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Dive into the research topics where Lena Rad is active.

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Featured researches published by Lena Rad.


Cancer Cell | 2013

Selective Requirement of PI3K/PDK1 Signaling for Kras Oncogene-Driven Pancreatic Cell Plasticity and Cancer

Stefan Eser; Nina Reiff; Marlena Messer; Barbara Seidler; Kathleen Gottschalk; Melanie Dobler; Maren Hieber; Andreas Arbeiter; Sabine Klein; Bo Kong; Christoph W. Michalski; Anna Melissa Schlitter; Irene Esposito; Alexander Kind; Lena Rad; Angelika Schnieke; Manuela Baccarini; Dario R. Alessi; Roland Rad; Roland M. Schmid; Günter Schneider; Dieter Saur

Oncogenic Kras activates a plethora of signaling pathways, but our understanding of critical Ras effectors is still very limited. We show that cell-autonomous phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) and 3-phosphoinositide-dependent protein kinase 1 (PDK1), but not Craf, are key effectors of oncogenic Kras in the pancreas, mediating cell plasticity, acinar-to-ductal metaplasia (ADM), and pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) formation. This contrasts with Kras-driven non-small cell lung cancer, where signaling via Craf, but not PDK1, is an essential tumor-initiating event. These in vivo genetic studies together with pharmacologic treatment studies in models of human ADM and PDAC demonstrate tissue-specific differences of oncogenic Kras signaling and define PI3K/PDK1 as a suitable target for therapeutic intervention specifically in PDAC.


Science | 2010

PiggyBac Transposon Mutagenesis: A Tool for Cancer Gene Discovery in Mice

Roland Rad; Lena Rad; Wei Wang; Juan Cadiñanos; George S. Vassiliou; Stephen A. Rice; Lia S. Campos; Kosuke Yusa; Ruby Banerjee; Meng Amy Li; Jorge de la Rosa; Alexander Strong; Dong Lu; Peter Ellis; Nathalie Conte; Fang Tang Yang; Pentao Liu; Allan Bradley

Piggybacking on Cancer Genes Transposons are mobile segments of DNA that can insert in or near important genes to cause mutations that disrupt gene function. Rad et al. (p. 1104, published online 14 October) adapted a mutagenic transposon called Piggybac, originally derived from a moth, into a tool for discovery of cancer-causing genes in mice. Mobilization of Piggybac in mice was associated with the development of leukemias and solid tumors. In many instances the causative mutations, which were identified by mapping the Piggybac integration sites, were within genes not previously implicated in cancer. Mutations induced by a transposable element in mice can be used to identify cancer-causing genes. Transposons are mobile DNA segments that can disrupt gene function by inserting in or near genes. Here, we show that insertional mutagenesis by the PiggyBac transposon can be used for cancer gene discovery in mice. PiggyBac transposition in genetically engineered transposon-transposase mice induced cancers whose type (hematopoietic versus solid) and latency were dependent on the regulatory elements introduced into transposons. Analysis of 63 hematopoietic tumors revealed that PiggyBac is capable of genome-wide mutagenesis. The PiggyBac screen uncovered many cancer genes not identified in previous retroviral or Sleeping Beauty transposon screens, including Spic, which encodes a PU.1-related transcription factor, and Hdac7, a histone deacetylase gene. PiggyBac and Sleeping Beauty have different integration preferences. To maximize the utility of the tool, we engineered 21 mouse lines to be compatible with both transposon systems in constitutive, tissue- or temporal-specific mutagenesis. Mice with different transposon types, copy numbers, and chromosomal locations support wide applicability.


Nature Genetics | 2011

Mutant nucleophosmin and cooperating pathways drive leukemia initiation and progression in mice

George S. Vassiliou; Jonathan L. Cooper; Roland Rad; Juan Li; Stephen Rice; Anthony G. Uren; Lena Rad; Peter Ellis; Robert Andrews; Ruby Banerjee; C Grove; Wei Wang; Pentao Liu; Penny Wright; Mark J. Arends; Allan Bradley

Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a molecularly diverse malignancy with a poor prognosis whose largest subgroup is characterized by somatic mutations in NPM1, which encodes nucleophosmin. These mutations, termed NPM1c, result in cytoplasmic dislocation of nucleophosmin and are associated with distinctive transcriptional signatures, yet their role in leukemogenesis remains obscure. Here we report that activation of a humanized Npm1c knock-in allele in mouse hemopoietic stem cells causes Hox gene overexpression, enhanced self renewal and expanded myelopoiesis. One third of mice developed delayed-onset AML, suggesting a requirement for cooperating mutations. We identified such mutations using a Sleeping Beauty transposon, which caused rapid-onset AML in 80% of mice with Npm1c, associated with mutually exclusive integrations in Csf2, Flt3 or Rasgrp1 in 55 of 70 leukemias. We also identified recurrent integrations in known and newly discovered leukemia genes including Nf1, Bach2, Dleu2 and Nup98. Our results provide new pathogenetic insights and identify possible therapeutic targets in NPM1c+ AML.


Gastroenterology | 2009

Extracellular and Intracellular Pattern Recognition Receptors Cooperate in the Recognition of Helicobacter pylori

Roland Rad; Wibke Ballhorn; Petra Voland; Katharina Eisenächer; Jörg Mages; Lena Rad; Ruth Ferstl; Roland Lang; Hermann Wagner; Roland M. Schmid; Stefan Bauer; Christian Prinz; Carsten J. Kirschning; Anne Krug

BACKGROUND & AIMS Helicobacter pylori infects half of the worlds population, thereby causing significant human morbidity and mortality. The mechanisms by which professional antigen-presenting cells recognize the microbe are poorly understood. METHODS Using dendritic cells (DCs) from TRIF, MyD88, TLR 2/4/7/9(-/-), and multiple double/triple/quadruple mutant mice, we characterized receptors and pathways mediating innate immune recognition of H pylori. RESULTS We identified a MyD88-dependent component of the DC activation program, which was induced by surface TLRs, with TLR2 and to a minor extent also TLR4 being the exclusive surface receptors recognizing H pylori. A second MyD88-dependent component could be blocked in TLR2/4(-/-) DCs by inhibitors of endosomal acidification and depended on intracellular TLRs. We identified TLR9-mediated recognition of H pylori DNA as a principal H pylori-induced intracellular TLR pathway and further showed that H pylori RNA induces proinflammatory cytokines in a TLR-dependent manner. Microarray analysis showed complementary, redundant, and synergistic interactions between TLRs and additionally revealed gene expression patterns specific for individual TLRs, including a TLR2-dependent anti-inflammatory signature. A third component of the DC activation program was primarily composed of type I interferon-stimulated genes. This response was MyD88 and TRIF independent but was inducible by RIG-I-dependent recognition of H pylori RNA. CONCLUSIONS These results provide novel comprehensive insights into the mechanisms of H pylori recognition by DCs. Understanding these processes provides a basis for the rational design of new vaccination strategies.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2011

Mobilization of giant piggyBac transposons in the mouse genome

Meng Amy Li; Daniel J. Turner; Zemin Ning; Kosuke Yusa; Qi Liang; Sabine Eckert; Lena Rad; Tomas W. Fitzgerald; Nancy L. Craig; Allan Bradley

The development of technologies that allow the stable delivery of large genomic DNA fragments in mammalian systems is important for genetic studies as well as for applications in gene therapy. DNA transposons have emerged as flexible and efficient molecular vehicles to mediate stable cargo transfer. However, the ability to carry DNA fragments >10 kb is limited in most DNA transposons. Here, we show that the DNA transposon piggyBac can mobilize 100-kb DNA fragments in mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells, making it the only known transposon with such a large cargo capacity. The integrity of the cargo is maintained during transposition, the copy number can be controlled and the inserted giant transposons express the genomic cargo. Furthermore, these 100-kb transposons can also be excised from the genome without leaving a footprint. The development of piggyBac as a large cargo vector will facilitate a wider range of genetic and genomic applications.


Cancer Cell | 2013

A Genetic Progression Model of BrafV600E-Induced Intestinal Tumorigenesis Reveals Targets for Therapeutic Intervention

Roland Rad; Juan Cadiñanos; Lena Rad; Ignacio Varela; Alexander Strong; Lydia Kriegl; Fernando Constantino-Casas; Stefan Eser; Maren Hieber; Barbara Seidler; Stacey Price; Mario F. Fraga; Vincenzo Calvanese; Gary J. Hoffman; Hannes Ponstingl; Günter Schneider; Kosuke Yusa; C Grove; Roland M. Schmid; Wei Wang; George S. Vassiliou; Thomas Kirchner; Ultan McDermott; Pentao Liu; Dieter Saur; Allan Bradley

Summary We show that BRAFV600E initiates an alternative pathway to colorectal cancer (CRC), which progresses through a hyperplasia/adenoma/carcinoma sequence. This pathway underlies significant subsets of CRCs with distinctive pathomorphologic/genetic/epidemiologic/clinical characteristics. Genetic and functional analyses in mice revealed a series of stage-specific molecular alterations driving different phases of tumor evolution and uncovered mechanisms underlying this stage specificity. We further demonstrate dose-dependent effects of oncogenic signaling, with physiologic BrafV600E expression being sufficient for hyperplasia induction, but later stage intensified Mapk-signaling driving both tumor progression and activation of intrinsic tumor suppression. Such phenomena explain, for example, the inability of p53 to restrain tumor initiation as well as its importance in invasiveness control, and the late stage specificity of its somatic mutation. Finally, systematic drug screening revealed sensitivity of this CRC subtype to targeted therapeutics, including Mek or combinatorial PI3K/Braf inhibition.


Nature Genetics | 2015

A conditional piggyBac transposition system for genetic screening in mice identifies oncogenic networks in pancreatic cancer

Roland Rad; Lena Rad; Wei Wang; Alexander Strong; Hannes Ponstingl; Iraad F. Bronner; Matthew Mayho; Katja Steiger; Julia Weber; Maren Hieber; Christian Veltkamp; Stefan Eser; Ulf Geumann; Rupert Öllinger; Magdalena Zukowska; Maxim Barenboim; Roman Maresch; Juan Cadiñanos; Mathias Friedrich; Ignacio Varela; Fernando Constantino-Casas; Aaron L. Sarver; Jelle ten Hoeve; Haydn M. Prosser; Barbara Seidler; Judith Bauer; Mathias Heikenwalder; Emmanouil Metzakopian; Anne Krug; Ursula Ehmer

Here we describe a conditional piggyBac transposition system in mice and report the discovery of large sets of new cancer genes through a pancreatic insertional mutagenesis screen. We identify Foxp1 as an oncogenic transcription factor that drives pancreatic cancer invasion and spread in a mouse model and correlates with lymph node metastasis in human patients with pancreatic cancer. The propensity of piggyBac for open chromatin also enabled genome-wide screening for cancer-relevant noncoding DNA, which pinpointed a Cdkn2a cis-regulatory region. Histologically, we observed different tumor subentities and discovered associated genetic events, including Fign insertions in hepatoid pancreatic cancer. Our studies demonstrate the power of genetic screening to discover cancer drivers that are difficult to identify by other approaches to cancer genome analysis, such as downstream targets of commonly mutated human cancer genes. These piggyBac resources are universally applicable in any tissue context and provide unique experimental access to the genetic complexity of cancer.


Nature Protocols | 2017

Genome-wide transposon screening and quantitative insertion site sequencing for cancer gene discovery in mice

Mathias Friedrich; Lena Rad; Iraad F. Bronner; Alexander Strong; Wei Wang; Julia Weber; Matthew Mayho; Hannes Ponstingl; Thomas Engleitner; Carolyn S. Grove; Anja Pfaus; Dieter Saur; Juan Cadiñanos; Michael A. Quail; George S. Vassiliou; Pentao Liu; Allan Bradley; Roland Rad

Transposon-mediated forward genetics screening in mice has emerged as a powerful tool for cancer gene discovery. It pinpoints cancer drivers that are difficult to find with other approaches, thus complementing the sequencing-based census of human cancer genes. We describe here a large series of mouse lines for insertional mutagenesis that are compatible with two transposon systems, PiggyBac and Sleeping Beauty, and give guidance on the use of different engineered transposon variants for constitutive or tissue-specific cancer gene discovery screening. We also describe a method for semiquantitative transposon insertion site sequencing (QiSeq). The QiSeq library preparation protocol exploits acoustic DNA fragmentation to reduce bias inherent to widely used restriction–digestion-based approaches for ligation-mediated insertion site amplification. Extensive multiplexing in combination with next-generation sequencing allows affordable ultra-deep transposon insertion site recovery in high-throughput formats within 1 week. Finally, we describe principles of data analysis and interpretation for obtaining insights into cancer gene function and genetic tumor evolution.


Nature | 2018

Evolutionary routes and KRAS dosage define pancreatic cancer phenotypes

Sebastian Mueller; Thomas Engleitner; Roman Maresch; Magdalena Zukowska; Sebastian Lange; Thorsten Kaltenbacher; Björn Konukiewitz; Rupert Öllinger; Maximilian Zwiebel; Alex Strong; Hsi-Yu Yen; Ruby Banerjee; Sandra Louzada; Beiyuan Fu; Barbara Seidler; Juliana Götzfried; Kathleen Schuck; Zonera Hassan; Andreas Arbeiter; Nina Schönhuber; Sabine Klein; Christian Veltkamp; Mathias Friedrich; Lena Rad; Maxim Barenboim; Christoph Ziegenhain; Julia Hess; Oliver M. Dovey; Stefan Eser; Swati Parekh

The poor correlation of mutational landscapes with phenotypes limits our understanding of the pathogenesis and metastasis of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC). Here we show that oncogenic dosage-variation has a critical role in PDAC biology and phenotypic diversification. We find an increase in gene dosage of mutant KRAS in human PDAC precursors, which drives both early tumorigenesis and metastasis and thus rationalizes early PDAC dissemination. To overcome the limitations posed to gene dosage studies by the stromal richness of PDAC, we have developed large cell culture resources of metastatic mouse PDAC. Integration of cell culture genomes, transcriptomes and tumour phenotypes with functional studies and human data reveals additional widespread effects of oncogenic dosage variation on cell morphology and plasticity, histopathology and clinical outcome, with the highest KrasMUT levels underlying aggressive undifferentiated phenotypes. We also identify alternative oncogenic gains (Myc, Yap1 or Nfkb2), which collaborate with heterozygous KrasMUT in driving tumorigenesis, but have lower metastatic potential. Mechanistically, different oncogenic gains and dosages evolve along distinct evolutionary routes, licensed by defined allelic states and/or combinations of hallmark tumour suppressor alterations (Cdkn2a, Trp53, Tgfβ-pathway). Thus, evolutionary constraints and contingencies direct oncogenic dosage gain and variation along defined routes to drive the early progression of PDAC and shape its downstream biology. Our study uncovers universal principles of Ras-driven oncogenesis that have potential relevance beyond pancreatic cancer.


Nature Genetics | 2017

A single-copy Sleeping Beauty transposon mutagenesis screen identifies new PTEN-cooperating tumor suppressor genes

Jorge de la Rosa; Julia Weber; Mathias Friedrich; Yilong Li; Lena Rad; Hannes Ponstingl; Qi Liang; Sandra Bernaldo de Quirós; Imran Noorani; Emmanouil Metzakopian; Alexander Strong; Meng Amy Li; Aurora Astudillo; María Teresa Fernández-García; María Soledad Fernández-García; Gary J. Hoffman; Rocío Fuente; George S. Vassiliou; Roland Rad; Carlos López-Otín; Allan Bradley; Juan Cadiñanos

The overwhelming number of genetic alterations identified through cancer genome sequencing requires complementary approaches to interpret their significance and interactions. Here we developed a novel whole-body insertional mutagenesis screen in mice, which was designed for the discovery of Pten-cooperating tumor suppressors. Toward this aim, we coupled mobilization of a single-copy inactivating Sleeping Beauty transposon to Pten disruption within the same genome. The analysis of 278 transposition-induced prostate, breast and skin tumors detected tissue-specific and shared data sets of known and candidate genes involved in cancer. We validated ZBTB20, CELF2, PARD3, AKAP13 and WAC, which were identified by our screens in multiple cancer types, as new tumor suppressor genes in prostate cancer. We demonstrated their synergy with PTEN in preventing invasion in vitro and confirmed their clinical relevance. Further characterization of Wac in vivo showed obligate haploinsufficiency for this gene (which encodes an autophagy-regulating factor) in a Pten-deficient context. Our study identified complex PTEN-cooperating tumor suppressor networks in different cancer types, with potential clinical implications.

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Alexander Strong

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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Allan Bradley

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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George S. Vassiliou

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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Mathias Friedrich

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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Wei Wang

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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Hannes Ponstingl

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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Pentao Liu

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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Ruby Banerjee

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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