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Dive into the research topics where Niamh H Foley is active.

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Featured researches published by Niamh H Foley.


PLOS ONE | 2009

Widespread Dysregulation of MiRNAs by MYCN Amplification and Chromosomal Imbalances in Neuroblastoma: Association of miRNA Expression with Survival

Isabella Bray; Kenneth Bryan; Suzanne Prenter; Patrick G. Buckley; Niamh H Foley; Derek Murphy; Leah Alcock; Pieter Mestdagh; Jo Vandesompele; Frank Speleman; Wendy B. London; Patrick McGrady; Anne O'Meara; Maureen J. O'Sullivan; Raymond L. Stallings

MiRNAs regulate gene expression at a post-transcriptional level and their dysregulation can play major roles in the pathogenesis of many different forms of cancer, including neuroblastoma, an often fatal paediatric cancer originating from precursor cells of the sympathetic nervous system. We have analyzed a set of neuroblastoma (n = 145) that is broadly representative of the genetic subtypes of this disease for miRNA expression (430 loci by stem-loop RT qPCR) and for DNA copy number alterations (array CGH) to assess miRNA involvement in disease pathogenesis. The tumors were stratified and then randomly split into a training set (n = 96) and a validation set (n = 49) for data analysis. Thirty-seven miRNAs were significantly over- or under-expressed in MYCN amplified tumors relative to MYCN single copy tumors, indicating a potential role for the MYCN transcription factor in either the direct or indirect dysregulation of these loci. In addition, we also determined that there was a highly significant correlation between miRNA expression levels and DNA copy number, indicating a role for large-scale genomic imbalances in the dysregulation of miRNA expression. In order to directly assess whether miRNA expression was predictive of clinical outcome, we used the Random Forest classifier to identify miRNAs that were most significantly associated with poor overall patient survival and developed a 15 miRNA signature that was predictive of overall survival with 72.7% sensitivity and 86.5% specificity in the validation set of tumors. We conclude that there is widespread dysregulation of miRNA expression in neuroblastoma tumors caused by both over-expression of the MYCN transcription factor and by large-scale chromosomal imbalances. MiRNA expression patterns are also predicative of clinical outcome, highlighting the potential for miRNA mediated diagnostics and therapeutics.


Cancer Research | 2010

MicroRNA Mediates DNA De-methylation Events Triggered By Retinoic Acid During Neuroblastoma Cell Differentiation

Sudipto Das; Niamh H Foley; Kenneth Bryan; Karen M. Watters; Isabella Bray; Derek Murphy; Patrick G. Buckley; Raymond L. Stallings

Neuroblastoma is an often fatal pediatric cancer arising from precursor cells of the sympathetic nervous system. 13-Cis retinoic acid is included in the treatment regimen for patients with high-risk disease, and a similar derivative, all-trans-retinoic acid (ATRA), causes neuroblastoma cell lines to undergo differentiation. The molecular signaling pathways involved with ATRA-induced differentiation are complex, and the role that DNA methylation changes might play are unknown. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the genome-wide effects of ATRA on DNA methylation using methylated DNA immunoprecipitation applied to microarrays representing all known promoter and CpG islands. Four hundred and two gene promoters became demethylated, whereas 88 were hypermethylated post-ATRA. mRNA expression microarrays revealed that 82 of the demethylated genes were overexpressed by >2-fold, whereas 13 of the hypermethylated genes were underexpressed. Gene ontology analysis indicated that demethylated and re-expressed genes were enriched for signal transduction pathways, including NOS1, which is required for neural cell differentiation. As a potential mechanism for the DNA methylation changes, we show the downregulation of methyltransferases, DNMT1 and DNMT3B, along with the upregulation of endogenous microRNAs targeting them. Ectopic overexpression of miR-152, targeting DNMT1, also negatively affected cell invasiveness and anchorage-independent growth, contributing in part to the differentiated phenotype. We conclude that functionally important, miRNA-mediated DNA demethylation changes contribute to the process of ATRA-induced differentiation resulting in the activation of NOS1, a critical determinant of neural cell differentiation. Our findings illustrate the plasticity and dynamic nature of the epigenome during cancer cell differentiation.


Cancer Letters | 2011

MicroRNA-542-5p as a novel tumor suppressor in neuroblastoma.

Isabella Bray; Amanda Tivnan; Kenneth Bryan; Niamh H Foley; Karen M. Watters; Lorraine Tracey; Andrew M. Davidoff; Raymond L. Stallings

Several studies have implicated the dysregulation of microRNAs in neuroblastoma pathogenesis, an often fatal paediatric cancer arising from precursor cells of the sympathetic nervous system. Our group and others have demonstrated that lower expression of miR-542-5p is highly associated with poor patient survival, indicating a potential tumor suppressive function. Here, we demonstrate that ectopic over-expression of this miRNA decreases the invasive potential of neuroblastoma cell lines in vitro, along with primary tumor growth and metastases in an orthotopic mouse xenograft model, providing the first functional evidence for the involvement of miR-542-5p as a tumor suppressor in any type of cancer.


Oncogene | 2013

Modulation of neuroblastoma disease pathogenesis by an extensive network of epigenetically regulated microRNAs

Sudipto Das; Kenneth Bryan; Patrick G. Buckley; Olga Piskareva; Isabella Bray; Niamh H Foley; Jacqueline Ryan; J Lynch; L Creevey; J Fay; Suzanne Prenter; Jan Koster; P van Sluis; Rogier Versteeg; Angelika Eggert; Johannes H. Schulte; Alexander Schramm; Pieter Mestdagh; Jo Vandesompele; Franki Speleman; Raymond L. Stallings

MicroRNAs (miRNAs) contribute to the pathogenesis of many forms of cancer, including the pediatric cancer neuroblastoma, but the underlying mechanisms leading to altered miRNA expression are often unknown. Here, a novel integrated approach for analyzing DNA methylation coupled with miRNA and mRNA expression data sets identified 67 epigenetically regulated miRNA in neuroblastoma. A large proportion (42%) of these miRNAs was associated with poor patient survival when underexpressed in tumors. Moreover, we demonstrate that this panel of epigenetically silenced miRNAs targets a large set of genes that are overexpressed in tumors from patients with poor survival in a highly redundant manner. The genes targeted by the epigenetically regulated miRNAs are enriched for a number of biological processes, including regulation of cell differentiation. Functional studies involving ectopic overexpression of several of the epigenetically silenced miRNAs had a negative impact on neuroblastoma cell viability, providing further support to the concept that inactivation of these miRNAs is important for neuroblastoma disease pathogenesis. One locus, miR-340, induced either differentiation or apoptosis in a cell context dependent manner, indicating a tumor suppressive function for this miRNA. Intriguingly, it was determined that miR-340 is upregulated by demethylation of an upstream genomic region that occurs during the process of neuroblastoma cell differentiation induced by all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA). Further biological studies of miR-340 revealed that it directly represses the SOX2 transcription factor by targeting of its 3′-untranslated region, explaining the mechanism by which SOX2 is downregulated by ATRA. Although SOX2 contributes to the maintenance of stem cells in an undifferentiated state, we demonstrate that miR-340-mediated downregulation of SOX2 is not required for ATRA induced differentiation to occur. In summary, our results exemplify the dynamic nature of the miRNA epigenome and identify a remarkable network of miRNA/mRNA interactions that significantly contribute to neuroblastoma disease pathogenesis.


PLOS ONE | 2009

Global MYCN Transcription Factor Binding Analysis in Neuroblastoma Reveals Association with Distinct E-Box Motifs and Regions of DNA Hypermethylation

Derek Murphy; Patrick G. Buckley; Kenneth Bryan; Sudipto Das; Leah Alcock; Niamh H Foley; Suzanne Prenter; Isabella Bray; Karen M. Watters; Raymond L. Stallings

Background Neuroblastoma, a cancer derived from precursor cells of the sympathetic nervous system, is a major cause of childhood cancer related deaths. The single most important prognostic indicator of poor clinical outcome in this disease is genomic amplification of MYCN, a member of a family of oncogenic transcription factors. Methodology We applied MYCN chromatin immunoprecipitation to microarrays (ChIP-chip) using MYCN amplified/non-amplified cell lines as well as a conditional knockdown cell line to determine the distribution of MYCN binding sites within all annotated promoter regions. Conclusion Assessment of E-box usage within consistently positive MYCN binding sites revealed a predominance for the CATGTG motif (p<0.0016), with significant enrichment of additional motifs CATTTG, CATCTG, CAACTG in the MYCN amplified state. For cell lines over-expressing MYCN, gene ontology analysis revealed enrichment for the binding of MYCN at promoter regions of numerous molecular functional groups including DNA helicases and mRNA transcriptional regulation. In order to evaluate MYCN binding with respect to other genomic features, we determined the methylation status of all annotated CpG islands and promoter sequences using methylated DNA immunoprecipitation (MeDIP). The integration of MYCN ChIP-chip and MeDIP data revealed a highly significant positive correlation between MYCN binding and DNA hypermethylation. This association was also detected in regions of hemizygous loss, indicating that the observed association occurs on the same homologue. In summary, these findings suggest that MYCN binding occurs more commonly at CATGTG as opposed to the classic CACGTG E-box motif, and that disease associated over expression of MYCN leads to aberrant binding to additional weaker affinity E-box motifs in neuroblastoma. The co-localization of MYCN binding and DNA hypermethylation further supports the dual role of MYCN, namely that of a classical transcription factor affecting the activity of individual genes, and that of a mediator of global chromatin structure.


Expert Opinion on Therapeutic Targets | 2010

Therapeutic targeting of miRNAs in neuroblastoma

Raymond L. Stallings; Niamh H Foley; Kenneth Bryan; Patrick G. Buckley; Isabella Bray

Importance of the field: Neuroblastomas arise from precursor cells of the sympathetic nervous system and are noted for highly heterogeneous clinical behavior. These tumors currently account for ∼ 15% of all childhood cancer related deaths in spite of intensive multimodal chemotherapy and are a major problem in pediatric oncology. The identification of novel therapeutic targets is urgently required to reduce patient morbidity. Areas covered in this review: The purpose of this article is to review and synthesize all of the rapidly expanding evidence for the contribution of microRNAs (miRNAs) in neuroblastoma aggressive disease pathogenesis, along with the prospect of using small RNAs as therapeutics. What the reader will gain: The reader will obtain insight on the miRNAs that are dysregulated in neuroblastoma along with potential therapeutic strategies and the most promising targets. Take home message: A number of miRNAs which are associated with aggressive disease pathogenesis in neuroblastoma patients have been demonstrated to contribute in major ways to cell proliferation rates, apoptosis, differentiation, invasiveness and tumor growth in vitro and in vivo. Directly or indirectly interfering with the function of these miRNAs may prove to be an important and novel form of therapy.


Molecular Cancer | 2012

Protein tyrosine phosphatase receptor delta acts as a neuroblastoma tumor suppressor by destabilizing the aurora kinase a oncogene

Maria Meehan; Laavanya Parthasarathi; Niamh Moran; Caroline A. Jefferies; Niamh H Foley; Elisa Lazzari; Derek Murphy; Jacqueline Ryan; Berenice Ortiz; Armida W. M. Fabius; Timothy A. Chan; Raymond L. Stallings

BackgroundProtein tyrosine phosphatase receptor delta (PTPRD) is a member of a large family of protein tyrosine phosphatases which negatively regulate tyrosine phosphorylation. Neuroblastoma is a major childhood cancer arising from precursor cells of the sympathetic nervous system which is known to acquire deletions and alterations in the expression patterns of PTPRD, indicating a potential tumor suppressor function for this gene. The molecular mechanism, however, by which PTPRD renders a tumor suppressor effect in neuroblastoma is unknown.ResultsAs a molecular mechanism, we demonstrate that PTPRD interacts with aurora kinase A (AURKA), an oncogenic protein that is over-expressed in multiple forms of cancer, including neuroblastoma. Ectopic up-regulation of PTPRD in neuroblastoma dephosphorylates tyrosine residues in AURKA resulting in a destabilization of this protein culminating in interfering with one of AURKAs primary functions in neuroblastoma, the stabilization of MYCN protein, the gene of which is amplified in approximately 25 to 30% of high risk neuroblastoma.ConclusionsPTPRD has a tumor suppressor function in neuroblastoma through AURKA dephosphorylation and destabilization and a downstream destabilization of MYCN protein, representing a novel mechanism for the function of PTPRD in neuroblastoma.


Seminars in Cancer Biology | 2011

MicroRNA and DNA methylation alterations mediating retinoic acid induced neuroblastoma cell differentiation.

Raymond L. Stallings; Niamh H Foley; Isabella Bray; Sudipto Das; Patrick G. Buckley

Many neuroblastoma cell lines can be induced to differentiate into a mature neuronal cell type with retinoic acid and other compounds, providing an important model system for elucidating signalling pathways involved in this highly complex process. Recently, it has become apparent that miRNAs, which act as regulators of gene expression at a post-transcriptional level, are differentially expressed in differentiating cells and play important roles governing many aspects of this process. This includes the down-regulation of DNA methyltransferases that cause the de-methylation and transcriptional activation of numerous protein coding gene sequences. The purpose of this article is to review involvement of miRNAs and DNA methylation alterations in the process of neuroblastoma cell differentiation. A thorough understanding of miRNA and genetic pathways regulating neuroblastoma cell differentiation potentially could lead to targeted therapies for this disease.


BMC Cancer | 2013

Expressional alterations in functional ultra-conserved non-coding rnas in response to all - trans retinoic acid - induced differentiation in neuroblastoma cells

Karen M. Watters; Kenneth Bryan; Niamh H Foley; Maria Meehan; Raymond L. Stallings

BackgroundUltra-conserved regions (UCRs) are segments of the genome (≥ 200 bp) that exhibit 100% DNA sequence conservation between human, mouse and rat. Transcribed UCRs (T-UCRs) have been shown to be differentially expressed in cancers versus normal tissue, indicating a possible role in carcinogenesis. All-trans-retinoic acid (ATRA) causes some neuroblastoma (NB) cell lines to undergo differentiation and leads to a significant decrease in the oncogenic transcription factor MYCN. Here, we examine the impact of ATRA treatment on T-UCR expression and investigate the biological significance of these changes.MethodsWe designed a custom tiling microarray to profile the expression of 481 T-UCRs in sense and anti-sense orientation (962 potential transcripts) in untreated and ATRA-treated neuroblastoma cell lines (SH-SY5Y, SK-N-BE, LAN-5). Following identification of significantly differentially expressed T-UCRs, we carried out siRNA knockdown and gene expression microarray analysis to investigate putative functional roles for selected T-UCRs.ResultsFollowing ATRA-induced differentiation, 32 T-UCRs were differentially expressed (16 up-regulated, 16 down-regulated) across all three cell lines. Further insight into the possible role of T-UC.300A, an independent transcript whose expression is down-regulated following ATRA was achieved by siRNA knockdown, resulting in the decreased viability and invasiveness of ATRA-responsive cell lines. Gene expression microarray analysis following knockdown of T-UC.300A revealed a number of genes whose expression was altered by changing T-UC.300A levels and that might play a role in the increased proliferation and invasion of NB cells prior to ATRA-treatment.ConclusionsOur results indicate that significant numbers of T-UCRs have altered expression levels in response to ATRA. While the precise roles that T-UCRs might play in cancer or in normal development are largely unknown and an important area for future study, our findings strongly indicate that the function of non-coding RNA T-UC.300A is connected with proliferation, invasion and the inhibition of differentiation of neuroblastoma cell lines prior to ATRA treatment.


Molecular Cancer | 2010

MicroRNA-184 inhibits neuroblastoma cell survival through targeting the serine/threonine kinase AKT2

Niamh H Foley; Isabella Bray; Amanda Tivnan; Kenneth Bryan; Derek Murphy; Patrick G. Buckley; Jacqueline Ryan; Anne O'Meara; Maureen J. O'Sullivan; Raymond L. Stallings

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Raymond L. Stallings

Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland

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Isabella Bray

Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland

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Kenneth Bryan

Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland

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Derek Murphy

Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland

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Karen M. Watters

Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland

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Sudipto Das

Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland

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Amanda Tivnan

Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland

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Jacqueline Ryan

Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland

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Suzanne Prenter

Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland

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