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Dive into the research topics where Rifat Hamoudi is active.

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Featured researches published by Rifat Hamoudi.


Cell | 1999

Bcl10 is involved in t(1;14)(p22;q32) of MALT B cell lymphoma and mutated in multiple tumor types

Tony G. Willis; Dalal M. Jadayel; Ming-Qing Du; Huaizheng Peng; Amanda R. Perry; Munah Abdul-Rauf; Helen P. Price; Loraine Karran; Oluwatosin Majekodunmi; Iwona Wlodarska; Langxing Pan; Tim Crook; Rifat Hamoudi; Peter G. Isaacson; Martin J. S. Dyer

MALT B cell lymphomas with t(1;14)(p22;q32) showed a recurrent breakpoint upstream of the promoter of a novel gene, Bcl10. Bcl10 is a cellular homolog of the equine herpesvirus-2 E10 gene: both contain an amino-terminal caspase recruitment domain (CARD) homologous to that found in several apoptotic molecules. Bcl10 and E10 activated NF-kappaB but caused apoptosis of 293 cells. Bcl10 expressed in a MALT lymphoma exhibited a frameshift mutation resulting in truncation distal to the CARD. Truncated Bcl10 activated NF-kappaB but did not induce apoptosis. Wild-type Bcl10 suppressed transformation, whereas mutant forms had lost this activity and displayed gain-of-function transforming activity. Similar mutations were detected in other tumor types, indicating that Bcl10 may be commonly involved in the pathogenesis of human malignancy.


The Lancet | 2001

Resistance of t(11;18) positive gastric mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue lymphoma to Helicobacter pylori eradication therapy

Hongxiang Liu; Agnes Ruskon-Fourmestraux; Anne Lavergne-Slove; Hongtao Ye; Thierry Molina; Yoram Bouhnik; Rifat Hamoudi; Tim C. Diss; Ahmet Dogan; Francis Mégraud; Jean Claude Rambaud; Ming-Qing Du; Peter G. Isaacson

20-30% of gastric mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphoma associated with Helicobacter pylori do not regress after antibiotic therapy. Regression can be assessed only by extended follow-up. To assess whether t(11;18, q21;q21), which results in a chimeric transcript between the AP12 and MLT genes, predicts lymphoma resistance to antibiotic therapy, we screened for the fusion transcript with RT-PCR in ten responsive and 12 non-responsive gastric MALT lymphomas. The AP12-MLT transcript was detected in nine (75%) of 12 patients non-responsive to antibiotic therapy but not in responsive patients. Most H pylori-associated gastric MALT lymphomas that do not respond to antibiotic therapy are associated with t(11;18, q21;q21).


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2003

Two Percent of Men with Early-Onset Prostate Cancer Harbor Germline Mutations in the BRCA2 Gene

Stephen M. Edwards; Zsofia Kote-Jarai; Julia Meitz; Rifat Hamoudi; Questa Hope; Peter Osin; Rachel Jackson; Christine Southgate; Rashmi Singh; Alison Falconer; David P. Dearnaley; Audrey Ardern-Jones; A Murkin; Anna Dowe; Kelly J; Sue Williams; Richard Oram; Margaret Stevens; Dawn Teare; A.J. Bruce Ponder; Simon A. Gayther; Doug Easton; Rosalind Eeles

Studies of families with breast cancer have indicated that male carriers of BRCA2 mutations are at increased risk of prostate cancer, particularly at an early age. To evaluate the contribution of BRCA2 mutations to early-onset prostate cancer, we screened the complete coding sequence of BRCA2 for germline mutations, in 263 men with diagnoses of prostate cancer who were </=55 years of age. Protein-truncating mutations were found in six men (2.3%; 95% confidence interval 0.8%-5.0%), and all of these mutations were clustered outside the ovarian-cancer cluster region. The relative risk of developing prostate cancer by age 56 years from a deleterious germline BRCA2 mutation was 23-fold. Four of the patients with mutations did not have a family history of breast or ovarian cancer. Twenty-two variants of uncertain significance were also identified. These results confirm that BRCA2 is a high-risk prostate-cancer-susceptibility gene and have potential implications for the management of early-onset prostate cancer, in both patients and their relatives.


Nature Genetics | 2013

Distinct H3F3A and H3F3B driver mutations define chondroblastoma and giant cell tumor of bone

Sam Behjati; Patrick Tarpey; Nadège Presneau; Susanne Scheipl; Nischalan Pillay; Peter Van Loo; David C. Wedge; Susanna L. Cooke; Gunes Gundem; Helen Davies; Serena Nik-Zainal; Sancha Martin; Stuart McLaren; Victoria Goodie; Ben Robinson; Adam Butler; Jon Teague; Dina Halai; Bhavisha Khatri; Ola Myklebost; Daniel Baumhoer; Gernot Jundt; Rifat Hamoudi; Roberto Tirabosco; M Fernanda Amary; P. Andrew Futreal; Michael R. Stratton; Peter J. Campbell; Adrienne M. Flanagan

It is recognized that some mutated cancer genes contribute to the development of many cancer types, whereas others are cancer type specific. For genes that are mutated in multiple cancer classes, mutations are usually similar in the different affected cancer types. Here, however, we report exquisite tumor type specificity for different histone H3.3 driver alterations. In 73 of 77 cases of chondroblastoma (95%), we found p.Lys36Met alterations predominantly encoded in H3F3B, which is one of two genes for histone H3.3. In contrast, in 92% (49/53) of giant cell tumors of bone, we found histone H3.3 alterations exclusively in H3F3A, leading to p.Gly34Trp or, in one case, p.Gly34Leu alterations. The mutations were restricted to the stromal cell population and were not detected in osteoclasts or their precursors. In the context of previously reported H3F3A mutations encoding p.Lys27Met and p.Gly34Arg or p.Gly34Val alterations in childhood brain tumors, a remarkable picture of tumor type specificity for histone H3.3 driver alterations emerges, indicating that histone H3.3 residues, mutations and genes have distinct functions.


Nature Genetics | 2000

Localization to Xq27 of a susceptibility gene for testicular germ-cell tumours

Elizabeth A. Rapley; Gillian P. Crockford; Dawn Teare; Patrick J. Biggs; Sheila Seal; Rita Barfoot; S Edwards; Rifat Hamoudi; Ketil Heimdal; Sophie D. Fosså; Katherine L. Tucker; Jenny Donald; Felicity Collins; Michael Friedlander; David Hogg; Paul E. Goss; Axel Heidenreich; Wilma Ormiston; Peter A. Daly; David Forman; R. Timothy D. Oliver; Michael Gordon Leahy; Robert Huddart; Colin S. Cooper; Julia G. Bodmer; Douglas F. Easton; Michael R. Stratton; D. Timothy Bishop

Testicular germ-cell tumours (TGCT) affect 1 in 500 men and are the most common cancer in males aged 15–40 in Western European populations. The incidence of TGCT has risen dramatically over the last century. Known risk factors for TGCT include a history of undescended testis (UDT), testicular dysgenesis, infertility, previously diagnosed TGCT (ref. 7) and a family history of the disease. Brothers of men with TGCT have an 8-10-fold risk of developing TGCT (refs 8,9), whereas the relative risk to fathers and sons is fourfold (ref. 9). This familial relative risk is much higher than that for most other types of cancer. We have collected samples from 134 families with two or more cases of TGCT, 87 of which are affected sibpairs. A genome-wide linkage search yielded a heterogeneity lod (hlod) score of 2.01 on chromosome Xq27 using all families compatible with X inheritance. We obtained a hlod score of 4.7 from families with at least one bilateral case, corresponding to a genome-wide significance level of P=0.034. The proportion of families with UDT linked to this locus was 73% compared with 26% of families without UDT (P=0.03). Our results provide evidence for a TGCT susceptibility gene on chromosome Xq27 that may also predispose to UDT.


Oncogene | 1997

Fusion of splicing factor genes PSF and NonO (p54nrb) to the TFE3 gene in papillary renal cell carcinoma

Jeremy Clark; Yong-J Lu; Sk Sidhar; C Parker; S. Gill; Damian Smedley; Rifat Hamoudi; Wm Linehan; Janet Shipley; Colin S. Cooper

We demonstrate that the cytogenetically defined translocation t(X;1)(p11.2;p34) observed in papillary renal cell carcinomas results in the fusion of the splicing factor gene PSF located at 1p34 to the TFE3 helix – loop – helix transcription factor gene at Xp11.2. In addition we define an X chromosome inversion inv(X)(p11.2;q12) that results in the fusion of the NonO (p54nrb) gene to TFE3. NonO (p54nrb), the human homologue of the Drosophila gene NonAdiss which controls the male courtship song, is closely related to PSF and also believed to be involved in RNA splicing. In each case the rearrangement results in the fusion of almost the entire splicing factor protein to the TFE3 DNA-binding domain. These observations suggest the possibility of intriguing links between the processes of RNA splicing, DNA transcription and oncogenesis.


The Journal of Pathology | 2006

Chlamydia psittaci is variably associated with ocular adnexal MALT lymphoma in different geographical regions

Estelle Chanudet; Yuanping Zhou; Chris M. Bacon; Andrew Wotherspoon; Hans Konrad Müller-Hermelink; Patrick Adam; H Y Dong; D de Jong; Yingchang Li; R Wei; X Gong; Q Wu; Renzo Ranaldi; Gaia Goteri; Stefano Pileri; Hongtao Ye; Rifat Hamoudi; Hongxiang Liu; John Radford; Ming-Qing Du

Infectious agents play a critical role in MALT lymphoma development. Studies from Italy showed Chlamydia psittaci infection in 87% of ocular adnexal MALT lymphomas and complete or partial regression of the lymphoma after C. psittaci eradication in four of nine cases. However, C. psittaci was not demonstrated in ocular adnexal MALT lymphomas from the USA. This study was thus designed to investigate further the role of C. psittaci, and other infectious agents commonly associated with chronic eye disease, in the development of ocular adnexal MALT lymphoma. The presence of C. psittaci, C. trachomatis, C. pneumoniae, herpes simplex virus 1 and 2 (HSV1, HSV2), and adenovirus 8 and 19 (ADV8, ADV19) was assessed separately by polymerase chain reaction in 142 ocular adnexal MALT lymphomas, 53 non‐marginal zone lymphomas, and 51 ocular adnexal biopsies without a lymphoproliferative disorder (LPD), from six geographical regions. C. psittaci was detected at similar low frequencies in non‐LPD and non‐marginal zone lymphoma groups from different geographical regions (0–14%). Overall, the prevalence of C. psittaci was significantly higher in MALT lymphomas (22%) than in non‐LPD (10%, p = 0.042) and non‐marginal zone lymphoma cases (9%, p = 0.033). However, the prevalence of C. psittaci infection in MALT lymphoma showed marked variation among the six geographical regions examined, being most frequent in Germany (47%), followed by the East Coast of the USA (35%) and the Netherlands (29%), but relatively low in Italy (13%), the UK (12%), and Southern China (11%). No significant differences in the detection of C. pneumoniae, C. trachomatis, HSV1, HSV2, ADV8, and ADV19 were found between lymphomas and controls from different geographical regions. In conclusion, our results show that C. psittaci, but not C. pneumoniae, C. trachomatis, HSV1, HSV2, ADV8 or ADV19, is associated with ocular adnexal MALT lymphoma and that this association is variable in different geographical areas. Copyright


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2009

High Numbers of Tumor-Infiltrating Programmed Cell Death 1–Positive Regulatory Lymphocytes Are Associated With Improved Overall Survival in Follicular Lymphoma

Joaquim Carreras; Armando López-Guillermo; Giovanna Roncador; Neus Villamor; Lluis Colomo; Antonio Martinez; Rifat Hamoudi; William J. Howat; Emili Montserrat; Elias Campo

PURPOSE Tumor microenvironment influences the behavior of follicular lymphoma (FL), although the specific cell subsets involved are not well known. The aim of this study was to determine the impact of programmed cell death 1 (PD-1) -positive inhibitory immunoregulatory lymphoid cells in the clinicobiologic features and outcome of patients with FL. PATIENTS AND METHODS We examined samples from 100 patients (53 men and 47 women; median age, 54 years) at diagnosis, as well as in 32 patients at first relapse, with a recently generated monoclonal antibody against PD-1. The cells were quantified using computerized image analysis. Additional analysis consisted of double immunofluorescence and flow cytometry. RESULTS PD-1 expression was alternative to FOXP3 in lymphoid cells from both reactive tonsils and FL. At diagnosis, the median percentage of PD-1-positive cells was 14% (range, 0.1% to 74%). Patients with grade 3 FL, poor performance status, and high serum lactate dehydrogenase showed lower numbers of PD-1-positive cells. After a median follow-up of 6.2 years, patients with PD-1-positive cells <or= 5% (n = 25), 6% to 33% (n = 50), and more than 33% (n = 25) had a 5-year progression-free survival rate of 20%, 46%, and 48% (P = .038) and overall survival (OS) of 50%, 77%, and 95% (P = .004), respectively. PD-1 and FL International Prognostic Index maintained prognostic value for OS in multivariate analysis. Patients with PD-1-positive cells <or= 5% showed a higher risk of histologic transformation. At that time, transformed diffuse large B-cell lymphomas had lower percentage of PD-1-positive cells than FL. CONCLUSION A high content of PD-1-positive cells predicted favorable outcome of FL patients, whereas a marked reduction is observed in transformation.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 1997

Familial nontoxic multinodular thyroid goiter locus maps to chromosome 14q but does not account for familial nonmedullary thyroid cancer.

Graham R. Bignell; Federico Canzian; Maryam Shayeghi; Markus Stark; Yin Yao Shugart; Patrick J. Biggs; Jonathan Mangion; Rifat Hamoudi; Jacalyn Rosenblatt; Paul N. Buu; Sophie Sun; Sheldon S. Stoffer; David E. Goldgar; Giovanni Romeo; Richard S. Houlston; Steven A. Narod; Michael R. Stratton; William D. Foulkes

Thyroid goiter is a common condition that is often associated with iodine deficiency. Familial forms of goiter in areas not known to feature iodine deficiency are much less common. We have performed a genomic search on a single large Canadian family with 18 cases of nontoxic multinodular goiter in which 2 individuals also had papillary lesions highly suggestive of papillary carcinoma. A locus on chromosome 14q (MNG1 [multinodular goiter 1]) has been identified, with a maximal two-point LOD score of 3.8 at D14S1030 and a multipoint LOD score of 4.88 at the same marker, defined by D14S1062 (upper boundary) and D14S267 (lower boundary). The gene encoding thyroid-stimulating hormone receptor (TSHR), which is located on chromosome 14q, is outside the linked region. To determine the role of this gene in familial nonmedullary thyroid cancer (NMTC), we studied 37 smaller pedigrees each containing at least two cases of NMTC. Analysis by both parametric and nonparametric methods indicates that only a very small proportion of familial NMTC (point estimate 0.001, support intervals 0-.6 under a dominant model) is attributable to MNG1.


International Journal of Cancer | 1999

Androgen receptor polymorphisms: Association with prostate cancer risk, relapse and overall survival

Stephen M. Edwards; Mike D. Badzioch; Ralph Minter; Rifat Hamoudi; Nadine Collins; Audrey Ardern-Jones; Anna Dowe; Simon Osborne; Kelly J; R. J. Shearer; Doug Easton; Grady F. Saunders; David P. Dearnaley; Rosalind Eeles

Several reports have suggested that one or both of the trinucleotide repeat polymorphisms in the human androgen receptor (hAR) gene, (CAG)n coding for polyglutamine and (GGC)ncoding for polyglycine, may be associated with prostate cancer risk; but no study has investigated their association with disease progression. We present here a study of both hAR trinucleotide repeat polymorphisms not only as they relate to the initial diagnosis but also as they are associated with disease progression after therapy. Lymphocyte DNA samples from 178 British Caucasian prostate cancer patients and 195 control individuals were genotyped by PCR for the (CAG)n and (GGC)n polymorphisms in hAR. Univariate Cox proportional hazard analysis indicated that stage, grade and GGC repeat length were individually significant factors associated with disease‐free survival (DFS) and overall survival (OS). The relative risk (RR) of relapse for men with more than 16 GGC repeats was 1.74 (95% CI 1.08–2.79) and of dying from any cause, 1.98 (1.13–3.45). Adjusting for stage and grade, GGC effects remained but were not significant (RRDFS= 1.60, p = 0.052; RROS= 1.65, p = 0.088). The greatest effects were in stage T1‐T2 (RRDFS= 3.56, 95% CI 1.13–11.21) and grade 1 (RRDFS= 6.47, 95% CI 0.57–72.8) tumours. No differences between patient and control allele distributions were found by odds‐ratio analysis, nor were trends with stage or grade evident in the proportion of short CAG alleles. Non‐significant trends with stage and grade were found in the proportion of short GGC alleles. The (GGC)n polymorphism in this population is a significant predictor of disease outcome. Since the (GGC)n effect is strongest in early‐stage tumours, this marker may help forecast aggressive behaviour and could be used to identify those patients meriting more radical treatment. Int. J. Cancer (Pred. Oncol.) 84:458–465, 1999.

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Ming-Qing Du

University of Cambridge

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Hongtao Ye

University of Cambridge

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Hongxiang Liu

Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

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Ahmet Dogan

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Laurence Lovat

University College London

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Andrew Wotherspoon

The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust

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Michael R. Stratton

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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Daniel Catovsky

Institute of Cancer Research

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