Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Patrick Jedlowski is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Patrick Jedlowski.


Blood | 2014

Identification of cereblon-binding proteins and relationship with response and survival after IMiDs in multiple myeloma

Yuan Xiao Zhu; Esteban Braggio; Chang Xin Shi; K. Martin Kortuem; Laura Bruins; Jessica Schmidt; Xiu Bao Chang; Paul Langlais; Moulun Luo; Patrick Jedlowski; Betsy LaPlant; Kristina Laumann; Rafael Fonseca; P. Leif Bergsagel; Joseph R. Mikhael; Martha Q. Lacy; Mia D. Champion; A. Keith Stewart

Cereblon (CRBN) mediates immunomodulatory drug (IMiD) action in multiple myeloma (MM). Using 2 different methodologies, we identified 244 CRBN binding proteins and established relevance to MM biology by changes in their abundance after exposure to lenalidomide. Proteins most reproducibly binding CRBN (>fourfold vs controls) included DDB1, CUL4A, IKZF1, KPNA2, LTF, PFKL, PRKAR2A, RANGAP1, and SHMT2. After lenalidomide treatment, the abundance of 46 CRBN binding proteins decreased. We focused attention on 2 of these-IKZF1 and IKZF3. IZKF expression is similar across all MM stages or subtypes; however, IKZF1 is substantially lower in 3 of 5 IMiD-resistant MM cell lines. The cell line (FR4) with the lowest IKZF1 levels also harbors a damaging mutation and a translocation that upregulates IRF4, an IKZF target. Clinical relevance of CRBN-binding proteins was demonstrated in 44 refractory MM patients treated with pomalidomide and dexamethasone therapy in whom low IKZF1 gene expression predicted lack of response (0/11 responses in the lowest expression quartile). CRBN, IKZF1, and KPNA2 levels also correlate with significant differences in overall survival. Our study identifies CRBN-binding proteins and demonstrates that in addition to CRBN, IKZF1, and KPNA2, expression can predict survival outcomes.


Blood | 2016

Targeted sequencing of refractory myeloma reveals a high incidence of mutations in CRBN and Ras pathway genes

K. Martin Kortüm; Elias K. Mai; Nur Hanafiah; Chang Xi Shi; Yuan Xiao Zhu; Laura Bruins; Santiago Barrio; Patrick Jedlowski; Maximilian Merz; Jing Xu; Robert A. Stewart; Mindaugas Andrulis; Anna Jauch; Jens Hillengass; Hartmut Goldschmidt; P. Leif Bergsagel; Esteban Braggio; A. Keith Stewart; Marc S. Raab

In this study, targeted sequencing to screen 50 multidrug refractory multiple myeloma (rMM) patients was performed by using the Multiple Myeloma Mutation Panel. Patients were pretreated with both immunomodulatory drugs (IMiDs) and proteasome inhibitors (PIs), and 88%, 78%, and 68% were refractory to an IMiD, a PI, or both, respectively. The majority of patients had progressive (82%) or refractory (78%) disease immediately before sampling, with 43% being IMiD refractory and 46% being PI refractory in the most recent line of therapy. Compared with newly diagnosed MM, an increased prevalence of mutations in the Ras pathway genes KRAS, NRAS, and/or BRAF (72%), as well as TP53 (26%), CRBN (12%), and CRBN pathway genes (10%) was observed. Longitudinal analyses performed in 3 patients with CRBN mutations at time of IMiD resistance confirmed that these mutations were undetectable at earlier, IMiD-sensitive time points. Furthermore, the functional introduction of these mutations in MM cells conferred lenalidomide resistance in vitro. These data indicate a differential genetic landscape in rMM associated with drug response.


British Journal of Haematology | 2015

Targeted sequencing using a 47 gene multiple myeloma mutation panel (M3P) in -17p high risk disease

Klaus Martin Kortüm; Christian Langer; Jorge Monge; Laura Bruins; Jan B. Egan; Yuan X. Zhu; Chang Xin Shi; Patrick Jedlowski; Jessica Schmidt; Juhi Ojha; Lars Bullinger; Peter Liebisch; Miriam Kull; Mia D. Champion; Scott Van Wier; Gregory J. Ahmann; Leo Rasche; Stefan Knop; Rafael Fonseca; Hermann Einsele; A. Keith Stewart; Esteban Braggio

We constructed a multiple myeloma (MM)‐specific gene panel for targeted sequencing and investigated 72 untreated high‐risk (del17p) MM patients. Mutations were identified in 78% of the patients. While the majority of studied genes were mutated at similar frequency to published literature, the prevalence of TP53 mutation was increased (28%) and no mutations were found in FAM46C. This study provides a comprehensive insight into the mutational landscape of del17p high‐risk MM. Additionally, our work demonstrates the practical use of a customized sequencing panel, as an easy, cheap and fast approach to characterize the mutational profile of MM.


Blood Cancer Journal | 2016

Panel sequencing for clinically oriented variant screening and copy number detection in 142 untreated multiple myeloma patients

Klaus Martin Kortuem; Esteban Braggio; Laura Bruins; Santiago Barrio; Chang-Xin Shi; Yuan-Xiao Zhu; R Tibes; David S. Viswanatha; P Votruba; Gregory J. Ahmann; Rafael Fonseca; Patrick Jedlowski; I Schlam; Shaji Kumar; P L Bergsagel; A. K. Stewart

We employed a customized Multiple Myeloma (MM)-specific Mutation Panel (M3P) to screen a homogenous cohort of 142 untreated MM patients for relevant mutations in a selection of disease-specific genes. M3Pv2.0 includes 77 genes selected for being either actionable targets, potentially related to drug–response or part of known key pathways in MM biology. We identified mutations in potentially actionable genes in 49% of patients and provided prognostic evidence of STAT3 mutations. This panel may serve as a practical alternative to more comprehensive sequencing approaches, providing genomic information in a timely and cost-effective manner, thus allowing clinically oriented variant screening in MM.


Blood Reviews | 2015

Cereblon binding molecules in multiple myeloma.

Klaus Martin Kortüm; Yuan-Xiao Zhu; Chang-Xin Shi; Patrick Jedlowski; A. K. Stewart

Immunomodulation is an established treatment strategy in multiple myeloma with thalidomide and its derivatives lenalidomide and pomalidomide as its FDA approved representatives. Just recently the method of action of these cereblon binding molecules was deciphered and results from large phase 3 trials confirmed the backbone function of this drug family in various combination therapies. This review details the to-date knowledge concerning mechanism of IMiD action, clinical applications and plausible escape mechanisms in which cells may become resistant/refractory to cereblon binding molecule based treatment.


Haematologica | 2015

Proteasome inhibitors block Ikaros degradation by lenalidomide in multiple myeloma

Chang Xin Shi; Klaus Martin Kortüm; Yuan Xiao Zhu; Patrick Jedlowski; Laura Bruins; Esteban Braggio; A. Keith Stewart

Survival in multiple myeloma (MM) has improved remarkably since the introduction of the proteasome inhibitors, (PI), bortezomib (BOR), carfilzomib (CAR), and the immune modulating cereblon-binding molecules (CBMs) thalidomide (THAL), lenalidomide (LEN), and pomalidomide (POM). BOR reversibly, and


Blood | 2015

RNA interference screening identifies lenalidomide sensitizers in multiple myeloma, including RSK2.

Yuan Xiao Zhu; Hongwei Yin; Laura Bruins; Chang Xin Shi; Patrick Jedlowski; Meraj Aziz; Chris Sereduk; Klaus Martin Kortuem; Jessica Schmidt; Mia D. Champion; Esteban Braggio; A. Keith Stewart

To identify molecular targets that modify sensitivity to lenalidomide, we measured proliferation in multiple myeloma (MM) cells transfected with 27 968 small interfering RNAs in the presence of increasing concentrations of drug and identified 63 genes that enhance activity of lenalidomide upon silencing. Ribosomal protein S6 kinase (RPS6KA3 or RSK2) was the most potent sensitizer. Other notable gene targets included 5 RAB family members, 3 potassium channel proteins, and 2 peroxisome family members. Single genes of interest included I-κ-B kinase-α (CHUK), and a phosphorylation dependent transcription factor (CREB1), which associate with RSK2 to regulate several signaling pathways. RSK2 knockdown induced cytotoxicity across a panel of MM cell lines and consistently increased sensitivity to lenalidomide. Accordingly, 3 small molecular inhibitors of RSK2 demonstrated synergy with lenalidomide cytotoxicity in MM cells even in the presence of stromal contact. Both RSK2 knockdown and small molecule inhibition downregulate interferon regulatory factor 4 and MYC, and provides an explanation for the synergy between lenalidomide and RSK2 inhibition. Interestingly, RSK2 inhibition also sensitized MM cells to bortezomib, melphalan, and dexamethasone, but did not downregulate Ikaros or influence lenalidomide-mediated downregulation of tumor necrosis factor-α or increase lenalidomide-induced IL-2 upregulation. In summary, inhibition of RSK2 may prove a broadly useful adjunct to MM therapy.


Molecular Cancer Therapeutics | 2017

CRISPR genome-wide screening identifies dependence on the proteasome subunit PSMC6 for Bortezomib sensitivity in multiple myeloma

Chang Xin Shi; K. Martin Kortüm; Yuan Xiao Zhu; Laura Bruins; Patrick Jedlowski; Patrick G. Votruba; Moulun Luo; Robert A. Stewart; Jonathan Ahmann; Esteban Braggio; A. Keith Stewart

Bortezomib is highly effective in the treatment of multiple myeloma; however, emergent drug resistance is common. Consequently, we employed CRISPR targeting 19,052 human genes to identify unbiased targets that contribute to bortezomib resistance. Specifically, we engineered an RPMI8226 multiple myeloma cell line to express Cas9 infected by lentiviral vector CRISPR library and cultured derived cells in doses of bortezomib lethal to parental cells. Sequencing was performed on surviving cells to identify inactivated genes responsible for drug resistance. From two independent whole-genome screens, we selected 31 candidate genes and constructed a second CRISPR sgRNA library, specifically targeting each of these 31 genes with four sgRNAs. After secondary screening for bortezomib resistance, the top 20 “resistance” genes were selected for individual validation. Of these 20 targets, the proteasome regulatory subunit PSMC6 was the only gene validated to reproducibly confer bortezomib resistance. We confirmed that inhibition of chymotrypsin-like proteasome activity by bortezomib was significantly reduced in cells lacking PSMC6. We individually investigated other members of the PSMC group (PSMC1 to 5) and found that deficiency in each of those subunits also imparts bortezomib resistance. We found 36 mutations in 19S proteasome subunits out of 895 patients in the IA10 release of the CoMMpass study (https://themmrf.org). Our findings demonstrate that the PSMC6 subunit is the most prominent target required for bortezomib sensitivity in multiple myeloma cells and should be examined in drug-refractory populations. Mol Cancer Ther; 16(12); 2862–70. ©2017 AACR.


Cancer Research | 2017

Loss of FAM46C Promotes Cell Survival in Myeloma

Yuan Xiao Zhu; Chang Xin Shi; Laura Bruins; Patrick Jedlowski; Xuewei Wang; K. Martin Kortüm; Moulun Luo; Jonathan Ahmann; Esteban Braggio; A. Keith Stewart

FAM46C is one of the most recurrently mutated genes in multiple myeloma; however its role in disease pathogenesis has not been determined. Here we demonstrate that wild-type (WT) FAM46C overexpression induces substantial cytotoxicity in multiple myeloma cells. In contrast, FAM46C mutations found in multiple myeloma patients abrogate this cytotoxicity, indicating a survival advantage conferred by the FAM46C mutant phenotype. WT FAM46C overexpression downregulated IRF4, CEBPB, and MYC and upregulated immunoglobulin (Ig) light chain and HSPA5/BIP Furthermore, pathway analysis suggests that enforced FAM46C expression activated the unfolded protein response pathway and induced mitochondrial dysfunction. CRISPR-mediated depletion of endogenous FAM46C enhanced multiple myeloma cell growth, decreased Ig light chain and HSPA5/BIP expression, activated ERK and antiapoptotic signaling, and conferred relative resistance to dexamethasone and lenalidomide treatments. Genes altered in FAM46C-depleted cells were enriched for signaling pathways regulating estrogen, glucocorticoid, B-cell receptor signaling, and ATM signaling. Together these results implicate FAM46C in myeloma cell growth and survival and identify FAM46C mutation as a contributor to myeloma pathogenesis and disease progression via perturbation in plasma cell differentiation and endoplasmic reticulum homeostasis. Cancer Res; 77(16); 4317-27. ©2017 AACR.


Annals of Hematology | 2015

Longitudinal analysis of 25 sequential sample-pairs using a custom multiple myeloma mutation sequencing panel (M 3 P)

Klaus Martin Kortüm; Christian Langer; Jorge Monge; Laura Bruins; Yuan-Xiao Zhu; Chang-Xin Shi; Patrick Jedlowski; Jan B. Egan; Juhi Ojha; Lars Bullinger; Miriam Kull; Gregory J. Ahmann; Leo Rasche; Stefan Knop; Rafael Fonseca; Hermann Einsele; A. K. Stewart; Esteban Braggio

Collaboration


Dive into the Patrick Jedlowski's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge