Marta Sanchez-Martin
Columbia University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Marta Sanchez-Martin.
Cancer Cell | 2013
Erich Piovan; Jiyang Yu; Valeria Tosello; Daniel Herranz; Alberto Ambesi-Impiombato; Ana Carolina Da Silva; Marta Sanchez-Martin; Arianne Perez-Garcia; Isaura Rigo; Mireia Castillo; Stefano Indraccolo; Justin R. Cross; Elisa de Stanchina; Elisabeth Paietta; Janis Racevskis; Jacob M. Rowe; Martin S. Tallman; Giuseppe Basso; Jules P.P. Meijerink; Carlos Cordon-Cardo; Adolfo A. Ferrando
Glucocorticoid resistance is a major driver of therapeutic failure in T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL). Here, we identify the AKT1 kinase as a major negative regulator of the NR3C1 glucocorticoid receptor protein activity driving glucocorticoid resistance in T-ALL. Mechanistically, AKT1 impairs glucocorticoid-induced gene expression by direct phosphorylation of NR3C1 at position S134 and blocking glucocorticoid-induced NR3C1 translocation to the nucleus. Moreover, we demonstrate that loss of PTEN and consequent AKT1 activation can effectively block glucocorticoid-induced apoptosis and induce resistance to glucocorticoid therapy. Conversely, pharmacologic inhibition of AKT with MK2206 effectively restores glucocorticoid-induced NR3C1 translocation to the nucleus, increases the response of T-ALL cells to glucocorticoid therapy, and effectively reverses glucocorticoid resistance in vitro and in vivo.
Cancer Cell | 2015
Lauren A. Pitt; Anastasia Tikhonova; Hai Hu; Thomas Trimarchi; Bryan King; Yixiao Gong; Marta Sanchez-Martin; Aris Tsirigos; Dan R. Littman; Adolfo A. Ferrando; Sean J. Morrison; David R. Fooksman; Iannis Aifantis; Susan R. Schwab
The role of the microenvironment in T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL), or any acute leukemia, is poorly understood. Here we demonstrate that T-ALL cells are in direct, stable contact with CXCL12-producing bone marrow stroma. Cxcl12 deletion from vascular endothelial, but not perivascular, cells impeded tumor growth, suggesting a vascular niche for T-ALL. Moreover, genetic targeting of Cxcr4 in murine T-ALL after disease onset led to rapid, sustained disease remission, and CXCR4 antagonism suppressed human T-ALL in primary xenografts. Loss of CXCR4 targeted key T-ALL regulators, including the MYC pathway, and decreased leukemia initiating cell activity in vivo. Our data identify a T-ALL niche and suggest targeting CXCL12/CXCR4 signaling as a powerful therapeutic approach for T-ALL.
Nature Medicine | 2015
Daniel Herranz; Alberto Ambesi-Impiombato; Jessica Sudderth; Marta Sanchez-Martin; Laura Belver; Valeria Tosello; Luyao Xu; Agnieszka A. Wendorff; Mireia Castillo; J. Erika Haydu; Javier Márquez; José M. Matés; Andrew L. Kung; Stephen Rayport; Carlos Cordon-Cardo; Ralph J. DeBerardinis; Adolfo A. Ferrando
Activating mutations in NOTCH1 are common in T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL). Here we identify glutaminolysis as a critical pathway for leukemia cell growth downstream of NOTCH1 and a key determinant of the response to anti-NOTCH1 therapies in vivo. Mechanistically, inhibition of NOTCH1 signaling in T-ALL induces a metabolic shutdown, with prominent inhibition of glutaminolysis and triggers autophagy as a salvage pathway supporting leukemia cell metabolism. Consequently, inhibition of glutaminolysis and inhibition of autophagy strongly and synergistically enhance the antileukemic effects of anti-NOTCH1 therapy in mice harboring T-ALL. Moreover, we demonstrate that Pten loss upregulates glycolysis and consequently rescues leukemic cell metabolism, thereby abrogating the antileukemic effects of NOTCH1 inhibition. Overall, these results identify glutaminolysis as a major node in cancer metabolism controlled by NOTCH1 and as therapeutic target for the treatment of T-ALL.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016
Koichi Oshima; Hossein Khiabanian; Ana C. da Silva-Almeida; Gannie Tzoneva; Francesco Abate; Alberto Ambesi-Impiombato; Marta Sanchez-Martin; Zachary Carpenter; Alex Penson; Arianne Perez-Garcia; Cornelia Eckert; Concepción Nicolás; Milagros Balbín; Maria Luisa Sulis; Motohiro Kato; Katsuyoshi Koh; Maddalena Paganin; Giuseppe Basso; Julie M. Gastier-Foster; Meenakshi Devidas; Mignon L. Loh; Renate Kirschner-Schwabe; Teresa Palomero; Raul Rabadan; Adolfo A. Ferrando
Significance Relapsed acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is associated with chemotherapy resistance and poor prognosis. This study analyzes the emergence of acquired mutations in relapsed ALL samples, identifying genes implicated in disease progression and defining the process of clonal evolution leading to relapse. These analyses revealed that ALL relapse emerges from subclonal populations sharing only part of the mutations present in the dominant leukemia population found at diagnosis. Moreover, we show mutations in genes implicated in chemotherapy resistance pathways at relapse. RAS mutations are highly prevalent in high-risk ALL, yet their capacity to confer resistance to methotrexate and sensitivity to vincristine, two core drugs used in the treatment of ALL, influences their positive or negative selection at relapse. Although multiagent combination chemotherapy is curative in a significant fraction of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) patients, 20% of cases relapse and most die because of chemorefractory disease. Here we used whole-exome and whole-genome sequencing to analyze the mutational landscape at relapse in pediatric ALL cases. These analyses identified numerous relapse-associated mutated genes intertwined in chemotherapy resistance-related protein complexes. In this context, RAS-MAPK pathway-activating mutations in the neuroblastoma RAS viral oncogene homolog (NRAS), kirsten rat sarcoma viral oncogene homolog (KRAS), and protein tyrosine phosphatase, nonreceptor type 11 (PTPN11) genes were present in 24 of 55 (44%) cases in our series. Interestingly, some leukemias showed retention or emergence of RAS mutant clones at relapse, whereas in others RAS mutant clones present at diagnosis were replaced by RAS wild-type populations, supporting a role for both positive and negative selection evolutionary pressures in clonal evolution of RAS-mutant leukemia. Consistently, functional dissection of mouse and human wild-type and mutant RAS isogenic leukemia cells demonstrated induction of methotrexate resistance but also improved the response to vincristine in mutant RAS-expressing lymphoblasts. These results highlight the central role of chemotherapy-driven selection as a central mechanism of leukemia clonal evolution in relapsed ALL, and demonstrate a previously unrecognized dual role of RAS mutations as drivers of both sensitivity and resistance to chemotherapy.
Blood | 2017
Marta Sanchez-Martin; Adolfo A. Ferrando
T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) is a highly proliferative hematologic malignancy that results from the transformation of immature T-cell progenitors. Aberrant cell growth and proliferation in T-ALL lymphoblasts are sustained by activation of strong oncogenic drivers promoting cell anabolism and cell cycle progression. Oncogenic NOTCH signaling, which is activated in more than 65% of T-ALL patients by activating mutations in the NOTCH1 gene, has emerged as a major regulator of leukemia cell growth and metabolism. T-ALL NOTCH1 mutations result in ligand-independent and sustained NOTCH1-receptor signaling, which translates into activation of a broad transcriptional program dominated by upregulation of genes involved in anabolic pathways. Among these, the MYC oncogene plays a major role in NOTCH1-induced transformation. As result, the oncogenic activity of NOTCH1 in T-ALL is strictly dependent on MYC upregulation, which makes the NOTCH1-MYC regulatory circuit an attractive therapeutic target for the treatment of T-ALL.
Blood | 2015
Stephanie A. Schnell; Alberto Ambesi-Impiombato; Marta Sanchez-Martin; Laura Belver; Luyao Xu; Yue Qin; Ryoichiro Kageyama; Adolfo A. Ferrando
Oncogenic activation of NOTCH1 signaling plays a central role in the pathogenesis of T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia, with mutations on this signaling pathway affecting more than 60% of patients at diagnosis. However, the transcriptional regulatory circuitries driving T-cell transformation downstream of NOTCH1 remain incompletely understood. Here we identify Hairy and Enhancer of Split 1 (HES1), a transcriptional repressor controlled by NOTCH1, as a critical mediator of NOTCH1-induced leukemogenesis strictly required for tumor cell survival. Mechanistically, we demonstrate that HES1 directly downregulates the expression of BBC3, the gene encoding the PUMA BH3-only proapoptotic factor in T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Finally, we identify perhexiline, a small-molecule inhibitor of mitochondrial carnitine palmitoyltransferase-1, as a HES1-signature antagonist drug with robust antileukemic activity against NOTCH1-induced leukemias in vitro and in vivo.
ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2014
Alexandra M. Cantley; Matthew Welsch; Alberto Ambesi-Impiombato; Marta Sanchez-Martin; Mi-Yeon Kim; Andras J. Bauer; Adolfo A. Ferrando; Brent R. Stockwell
Glucocorticoids are one of the most utilized and effective therapies in treating T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia. However, patients often develop resistance to glucocorticoids, rendering these therapies ineffective. We screened 9517 compounds, selected for their lead-like properties, chosen from among 3 372 615 compounds, against a dexamethasone-resistant T-ALL cell line to identify small molecules that reverse glucocorticoid resistance. We synthesized analogues of the most effective compound, termed J9, from the screen in order to define the scaffolds structure-activity relationship. Active compounds restored sensitivity to glucocorticoids through upregulation of the glucocorticoid receptor. This compound and mechanism may provide a strategy for overcoming glucocorticoid resistance in patients with T-ALL.
Nature | 2018
Gannie Tzoneva; Chelsea L. Dieck; Koichi Oshima; Alberto Ambesi-Impiombato; Marta Sanchez-Martin; Chioma J Madubata; Hossein Khiabanian; Jiangyan Yu; Esmé Waanders; Ilaria Iacobucci; Maria Luisa Sulis; Motohiro Kato; Katsuyoshi Koh; Maddalena Paganin; Giuseppe Basso; Julie M. Gastier-Foster; Mignon L. Loh; Renate Kirschner-Schwabe; Charles G. Mullighan; Raul Rabadan; Adolfo A. Ferrando
Relapsed acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) is associated with resistance to chemotherapy and poor prognosis. Gain-of-function mutations in the 5′-nucleotidase, cytosolic II (NT5C2) gene induce resistance to 6-mercaptopurine and are selectively present in relapsed ALL. Yet, the mechanisms involved in NT5C2 mutation-driven clonal evolution during the initiation of leukaemia, disease progression and relapse remain unknown. Here we use a conditional-and-inducible leukaemia model to demonstrate that expression of NT5C2(R367Q), a highly prevalent relapsed-ALL NT5C2 mutation, induces resistance to chemotherapy with 6-mercaptopurine at the cost of impaired leukaemia cell growth and leukaemia-initiating cell activity. The loss-of-fitness phenotype of NT5C2+/R367Q mutant cells is associated with excess export of purines to the extracellular space and depletion of the intracellular purine-nucleotide pool. Consequently, blocking guanosine synthesis by inhibition of inosine-5′-monophosphate dehydrogenase (IMPDH) induced increased cytotoxicity against NT5C2-mutant leukaemia lymphoblasts. These results identify the fitness cost of NT5C2 mutation and resistance to chemotherapy as key evolutionary drivers that shape clonal evolution in relapsed ALL and support a role for IMPDH inhibition in the treatment of ALL.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017
Marta Sanchez-Martin; Alberto Ambesi-Impiombato; Yue Qin; Daniel Herranz; Mukesh Bansal; Tiziana Girardi; Elisabeth Paietta; Martin S. Tallman; Jacob M. Rowe; Kim De Keersmaecker; Adolfo A. Ferrando
Significance The clinical development of targeted therapies has been hampered by their limited intrinsic antitumor activity and the rapid emergence of resistance, highlighting the need to identify highly active and synergistic drug combinations. However, empirical synergistic drug-screening approaches are challenging, and elucidating the mechanisms that underlie such drug interactions is typically complex. Here, we performed an expression-based screen and network analyses to identify drugs amplifying the antitumor effects of NOTCH inhibition in T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL). These studies uncovered a druggable synthetic lethal interaction between suppression of protein translation and NOTCH inhibition in T-ALL. Our results illustrate the power of expression-based analyses toward the identification and functional characterization of antitumor drug combinations for the treatment of human cancer. The Notch1 gene is a major oncogenic driver and therapeutic target in T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL). However, inhibition of NOTCH signaling with γ-secretase inhibitors (GSIs) has shown limited antileukemic activity in clinical trials. Here we performed an expression-based virtual screening to identify highly active antileukemic drugs that synergize with NOTCH1 inhibition in T-ALL. Among these, withaferin A demonstrated the strongest cytotoxic and GSI-synergistic antileukemic effects in vitro and in vivo. Mechanistically, network perturbation analyses showed eIF2A-phosphorylation–mediated inhibition of protein translation as a critical mediator of the antileukemic effects of withaferin A and its interaction with NOTCH1 inhibition. Overall, these results support a role for anti-NOTCH1 therapies and protein translation inhibitor combinations in the treatment of T-ALL.
Gut | 2018
Luis Arnes; Zhaoqi Liu; Jiguang Wang; Hans Carlo Maurer; Irina Sagalovskiy; Marta Sanchez-Martin; Nikhil Bommakanti; Diana C. Garofalo; Dina A. Balderes; Lori Sussel; Kenneth P. Olive; Raul Rabadan
Objective Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDA) is a highly metastatic disease with limited therapeutic options. Genome and transcriptome analyses have identified signalling pathways and cancer driver genes with implications in patient stratification and targeted therapy. However, these analyses were performed in bulk samples and focused on coding genes, which represent a small fraction of the genome. Design We developed a computational framework to reconstruct the non-coding transcriptome from cross-sectional RNA-Seq, integrating somatic copy number alterations (SCNA), common germline variants associated to PDA risk and clinical outcome. We validated the results in an independent cohort of paired epithelial and stromal RNA-Seq derived from laser capture microdissected human pancreatic tumours, allowing us to annotate the compartment specificity of their expression. We employed systems and experimental biology approaches to interrogate the function of epithelial long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) associated with genetic traits and clinical outcome in PDA. Results We generated a catalogue of PDA-associated lncRNAs. We showed that lncRNAs define molecular subtypes with biological and clinical significance. We identified lncRNAs in genomic regions with SCNA and single nucleotide polymorphisms associated with lifetime risk of PDA and associated with clinical outcome using genomic and clinical data in PDA. Systems biology and experimental functional analysis of two epithelial lncRNAs (LINC00673 and FAM83H-AS1) suggest they regulate the transcriptional profile of pancreatic tumour samples and PDA cell lines. Conclusions Our findings indicate that lncRNAs are associated with genetic marks of pancreatic cancer risk, contribute to the transcriptional regulation of neoplastic cells and provide an important resource to design functional studies of lncRNAs in PDA.