Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Michael Chiorazzi is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Michael Chiorazzi.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2003

Molecular Diagnosis of Primary Mediastinal B Cell Lymphoma Identifies a Clinically Favorable Subgroup of Diffuse Large B Cell Lymphoma Related to Hodgkin Lymphoma

Andreas Rosenwald; George E. Wright; Karen Leroy; Xin-You Yu; Philippe Gaulard; Randy D. Gascoyne; Wing C. Chan; Tong Zhao; Corinne Haioun; Timothy C. Greiner; Dennis D. Weisenburger; James C. Lynch; Julie M. Vose; James O. Armitage; Erlend B. Smeland; Stein Kvaløy; Harald Holte; Jan Delabie; Elias Campo; Emili Montserrat; Armando López-Guillermo; German Ott; H. Konrad Muller-Hermelink; Joseph M. Connors; Rita M. Braziel; Thomas M. Grogan; Richard I. Fisher; Thomas P. Miller; Michael LeBlanc; Michael Chiorazzi

Using current diagnostic criteria, primary mediastinal B cell lymphoma (PMBL) cannot be distinguished from other types of diffuse large B cell lymphoma (DLBCL) reliably. We used gene expression profiling to develop a more precise molecular diagnosis of PMBL. PMBL patients were considerably younger than other DLBCL patients, and their lymphomas frequently involved other thoracic structures but not extrathoracic sites typical of other DLBCLs. PMBL patients had a relatively favorable clinical outcome, with a 5-yr survival rate of 64% compared with 46% for other DLBCL patients. Gene expression profiling strongly supported a relationship between PMBL and Hodgkin lymphoma: over one third of the genes that were more highly expressed in PMBL than in other DLBCLs were also characteristically expressed in Hodgkin lymphoma cells. PDL2, which encodes a regulator of T cell activation, was the gene that best discriminated PMBL from other DLBCLs and was also highly expressed in Hodgkin lymphoma cells. The genomic loci for PDL2 and several neighboring genes were amplified in over half of the PMBLs and in Hodgkin lymphoma cell lines. The molecular diagnosis of PMBL should significantly aid in the development of therapies tailored to this clinically and pathogenetically distinctive subgroup of DLBCL.


Journal of Immunology | 2007

Characterization of early stages of human B cell development by gene expression profiling.

Marit E. Hystad; June H. Myklebust; Trond Hellem Bø; Einar Andreas Sivertsen; Edith Rian; Lise Forfang; Else Munthe; Andreas Rosenwald; Michael Chiorazzi; Inge Jonassen; Louis M. Staudt; Erlend B. Smeland

We have characterized several stages of normal human B cell development in adult bone marrow by gene expression profiling of hemopoietic stem cells, early B (E-B), pro-B, pre-B, and immature B cells, using RNA amplification and Lymphochip cDNA microarrays (n = 6). Hierarchical clustering of 758 differentially expressed genes clearly separated the five populations. We used gene sets to investigate the functional assignment of the differentially expressed genes. Genes involved in VDJ recombination as well as B lineage-associated transcription factors (TCF3 (E2A), EBF, BCL11A, and PAX5) were turned on in E-B cells, before acquisition of CD19. Several transcription factors with unknown roles in B lymphoid cells demonstrated interesting expression patterns, including ZCCHC7 and ZHX2. Compared with hemopoietic stem cells and pro-B cells, E-B cells had increased expression of 18 genes, and these included IGJ, IL1RAP, BCL2, and CD62L. In addition, E-B cells expressed T/NK lineage and myeloid-associated genes including CD2, NOTCH1, CD99, PECAM1, TNFSF13B, and MPO. Expression of key genes was confirmed at the protein level by FACS analysis. Several of these Ags were heterogeneously expressed, providing a basis for further subdivision of E-B cells. Altogether, these results provide new information regarding expression of genes in early stages of human B cell development.


Development | 2007

Timing of the onset of a developmental cell death is controlled by transcriptional induction of the C. elegans ced-3 caspase-encoding gene

Carine W. Maurer; Michael Chiorazzi; Shai Shaham

Temporal control of programmed cell death is necessary to ensure that cells die at only the right time during animal development. How such temporal regulation is achieved remains poorly understood. In some Caenorhabditis elegans somatic cells, transcription of the egl-1/BH3-only gene promotes cell-specific death. The EGL-1 protein inhibits the CED-9/Bcl-2 protein, resulting in the release of the caspase activator CED-4/Apaf-1. Subsequent activation of the CED-3 caspase by CED-4 leads to cell death. Despite the important role of egl-1 transcription in promoting CED-3 activity in cells destined to die, it remains unclear whether the temporal control of cell death is mediated by egl-1 expression. Here, we show that egl-1 and ced-9 play only minor roles in the death of the C. elegans tail-spike cell, demonstrating that temporal control of tail-spike cell death can be achieved in the absence of egl-1. We go on to show that the timing of the onset of tail-spike cell death is controlled by transcriptional induction of the ced-3 caspase. We characterized the developmental expression pattern of ced-3, and show that, in the tail-spike cell, ced-3 expression is induced shortly before the cell dies, and this induction is sufficient to promote the demise of the cell. Both ced-3 expression and cell death are dependent on the transcription factor PAL-1, the C. elegans homolog of the mammalian tumor suppressor gene Cdx2. PAL-1 can bind to the ced-3 promoter sites that are crucial for tail-spike cell death, suggesting that it promotes cell death by directly activating ced-3 transcription. Our results highlight a role that has not been described previously for the transcriptional regulation of caspases in controlling the timing of cell death onset during animal development.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Related F-box proteins control cell death in Caenorhabditis elegans and human lymphoma

Michael Chiorazzi; Lixin Rui; Yandan Yang; Michele Ceribelli; Nima Tishbi; Carine W. Maurer; Stella M. Ranuncolo; Hong Zhao; Weihong Xu; Wing C. Chan; Elaine S. Jaffe; Randy D. Gascoyne; Elias Campo; Andreas Rosenwald; German Ott; Jan Delabie; Lisa M. Rimsza; Shai Shaham; Louis M. Staudt

Cell death is a common metazoan cell fate, and its inactivation is central to human malignancy. In Caenorhabditis elegans, apoptotic cell death occurs via the activation of the caspase CED-3 following binding of the EGL-1/BH3-only protein to the antiapoptotic CED-9/BCL2 protein. Here we report a major alternative mechanism for caspase activation in vivo involving the F-box protein DRE-1. DRE-1 functions in parallel to EGL-1, requires CED-9 for activity, and binds to CED-9, suggesting that DRE-1 promotes apoptosis by inactivating CED-9. FBXO10, a human protein related to DRE-1, binds BCL2 and promotes its degradation, thereby initiating cell death. Moreover, some human diffuse large B-cell lymphomas have inactivating mutations in FBXO10 or express FBXO10 at low levels. Our results suggest that DRE-1/FBXO10 is a conserved regulator of apoptosis.


Journal of Immunology | 2001

Circulating Human B Cells That Express Surrogate Light Chains Display a Unique Antibody Repertoire

Eric Meffre; Michael Chiorazzi; Michel C. Nussenzweig

Circulating human B cells that coexpress V-preB and conventional L chains (V-preB+L+ B cells) are a recently described subset of B cells that express Abs with features of self-reactivity. Initial analysis of V-preB+L+ B cells was limited to Ig-κ and to the small, underused VH5 family. To determine whether Abs commonly expressed by V-preB+L+ B cells show similar features, we analyzed Ig H chains from three highly expressed VH families, VH1, VH3, and VH4, and Ig-λ. We find that VH1 and VH3 Abs expressed by V-preB+L+ B cells resemble VH5 in that they display increased JH6 use, long CDR3s, and an increased frequency of D-D fusions. Abs in all three of these VH families also show skewed D reading frame use resulting in predominance of hydrophobic amino acids, which are counterselected in conventional B cells. Like Ig-κ genes, the Ig-λ genes in V-preB+L+ B cells show long CDR3s, but they differ from Ig-κ genes in that they display no evidence of receptor editing. We conclude that a large number of H and L chain Abs expressed by V-preB+L+ B cells display features associated with self-reactive Abs.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2004

Prediction of Survival in Follicular Lymphoma Based on Molecular Features of Tumor-Infiltrating Immune Cells

Sandeep S. Dave; George E. Wright; Bruce Tan; Andreas Rosenwald; Randy D. Gascoyne; Wing C. Chan; Richard I. Fisher; Rita M. Braziel; Lisa M. Rimsza; Thomas M. Grogan; Thomas P. Miller; Michael LeBlanc; Timothy C. Greiner; Dennis D. Weisenburger; James C. Lynch; Julie M. Vose; James O. Armitage; Erlend B. Smeland; Stein Kvaløy; Harald Holte; Jan Delabie; Joseph M. Connors; Peter M. Lansdorp; Qin Ouyang; T. Andrew Lister; Andrew Davies; Andrew J. Norton; H. Konrad Muller-Hermelink; German Ott; Elias Campo


Cancer Cell | 2003

The proliferation gene expression signature is a quantitative integrator of oncogenic events that predicts survival in mantle cell lymphoma

Andreas Rosenwald; George E. Wright; Adrian Wiestner; Wing C. Chan; Joseph M. Connors; Elias Campo; Randy D. Gascoyne; Thomas M. Grogan; H. Konrad Muller-Hermelink; Erlend B. Smeland; Michael Chiorazzi; Jena M. Giltnane; Elaine M. Hurt; Hong Zhao; Lauren Averett; Sarah E. Henrickson; Liming Yang; John Powell; Wyndham H. Wilson; Elaine S. Jaffe; Richard Simon; Richard D. Klausner; Emilio Montserrat; Francesc Bosch; Timothy C. Greiner; Dennis D. Weisenburger; Warren G. Sanger; Bhavana J. Dave; James C. Lynch; Julie M. Vose


Blood | 2005

Cyclin D1–negative mantle cell lymphoma: a clinicopathologic study based on gene expression profiling

Kai Fu; Dennis D. Weisenburger; Timothy C. Greiner; Sandeep S. Dave; George E. Wright; Andreas Rosenwald; Michael Chiorazzi; Javeed Iqbal; Stefan Gesk; Reiner Siebert; Daphne de Jong; Elaine S. Jaffe; Wyndham H. Wilson; Jan Delabie; German Ott; Bhavana J. Dave; Warren G. Sanger; Lynette M. Smith; Lisa M. Rimsza; Rita M. Braziel; H. Konrad Muller-Hermelink; Elias Campo; Randy D. Gascoyne; Louis M. Staudt; Wing C. Chan


Blood | 2007

Point mutations and genomic deletions in CCND1 create stable truncated cyclin D1 mRNAs that are associated with increased proliferation rate and shorter survival

Adrian Wiestner; Mahsa Tehrani; Michael Chiorazzi; George E. Wright; Federica Gibellini; Kazutaka Nakayama; Hui Liu; Andreas Rosenwald; H. Konrad Muller-Hermelink; German Ott; Wing C. Chan; Timothy C. Greiner; Dennis D. Weisenburger; Julie M. Vose; James O. Armitage; Randy D. Gascoyne; Joseph M. Connors; Elias Campo; Emilio Montserrat; Francesc Bosch; Erlend B. Smeland; Stein Kvaløy; Harald Holte; Jan Delabie; Richard I. Fisher; Thomas M. Grogan; Thomas P. Miller; Wyndham H. Wilson; Elaine S. Jaffe; Louis M. Staudt


Blood | 2004

Lymphdx: A Custom Microarray for Molecular Diagnosis and Prognosis in Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma.

Sandeep S. Dave; George E. Wright; Bruce Tan; Andreas Rosenwald; Wing-Chung Chan; Timothy C. Greiner; Dennis D. Weisenburger; James C. Lynch; Julie M. Vose; James O. Armitage; Richard I. Fisher; Rita M. Braziel; Lisa M. Rimsza; Thomas M. Grogan; Thomas P. Miller; Michael LeBlanc; Erlend B. Smeland; Stein Kvaloy; Harald Holte; Jan Delabie; Hans-Konrad Müller-Hermelink; German Ott; Randy D. Gascoyne; Joseph M. Connors; Elias Campo; Emilio Montserrat; Wyndham H. Wilson; Elaine S. Jaffe; T. A. Lister; Andrew Davies

Collaboration


Dive into the Michael Chiorazzi's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Dennis D. Weisenburger

University of Nebraska Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Timothy C. Greiner

University of Nebraska Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Wing C. Chan

City of Hope National Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Elias Campo

University of Barcelona

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Elaine S. Jaffe

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Julie M. Vose

University of Nebraska Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Louis M. Staudt

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Harald Holte

Oslo University Hospital

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge