Rebecca Haffner-Krausz
Weizmann Institute of Science
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Featured researches published by Rebecca Haffner-Krausz.
Nature | 2011
Ela Elyada; Ariel Pribluda; Robert Goldstein; Yael Morgenstern; Guy Brachya; Gady Cojocaru; Irit Snir-Alkalay; Ido Burstain; Rebecca Haffner-Krausz; Steffen Jung; Zoltán Wiener; Kari Alitalo; Moshe Oren; Eli Pikarsky; Yinon Ben-Neriah
The mature gut renews continuously and rapidly throughout adult life, often in a damage-inflicting micro-environment. The major driving force for self-renewal of the intestinal epithelium is the Wnt-mediated signalling pathway, and Wnt signalling is frequently hyperactivated in colorectal cancer. Here we show that casein kinase Iα (CKIα), a component of the β-catenin-destruction complex, is a critical regulator of the Wnt signalling pathway. Inducing the ablation of Csnk1a1 (the gene encoding CKIα) in the gut triggers massive Wnt activation, surprisingly without causing tumorigenesis. CKIα-deficient epithelium shows many of the features of human colorectal tumours in addition to Wnt activation, in particular the induction of the DNA damage response and cellular senescence, both of which are thought to provide a barrier against malignant transformation. The epithelial DNA damage response in mice is accompanied by substantial activation of p53, suggesting that the p53 pathway may counteract the pro-tumorigenic effects of Wnt hyperactivation. Notably, the transition from benign adenomas to invasive colorectal cancer in humans is typically linked to p53 inactivation, underscoring the importance of p53 as a safeguard against malignant progression; however, the mechanism of p53-mediated tumour suppression is unknown. We show that the maintenance of intestinal homeostasis in CKIα-deficient gut requires p53-mediated growth control, because the combined ablation of Csnk1a1 and either p53 or its target gene p21 (also known as Waf1, Cip1, Sdi1 and Cdkn1a) triggered high-grade dysplasia with extensive proliferation. Unexpectedly, these ablations also induced non-proliferating cells to invade the villous lamina propria rapidly, producing invasive carcinomas throughout the small bowel. Furthermore, in p53-deficient gut, loss of heterozygosity of the gene encoding CKIα caused a highly invasive carcinoma, indicating that CKIα functions as a tumour suppressor when p53 is inactivated. We identified a set of genes (the p53-suppressed invasiveness signature, PSIS) that is activated by the loss of both p53 and CKIα and which probably accounts for the brisk induction of invasiveness. PSIS transcription and tumour invasion were suppressed by p21, independently of cell cycle control. Restraining tissue invasion through suppressing PSIS expression is thus a novel tumour-suppressor function of wild-type p53.
Mechanisms of Development | 1999
Rebecca Haffner-Krausz; Marat Gorivodsky; Yali Chen; Peter Lonai
We report that the IIIc transcriptional alternative of Fgfr2 is transcribed in the unfertilized egg and that during early zygotic transcription, messages encoded by both Fgfr2 alternatives (IIIc and IIIb) are present. The Fgfr2 protein was first detected in peripheral blastomeres of compacted morulae. Trophectoderm specificity of Fgfr2 became obvious in the early blastocyst and with maturation its localization underwent further specification, Fgfr2 concentration increased at the abembryonic pole and decreased at the embryonic pole. Moreover Fgfr2 expression became markedly asymmetrical along the animal-vegetal axis of the mature blastocyst. Our observations indicate a role for Fgfr2 in trophectoderm growth and specification and in the orientation and polarity of the preimplantation conceptus.
Nature Communications | 2017
Anna Gorelik; Tamar Sapir; Rebecca Haffner-Krausz; Tsviya Olender; Trent M. Woodruff; Orly Reiner
In recent years the notion that malfunctioning of the immune system may result in developmental brain diseases has emerged. However, the role of immune molecules in the developing brain has not been well explored. The complement pathway converges to cleave C3. Here we show that key proteins in the lectin arm of this pathway, MASP1, MASP2 and C3, are expressed in the developing cortex and that neuronal migration is impaired in knockout and knockdown mice. Molecular mimics of C3 cleavage products rescue the migration defects that have been seen following knockdown of C3 or Masp2. Pharmacological activation of the downstream receptors rescue Masp2 and C3 knockdown as well as C3 knockout. Therefore, we propose that the complement pathway is functionally important in migrating neurons of the developing cortex.
Cerebral Cortex | 2018
Tamar Sapir; Talia Levy; Noga Kozer; Irina Shin; Vanessa Zamor; Rebecca Haffner-Krausz; Jane McGlade; Orly Reiner
The evolutionarily conserved Notch pathway plays an important role in regulation of stem cell renewal and cell fate determination in numerous organs, and as such is a key pathway in normal health and disease processes. Canonical Notch signaling is usually activated by cell contact where transmembrane ligands such as Delta-like and Jagged bind to Notch receptors. Notch activation results in the translocation of the cleaved Notch intracellular domain (NICD) into the nucleus and subsequent activation of transcription. Poly-ubiquitination leading to proteosome degradation of pathway components is one mean of regulating the Notch pathway. Here, we identified that Shootin1 exhibits the surprising propensity of activating the pathway either by interacting with LNX1/2 and promoting poly-ubiquitination of Numb or by complexing with Itch and impairing poly-ubiquitination of NICD. Within the developing brain Shootin1 modulates neuroblasts cell fate by executing 2 opposing activities on ubiquitin ligases, which control Notch signaling on 2 different levels.
Transgenic Research | 1998
Yvan Lallemand; Victor Luria; Rebecca Haffner-Krausz; Peter Lonai
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1999
Esther Arman; Rebecca Haffner-Krausz; Marat Gorivodsky; Peter Lonai
Journal of Cell Biology | 2001
Xiaofeng Li; Yali Chen; Susanne Schéele; Esther Arman; Rebecca Haffner-Krausz; Peter Ekblom; Peter Lonai
Molecular Imaging and Biology | 2011
Vicki Plaks; Stav Sapoznik; Elina Berkovitz; Rebecca Haffner-Krausz; Nava Dekel; Alon Harmelin; Michal Neeman
Journal of Neurochemistry | 2015
Orly Reiner; Anna Gorelik; Tamar Sapir; A. R. Bialas; Beth Stevens; Trent M. Woodruff; Rebecca Haffner-Krausz
Archive | 1999
Rebecca Haffner-Krausz; Marat Gorivodsky; Yali Chen; Peter Lonai