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Dive into the research topics where Nikki K. Lytle is active.

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Featured researches published by Nikki K. Lytle.


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

Ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme Ubc13 controls breast cancer metastasis through a TAK1-p38 MAP kinase cascade.

Xuefeng Wu; Weizhou Zhang; Joan Font-Burgada; Trenis Palmer; Alexander S. Hamil; Subhra K. Biswas; Michael Poidinger; Nicholas Borcherding; Qing Xie; Lesley G. Ellies; Nikki K. Lytle; Li Wha Wu; Raymond Fox; Jing Yang; Steven F. Dowdy; Tannishtha Reya; Michael Karin

Significance We demonstrate that ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme Ubc13, whose expression is elevated in primary and metastatic breast cancer (BCa), promotes metastatic spread of BCa cells by controlling their lung-colonizing ability while having little effect on primary tumor growth. Mechanistically, Ubc13 is required for TGFβ-induced non-SMAD signaling via TAK1 and p38, a pathway that is first activated in the primary tumor. An Ubc13- and p38-dependent metastatic gene signature was identified, explaining how p38 may control metastasis and providing a measure for monitoring the effectiveness of pharmacologic p38 inhibition, which inhibits the growth of established metastatic lesions. We suggest that p38 inhibition should be considered as a potential treatment for metastatic BCa. Metastatic spread is the leading cause of cancer mortality. Breast cancer (BCa) metastatic recurrence can happen years after removal of the primary tumor. Here we show that Ubc13, an E2 enzyme that catalyzes K63-linked protein polyubiquitination, is largely dispensable for primary mammary tumor growth but is required for metastatic spread and lung colonization by BCa cells. Loss of Ubc13 inhibited BCa growth and survival only at metastatic sites. Ubc13 was dispensable for transforming growth factor β (TGFβ)-induced SMAD activation but was required for activation of non-SMAD signaling via TGFβ-activating kinase 1 (TAK1) and p38, whose activity controls expression of numerous metastasis promoting genes. p38 activation restored metastatic activity to Ubc13-deficient cells, and its pharmacological inhibition attenuated BCa metastasis in mice, suggesting it is a therapeutic option for metastatic BCa.


Nature | 2016

Image-based detection and targeting of therapy resistance in pancreatic adenocarcinoma.

Raymond G. Fox; Nikki K. Lytle; Dawn Jaquish; Frederick D. Park; Takahiro Ito; Jeevisha Bajaj; Claire S. Koechlein; Bryan Zimdahl; Masato Yano; Janel L. Kopp; Marcie Kritzik; Jason K. Sicklick; Maike Sander; Paul M. Grandgenett; Michael A. Hollingsworth; Shinsuke Shibata; Donald P. Pizzo; Mark A. Valasek; Roman Sasik; Miriam Scadeng; Hideyuki Okano; Youngsoo Kim; A. Robert MacLeod; Andrew M. Lowy; Tannishtha Reya

Pancreatic intraepithelial neoplasia (PanIN) is a premalignant lesion that can progress to pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma, a highly lethal malignancy marked by its late stage at clinical presentation and profound drug resistance1. The genomic alterations that commonly occur in pancreatic cancer include activation of KRAS2 and inactivation of p53, and SMAD42-4. To date, however, it has been challenging to target these pathways therapeutically; thus the search for other key mediators of pancreatic cancer growth remains an important endeavor. Here we show that the stem cell determinant Musashi (Msi) is a critical element of pancreatic cancer progression in both genetic models and patient derived xenografts. Specifically, we developed Msi reporter mice that allowed image based tracking of stem cell signals within cancers, revealing that Msi expression rises as PanIN progresses to adenocarcinoma, and that Msi-expressing cells are key drivers of pancreatic cancer: they preferentially harbor the capacity to propagate adenocarcinoma, are enriched in circulating tumor cells, and are markedly drug resistant. This population could be effectively targeted by deletion of either Msi1 or Msi2, which led to a striking defect in PanIN progression to adenocarcinoma and an improvement in overall survival. Msi inhibition also blocked the growth of primary patient-derived tumors, suggesting that this signal is required for human disease. To define the translational potential of this work we developed antisense oligonucleotides against Msi; these showed reliable tumor penetration, uptake and target inhibition, and effectively blocked pancreatic cancer growth. Collectively, these studies highlight Msi reporters as a unique tool to identify therapy resistance, and define Msi signaling as a central regulator of pancreatic cancer.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Intermittent cold exposure enhances fat accumulation in mice.

Hyung sun Yoo; Liping Qiao; Chris Bosco; Lok-Hei Leong; Nikki K. Lytle; Gen-Sheng Feng; Nai-Wen Chi; Jianhua Shao

Due to its high energy consuming characteristics, brown adipose tissue (BAT) has been suggested as a key player in energy metabolism. Cold exposure is a physiological activator of BAT. Intermittent cold exposure (ICE), unlike persistent exposure, is clinically feasible. The main objective of this study was to investigate whether ICE reduces adiposity in C57BL/6 mice. Surprisingly, we found that ICE actually increased adiposity despite enhancing Ucp1 expression in BAT and inducing beige adipocytes in subcutaneous white adipose tissue. ICE did not alter basal systemic insulin sensitivity, but it increased liver triglyceride content and secretion rate as well as blood triglyceride levels. Gene profiling further demonstrated that ICE, despite suppressing lipogenic gene expression in white adipose tissue and liver during cold exposure, enhanced lipogenesis between the exposure periods. Together, our results indicate that despite enhancing BAT recruitment, ICE in mice increases fat accumulation by stimulating de novo lipogenesis.


Cancer Cell | 2016

CD98-Mediated Adhesive Signaling Enables the Establishment and Propagation of Acute Myelogenous Leukemia

Jeevisha Bajaj; Takaaki Konuma; Nikki K. Lytle; Hyog Young Kwon; Jailal N. G. Ablack; Joseph M. Cantor; David A. Rizzieri; Charles Chuah; Vivian G. Oehler; Elizabeth H. Broome; Edward D. Ball; Edward H. van der Horst; Mark H. Ginsberg; Tannishtha Reya

Acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) is an aggressive disease associated with drug resistance and relapse. To improve therapeutic strategies, it is critical to better understand the mechanisms that underlie AML progression. Here we show that the integrin binding glycoprotein CD98 plays a central role in AML. CD98 promotes AML propagation and lethality by driving engagement of leukemia cells with their microenvironment and maintaining leukemic stem cells. Further, delivery of a humanized anti-CD98 antibody blocks growth of patient-derived AML, highlighting the importance of this pathway in human disease. These findings indicate that microenvironmental interactions are key regulators of AML and that disrupting these signals with targeted inhibitors such as CD98 antibodies may be a valuable therapeutic approach for adults and children with this disease.


Cancer Cell | 2018

Epigenetic and Transcriptomic Profiling of Mammary Gland Development and Tumor Models Disclose Regulators of Cell State Plasticity

Christopher Dravis; Chi-Yeh Chung; Nikki K. Lytle; Jaslem Herrera-Valdez; Gidsela Luna; Christy L. Trejo; Tannishtha Reya; Geoffrey M. Wahl

Cell state reprogramming during tumor progression complicates accurate diagnosis, compromises therapeutic effectiveness, and fuels metastatic dissemination. We used chromatin accessibility assays and transcriptional profiling during mammary development as an agnostic approach to identify factors that mediate cancer cell state interconversions. We show that fetal and adult basal cells share epigenetic features consistent with multi-lineage differentiation potential. We find that DNA-binding motifs for SOX transcription factors are enriched in chromatin that is accessible in stem/progenitor cells and inaccessible in differentiated cells. In both mouse and human tumors, SOX10 expression correlates with stem/progenitor identity, dedifferentiation, and invasive characteristics. Strikingly, we demonstrate that SOX10 binds to genes that regulate neural crest cell identity, and that SOX10-positive tumor cells exhibit neural crest cell features.


Cell Stem Cell | 2015

Tetraspanin 3 Is Required for the Development and Propagation of Acute Myelogenous Leukemia

Hyog Young Kwon; Jeevisha Bajaj; Takahiro Ito; Allen Blevins; Takaaki Konuma; Joi Weeks; Nikki K. Lytle; Claire S. Koechlein; David A. Rizzieri; Charles Chuah; Vivian G. Oehler; Roman Sasik; Gary Hardiman; Tannishtha Reya


Cancer Cell | 2017

Stress-Activated NRF2-MDM2 Cascade Controls Neoplastic Progression in Pancreas

Jelena Todoric; Laura Antonucci; Giuseppe Di Caro; Ning Li; Xuefeng Wu; Nikki K. Lytle; Debanjan Dhar; Sourav Banerjee; Johan B. Fagman; Cecille D. Browne; Atsushi Umemura; Mark A. Valasek; Hannes Kessler; David Tarin; Michael Goggins; Tannishtha Reya; Maria T. Diaz-Meco; Jorge Moscat; Michael Karin


Protocol exchange | 2016

A protocol for live imaging of pancreatic tissue

Nikki K. Lytle; Raymond Fox; Claire S. Koechlein; Andrew M. Lowy; Tannishtha Reya


Protocol exchange | 2016

A protocol for lentiviral infection of primary patient pancreatic tumors

Raymond Fox; Nikki K. Lytle; Andrew M. Lowy; Tannishtha Reya


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 2016

Targeting Therapy-Resistant Pancreatic Cancer Stem Cells Through Selective Sensitization and Radiation Therapy

N.L. Pham; Nikki K. Lytle; J.A. Hattangadi; James D. Murphy; Arno J. Mundt; Andrew M. Lowy; Tannishtha Reya

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Andrew M. Lowy

University of California

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Raymond Fox

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Jeevisha Bajaj

University of California

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Dawn Jaquish

University of California

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Michael Karin

University of California

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