Kamil R. Kranc
University of Edinburgh
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Publication
Featured researches published by Kamil R. Kranc.
Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2011
Monika Mortensen; Elizabeth J. Soilleux; Gordana Djordjevic; Rebecca Tripp; Michael Lutteropp; Elham Sadighi-Akha; Amanda J. Stranks; Julie Glanville; Samantha J. L. Knight; Sten Eirik W. Jacobsen; Kamil R. Kranc; Anna Katharina Simon
Adult mouse LSK cells unable to undergo autophagy contain fewer HSCs, accumulate mitochondria, and fail to reconstitute lethally irradiated mice.
Nature Genetics | 2001
Simon D. Bamforth; José Bragança; Jyrki J. Eloranta; Jennifer N. Murdoch; Fatima I.R. Marques; Kamil R. Kranc; Hend Farza; Deborah J. Henderson; Helen C. Hurst; Shoumo Bhattacharya
The protein EP300 and its paralog CREBBP (CREB-binding protein) are ubiquitously expressed transcriptional co-activators and histone acetyl transferases. The gene EP300 is essential for normal cardiac and neural development, whereas CREBBP is essential for neurulation, hematopoietic differentiation, angiogenesis and skeletal and cardiac development. Mutations in CREBBP cause Rubinstein-Taybi syndrome, which is characterized by mental retardation, skeletal abnormalities and congenital cardiac defects. The CBP/p300-interacting transactivator with ED-rich tail 2 (CITED2) binds EP300 and CREBBP with high affinity and regulates gene transcription. Here we show that Cited2−/− embryos die with cardiac malformations, adrenal agenesis, abnormal cranial ganglia and exencephaly. The cardiac defects include atrial and ventricular septal defects, overriding aorta, double-outlet right ventricle, persistent truncus arteriosus and right-sided aortic arches. We find increased apoptosis in the midbrain region and a marked reduction in ErbB3-expressing neural crest cells in mid-embryogenesis. We show that CITED2 interacts with and co-activates all isoforms of transcription factor AP-2 (TFAP2). Transactivation by TFAP2 isoforms is defective in Cited2−/− embryonic fibroblasts and is rescued by ectopically expressed CITED2. As certain Tfap2 isoforms are essential in neural crest, neural tube and cardiac development, we propose that abnormal embryogenesis in mice lacking Cited2 results, at least in part, from its role as a Tfap2 co-activator.
Nature | 2006
Jon W. Gregersen; Kamil R. Kranc; Xiayi Ke; Pia Svendsen; Lars S. Madsen; Allan Randrup Thomsen; Lon R. Cardon; John I. Bell; Lars Fugger
Genes in the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) encode proteins important in activating antigen-specific immune responses. Alleles at adjacent MHC loci are often in strong linkage disequilibrium; however, little is known about the mechanisms responsible for this linkage disequilibrium. Here we report that the human MHC HLA-DR2 haplotype, which predisposes to multiple sclerosis, shows more extensive linkage disequilibrium than other common caucasian HLA haplotypes in the DR region and thus seems likely to have been maintained through positive selection. Characterization of two multiple-sclerosis-associated HLA-DR alleles at separate loci by a functional assay in humanized mice indicates that the linkage disequilibrium between the two alleles may be due to a functional epistatic interaction, whereby one allele modifies the T-cell response activated by the second allele through activation-induced cell death. This functional epistasis is associated with a milder form of multiple-sclerosis-like disease. Such epistatic interaction might prove to be an important general mechanism for modifying exuberant immune responses that are deleterious to the host and could also help to explain the strong linkage disequilibrium in this and perhaps other HLA haplotypes.
Immunity | 2009
Maria Harkiolaki; Samantha L. Holmes; Pia Svendsen; Jon W. Gregersen; Lise T. Jensen; Róisín M. McMahon; Manuel A. Friese; Gijs I. van Boxel; Ruth Etzensperger; John S. Tzartos; Kamil R. Kranc; Sarah Sainsbury; Karl Harlos; Elizabeth D. Mellins; Jackie Palace; Margaret M. Esiri; P. Anton van der Merwe; E. Yvonne Jones; Lars Fugger
Environmental factors account for 75% of the risk of developing multiple sclerosis (MS). Numerous infections have been suspected as environmental disease triggers, but none of them has consistently been incriminated, and it is unclear how so many different infections may play a role. We show that a microbial peptide, common to several major classes of bacteria, can induce MS-like disease in humanized mice by crossreacting with a T cell receptor (TCR) that also recognizes a peptide from myelin basic protein, a candidate MS autoantigen. Structural analysis demonstrates this crossreactivity is due to structural mimicry of a binding hotspot shared by self and microbial antigens, rather than to degenerate TCR recognition. Biophysical studies reveal that the autoreactive TCR binding affinity is markedly lower for the microbial (mimicry) peptide than for the autoantigenic peptide. Thus, these data suggest a possible explanation for the difficulty in incriminating individual infections in the development of MS.
Cell Stem Cell | 2009
Kamil R. Kranc; Hein Schepers; Neil P. Rodrigues; Simon D. Bamforth; Ellen Villadsen; Helen Ferry; Tiphaine Bouriez-Jones; Mikael Sigvardsson; Shoumo Bhattacharya; Sten Eirik W. Jacobsen; Tariq Enver
Summary The regulatory pathways necessary for the maintenance of adult hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) remain poorly defined. By using loss-of-function approaches, we report a selective and cell-autonomous requirement for the p300/CBP-binding transcriptional coactivator Cited2 in adult HSC maintenance. Conditional deletion of Cited2 in the adult mouse results in loss of HSCs causing multilineage bone marrow failure and increased lethality. In contrast, conditional ablation of Cited2 after lineage specification in lymphoid and myeloid lineages has no impact on the maintenance of these lineages. Additional deletion of Ink4a/Arf (encoding p16Ink4a and p19Arf) or Trp53 (encoding p53, a downstream target of p19Arf) in a Cited2-deficient background restores HSC functionality and rescues mice from bone marrow failure. Furthermore, we show that the critical role of Cited2 in primitive hematopoietic cells is conserved in humans. Taken together, our studies provide genetic evidence that Cited2 selectively maintains adult HSC functions, at least in part, via Ink4a/Arf and Trp53.
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2003
Kamil R. Kranc; Simon D. Bamforth; José Bragança; Christopher C. Norbury; Maarten van Lohuizen; Shoumo Bhattacharya
ABSTRACT Cited2 (CBP/p300 interacting transactivator with ED-rich tail 2) is required for embryonic development, coactivation of transcription factor AP-2, and inhibition of hypoxia-inducible factor 1 transactivation. Cited2 is induced by multiple growth factors and cytokines and oncogenically transforms cells. Here, we show that the proliferation of Cited2 −/− mouse embryonic fibroblasts ceases prematurely. This is associated with a reduction in growth fraction, senescent cellular morphology, and increased expression of the cell proliferation inhibitors p16INK4a, p19ARF, and p15INK4b. Deletion of INK4a/ARF (encoding p16INK4a and p19ARF) completely rescued the defective proliferation of Cited2−/− fibroblasts. However, the deletion of INK4a/ARF did not rescue the embryonic malformations observed in Cited2 −/− mice, indicating that INK4a/ARF-independent pathways are likely to be involved here. We found that Cited2 −/− fibroblasts had reduced expression of the polycomb-group genes Bmi1 and Mel18, which function as INK4a/ARF and Hox repressors. Complementation with CITED2-expressing retrovirus enhanced proliferation, induced Bmi1/Mel18 expression, and decreased INK4a/ARF expression. Bmi1- and Mel18-expressing retroviruses enhanced the proliferation of Cited2 −/− fibroblasts, indicating that they function downstream of Cited2. Our results provide genetic evidence that Cited2 controls the expression of INK4a/ARF and fibroblast proliferation, at least in part via the polycomb-group genes Bmi1 and Mel18.
Blood | 2013
Amelie V. Guitart; Chithra Subramani; Alejandro Armesilla-Diaz; Gillian Smith; Catarina Sepulveda; Deniz Gezer; Milica Vukovic; Karen Dunn; Patrick J. Pollard; Tessa L. Holyoake; Tariq Enver; Peter J. Ratcliffe; Kamil R. Kranc
Local hypoxia in hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) niches is thought to regulate HSC functions. Hypoxia-inducible factor-1 (Hif-1) and Hif-2 are key mediators of cellular responses to hypoxia. Although oxygen-regulated α-subunits of Hifs, namely Hif-1α and Hif-2α, are closely related, they play overlapping and also distinct functions in nonhematopoietic tissues. Although Hif-1α-deficient HSCs lose their activity on serial transplantation, the role for Hif-2α in cell-autonomous HSC maintenance remains unknown. Here, we demonstrate that constitutive or inducible hematopoiesis-specific Hif-2α deletion does not affect HSC numbers and steady-state hematopoiesis. Furthermore, using serial transplantations and 5-fluorouracil treatment, we demonstrate that HSCs do not require Hif-2α to self-renew and recover after hematopoietic injury. Finally, we show that Hif-1α deletion has no major impact on steady-state maintenance of Hif-2α-deficient HSCs and their ability to repopulate primary recipients, indicating that Hif-1α expression does not account for normal behavior of Hif-2α-deficient HSCs.
PLOS ONE | 2012
Simon D. J. Calaminus; Amelie V. Guitart; Amy Sinclair; Hannah Schachtner; Steve P. Watson; Tessa L. Holyoake; Kamil R. Kranc; Laura M. Machesky
The development of a megakaryocyte lineage specific Cre deleter, using the Pf4 (CXCL4) promoter (Pf4-Cre), was a significant step forward in the specific analysis of platelet and megakaryocyte cell biology. However, in the present study we have employed a sensitive reporter-based approach to demonstrate that Pf4-Cre also recombines in a significant proportion of both fetal liver and bone marrow hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs), including the most primitive fraction containing the long-term repopulating HSCs. Consequently, we demonstrate that Pf4-Cre activity is not megakaryocyte lineage-specific but extends to other myeloid and lymphoid lineages at significant levels between 15–60%. Finally, we show for the first time that Pf4 transcripts are present in adult HSCs and primitive hematopoietic progenitor cells. These results have fundamental implications for the use of the Pf4-Cre mouse model and for our understanding of a possible role for Pf4 in the development of the hematopoietic lineage.
Autophagy | 2016
Maria Karvela; Pablo Baquero; Elodie M. Kuntz; Arunima Mukhopadhyay; Rebecca Mitchell; Elaine K. Allan; Edmond Chan; Kamil R. Kranc; Bruno Calabretta; Paolo Salomoni; Eyal Gottlieb; Tessa L. Holyoake; G. Vignir Helgason
ABSTRACT A major drawback of tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) treatment in chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) is that primitive CML cells are able to survive TKI-mediated BCR-ABL inhibition, leading to disease persistence in patients. Investigation of strategies aiming to inhibit alternative survival pathways in CML is therefore critical. We have previously shown that a nonspecific pharmacological inhibition of autophagy potentiates TKI-induced death in Philadelphia chromosome-positive cells. Here we provide further understanding of how specific and pharmacological autophagy inhibition affects nonmitochondrial and mitochondrial energy metabolism and reactive oxygen species (ROS)-mediated differentiation of CML cells and highlight ATG7 (a critical component of the LC3 conjugation system) as a potential specific therapeutic target. By combining extra- and intracellular steady state metabolite measurements by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry with metabolic flux assays using labeled glucose and functional assays, we demonstrate that knockdown of ATG7 results in decreased glycolysis and increased flux of labeled carbons through the mitochondrial tricarboxylic acid cycle. This leads to increased oxidative phosphorylation and mitochondrial ROS accumulation. Furthermore, following ROS accumulation, CML cells, including primary CML CD34+ progenitor cells, differentiate toward the erythroid lineage. Finally, ATG7 knockdown sensitizes CML progenitor cells to TKI-induced death, without affecting survival of normal cells, suggesting that specific inhibitors of ATG7 in combination with TKI would provide a novel therapeutic approach for CML patients exhibiting persistent disease.
Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2015
Milica Vukovic; Amelie V. Guitart; Catarina Sepulveda; Arnaud Villacreces; Eoghan O'Duibhir; Theano I. Panagopoulou; Alasdair Ivens; Juan Menendez-Gonzalez; Juan Manuel Iglesias; Lewis Allen; Fokion Glykofrydis; Chithra Subramani; Alejandro Armesilla-Diaz; Annemarie E.M. Post; Katrin Schaak; Deniz Gezer; Chi Wai Eric So; Tessa L. Holyoake; Andrew J. Wood; Dónal O'Carroll; Peter J. Ratcliffe; Kamil R. Kranc
Vukovic et al. report that Hif-1α and Hif-2α are not required for leukemia stem cell maintenance and AML propagation, but they act synergistically to suppress leukemia development in mice. Furthermore, knockout of HIF-2α or pharmacological inhibition of the HIF pathway in human AML cells has no impact on their survival and proliferation under hypoxic conditions.