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Dive into the research topics where Maciej Rosolowski is active.

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Featured researches published by Maciej Rosolowski.


Nature Genetics | 2012

Recurrent mutation of the ID3 gene in Burkitt lymphoma identified by integrated genome, exome and transcriptome sequencing

Julia Richter; Matthias Schlesner; Steve Hoffmann; Markus Kreuz; Ellen Leich; Birgit Burkhardt; Maciej Rosolowski; Ole Ammerpohl; Rabea Wagener; Stephan H. Bernhart; Dido Lenze; Monika Szczepanowski; Maren Paulsen; Simone Lipinski; Robert B. Russell; Sabine Adam-Klages; Gordana Apic; Alexander Claviez; Dirk Hasenclever; Volker Hovestadt; Nadine Hornig; Jan O. Korbel; Dieter Kube; David Langenberger; Chris Lawerenz; Jasmin Lisfeld; Katharina Meyer; Simone Picelli; Jordan Pischimarov; Bernhard Radlwimmer

Burkitt lymphoma is a mature aggressive B-cell lymphoma derived from germinal center B cells. Its cytogenetic hallmark is the Burkitt translocation t(8;14)(q24;q32) and its variants, which juxtapose the MYC oncogene with one of the three immunoglobulin loci. Consequently, MYC is deregulated, resulting in massive perturbation of gene expression. Nevertheless, MYC deregulation alone seems not to be sufficient to drive Burkitt lymphomagenesis. By whole-genome, whole-exome and transcriptome sequencing of four prototypical Burkitt lymphomas with immunoglobulin gene (IG)-MYC translocation, we identified seven recurrently mutated genes. One of these genes, ID3, mapped to a region of focal homozygous loss in Burkitt lymphoma. In an extended cohort, 36 of 53 molecularly defined Burkitt lymphomas (68%) carried potentially damaging mutations of ID3. These were strongly enriched at somatic hypermutation motifs. Only 6 of 47 other B-cell lymphomas with the IG-MYC translocation (13%) carried ID3 mutations. These findings suggest that cooperation between ID3 inactivation and IG-MYC translocation is a hallmark of Burkitt lymphomagenesis.


Cancer Cell | 2012

Synergy between PI3K Signaling and MYC in Burkitt Lymphomagenesis

Sandrine Sander; Dinis Pedro Calado; Lakshmi Srinivasan; Karl Köchert; Baochun Zhang; Maciej Rosolowski; Scott J. Rodig; Karlheinz Holzmann; Stephan Stilgenbauer; Reiner Siebert; Lars Bullinger; Klaus Rajewsky

In Burkitt lymphoma (BL), a germinal center B-cell-derived tumor, the pro-apoptotic properties of c-MYC must be counterbalanced. Predicting that survival signals would be delivered by phosphoinositide-3-kinase (PI3K), a major survival determinant in mature B cells, we indeed found that combining constitutive c-MYC expression and PI3K activity in germinal center B cells of the mouse led to BL-like tumors, which fully phenocopy human BL with regard to histology, surface and other markers, and gene expression profile. The tumors also accumulate tertiary mutational events, some of which are recurrent in the human disease. These results and our finding of recurrent PI3K pathway activation in human BL indicate that deregulated c-MYC and PI3K activity cooperate in BL pathogenesis.


Blood | 2009

New insights into the biology and origin of mature aggressive B-cell lymphomas by combined epigenomic, genomic, and transcriptional profiling

José I. Martín-Subero; Markus Kreuz; Marina Bibikova; Stefan Bentink; Ole Ammerpohl; Eliza Wickham-Garcia; Maciej Rosolowski; Julia Richter; Lidia Lopez-Serra; Esteban Ballestar; Hilmar Berger; Xabier Agirre; Heinz-Wolfram Bernd; Vincenzo Calvanese; Sergio Cogliatti; Hans G. Drexler; Jian-Bing Fan; Mario F. Fraga; Martin Leo Hansmann; Michael Hummel; Wolfram Klapper; Bernhard Korn; Ralf Küppers; Roderick A. F. MacLeod; Peter Möller; German Ott; Christiane Pott; Felipe Prosper; Andreas Rosenwald; Carsten Schwaenen

Lymphomas are assumed to originate at different stages of lymphocyte development through chromosomal aberrations. Thus, different lymphomas resemble lymphocytes at distinct differentiation stages and show characteristic morphologic, genetic, and transcriptional features. Here, we have performed a microarray-based DNA methylation profiling of 83 mature aggressive B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphomas (maB-NHLs) characterized for their morphologic, genetic, and transcriptional features, including molecular Burkitt lymphomas and diffuse large B-cell lymphomas. Hierarchic clustering indicated that methylation patterns in maB-NHLs were not strictly associated with morphologic, genetic, or transcriptional features. By supervised analyses, we identified 56 genes de novo methylated in all lymphoma subtypes studied and 22 methylated in a lymphoma subtype-specific manner. Remarkably, the group of genes de novo methylated in all lymphoma subtypes was significantly enriched for polycomb targets in embryonic stem cells. De novo methylated genes in all maB-NHLs studied were expressed at low levels in lymphomas and normal hematopoietic tissues but not in nonhematopoietic tissues. These findings, especially the enrichment for polycomb targets in stem cells, indicate that maB-NHLs with different morphologic, genetic, and transcriptional background share a similar stem cell-like epigenetic pattern. This suggests that maB-NHLs originate from cells with stem cell features or that stemness was acquired during lymphomagenesis by epigenetic remodeling.


Blood | 2011

Translocations activating IRF4 identify a subtype of germinal center-derived B-cell lymphoma affecting predominantly children and young adults

Itziar Salaverria; Claudia Philipp; Ilske Oschlies; Christian W. Kohler; Markus Kreuz; Monika Szczepanowski; Birgit Burkhardt; Heiko Trautmann; Stefan Gesk; Miroslaw Andrusiewicz; Hilmar Berger; Miriam Fey; Lana Harder; Dirk Hasenclever; Michael Hummel; Markus Loeffler; Friederike Mahn; Idoia Martin-Guerrero; Shoji Pellissery; Christiane Pott; Michael Pfreundschuh; Alfred Reiter; Julia Richter; Maciej Rosolowski; Carsten Schwaenen; Harald Stein; Lorenz Trümper; Swen Wessendorf; Rainer Spang; Ralf Küppers

The prognosis of germinal center-derived B-cell (GCB) lymphomas, including follicular lymphoma and diffuse large-B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), strongly depends on age. Children have a more favorable outcome than adults. It is not known whether this is because of differences in host characteristics, treatment protocols, or tumor biology, including the presence of chromosomal alterations. By screening for novel IGH translocation partners in pediatric and adult lymphomas, we identified chromosomal translocations juxtaposing the IRF4 oncogene next to one of the immunoglobulin (IG) loci as a novel recurrent aberration in mature B-cell lymphoma. FISH revealed 20 of 427 lymphomas to carry an IG/IRF4-fusion. Those were predominantly GCB-type DLBCL or follicular lymphoma grade 3, shared strong expression of IRF4/MUM1 and BCL6, and lacked PRDM1/BLIMP1 expression and t(14;18)/BCL2 breaks. BCL6 aberrations were common. The gene expression profile of IG/IRF4-positive lymphomas differed from other subtypes of DLBCL. A classifier for IG/IRF4 positivity containing 27 genes allowed accurate prediction. IG/IRF4 positivity was associated with young age and a favorable outcome. Our results suggest IRF4 translocations to be primary alterations in a molecularly defined subset of GCB-derived lymphomas. The probability for this subtype of lymphoma significantly decreases with age, suggesting that diversity in tumor biology might contribute to the age-dependent differences in prognosis of lymphoma.


Blood | 2008

Molecular profiling of pediatric mature B-cell lymphoma treated in population-based prospective clinical trials

Wolfram Klapper; Monika Szczepanowski; Birgit Burkhardt; Hilmar Berger; Maciej Rosolowski; Stefan Bentink; Carsten Schwaenen; Swen Wessendorf; Rainer Spang; Peter Möller; Martin Leo Hansmann; Heinz-Wolfram Bernd; German Ott; Michael Hummel; Harald Stein; Markus Loeffler; Lorenz Trümper; Martin Zimmermann; Alfred Reiter; Reiner Siebert

The spectrum of entities, the therapeutic strategy, and the outcome of mature aggressive B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphomas (maB-NHLs) differs between children and adolescents on the one hand and adult patients on the other. Whereas adult maB-NHLs have been studied in detail, data on molecular profiling of pediatric maB-NHLs are hitherto lacking. We analyzed 65 cases of maB-NHL from patients up to 18 years of age by gene expression profiling, matrix comparative genomic hybridization (CGH), fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH), and immunohistochemistry. The majority of the analyzed pediatric patients were treated within prospective trials (n = 49). We compared this group to a series of 182 previously published cases of adult maB-NHL. Gene expression profiling reclassified 31% of morphologically defined diffuse large B-cell lymphomas as molecular Burkitt lymphoma (mBL). The subgroups obtained by molecular reclassification did not show any difference in outcome in children treated with the NHL-Berlin-Frankfurt-Muenster (BFM) protocols. No differences were detectable between pediatric and adult mBL with regard to gene expression or chromosomal imbalances. This is the first report on molecular profiling of pediatric B-NHL showing mBL to be much more prominent in children than suggested by morphologic assessment. Based on molecular profiling mBL is a molecularly homogeneous disease across children and adults.


Haematologica | 2014

Biological characterization of adult MYC-translocation-positive mature B-cell lymphomas other than molecular Burkitt lymphoma

Sietse M. Aukema; Markus Kreuz; Christian W. Kohler; Maciej Rosolowski; Dirk Hasenclever; Michael Hummel; Ralf Küppers; Dido Lenze; German Ott; Christiane Pott; Julia Richter; Andreas Rosenwald; Monika Szczepanowski; Carsten Schwaenen; Harald Stein; Heiko Trautmann; Swen Wessendorf; Lorenz Trümper; Markus Loeffler; Rainer Spang; Philip M. Kluin; Wolfram Klapper; Reiner Siebert

Chromosomal translocations affecting the MYC oncogene are the biological hallmark of Burkitt lymphomas but also occur in a subset of other mature B-cell lymphomas. If accompanied by a chromosomal break targeting the BCL2 and/or BCL6 oncogene these MYC translocation-positive (MYC+) lymphomas are called double-hit lymphomas, otherwise the term single-hit lymphomas is applied. In order to characterize the biological features of these MYC+ lymphomas other than Burkitt lymphoma we explored, after exclusion of molecular Burkitt lymphoma as defined by gene expression profiling, the molecular, pathological and clinical aspects of 80 MYC-translocation-positive lymphomas (31 single-hit, 46 double-hit and 3 MYC+-lymphomas with unknown BCL6 status). Comparison of single-hit and double-hit lymphomas revealed no difference in MYC partner (IG/non-IG), genomic complexity, MYC expression or gene expression profile. Double-hit lymphomas more frequently showed a germinal center B-cell-like gene expression profile and had higher IGH and MYC mutation frequencies. Gene expression profiling revealed 130 differentially expressed genes between BCL6+/MYC+ and BCL2+/MYC+ double-hit lymphomas. BCL2+/MYC+ double-hit lymphomas more frequently showed a germinal center B-like gene expression profile. Analysis of all lymphomas according to MYC partner (IG/non-IG) revealed no substantial differences. In this series of lymphomas, in which immunochemotherapy was administered in only a minority of cases, single-hit and double-hit lymphomas had a similar poor outcome in contrast to the outcome of molecular Burkitt lymphoma and lymphomas without the MYC break. Our data suggest that, after excluding molecular Burkitt lymphoma and pediatric cases, MYC+ lymphomas are biologically quite homogeneous with single-hit and double-hit lymphomas as well as IG-MYC and non-IG-MYC+ lymphomas sharing various molecular characteristics.


Blood | 2014

A recurrent 11q aberration pattern characterizes a subset of MYC-negative high-grade B-cell lymphomas resembling Burkitt lymphoma

Itziar Salaverria; Idoia Martin-Guerrero; Rabea Wagener; Markus Kreuz; Christian W. Kohler; Julia Richter; Barbara Pienkowska-Grela; Patrick Adam; Birgit Burkhardt; Alexander Claviez; Christine Damm-Welk; Hans G. Drexler; Michael Hummel; Elaine S. Jaffe; Ralf Küppers; Christine Lefebvre; Jasmin Lisfeld; Markus Löffler; Roderick A. F. MacLeod; Inga Nagel; Ilske Oschlies; Maciej Rosolowski; Robert B. Russell; Grzegorz Rymkiewicz; Detlev Schindler; Matthias Schlesner; René Scholtysik; Carsten Schwaenen; Rainer Spang; Monika Szczepanowski

The genetic hallmark of Burkitt lymphoma (BL) is the t(8;14)(q24;q32) and its variants leading to activation of the MYC oncogene. It is a matter of debate whether true BL without MYC translocation exists. Here, we identified 59 lymphomas concordantly called BL by 2 gene expression classifiers among 753 B-cell lymphomas. Only 2 (3%) of these 59 molecular BL lacked a MYC translocation, which both shared a peculiar pattern of chromosome 11q aberration characterized by interstitial gains including 11q23.2-q23.3 and telomeric losses of 11q24.1-qter. We extended our analysis to 17 MYC-negative high-grade B-cell lymphomas with a similar 11q aberration and showed this aberration to be recurrently associated with morphologic and clinical features of BL. The minimal region of gain was defined by high-level amplifications in 11q23.3 and associated with overexpression of genes including PAFAH1B2 on a transcriptional and protein level. The recurrent region of loss contained a focal homozygous deletion in 11q24.2-q24.3 including the ETS1 gene, which was shown to be mutated in 4 of 16 investigated cases. These findings indicate the existence of a molecularly distinct subset of B-cell lymphomas reminiscent of BL, which is characterized by deregulation of genes in 11q.


Genes, Chromosomes and Cancer | 2009

Microarray-based genomic profiling reveals novel genomic aberrations in follicular lymphoma which associate with patient survival and gene expression status

Carsten Schwaenen; Andreas Viardot; Hilmar Berger; Thomas F. E. Barth; Stefan Bentink; Hartmut Döhner; Martina Enz; Alfred C. Feller; Martin Leo Hansmann; Michael Hummel; Hans A. Kestler; Wolfram Klapper; Markus Kreuz; Dido Lenze; Markus Loeffler; Peter Möller; Hans Konrad Müller-Hermelink; German Ott; Maciej Rosolowski; Andreas Rosenwald; Sandra Ruf; Reiner Siebert; Rainer Spang; Harald Stein; Lorenz Truemper; Peter Lichter; Martin Bentz; Swen Wessendorf

Follicular lymphoma (FL) is characterized by a large number of chromosomal aberrations. However, their exact genomic extension and involved target genes remain to be determined. For this purpose, we used array‐based intermediate‐high resolution genomic profiling in combination with Affymetrix™ gene expression analysis. Tumor specimens from 128 FL patients were analyzed for the presence of genomic aberrations and the results were correlated to clinical data sets and mRNA expression levels. In 114 (89%) of the 128 analyzed cases, a total of 688 genomic aberrations (384 gains/amplifications and 304 losses) were detected. Frequent genomic aberrations were: −1p36 (18%), +2p15 (24%), −3q (14%), −6q (25%), +7p (19%), +7q (23%), +8q (14%), −9p (16%), −11q (15%), +12q (20%), −13q (11%), −17p (16%), +18p (18%), and +18q (28%). Critical segments of these imbalances were delineated to genomic fragments with a minimum size down to 0.2 Mb. By comparison of these with mRNA gene expression data, putative candidate genes were identified. Moreover, we found that deletions affecting the tumor suppressor gene CDKN2A/B on 9p21 were detected in nontransformed FL grade I–II. For this aberration as well as for −6q25 and −6q26, an association with inferior survival was observed.


Nature Genetics | 2015

DNA methylome analysis in Burkitt and follicular lymphomas identifies differentially methylated regions linked to somatic mutation and transcriptional control

Helene Kretzmer; Stephan H. Bernhart; Wei Wang; Andrea Haake; Marc A. Weniger; Anke K. Bergmann; Matthew J. Betts; Enrique Carrillo-de-Santa-Pau; Jana Gutwein; Julia Richter; Volker Hovestadt; Bingding Huang; Daniel Rico; Frank Jühling; Julia Kolarova; Qianhao Lu; Christian Otto; Rabea Wagener; Judith Arnolds; Birgit Burkhardt; Alexander Claviez; Hans G. Drexler; Sonja Eberth; Roland Eils; Paul Flicek; Siegfried Haas; Michael Hummel; Dennis Karsch; Hinrik H D Kerstens; Wolfram Klapper

Although Burkitt lymphomas and follicular lymphomas both have features of germinal center B cells, they are biologically and clinically quite distinct. Here we performed whole-genome bisulfite, genome and transcriptome sequencing in 13 IG-MYC translocation–positive Burkitt lymphoma, nine BCL2 translocation–positive follicular lymphoma and four normal germinal center B cell samples. Comparison of Burkitt and follicular lymphoma samples showed differential methylation of intragenic regions that strongly correlated with expression of associated genes, for example, genes active in germinal center dark-zone and light-zone B cells. Integrative pathway analyses of regions differentially methylated in Burkitt and follicular lymphomas implicated DNA methylation as cooperating with somatic mutation of sphingosine phosphate signaling, as well as the TCF3-ID3 and SWI/SNF complexes, in a large fraction of Burkitt lymphomas. Taken together, our results demonstrate a tight connection between somatic mutation, DNA methylation and transcriptional control in key B cell pathways deregulated differentially in Burkitt lymphoma and other germinal center B cell lymphomas.


International Journal of Cancer | 2015

The role of HPV RNA transcription, immune response-related gene expression and disruptive TP53 mutations in diagnostic and prognostic profiling of head and neck cancer

Gunnar Wichmann; Maciej Rosolowski; Knut Krohn; Markus Kreuz; Andreas Boehm; Anett Reiche; Ulrike Scharrer; Dirk Halama; Julia Bertolini; Ulrike Bauer; Dana Holzinger; Michael Pawlita; Jochen Hess; Christoph Engel; Dirk Hasenclever; Markus Scholz; Peter Ahnert; Holger Kirsten; Alexander Hemprich; Christian Wittekind; Olf Herbarth; Friedemann Horn; Andreas Dietz; Markus Loeffler

Stratification of head and neck squamous cell carcinomas (HNSCC) based on HPV16 DNA and RNA status, gene expression patterns, and mutated candidate genes may facilitate patient treatment decision. We characterize head and neck squamous cell carcinomas (HNSCC) with different HPV16 DNA and RNA (E6*I) status from 290 consecutively recruited patients by gene expression profiling and targeted sequencing of 50 genes. We show that tumors with transcriptionally inactive HPV16 (DNA+ RNA‐) are similar to HPV‐negative (DNA‐) tumors regarding gene expression and frequency of TP53 mutations (47%, 8/17 and 43%, 72/167, respectively). We also find that an immune response‐related gene expression cluster is associated with lymph node metastasis, independent of HPV16 status and that disruptive TP53 mutations are associated with lymph node metastasis in HPV16 DNA‐ tumors. We validate each of these associations in another large data set. Four gene expression clusters which we identify differ moderately but significantly in overall survival. Our findings underscore the importance of measuring the HPV16 RNA (E6*I) and TP53‐mutation status for patient stratification and identify associations of an immune response‐related gene expression cluster and TP53 mutations with lymph node metastasis in HNSCC.

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Michael Hummel

University College London

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Birgit Burkhardt

Boston Children's Hospital

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