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Dive into the research topics where Katerina Goudevenou is active.

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Featured researches published by Katerina Goudevenou.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Perturbation of fetal liver hematopoietic stem and progenitor cell development by trisomy 21

Anindita Roy; Gillian Cowan; Adam Mead; Sarah Filippi; Georg Bohn; Aristeidis Chaidos; Oliver Tunstall; Jerry Chan; Mahesh Choolani; Phillip R. Bennett; Sailesh Kumar; Deborah Atkinson; Josephine Wyatt-Ashmead; Ming Hu; Michael P. H. Stumpf; Katerina Goudevenou; David F. O'Connor; Stella T. Chou; Mitchell J. Weiss; Anastasios Karadimitris; Sten Eirik W. Jacobsen; Paresh Vyas; Irene Roberts

The 40-fold increase in childhood megakaryocyte-erythroid and B-cell leukemia in Down syndrome implicates trisomy 21 (T21) in perturbing fetal hematopoiesis. Here, we show that compared with primary disomic controls, primary T21 fetal liver (FL) hematopoietic stem cells (HSC) and megakaryocyte-erythroid progenitors are markedly increased, whereas granulocyte-macrophage progenitors are reduced. Commensurately, HSC and megakaryocyte-erythroid progenitors show higher clonogenicity, with increased megakaryocyte, megakaryocyte-erythroid, and replatable blast colonies. Biased megakaryocyte-erythroid–primed gene expression was detected as early as the HSC compartment. In lymphopoiesis, T21 FL lymphoid-primed multipotential progenitors and early lymphoid progenitor numbers are maintained, but there was a 10-fold reduction in committed PreproB-lymphoid progenitors and the functional B-cell potential of HSC and early lymphoid progenitor is severely impaired, in tandem with reduced early lymphoid gene expression. The same pattern was seen in all T21 FL samples and no samples had GATA1 mutations. Therefore, T21 itself causes multiple distinct defects in FL myelo- and lymphopoiesis.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2015

Glycosphingolipid synthesis inhibition limits osteoclast activation and myeloma bone disease

Adel Ersek; Ke Xu; Aristotelis Antonopoulos; Terry D. Butters; Ana Isabel Espirito Santo; Youridies Vattakuzhi; Lynn M. Williams; Katerina Goudevenou; L Danks; Andrew Freidin; Emmanouil Spanoudakis; Simon Parry; Maria Papaioannou; Evdoxia Hatjiharissi; Aristeidis Chaidos; Dominic S. Alonzi; Gabriele Twigg; Ming Hu; Raymond A. Dwek; Stuart M. Haslam; Irene Roberts; Anne Dell; Amin Rahemtulla; Nicole J. Horwood; Anastasios Karadimitris

Glycosphingolipids (GSLs) are essential constituents of cell membranes and lipid rafts and can modulate signal transduction events. The contribution of GSLs in osteoclast (OC) activation and osteolytic bone diseases in malignancies such as the plasma cell dyscrasia multiple myeloma (MM) is not known. Here, we tested the hypothesis that pathological activation of OCs in MM requires de novo GSL synthesis and is further enhanced by myeloma cell-derived GSLs. Glucosylceramide synthase (GCS) inhibitors, including the clinically approved agent N-butyl-deoxynojirimycin (NB-DNJ), prevented OC development and activation by disrupting RANKL-induced localization of TRAF6 and c-SRC into lipid rafts and preventing nuclear accumulation of transcriptional activator NFATc1. GM3 was the prevailing GSL produced by patient-derived myeloma cells and MM cell lines, and exogenous addition of GM3 synergistically enhanced the ability of the pro-osteoclastogenic factors RANKL and insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1) to induce osteoclastogenesis in precursors. In WT mice, administration of GM3 increased OC numbers and activity, an effect that was reversed by treatment with NB-DNJ. In a murine MM model, treatment with NB-DNJ markedly improved osteolytic bone disease symptoms. Together, these data demonstrate that both tumor-derived and de novo synthesized GSLs influence osteoclastogenesis and suggest that NB-DNJ may reduce pathological OC activation and bone destruction associated with MM.


Stem Cells | 2015

Myeloma Propagating Cells, Drug Resistance and Relapse

Anastasios Karadimitris; Aristeidis Chaidos; Valentina Caputo; Katerina Goudevenou; Kanagaraju Ponnusamy; Xiaolin Xiao

Multiple myeloma (MM) is an incurable tumor of the plasma cells, the terminally differentiated immunoglobulin secreting B lineage cells. The genetic make‐up of MM has been extensively characterized but its impact on the biology of the disease is incomplete without more precise knowledge of the identity and functional role of cells with multiple myeloma propagating activity (MMPA). We review here recent data that link MMPA with myeloma clonotypic populations organized in a cellular hierarchy that mirrors normal B cell development and also with drug resistance and disease relapse. We further propose a conceptual framework which, with optimal use of recent technological advances in genomics and phenomics, could allow dissection of the cellular and molecular properties of cells with MMPA, drug resistance and in vivo relapse in an integrated and patient‐specific manner. There is real hope that these approaches will significantly contribute to further improvements in disease control, overall survival, and possibly cure of patients with MM. Stem Cells 2015;33:3205–3211


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2014

Nuclear proteasomes carry a constitutive posttranslational modification which derails SDS-PAGE (but not CTAB-PAGE).

David S. Pitcher; Kate de Mattos-Shipley; Ziming Wang; Konstantinos Tzortzis; Katerina Goudevenou; Helen R. Flynn; Georg Bohn; Amin Rahemtulla; Irene Roberts; Ambrosius P. Snijders; Anastasios Karadimitris; Maurits F. Kleijnen

We report that subunits of human nuclear proteasomes carry a previously unrecognised, constitutive posttranslational modification. Subunits with this modification are not visualised by SDS-PAGE, which is used in almost all denaturing protein gel electrophoresis. In contrast, CTAB-PAGE readily visualises such modified subunits. Thus, under most experimental conditions, with identical samples, SDS-PAGE yielded gel electrophoresis patterns for subunits of nuclear proteasomes which were misleading and strikingly different from those obtained with CTAB-PAGE. Initial analysis indicates a novel modification of a high negative charge with some similarity to polyADP-ribose, possibly explaining compatibility with (positively-charged) CTAB-PAGE but not (negatively-charged) SDS-PAGE and providing a mechanism for how nuclear proteasomes may interact with chromatin, DNA and other nuclear components.


Cancer Cell | 2018

Enhanced Anti-lymphoma Activity of CAR19-iNKT Cells Underpinned by Dual CD19 and CD1d Targeting

Antonia Rotolo; Valentina Caputo; Monika Holubova; Nicoleta Baxan; Olivier Dubois; Mohammed Suhail Chaudhry; Xiaolin Xiao; Katerina Goudevenou; David S. Pitcher; Kyriaki Petevi; Carolina Kachramanoglou; Sandra Iles; Kikkeri N. Naresh; John Maher; Anastasios Karadimitris

Summary Chimeric antigen receptor anti-CD19 (CAR19)-T cell immunotherapy-induced clinical remissions in CD19+ B cell lymphomas are often short lived. We tested whether CAR19-engineering of the CD1d-restricted invariant natural killer T (iNKT) cells would result in enhanced anti-lymphoma activity. CAR19-iNKT cells co-operatively activated by CD1d- and CAR19-CD19-dependent interactions are more effective than CAR19-T cells against CD1d-expressing lymphomas in vitro and in vivo. The swifter in vivo anti-lymphoma activity of CAR19-iNKT cells and their enhanced ability to eradicate brain lymphomas underpinned an improved tumor-free and overall survival. CD1D transcriptional de-repression by all-trans retinoic acid results in further enhanced cytotoxicity of CAR19-iNKT cells against CD19+ chronic lymphocytic leukemia cells. Thus, iNKT cells are a highly efficient platform for CAR-based immunotherapy of lymphomas and possibly other CD1d-expressing cancers.


Clinical Immunology | 2017

High resolution IgH repertoire analysis reveals fetal liver as the likely origin of life-long, innate B lymphopoiesis in humans

Anindita Roy; Vojtech Bystry; Georg Bohn; Katerina Goudevenou; Tomas Reigl; Maria Papaioannou; Adam Krejci; Sorcha O'Byrne; Aristeidis Chaidos; Andrea Grioni; Nikos Darzentas; Irene Roberts; Anastasios Karadimitris

The ontogeny of the natural, public IgM repertoire remains incompletely explored. Here, high-resolution immunogenetic analysis of B cells from (unrelated) fetal, child, and adult samples, shows that although fetal liver (FL) and bone marrow (FBM) IgM repertoires are equally diversified, FL is the main source of IgM natural immunity during the 2nd trimester. Strikingly, 0.25% of all prenatal clonotypes, comprising 18.7% of the expressed repertoire, are shared with the postnatal samples, consistent with persisting fetal IgM + B cells being a source of natural IgM repertoire in adult life. Further, the origins of specific stereotypic IgM + B cell receptors associated with chronic lymphocytic leukemia, can be traced back to fetal B cell lymphopoiesis, suggesting that persisting fetal B cells can be subject to malignant transformation late in life. Overall, these novel data provide unique insights into the ontogeny of physiological and malignant B lymphopoiesis that spans the human lifetime.


Haematologica | 2016

GENOME WIDE DYSREGULATION OF GENE EXPRESSION BY TRISOMY 21 IN FETAL LIVER HAEMATOPOIETIC STEM AND PROGENITOR CELLS

Anindita Roy; Binbin Liu; Katerina Goudevenou; Georg Bohn; Sarah Filippi; N Elliott; Gillian Cowan; David F. O'Connor; Neha Bhatnagar; Stella T. Chou; Mitchell J. Weiss; Paresh Vyas; Anastasios Karadimitris; Irene Roberts


Developmental Biology | 2016

Retraction notice to “Swap70b is required for convergent and extension cell movement during zebrafish gastrulation linking Wnt11 signalling and RhoA effector function”: YDBIO 386/1 (2013) 191–203

Xiaoou Xu; Wai Ho Shuen; Chen Chen; Katerina Goudevenou; Peter Jones; Fred Sablitzky


Blood | 2016

High Resolution Igh Repertoire Analysis Reveals the Human Fetal Liver As the Origin of Life-Long, Innate B Lymphopoiesis

Anindita Roy; Vojtech Bystry; Georg Bohn; Katerina Goudevenou; Tomas Reigl; Maria Papaioannou; Adam Krejci; Sorcha O'Byrne; Aristeidis Chaidos; Andrea Grioni; Nikos Darzentas; Irene Roberts; Anastasios Karadimitris


Blood | 2014

Trisomy 21-Associated Abnormalities in IGF Signalling and the Fetal Microenvironment Both Contribute to Disruption of Fetal Hematopoiesis in Down Syndrome

David F. O'Connor; Binbin Liu; Gillian Cowan; Anindita Roy; Katerina Goudevenou; Neha Bhatnagar; Oliver Tunstall; J de la Fuente; Anastasios Karadimitris; Irene Roberts

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Anindita Roy

Imperial College London

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Georg Bohn

Hannover Medical School

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Oliver Tunstall

Bristol Royal Hospital for Children

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