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Dive into the research topics where Nagarajan Kannan is active.

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Featured researches published by Nagarajan Kannan.


Stem Cells | 2012

Aldehyde Dehydrogenase Activity Is a Biomarker of Primitive Normal Human Mammary Luminal Cells

Peter Eirew; Nagarajan Kannan; David J.H.F. Knapp; François Vaillant; Joanne T. Emerman; Geoffrey J. Lindeman; Jane E. Visvader; Connie J. Eaves

Elevated aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH) expression/activity has been identified as an important biomarker of primitive cells in various normal and malignant human tissues. Here we examined the level and type of ALDH expression and activity in different subsets of phenotypically and functionally defined normal human mammary cells. We find that the most primitive human mammary stem and progenitor cell types with bilineage differentiation potential show low ALDH activity but undergo a marked, selective, and transient upregulation of ALDH activity at the point of commitment to the luminal lineage. This mirrors a corresponding change in transcripts and protein levels of ALDH1A3, an enzyme involved in retinoic acid synthesis and the most highly expressed ALDH gene in normal human mammary tissue. In contrast, ALDH1A1 is expressed at low levels in all mammary epithelial cells. These findings raise interesting questions about the reported association of ALDH activity with breast cancer stem cells and breast cancer prognosis. STEM CELLS 2012; 30:344–348.


Cell Stem Cell | 2014

Clonal Analysis via Barcoding Reveals Diverse Growth and Differentiation of Transplanted Mouse and Human Mammary Stem Cells

Long V. Nguyen; Maisam Makarem; Annaick Carles; Michelle Moksa; Nagarajan Kannan; Pawan Pandoh; Peter Eirew; Tomo Osako; Melanie D. Kardel; Alice M.S. Cheung; William Kennedy; Kane Tse; Thomas Zeng; Yongjun Zhao; R. Keith Humphries; Samuel Aparicio; Connie J. Eaves; Martin Hirst

Cellular barcoding offers a powerful approach to characterize the growth and differentiation activity of large numbers of cotransplanted stem cells. Here, we describe a lentiviral genomic-barcoding and analysis strategy and its use to compare the clonal outputs of transplants of purified mouse and human basal mammary epithelial cells. We found that both sources of transplanted cells produced many bilineage mammary epithelial clones in primary recipients, although primary clones containing only one detectable mammary lineage were also common. Interestingly, regardless of the species of origin, many clones evident in secondary recipients were not detected in the primary hosts, and others that were changed from appearing luminal-restricted to appearing bilineage. This barcoding methodology has thus revealed conservation between mice and humans of a previously unknown diversity in the growth and differentiation activities of their basal mammary epithelial cells stimulated to grow in transplanted hosts.


PLOS Biology | 2013

Developmental changes in the in vitro activated regenerative activity of primitive mammary epithelial cells.

Maisam Makarem; Nagarajan Kannan; Long V. Nguyen; David J.H.F. Knapp; Sneha Balani; Michael D. Prater; John Stingl; Afshin Raouf; Oksana Nemirovsky; Peter Eirew; Connie J. Eaves

Mouse fetal mammary cells display greater regenerative activity than do adult mammary cells when stimulated to proliferate in a new system that supports the production of transplantable mammary stem cells ex vivo.


Stem cell reports | 2013

The Luminal Progenitor Compartment of the Normal Human Mammary Gland Constitutes a Unique Site of Telomere Dysfunction

Nagarajan Kannan; Nazmul Huda; LiRen Tu; Radina Droumeva; Geraldine Aubert; Elizabeth Chavez; Ryan R. Brinkman; Peter M. Lansdorp; Joanne T. Emerman; Satoshi Abe; Connie J. Eaves; David Gilley

Telomeres are essential for genomic integrity, but little is known about their regulation in the normal human mammary gland. We now demonstrate that a phenotypically defined cell population enriched in luminal progenitors (LPs) is characterized by unusually short telomeres independently of donor age. Furthermore, we find that multiple DNA damage response proteins colocalize with telomeres in >95% of LPs but in <5% of basal cells. Paradoxically, 25% of LPs are still capable of exhibiting robust clonogenic activity in vitro. This may be partially explained by the elevated telomerase activity that was also seen only in LPs. Interestingly, this potential telomere salvage mechanism declines with age. Our findings thus reveal marked differences in the telomere biology of different subsets of primitive normal human mammary cells. The chronically dysfunctional telomeres unique to LPs have potentially important implications for normal mammary tissue homeostasis as well as the development of certain breast cancers.


Nature Communications | 2014

DNA barcoding reveals diverse growth kinetics of human breast tumour subclones in serially passaged xenografts

Long V. Nguyen; Claire L. Cox; Peter Eirew; David J.H.F. Knapp; Davide Pellacani; Nagarajan Kannan; Annaick Carles; Michelle Moksa; Sneha Balani; Sohrab P. Shah; Martin Hirst; Samuel Aparicio; Connie J. Eaves

Genomic and phenotypic analyses indicate extensive intra- as well as intertumoral heterogeneity in primary human malignant cell populations despite their clonal origin. Cellular DNA barcoding offers a powerful and unbiased alternative to track the number and size of multiple subclones within a single human tumour xenograft and their response to continued in vivo passaging. Using this approach we find clone-initiating cell frequencies that vary from ~1/10 to ~1/10,000 cells transplanted for two human breast cancer cell lines and breast cancer xenografts derived from three different patients. For the cell lines, these frequencies are negatively affected in transplants of more than 20,000 cells. Serial transplants reveal five clonal growth patterns (unchanging, expanding, diminishing, fluctuating or of delayed onset), whose predominance is highly variable both between and within original samples. This study thus demonstrates the high growth potential and diverse growth properties of xenografted human breast cancer cells.


Stem cell reports | 2015

RANK Signaling Amplifies WNT-Responsive Mammary Progenitors through R-SPONDIN1

Purna A. Joshi; Paul Waterhouse; Nagarajan Kannan; Swami R. Narala; Hui Fang; Marco A. Di Grappa; Hartland W. Jackson; Josef M. Penninger; Connie J. Eaves; Rama Khokha

Summary Systemic and local signals must be integrated by mammary stem and progenitor cells to regulate their cyclic growth and turnover in the adult gland. Here, we show RANK-positive luminal progenitors exhibiting WNT pathway activation are selectively expanded in the human breast during the progesterone-high menstrual phase. To investigate underlying mechanisms, we examined mouse models and found that loss of RANK prevents the proliferation of hormone receptor-negative luminal mammary progenitors and basal cells, an accompanying loss of WNT activation, and, hence, a suppression of lobuloalveologenesis. We also show that R-spondin1 is depleted in RANK-null progenitors, and that its exogenous administration rescues key aspects of RANK deficiency by reinstating a WNT response and mammary cell expansion. Our findings point to a novel role of RANK in dictating WNT responsiveness to mediate hormone-induced changes in the growth dynamics of adult mammary cells.


Journal of Mammary Gland Biology and Neoplasia | 2013

Stem Cells and the Developing Mammary Gland

Maisam Makarem; Benjamin T. Spike; Christopher Dravis; Nagarajan Kannan; Geoffrey M. Wahl; Connie J. Eaves

The mammary gland undergoes dynamic changes throughout life. In the mouse, these begin with initial morphogenesis of the gland in the mid-gestation embryo followed by hormonally regulated changes during puberty and later in adulthood. The adult mammary gland contains a hierarchy of cell types with varying potentials for self-maintenance and differentiation. These include cells able to produce complete, functional mammary glands in vivo and that contain daughter cells with the same remarkable regenerative potential, as well as cells with more limited clonogenic activity in vitro. Here we review how applying in vitro and in vivo methods for quantifying these cells in adult mammary tissue to fetal mammary cells has enabled the first cells fulfilling the functional criteria of transplantable, isolated mammary stem cells to be identified a few days before birth. Thereafter, the number of these cells increases rapidly. Populations containing these fetal stem cells display growth and gene expression programs that differ from their adult counterparts but share signatures characteristic of certain types of breast cancer. Such observations reinforce growing evidence of important differences between tissue-specific fetal and adult cells with stem cell properties and emphasize the merits of investigating their molecular basis.


Cell Reports | 2016

Analysis of Normal Human Mammary Epigenomes Reveals Cell-Specific Active Enhancer States and Associated Transcription Factor Networks

Davide Pellacani; Misha Bilenky; Nagarajan Kannan; Alireza Heravi-Moussavi; David J.H.F. Knapp; Sitanshu Gakkhar; Michelle Moksa; Annaick Carles; Richard A. Moore; Andrew J. Mungall; Marco A. Marra; Steven J.M. Jones; Samuel Aparicio; Martin Hirst; Connie J. Eaves

The normal adult human mammary gland is a continuous bilayered epithelial system. Bipotent and myoepithelial progenitors are prominent and unique components of the outer (basal) layer. The inner (luminal) layer includes both luminal-restricted progenitors and a phenotypically separable fraction that lacks progenitor activity. We now report an epigenomic comparison of these three subsets with one another, with their associated stromal cells, and with three immortalized, non-tumorigenic human mammary cell lines. Each genome-wide analysis contains profiles for six histone marks, methylated DNA, and RNA transcripts. Analysis of these datasets shows that each cell type has unique features, primarily within genomic regulatory regions, and that the cell lines group together. Analyses of the promoter and enhancer profiles place the luminal progenitors in between the basal cells and the non-progenitor luminal subset. Integrative analysis reveals networks of subset-specific transcription factors.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Glutathione-dependent and -independent oxidative stress-control mechanisms distinguish normal human mammary epithelial cell subsets

Nagarajan Kannan; Long V. Nguyen; Maisam Makarem; Yifei Dong; Kingsley Shih; Peter Eirew; Afshin Raouf; Joanne T. Emerman; Connie J. Eaves

Significance Our study reveals lineage-specific mechanisms of ROS control and associated sensitivity to oxidative DNA damage in the basal and luminal progenitor-enriched subsets of normal human mammary cells. We show that the primitive luminal cells contain more mitochondria, show greater uptake of O2, sustain and withstand higher levels of ROS, and have mechanisms that allow them to accrue mutagenic levels of oxidative DNA damage. These findings support a growing body of data suggesting the involvement of primitive luminal cells in the generation of human breast cancers. Mechanisms that control the levels and activities of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in normal human mammary cells are poorly understood. We show that purified normal human basal mammary epithelial cells maintain low levels of ROS primarily by a glutathione-dependent but inefficient antioxidant mechanism that uses mitochondrial glutathione peroxidase 2. In contrast, the matching purified luminal progenitor cells contain higher levels of ROS, multiple glutathione-independent antioxidants and oxidative nucleotide damage-controlling proteins and consume O2 at a higher rate. The luminal progenitor cells are more resistant to glutathione depletion than the basal cells, including those with in vivo and in vitro proliferation and differentiation activity. The luminal progenitors also are more resistant to H2O2 or ionizing radiation. Importantly, even freshly isolated “steady-state” normal luminal progenitors show elevated levels of unrepaired oxidative DNA damage. Distinct ROS control mechanisms operating in different subsets of normal human mammary cells could have differentiation state-specific functions and long-term consequences.


Nature Cell Biology | 2014

Integrin β3 links therapy resistance and cancer stem cell properties.

Nagarajan Kannan; Long V. Nguyen; Connie J. Eaves

Heterogeneity in tumour cell properties underlies many treatment failures. Understanding the sources of such heterogeneity has proved to be challenging, but remains critical to improving patient outcomes. Integrin αvβ3 expression in multiple types of solid tumour stem cells is now shown to control a pro-survival pathway that contributes to therapy resistance.

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Connie J. Eaves

University of British Columbia

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David J.H.F. Knapp

University of British Columbia

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Martin Hirst

University of British Columbia

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Samuel Aparicio

University of British Columbia

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Annaick Carles

University of British Columbia

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