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Dive into the research topics where Lovorka Stojic is active.

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Featured researches published by Lovorka Stojic.


Epigenetics & Chromatin | 2011

Chromatin regulated interchange between polycomb repressive complex 2 (PRC2)-Ezh2 and PRC2-Ezh1 complexes controls myogenin activation in skeletal muscle cells

Lovorka Stojic; Zuzana Jasencakova; Carolina Prezioso; Alexandra Stützer; Beatrice Bodega; Diego Pasini; Rebecca Klingberg; Chiara Mozzetta; Raphael Margueron; Pier Lorenzo Puri; Dirk Schwarzer; Kristian Helin; Wolfgang Fischle; Valerio Orlando

BackgroundPolycomb group (PcG) genes code for chromatin multiprotein complexes that are responsible for maintaining gene silencing of transcriptional programs during differentiation and in adult tissues. Despite the large amount of information on PcG function during development and cell identity homeostasis, little is known regarding the dynamics of PcG complexes and their role during terminal differentiation.ResultsWe show that two distinct polycomb repressive complex (PRC)2 complexes contribute to skeletal muscle cell differentiation: the PRC2-Ezh2 complex, which is bound to the myogenin (MyoG) promoter and muscle creatine kinase (mCK) enhancer in proliferating myoblasts, and the PRC2-Ezh1 complex, which replaces PRC2-Ezh2 on MyoG promoter in post-mitotic myotubes. Interestingly, the opposing dynamics of PRC2-Ezh2 and PRC2-Ezh1 at these muscle regulatory regions is differentially regulated at the chromatin level by Msk1 dependent methyl/phospho switch mechanism involving phosphorylation of serine 28 of the H3 histone (H3S28ph). While Msk1/H3S28ph is critical for the displacement of the PRC2-Ezh2 complex, this pathway does not influence the binding of PRC2-Ezh1 on the chromatin. Importantly, depletion of Ezh1 impairs muscle differentiation and the chromatin recruitment of MyoD to the MyoG promoter in differentiating myotubes. We propose that PRC2-Ezh1 is necessary for controlling the proper timing of MyoG transcriptional activation and thus, in contrast to PRC2-Ezh2, is required for myogenic differentiation.ConclusionsOur data reveal another important layer of epigenetic control orchestrating skeletal muscle cell terminal differentiation, and introduce a novel function of the PRC2-Ezh1 complex in promoter setting.


Expert Reviews in Molecular Medicine | 2011

Molecular mechanisms of genomic imprinting and clinical implications for cancer.

Santiago Uribe-Lewis; Kathryn Woodfine; Lovorka Stojic; Adele Murrell

Genomic imprinting is an epigenetic marking of genes in the parental germline that ensures the stable transmission of monoallelic gene expression patterns in a parent-of-origin-specific manner. Epigenetic marking systems are thus able to regulate gene activity independently of the underlying DNA sequence. Several imprinted gene products regulate cell proliferation and fetal growth; loss of their imprinted state, which effectively alters their dosage, might promote or suppress tumourigenic processes. Conversely, global epigenetic changes that underlie tumourigenesis might affect imprinted gene expression. Here, we review imprinted genes with regard to their roles in epigenetic predisposition to cancer, and discuss acquired epigenetic changes (DNA methylation, histone modifications and chromatin conformation) either as a result of cancer or as an early event in neoplasia. We also address recent work showing the potential role of noncoding RNA in modifying chromatin and affecting imprinted gene expression, and summarise the effects of loss of imprinting in cancer with regard to the roles that imprinted genes play in regulating growth signalling cascades. Finally, we speculate on the clinical applications of epigenetic drugs in cancer.


Cell Cycle | 2005

High doses of SN1 type methylating agents activate DNA damage signaling cascades that are largely independent of mismatch repair

Lovorka Stojic; Petr Cejka; Josef Jiricny

Methylating agents of the SN1 type represent an important class of cancer chemotherapeutics. Efficient killing by clinically-relevant doses of these agents requires cell division and low levels or absence of the repair enzyme methylguanine methyl transferase (MGMT). The process requires also an active mismatch repair (MMR) system, as treatment of cells with the prototypic methylating agent N-methyl-N’-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine (MNNG) could be shown to trigger a delayed cell cycle arrest, which was absolutely MMR-dependent. We now show that DNA damage signaling activated by high doses of MNNG is very rapid and largely MMR-independent. However, the MMR system still contributes towards cell killing, as MMR deficiency favors the long-term survival of the cells, albeit to a substantially smaller extent than when low MNNG concentrations are deployed.


Science | 2017

Aging increases cell-to-cell transcriptional variability upon immune stimulation

Celia Pilar Martinez-Jimenez; Nils Eling; Hung-Chang Chen; Catalina A. Vallejos; Aleksandra A. Kolodziejczyk; Frances Connor; Lovorka Stojic; Tim F. Rayner; Michael J. T. Stubbington; Sarah A. Teichmann; John C. Marioni; Duncan T. Odom

Single-cell sequencing of mouse immune cells reveals how aging destabilizes a conserved transcriptional activation program. Aging and variability among immune cells How and why the immune system becomes less effective with age are not well understood. Martinez-Jimenez et al. performed single-cell sequencing of CD4+ T cells in old and young mice of two species. In young mice, the gene expression program of early immune activation was tightly regulated and conserved between species. However, as mice aged, the expression of genes involved in pathways responding to immune cell stimulation was not as robust and exhibited increased cell-to-cell variability. Science, this issue p. 1433 Aging is characterized by progressive loss of physiological and cellular functions, but the molecular basis of this decline remains unclear. We explored how aging affects transcriptional dynamics using single-cell RNA sequencing of unstimulated and stimulated naïve and effector memory CD4+ T cells from young and old mice from two divergent species. In young animals, immunological activation drives a conserved transcriptomic switch, resulting in tightly controlled gene expression characterized by a strong up-regulation of a core activation program, coupled with a decrease in cell-to-cell variability. Aging perturbed the activation of this core program and increased expression heterogeneity across populations of cells in both species. These discoveries suggest that increased cell-to-cell transcriptional variability will be a hallmark feature of aging across most, if not all, mammalian tissues.


Cell Cycle | 2007

Mismatch Repair Status and the Response of Human Cells to Cisplatin

Elisabetta Pani; Lovorka Stojic; Mahmoud El-Shemerly; Josef Jiricny; Stefano Ferrari

The emergence of resistance to cisplatin is a serious drawback of cancer therapy. To help elucidate the molecular basis of this resistance, we examined matched ovarian cancer cell lines that differ in their DNA mismatch repair (MMR) status and the response to cisplatin. Checkpoint activation by cisplatin was identical in both lines. However, sensitive cells delayed S-phase transition, arrested at G2/M and died by apoptosis. The G2/M block was characterized by selective disappearance of homologous recombination (HR) proteins, which likely resulted in incomplete repair of the cisplatin adducts. In contrast, resistant cells transiently arrested at G2/M, maintained constant levels of HR proteins and ultimately resumed cell cycle progression. The net contribution of MMR to the cisplatin response was examined using matched semi-isogenic (HCT116±chr3) or strictly isogenic (293T-Lα-/+) cell lines. Delayed transition through S-phase in response to cisplatin was also observed in the MMR-proficient HCT116+chr3 cells. Unlike in the ovarian cell lines, however, both HCT116+chr3 and HCT116 permanently arrested at G2/M with an intact complement of HR proteins and died by apoptosis. A similar G2/M arrest was observed in the strictly isogenic 293T-Lα-/+ cells. This confirmed that although MMR undoubtedly contributes towards the cytotoxicity of cisplatin, it is only one of several pathways that modulate the cellular response to this drug. However, our data highlighted the importance of HR to cisplatin cytotoxicity and suggested that HR status might represent a novel prognostic marker and possibly also a therapeutic target, the inhibition of which would substantially sensitize cells to cisplatin chemotherapy.


Science | 2017

Neurodevelopmental protein Musashi-1 interacts with the Zika genome and promotes viral replication

Pavithra L. Chavali; Lovorka Stojic; Luke W. Meredith; Nimesh Joseph; Michael S. Nahorski; Thomas Sanford; Trevor R. Sweeney; Ben A. Krishna; Myra Hosmillo; Andrew E. Firth; Richard Bayliss; Carlo Marcelis; Susan Lindsay; Ian Goodfellow; C. Geoffrey Woods; Fanni Gergely

Inherited microcephaly exposes Zika culprit Microcephaly has been the terrifying hallmark of the recent outbreak of Zika virus (ZIKV) in the Americas. How the virus damages brain development in the fetus is enigmatic. Chavali et al. found that in congenital microcephaly, mutations in a neural precursor protein, Musashi-1 (MSI1), impede RNA binding to neural stem cell targets, resulting in abnormal brain development (see the Perspective by Griffin). MSI1 also binds ZIKV RNA to amplify viral replication in cells. This interaction could put a pregnant woman at risk of giving birth to a microcephalic child. Furthermore, MSI1 is expressed at high levels in the mouse testis, which may explain the sexual transmission of this virus. Science, this issue p. 83; see also p. 33 An inherited mutation fingerprints the molecular underpinnings of Zika–virus associated microcephaly. A recent outbreak of Zika virus in Brazil has led to a simultaneous increase in reports of neonatal microcephaly. Zika targets cerebral neural precursors, a cell population essential for cortical development, but the cause of this neurotropism remains obscure. Here we report that the neural RNA-binding protein Musashi-1 (MSI1) interacts with the Zika genome and enables viral replication. Zika infection disrupts the binding of MSI1 to its endogenous targets, thereby deregulating expression of factors implicated in neural stem cell function. We further show that MSI1 is highly expressed in neural progenitors of the human embryonic brain and is mutated in individuals with autosomal recessive primary microcephaly. Selective MSI1 expression in neural precursors could therefore explain the exceptional vulnerability of these cells to Zika infection.


Genome Biology | 2015

5-hydroxymethylcytosine marks promoters in colon that resist DNA hypermethylation in cancer.

Santiago Uribe-Lewis; Rory Stark; Thomas Carroll; Mark J. Dunning; Martin Bachman; Yoko Ito; Lovorka Stojic; Silvia Halim; Sarah L. Vowler; Andy G. Lynch; Benjamin Delatte; Eric James de Bony; Laurence Colin; Matthieu Defrance; Felix Krueger; Ana-Luisa Silva; Rogier ten Hoopen; Ashraf Ibrahim; François Fuks; Adele Murrell

BackgroundThe discovery of cytosine hydroxymethylation (5hmC) as a mechanism that potentially controls DNA methylation changes typical of neoplasia prompted us to investigate its behaviour in colon cancer. 5hmC is globally reduced in proliferating cells such as colon tumours and the gut crypt progenitors, from which tumours can arise.ResultsHere, we show that colorectal tumours and cancer cells express Ten-Eleven-Translocation (TET) transcripts at levels similar to normal tissues. Genome-wide analyses show that promoters marked by 5hmC in normal tissue, and those identified as TET2 targets in colorectal cancer cells, are resistant to methylation gain in cancer. In vitro studies of TET2 in cancer cells confirm that these promoters are resistant to methylation gain independently of sustained TET2 expression. We also find that a considerable number of the methylation gain-resistant promoters marked by 5hmC in normal colon overlap with those that are marked with poised bivalent histone modifications in embryonic stem cells.ConclusionsTogether our results indicate that promoters that acquire 5hmC upon normal colon differentiation are innately resistant to neoplastic hypermethylation by mechanisms that do not require high levels of 5hmC in tumours. Our study highlights the potential of cytosine modifications as biomarkers of cancerous cell proliferation.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2011

Enhancer of zeste homolog 2 overexpression has a role in the development of anaplastic thyroid carcinomas.

Eleonora Borbone; Giancarlo Troncone; Angelo Ferraro; Zuzana Jasencakova; Lovorka Stojic; Nadine Hornig; Alfredo Fusco; Valerio Orlando

CONTEXT Enhancer of zeste homolog 2 (EZH2) is a histone lysine methyltransferase belonging to the polycomb group protein family. Overexpression of EZH2 has been found in several human malignancies including hematological and solid tumors. OBJECTIVES In this study we investigated the expression levels of EZH2 and its polycomb group protein partners in thyroid carcinoma tissues with different degrees of malignancy to identify potential new therapeutic targets for anaplastic thyroid carcinoma (ATC). RESULTS We show that high EZH2 expression levels are characteristic of undifferentiated ATC, whereas no significant changes were observed in well-differentiated papillary and follicular thyroid carcinomas as compared with normal thyroid. Knockdown of EZH2 in ATC cell lines results in cell growth inhibition, loss of anchorage-independent growth, migration, and invasion properties. Moreover, we demonstrate that EZH2 directly controls differentiation of ATC cells by silencing the thyroid specific transcription factor paired-box gene 8 (PAX8). CONCLUSIONS EZH2 is specifically overexpressed in ATC, and it directly contributes to transcriptional silencing of PAX8 gene and ATC differentiation.


Nature Communications | 2016

Transcriptional silencing of long noncoding RNA GNG12-AS1 uncouples its transcriptional and product-related functions.

Lovorka Stojic; Malwina Niemczyk; Arturo V. Orjalo; Yoko Ito; Anna Elisabeth Maria Ruijter; Santiago Uribe-Lewis; Nimesh Joseph; Stephen Weston; Suraj Menon; Duncan T. Odom; John L. Rinn; Fanni Gergely; Adele Murrell

Long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) regulate gene expression via their RNA product or through transcriptional interference, yet a strategy to differentiate these two processes is lacking. To address this, we used multiple small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) to silence GNG12-AS1, a nuclear lncRNA transcribed in an antisense orientation to the tumour-suppressor DIRAS3. Here we show that while most siRNAs silence GNG12-AS1 post-transcriptionally, siRNA complementary to exon 1 of GNG12-AS1 suppresses its transcription by recruiting Argonaute 2 and inhibiting RNA polymerase II binding. Transcriptional, but not post-transcriptional, silencing of GNG12-AS1 causes concomitant upregulation of DIRAS3, indicating a function in transcriptional interference. This change in DIRAS3 expression is sufficient to impair cell cycle progression. In addition, the reduction in GNG12-AS1 transcripts alters MET signalling and cell migration, but these are independent of DIRAS3. Thus, differential siRNA targeting of a lncRNA allows dissection of the functions related to the process and products of its transcription.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2013

Imprinted Chromatin around DIRAS3 Regulates Alternative Splicing of GNG12-AS1, a Long Noncoding RNA

Malwina Niemczyk; Yoko Ito; Joanna E. Huddleston; Anna Git; Sayeda Abu-Amero; Carlos Caldas; Gudrun E. Moore; Lovorka Stojic; Adele Murrell

Imprinted gene clusters are regulated by long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs), CCCTC binding factor (CTCF)-mediated boundaries, and DNA methylation. DIRAS3 (also known as ARH1 or NOEY1) is an imprinted gene encoding a protein belonging to the RAS superfamily of GTPases and is located within an intron of a lncRNA called GNG12-AS1. In this study, we investigated whether GNG12-AS1 is imprinted and coregulated with DIRAS3. We report that GNG12-AS1 is coexpressed with DIRAS3 in several tissues and coordinately downregulated with DIRAS3 in breast cancers. GNG12-AS1 has several splice variants, all of which initiate from a single transcription start site. In placenta tissue and normal cell lines, GNG12-AS1 is biallelically expressed but some isoforms are allele-specifically spliced. Cohesin plays a role in allele-specific splicing of GNG12-AS1. In breast cancer cell lines with loss of DIRAS3 imprinting, DIRAS3 and GNG12-AS1 are silenced in cis and the remaining GNG12-AS1 transcripts are predominantly monoallelic. The GNG12-AS1 locus, which includes DIRAS3, provides an example of imprinted cotranscriptional splicing and a potential model system for studying the long-range effects of CTCF-cohesin binding on splicing and transcriptional interference.

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Yoko Ito

University of Cambridge

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Valerio Orlando

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

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