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Dive into the research topics where Miroslav Varecha is active.

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Featured researches published by Miroslav Varecha.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2015

Fibroblast growth factor and canonical WNT/β-catenin signaling cooperate in suppression of chondrocyte differentiation in experimental models of FGFR signaling in cartilage

Marcela Buchtová; Veronika Oralová; Anie Aklian; Jan Mašek; Iva Vesela; Zhufeng Ouyang; Tereza Obadalova; Zaneta Konecna; Tereza Spoustova; Tereza Pospisilova; Petr Matula; Miroslav Varecha; Lukas Balek; Iva Gudernova; Iva Jelínková; Ivan Duran; Iveta Cervenkova; Shunichi Murakami; Alois Kozubík; Petr Dvorak; Vitezslav Bryja; Pavel Krejčí

Aberrant fibroblast growth factor (FGF) signaling disturbs chondrocyte differentiation in skeletal dysplasia, but the mechanisms underlying this process remain unclear. Recently, FGF was found to activate canonical WNT/β-catenin pathway in chondrocytes via Erk MAP kinase-mediated phosphorylation of WNT co-receptor Lrp6. Here, we explore the cellular consequences of such a signaling interaction. WNT enhanced the FGF-mediated suppression of chondrocyte differentiation in mouse limb bud micromass and limb organ cultures, leading to inhibition of cartilage nodule formation in micromass cultures, and suppression of growth in cultured limbs. Simultaneous activation of the FGF and WNT/β-catenin pathways resulted in loss of chondrocyte extracellular matrix, expression of genes typical for mineralized tissues and alteration of cellular shape. WNT enhanced the FGF-mediated downregulation of chondrocyte proteoglycan and collagen extracellular matrix via inhibition of matrix synthesis and induction of proteinases involved in matrix degradation. Expression of genes regulating RhoA GTPase pathway was induced by FGF in cooperation with WNT, and inhibition of the RhoA signaling rescued the FGF/WNT-mediated changes in chondrocyte cellular shape. Our results suggest that aberrant FGF signaling cooperates with WNT/β-catenin in suppression of chondrocyte differentiation.


Osteoarthritis and Cartilage | 2017

Statins do not inhibit the FGFR signaling in chondrocytes

Bohumil Fafilek; Marek Hampl; N. Ricankova; Iva Vesela; Lukas Balek; M. Kunova Bosakova; Iva Gudernova; Miroslav Varecha; Marcela Buchtová; Pavel Krejčí

OBJECTIVE Statins are widely used drugs for cholesterol lowering, which were recently found to counteract the effects of aberrant fibroblast growth factor receptor (FGFR3) signaling in cell and animal models of FGFR3-related chondrodysplasia. This opened an intriguing therapeutic possibility for human dwarfing conditions caused by gain-of-function mutations in FGFR3, although the mechanism of statin action on FGFR3 remains unclear. Here, we determine the effect of statins on FGFR signaling in chondrocytes. DESIGN Cultured chondrocyte cell lines, mouse embryonic tibia cultures and limb bud micromasses were treated with FGF2 to activate FGFR signaling. The effects of atorvastatin, fluvastatin, lovastatin and pravastatin on FGFR3 protein stability and on FGFR-mediated chondrocyte growth-arrest, loss of extracellular matrix (ECM), induction of premature senescence and hypertrophic differentiation were evaluated. RESULTS Statins did not alter the level of FGFR3 protein expression nor produce any effect on FGFR-mediated inhibition of chondrocyte proliferation and hypertrophic differentiation in cultured chondrocyte cell lines, mouse tibia cultures or limb bud micromasses. CONCLUSION We conclude that statins do not inhibit the FGFR signaling in chondrocytes. Therefore the statin-mediated rescue of FGFR3-related chondrodysplasia, described before, is likely not intrinsic to the growth plate cartilage.


eLife | 2017

One reporter for in-cell activity profiling of majority of protein kinase oncogenes.

Iva Gudernova; Silvie Foldynova-Trantirkova; Barbora El Ghannamova; Bohumil Fafilek; Miroslav Varecha; Lukas Balek; Eva Hrubá; Lucie Jonatova; Iva Jelínková; Michaela Kunova Bosakova; Lukáš Trantírek; Jiri Mayer; Pavel Krejčí

In-cell profiling enables the evaluation of receptor tyrosine activity in a complex environment of regulatory networks that affect signal initiation, propagation and feedback. We used FGF-receptor signaling to identify EGR1 as a locus that strongly responds to the activation of a majority of the recognized protein kinase oncogenes, including 30 receptor tyrosine kinases and 154 of their disease-associated mutants. The EGR1 promoter was engineered to enhance trans-activation capacity and optimized for simple screening assays with luciferase or fluorescent reporters. The efficacy of the developed, fully synthetic reporters was demonstrated by the identification of novel targets for two clinically used tyrosine kinase inhibitors, nilotinib and osimertinib. A universal reporter system for in-cell protein kinase profiling will facilitate repurposing of existing anti-cancer drugs and identification of novel inhibitors in high-throughput screening studies. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.21536.001


Stem Cells | 2017

TEC controls pluripotency and early cell fate decisions of human pluripotent stem cells via regulation of FGF2 secretion

Tereza Vanova; Zaneta Konecna; Zuzana Zbonakova; Giuseppe La Venuta; Karolina Zoufalova; Šárka Jelínková; Miroslav Varecha; Vladimír Rotrekl; Pavel Krejčí; Walter Nickel; Petr Dvorak; Michaela Kunova Bosakova

Human pluripotent stem cells (hPSC) require signaling provided by fibroblast growth factor (FGF) receptors. This can be initiated by the recombinant FGF2 ligand supplied exogenously, but hPSC further support their niche by secretion of endogenous FGF2. In this study, we describe a role of tyrosine kinase expressed in hepatocellular carcinoma (TEC) kinase in this process. We show that TEC‐mediated FGF2 secretion is essential for hPSC self‐renewal, and its lack mediates specific differentiation. Following both short hairpin RNA‐ and small interfering RNA‐mediated TEC knockdown, hPSC secretes less FGF2. This impairs hPSC proliferation that can be rescued by increasing amounts of recombinant FGF2. TEC downregulation further leads to a lower expression of the pluripotency markers, an improved priming towards neuroectodermal lineage, and a failure to develop cardiac mesoderm. Our data thus demonstrate that TEC is yet another regulator of FGF2‐mediated hPSC pluripotency and differentiation. Stem Cells 2017;35:2050–2059


Stem Cells | 2017

Tyrosine Kinase Expressed in Hepatocellular Carcinoma, TEC, Controls Pluripotency and Early Cell Fate Decisions of Human Pluripotent Stem Cells via Regulation of Fibroblast Growth Factor-2 Secretion

Tereza Vanova; Zaneta Konecna; Zuzana Zbonakova; Giuseppe La Venuta; Karolina Zoufalova; Šárka Jelínková; Miroslav Varecha; Vladimír Rotrekl; Pavel Krejčí; Walter Nickel; Petr Dvorak; Michaela Kunova Bosakova

Human pluripotent stem cells (hPSC) require signaling provided by fibroblast growth factor (FGF) receptors. This can be initiated by the recombinant FGF2 ligand supplied exogenously, but hPSC further support their niche by secretion of endogenous FGF2. In this study, we describe a role of tyrosine kinase expressed in hepatocellular carcinoma (TEC) kinase in this process. We show that TEC‐mediated FGF2 secretion is essential for hPSC self‐renewal, and its lack mediates specific differentiation. Following both short hairpin RNA‐ and small interfering RNA‐mediated TEC knockdown, hPSC secretes less FGF2. This impairs hPSC proliferation that can be rescued by increasing amounts of recombinant FGF2. TEC downregulation further leads to a lower expression of the pluripotency markers, an improved priming towards neuroectodermal lineage, and a failure to develop cardiac mesoderm. Our data thus demonstrate that TEC is yet another regulator of FGF2‐mediated hPSC pluripotency and differentiation. Stem Cells 2017;35:2050–2059


Cellular Signalling | 2018

Proteomic analyses of signalling complexes associated with receptor tyrosine kinase identify novel members of fibroblast growth factor receptor 3 interactome

Lukas Balek; Pavel Nemec; Peter Konik; Michaela Kunova Bosakova; Miroslav Varecha; Iva Gudernova; Jirina Medalova; Deborah Krakow; Pavel Krejčí

Receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs) form multiprotein complexes that initiate and propagate intracellular signals and determine the RTK-specific signalling patterns. Unravelling the full complexity of protein interactions within the RTK-associated complexes is essential for understanding of RTK functions, yet it remains an understudied area of cell biology. We describe a comprehensive approach to characterize RTK interactome. A single tag immunoprecipitation and phosphotyrosine protein isolation followed by mass-spectrometry was used to identify proteins interacting with fibroblast growth factor receptor 3 (FGFR3). A total of 32 experiments were carried out in two different cell types and identified 66 proteins out of which only 20 (30.3%) proteins were already known FGFR interactors. Using co-immunoprecipitations, we validated FGFR3 interaction with adapter protein STAM1, transcriptional regulator SHOX2, translation elongation factor eEF1A1, serine/threonine kinases ICK, MAK and CCRK, and inositol phosphatase SHIP2. We show that unappreciated signalling mediators exist for well-studied RTKs, such as FGFR3, and may be identified via proteomic approaches described here. These approaches are easily adaptable to other RTKs, enabling identification of novel signalling mediators for majority of the known human RTKs.


Science Signaling | 2018

The inositol phosphatase SHIP2 enables sustained ERK activation downstream of FGF receptors by recruiting Src kinases

Bohumil Fafilek; Lukas Balek; Michaela Kunova Bosakova; Miroslav Varecha; Alexandru Nita; Tomáš Gregor; Iva Gudernova; Jitka Krenova; Somadri Ghosh; Martin Piskacek; Lucie Jonatova; Nicole H. Cernohorsky; Jennifer Zieba; Michal Kostas; Ellen Margrethe Haugsten; Jørgen Wesche; Christophe Erneux; Lukáš Trantírek; Deborah Krakow; Pavel Krejčí

The scaffold function of the inositol phosphatase SHIP2 mediates sustained ERK signaling downstream of FGF receptors. Converting transient to sustained signaling Activation of fibroblast growth factor receptors (FGFRs) stimulates downstream signaling transiently because the receptors are endocytosed and degraded after activation. Nevertheless, FGFRs stimulate both sustained and transient ERK signaling. Fafilek et al. found that the inositol phosphatase SHIP2 was required for converting transient FGFR activation into sustained ERK signaling. The catalytic activity of SHIP2 was not required. Instead, SHIP2 acted as a scaffold that recruited Src family kinases to FGFR complexes, thus enhancing the phosphorylation of adaptor proteins that mediated signal relay from FGFRs to ERK. Because sustained ERK activation due to aberrant FGFR signaling is associated with oncogenesis and developmental disorders, SHIP2 may be a potential therapeutic target for these pathologies. Sustained activation of extracellular signal–regulated kinase (ERK) drives pathologies caused by mutations in fibroblast growth factor receptors (FGFRs). We previously identified the inositol phosphatase SHIP2 (also known as INPPL1) as an FGFR-interacting protein and a target of the tyrosine kinase activities of FGFR1, FGFR3, and FGFR4. We report that loss of SHIP2 converted FGF-mediated sustained ERK activation into a transient signal and rescued cell phenotypes triggered by pathologic FGFR-ERK signaling. Mutant forms of SHIP2 lacking phosphoinositide phosphatase activity still associated with FGFRs and did not prevent FGF-induced sustained ERK activation, demonstrating that the adaptor rather than the catalytic activity of SHIP2 was required. SHIP2 recruited Src family kinases to the FGFRs, which promoted FGFR-mediated phosphorylation and assembly of protein complexes that relayed signaling to ERK. SHIP2 interacted with FGFRs, was phosphorylated by active FGFRs, and promoted FGFR-ERK signaling at the level of phosphorylation of the adaptor FRS2 and recruitment of the tyrosine phosphatase PTPN11. Thus, SHIP2 is an essential component of canonical FGF-FGFR signal transduction and a potential therapeutic target in FGFR-related disorders.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2018

Regulation of ciliary function by fibroblast growth factor signaling identifies FGFR3-related disorders achondroplasia and thanatophoric dysplasia as ciliopathies

Michaela Kunova Bosakova; Miroslav Varecha; Marek Hampl; Ivan Duran; Alexandru Nita; Marcela Buchtová; Hana Dosedelova; Radek Machat; Yangli Xie; Zhenhong Ni; Jorge Martin; Lin Chen; Gert Jansen; Deborah Krakow; Pavel Krejčí

Cilia project from almost every cell integrating extracellular cues with signaling pathways. Constitutive activation of FGFR3 signaling produces the skeletal disorders achondroplasia (ACH) and thanatophoric dysplasia (TD), but many of the molecular mechanisms underlying these phenotypes remain unresolved. Here, we report in vivo evidence for significantly shortened primary cilia in ACH and TD cartilage growth plates. Using in vivo and in vitro methodologies, our data demonstrate that transient versus sustained activation of FGF signaling correlated with different cilia consequences. Transient FGF pathway activation elongated cilia, while sustained activity shortened cilia. FGF signaling extended primary cilia via ERK MAP kinase and mTORC2 signaling, but not through mTORC1. Employing a GFP-tagged IFT20 construct to measure intraflagellar (IFT) speed in cilia, we showed that FGF signaling affected IFT velocities, as well as modulating cilia-based Hedgehog signaling. Our data integrate primary cilia into canonical FGF signal transduction and uncover a FGF-cilia pathway that needs consideration when elucidating the mechanisms of physiological and pathological FGFR function, or in the development of FGFR therapeutics.


Oncotarget | 2017

Inhibitor repurposing reveals ALK, LTK, FGFR, RET and TRK kinases as the targets of AZD1480

Iva Gudernova; Lukas Balek; Miroslav Varecha; Jana Fialova Kucerova; Michaela Kunova Bosakova; Bohumil Fafilek; Veronika Palusova; Stjepan Uldrijan; Lukáš Trantírek; Pavel Krejčí

Many tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) have failed to reach human use due to insufficient activity in clinical trials. However, the failed TKIs may still benefit patients if their other kinase targets are identified by providing treatment focused on syndromes driven by these kinases. Here, we searched for novel targets of AZD1480, an inhibitor of JAK2 kinase that recently failed phase two cancer clinical trials due to a lack of activity. Twenty seven human receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs) and 153 of their disease-associated mutants were in-cell profiled for activity in the presence of AZD1480 using a newly developed RTK plasmid library. We demonstrate that AZD1480 inhibits ALK, LTK, FGFR1-3, RET and TRKA-C kinases and uncover a physical basis of this specificity. The RTK activity profiling described here facilitates inhibitor repurposing by enabling rapid and efficient identification of novel TKI targets in cells.


Bone | 2017

ARQ 087 inhibits FGFR signaling and rescues aberrant cell proliferation and differentiation in experimental models of craniosynostoses and chondrodysplasias caused by activating mutations in FGFR1, FGFR2 and FGFR3

Lukas Balek; Iva Gudernova; Iva Vesela; Marek Hampl; Veronika Oralová; Michaela Kunova Bosakova; Miroslav Varecha; Pavel Nemec; Terence Hall; Giovanni Abbadessa; Nan E. Hatch; Marcela Buchtová; Pavel Krejčí

Tyrosine kinase inhibitors are being developed for therapy of malignancies caused by oncogenic FGFR signaling but little is known about their effect in congenital chondrodysplasias or craniosynostoses that associate with activating FGFR mutations. Here, we investigated the effects of novel FGFR inhibitor, ARQ 087, in experimental models of aberrant FGFR3 signaling in cartilage. In cultured chondrocytes, ARQ 087 efficiently rescued all major effects of pathological FGFR3 activation, i.e. inhibition of chondrocyte proliferation, loss of extracellular matrix and induction of premature senescence. In ex vivo tibia organ cultures, ARQ 087 restored normal growth plate architecture and eliminated the suppressing FGFR3 effect on chondrocyte hypertrophic differentiation, suggesting that it targets the FGFR3 pathway specifically, i.e. without interference with other pro-growth pathways. Moreover, ARQ 087 inhibited activity of FGFR1 and FGFR2 mutants associated with Pfeiffer, Apert and Beare-Stevenson craniosynostoses, and rescued FGFR-driven excessive osteogenic differentiation in mouse mesenchymal micromass cultures or in ex vivo calvarial organ cultures. Our data warrant further development of ARQ 087 for clinical use in skeletal disorders caused by activating FGFR mutations.

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Iva Vesela

University of Veterinary and Pharmaceutical Sciences Brno

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Lukáš Trantírek

Central European Institute of Technology

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