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Dive into the research topics where Raul Rabadan is active.

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Featured researches published by Raul Rabadan.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2011

BRAF Mutations in Hairy-Cell Leukemia

Enrico Tiacci; Vladimir Trifonov; Gianluca Schiavoni; Antony B. Holmes; Wolfgang Kern; Maria Paola Martelli; Alessandra Pucciarini; Barbara Bigerna; Roberta Pacini; Victoria A. Wells; Paolo Sportoletti; Valentina Pettirossi; Roberta Mannucci; Oliver Elliott; Arcangelo Liso; Achille Ambrosetti; Alessandro Pulsoni; Francesco Forconi; Livio Trentin; Gianpietro Semenzato; Giorgio Inghirami; Monia Capponi; Francesco Di Raimondo; Caterina Patti; Luca Arcaini; Pellegrino Musto; Stefano Pileri; Claudia Haferlach; Susanne Schnittger; Giovanni Pizzolo

BACKGROUND Hairy-cell leukemia (HCL) is a well-defined clinicopathological entity whose underlying genetic lesion is still obscure. METHODS We searched for HCL-associated mutations by performing massively parallel sequencing of the whole exome of leukemic and matched normal cells purified from the peripheral blood of an index patient with HCL. Findings were validated by Sanger sequencing in 47 additional patients with HCL. RESULTS Whole-exome sequencing identified five missense somatic clonal mutations that were confirmed on Sanger sequencing, including a heterozygous mutation in BRAF that results in the BRAF V600E variant protein. Since BRAF V600E is oncogenic in other tumors, further analyses were focused on this genetic lesion. The same BRAF mutation was noted in all the other 47 patients with HCL who were evaluated by means of Sanger sequencing. None of the 195 patients with other peripheral B-cell lymphomas or leukemias who were evaluated carried the BRAF V600E variant, including 38 patients with splenic marginal-zone lymphomas or unclassifiable splenic lymphomas or leukemias. In immunohistologic and Western blot studies, HCL cells expressed phosphorylated MEK and ERK (the downstream targets of the BRAF kinase), indicating a constitutive activation of the RAF-MEK-ERK mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway in HCL. In vitro incubation of BRAF-mutated primary leukemic hairy cells from 5 patients with PLX-4720, a specific inhibitor of active BRAF, led to a marked decrease in phosphorylated ERK and MEK. CONCLUSIONS; The BRAF V600E mutation was present in all patients with HCL who were evaluated. This finding may have implications for the pathogenesis, diagnosis, and targeted therapy of HCL. (Funded by Associazione Italiana per la Ricerca sul Cancro and others.).


Nature Genetics | 2011

Analysis of the coding genome of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma

Laura Pasqualucci; Vladimir Trifonov; Giulia Fabbri; Jing Ma; Davide Rossi; Annalisa Chiarenza; Victoria A. Wells; Adina Grunn; Monica Messina; Oliver Elliot; Joseph Chan; Govind Bhagat; Amy Chadburn; Gianluca Gaidano; Charles G. Mullighan; Raul Rabadan; Riccardo Dalla-Favera

Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) is the most common form of human lymphoma. Although a number of structural alterations have been associated with the pathogenesis of this malignancy, the full spectrum of genetic lesions that are present in the DLBCL genome, and therefore the identity of dysregulated cellular pathways, remains unknown. By combining next-generation sequencing and copy number analysis, we show that the DLBCL coding genome contains, on average, more than 30 clonally represented gene alterations per case. This analysis also revealed mutations in genes not previously implicated in DLBCL pathogenesis, including those regulating chromatin methylation (MLL2; 24% of samples) and immune recognition by T cells. These results provide initial data on the complexity of the DLBCL coding genome and identify novel dysregulated pathways underlying its pathogenesis.


Nature | 2011

Inactivating mutations of acetyltransferase genes in B-cell lymphoma.

Laura Pasqualucci; David Dominguez-Sola; Annalisa Chiarenza; Giulia Fabbri; Adina Grunn; Vladimir Trifonov; Lawryn H. Kasper; Stephanie Lerach; Hongyan Tang; Jing Ma; Davide Rossi; Amy Chadburn; Vundavalli V. Murty; Charles G. Mullighan; Gianluca Gaidano; Raul Rabadan; Paul K. Brindle; Riccardo Dalla-Favera

B-cell non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma comprises biologically and clinically distinct diseases the pathogenesis of which is associated with genetic lesions affecting oncogenes and tumour-suppressor genes. We report here that the two most common types—follicular lymphoma and diffuse large B-cell lymphoma—harbour frequent structural alterations inactivating CREBBP and, more rarely, EP300, two highly related histone and non-histone acetyltransferases (HATs) that act as transcriptional co-activators in multiple signalling pathways. Overall, about 39% of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma and 41% of follicular lymphoma cases display genomic deletions and/or somatic mutations that remove or inactivate the HAT coding domain of these two genes. These lesions usually affect one allele, suggesting that reduction in HAT dosage is important for lymphomagenesis. We demonstrate specific defects in acetylation-mediated inactivation of the BCL6 oncoprotein and activation of the p53 tumour suppressor. These results identify CREBBP/EP300 mutations as a major pathogenetic mechanism shared by common forms of B-cell non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, with direct implications for the use of drugs targeting acetylation/deacetylation mechanisms.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2011

Analysis of the chronic lymphocytic leukemia coding genome: role of NOTCH1 mutational activation

Giulia Fabbri; Silvia Rasi; Davide Rossi; Vladimir Trifonov; Hossein Khiabanian; Jing Ma; Adina Grunn; Marco Fangazio; Daniela Capello; Sara Monti; Stefania Cresta; Ernesto Gargiulo; Francesco Forconi; Anna Guarini; Luca Arcaini; Marco Paulli; Luca Laurenti; Luigi Maria Larocca; Roberto Marasca; Valter Gattei; David Oscier; Francesco Bertoni; Charles G. Mullighan; Robin Foà; Laura Pasqualucci; Raul Rabadan; Riccardo Dalla-Favera; Gianluca Gaidano

Next generation sequencing and copy number analysis provide insights into the complexity of the CLL coding genome, and reveal an association between NOTCH1 mutational activation and poor prognosis.


Cancer Cell | 2012

Promotion of Hepatocellular Carcinoma by the Intestinal Microbiota and TLR4

Ali Mencin; Geum-Youn Gwak; Jean Philippe Pradere; Myoung Kuk Jang; Ingmar Mederacke; Jorge Matias Caviglia; Hossein Khiabanian; Adebowale Adeyemi; Ramon Bataller; Jay H. Lefkowitch; Maureen Bower; Richard A. Friedman; R. Balfour Sartor; Raul Rabadan; Robert F. Schwabe

Increased translocation of intestinal bacteria is a hallmark of chronic liver disease and contributes to hepatic inflammation and fibrosis. Here we tested the hypothesis that the intestinal microbiota and Toll-like receptors (TLRs) promote hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), a long-term consequence of chronic liver injury, inflammation, and fibrosis. Hepatocarcinogenesis in chronically injured livers depended on the intestinal microbiota and TLR4 activation in non-bone-marrow-derived resident liver cells. TLR4 and the intestinal microbiota were not required for HCC initiation but for HCC promotion, mediating increased proliferation, expression of the hepatomitogen epiregulin, and prevention of apoptosis. Gut sterilization restricted to late stages of hepatocarcinogenesis reduced HCC, suggesting that the intestinal microbiota and TLR4 represent therapeutic targets for HCC prevention in advanced liver disease.


Science | 2012

Transforming Fusions of FGFR and TACC Genes in Human Glioblastoma

Devendra Singh; Joseph Chan; Pietro Zoppoli; Francesco Niola; Ryan J. Sullivan; Angelica Castano; Eric Minwei Liu; Jonathan Reichel; Paola Porrati; Serena Pellegatta; Kunlong Qiu; Zhibo Gao; Michele Ceccarelli; Riccardo Riccardi; Daniel J. Brat; Abhijit Guha; Kenneth D. Aldape; John G. Golfinos; David Zagzag; Tom Mikkelsen; Gaetano Finocchiaro; Anna Lasorella; Raul Rabadan; Antonio Iavarone

Oncogenic TACC-tics Human cancers exhibit many types of genomic rearrangements—including some that juxtapose sequences from two unrelated genes—thereby creating fusion proteins with oncogenic activity. Functional analysis of these fusion genes can provide mechanistic insights into tumorigenesis and potentially lead to effective drugs, as famously illustrated by the BCR-ABL gene in chronic myelogenous leukemia. Singh et al. (p. 1231, published online 26 July) identify and characterize a fusion gene present in 3% of human glioblastomas, a deadly brain cancer. In the resultant fusion protein, the tyrosine kinase region of the fibroblast growth factor receptor (FGFR) is joined to a domain from a transforming acidic coiled-coil (TACC) protein. The TACC-FGFR protein is oncogenic, shows unregulated kinase activity, localizes to the mitotic spindle, and disrupts chromosome segregation. In mice, FGFR inhibitors slowed the growth of tumors driven by the TACC-FGFR gene, suggesting that a subset of glioblastoma patients may benefit from these types of drugs. A fusion gene detected in a small subset of human brain tumors encodes a potentially druggable target. The brain tumor glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is among the most lethal forms of human cancer. Here, we report that a small subset of GBMs (3.1%; 3 of 97 tumors examined) harbors oncogenic chromosomal translocations that fuse in-frame the tyrosine kinase coding domains of fibroblast growth factor receptor (FGFR) genes (FGFR1 or FGFR3) to the transforming acidic coiled-coil (TACC) coding domains of TACC1 or TACC3, respectively. The FGFR-TACC fusion protein displays oncogenic activity when introduced into astrocytes or stereotactically transduced in the mouse brain. The fusion protein, which localizes to mitotic spindle poles, has constitutive kinase activity and induces mitotic and chromosomal segregation defects and triggers aneuploidy. Inhibition of FGFR kinase corrects the aneuploidy, and oral administration of an FGFR inhibitor prolongs survival of mice harboring intracranial FGFR3-TACC3–initiated glioma. FGFR-TACC fusions could potentially identify a subset of GBM patients who would benefit from targeted FGFR kinase inhibition.


Cell | 2016

Molecular Profiling Reveals Biologically Discrete Subsets and Pathways of Progression in Diffuse Glioma

Michele Ceccarelli; Floris P. Barthel; Tathiane Maistro Malta; Thais S. Sabedot; Sofie R. Salama; Bradley A. Murray; Olena Morozova; Yulia Newton; Amie Radenbaugh; Stefano Maria Pagnotta; Samreen Anjum; Jiguang Wang; Ganiraju C. Manyam; Pietro Zoppoli; Shiyun Ling; Arjun A. Rao; Mia Grifford; Andrew D. Cherniack; Hailei Zhang; Laila M. Poisson; Carlos Gilberto Carlotti; Daniela Tirapelli; Arvind Rao; Tom Mikkelsen; Ching C. Lau; W. K. Alfred Yung; Raul Rabadan; Jason T. Huse; Daniel J. Brat; Norman L. Lehman

Therapy development for adult diffuse glioma is hindered by incomplete knowledge of somatic glioma driving alterations and suboptimal disease classification. We defined the complete set of genes associated with 1,122 diffuse grade II-III-IV gliomas from The Cancer Genome Atlas and used molecular profiles to improve disease classification, identify molecular correlations, and provide insights into the progression from low- to high-grade disease. Whole-genome sequencing data analysis determined that ATRX but not TERT promoter mutations are associated with increased telomere length. Recent advances in glioma classification based on IDH mutation and 1p/19q co-deletion status were recapitulated through analysis of DNA methylation profiles, which identified clinically relevant molecular subsets. A subtype of IDH mutant glioma was associated with DNA demethylation and poor outcome; a group of IDH-wild-type diffuse glioma showed molecular similarity to pilocytic astrocytoma and relatively favorable survival. Understanding of cohesive disease groups may aid improved clinical outcomes.


Journal of Mathematical Physics | 2001

D = 4 chiral string compactifications from intersecting branes

Gerardo Aldazabal; Sebastian Franco; Luis de la Corte Ibáñez; Raul Rabadan; Angel M. Uranga

Intersecting Dp-branes often give rise to chiral fermions living on their intersections. We study the construction of four-dimensional chiral gauge theories by considering configurations of type II D(3+n)-branes wrapped on nontrivial n-cycles on T2n×(R2(3−n)/ZN), for n=1, 2, 3. The gauge theories on the four noncompact dimensions of the brane world-volume are generically chiral and nonsupersymmetric. We analyze consistency conditions (RR tadpole cancellation) for these models, and their relation to four-dimensional anomaly cancellation. Cancellation of U(1) gauge anomalies involves a Green–Schwarz mechanism mediated by RR partners of untwisted and/or twisted moduli. This class of models is of potential phenomenological interest, and we construct explicit examples of SU(3)×SU(2)×U(1) three-generation models. The models are nonsupersymmetric, but the string scale may be lowered close to the weak scale so that the standard hierarchy problem is avoided. We also comment on the presence of scalar tachyons and p...


Journal of High Energy Physics | 2001

Getting just the standard model at intersecting branes

Luis E. Ibanez; Fernando Marchesano; Raul Rabadan

We present what we believe are the first specific string (D-brane) constructions whose low-energy limit yields just a three generation SU(3) × SU(2) × U(1) standard model with no extra fermions nor U(1)s (without any further effective field theory assumption). In these constructions the number of generations is given by the number of colours. The Baryon, Lepton and Peccei-Quinn symmetries are necessarily gauged and their anomalies cancelled by a generalized Green-Schwarz mechanism. The corresponding gauge bosons become massive but their presence guarantees automatically proton stability. There are necessarily three right-handed neutrinos and neutrino masses can only be of Dirac type. They are naturally small as a consequence of a PQ-like symmetry. There is a Higgs sector which is somewhat similar to that of the MSSM and the scalar potential parameters have a geometric interpretation in terms of brane distances and intersection angles. Some other physical implications of these constructions are discussed.


Nature Medicine | 2012

Genetic inactivation of the polycomb repressive complex 2 in T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia

Panagiotis Ntziachristos; Aristotelis Tsirigos; Pieter Van Vlierberghe; Jelena Nedjic; Thomas Trimarchi; Maria Sol Flaherty; Dolors Ferres-Marco; Vanina Gabriela Da Ros; Zuojian Tang; Jasmin Siegle; Patrik Asp; Michael Hadler; Isaura Rigo; Kim De Keersmaecker; Jay Patel; Tien Huynh; Filippo Utro; Sandrine Poglio; Jeremy B. Samon; Elisabeth Paietta; Janis Racevskis; Jacob M. Rowe; Raul Rabadan; Ross L. Levine; Stuart M. Brown; Françoise Pflumio; M.I. Domínguez; Adolfo A. Ferrando; Iannis Aifantis

T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) is an immature hematopoietic malignancy driven mainly by oncogenic activation of NOTCH1 signaling1. In this study we report the presence of loss-of-function mutations and deletions of EZH2 and SUZ12 genes, encoding critical components of the Polycomb Repressive Complex 2 (PRC2) complex2,3, in 25% of T-ALLs. To further study the role of the PRC2 complex in T-ALL, we used NOTCH1-induced animal models of the disease, as well as human T-ALL samples, and combined locus-specific and global analysis of NOTCH1-driven epigenetic changes. These studies demonstrated that activation of NOTCH1 specifically induces loss of the repressive mark lysine-27 tri-methylation of histone 3 (H3K27me3)4 by antagonizing the activity of the Polycomb Repressive Complex 2 (PRC2) complex. These studies demonstrate a tumor suppressor role for the PRC2 complex in human leukemia and suggest a hitherto unrecognized dynamic interplay between oncogenic NOTCH1 and PRC2 function for the regulation of gene expression and cell transformation.

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Davide Rossi

University of Eastern Piedmont

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Arnold J. Levine

Institute for Advanced Study

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Gianluca Gaidano

University of Eastern Piedmont

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