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Dive into the research topics where Kristian W. Pajtler is active.

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Featured researches published by Kristian W. Pajtler.


Cancer Research | 2009

Lysine-Specific Demethylase 1 Is Strongly Expressed in Poorly Differentiated Neuroblastoma: Implications for Therapy.

Johannes H. Schulte; Soyoung Lim; Alexander Schramm; Nicolaus Friedrichs; Jan Koster; Rogier Versteeg; Ingrid Øra; Kristian W. Pajtler; Ludger Klein-Hitpass; Steffi Kuhfittig-Kulle; Eric Metzger; Roland Schüle; Angelika Eggert; Reinhard Buettner; Jutta Kirfel

Aberrant epigenetic changes in DNA methylation and histone acetylation are hallmarks of most cancers, whereas histone methylation was previously considered to be irreversible and less versatile. Recently, several histone demethylases were identified catalyzing the removal of methyl groups from histone H3 lysine residues and thereby influencing gene expression. Neuroblastomas continue to remain a clinical challenge despite advances in multimodal therapy. Here, we address the functional significance of the chromatin-modifying enzyme lysine-specific demethylase 1 (LSD1) in neuroblastoma. LSD1 expression correlated with adverse outcome and was inversely correlated with differentiation in neuroblastic tumors. Differentiation of neuroblastoma cells resulted in down-regulation of LSD1. Small interfering RNA-mediated knockdown of LSD1 decreased cellular growth, induced expression of differentiation-associated genes, and increased target gene-specific H3K4 methylation. Moreover, LSD1 inhibition using monoamine oxidase inhibitors resulted in an increase of global H3K4 methylation and growth inhibition of neuroblastoma cells in vitro. Finally, targeting LSD1 reduced neuroblastoma xenograft growth in vivo. Here, we provide the first evidence that a histone demethylase, LSD1, is involved in maintaining the undifferentiated, malignant phenotype of neuroblastoma cells. We show that inhibition of LSD1 reprograms the transcriptome of neuroblastoma cells and inhibits neuroblastoma xenograft growth. Our results suggest that targeting histone demethylases may provide a novel option for cancer therapy.


Leukemia | 2012

Lysine-specific demethylase 1 restricts hematopoietic progenitor proliferation and is essential for terminal differentiation

Annika Sprüssel; Johannes H. Schulte; S Weber; M Necke; K Händschke; Theresa Thor; Kristian W. Pajtler; Alexander Schramm; Katharina König; L Diehl; Pieter Mestdagh; Jo Vandesompele; Franki Speleman; Holger Jastrow; Lukas C. Heukamp; Roland Schüle; U Dührsen; Reinhard Buettner; Angelika Eggert; Göthert

Lysine (K)-specific demethylase 1A (LSD1/KDM1A) has been identified as a potential therapeutic target in solid cancers and more recently in acute myeloid leukemia. However, the potential side effects of a LSD1-inhibitory therapy remain elusive. Here, we show, with a newly established conditional in vivo knockdown model, that LSD1 represents a central regulator of hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells. LSD1 knockdown (LSD1-kd) expanded progenitor numbers by enhancing their proliferative behavior. LSD1-kd led to an extensive expansion of granulomonocytic, erythroid and megakaryocytic progenitors. In contrast, terminal granulopoiesis, erythropoiesis and platelet production were severely inhibited. The only exception was monopoiesis, which was promoted by LSD1 deficiency. Importantly, we showed that peripheral blood granulocytopenia, monocytosis, anemia and thrombocytopenia were reversible after LSD1-kd termination. Extramedullary splenic hematopoiesis contributed to the phenotypic reversion, and progenitor populations remained expanded. LSD1-kd was associated with the upregulation of key hematopoietic genes, including Gfi1b, Hoxa9 and Meis1, which are known regulators of the HSC/progenitor compartment. We also demonstrated that LSD1-kd abrogated Gfi1b-negative autoregulation by crossing LSD1-kd with Gfi1b:GFP mice. Taken together, our findings distinguish LSD1 as a critical regulator of hematopoiesis and point to severe, but reversible, side effects of a LSD1-targeted therapy.


International Journal of Cancer | 2010

Accurate prediction of neuroblastoma outcome based on miRNA expression profiles.

Johannes H. Schulte; Benjamin Schowe; Pieter Mestdagh; Lars Kaderali; Prabhav Kalaghatgi; Stefanie Schlierf; Joëlle Vermeulen; Bent Brockmeyer; Kristian W. Pajtler; Theresa Thor; Katleen De Preter; Franki Speleman; Katharina Morik; Angelika Eggert; Jo Vandesompele; Alexander Schramm

For neuroblastoma, the most common extracranial tumour of childhood, identification of new biomarkers and potential therapeutic targets is mandatory to improve risk stratification and survival rates. MicroRNAs are deregulated in most cancers, including neuroblastoma. In this study, we analysed 430 miRNAs in 69 neuroblastomas by stem‐loop RT‐qPCR. Prediction of event‐free survival (EFS) with support vector machines (SVM) and actual survival times with Cox regression‐based models (CASPAR) were highly accurate and were independently validated. SVM‐accuracy for prediction of EFS was 88.7% (95% CI: 88.5–88.8%). For CASPAR‐based predictions, 5y‐EFS probability was 0.19% (95% CI: 0–38%) in the CASPAR‐predicted short survival group compared with 0.78% (95%CI: 64–93%) in the CASPAR‐predicted long survival group. Both classifiers were validated on an independent test set yielding accuracies of 94.74% (SVM) and 5y‐EFS probabilities as 0.25 (95% CI: 0.0–0.55) for short versus 1 ± 0.0 for long survival (CASPAR), respectively. Amplification of the MYCN oncogene was highly correlated with deregulation of miRNA expression. In addition, 37 miRNAs correlated with TrkA expression, a marker of excellent outcome, and 6 miRNAs further analysed in vitro were regulated upon TrkA transfection, suggesting a functional relationship. Expression of the most significant TrkA‐correlated miRNA, miR‐542‐5p, also discriminated between local and metastatic disease and was inversely correlated with MYCN amplification and event‐free survival. We conclude that neuroblastoma patient outcome prediction using miRNA expression is feasible and effective. Studies testing miRNA‐based predictors in comparison to and in combination with mRNA and aCGH information should be initiated. Specific miRNAs (e.g., miR‐542‐5p) might be important in neuroblastoma tumour biology, and qualify as potential therapeutic targets.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2011

High ALK Receptor Tyrosine Kinase Expression Supersedes ALK Mutation as a Determining Factor of an Unfavorable Phenotype in Primary Neuroblastoma

Johannes H. Schulte; H Bachmann; Bent Brockmeyer; Katleen DePreter; André Oberthür; Sandra Ackermann; Yvonne Kahlert; Kristian W. Pajtler; Jessica Theissen; Frank Westermann; Jo Vandesompele; Frank Speleman; Frank Berthold; Angelika Eggert; Benedikt Brors; Barbara Hero; Alexander Schramm; Matthias Fischer

Purpose: Genomic alterations of the anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) gene have been postulated to contribute to neuroblastoma pathogenesis. This study aimed to determine the interrelation of ALK mutations, ALK expression levels, and clinical phenotype in primary neuroblastoma. Experimental Design: The genomic ALK status and global gene expression patterns were examined in 263 primary neuroblastomas. Allele-specific ALK expression was determined by cDNA cloning and sequencing. Associations of genomic ALK alterations and ALK expression levels with clinical phenotypes and transcriptomic profiles were compared. Results: Nonsynonymous point mutations of ALK were detected in 21 of 263 neuroblastomas (8%). Tumors with ALK mutations exhibited about 2-fold elevated median ALK mRNA levels in comparison with tumors with wild-type (WT) ALK. Unexpectedly, the WT allele was preferentially expressed in 12 of 21 mutated tumors. Whereas survival of patients with ALK mutated tumors was significantly worse as compared with the entire cohort of WT ALK patients, it was similarly poor in patients with WT ALK tumors in which ALK expression was as high as in ALK mutated neuroblastomas. Global gene expression patterns of tumors with ALK mutations or with high-level WT ALK expression were highly similar, and suggested that ALK may be involved in cellular proliferation in primary neuroblastoma. Conclusions: Primary neuroblastomas with mutated ALK exhibit high ALK expression levels and strongly resemble neuroblastomas with elevated WT ALK expression levels in both their clinical and molecular phenotypes. These data suggest that high levels of mutated and WT ALK mediate similar molecular functions that may contribute to a malignant phenotype in primary neuroblastoma. Clin Cancer Res; 17(15); 5082–92. ©2011 AACR.


Neuro-oncology | 2012

Pharmacological activation of the p53 pathway by nutlin-3 exerts anti-tumoral effects in medulloblastomas

Annette Künkele; Katleen De Preter; Lukas C. Heukamp; Theresa Thor; Kristian W. Pajtler; Wolfgang Hartmann; Michel Mittelbronn; Michael A. Grotzer; Hedwig E. Deubzer; Franki Speleman; Alexander Schramm; Angelika Eggert; Johannes H. Schulte

Medulloblastomas account for 20% of pediatric brain tumors. With an overall survival of 40%-70%, their treatment is still a challenge. The majority of medulloblastomas lack p53 mutations, but even in cancers retaining wild-type p53, the tumor surveillance function of p53 is inhibited by the oncoprotein MDM2. Deregulation of the MDM2/p53 balance leads to malignant transformation. Here, we analyzed MDM2 mRNA and protein expression in primary medulloblastomas and normal cerebellum and assessed the mutational status of p53 and MDM2 expression in 6 medulloblastoma cell lines. MDM2 expression was elevated in medulloblastomas, compared with cerebellum. Four of 6 medulloblastoma cell lines expressed wild-type p53 and high levels of MDM2. The tumor-promoting p53-MDM2 interaction can be inhibited by the small molecule, nutlin-3, restoring p53 function. Targeting the p53-MDM2 axis using nutlin-3 significantly reduced cell viability and induced either cell cycle arrest or apoptosis and expression of the p53 target gene p21 in these 4 cell lines. In contrast, DAOY and UW-228 cells harboring TP53 mutations were almost unaffected by nutlin-3 treatment. MDM2 knockdown in medulloblastoma cells by siRNA mimicked nutlin-3 treatment, whereas expression of dominant negative p53 abrogated nutlin-3 effects. Oral nutlin-3 treatment of mice with established medulloblastoma xenografts inhibited tumor growth and significantly increased survival. Thus, nutlin-3 reduced medulloblastoma cell viability in vitro and in vivo by re-activating p53 function. We suggest that inhibition of the MDM2-p53 interaction with nutlin-3 is a promising therapeutic option for medulloblastomas with functional p53 that should be further evaluated in clinical trials.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2017

Childhood cancer predisposition syndromes—A concise review and recommendations by the Cancer Predisposition Working Group of the Society for Pediatric Oncology and Hematology

Tim Ripperger; Stefan S. Bielack; Arndt Borkhardt; Ines B. Brecht; Birgit Burkhardt; Gabriele Calaminus; Klaus-Michael Debatin; Hedwig E. Deubzer; Uta Dirksen; Cornelia Eckert; Angelika Eggert; Miriam Erlacher; Gudrun Fleischhack; Michael C. Frühwald; Astrid Gnekow; Gudrun Goehring; Norbert Graf; Helmut Hanenberg; Julia Hauer; Barbara Hero; Simone Hettmer; Katja von Hoff; Martin A. Horstmann; Juliane Hoyer; Thomas Illig; Peter Kaatsch; Roland Kappler; Kornelius Kerl; Thomas Klingebiel; Udo Kontny

Heritable predisposition is an important cause of cancer in children and adolescents. Although a large number of cancer predisposition genes and their associated syndromes and malignancies have already been described, it appears likely that there are more pediatric cancer patients in whom heritable cancer predisposition syndromes have yet to be recognized. In a consensus meeting in the beginning of 2016, we convened experts in Human Genetics and Pediatric Hematology/Oncology to review the available data, to categorize the large amount of information, and to develop recommendations regarding when a cancer predisposition syndrome should be suspected in a young oncology patient. This review summarizes the current knowledge of cancer predisposition syndromes in pediatric oncology and provides essential information on clinical situations in which a childhood cancer predisposition syndrome should be suspected.


International Journal of Cancer | 2016

Telomere dysfunction and chromothripsis

Aurélie Ernst; David T. W. Jones; Kendra Korinna Maass; Agata Rode; Katharina I. Deeg; Billy Michael Chelliah Jebaraj; Andrey Korshunov; Volker Hovestadt; Michael A. Tainsky; Kristian W. Pajtler; Sebastian Bender; Sebastian Brabetz; Susanne Gröbner; Marcel Kool; Frauke Devens; Jennifer Edelmann; Cindy Zhang; Pedro Castelo-Branco; Uri Tabori; David Malkin; Karsten Rippe; Stephan Stilgenbauer; Stefan M. Pfister; Marc Zapatka; Peter Lichter

Chromothripsis is a recently discovered form of genomic instability, characterized by tens to hundreds of clustered DNA rearrangements resulting from a single dramatic event. Telomere dysfunction has been suggested to play a role in the initiation of this phenomenon, which occurs in a large number of tumor entities. Here, we show that telomere attrition can indeed lead to catastrophic genomic events, and that telomere patterns differ between cells analyzed before and after such genomic catastrophes. Telomere length and telomere stabilization mechanisms diverge between samples with and without chromothripsis in a given tumor subtype. Longitudinal analyses of the evolution of chromothriptic patterns identify either stable patterns between matched primary and relapsed tumors, or loss of the chromothriptic clone in the relapsed specimen. The absence of additional chromothriptic events occurring between the initial tumor and the relapsed tumor sample points to telomere stabilization after the initial chromothriptic event which prevents further shattering of the genome.


Acta neuropathologica communications | 2013

The KDM1A histone demethylase is a promising new target for the epigenetic therapy of medulloblastoma.

Kristian W. Pajtler; Christina Weingarten; Theresa Thor; Annette Künkele; Lukas C. Heukamp; Reinhard Büttner; Takayoshi Suzuki; Naoki Miyata; Michael A. Grotzer; Anja Rieb; Annika Sprüssel; Angelika Eggert; Alexander Schramm; Johannes H. Schulte

BackgroundMedulloblastoma is a leading cause of childhood cancer-related deaths. Current aggressive treatments frequently lead to cognitive and neurological disabilities in survivors. Novel targeted therapies are required to improve outcome in high-risk medulloblastoma patients and quality of life of survivors. Targeting enzymes controlling epigenetic alterations is a promising approach recently bolstered by the identification of mutations in histone demethylating enzymes in medulloblastoma sequencing efforts. Hypomethylation of lysine 4 in histone 3 (H3K4) is also associated with a dismal prognosis for medulloblastoma patients. Functional characterization of important epigenetic key regulators is urgently needed.ResultsWe examined the role of the H3K4 modifying enzyme, KDM1A, in medulloblastoma, an enzyme also associated with malignant progression in the closely related tumor, neuroblastoma. Re-analysis of gene expression data and immunohistochemistry of tissue microarrays of human medulloblastomas showed strong KDM1A overexpression in the majority of tumors throughout all molecular subgroups. Interestingly, KDM1A knockdown in medulloblastoma cell lines not only induced apoptosis and suppressed proliferation, but also impaired migratory capacity. Further analyses revealed bone morphogenetic protein 2 (BMP2) as a major KDM1A target gene. BMP2 is known to be involved in development and differentiation of granule neuron precursor cells (GNCPs), one potential cell of origin for medulloblastoma. Treating medulloblastoma cells with the specific KDM1A inhibitor, NCL-1, significantly inhibited growth in vitro.ConclusionWe provide the first evidence that a histone demethylase is functionally involved in the regulation of the malignant phenotype of medulloblastoma cells, and lay a foundation for future evaluation of KDM1A-inihibiting therapies in combating medulloblastoma.


Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2010

Production of Chick Embryo Extract for the Cultivation of Murine Neural Crest Stem Cells

Kristian W. Pajtler; Anna Bohrer; Jochen Maurer; Hubert Schorle; Alexander Schramm; Angelika Eggert; Johannes H. Schulte

The neural crest arises from the neuro-ectoderm during embryogenesis and persists only temporarily. Early experiments already proofed pluripotent progenitor cells to be an integral part of the neural crest(1). Phenotypically, neural crest stem cells (NCSC) are defined by simultaneously expressing p75 (low-affine nerve growth factor receptor, LNGFR) and SOX10 during their migration from the neural crest(2,3,4,5). These progenitor cells can differentiate into smooth muscle cells, chromaffin cells, neurons and glial cells, as well as melanocytes, cartilage and bone(6,7,8,9). To cultivate NCSC in vitro, a special neural crest stem cell medium (NCSCM) is required(10). The most complex part of the NCSCM is the preparation of chick embryo extract (CEE) representing an essential source of growth factors for the NCSC as well as for other types of neural explants. Other NCSCM ingredients beside CEE are commercially available. Producing CCE using laboratory standard equipment it is of high importance to know about the challenging details as the isolation, maceration, centrifugation, and filtration processes. In this protocol we describe accurate techniques to produce a maximized amount of pure and high quality CEE.


Brain Pathology | 2016

Papillary Tumor of the Pineal Region: A Distinct Molecular Entity

Stephanie Heim; Martin Sill; David T. W. Jones; Alexandre Vasiljevic; A. Jouvet; Michelle Fèvre-Montange; Pieter Wesseling; Rudi Beschorner; Michel Mittelbronn; Patricia Kohlhof; Volker Hovestadt; Pascal Johann; Marcel Kool; Kristian W. Pajtler; Andrey Korshunov; Vincent Ruland; Jan Sperveslage; Christian Thomas; Hendrik Witt; Andreas von Deimling; Werner Paulus; Stefan M. Pfister; David Capper; Martin Hasselblatt

Papillary tumor of the pineal region (PTPR) is a neuroepithelial brain tumor, which might pose diagnostic difficulties and recurs often. Little is known about underlying molecular alterations. We therefore investigated chromosomal copy number alterations, DNA methylation patterns and mRNA expression profiles in a series of 24 PTPRs. Losses of chromosome 10 were identified in all 13 PTPRs examined. Losses of chromosomes 3 and 22q (54%) as well as gains of chromosomes 8p (62%) and 12 (46%) were also common. DNA methylation profiling using Illumina 450k arrays reliably distinguished PTPR from ependymomas and pineal parenchymal tumors of intermediate differentiation. PTPR could be divided into two subgroups based on methylation pattern, PTPR group 2 showing higher global methylation and a tendency toward shorter progression‐free survival (P = 0.06). Genes overexpressed in PTPR as compared with ependymal tumors included SPDEF, known to be expressed in the rodent subcommissural organ. Notable SPDEF protein expression was encountered in 15/19 PTPRs as compared with only 2/36 ependymal tumors, 2/19 choroid plexus tumors and 0/23 samples of other central nervous system (CNS) tumor entities. In conclusion, PTPRs show typical chromosomal alterations as well as distinct DNA methylation and expression profiles, which might serve as useful diagnostic tools.

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Stefan M. Pfister

German Cancer Research Center

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Marcel Kool

German Cancer Research Center

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Alexander Schramm

Boston Children's Hospital

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Andrey Korshunov

German Cancer Research Center

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David T. W. Jones

German Cancer Research Center

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Lukas Chavez

German Cancer Research Center

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Hendrik Witt

German Cancer Research Center

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Martin Sill

German Cancer Research Center

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