Karen Cravero
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
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Featured researches published by Karen Cravero.
Clinical Cancer Research | 2016
David Chu; Costanza Paoletti; Christina Gersch; Dustin A. VanDenBerg; Daniel J. Zabransky; Rory L. Cochran; Hong Yuen Wong; Patricia Valda Toro; Justin Cidado; Sarah Croessmann; Bracha Erlanger; Karen Cravero; Kelly Kyker-Snowman; Berry Button; Heather A. Parsons; W. Brian Dalton; Riaz Gillani; Arielle Medford; Kimberly Aung; Nahomi Tokudome; Arul M. Chinnaiyan; Anne F. Schott; Dan R. Robinson; Karen S. Jacks; Josh Lauring; Paula J. Hurley; Daniel F. Hayes; James M. Rae; Ben Ho Park
Purpose: Mutations in the estrogen receptor (ER)α gene, ESR1, have been identified in breast cancer metastases after progression on endocrine therapies. Because of limitations of metastatic biopsies, the reported frequency of ESR1 mutations may be underestimated. Here, we show a high frequency of ESR1 mutations using circulating plasma tumor DNA (ptDNA) from patients with metastatic breast cancer. Experimental Design: We retrospectively obtained plasma samples from eight patients with known ESR1 mutations and three patients with wild-type ESR1 identified by next-generation sequencing (NGS) of biopsied metastatic tissues. Three common ESR1 mutations were queried for using droplet digital PCR (ddPCR). In a prospective cohort, metastatic tissue and plasma were collected contemporaneously from eight ER-positive and four ER-negative patients. Tissue biopsies were sequenced by NGS, and ptDNA ESR1 mutations were analyzed by ddPCR. Results: In the retrospective cohort, all corresponding mutations were detected in ptDNA, with two patients harboring additional ESR1 mutations not present in their metastatic tissues. In the prospective cohort, three ER-positive patients did not have adequate tissue for NGS, and no ESR1 mutations were identified in tissue biopsies from the other nine patients. In contrast, ddPCR detected seven ptDNA ESR1 mutations in 6 of 12 patients (50%). Conclusions: We show that ESR1 mutations can occur at a high frequency and suggest that blood can be used to identify additional mutations not found by sequencing of a single metastatic lesion. Clin Cancer Res; 22(4); 993–9. ©2015 AACR.
Clinical Biochemistry | 2015
Patricia Valda Toro; Bracha Erlanger; Julia A. Beaver; Rory L. Cochran; Dustin A. VanDenBerg; Elizabeth Yakim; Karen Cravero; David Chu; Daniel J. Zabransky; Hong Yuen Wong; Sarah Croessmann; Heather A. Parsons; Paula J. Hurley; Josh Lauring; Ben Ho Park
OBJECTIVES Circulating plasma DNA is being increasingly used for biomedical and clinical research as a substrate for genetic testing. However, cell lysis can occur hours after venipuncture when using standard tubes for blood collection, leading to an increase in contaminating cellular DNA that may hinder analysis of circulating plasma DNA. Cell stabilization agents can prevent cellular lysis for several days, reducing the need for immediate plasma preparation after venipuncture, thereby facilitating the ease of blood collection and sample preparation for clinical research. However, the majority of cell stabilizing reagents have not been formally tested for their ability to preserve circulating plasma tumor DNA. DESIGN & METHODS In this study, we compared the properties of two cell stabilizing reagents, the cell-free DNA BCT tube and the PAXgene tube, by collecting blood samples from metastatic breast cancer patients and measuring genome equivalents of plasma DNA by droplet digital PCR. We compared wild type PIK3CA genome equivalents and also assayed for two PIK3CA hotspot mutations, E545K and H1047R. RESULTS Our results demonstrate that blood stored for 7 days in BCT tubes did not show evidence of cell lysis, whereas PAXgene tubes showed an order of magnitude increase in genome equivalents, indicative of considerable cellular lysis. CONCLUSIONS We conclude that BCT tubes can prevent lysis and cellular release of genomic DNA of blood samples from cancer patients when stored at room temperature, and could therefore be of benefit for blood specimen collections in clinical trials.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014
Morassa Mohseni; Justin Cidado; Sarah Croessmann; Karen Cravero; Ashley Cimino-Mathews; Hong Yuen Wong; Rob Scharpf; Daniel J. Zabransky; Abde M. Abukhdeir; Joseph P. Garay; Grace M. Wang; Julia A. Beaver; Rory L. Cochran; Brian G. Blair; D. Marc Rosen; Bracha Erlanger; Pedram Argani; Paula J. Hurley; Josh Lauring; Ben Ho Park
Significance Despite the widespread use and success of tamoxifen for treating ER-positive breast cancers, overcoming resistance to this drug remains an unmet need in clinical breast oncology. The results presented in this study demonstrate that overexpression of a novel gene, MACROD2, can mediate tamoxifen resistance and estrogen independent growth in human breast cancers, and that amplification of MACROD2 in primary breast tumors is associated with worse overall survival. Tamoxifen is effective for treating estrogen receptor-alpha (ER) positive breast cancers. However, few molecular mediators of tamoxifen resistance have been elucidated. Here we describe a previously unidentified gene, MACROD2 that confers tamoxifen resistance and estrogen independent growth. We found MACROD2 is amplified and overexpressed in metastatic tamoxifen-resistant tumors. Transgene overexpression of MACROD2 in breast cancer cell lines results in tamoxifen resistance, whereas RNAi-mediated gene knock down reverses this phenotype. MACROD2 overexpression also leads to estrogen independent growth in xenograft assays. Mechanistically, MACROD2 increases p300 binding to estrogen response elements in a subset of ER regulated genes. Primary breast cancers and matched metastases demonstrate MACROD2 expression can change with disease evolution, and increased expression and amplification of MACROD2 in primary tumors is associated with worse overall survival. These studies establish MACROD2 as a key mediator of estrogen independent growth and tamoxifen resistance, as well as a potential novel target for diagnostics and therapy.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015
Daniel J. Zabransky; Christopher L. Yankaskas; Rory L. Cochran; Hong Yuen Wong; Sarah Croessmann; David Chu; Shyam M. Kavuri; Monica Red Brewer; D. Marc Rosen; W. Brian Dalton; Ashley Cimino-Mathews; Karen Cravero; Berry Button; Kelly Kyker-Snowman; Justin Cidado; Bracha Erlanger; Heather A. Parsons; Kristen M. Manto; Ron Bose; Josh Lauring; Carlos L. Arteaga; Konstantinos Konstantopoulos; Ben Ho Park
Significance The discovery of human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) missense mutations in breast and other cancers potentially make such tumors susceptible to current and future HER2-targeted therapies. However, the majority of HER2 mutations occur in HER2 nonamplified cancers, and whether these mutations will predict for sensitivity to HER2-directed therapies remains unknown. Using genome editing, the data presented here suggest that HER2 missense mutations are functionally distinct and require additional oncogenic input to impart cancerous phenotypes. These results suggest that HER2 missense mutations by themselves may not be reliable predictors of response to HER2-targeted therapies, a hypothesis currently being tested in genomically driven clinical trials. Recurrent human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) missense mutations have been reported in human cancers. These mutations occur primarily in the absence of HER2 gene amplification such that most HER2-mutant tumors are classified as “negative” by FISH or immunohistochemistry assays. It remains unclear whether nonamplified HER2 missense mutations are oncogenic and whether they are targets for HER2-directed therapies that are currently approved for the treatment of HER2 gene-amplified breast cancers. Here we functionally characterize HER2 kinase and extracellular domain mutations through gene editing of the endogenous loci in HER2 nonamplified human breast epithelial cells. In in vitro and in vivo assays, the majority of HER2 missense mutations do not impart detectable oncogenic changes. However, the HER2 V777L mutation increased biochemical pathway activation and, in the context of a PIK3CA mutation, enhanced migratory features in vitro. However, the V777L mutation did not alter in vivo tumorigenicity or sensitivity to HER2-directed therapies in proliferation assays. Our results suggest the oncogenicity and potential targeting of HER2 missense mutations should be considered in the context of cooperating genetic alterations and provide previously unidentified insights into functional analysis of HER2 mutations and strategies to target them.
Oncotarget | 2016
Justin Cidado; Hong Yuen Wong; D. Marc Rosen; Ashley Cimino-Mathews; Joseph P. Garay; Abigail G. Fessler; Zeshaan Rasheed; Jessica Hicks; Rory L. Cochran; Sarah Croessmann; Daniel J. Zabransky; Morassa Mohseni; Julia A. Beaver; David Chu; Karen Cravero; Eric S. Christenson; Arielle Medford; Austin Mattox; Angelo M. De Marzo; Pedram Argani; Ajay Chawla; Paula J. Hurley; Josh Lauring; Ben Ho Park
Ki-67 expression is correlated with cell proliferation and is a prognostic marker for various cancers; however, its function is unknown. Here we demonstrate that genetic disruption of Ki-67 in human epithelial breast and colon cancer cells depletes the cancer stem cell niche. Ki-67 null cells had a proliferative disadvantage compared to wildtype controls in colony formation assays and displayed increased sensitivity to various chemotherapies. Ki-67 null cancer cells showed decreased and delayed tumor formation in xenograft assays, which was associated with a reduction in cancer stem cell markers. Immunohistochemical analyses of human breast cancers revealed that Ki-67 expression is maintained at equivalent or greater levels in metastatic sites of disease compared to matched primary tumors, suggesting that maintenance of Ki-67 expression is associated with metastatic/clonogenic potential. These results elucidate Ki-67s role in maintaining the cancer stem cell niche, which has potential diagnostic and therapeutic implications for human malignancies.
Proteomics | 2015
Brian G. Blair; Xinyan Wu; Muhammad Saddiq Zahari; Morassa Mohseni; Justin Cidado; Hong Yuen Wong; Julia A. Beaver; Rory L. Cochran; Daniel J. Zabransky; Sarah Croessmann; David Chu; Patricia Valda Toro; Karen Cravero; Akhilesh Pandey; Ben Ho Park
The PIK3CA gene encodes for the p110 alpha isoform of PI3 kinase and is one of the most frequently mutated oncogenes in human cancers. However, the mechanisms by which PIK3CA mutations activate cell signaling are not fully understood. Here we used a phosphoproteomic approach to compare differential phosphorylation patterns between human breast epithelial cells and two isogenic somatic cell knock in derivatives, each harboring a distinct PIK3CA mutation. We demonstrated differential phosphorylation patterns between isogenic cell lines containing a PIK3CA helical domain mutation (E545K) compared to cells with a PIK3CA kinase domain mutation (H1047R). In particular, the receptor tyrosine kinase, HER3, showed increased phosphorylation at tyrosine 1328 in H1047R cells versus E545K cells. Genetic studies using shRNA demonstrated that H1047R cells have a profound decrease in growth factor independent proliferation upon HER3 knock down, but this effect was attenuated in E545K cells. In addition, HER3 knock down led to reductions in both PI3 kinase and MAP kinase pathway activation in H1047R cells, but in E545K cells only PI3 kinase pathway diminution was observed. These studies demonstrate the power of using paired isogenic cell lines for proteomic analysis to gain new insights into oncogenic signal transduction pathways.
Oncotarget | 2017
Alexa Goldstein; Patricia Valda Toro; Justin Lee; John L. Silberstein; Mary Nakazawa; Ian Waters; Karen Cravero; David Chu; Rory L. Cochran; Minsoo Kim; Daniel Shinn; Samantha Torquato; Robert M. Hughes; Aparna Pallavajjala; Michael A. Carducci; Channing J. Paller; Samuel R. Denmeade; Bruce Kressel; Bruce J. Trock; Mario A. Eisenberger; Emmanuel S. Antonarakis; Ben Ho Park; Paula J. Hurley
Somatic genetic alterations including copy number and point mutations in the androgen receptor (AR) are associated with resistance to therapies targeting the androgen/AR axis in patients with metastatic castration resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC). Due to limitations associated with biopsying metastatic lesions, plasma derived cell-free DNA (cfDNA) is increasingly being used as substrate for genetic testing. AR mutations detected by deep next generation sequencing (NGS) of cfDNA from patients with mCRPC have been reported at allelic fractions ranging from over 25% to below 1%. The lower bound threshold for accurate mutation detection by deep sequencing of cfDNA has not been comprehensively determined and may have locus specific variability. Herein, we used NGS for AR mutation discovery in plasma-derived cfDNA from patients with mCRPC and then used droplet digital polymerase chain reaction (ddPCR) for validation. Our findings show the AR (tTC>cTC) F877L hotspot was prone to false positive mutations during NGS. The rate of error at AR (tTC>cTC) F877L during amplification prior to ddPCR was variable among high fidelity polymerases. These results highlight the importance of validating low-abundant mutations detected by NGS and optimizing and controlling for amplification conditions prior to ddPCR.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015
Sarah Croessmann; Hong Yuen Wong; Daniel J. Zabransky; David Chu; Janet Mendonca; Anup Sharma; Morassa Mohseni; D. Marc Rosen; Robert B. Scharpf; Justin Cidado; Rory L. Cochran; Heather A. Parsons; W. Brian Dalton; Bracha Erlanger; Berry Button; Karen Cravero; Kelly Kyker-Snowman; Julia A. Beaver; Sushant K. Kachhap; Paula J. Hurley; Josh Lauring; Ben Ho Park
Significance The mechanism of how loss of the tumor suppressor p53 can lead to genomic instability is not fully understood. This study demonstrates that under physiologic low levels of proliferation, homozygous loss of tumor protein 53 (TP53) via genome editing, but not common p53 missense mutations, results in an inability to increase expression of N-Myc down-regulated gene 1 (NDRG1). In turn, failure to upregulate NDRG1 protein under low proliferative states leads to supernumerary centrosome formation, a known mechanism of aneuploidy. These results provide a mechanistic link between loss of TP53, proliferation, NDRG1, and genomic instability and help explain how cells with a low proliferative index and p53 loss can acquire additional genetic alterations that lead to cancer. The tumor protein 53 (TP53) tumor suppressor gene is the most frequently somatically altered gene in human cancers. Here we show expression of N-Myc down-regulated gene 1 (NDRG1) is induced by p53 during physiologic low proliferative states, and mediates centrosome homeostasis, thus maintaining genome stability. When placed in physiologic low-proliferating conditions, human TP53 null cells fail to increase expression of NDRG1 compared with isogenic wild-type controls and TP53 R248W knockin cells. Overexpression and RNA interference studies demonstrate that NDRG1 regulates centrosome number and amplification. Mechanistically, NDRG1 physically associates with γ-tubulin, a key component of the centrosome, with reduced association in p53 null cells. Strikingly, TP53 homozygous loss was mutually exclusive of NDRG1 overexpression in over 96% of human cancers, supporting the broad applicability of these results. Our study elucidates a mechanism of how TP53 loss leads to abnormal centrosome numbers and genomic instability mediated by NDRG1.
Clinical Cancer Research | 2017
Bracha Erlanger Avigdor; Katie Beierl; Christopher D. Gocke; Daniel J. Zabransky; Karen Cravero; Kelly Kyker-Snowman; Berry Button; David Chu; Sarah Croessmann; Rory L. Cochran; Roisin M. Connolly; Ben Ho Park; Sarah J. Wheelan; Ashley Cimino-Mathews
Purpose: Although most human cancers display a single histology, there are unusual cases where two or more distinct tissue types present within a primary tumor. One such example is metaplastic breast carcinoma, a rare but aggressive cancer with a heterogeneous histology, including squamous, chondroid, and spindle cells. Metaplastic carcinomas often contain an admixed conventional ductal invasive or in situ mammary carcinoma component, and are typically triple-negative for estrogen receptor, progesterone receptor, and HER-2 amplification/overexpression. An unanswered question is the origin of metaplastic breast cancers. While they may arise independently from their ductal components, their close juxtaposition favors a model that postulates a shared origin, either as two derivatives from the same primary cancer or one histology as an outgrowth of the other. Understanding the mechanism of development of these tumors may inform clinical decisions. Experimental Design: We performed exome sequencing for paired metaplastic and adjacent conventional invasive ductal carcinomas in 8 patients and created a pipeline to identify somatic variants and predict their functional impact, without having normal tissue. We then determined the genetic relationships between the histologically distinct compartments. Results: In each case, the tumor components have nearly identical landscapes of somatic mutation, implying that the differing histologies do not derive from genetic clonal divergence. Conclusions: A shared origin for tumors with differing histologies suggests that epigenetic or noncoding changes may mediate the metaplastic phenotype and that alternative therapeutic approaches, including epigenetic therapies, may be required for metaplastic breast cancers. Clin Cancer Res; 23(16); 4875–84. ©2017 AACR.
Breast Cancer Research and Treatment | 2017
Sarah Croessmann; Hong Yuen Wong; Daniel J. Zabransky; David Chu; D. Marc Rosen; Justin Cidado; Rory L. Cochran; W. Brian Dalton; Bracha Erlanger; Karen Cravero; Berry Button; Kelly Kyker-Snowman; Paula J. Hurley; Josh Lauring; Ben Ho Park
Background/purposeThe combined contributions of oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes toward carcinogenesis remain poorly understood. Elucidation of cancer gene cooperativity can provide new insights leading to more effective use of therapies.Experimental design/MethodsWe used somatic cell genome editing to introduce singly and in combination PIK3CA mutations (E545K or H1047R) with TP53 alterations (R248W or knockout), to assess any enhanced cancerous phenotypes. The non-tumorigenic human breast epithelial cell line, MCF10A, was used as the parental cell line, and resultant cells were assessed via various in vitro assays, growth as xenografts, and drug sensitivity assays using targeted agents and chemotherapies.ResultsCompared to single-gene-targeted cells and parental controls, cells with both a PIK3CA mutation and TP53 alteration had increased cancerous phenotypes including cell proliferation, soft agar colony formation, aberrant morphology in acinar formation assays, and genomic heterogeneity. Cells also displayed varying sensitivities to anti-neoplastic drugs, although all cells with PIK3CA mutations showed a relative increased sensitivity to paclitaxel. All cell lines remained non-tumorigenic.ConclusionsThis cell line panel provides a resource for further elucidating cooperative genetic mediators of carcinogenesis and response to therapies.