Mirle Schemionek
RWTH Aachen University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Mirle Schemionek.
Journal of Hematology & Oncology | 2016
Lijuan Han; Claudia Schubert; Johanna Köhler; Mirle Schemionek; Susanne Isfort; Tim H. Brümmendorf; Steffen Koschmieder; Nicolas Chatain
BackgroundSomatic calreticulin (CALR), Janus kinase 2 (JAK2), and thrombopoietin receptor (MPL) mutations essentially show mutual exclusion in myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPN), suggesting that they activate common oncogenic pathways. Recent data have shown that MPL function is essential for CALR mutant-driven MPN. However, the exact role and the mechanisms of action of CALR mutants have not been fully elucidated.MethodsThe murine myeloid cell line 32D and human HL60 cells overexpressing the most frequent CALR type 1 and type 2 frameshift mutants were generated to analyze the first steps of cellular transformation, in the presence and absence of MPL expression. Furthermore, mutant CALR protein stability and secretion were examined using brefeldin A, MG132, spautin-1, and tunicamycin treatment.ResultsThe present study demonstrates that the expression of endogenous Mpl, CD41, and the key megakaryocytic transcription factor NF-E2 is stimulated by type 1 and type 2 CALR mutants, even in the absence of exogenous MPL. Mutant CALR expressing 32D cells spontaneously acquired cytokine independence, and this was associated with increased Mpl mRNA expression, CD41, and NF-E2 protein as well as constitutive activation of downstream signaling and response to JAK inhibitor treatment. Exogenous expression of MPL led to constitutive activation of STAT3 and 5, ERK1/2, and AKT, cytokine-independent growth, and reduction of apoptosis similar to the effects seen in the spontaneously outgrown cells. We observed low CALR-mutant protein amounts in cellular lysates of stably transduced cells, and this was due to accelerated protein degradation that occurred independently from the ubiquitin-proteasome system as well as autophagy. CALR-mutant degradation was attenuated by MPL expression. Interestingly, we found high levels of mutated CALR and loss of downstream signaling after blockage of the secretory pathway and protein glycosylation.ConclusionsThese findings demonstrate the potency of CALR mutants to drive expression of megakaryocytic differentiation markers such as NF-E2 and CD41 as well as Mpl. Furthermore, CALR mutants undergo accelerated protein degradation that involves the secretory pathway and/or protein glycosylation.
PLOS ONE | 2012
Daniel B. Lipka; Marie-Christine Wagner; Marek Dziadosz; Tina M. Schnöder; Florian H. Heidel; Mirle Schemionek; Junia V. Melo; Thomas Kindler; Carsten Müller-Tidow; Steffen Koschmieder; Thomas Fischer
Clinical development of imatinib in CML established continuous target inhibition as a paradigm for successful tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) therapy. However, recent reports suggested that transient potent target inhibition of BCR-ABL by high-dose TKI (HD-TKI) pulse-exposure is sufficient to irreversibly commit cells to apoptosis. Here, we report a novel mechanism of prolonged intracellular TKI activity upon HD-TKI pulse-exposure (imatinib, dasatinib) in BCR-ABL-positive cells. Comprehensive mechanistic exploration revealed dramatic intracellular accumulation of TKIs which closely correlated with induction of apoptosis. Cells were rescued from apoptosis upon HD-TKI pulse either by repetitive drug wash-out or by overexpression of ABC-family drug transporters. Inhibition of ABCB1 restored sensitivity to HD-TKI pulse-exposure. Thus, our data provide evidence that intracellular drug retention crucially determines biological activity of imatinib and dasatinib. These studies may refine our current thinking on critical requirements of TKI dose and duration of target inhibition for biological activity of TKIs.
PLOS ONE | 2015
Mirle Schemionek; Behzad Kharabi Masouleh; Yvonne Klaile; Utz Krug; Katja Hebestreit; Claudia Schubert; Martin Dugas; Thomas Büchner; Bernhard Wörmann; Wolfgang Hiddemann; Wolfgang E. Berdel; Tim H. Brümmendorf; Carsten Müller-Tidow; Steffen Koschmieder
The adapter protein metastasis suppressor 1 (MTSS1) is implicated as a tumor suppressor or tumor promoter, depending on the type of solid cancer. Here, we identified Mtss1 expression to be increased in AML subsets with favorable outcome, while suppressed in high risk AML patients. High expression of MTSS1 predicted better clinical outcome of patients with normal-karyotype AML. Mechanistically, MTSS1 expression was negatively regulated by FLT3-ITD signaling but enhanced by the AML1-ETO fusion protein. DNMT3B, a negative regulator of MTSS1, showed strong binding to the MTSS1 promoter in PML-RARA positive but not AML1-ETO positive cells, suggesting that AML1-ETO leads to derepression of MTSS1. Pharmacological treatment of AML cell lines carrying the FLT3-ITD mutation with the specific FLT3 inhibitor PKC-412 caused upregulation of MTSS1. Moreover, treatment of acute promyelocytic cells (APL) with all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) increased MTSS1 mRNA levels. Taken together, our findings suggest that MTSS1 might have a context-dependent function and could act as a tumor suppressor, which is pharmacologically targetable in AML patients.
PLOS ONE | 2015
Martin Kirschner; Mirle Schemionek; Claudia Schubert; Nicolas Chatain; Stephanie Sontag; Susanne Isfort; Nadina Ortiz-Brüchle; Karla Schmitt; Luisa Krüger; Klaus Zerres; Martin Zenke; Tim H. Brümmendorf; Steffen Koschmieder
In order to assess the feasibility of amplicon-based parallel next generation sequencing (NGS) for the diagnosis of myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPN), we investigated multiplex-PCR of 212 amplicons covering genomic mutational hotspots in 48 cancer-related genes. Samples from 64 patients with MPN and five controls as well as seven (myeloid) cell lines were analyzed. Healthy donor and reactive erythrocytosis samples showed several frequent single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) but no known pathogenic mutation. Sequencing of the cell lines confirmed the presence of the known mutations. In the patient samples, JAK2 V617F was present in all PV, 4 of 10 ET, and 16 of 19 MF patients. The JAK2 V617F allele burden was different in the three groups (ET, 33+/-22%; PV 48+/-28% and MF 68+/- 29%). Further analysis detected both previously described and undescribed mutations (i.e., G12V NRAS, IDH1 R132H, E255G ABL, and V125G IDH1 mutations). One patient with lymphoid BC/Ph+ ALL who harbored a T315I ABL mutation and was treated with ponatinib was found to have developed a newly acquired V216M TP53 mutation (12% of transcripts) when becoming resistant to ponatinib. Ponatinib led to a decrease of ABL T315I positive transcripts from 47% before ponatinib treatment to 16% at the time of ponatinib resistance in this patient, suggesting that both TP53 and ABL mutations were present in the same clone and that the newly acquired TP53 mutation might have caused ponatinib resistance in this patient. In conclusion, amplicon-sequencing-based NGS allows simultaneous analysis of multiple MPN associated genes for diagnosis and during treatment and measurement of the mutant allele burden.
Leukemia | 2018
Martin Kirschner; Angela Maurer; Marcin W. Wlodarski; Mónica S. Ventura Ferreira; Anne-Sophie Bouillon; Insa Halfmeyer; Wolfgang Blau; Michael Kreuter; Martin Rosewich; Selim Corbacioglu; Joachim Beck; Michaela Schwarz; Jörg Bittenbring; Markus P. Radsak; Christian Matthias Wilk; Steffen Koschmieder; Matthias Begemann; Ingo Kurth; Mirle Schemionek; Tim H. Brümmendorf; Fabian Beier
Dyskeratosis congenita (DKC) is a paradigmatic telomere disorder characterized by substantial and premature telomere shortening, bone marrow failure, and a dramatically increased risk of developing myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) or acute myeloid leukemia (AML). DKC can occur as a late-onset, so-called cryptic form, with first manifestation in adults. Somatic MDS-related mutations are found in up to 35% of patients with acquired aplastic anemia (AA), especially in patients with short telomeres. The aim of our study was to investigate whether cryptic DKC is associated with an increased incidence of MDS-related somatic mutations, thereby linking the accelerated telomere shortening with the increased risk of MDS/AML. Samples from 15 adult patients (median age: 42 years, range: 23–60 years) with molecularly confirmed cryptic DKC were screened using next-generation gene panel sequencing to detect MDS-related somatic variants. Only one of the 15 patients (7%) demonstrated a clinically relevant MDS-related somatic variant. This incidence was dramatically lower than formerly described in acquired AA. Based on our data, we conclude that clonal evolution of subclones carrying MDS-related mutations is not the predominant mechanism for MDS/AML initiation in adult cryptic DKC patients.
Blood Advances | 2018
Anne-Sophie Bouillon; Mónica S. Ventura Ferreira; Shady Adnan Awad; Johan Richter; Andreas Hochhaus; Volker Kunzmann; Jolanta Dengler; Jeroen J.W.M. Janssen; Gert J. Ossenkoppele; Peter E. Westerweel; Peter te Boekhorst; François-Xavier Mahon; Henrik Hjorth-Hansen; Susanne Isfort; Thoas Fioretos; Sebastian Hummel; Mirle Schemionek; Stefan Wilop; Steffen Koschmieder; Susanne Saußele; Satu Mustjoki; Fabian Beier; Tim H. Brümmendorf
Telomere length (TL) in peripheral blood (PB) cells of patients with chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) has been shown to correlate with disease stage, prognostic scores, response to therapy, and disease progression. However, due to considerable genetic interindividual variability, TL varies substantially between individuals, limiting its use as a robust prognostic marker in individual patients. Here, we compared TL of BCR-ABL-, nonleukemic CD34+CD38- hematopoietic stem cells (HSC) in the bone marrow of CML patients at diagnosis to their individual BCR-ABL+ leukemic stem cell (LSC) counterparts. We observed significantly accelerated telomere shortening in LSC compared with nonleukemic HSC. Interestingly, the degree of LSC telomere shortening was found to correlate significantly with the leukemic clone size. To validate the diagnostic value of nonleukemic cells as internal controls and to rule out effects of tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) treatment on these nontarget cells, we prospectively assessed TL in 134 PB samples collected in deep molecular remission after TKI treatment within the EURO-SKI study (NCT01596114). Here, no significant telomere shortening was observed in granulocytes compared with an age-adjusted control cohort. In conclusion, this study provides proof of principle for accelerated telomere shortening in LSC as opposed to HSC in CML patients at diagnosis. The fact that the degree of telomere shortening correlates with leukemic clones size supports the use of TL in leukemic cells as a prognostic parameter pending prospective validation. TL in nonleukemic myeloid cells seems unaffected even by long-term TKI treatment arguing against a reduction of telomere-mediated replicative reserve in normal hematopoiesis under TKI treatment.
Leukemia | 2017
D Fahrenkamp; O Herrmann; Steffen Koschmieder; Tim H. Brümmendorf; Mirle Schemionek
The metastasis suppressor 1 (Mtss1) protein belongs to the inverse Bin–amphiphysin–Rvs (I-BAR) domain family, a subgroup of membrane binding and deforming proteins involved in the formation of plasma membrane protrusions such as filopodia and lamellipodia. Mtss1 function appears to be pleotropic with tumor-promoting and tumorsuppressing functions being described in diverse malignancies. Our own group established a role for Mtss1 as a novel tumor suppressor in chronic myeloid leukemia and acute myeloid leukemia. Aiming to study the role of Mtss1 in vivo, two mouse models targeting Mtss1 expression had previously been developed. In the first model, insertion of a neomycin cassette into the first Mtss1 exon resulted in the depletion of Mtss1 full-length protein, but preserved an I-BAR truncated isoform. In a second model, Mtss1 knockout was reported to be achieved by utilization of embryonic stem cells (ES, clone CSC156, BayGenomics) carrying an insertion
Methods of Molecular Biology | 2016
Oliver Herrmann; Mirle Schemionek
Retroviral models have tremendously contributed to our understanding of CML development and have been indispensable for preclinical drug testing which facilitated the implementation of a targeted therapy. The retroviral insertion of Bcr-Abl into mice that are genetically depleted for a potential tumor suppressor is a tool to test for a specific gene function in Bcr-Abl disease. Here we describe how to generate a Bcr-Abl retrovirus that is subsequently used for infection of primary murine BM cells, which are genetically depleted for a potential tumor suppressor gene. We will suggest control experiments and outline further methods that are required to allow for assessment of disease development upon tumor suppressor knockout in CML.
Annals of Hematology | 2017
Mónica S. Ventura Ferreira; Martina Crysandt; Patrick Ziegler; Sebastian Hummel; Stefan Wilop; Martin Kirschner; Mirle Schemionek; Edgar Jost; Wolfgang Wagner; Tim H. Brümmendorf; Fabian Beier
Blood | 2013
Daniel J. Kowalewski; Mirle Schemionek; Lothar Kanz; Tim H. Brümmendorf; Helmut R. Salih; Hans-Georg Rammensee; Stefan Stevanovic