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Dive into the research topics where Patrick S. Ward is active.

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Featured researches published by Patrick S. Ward.


Nature | 2009

Cancer-associated IDH1 mutations produce 2-hydroxyglutarate

Lenny Dang; David W. White; Stefan Gross; Bryson D. Bennett; Mark A. Bittinger; Edward M. Driggers; Valeria Fantin; Hyun Gyung Jang; Shengfang Jin; Marie C. Keenan; Kevin Marks; Robert M. Prins; Patrick S. Ward; Katharine E. Yen; Linda M. Liau; Joshua D. Rabinowitz; Lewis C. Cantley; Craig B. Thompson; Matthew G. Vander Heiden; Shinsan M. Su

Mutations in the enzyme cytosolic isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 (IDH1) are a common feature of a major subset of primary human brain cancers. These mutations occur at a single amino acid residue of the IDH1 active site, resulting in loss of the enzyme’s ability to catalyse conversion of isocitrate to α-ketoglutarate. However, only a single copy of the gene is mutated in tumours, raising the possibility that the mutations do not result in a simple loss of function. Here we show that cancer-associated IDH1 mutations result in a new ability of the enzyme to catalyse the NADPH-dependent reduction of α-ketoglutarate to R(-)-2-hydroxyglutarate (2HG). Structural studies demonstrate that when arginine 132 is mutated to histidine, residues in the active site are shifted to produce structural changes consistent with reduced oxidative decarboxylation of isocitrate and acquisition of the ability to convert α-ketoglutarate to 2HG. Excess accumulation of 2HG has been shown to lead to an elevated risk of malignant brain tumours in patients with inborn errors of 2HG metabolism. Similarly, in human malignant gliomas harbouring IDH1 mutations, we find markedly elevated levels of 2HG. These data demonstrate that the IDH1 mutations result in production of the onco-metabolite 2HG, and indicate that the excess 2HG which accumulates in vivo contributes to the formation and malignant progression of gliomas.


Cancer Cell | 2010

Leukemic IDH1 and IDH2 Mutations Result in a Hypermethylation Phenotype, Disrupt TET2 Function, and Impair Hematopoietic Differentiation

Maria E. Figueroa; Omar Abdel-Wahab; Chao Lu; Patrick S. Ward; Jay Patel; Alan Shih; Yushan Li; Neha Bhagwat; Aparna Vasanthakumar; Hugo F. Fernandez; Martin S. Tallman; Zhuoxin Sun; Kristy L. Wolniak; Justine K. Peeters; Wei Liu; Sung E. Choe; Valeria Fantin; Elisabeth Paietta; Bob Löwenberg; Jonathan D. Licht; Lucy A. Godley; Ruud Delwel; Peter J. M. Valk; Craig B. Thompson; Ross L. Levine; Ari Melnick

Cancer-associated IDH mutations are characterized by neomorphic enzyme activity and resultant 2-hydroxyglutarate (2HG) production. Mutational and epigenetic profiling of a large acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patient cohort revealed that IDH1/2-mutant AMLs display global DNA hypermethylation and a specific hypermethylation signature. Furthermore, expression of 2HG-producing IDH alleles in cells induced global DNA hypermethylation. In the AML cohort, IDH1/2 mutations were mutually exclusive with mutations in the α-ketoglutarate-dependent enzyme TET2, and TET2 loss-of-function mutations were associated with similar epigenetic defects as IDH1/2 mutants. Consistent with these genetic and epigenetic data, expression of IDH mutants impaired TET2 catalytic function in cells. Finally, either expression of mutant IDH1/2 or Tet2 depletion impaired hematopoietic differentiation and increased stem/progenitor cell marker expression, suggesting a shared proleukemogenic effect.


Cancer Cell | 2012

Metabolic Reprogramming: A Cancer Hallmark Even Warburg Did Not Anticipate

Patrick S. Ward; Craig B. Thompson

Cancer metabolism has long been equated with aerobic glycolysis, seen by early biochemists as primitive and inefficient. Despite these early beliefs, the metabolic signatures of cancer cells are not passive responses to damaged mitochondria but result from oncogene-directed metabolic reprogramming required to support anabolic growth. Recent evidence suggests that metabolites themselves can be oncogenic by altering cell signaling and blocking cellular differentiation. No longer can cancer-associated alterations in metabolism be viewed as an indirect response to cell proliferation and survival signals. We contend that altered metabolism has attained the status of a core hallmark of cancer.


Cancer Cell | 2010

The Common Feature of Leukemia-Associated IDH1 and IDH2 Mutations Is a Neomorphic Enzyme Activity Converting α-Ketoglutarate to 2-Hydroxyglutarate

Patrick S. Ward; Jay Patel; David R. Wise; Omar Abdel-Wahab; Bryson D. Bennett; Hilary A. Coller; Justin R. Cross; Valeria Fantin; Cyrus V. Hedvat; Alexander E. Perl; Joshua D. Rabinowitz; Martin Carroll; Shinsan M. Su; Kim A. Sharp; Ross L. Levine; Craig B. Thompson

The somatic mutations in cytosolic isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 (IDH1) observed in gliomas can lead to the production of 2-hydroxyglutarate (2HG). Here, we report that tumor 2HG is elevated in a high percentage of patients with cytogenetically normal acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Surprisingly, less than half of cases with elevated 2HG possessed IDH1 mutations. The remaining cases with elevated 2HG had mutations in IDH2, the mitochondrial homolog of IDH1. These data demonstrate that a shared feature of all cancer-associated IDH mutations is production of the oncometabolite 2HG. Furthermore, AML patients with IDH mutations display a significantly reduced number of other well characterized AML-associated mutations and/or associated chromosomal abnormalities, potentially implicating IDH mutation in a distinct mechanism of AML pathogenesis.


Nature | 2012

IDH1 mutation is sufficient to establish the glioma hypermethylator phenotype

Sevin Turcan; Daniel Rohle; Anuj Goenka; Logan A. Walsh; Fang Fang; Emrullah Yilmaz; Carl Campos; Armida W. M. Fabius; Chao Lu; Patrick S. Ward; Craig B. Thompson; Andrew Kaufman; Olga A. Guryanova; Ross L. Levine; Adriana Heguy; Agnes Viale; Luc G. T. Morris; Jason T. Huse; Ingo K. Mellinghoff; Timothy A. Chan

Both genome-wide genetic and epigenetic alterations are fundamentally important for the development of cancers, but the interdependence of these aberrations is poorly understood. Glioblastomas and other cancers with the CpG island methylator phenotype (CIMP) constitute a subset of tumours with extensive epigenomic aberrations and a distinct biology. Glioma CIMP (G-CIMP) is a powerful determinant of tumour pathogenicity, but the molecular basis of G-CIMP remains unresolved. Here we show that mutation of a single gene, isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 (IDH1), establishes G-CIMP by remodelling the methylome. This remodelling results in reorganization of the methylome and transcriptome. Examination of the epigenome of a large set of intermediate-grade gliomas demonstrates a distinct G-CIMP phenotype that is highly dependent on the presence of IDH mutation. Introduction of mutant IDH1 into primary human astrocytes alters specific histone marks, induces extensive DNA hypermethylation, and reshapes the methylome in a fashion that mirrors the changes observed in G-CIMP-positive lower-grade gliomas. Furthermore, the epigenomic alterations resulting from mutant IDH1 activate key gene expression programs, characterize G-CIMP-positive proneural glioblastomas but not other glioblastomas, and are predictive of improved survival. Our findings demonstrate that IDH mutation is the molecular basis of CIMP in gliomas, provide a framework for understanding oncogenesis in these gliomas, and highlight the interplay between genomic and epigenomic changes in human cancers.


Nature | 2012

IDH mutation impairs histone demethylation and results in a block to cell differentiation

Chao Lu; Patrick S. Ward; Gurpreet S. Kapoor; D. Rohle; Sevin Turcan; Omar Abdel-Wahab; Christopher R. Edwards; Raya Khanin; Maria E. Figueroa; Ari Melnick; Kathryn E. Wellen; Donald M. O’Rourke; Shelley L. Berger; Timothy A. Chan; Ross L. Levine; Ingo K. Mellinghoff; Craig B. Thompson

Recurrent mutations in isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 (IDH1) and IDH2 have been identified in gliomas, acute myeloid leukaemias (AML) and chondrosarcomas, and share a novel enzymatic property of producing 2-hydroxyglutarate (2HG) from α-ketoglutarate. Here we report that 2HG-producing IDH mutants can prevent the histone demethylation that is required for lineage-specific progenitor cells to differentiate into terminally differentiated cells. In tumour samples from glioma patients, IDH mutations were associated with a distinct gene expression profile enriched for genes expressed in neural progenitor cells, and this was associated with increased histone methylation. To test whether the ability of IDH mutants to promote histone methylation contributes to a block in cell differentiation in non-transformed cells, we tested the effect of neomorphic IDH mutants on adipocyte differentiation in vitro. Introduction of either mutant IDH or cell-permeable 2HG was associated with repression of the inducible expression of lineage-specific differentiation genes and a block to differentiation. This correlated with a significant increase in repressive histone methylation marks without observable changes in promoter DNA methylation. Gliomas were found to have elevated levels of similar histone repressive marks. Stable transfection of a 2HG-producing mutant IDH into immortalized astrocytes resulted in progressive accumulation of histone methylation. Of the marks examined, increased H3K9 methylation reproducibly preceded a rise in DNA methylation as cells were passaged in culture. Furthermore, we found that the 2HG-inhibitable H3K9 demethylase KDM4C was induced during adipocyte differentiation, and that RNA-interference suppression of KDM4C was sufficient to block differentiation. Together these data demonstrate that 2HG can inhibit histone demethylation and that inhibition of histone demethylation can be sufficient to block the differentiation of non-transformed cells.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Hypoxia promotes isocitrate dehydrogenase-dependent carboxylation of α-ketoglutarate to citrate to support cell growth and viability.

David R. Wise; Patrick S. Ward; Jessica E.S. Shay; Justin R. Cross; Joshua J. Gruber; Uma M. Sachdeva; Jesse M. Platt; Raymond G. DeMatteo; M. Celeste Simon; Craig B. Thompson

Citrate is a critical metabolite required to support both mitochondrial bioenergetics and cytosolic macromolecular synthesis. When cells proliferate under normoxic conditions, glucose provides the acetyl-CoA that condenses with oxaloacetate to support citrate production. Tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle anaplerosis is maintained primarily by glutamine. Here we report that some hypoxic cells are able to maintain cell proliferation despite a profound reduction in glucose-dependent citrate production. In these hypoxic cells, glutamine becomes a major source of citrate. Glutamine-derived α-ketoglutarate is reductively carboxylated by the NADPH-linked mitochondrial isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH2) to form isocitrate, which can then be isomerized to citrate. The increased IDH2-dependent carboxylation of glutamine-derived α-ketoglutarate in hypoxia is associated with a concomitant increased synthesis of 2-hydroxyglutarate (2HG) in cells with wild-type IDH1 and IDH2. When either starved of glutamine or rendered IDH2-deficient by RNAi, hypoxic cells are unable to proliferate. The reductive carboxylation of glutamine is part of the metabolic reprogramming associated with hypoxia-inducible factor 1 (HIF1), as constitutive activation of HIF1 recapitulates the preferential reductive metabolism of glutamine-derived α-ketoglutarate even in normoxic conditions. These data support a role for glutamine carboxylation in maintaining citrate synthesis and cell growth under hypoxic conditions.


Nature | 2010

Erratum: Cancer-associated IDH1 mutations produce 2-hydroxyglutarate

Lenny Dang; David W. White; Stefan Gross; Bryson D. Bennett; Mark A. Bittinger; Edward M. Driggers; Valeria Fantin; Hyun Gyung Jang; Shengfang Jin; Marie C. Keenan; Kevin Marks; Robert M. Prins; Patrick S. Ward; Katharine E. Yen; Linda M. Liau; Joshua D. Rabinowitz; Lewis C. Cantley; Craig B. Thompson; Matthew G. Vander Heiden; Shinsan M. Su

This corrects the article DOI: 10.1038/nature08617


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Pyruvate kinase M2 promotes de novo serine synthesis to sustain mTORC1 activity and cell proliferation

Jiangbin Ye; Anthony Mancuso; Xuemei Tong; Patrick S. Ward; Jing Fan; Joshua D. Rabinowitz; Craig B. Thompson

Despite the fact that most cancer cells display high glycolytic activity, cancer cells selectively express the less active M2 isoform of pyruvate kinase (PKM2). Here we demonstrate that PKM2 expression makes a critical regulatory contribution to the serine synthetic pathway. In the absence of serine, an allosteric activator of PKM2, glycolytic efflux to lactate is significantly reduced in PKM2-expressing cells. This inhibition of PKM2 results in the accumulation of glycolytic intermediates that feed into serine synthesis. As a consequence, PKM2-expressing cells can maintain mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1 activity and proliferate in serine-depleted medium, but PKM1-expressing cells cannot. Cellular detection of serine depletion depends on general control nonderepressible 2 kinase-activating transcription factor 4 (GCN2-ATF4) pathway activation and results in increased expression of enzymes required for serine synthesis from the accumulating glycolytic precursors. These findings suggest that tumor cells use serine-dependent regulation of PKM2 and GCN2 to modulate the flux of glycolytic intermediates in support of cell proliferation.


Oncogene | 2012

Identification of additional IDH mutations associated with oncometabolite R (−)-2-hydroxyglutarate production

Patrick S. Ward; Justin R. Cross; Chao Lu; Oliver Weigert; Omar Abel-Wahab; Ross L. Levine; David M. Weinstock; Kim A. Sharp; Craig B. Thompson

Mutations in cytosolic isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 (IDH1) or its mitochondrial homolog IDH2 can lead to R(−)-2-hydroxyglutarate (2HG) production. To date, mutations in three active site arginine residues, IDH1 R132, IDH2 R172 and IDH2 R140, have been shown to result in the neomorphic production of 2HG. Here we report on three additional 2HG-producing IDH1 mutations: IDH1 R100, which is affected in adult glioma, IDH1 G97, which is mutated in colon cancer cell lines and pediatric glioblastoma, and IDH1 Y139. All these new mutants stereospecifically produced 2HGs (R) enantiomer. In contrast, we find that the IDH1 SNPs V71I and V178I, as well as a number of other single-sample reports of IDH non-synonymous mutation, did not elevate cellular 2HG levels in cells and retained the wild-type ability for isocitrate-dependent NADPH production. Finally, we report the existence of additional rare, but recurring mutations found in lymphoma and thyroid cancer, which while failing to elevate 2HG nonetheless displayed loss of function, indicating a possible tumorigenic mechanism for a non-2HG-producing subset of IDH mutations in some malignancies. These data broaden our understanding of how IDH mutations may contribute to cancer through either neomorphic R(−)-2HG production or reduced wild-type enzymatic activity, and highlight the potential value of metabolite screening in identifying IDH-mutated tumors associated with elevated oncometabolite levels.

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Craig B. Thompson

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Chao Lu

Rockefeller University

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Ross L. Levine

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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David J. Spielman

International Food Policy Research Institute

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Justin R. Cross

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Omar Abdel-Wahab

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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