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Dive into the research topics where Morgan Truitt is active.

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Featured researches published by Morgan Truitt.


Nature Medicine | 2011

Subtypes of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma and their differing responses to therapy

Eric A. Collisson; Anguraj Sadanandam; Peter Olson; William J. Gibb; Morgan Truitt; Shenda Gu; Janine Cooc; Jennifer Weinkle; Grace E. Kim; Lakshmi Jakkula; Heidi S. Feiler; Andrew H. Ko; Adam B. Olshen; Kathleen L Danenberg; Margaret A. Tempero; Paul T. Spellman; Douglas Hanahan; Joe W. Gray

Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDA) is a lethal disease. Overall survival is typically 6 months from diagnosis. Numerous phase 3 trials of agents effective in other malignancies have failed to benefit unselected PDA populations, although patients do occasionally respond. Studies in other solid tumors have shown that heterogeneity in response is determined, in part, by molecular differences between tumors. Furthermore, treatment outcomes are improved by targeting drugs to tumor subtypes in which they are selectively effective, with breast and lung cancers providing recent examples. Identification of PDA molecular subtypes has been frustrated by a paucity of tumor specimens available for study. We have overcome this problem by combined analysis of transcriptional profiles of primary PDA samples from several studies, along with human and mouse PDA cell lines. We define three PDA subtypes: classical, quasimesenchymal and exocrine-like, and we present evidence for clinical outcome and therapeutic response differences between them. We further define gene signatures for these subtypes that may have utility in stratifying patients for treatment and present preclinical model systems that may be used to identify new subtype specific therapies.


Genes & Development | 2009

GLI1 is regulated through Smoothened-independent mechanisms in neoplastic pancreatic ducts and mediates PDAC cell survival and transformation

Olivier Nolan-Stevaux; Janet Lau; Morgan Truitt; Gerald C. Chu; Matthias Hebrok; Martin E. Fernández-Zapico; Douglas Hanahan

Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is characterized by the deregulation of the hedgehog signaling pathway. The Sonic Hedgehog ligand (Shh), absent in the normal pancreas, is highly expressed in pancreatic tumors and is sufficient to induce neoplastic precursor lesions in mouse models. We investigated the mechanism of Shh signaling in PDAC carcinogenesis by genetically ablating the canonical bottleneck of hedgehog signaling, the transmembrane protein Smoothened (Smo), in the pancreatic epithelium of PDAC-susceptible mice. We report that multistage development of PDAC tumors is not affected by the deletion of Smo in the pancreas, demonstrating that autocrine Shh-Ptch-Smo signaling is not required in pancreatic ductal cells for PDAC progression. However, the expression of Gli target genes is maintained in Smo-negative ducts, implicating alternative means of regulating Gli transcription in the neoplastic ductal epithelium. In PDAC tumor cells, we find that Gli transcription is decoupled from upstream Shh-Ptch-Smo signaling and is regulated by TGF-beta and KRAS, and we show that Gli1 is required both for survival and for the KRAS-mediated transformed phenotype of cultured PDAC cancer cells.


Science | 2012

IRE1α Cleaves Select microRNAs During ER Stress to Derepress Translation of Proapoptotic Caspase-2

John-Paul Upton; Likun Wang; Dan Han; Eric S. Wang; Noelle E. Huskey; Lionel Lim; Morgan Truitt; Michael T. McManus; Davide Ruggero; Andrei Goga; Feroz R. Papa; Scott A. Oakes

To Die For The unfolded protein response (UPR) adjusts the protein folding capacity of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) to match demand. UPR signaling requires IRE1α, an ER transmembrane kinase-endoribonuclease (RNase) that becomes activated by unfolded protein accumulation within the ER and excises a segment in XBP1 messenger RNA (mRNA) to initiate production of the homeostatic transcription factor XBP1s. However, if ER stress is irremediable, sustained IRE1α RNase activity triggers cell death. Severe ER stress activates the protease Caspase-2 as an early apoptotic switch upstream of mitochondria. However, the molecular events leading from the detection of ER stress to Caspase-2 activation are unclear. Upton et al. (p. 818, published online 4 October) now report that IRE1α is the ER stress sensor that activates Caspase-2, and does so through a mechanism involving non-coding RNAs. Under irremediable ER stress, IRE1αs RNase triggers the rapid decay of select microRNAs that normally repress translation of Caspase-2 mRNA, rapidly increasing Caspase-2 levels as the first step in its activation. Protein misfolding stimulates the destruction of microRNAs and the synthesis of an enzyme that promotes cell death. The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is the primary organelle for folding and maturation of secretory and transmembrane proteins. Inability to meet protein-folding demand leads to “ER stress,” and activates IRE1α, an ER transmembrane kinase-endoribonuclease (RNase). IRE1α promotes adaptation through splicing Xbp1 mRNA or apoptosis through incompletely understood mechanisms. Here, we found that sustained IRE1α RNase activation caused rapid decay of select microRNAs (miRs -17, -34a, -96, and -125b) that normally repress translation of Caspase-2 mRNA, and thus sharply elevates protein levels of this initiator protease of the mitochondrial apoptotic pathway. In cell-free systems, recombinant IRE1α endonucleolytically cleaved microRNA precursors at sites distinct from DICER. Thus, IRE1α regulates translation of a proapoptotic protein through terminating microRNA biogenesis, and noncoding RNAs are part of the ER stress response.


Nature | 2012

Autism-related deficits via dysregulated eIF4E-dependent translational control

Christos G. Gkogkas; Arkady Khoutorsky; Israeli Ran; Emmanouil Rampakakis; Tatiana Nevarko; Daniel B. Weatherill; Cristina Vasuta; Stephanie Yee; Morgan Truitt; Paul Dallaire; François Major; Paul Lasko; Davide Ruggero; Karim Nader; Jean-Claude Lacaille; Nahum Sonenberg

Hyperconnectivity of neuronal circuits due to increased synaptic protein synthesis is thought to cause autism spectrum disorders (ASDs). The mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) is strongly implicated in ASDs by means of upstream signalling; however, downstream regulatory mechanisms are ill-defined. Here we show that knockout of the eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4E-binding protein 2 (4E-BP2)—an eIF4E repressor downstream of mTOR—or eIF4E overexpression leads to increased translation of neuroligins, which are postsynaptic proteins that are causally linked to ASDs. Mice that have the gene encoding 4E-BP2 (Eif4ebp2) knocked out exhibit an increased ratio of excitatory to inhibitory synaptic inputs and autistic-like behaviours (that is, social interaction deficits, altered communication and repetitive/stereotyped behaviours). Pharmacological inhibition of eIF4E activity or normalization of neuroligin 1, but not neuroligin 2, protein levels restores the normal excitation/inhibition ratio and rectifies the social behaviour deficits. Thus, translational control by eIF4E regulates the synthesis of neuroligins, maintaining the excitation-to-inhibition balance, and its dysregulation engenders ASD-like phenotypes.


Disease Models & Mechanisms | 2008

Visualizing stromal cell dynamics in different tumor microenvironments by spinning disk confocal microscopy

Mikala Egeblad; Andrew J. Ewald; H. A. Askautrud; Morgan Truitt; Bryan E. Welm; Emma Bainbridge; George Peeters; Matthew F. Krummel; Zena Werb

SUMMARY The tumor microenvironment consists of stromal cells and extracellular factors that evolve in parallel with carcinoma cells. To gain insights into the activities of stromal cell populations, we developed and applied multicolor imaging techniques to analyze the behavior of these cells within different tumor microenvironments in the same live mouse. We found that regulatory T-lymphocytes (Tregs) migrated in proximity to blood vessels. Dendritic-like cells, myeloid cells and carcinoma-associated fibroblasts all exhibited higher motility in the microenvironment at the tumor periphery than within the tumor mass. Since oxygen levels differ between tumor microenvironments, we tested if acute hypoxia could account for the differences in cell migration. Direct visualization revealed that Tregs ceased migration under acute systemic hypoxia, whereas myeloid cells continued migrating. In the same mouse and microenvironment, we experimentally subdivided the myeloid cell population and revealed that uptake of fluorescent dextran defined a low-motility subpopulation expressing markers of tumor-promoting, alternatively activated macrophages. In contrast, fluorescent anti-Gr1 antibodies marked myeloid cells patrolling inside tumor vessels and in the stroma. Our techniques allow real-time combinatorial analysis of cell populations based on spatial location, gene expression, behavior and cell surface molecules within intact tumors. The techniques are not limited to investigations in cancer, but could give new insights into cell behavior more broadly in development and disease.


Cancer Discovery | 2016

Bruton Tyrosine Kinase–Dependent Immune Cell Cross-talk Drives Pancreas Cancer

Andrew J. Gunderson; Megan M. Kaneda; Takahiro Tsujikawa; Abraham V. Nguyen; Nesrine I. Affara; Brian Ruffell; Sara Gorjestani; Shannon M. Liudahl; Morgan Truitt; Peter Olson; Grace E. Kim; Douglas Hanahan; Margaret A. Tempero; Brett C. Sheppard; Bryan Irving; Betty Y. Chang; Judith A. Varner; Lisa M. Coussens

UNLABELLED Pancreas ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) has one of the worst 5-year survival rates of all solid tumors, and thus new treatment strategies are urgently needed. Here, we report that targeting Bruton tyrosine kinase (BTK), a key B-cell and macrophage kinase, restores T cell-dependent antitumor immune responses, thereby inhibiting PDAC growth and improving responsiveness to standard-of-care chemotherapy. We report that PDAC tumor growth depends on cross-talk between B cells and FcRγ(+) tumor-associated macrophages, resulting in T(H)2-type macrophage programming via BTK activation in a PI3Kγ-dependent manner. Treatment of PDAC-bearing mice with the BTK inhibitor PCI32765 (ibrutinib) or by PI3Kγ inhibition reprogrammed macrophages toward a T(H)1 phenotype that fostered CD8(+) T-cell cytotoxicity, and suppressed PDAC growth, indicating that BTK signaling mediates PDAC immunosuppression. These data indicate that pharmacologic inhibition of BTK in PDAC can reactivate adaptive immune responses, presenting a new therapeutic modality for this devastating tumor type. SIGNIFICANCE We report that BTK regulates B-cell and macrophage-mediated T-cell suppression in pancreas adenocarcinomas. Inhibition of BTK with the FDA-approved inhibitor ibrutinib restores T cell-dependent antitumor immune responses to inhibit PDAC growth and improves responsiveness to chemotherapy, presenting a new therapeutic modality for pancreas cancer.


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

Myc and mTOR converge on a common node in protein synthesis control that confers synthetic lethality in Myc-driven cancers

Michael Pourdehnad; Morgan Truitt; Imran N. Siddiqi; Gregory S. Ducker; Kevan M. Shokat; Davide Ruggero

Myc is one of the most commonly deregulated oncogenes in human cancer, yet therapies directly targeting Myc hyperactivation are not presently available in the clinic. The evolutionarily conserved function of Myc in modulating protein synthesis control is critical to the Myc oncogenic program. Indeed, enhancing the protein synthesis capacity of cancer cells directly contributes to their survival, proliferation, and genome instability. Therefore, inhibiting enhanced protein synthesis may represent a highly relevant strategy for the treatment of Myc-dependent human cancers. However, components of the translation machinery that can be exploited as therapeutic targets for Myc-driven cancers remain poorly defined. Here, we uncover a surprising and important functional link between Myc and mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR)-dependent phosphorylation of eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4E binding protein-1 (4EBP1), a master regulator of protein synthesis control. Using a pharmacogenetic approach, we find that mTOR-dependent phosphorylation of 4EBP1 is required for cancer cell survival in Myc-dependent tumor initiation and maintenance. We further show that a clinical mTOR active site inhibitor, which is capable of blocking mTOR-dependent 4EBP1 phosphorylation, has remarkable therapeutic efficacy in Myc-driven hematological cancers. Additionally, we demonstrate the clinical implications of these results by delineating a significant link between Myc and mTOR-dependent phosphorylation of 4EBP1 and therapeutic response in human lymphomas. Together, these findings reveal that an important mTOR substrate is found hyperactivated downstream of Myc oncogenic activity to promote tumor survival and confers synthetic lethality, thereby revealing a unique therapeutic approach to render Myc druggable in the clinic.


Nature Reviews Cancer | 2016

New frontiers in translational control of the cancer genome

Morgan Truitt; Davide Ruggero

The past several years have seen dramatic leaps in our understanding of how gene expression is rewired at the translation level during tumorigenesis to support the transformed phenotype. This work has been driven by an explosion in technological advances and is revealing previously unimagined regulatory mechanisms that dictate functional expression of the cancer genome. In this Review we discuss emerging trends and exciting new discoveries that reveal how this translational circuitry contributes to specific aspects of tumorigenesis and cancer cell function, with a particular focus on recent insights into the role of translational control in the adaptive response to oncogenic stress conditions.


British Journal of Cancer | 2011

Oncogenic AKTivation of translation as a therapeutic target

Andrew C. Hsieh; Morgan Truitt; Davide Ruggero

The AKT signalling pathway is a major regulator of protein synthesis that impinges on multiple cellular processes frequently altered in cancer, such as proliferation, cell growth, survival, and angiogenesis. AKT controls protein synthesis by regulating the multistep process of mRNA translation at every stage from ribosome biogenesis to translation initiation and elongation. Recent studies have highlighted the ability of oncogenic AKT to drive cellular transformation by altering gene expression at the translational level. Oncogenic AKT signalling leads to both global changes in protein synthesis as well as specific changes in the translation of select mRNAs. New and developing technologies are significantly advancing our ability to identify and functionally group these translationally controlled mRNAs into gene networks based on their modes of regulation. How oncogenic AKT activates ribosome biogenesis, translation initiation, and translational elongation to regulate these translational networks is an ongoing area of research. Currently, the majority of therapeutics targeting translational control are focused on blocking translation initiation through inhibition of eIF4E hyperactivity. However, it will be important to determine whether combined inhibition of ribosome biogenesis, translation initiation, and translation elongation can demonstrate improved therapeutic efficacy in tumours driven by oncogenic AKT.


Science Signaling | 2016

The 4E-BP–eIF4E axis promotes rapamycin-sensitive growth and proliferation in lymphocytes

Lomon So; Jongdae Lee; Miguel Palafox; Sharmila Mallya; Chaz G. Woxland; Meztli Arguello; Morgan Truitt; Nahum Sonenberg; Davide Ruggero; David A. Fruman

Lymphocyte reliance on 4E-BP2 and eIF4E for growth and proliferation underlies their exquisite sensitivity to the drug rapamycin. 4E-BP, the key to lymphocyte sensitivity In most cells, the mammalian (mechanistic) target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1) regulates cell growth through the ribosomal S6 kinases (S6Ks) and cell proliferation through translation-regulating proteins of the eIF4E-binding protein (4E-BP) family, respectively. Although mTORC1 is present in all cells, the mTORC1 inhibitor rapamycin is an effective immunosuppressant that blocks lymphocyte proliferation (see the Focus by Abraham). But, why are lymphocytes so exquisitely sensitive? So et al. found that lymphocytes did not depend on S6K signaling to promote growth or proliferation in response to antigen receptor stimulation. Instead, these cells relied on 4E-BP proteins for both processes. Unlike in nonlymphoid cells, the 4E-BP2 isoform was more abundant than the 4E-BP1 isoform in lymphocytes, and its phosphorylation by mTORC1 was more sensitive to rapamycin. These data suggest that the exquisite sensitivity of lymphocytes to rapamycin may be due to their complete reliance on 4E-BP2 for both growth and proliferation. Rapamycin has been used as a clinical immunosuppressant for many years; however, the molecular basis for its selective effects on lymphocytes remains unclear. We investigated the role of two canonical effectors of the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR): ribosomal S6 kinases (S6Ks) and eukaryotic initiation factor 4E (eIF4E)–binding proteins (4E-BPs). S6Ks are thought to regulate cell growth (increase in cell size), and 4E-BPs are thought to control proliferation (increase in cell number), with mTORC1 signaling serving to integrate these processes. However, we found that the 4E-BP–eIF4E signaling axis controlled both the growth and proliferation of lymphocytes, processes for which the S6Ks were dispensable. Furthermore, rapamycin disrupted eIF4E function selectively in lymphocytes, which was due to the increased abundance of 4E-BP2 relative to that of 4E-BP1 in these cells and the greater sensitivity of 4E-BP2 to rapamycin. Together, our findings suggest that the 4E-BP–eIF4E axis is uniquely rapamycin-sensitive in lymphocytes and that this axis promotes clonal expansion of these cells by coordinating growth and proliferation.

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Davide Ruggero

University of California

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Mikala Egeblad

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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Zena Werb

University of California

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Douglas Hanahan

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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