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Dive into the research topics where Jonathan R. Hart is active.

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Featured researches published by Jonathan R. Hart.


Cancer Cell | 2014

MicroRNA-135b Promotes Cancer Progression by Acting as a Downstream Effector of Oncogenic Pathways in Colon Cancer

Nicola Valeri; Chiara Braconi; Pierluigi Gasparini; Claudio Murgia; Andrea Lampis; Viola Paulus-Hock; Jonathan R. Hart; Lynn Ueno; Sergei I. Grivennikov; Francesca Lovat; Alessio Paone; Luciano Cascione; Khlea M. Sumani; Angelo Veronese; Muller Fabbri; Stefania Carasi; Hansjuerg Alder; Giovanni Lanza; Roberta Gafà; Mary P. Moyer; Rachel A. Ridgway; Julia B. Cordero; Gerard J. Nuovo; Wendy L. Frankel; Massimo Rugge; Matteo Fassan; Joanna Groden; Peter K. Vogt; Michael Karin; Owen J. Sansom

Summary MicroRNA deregulation is frequent in human colorectal cancers (CRCs), but little is known as to whether it represents a bystander event or actually drives tumor progression in vivo. We show that miR-135b overexpression is triggered in mice and humans by APC loss, PTEN/PI3K pathway deregulation, and SRC overexpression and promotes tumor transformation and progression. We show that miR-135b upregulation is common in sporadic and inflammatory bowel disease-associated human CRCs and correlates with tumor stage and poor clinical outcome. Inhibition of miR-135b in CRC mouse models reduces tumor growth by controlling genes involved in proliferation, invasion, and apoptosis. We identify miR-135b as a key downsteam effector of oncogenic pathways and a potential target for CRC treatment.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Cancer-derived mutations in the regulatory subunit p85α of phosphoinositide 3-kinase function through the catalytic subunit p110α

Minghao Sun; Petra Hillmann; Bianca T. Hofmann; Jonathan R. Hart; Peter K. Vogt

Cancer-specific mutations in the iSH2 (inter-SH2) and nSH2 (N-terminal SH2) domains of p85α, the regulatory subunit of phosphatidylinositide 3-kinase (PI3K), show gain of function. They induce oncogenic cellular transformation, stimulate cellular proliferation, and enhance PI3K signaling. Quantitative determinations of oncogenic activity reveal large differences between individual mutants of p85α. The mutant proteins are still able to bind to the catalytic subunits p110α and p110β. Studies with isoform-specific inhibitors of p110 suggest that expression of p85 mutants in fibroblasts leads exclusively to an activation of p110α, and p110α is the sole mediator of p85 mutant-induced oncogenic transformation. The characteristics of the p85 mutants are in agreement with the hypothesis that the mutations weaken an inhibitory interaction between p85α and p110α while preserving the stabilizing interaction between p85α iSH2 and the adapter-binding domain of p110α.


Current Topics in Microbiology and Immunology | 2010

Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinase: The Oncoprotein

Peter K. Vogt; Jonathan R. Hart; Marco Gymnopoulos; Hao Jiang; Sohye Kang; Andreas G. Bader; Li Zhao; Adam Denley

The catalytic and regulatory subunits of class I phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) have oncogenic potential. The catalytic subunit p110α and the regulatory subunit p85 undergo cancer-specific gain-of-function mutations that lead to enhanced enzymatic activity, ability to signal constitutively, and oncogenicity. The β, γ, and δ isoforms of p110 are cell-transforming as overexpressed wild-type proteins. Class I PI3Ks have the unique ability to generate phosphoinositide 3,4,5 trisphosphate (PIP(3)). Class II and class III PI3Ks lack this ability. Genetic and cell biological evidence suggests that PIP(3) is essential for PI3K-mediated oncogenicity, explaining why class II and class III enzymes have not been linked to cancer. Mutational analysis reveals the existence of at least two distinct molecular mechanisms for the gain of function seen with cancer-specific mutations in p110α; one causing independence from upstream receptor tyrosine kinases, the other inducing independence from Ras. An essential component of the oncogenic signal that is initiated by PI3K is the TOR (target of rapamycin) kinase. TOR is an integrator of growth and of metabolic inputs. In complex with the raptor protein (TORC1), it controls cap-dependent translation, and this function is essential for PI3K-initiated oncogenesis.


Current Opinion in Genetics & Development | 2009

PI 3-Kinase and Cancer: Changing Accents

Peter K. Vogt; Marco Gymnopoulos; Jonathan R. Hart

Research on PI 3-kinase (PI3K) is undergoing significant shifts in emphasis. Questions that have been dormant for some time are coming to the forefront, such as the relationship of PTEN to PI3K and the role of AKT in PI3K-driven oncogenesis. Two non-alpha isoforms of Class I PI3K are now established as important determinants in cancer: p110beta and p110delta. The oncogenic activities of p110beta include a non-catalytic function, a finding that will have immediate consequences for drug development.


Cancer Discovery | 2011

PI3K and STAT3: a new alliance.

Peter K. Vogt; Jonathan R. Hart

UNLABELLED Recent proteomic data have uncovered an interdependence of PI3K and STAT3. In PI3K-tranformed murine cells, STAT3 is phosphorylated on Y705 and activated in a PI3K-dependent manner. Dominant negative STAT3 interferes with PI3K-induced oncogenic transformation. Phosphorylation of STAT3 in PI3K-transformed murine cells is mediated by the TEC kinase BMX. Observations on glioblastoma stem cells reveal similar critical roles for STAT3 and BMX. The new data document an important role of STAT3 in PI3K-driven oncogenic transformation and mark BMX as a promising therapeutic target that could enhance the effectiveness of PI3K inhibitors. SIGNIFICANCE The PI3K–TOR and STAT3 signaling pathways represent two distinct regulatory networks. The discovery of a functional link between these pathways is significant for our understanding of PI3K- and STAT3-driven oncogenic mechanisms and identifies the TEC kinase BMX as a new cancer target.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

A rhodium(III) complex for high-affinity DNA base-pair mismatch recognition

Henrik Junicke; Jonathan R. Hart; Jennifer L. Kisko; Oleg K. Glebov; Ilan R. Kirsch; Jacqueline K. Barton

A rhodium(III) complex, rac-[Rh(bpy)2phzi]3+ (bpy, 2,2′-bipyridine; phzi, benzo[a]phenazine-5,6-quinone diimine) has been designed as a sterically demanding intercalator targeted to destabilized mismatched sites in double-helical DNA. The complex is readily synthesized by condensation of the phenazine quinone with the corresponding diammine complex. Upon photoactivation, the complex promotes direct strand scission at single-base mismatch sites within the DNA duplex. As with the parent mismatch-specific reagent, [Rh(bpy)2(chrysi)]3+ [chrysene-5,6-quinone diimine (chrysi)], mismatch selectivity depends on the helix destabilization associated with mispairing. Unlike the parent chrysi complex, the phzi analogue binds and cleaves with high affinity and efficiency. The specific binding constants for CA, CC, and CT mismatches within a 31-mer oligonucleotide duplex are 0.3, 1, and 6 × 107 M−1, respectively; site-specific photocleavage is evident at nanomolar concentrations. Moreover, the specificity, defined as the ratio in binding affinities for mispaired vs. well paired sites, is maintained. The increase in affinity is attributed to greater stability in the mismatched site associated with stacking by the heterocyclic aromatic ligand. The high-affinity complex is also applied in the differential cleavage of DNA obtained from cell lines deficient in mismatch repair vs. those proficient in mismatch repair. Agreement is found between photocleavage by the mismatch-specific probes and deficiency in mismatch repair. This mismatch-specific targeting, therefore, offers a potential strategy for new chemotherapeutic design.


Molecular Therapy | 2016

Potent and Targeted Activation of Latent HIV-1 Using the CRISPR/dCas9 Activator Complex

Sheena Saayman; Daniel Lazar; Tristan Scott; Jonathan R. Hart; Mayumi Takahashi; John C. Burnett; Vicente Planelles; Kevin V. Morris; Marc S. Weinberg

HIV-1 provirus integration results in a persistent latently infected reservoir that is recalcitrant to combined antiretroviral therapy (cART) with lifelong treatment being the only option. The “shock and kill” strategy aims to eradicate latent HIV by reactivating proviral gene expression in the context of cART treatment. Gene-specific transcriptional activation can be achieved using the RNA-guided CRISPR-Cas9 system comprising single guide RNAs (sgRNAs) with a nuclease-deficient Cas9 mutant (dCas9) fused to the VP64 transactivation domain (dCas9-VP64). We engineered this system to target 23 sites within the long terminal repeat promoter of HIV-1 and identified a “hotspot” for activation within the viral enhancer sequence. Activating sgRNAs transcriptionally modulated the latent proviral genome across multiple different in vitro latency cell models including T cells comprising a clonally integrated mCherry-IRES-Tat (LChIT) latency system. We detected consistent and effective activation of latent virus mediated by activator sgRNAs, whereas latency reversal agents produced variable activation responses. Transcriptomic analysis revealed dCas9-VP64/sgRNAs to be highly specific, while the well-characterized chemical activator TNFα induced widespread gene dysregulation. CRISPR-mediated gene activation represents a novel system which provides enhanced efficiency and specificity in a targeted latency reactivation strategy and represents a promising approach to a “functional cure” of HIV/AIDS.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006

DNA mismatch-specific targeting and hypersensitivity of mismatch-repair-deficient cells to bulky rhodium(III) intercalators

Jonathan R. Hart; Oleg K. Glebov; Russell J. Ernst; Ilan R. Kirsch; Jacqueline K. Barton

Mismatch repair (MMR) is critical to maintaining the integrity of the genome, and deficiencies in MMR are correlated with cancerous transformations. Bulky rhodium intercalators target DNA base mismatches with high specificity. Here we describe the application of bulky rhodium intercalators to inhibit cellular proliferation differentially in MMR-deficient cells compared with cells that are MMR-proficient. Preferential inhibition by the rhodium complexes associated with MMR deficiency is seen both in a human colon cancer cell line and in normal mouse fibroblast cells; the inhibition of cellular proliferation depends strictly on the MMR deficiency of the cell. Furthermore, our assay of cellular proliferation is found to correlate with DNA mismatch targeting by the bulky metallointercalators. It is the Δ-isomer that is active both in targeting base mismatches and in inhibiting DNA synthesis. Additionally, the rhodium intercalators promote strand cleavage at the mismatch site with photoactivation, and we observe that the cellular response is enhanced with photoactivation. Targeting DNA mismatches may therefore provide a cell-selective strategy for chemotherapeutic design.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Essential role of Stat3 in PI3K-induced oncogenic transformation

Jonathan R. Hart; Lujian Liao; John R. Yates; Peter K. Vogt

Cells transformed by the p110α-H1047R mutant of PI3K show increased tyrosine phosphorylation of Stat3. This activation of Stat3 is important for the transformation process, because a dominant-negative mutant of Stat3 interferes with PI3K-induced oncogenesis. GDC-0941, a specific inhibitor of PI3K reduces the level of Stat3 phosphorylation. The effect of PI3K on Stat3 appears to be mediated by a member of the Tec kinase family. The Tec kinase inhibitor LFM-A13 blocks Stat3 phosphorylation in H1047R-transformed cells. The Janus kinase inhibitor AG490 and the Src kinase inhibitor Src-1, as well as rapamycin, have no effect on Stat3 phosphorylation in H1047R-transformed cells. The H1047R-transformed cells also release a factor that induces Stat3 phosphorylation in normal cells with possible effects on the cellular microenvironment. In some human tumor cell lines, the enhanced phosphorylation of Stat3 is inhibited by both PI3K and by Tec kinase inhibitors, suggesting that the link between PI3K and Stat3 is significant in human cancer.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Inhibitor of MYC identified in a Krohnke pyridine library.

Jonathan R. Hart; Amanda L. Garner; Jing Yu; Yoshihiro Ito; Minghao Sun; Lynn Ueno; Jin Kyu Rhee; Michael M. Baksh; Eduard Stefan; Markus Hartl; Klaus Bister; Peter K. Vogt; Kim D. Janda

Significance MYC is an essential transcriptional regulator that controls cell proliferation. Elevated MYC is a driving force in most human cancers, yet MYC has been an exceedingly challenging target for small-molecule inhibitors. Here we describe a novel MYC inhibitor that interacts directly with MYC and interferes with its transcriptional and oncogenic activities. In a fluorescence polarization screen for the MYC–MAX interaction, we have identified a novel small-molecule inhibitor of MYC, KJ-Pyr-9, from a Kröhnke pyridine library. The Kd of KJ-Pyr-9 for MYC in vitro is 6.5 ± 1.0 nM, as determined by backscattering interferometry; KJ-Pyr-9 also interferes with MYC–MAX complex formation in the cell, as shown in a protein fragment complementation assay. KJ-Pyr-9 specifically inhibits MYC-induced oncogenic transformation in cell culture; it has no or only weak effects on the oncogenic activity of several unrelated oncoproteins. KJ-Pyr-9 preferentially interferes with the proliferation of MYC-overexpressing human and avian cells and specifically reduces the MYC-driven transcriptional signature. In vivo, KJ-Pyr-9 effectively blocks the growth of a xenotransplant of MYC-amplified human cancer cells.

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Peter K. Vogt

Scripps Research Institute

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Lynn Ueno

Scripps Research Institute

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John R. Yates

Scripps Research Institute

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Kim D. Janda

Scripps Research Institute

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Kevin V. Morris

City of Hope National Medical Center

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Marc S. Weinberg

Scripps Research Institute

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Yoshihiro Ito

Scripps Research Institute

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Lujian Liao

East China Normal University

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Yaoyang Zhang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Klaus Bister

University of Innsbruck

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