and mechanical dysfunction of pathologically stressed hearts. In mice, cardiac stress activates fibroblasts to express and secrete Loxl2 into the interstitium, triggering fibrosis, systolic and diastolic dysfunction of stressed hearts. Antibody-mediated inhibition or genetic disruption of Loxl2 greatly reduces stress-induced cardiac fibrosis and chamber dilatation, improving systolic and diastolic functions. Loxl2 stimulates cardiac fibroblasts through PI3K/AKT to produce TGF-β2, promoting fibroblast-to-myofibroblast transformation; Loxl2 also acts downstream of TGF-β2 to stimulate myofibroblast migration. In diseased human hearts, LOXL2 is upregulated in cardiac interstitium; its levels correlate with collagen crosslinking and cardiac dysfunction. LOXL2 is also elevated in the serum of heart failure (HF) patients, correlating with other HF biomarkers, suggesting a conserved LOXL2-mediated mechanism of human HF.
PLOS ONE | 2011
Susan K. Lyman; Suzanne C. Crawley; Ruoyu Gong; Joanne I. Adamkewicz; Garth McGrath; Jason Y. Chew; Jennifer Choi; Charles R. Holst; Leanne H. Goon; Scott A. Detmer; Jana Vaclavikova; Mary E. Gerritsen; Robert A. Blake
Background Many proteins that are dysregulated or mutated in cancer cells rely on the molecular chaperone HSP90 for their proper folding and activity, which has led to considerable interest in HSP90 as a cancer drug target. The diverse array of HSP90 client proteins encompasses oncogenic drivers, cell cycle components, and a variety of regulatory factors, so inhibition of HSP90 perturbs multiple cellular processes, including mitogenic signaling and cell cycle control. Although many reports have investigated HSP90 inhibition in the context of the cell cycle, no large-scale studies have examined potential correlations between cell genotype and the cell cycle phenotypes of HSP90 inhibition. Methodology/Principal Findings To address this question, we developed a novel high-content, high-throughput cell cycle assay and profiled the effects of two distinct small molecule HSP90 inhibitors (XL888 and 17-AAG [17-allylamino-17-demethoxygeldanamycin]) in a large, genetically diverse panel of cancer cell lines. The cell cycle phenotypes of both inhibitors were strikingly similar and fell into three classes: accumulation in M-phase, G2-phase, or G1-phase. Accumulation in M-phase was the most prominent phenotype and notably, was also correlated with TP53 mutant status. We additionally observed unexpected complexity in the response of the cell cycle-associated client PLK1 to HSP90 inhibition, and we suggest that inhibitor-induced PLK1 depletion may contribute to the striking metaphase arrest phenotype seen in many of the M-arrested cell lines. Conclusions/Significance Our analysis of the cell cycle phenotypes induced by HSP90 inhibition in 25 cancer cell lines revealed that the phenotypic response was highly dependent on cellular genotype as well as on the concentration of HSP90 inhibitor and the time of treatment. M-phase arrest correlated with the presence of TP53 mutations, while G2 or G1 arrest was more commonly seen in cells bearing wt TP53. We draw upon previous literature to suggest an integrated model that accounts for these varying observations.
Archive | 2004
Helen Francis-Lang; Christopher G. Winter; Richard Ventura; Timothy S. Heuer; Joanne I. Adamkewicz
Archive | 2012
Victoria Smith; Joanne I. Adamkewicz; Susan K. Lyman; Jason W. Chien; Xiaoming Li; Lixin Shao; Jeffrey D. Bornstein
Archive | 2003
Helen Francis-Lang; Siobhan Roche; Daniel M. Joo; Monique Nicoll; Bing Hai; Haiguang Zhang; Kim Lickteig; Craig D. Amundsen; Yisheng Jin; Joanne I. Adamkewicz; Darren Mark Platt; R. Glenn R. Hammonds
Archive | 2013
Victoria Smith; Scott Alan Mccauley; Maria Vaysberg; Joanne I. Adamkewicz
Archive | 2013
Jeffrey D. Bornstein; Joanne I. Adamkewicz; Victoria Smith; Susan K. Lyman; Jason W. Chien; Xiaoming Li; Lixin Shao