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Dive into the research topics where Larissa Savelyeva is active.

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Featured researches published by Larissa Savelyeva.


Cancer Letters | 2001

Amplification of oncogenes revisited: from expression profiling to clinical application

Larissa Savelyeva; Manfred Schwab

Regulatory or structural alterations of cellular oncogenes have been implicated in the causation of cancers. Amplification represents one of the major molecular pathways by which gene expression is constitutively enhanced above the level of physiologically normal variation. Consequently, the significance of oncogene amplification in tumorigenesis originally had emerged from expression profiling of tumor cells by oncogene arrays. Amplified oncogenes have been found associated with more aggressive tumor variants and in selected settings are clinical markers to determine patient prognosis.


Genes, Chromosomes and Cancer | 2001

Smallest region of overlapping deletion in 1p36 in human neuroblastoma: A 1 Mbp cosmid and PAC contig

Anja Bauer; Larissa Savelyeva; Andreas Claas; Christian Praml; Frank Berthold; Manfred Schwab

In human neuroblastomas, the distal portion of 1p is frequently deleted, as if one or more tumor suppressor genes from this region were involved in neuroblastoma tumorigenesis. Earlier studies had identified a smallest region of overlapping deletion (SRO) spanning approximately 23 cM between the most distally retained D1S80 and by the proximally retained D1S244. In pursuit of generating a refined delineation of the minimally deleted region, we have analyzed 49 neuroblastomas of different stages for loss of heterozygosity (LOH) from 1pter to 1p35 by employing 26 simple sequence length polymorphisms. Fifteen of the 49 tumors (31%) had LOH; homozygous deletion was not detected. Seven tumors had LOH at all informative loci analyzed, and eight tumors showed a terminal or an interstitial allelic loss of 1p. One small terminal and one interstitial deletion defined a new 1.7 cM SRO, approximately 1 Mbp in physical length, deleted in all tumors between the retained D1S2731 (distal) and D1S2666 (proximal). To determine the genomic complexity of the deleted region shared among tumors, we assembled a physical map of the 1 Mbp SRO consisting predominantly of bacteriophage P1‐derived artificial chromosome (PAC) clones. A total of 55 sequence‐tagged site (STS) markers (23 published STSs and short tandem repeats and 32 newly identified STSs from the insert ends of PACs and cosmids) were assembled in a contig, resulting in a sequence‐ready physical map with approximately one STS per 20 Kbp. Twelve genes (41BB, CD30, DFFA, DJ1, DR3, FRAP, HKR3, MASP2, MTHFR, RIZ, TNR2, TP73) previously mapped to 1p36 are localized outside this SRO. On the basis of this study, they would be excluded as candidate genes for neuroblastoma tumorigenesis. Ten expressed sequence tags were integrated in the contig, of which five are located outside the SRO. The other five from within the SRO may provide an entrance point for the cloning of candidate genes for neuroblastoma.


Gene | 2001

Cloning of the human homologue of the metastasis-associated rat C4.4A

Jens Würfel; Simone Seiter; Marike Stassar; Andreas Claas; Rüdiger Kläs; Marc Rösel; Rachid Marhaba; Larissa Savelyeva; Manfred Schwab; Siegfried Matzku; Margot Zöller

We have previously described a rat metastasis-associated molecule, C4.4A, which has some common features with the uPAR. Because of its restricted expression in non-transformed tissues a search for the human homologue became of interest. Human C4.4A was cloned from a placental cDNA library. As in the rat, the human uPAR and the human C4.4A genes appear to belong to the same family. Both genes are located on chromosome 19q13.1-q13.2 and both molecules have a glycolipid anchor site and are composed of three extracellular domains. Only domains one and two of the human C4.4A and the uPAR protein show a significant degree of identity. Expression of the human C4.4A was observed by RT-PCR and Northern blotting in placental tissue, skin, esophagus and peripheral blood leukocytes, but not in brain, lung, liver, kidney, stomach, colon and lymphoid organs. Yet, tumors derived from the latter tissues frequently contained C4.4A mRNA. As demonstrated for malignant melanoma, C4.4A mRNA expression correlated with tumor progression. While nevi were negative and only a minority of primary malignant melanoma expressed C4.4A, all metastases were C4.4A-positive. Taking into account the high degree of homology between rat and human C4.4A, the conformity of the expression profiles and the association of rat C4.4A with tumor progression, human C4.4A might well become a prognostic marker and possibly a target of therapy.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2011

The FRA2C common fragile site maps to the borders of MYCN amplicons in neuroblastoma and is associated with gross chromosomal rearrangements in different cancers

Anne Blumrich; Marc Zapatka; Lena M. Brueckner; Diana Zheglo; Manfred Schwab; Larissa Savelyeva

Common fragile sites (cFS) represent chromosomal regions that are prone to breakage after partial inhibition of DNA synthesis. Activation of cFS is associated with various forms of DNA instability in cancer cells, and is thought to be an initiating event in the generation of DNA damage in early-stage tumorigenesis. Only a few cFS have been fully characterized despite the growing interest in cFS instability in cancer genomes. In this study, six-color fluorescence in situ hybridization revealed that FRA2C consists of two cFS spanning 747 kb FRA2Ctel and 746 kb FRA2Ccen at 2p24.3 and 2p24.2, respectively. Both cFS are separated by a 2.8 Mb non-fragile region containing MYCN. Fine-tiling array comparative genomic hybridization of MYCN amplicons from neuroblastoma (NB) cell lines and primary tumors revealed that 56.5% of the amplicons cluster in FRA2C. MYCN amplicons are either organized as double minutes or as homogeneously stained regions in addition to the single copy of MYCN retained at 2p24. We suggest that MYCN amplicons arise from extra replication rounds of unbroken DNA secondary structures that accumulate at FRA2C. This hypothesis implicates cFS in high-level gene amplification in cancer cells. Complex genomic rearrangements, including deletions, duplications and translocations, which originate from double-strand breaks, were detected at FRA2C in different cancers. These data propose a dual role for cFS in the generation of gross chromosomal rearrangements either after DNA breakage or by inducing extra replication rounds, and provide new insights into the highly recombinogenic nature of cFS in the human cancer genome.


Cell Cycle | 2013

CDK4 inhibition restores G(1)-S arrest in MYCN-amplified neuroblastoma cells in the context of doxorubicin-induced DNA damage.

Sina Gogolin; Volker Ehemann; Gabriele Becker; Lena M. Brueckner; Daniel Dreidax; Steffen Bannert; Ingo Nolte; Larissa Savelyeva; Emma Bell; Frank Westermann

Relapse with drug-resistant disease is the main cause of death in MYCN-amplified neuroblastoma patients. MYCN-amplified neuroblastoma cells in vitro are characterized by a failure to arrest at the G₁-S checkpoint after irradiation- or drug-induced DNA damage. We show that several MYCN-amplified cell lines harbor additional chromosomal aberrations targeting p53 and/or pRB pathway components, including CDK4/CCND1/MDM2 amplifications, p16INK4A/p14ARF deletions or TP53 mutations. Cells with these additional aberrations undergo significantly lower levels of cell death after doxorubicin treatment compared with MYCN-amplified cells, with no additional mutations in these pathways. In MYCN-amplified cells CDK4 expression is elevated, increasing the competition between CDK4 and CDK2 for binding p21. This results in insufficient p21 to inhibit CDK2, leading to high CDK4 and CDK2 kinase activity upon doxorubicin treatment. CDK4 inhibition by siRNAs, selective small compounds or p19INK4D overexpression partly restored G₁-S arrest, delayed S-phase progression and reduced cell viability upon doxorubicin treatment. Our results suggest a specific function of p19INK4D, but not p16INK4A, in sensitizing MYCN-amplified cells with a functional p53 pathway to doxorubicin-induced cell death. In summary, the CDK4/cyclin D-pRB axis is altered in MYCN-amplified cells to evade a G₁-S arrest after doxorubicin-induced DNA damage. Additional chromosomal aberrations affecting the p53-p21 and CDK4-pRB axes compound the effects of MYCN on the G₁ checkpoint and reduce sensitivity to cell death after doxorubicin treatment. CDK4 inhibition partly restores G₁-S arrest and sensitizes cells to doxorubicin-mediated cell death in MYCN-amplified cells with an intact p53 pathway.


Cancer Letters | 2008

Anti-neuroblastoma activity of Helminthosporium carbonum (HC)-toxin is superior to that of other differentiating compounds in vitro

Hedwig E. Deubzer; Volker Ehemann; Andreas E. Kulozik; Frank Westermann; Larissa Savelyeva; Annette Kopp-Schneider; Daniel Riester; Manfred Schwab; Olaf Witt

Treatment of high-risk neuroblastoma (NB) is difficult. Novel therapeutics improving survival rates are urgently required. We have previously shown that the histone deacetylase inhibitor (HDACI) Helminthosporium carbonum (HC)-toxin induces differentiation of neuroblastoma (NB) cells. Here, we show that HC-toxin inhibits the growth of both established NB cell lines and primary cultures with and without amplified MYCN stronger than retinoids (RAs) and other HDACIs (MS-275, n-butyric acid, suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid, trichostatin A, valproic acid). Nanomolar dosages suppress E2F-1, N-myc, Skp2, Mad2 and survivin proteins, found at high levels in high-risk NBs, more efficiently than both RAs and other HDACIs. The level of hypophosphorylated active retinoblastoma (RB) tumor suppressor protein is increased most effectively. HC-toxins epoxy group is essential for inhibiting HDACs and promoting anti-NB activity. Without this functional group, those cellular effects are not observed. In conclusion, the anti-NB activity of HC-toxin is superior to that of RAs and that of all other HDACIs tested.


Genes, Chromosomes and Cancer | 2000

Topology of double minutes (dmins) and homogeneously staining regions (HSRs) in nuclei of human neuroblastoma cell lines

Irina Solovei; Dirk Kienle; Graham Little; Roland Eils; Larissa Savelyeva; Manfred Schwab; Willi Jäger; Christoph Cremer; Thomas Cremer

Amplification of the MYCN gene is a characteristic feature of many neuroblastomas and is correlated with aggressive tumor growth. Amplicons containing this gene form either double minutes (dmins) or homogeneously staining regions (HSRs). To study the nuclear topology of these tumor‐specific and transcriptionally active chromatin structures in comparison to chromosome territories, we performed fluorescence in situ hybridization with a MYCN probe and various chromosome paint probes, confocal laser scanning microscopy, and quantitative three‐dimensional image analysis. The dmins formed dot‐like structures in interphase nuclei and were typically located at the periphery of complexly folded chromosome territories; dmins noted in the chromosome territory interior were often detected within an invagination of the territory surface. Interphase HSRs typically formed extremely expanded structures, which we have never observed for chromosome territories of normal and tumor cell nuclei. Stretches of HSR‐chromatin often extended throughout a large part of the cell nucleus, but appeared well separated from neighboring chromosome territories. We hypothesize that dmins are located within the interchromosomal domain (ICD) space and that stretches of HSR‐chromatin align along this space. Such a topology could facilitate access of amplified genes to transcription and splicing complexes that are assumed to localize in the ICD space.


European Journal of Cancer | 1995

Cytogenetic evolution of mycn and mdm2 amplification in the neuroblastoma ls tumour and its cell line

R. Corvi; Larissa Savelyeva; Lukas C. Amler; R. Handgretinger; Manfred Schwab

Amplification of the MYCN gene is frequently seen either in extrachromosomal double minutes (DMs) or in homogeneously staining regions (HSRs) of aggressively growing neuroblastomas. Total genomic DNA from cell line LS, from early passages of the same line and from original tumour material was biotinylated and hybridised to metaphase chromosomes of normal human lymphocytes. The reverse genomic hybridisation revealed the amplified DNA to be derived both from chromosome 2p23-24, which is the position of MYCN, and from chromosome 12 band q13-14. The MDM2 gene, located at 12q13-14, was found amplified both in early and late passages of LS, in addition to amplified MYCN. Amplification units of MYCN and MDM2 appear first to develop within DMs, which then integrate into different chromosomes to develop to HSRs.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1996

A highly amplified mouse gene is homologous to the human interferon-responsive Sp100 gene encoding an autoantigen associated with nuclear dots

Thilo Grötzinger; Kirsten Jensen; Hans H. Guldner; Thomas Sternsdorf; Carin Szostecki; Manfred Schwab; Larissa Savelyeva; Berthold Reich; Hans Will

In human cells, three proteins are currently known to colocalize in di screte nuclear domains (designated nuclear dots): Sp100, a transcription-activating protein autoantigenic primarily in patients with primary biliary cirrhosis; PML, a tumor suppressor protein involved in development of acute promyelocytic leukemia; and NDP52, a protein of unknown function. Here we report sequence similarities between the Sp100 protein and a putative protein encoded by a highly amplified mouse gene which is visible as an inherited homogeneously staining region (HSR) on chromosome 1 of some mouse populations. By in situ hybridization, the Sp100 gene was mapped to locus 2q37, the syntenic region of the HSR on mouse chromosome 1. Unlike the highly amplified mouse gene, Sp100 was found to be a single-copy gene and showed no restriction fragment length polymorphisms. Sequence similarities in the promoter regions and similar exon-intron organizations of the two genes were revealed. As for Sp100, steady-state levels of the mRNAs of the HSR-encoded genes could be greatly increased by interferon (IFN) treatment. As in human cells, IFN treatment led to an enlargement in both size and number of nuclear dots in mouse cells as visualized by immunofluorescence staining with autoimmune sera from patients with primary biliary cirrhosis. These data indicate that a gene located in the inherited HSR of mice, designated mSp100, is homologous to the human Sp100 gene, has a similar gene organization, and responds similarly to IFN treatment.


Genes, Chromosomes and Cancer | 2007

Common fragile site FRA11G and rare fragile site FRA11B at 11q23.3 encompass distinct genomic regions

Anne Fechter; Isabel Buettel; Elisabeth Kuehnel; Larissa Savelyeva; Manfred Schwab

Fragile sites are specific genomic loci that are particularly prone to chromosomal breakage. Based on their incidence in the human population, they are divided into rare fragile sites occurring in less than 5% of all individuals and common fragile sites being a constitutional feature of the genome of probably all individuals. In this study, cloning of unstable DNA sequences, which have been previously genetically tagged with a marker gene, was the basis for defining the genomic localization of the common fragile site FRA11G at 11q23.3. Mapping of the fragile site with six‐color fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) resulted in the precise genomic localization of FRA11G to a 4.5 Mb region. The chromosomal subband 11q23.3 harbors both the common fragile site FRA11G and the rare fragile site FRA11B. Here, we show that FRA11G maps 0.8 Mb proximal to the genomic region previously defined to be affected by expression of FRA11B; thus, the common and the rare fragile sites at 11q23.3 encompass distinct genomic regions. The region of FRA11G is known to be involved in somatic and germline recurrent aberrations, and it is conceivable that genetic damage resulting from this fragile site might contribute to clinical phenotypes.

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Manfred Schwab

German Cancer Research Center

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Andreas Claas

German Cancer Research Center

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Lena M. Brueckner

German Cancer Research Center

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Christian Praml

German Cancer Research Center

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Frank Westermann

German Cancer Research Center

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Lukas C. Amler

German Cancer Research Center

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Raffaella Corvi

German Cancer Research Center

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Andrea Pillmann

German Cancer Research Center

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Anne Blumrich

German Cancer Research Center

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