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Dive into the research topics where Karen M. Frank is active.

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Featured researches published by Karen M. Frank.


Cell | 1998

A critical role for DNA end-joining proteins in both lymphogenesis and neurogenesis

Yijie Gao; Yi Sun; Karen M. Frank; Pieter Dikkes; Yuko Fujiwara; Katherine J. Seidl; JoAnn Sekiguchi; Gary Rathbun; Wojciech Swat; Jiyang Wang; Roderick T. Bronson; Barbara A. Malynn; Margaret Bryans; Chengming Zhu; Jayanta Chaudhuri; Laurie Davidson; Roger Ferrini; Thomas D. Stamato; Stuart H. Orkin; Michael E. Greenberg; Frederick W. Alt

XRCC4 was identified via a complementation cloning method that employed an ionizing radiation (IR)-sensitive hamster cell line. By gene-targeted mutation, we show that XRCC4 deficiency in primary murine cells causes growth defects, premature senescence, IR sensitivity, and inability to support V(D)J recombination. In mice, XRCC4 deficiency causes late embryonic lethality accompanied by defective lymphogenesis and defective neurogenesis manifested by extensive apoptotic death of newly generated postmitotic neuronal cells. We find similar neuronal developmental defects in embryos that lack DNA ligase IV, an XRCC4-associated protein. Our findings demonstrate that differentiating lymphocytes and neurons strictly require the XRCC4 and DNA ligase IV end-joining proteins and point to the general stage of neuronal development in which these proteins are necessary.


Nature | 1998

Late embryonic lethality and impaired V(D)J recombination in mice lacking DNA ligase IV

Karen M. Frank; JoAnn Sekiguchi; Katherine J. Seidl; Wojciech Swat; Gary Rathbun; Hwei Ling Cheng; Laurie Davidson; Landy Kangaloo; Frederick W. Alt

The DNA-end-joining reactions used for repair of double-strand breaks in DNA and for V (D)J recombination, the process by which immunoglobulin and T-cell antigen-receptor genes are assembled from multiple gene segments, use common factors. These factors include components of DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PK), namely DNA-PKcs and the Ku heterodimer, Ku70–Ku80, and XRCC4 (ref. 1). The precise function of XRCC4 is unknown, but it interacts with DNA ligase IV. Ligase IV is one of the three known mammalian DNA ligases; however, the in vivo functions of these ligases have not been determined unequivocally. Here we show that inactivation of the ligase IV gene in mice leads to late embryonic lethality. Lymphopoiesis in these mice is blocked and V (D)J joining does not occur. Ligase IV-deficient embryonic fibroblasts also show marked sensitivity to ionizing radiation, growth defects and premature senescence. All of these phenotypic characteristics, except embryonic lethality, resemble those associated with Ku70 and Ku80 deficiencies, indicating that they may result from an impaired end-joining process that involves both Ku subunits and ligase IV. However, Ku-deficient mice are viable, so ligase IV must also be required for processes and/or in cell types in which Ku is dispensable.


Science | 2013

Commensal bacteria control cancer response to therapy by modulating the tumor microenvironment.

Noriho Iida; Amiran Dzutsev; C. Andrew Stewart; Loretta Smith; Nicolas Bouladoux; Rebecca A. Weingarten; Daniel A. Molina; Rosalba Salcedo; Timothy C. Back; Sarah D. Cramer; Ren-Ming Dai; Hiu Kiu; Marco Cardone; Shruti Naik; Anil K. Patri; Ena Wang; Francesco M. Marincola; Karen M. Frank; Yasmine Belkaid; Giorgio Trinchieri; Romina S. Goldszmid

The Microbiota Makes for Good Therapy The gut microbiota has been implicated in the development of some cancers, such as colorectal cancer, but—given the important role our intestinal habitants play in metabolism—they may also modulate the efficacy of certain cancer therapeutics. Iida et al. (p. 967) evaluated the impact of the microbiota on the efficacy of an immunotherapy [CpG (the cytosine, guanosine, phosphodiester link) oligonucleotides] and oxaliplatin, a platinum compound used as a chemotherapeutic. Both therapies were reduced in efficacy in tumor-bearing mice that lacked microbiota, with the microbiota important for activating the innate immune response against the tumors. Viaud et al. (p. 971) found a similar effect of the microbiota on tumor-bearing mice treated with cyclophosphamide, but in this case it appeared that the microbiota promoted an adaptive immune response against the tumors. The gut microbiota promote the efficacy of several antineoplastic agents in mice. The gut microbiota influences both local and systemic inflammation. Inflammation contributes to development, progression, and treatment of cancer, but it remains unclear whether commensal bacteria affect inflammation in the sterile tumor microenvironment. Here, we show that disruption of the microbiota impairs the response of subcutaneous tumors to CpG-oligonucleotide immunotherapy and platinum chemotherapy. In antibiotics-treated or germ-free mice, tumor-infiltrating myeloid-derived cells responded poorly to therapy, resulting in lower cytokine production and tumor necrosis after CpG-oligonucleotide treatment and deficient production of reactive oxygen species and cytotoxicity after chemotherapy. Thus, optimal responses to cancer therapy require an intact commensal microbiota that mediates its effects by modulating myeloid-derived cell functions in the tumor microenvironment. These findings underscore the importance of the microbiota in the outcome of disease treatment.


Nature | 2000

Interplay of p53 and DNA-repair protein xrcc4 in tumorigenesis, genomic stability and development

Yijie Gao; David O. Ferguson; Wei Xie; John P. Manis; Jo Ann Sekiguchi; Karen M. Frank; Jayanta Chaudhuri; James W. Horner; Ronald A. DePinho; Frederick W. Alt

XRCC4 is a non-homologous end-joining protein employed in DNA double strand break repair and in V(D)J recombination. In mice, XRCC4-deficiency causes a pleiotropic phenotype, which includes embryonic lethality and massive neuronal apoptosis. When DNA damage is not repaired, activation of the cell cycle checkpoint protein p53 can lead to apoptosis. Here we show that p53-deficiency rescues several aspects of the XRCC4-deficient phenotype, including embryonic lethality, neuronal apoptosis, and impaired cellular proliferation. However, there was no significant rescue of impaired V(D)J recombination or lymphocyte development. Although p53-deficiency allowed postnatal survival of XRCC4-deficient mice, they routinely succumbed to pro-B-cell lymphomas which had chromosomal translocations linking amplified c-myc oncogene and IgH locus sequences. Moreover, even XRCC4-deficient embryonic fibroblasts exhibited marked genomic instability including chromosomal translocations. Our findings support a crucial role for the non-homologous end-joining pathway as a caretaker of the mammalian genome, a role required both for normal development and for suppression of tumours.


Molecular Cell | 2000

DNA ligase IV deficiency in mice leads to defective neurogenesis and embryonic lethality via the p53 pathway.

Karen M. Frank; Norman E. Sharpless; Yijie Gao; JoAnn Sekiguchi; David O. Ferguson; Chengming Zhu; John P. Manis; James W. Horner; Ronald A. DePinho; Frederick W. Alt

DNA ligase IV (LIG4) is a nonhomologous end-joining (NHEJ) protein used for V(D)J recombination and DNA repair. In mice, Lig4 deficiency causes embryonic lethality, massive neuronal apoptosis, arrested lymphogenesis, and various cellular defects. Herein, we assess potential roles in this phenotype for INK4a/ARF and p53, two proteins implicated in apoptosis and senescence. INK4a/ARF deficiency rescued proliferation/senescence defects of Lig4-deficient fibroblasts but not other phenotypic aspects. In contrast, p53 deficiency rescued embryonic lethality, neuronal apoptosis, and fibroblast proliferation/senescence defects but not lymphocyte development or radiosensitivity. Young Lig4/p53 double null mice routinely died from pro-B lymphomas. Thus, in the context of Lig4 deficiency, embryonic lethality and neuronal apoptosis likely result from a p53-dependent response to unrepaired DNA damage, and neuronal apoptosis and lymphocyte developmental defects can be mechanistically dissociated.


Immunity | 1997

Growth retardation and leaky SCID phenotype of Ku70-deficient mice

Yansong Gu; Katherine J. Seidl; Gary Rathbun; Chengming Zhu; John P. Manis; Nienke van der Stoep; Laurie Davidson; Hwei Ling Cheng; JoAnn Sekiguchi; Karen M. Frank; Patricia Stanhope-Baker; Mark S. Schlissel; David Roth; Frederick W. Alt

Ku70, Ku80, and DNA-PKcs are subunits of the DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PK), an enzyme implicated in DNA double-stranded break repair and V(D)J recombination. Our Ku70-deficient mice were about 50% the size of control littermates, and their fibroblasts were ionizing radiation sensitive and displayed premature senescence associated with the accumulation of nondividing cells. Ku70-deficient mice lacked mature B cells or serum immunoglobulin but, unexpectedly, reproducibly developed small populations of thymic and peripheral alpha/beta T lineage cells and had a significant incidence of thymic lymphomas. In association with B and T cell developmental defects, Ku70-deficient cells were severely impaired for joining of V(D)J coding and recombination signal sequences. These unanticipated features of the Ku70-deficient phenotype with respect to lymphocyte development and V(D)J recombination may reflect differential functions of the three DNA-PK components.


Nature Medicine | 2011

A Staphylococcus aureus pore-forming toxin subverts the activity of ADAM10 to cause lethal infection in mice

Ichiro Inoshima; Naoko Inoshima; Georgia Wilke; Michael E. Powers; Karen M. Frank; Yang Wang; Juliane Bubeck Wardenburg

Staphylococcus aureus is a major cause of human disease, responsible for half a million infections and approximately 20,000 deaths per year in the United States alone. This pathogen secretes α-hemolysin, a pore-forming cytotoxin that contributes to the pathogenesis of pneumonia. α-hemolysin injures epithelial cells in vitro by interacting with its receptor, the zinc-dependent metalloprotease ADAM10 (ref. 6). We show here that mice harboring a conditional disruption of the Adam10 gene in lung epithelium are resistant to lethal pneumonia. Investigation of the molecular mechanism of toxin-receptor function revealed that α-hemolysin upregulates ADAM10 metalloprotease activity in alveolar epithelial cells, resulting in cleavage of the adherens junction protein E-cadherin. Cleavage is associated with disruption of epithelial barrier function, contributing to the pathogenesis of lethal acute lung injury. A metalloprotease inhibitor of ADAM10 prevents E-cadherin cleavage in response to Hla; similarly, toxin-dependent E-cadherin proteolysis and barrier disruption is attenuated in ADAM10-knockout mice. Together, these data attest to the function of ADAM10 as the cellular receptor for α-hemolysin. The observation that α-hemolysin can usurp the metalloprotease activity of its receptor reveals a previously unknown mechanism of pore-forming cytotoxin action in which pathologic insults are not solely the result of irreversible membrane injury and defines ADAM10 inhibition as a strategy to attenuate α-hemolysin-induced disease.


Science Translational Medicine | 2014

Single-molecule sequencing to track plasmid diversity of hospital-associated carbapenemase-producing Enterobacteriaceae

Sean Conlan; Pamela J. Thomas; Clayton Deming; Morgan Park; Anna F. Lau; John P. Dekker; Evan S. Snitkin; Tyson A. Clark; Khai Luong; Yi Song; Yu-Chih Tsai; Matthew Boitano; Jyoti G. Dayal; Shelise Brooks; Brian Schmidt; Alice C. Young; James W. Thomas; Gerard G. Bouffard; Robert W. Blakesley; Nisc Comparative Sequencing Program; James C. Mullikin; Jonas Korlach; David K. Henderson; Karen M. Frank; Tara N. Palmore; Julia A. Segre

Single-molecule sequencing of bacteria at the NIH Clinical Center documents diverse plasmids encoding antibiotic resistance and their transfer between microbes. How Antibiotic Resistance Spreads Among Bacteria Antibiotic-resistant microbes are spreading at an alarming rate in health care facilities throughout the world. Conlan et al. use a new DNA sequencing method to take a close look at one way in which antibiotic resistance spreads. With single-molecule sequencing, the authors completely characterized individual plasmids, the circular bits of DNA that carry the genes for antibiotic resistance in bacteria. They focused on resistance to the carbapenems, a class of antibiotics that is often used for infections that do not respond to more conventional antimicrobial agents. By using this approach in their microbial surveillance program at the NIH Clinical Center, the authors found evidence that plasmids carrying carbapenemase genes moved from one microbial species to another within the hospital environment. They also used the technique to test hypotheses about patient-to-patient transmission and to characterize a previously undescribed carbapenemase-encoding plasmid carried by diverse bacterial species that could cause dangerous clinical infections. Public health officials have raised concerns that plasmid transfer between Enterobacteriaceae species may spread resistance to carbapenems, an antibiotic class of last resort, thereby rendering common health care–associated infections nearly impossible to treat. To determine the diversity of carbapenemase-encoding plasmids and assess their mobility among bacterial species, we performed comprehensive surveillance and genomic sequencing of carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae in the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Clinical Center patient population and hospital environment. We isolated a repertoire of carbapenemase-encoding Enterobacteriaceae, including multiple strains of Klebsiella pneumoniae, Klebsiella oxytoca, Escherichia coli, Enterobacter cloacae, Citrobacter freundii, and Pantoea species. Long-read genome sequencing with full end-to-end assembly revealed that these organisms carry the carbapenem resistance genes on a wide array of plasmids. K. pneumoniae and E. cloacae isolated simultaneously from a single patient harbored two different carbapenemase-encoding plasmids, indicating that plasmid transfer between organisms was unlikely within this patient. We did, however, find evidence of horizontal transfer of carbapenemase-encoding plasmids between K. pneumoniae, E. cloacae, and C. freundii in the hospital environment. Our data, including full plasmid identification, challenge assumptions about horizontal gene transfer events within patients and identify possible connections between patients and the hospital environment. In addition, we identified a new carbapenemase-encoding plasmid of potentially high clinical impact carried by K. pneumoniae, E. coli, E. cloacae, and Pantoea species, in unrelated patients and in the hospital environment.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001

Genetic interactions between ATM and the nonhomologous end-joining factors in genomic stability and development

JoAnn Sekiguchi; David O. Ferguson; Hua Tang Chen; Eva Yang; John Earle; Karen M. Frank; Scott Whitlow; Yansong Gu; Yang Xu; André Nussenzweig; Frederick W. Alt

DNA ligase IV (Lig4) and the DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PK) function in nonhomologous end joining (NHEJ). However, although Lig4 deficiency causes late embryonic lethality, deficiency in DNA-PK subunits (Ku70, Ku80, and DNA-PKcs) does not. Here we demonstrate that, similar to p53 deficiency, ataxia-telangiectasia-mutated (ATM) gene deficiency rescues the embryonic lethality and neuronal apoptosis, but not impaired lymphocyte development, associated with Lig4 deficiency. However, in contrast to p53 deficiency, ATM deficiency enhances deleterious effects of Lig4 deficiency on growth potential of embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) and genomic instability in both MEFs and cultured progenitor lymphocytes, demonstrating significant differences in the interplay of p53 vs. ATM with respect to NHEJ. Finally, in dramatic contrast to effects on Lig4 deficiency, ATM deficiency causes early embryonic lethality in Ku- or DNA-PKcs-deficient mice, providing evidence for an NHEJ-independent role for the DNA-PK holoenzyme.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2009

Investigation of the Cause of Death in a Gene-Therapy Trial

Karen M. Frank; D. Kyle Hogarth; Jonathan Miller; Saptarshi Mandal; Philip J. Mease; R. Jude Samulski; Glen A. Weisgerber; John Hart

We present a case of disseminated histoplasmosis, complicated by retroperitoneal bleeding and leading to death, in a patient who was receiving systemic immunosuppressive therapy for rheumatoid arthritis and who was enrolled in a gene-therapy trial. This trial was designed to evaluate intraarticular delivery of a tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) antagonist, through an adeno-associated virus (AAV) type 2 delivery system, for inflammatory arthritis. The patients receipt of concurrent anti-TNF-alpha therapy and other immunosuppressive therapy while she was living in an area where histoplasmosis was endemic was thought to be the most likely explanation for the infection; the evidence presented suggests that this fatal infection was unlikely to have been related to exposure to the agent administered in the gene-therapy trial. This case reinforces the importance of considering infectious complications, such as those from endemic mycoses, in patients receiving treatment with a TNF-alpha antagonist and the importance of having a well-designed monitoring plan when subjects in a research study become ill. (ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00126724.)

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John P. Dekker

National Institutes of Health

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Anna F. Lau

National Institutes of Health

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Tara N. Palmore

National Institutes of Health

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David K. Henderson

National Institutes of Health

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Julia A. Segre

National Institutes of Health

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Frederick W. Alt

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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Sean Conlan

National Institutes of Health

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Rebecca A. Weingarten

National Institutes of Health

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