John A. Hassell
McMaster University
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Featured researches published by John A. Hassell.
Cell | 2012
Eleftherios Sachlos; Ruth M. Risueño; Sarah Laronde; Zoya Shapovalova; Jong-Hee Lee; Jennifer Russell; Monika Malig; Jamie McNicol; Aline Fiebig-Comyn; Monica Graham; Marilyne Levadoux-Martin; Jung Bok Lee; Andrew O. Giacomelli; John A. Hassell; Daniela Fischer-Russell; Michael R. Trus; Ronan Foley; Brian Leber; Anargyros Xenocostas; Eric D. Brown; Tony J. Collins; Mickie Bhatia
Selective targeting of cancer stem cells (CSCs) offers promise for a new generation of therapeutics. However, assays for both human CSCs and normal stem cells that are amenable to robust biological screens are limited. Using a discovery platform that reveals differences between neoplastic and normal human pluripotent stem cells (hPSC), we identify small molecules from libraries of known compounds that induce differentiation to overcome neoplastic self-renewal. Surprisingly, thioridazine, an antipsychotic drug, selectively targets the neoplastic cells, and impairs human somatic CSCs capable of in vivo leukemic disease initiation while having no effect on normal blood SCs. The drug antagonizes dopamine receptors that are expressed on CSCs and on breast cancer cells as well. These results suggest that dopamine receptors may serve as a biomarker for diverse malignancies, demonstrate the utility of using neoplastic hPSCs for identifying CSC-targeting drugs, and provide support for the use of differentiation as a therapeutic strategy.
Nature | 2005
Chen Chen; Wenjun Ouyang; Vadim Grigura; Qing Zhou; Kay Carnes; Hyunjung Lim; Guang Quan Zhao; Silvia Arber; Natasza A. Kurpios; Theresa L. Murphy; Alec M. Cheng; John A. Hassell; Varadaraj Chandrashekar; Marie Claude Hofmann; Rex A. Hess; Kenneth M. Murphy
Division of spermatogonial stem cells produces daughter cells that either maintain their stem cell identity or undergo differentiation to form mature sperm. The Sertoli cell, the only somatic cell within seminiferous tubules, provides the stem cell niche through physical support and expression of surface proteins and soluble factors. Here we show that the Ets related molecule (ERM) is expressed exclusively within Sertoli cells in the testis and is required for spermatogonial stem cell self-renewal. Mice with targeted disruption of ERM have a loss of maintenance of spermatogonial stem cell self-renewal without a block in normal spermatogenic differentiation and thus have progressive germ-cell depletion and a Sertoli-cell-only syndrome. Microarray analysis of primary Sertoli cells from ERM-deficient mice showed alterations in secreted factors known to regulate the haematopoietic stem cell niche. These results identify a new function for the Ets family transcription factors in spermatogenesis and provide an example of transcriptional control of a vertebrate stem cell niche.
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1998
Marc Webster; John N. Hutchinson; Michael J. Rauh; Senthil K. Muthuswamy; Martina Anton; Christopher G. Tortorice; Robert D. Cardiff; Frank L. Graham; John A. Hassell; William J. Muller
ABSTRACT Transgenic mice expressing the polyomavirus (PyV) middle T antigen (MT) develop multifocal mammary tumors which frequently metastasize to the lung. The potent transforming activity of PyV MT is correlated with its capacity to activate and associate with a number of signaling molecules, including the Src family tyrosine kinases, the 85-kDa Src homology 2 subunit of the phosphatidylinositol 3′ (PI-3′) kinase, and the Shc adapter protein. To uncover the role of these signaling proteins in MT-mediated mammary tumorigenesis, we have generated transgenic mice that express mutant PyV MT antigens decoupled from either the Shc or the PI-3′ kinase signaling pathway. In contrast to the rapid induction of metastatic mammary tumors observed in the strains expressing wild-type PyV MT, mammary epithelial cell-specific expression of either mutant PyV MT resulted in the induction of extensive mammary epithelial hyperplasias. The mammary epithelial hyperplasias expressing the mutant PyV MT defective in recruiting the PI-3′ kinase were highly apoptotic, suggesting that recruitment of PI-3′ kinase by MT affects cell survival. Whereas the initial phenotypes observed in both strains were global mammary epithelial hyperplasias, focal mammary tumors eventually arose in all female transgenic mice. Genetic and biochemical analyses of tumorigenesis in the transgenic strains expressing the PyV MT mutant lacking the Shc binding site revealed that a proportion of the metastatic tumors arising in these mice displayed evidence of reversion of the mutant Shc binding site. In contrast, no evidence of reversion of the PI-3′ kinase binding site was noted in tumors derived from the strains expressing the PI-3′ kinase binding site MT mutant. Tumor progression in both mutant strains was further correlated with upregulation of the epidermal growth factor receptor family members which are known to couple to the PI-3′ kinase and Shc signaling pathways. Taken together, these observations suggest that PyV MT-mediated tumorigenesis requires activation of both Shc and PI-3′ kinase, which appear to be required for stimulation of cell proliferation and survival signaling pathways, respectively.
Cell | 1993
Zhigang He; Bradford T. Brinton; Jack Greenblatt; John A. Hassell; C. James Ingles
Many transcription factors can activate the initiation of DNA replication. We have used affinity chromatography to show that the acidic activation domains of the transcription factors VP16, GAL4, and p53 each bind selectively to human and yeast replication factor A (RPA). The binding is direct and to the largest subunit of the trimeric RPA complex, RPA-1. Mutations in VP16 that reduce the ability of GAL4-VP16 to activate polyomavirus DNA replication also compromise the binding of VP16 to RPA. We suggest that transcription factors may interact with RPA either to stabilize single-stranded DNA at a replication origin or to recruit DNA polymerase alpha to the replication initiation complex.
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2001
Howard C. Crawford; Barbara Fingleton; Mark D. Gustavson; Natasza A. Kurpios; Rebecca A. Wagenaar; John A. Hassell; Lynn M. Matrisian
ABSTRACT The matrix metalloproteinase matrilysin (MMP-7) is expressed in the tumor cells of a majority of mouse intestinal and human colonic adenomas. We showed previously that matrilysin is a target gene of β-catenin–Tcf, the transcription factor complex whose activity is thought to play a crucial role in the initiation of intestinal tumorigenesis. Here we report that overexpression of a stable mutant form of β-catenin alone was not sufficient to effect expression of luciferase from a matrilysin promoter-luciferase reporter plasmid. However, cotransfection of the reporter with an expression vector encoding the PEA3 Ets transcription factor, or its close relatives ER81 and ERM, increased luciferase expression and rendered the promoter responsive to β-catenin–LEF-1 as well as to the AP-1 protein c-Jun. Other Ets proteins could not substitute for the PEA3 subfamily. Luciferase activity was induced up to 250-fold when PEA3, c-Jun, β-catenin, and LEF-1 were coexpressed. This combination of transcription factors was also sufficient to induce expression of the endogenous matrilysin gene. Furthermore, all matrilysin-expressing benign intestinal tumors of the Min mouse expressed a member of the PEA3 subfamily, as did all human colon tumor cell lines examined. These data suggest that the expression of members of the PEA3 subfamily, in conjunction with the accumulation of β-catenin in these tumors, leads to coordinate upregulation of matrilysin gene transcription, contributing to gastrointestinal tumorigenesis.
Oncogene | 1997
Christopher C. Benz; Ronan C. O'hagan; Birgit Richter; Gary K. Scott; Chuan-Hsiung Chang; Xiaohui Xiong; Karen Chew; Britt-Marie Ljung; Susan M. Edgerton; Ann D. Thor; John A. Hassell
HER2/Neu is overexpressed in 25 – 30% of all human breast cancers as a result of both gene amplification and enhanced transcription. Transcriptional upregulation of HER2/neu leads to a 6 – 8-fold increased abundance of its mRNA per gene copy and likely results from the elevated activity of transcription factors acting on the HER2/neu promoter. Here we report that transcripts of PEA3, an ETS transcription factor implicated in oncogenesis, were increased in 93% of HER2/Neu-overexpressing human breast tumor samples. Analyses to uncover the molecular basis for elevated PEA3 transcripts in HER2/Neu-positive breast tumors revealed that the HER2/Neu receptor tyrosine kinase initiated an intracellular signaling cascade resulting in increased PEA3 transcriptional activity; transcriptionally-activated PEA3 stimulated HER2/neu and PEA3 gene transcription by binding to sites in the promoters of these genes. PEA3 also activates transcription of genes encoding matrix-degrading proteinases, enzymes required for tumor cell migration and invasion. These findings implicate PEA3 in the initiation and progression of HER2/Neu positive breast cancer, and suggest that PEA3 and signaling proteins affecting its regulation are appropriate therapeutic targets.
Nature Genetics | 2009
Benson Lu; Cristina Cebrian; Xuan Chi; Satu Kuure; Richard Kuo; Carlton M. Bates; Silvia Arber; John A. Hassell; Lesley T. MacNeil; Masato Hoshi; Sanjay Jain; Naoya Asai; Masahide Takahashi; Kai M. Schmidt-Ott; Jonathan Barasch; Vivette D. D'Agati; Frank Costantini
Glial cell line–derived neurotrophic factor signaling through the Ret receptor tyrosine kinase is crucial for ureteric bud branching morphogenesis during kidney development, yet few of the downstream genes are known. Here we show that the ETS transcription factors Etv4 and Etv5 are positively regulated by Ret signaling in the ureteric bud tips. Mice lacking both Etv4 alleles and one Etv5 allele show either renal agenesis or severe hypodysplasia, whereas kidney development fails completely in double homozygotes. We identified several genes whose expression in the ureteric bud depends on Etv4 and Etv5, including Cxcr4, Myb, Met and Mmp14. Thus, Etv4 and Etv5 are key components of a gene network downstream of Ret that promotes and controls renal branching morphogenesis.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001
Louise R. Howe; Howard C. Crawford; Kotha Subbaramaiah; John A. Hassell; Andrew J. Dannenberg; Anthony M. C. Brown
The inducible prostaglandin synthase cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) is aberrantly expressed in intestinal tumors resulting from APC mutation, and is also transcriptionally up-regulated in mouse mammary epithelial cells in response toWnt1 expression. β-Catenin stabilization is a consequence of both APC mutation and Wnt signaling. We have previously observed coordinate regulation of the matrilysin promoter by β-catenin and Ets family transcription factors of the PEA3 subfamily. Here we show that while β-catenin only weakly activates theCOX-2 promoter, PEA3 family transcription factors are potent activators of COX-2 transcription. Consistent with this, PEA3 is up-regulated in Wnt1-expressing mouse mammary epithelial cells, and PEA3 factors are highly expressed in tumors from Wnt1 transgenic mice, in whichCox-2 is also up-regulated. Promoter mapping experiments suggest that the NF-IL6 site in the COX-2 promoter is important for mediating PEA3 responsiveness. The NF-IL6 site is also important for COX-2 transcription in some colorectal cancer lines (Shao, J., Sheng, H., Inoue, H., Morrow, J. D., and DuBois, R. N. (2000) J. Biol. Chem. 275, 33951–33956), and PEA3 factors are highly expressed in colorectal cancer cell lines. Therefore, we speculate that PEA3 factors may contribute to the up-regulation of COX-2 expression resulting from bothAPC mutation and Wnt1 expression.
Current Biology | 2001
Trevor G. Shepherd; Lisa Kockeritz; Michelle R. Szrajber; William J. Muller; John A. Hassell
BACKGROUND The PEA3 Ets transcription factor is overexpressed in the vast majority of human breast tumors and in nearly all of those of the HER2/Neu-positive subclass. PEA3 is also overexpressed in various transgenic mouse models of this disease. Whether PEA3 plays an essential role in HER2/Neu-mediated oncogenesis has heretofore not been addressed. RESULTS Here, we report that each of the three highly related ets genes of the pea3 subfamily (pea3, er81, and erm) were coordinately overexpressed in mammary tumors of MMTV-neu transgenic mice. Other ets genes normally expressed in the mammary gland were not upregulated in these tumors. Expression of a dominant-negative pea3 transgene under the control of the MMTV promoter in mammary epithelial cells of MMTV-neu transgenic mice dramatically delayed the onset of mammary tumors and reduced the number and size of such tumors in individual mice. Those tumors that arose in bitransgenic mice expressed the MMTV-neu transgene, but not the MMTV-dominant-negative pea3 transgene. CONCLUSIONS These findings imply that one or more of the PEA3 subfamily Ets proteins or other Ets proteins with related DNA binding specificity play an essential role in Neu-mediated mammary oncogenesis. Hence, agents that inhibit the expression or activity of the PEA3 subfamily proteins may prove efficacious in the treatment of breast cancer.
Developmental Cell | 2009
Zhen Zhang; Jamie M. Verheyden; John A. Hassell; Xin Sun
Anterior-posterior (A-P) patterning of the vertebrate limb is controlled by sonic hedgehog (SHH) signaling, and the precise restriction of Shh expression to the posterior limb bud is essential for its polarizing effect. Fibroblast growth factor (FGF) signaling, a key control of proximal-distal (P-D) limb outgrowth, is known to promote Shh expression in the posterior limb bud. Here, we show that conditional knockout of the FGF-activated transcription factor genes Etv4 and Etv5 in mouse led to ectopic Shh expression in the anterior limb bud and a preaxial polydactyly (PPD) skeletal phenotype. These unexpected results suggest that ETV4 and ETV5 act downstream of FGF signaling to inhibit Shh expression in the anterior limb bud. This finding elucidates a novel aspect of the mechanism coordinating limb development along the A-P and P-D axes.