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Dive into the research topics where Julia Starkova is active.

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Featured researches published by Julia Starkova.


Leukemia | 2004

Upregulation of asparagine synthetase fails to avert cell cycle arrest induced by L-asparaginase in TEL/AML1-positive leukaemic cells

Ondrej Krejci; Julia Starkova; Berta Otová; Jozef Madzo; Marketa Kalinova; Ondřej Hrušák; J Trka

L-Asparaginase is a standard component in chemotherapy of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL). Leukaemic cells carrying TEL/AML1 fusion gene are more sensitive to treatment with L-asparaginase compared to other subtypes of ALL. We demonstrate in vitro the prolonged growth suppression of TEL/AML1[+] cells compared to TEL/AML1[−] leukaemic cells after L-asparaginase treatment simulating treatment protocol. Cell cycle analysis revealed TEL/AML1[+] cells to accumulate in G1/G0 phase (81–98%) compared to TEL/AML1[−] cells (47–60%). Quantitative analysis of asparagine synthetase (AsnS) expression showed the ability of TEL/AML1[+] cells to increase AsnS mRNA levels after L-asparaginase treatment to the same extent as TEL/AML1[−] leukaemic and nonleukaemic lymphoid cells. We hypothesise that TEL/AML1[+] cells are unable to progress into the S phase of cell cycle under nutrition stress caused by L-asparaginase, despite the ability of AsnS upregulation. Significantly higher expression of AsnS was found in untreated leukaemic cells from children with TEL/AML1[+] ALL (n=20) in comparison with the group of age-matched children with ALL bearing no known fusion gene (n=25; P=0.0043). Interestingly, none of the TEL/AML1[+] patients with high AsnS level relapsed, whereas 10/15 patients with AsnS below median relapsed (P=0.00028). Therefore, high AsnS levels in TEL/AML1[+] patients correlate with better prognosis, possibly reflecting the stretched metabolic demand of the lymphoblast.


Blood | 2011

ETV6/RUNX1 (TEL/AML1) is a frequent prenatal first hit in childhood leukemia

Jan Zuna; Jozef Madzo; Ondrej Krejci; Zuzana Zemanova; Marketa Kalinova; Katerina Muzikova; Michal Zapotocky; Julia Starkova; Ondrej Hrusak; Jiri Horak; Jan Trka

To the editor: We read with interest the report by Lausten-Thomsen et al in this issue of Blood .[1][1] The study challenges the previous report by Mori et al describing ∼ 1% frequency of TEL/AML1 ( ETV6/RUNX1 )–positive cord blood in healthy newborns and questions the hypothesis of TEL/AML1


Leukemia | 2014

CD2-positive B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia with an early switch to the monocytic lineage

Lucie Slamova; Julia Starkova; Eva Fronkova; Marketa Zaliova; Leona Reznickova; F van Delft; Elena Vodickova; Jana Volejnikova; Zuzana Zemanova; K Polgarova; Gunnar Cario; Maria E. Figueroa; Tomáš Kalina; Karel Fiser; J-P Bourquin; Beat C. Bornhauser; Michael Dworzak; Jan Zuna; Jan Trka; Jan Stary; Ondrej Hrusak; Ester Mejstrikova

Switches from the lymphoid to myeloid lineage during B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (BCP-ALL) treatment are considered rare and thus far have been detected in MLL-rearranged leukemia. Here, we describe a novel BCP-ALL subset, switching BCP-ALL or swALL, which demonstrated monocytosis early during treatment. Despite their monocytic phenotype, ‘monocytoids’ share immunoreceptor gene rearrangements with leukemic B lymphoblasts. All swALLs demonstrated BCP-ALL with CD2 positivity and no MLL alterations, and the proportion of swALLs cases among BCP-ALLs was unexpectedly high (4%). The upregulation of CEBPα and demethylation of the CEBPA gene were significant in blasts at diagnosis, prior to the time when most of the switching occurs. Intermediate stages between CD14negCD19posCD34pos B lymphoblasts and CD14posCD19negCD34neg ‘monocytoids’ were detected, and changes in the expression of PAX5, PU1, M-CSFR, GM-CSFR and other genes accompanied the switch. Alterations in the Ikaros and ERG genes were more frequent in swALL patients; however, both were altered in only a minority of swALLs. Moreover, switching could be recapitulated in vitro and in mouse xenografts. Although children with swALL respond slowly to initial therapy, risk-based ALL therapy appears the treatment of choice for swALL. SwALL shows that transdifferentiating into monocytic lineage is specifically associated with CEBPα changes and CD2 expression.


Pediatric Blood & Cancer | 2010

HOX gene expression in phenotypic and genotypic subgroups and low HOXA gene expression as an adverse prognostic factor in pediatric ALL

Julia Starkova; Blanka Zamostna; Ester Mejstrikova; Roman Krejčí; Harry A. Drabkin; Jan Trka

HOX genes play an important role in both normal lymphopoiesis and leukemogenesis. However, HOX expression patterns in leukemia cells compared to normal lymphoid progenitors have not been systematically studied in acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) subtypes.


Haematologica | 2016

Characterization of leukemias with ETV6-ABL1 fusion

Marketa Zaliova; Anthony V. Moorman; Giovanni Cazzaniga; Martin Stanulla; Richard C. Harvey; Kathryn G. Roberts; Susan L. Heatley; Mignon L. Loh; Marina Konopleva; I-Ming Chen; Olga Zimmermannova; Claire Schwab; Owen P. Smith; Marie-Joelle Mozziconacci; Christian Chabannon; Myungshin Kim; J.H. Frederik Falkenburg; Alice Norton; Karen Marshall; Oskar A. Haas; Julia Starkova; Jan Stuchly; Stephen P. Hunger; Deborah White; Charles G. Mullighan; Cheryl L. Willman; Jan Stary; Jan Trka; Jan Zuna

To characterize the incidence, clinical features and genetics of ETV6-ABL1 leukemias, representing targetable kinase-activating lesions, we analyzed 44 new and published cases of ETV6-ABL1-positive hematologic malignancies [22 cases of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (13 children, 9 adults) and 22 myeloid malignancies (18 myeloproliferative neoplasms, 4 acute myeloid leukemias)]. The presence of the ETV6-ABL1 fusion was ascertained by cytogenetics, fluorescence in-situ hybridization, reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction and RNA sequencing. Genomic and gene expression profiling was performed by single nucleotide polymorphism and expression arrays. Systematic screening of more than 4,500 cases revealed that in acute lymphoblastic leukemia ETV6-ABL1 is rare in childhood (0.17% cases) and slightly more common in adults (0.38%). There is no systematic screening of myeloproliferative neoplasms; however, the number of ETV6-ABL1-positive cases and the relative incidence of acute lymphoblastic leukemia and myeloproliferative neoplasms suggest that in adulthood ETV6-ABL1 is more common in BCR-ABL1-negative chronic myeloid leukemia-like myeloproliferations than in acute lymphoblastic leukemia. The genomic profile of ETV6-ABL1 acute lymphoblastic leukemia resembled that of BCR-ABL1 and BCR-ABL1-like cases with 80% of patients having concurrent CDKN2A/B and IKZF1 deletions. In the gene expression profiling all the ETV6-ABL1-positive samples clustered in close vicinity to BCR-ABL1 cases. All but one of the cases of ETV6-ABL1 acute lymphoblastic leukemia were classified as BCR-ABL1-like by a standardized assay. Over 60% of patients died, irrespectively of the disease or age subgroup examined. In conclusion, ETV6-ABL1 fusion occurs in both lymphoid and myeloid leukemias; the genomic profile and clinical behavior resemble BCR-ABL1-positive malignancies, including the unfavorable prognosis, particularly of acute leukemias. The poor outcome suggests that treatment with tyrosine kinase inhibitors should be considered for patients with this fusion.


Cancer Letters | 2012

Valproic acid triggers differentiation and apoptosis in AML1/ETO-positive leukemic cells specifically

Michal Zapotocky; Ester Mejstrikova; Karel Smetana; Jan Stary; Jan Trka; Julia Starkova

Valproic acid (VPA) has extensive effects on leukemic blasts through its inhibition of histone deacetylases. The main goal of this study was to identify the subgroup of patients who may benefit most from VPA treatment. We examined the significance of t(8;21) chromosomal aberration for VPA treatment response among acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients by direct comparison of AML1/ETO-negative vs. positive leukemic cell-lines as well as bone marrow blasts from AML patients. In t(8;21) AML, leukemogenesis is supposed to be induced via aberrant recruitment of histone deacetylases. AML cell lines of different genotypes (Kasumi-1, Kasumi-6, MV4;11, K562) and diagnostic bone marrow samples from patients were treated with VPA. VPA induced apoptosis in AML1/ETO-positive and MLL-AF4-positive cells in a dose-dependent manner. Differentiation, as indicated by changes in immunophenotype, was observed only in AML1/ETO-positive cells. VPA increased the expression of AML1 target genes - PU.1, C/EBPa, BPI and IGFBP7 only in AML1/ETO-positive cells. This AML1/ETO-specific effect was confirmed also using patient blasts isolated at the time of diagnosis. AML1/ETO-positive leukemia shows specific mechanism of VPA residing from differentiation followed by apoptosis that is accompanied by an increase in the expression of repressed AML1 target genes. Our data suggest that AML1/ETO-positive patients might derive the greatest benefit from VPA treatment.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2007

The Identification of (ETV6)/RUNX1-Regulated Genes in Lymphopoiesis Using Histone Deacetylase Inhibitors in ETV6/RUNX1-Positive Lymphoid Leukemic Cells

Julia Starkova; Jozef Madzo; Gunnar Cario; Tomáš Kalina; Anthony M. Ford; Marketa Zaliova; Ondrej Hrusak; Jan Trka

Purpose: Chimeric transcription factor ETV6/RUNX1 (TEL/AML1) is believed to cause pathologic block in lymphoid cell development via interaction with corepressor complex and histone deacetylase. We wanted to show the regulatory effect of ETV6/RUNX1 and its reversibility by histone deacetylase inhibitors (HDACi), as well as to identify potential ETV6/RUNX1-regulated genes. Experimental Design: We used luciferase assay to show the interaction of ETV6/RUNX1 protein, ETV6/RUNX1-regulated gene, and HDACi. To identify ETV6/RUNX1-regulated genes, we used expression profiling and HDACi in lymphoid cells. Next, using the flow cytometry and quantitative reverse transcription-PCR, we measured differentiation changes in gene and protein expression after HDACi treatment. Results: Luciferase assay showed repression of granzyme B expression by ETV6/RUNX1 protein and the reversibility of this effect by HDACi. Proving this regulatory role of ETV6/RUNX1, we identified, using complex statistical analysis, 25 genes that are potentially regulated by ETV6/RUNX1 protein. In four selected genes with known role in the cell cycle regulation (JunD, ACK1, PDGFRB, and TCF4), we confirmed expression changes after HDACi by quantitative analysis. After HDACi treatment, ETV6/RUNX1-positive cells showed immunophenotype changes resembling differentiation process compared with other leukemic cells (BCR/ABL, ETV6/PDGFRB positive). Moreover, ETV6/RUNX1-positive leukemic cells accumulated in G1-G0 phase after HDACi whereas other B-lineage leukemic cell lines showed rather unspecific changes including induction of apoptosis and decreased proliferation. Conclusions: Presented data support the hypothesis that HDACi affect ETV6/RUNX1-positive cells via direct interaction with ETV6/RUNX1 protein and that treatment with HDACi may release aberrant transcription activity caused by ETV6/RUNX1 chimeric transcription factor.


Journal of Hematology & Oncology | 2014

Homeobox gene expression in acute myeloid leukemia is linked to typical underlying molecular aberrations

Karolina Kramarzova; Karel Fiser; Ester Mejstrikova; Katerina Rejlova; Marketa Zaliova; Maarten Fornerod; Harry A. Drabkin; Marry M. van den Heuvel-Eibrink; Jan Stary; Jan Trka; Julia Starkova

BackgroundAlthough distinct patterns of homeobox (HOX) gene expression have been described in defined cytogenetic and molecular subsets of patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML), it is unknown whether these patterns are the direct result of transcriptional alterations or rather represent the differentiation stage of the leukemic cell.MethodTo address this question, we used qPCR to analyze mRNA expression of HOXA and HOXB genes in bone marrow (BM) samples of 46 patients with AML and sorted subpopulations of healthy BM cells. These various stages of myeloid differentiation represent matched counterparts of morphological subgroups of AML. To further study the transcriptional alterations of HOX genes in hematopoiesis, we also analyzed gene expression of epigenetic modifiers in the subpopluations of healthy BM and leukemic cells.ResultsUnsupervised hierarchical clustering divided the AMLs into five clusters characterized by the presence of prevalent molecular genetic aberrations. Notably, the impact of genotype on HOX gene expression was significantly more pronounced than that of the differentiation stage of the blasts. This driving role of molecular aberrations was best exemplified by the repressive effect of the PML-RARa fusion gene on HOX gene expression, regardless of the presence of the FLT3/ITD mutation. Furthermore, HOX gene expression was positively correlated with mRNA levels of histone demethylases (JMJD3 and UTX) and negatively correlated with gene expression of DNA methyltranferases. No such relationships were observed in subpopulations of healthy BM cells.ConclusionOur results demonstrate that specific molecular genetic aberrations, rather than differentiation per se, underlie the observed differences in HOX gene expression in AML. Moreover, the observed correlations between epigenetic modifiers and HOX ex pression that are specific to malignant hematopoiesis, suggest their potential causal relationships.


Leukemia | 2016

Pharmacological inhibition of fatty-acid oxidation synergistically enhances the effect of l -asparaginase in childhood ALL cells

I Hermanova; Amaia Arruabarrena-Aristorena; K Valis; H Nuskova; Meritxell Alberich-Jorda; Karel Fiser; Sonia Fernández-Ruiz; D Kavan; A Pecinova; M Niso-Santano; Marketa Zaliova; Petr Novák; J Houstek; T Mracek; G Kroemer; Arkaitz Carracedo; Jan Trka; Julia Starkova

l-asparaginase (ASNase), a key component in the treatment of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), hydrolyzes plasma asparagine and glutamine and thereby disturbs metabolic homeostasis of leukemic cells. The efficacy of such therapeutic strategy will depend on the capacity of cancer cells to adapt to the metabolic challenge, which could relate to the activation of compensatory metabolic routes. Therefore, we studied the impact of ASNase on the main metabolic pathways in leukemic cells. Treating leukemic cells with ASNase increased fatty-acid oxidation (FAO) and cell respiration and inhibited glycolysis. FAO, together with the decrease in protein translation and pyrimidine synthesis, was positively regulated through inhibition of the RagB-mTORC1 pathway, whereas the effect on glycolysis was RagB-mTORC1 independent. As FAO has been suggested to have a pro-survival function in leukemic cells, we tested its contribution to cell survival following ASNase treatment. Pharmacological inhibition of FAO significantly increased the sensitivity of ALL cells to ASNase. Moreover, constitutive activation of the mammalian target of rapamycin pathway increased apoptosis in leukemic cells treated with ASNase, but did not increase FAO. Our study uncovers a novel therapeutic option based on the combination of ASNase and FAO inhibitors.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Intragenic ERG Deletions Do Not Explain the Biology of ERG-Related Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia

Eliska Potuckova; Jan Zuna; Lenka Hovorkova; Julia Starkova; Jan Stary; Jan Trka; Marketa Zaliova

Intragenic ERG deletions occur in 3–5% of B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia, specifically in B-other subtype lacking the classifying genetic lesions. They represent the only genetic lesion described so far present in the majority of cases clustering into a subgroup of B-other subtype characterized by a unique gene expression profile, probably sharing a common, however, not yet fully described, biological background. We aimed to elucidate whether ERG deletions could drive the specific biology of this ERG-related leukemia subgroup through expression of aberrant or decreased expression of wild type ERG isoforms. We showed that leukemic cells with endogenous ERG deletion express an aberrant transcript translated into two proteins in transfected cell lines and that one of these proteins colocalizes with wild type ERG. However, we did not confirm expression of the proteins in acute lymphoblastic leukemia cases with endogenous ERG deletion. ERG deletions resulted in significantly lower expression of wild type ERG transcripts compared to B-other cases without ERG deletion. However, cases with subclonal ERG deletion, clustering to the same ERG deletion associated subgroup, presented similar levels of wild type ERG as cases without ERG deletion. In conclusion, our data suggest that neither the expression of aberrant proteins from internally deleted allele nor the reduced expression of wild type ERG seem to provide a plausible explanation of the specific biology of ERG -related leukemia subgroup.

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Dive into the Julia Starkova's collaboration.

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Jan Trka

Charles University in Prague

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Marketa Zaliova

Charles University in Prague

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Jan Zuna

Charles University in Prague

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Ester Mejstrikova

Charles University in Prague

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Jan Stary

Charles University in Prague

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Jozef Madzo

Charles University in Prague

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Karel Fiser

Charles University in Prague

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Ondrej Hrusak

Charles University in Prague

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Ondrej Krejci

Charles University in Prague

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Marketa Kalinova

Charles University in Prague

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