Rihab Nasr
American University of Beirut
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Publication
Featured researches published by Rihab Nasr.
Nature Cell Biology | 2008
Valérie Lallemand-Breitenbach; Marion Jeanne; Shirine Benhenda; Rihab Nasr; Ming Lei; Laurent Peres; Jun Zhou; Jun Zhu; Brian Raught
In acute promyelocytic leukaemia (APL), arsenic trioxide induces degradation of the fusion protein encoded by the PML–RARA oncogene, differentiation of leukaemic cells and produces clinical remissions. SUMOylation of its PML moiety was previously implicated, but the nature of the degradation pathway involved and the role of PML–RARα catabolism in the response to therapy have both remained elusive. Here, we demonstrate that arsenic-induced PML SUMOylation triggers its Lys 48-linked polyubiquitination and proteasome-dependent degradation. When exposed to arsenic, SUMOylated PML recruits RNF4, the human orthologue of the yeast SUMO-dependent E3 ubiquitin-ligase, as well as ubiquitin and proteasomes onto PML nuclear bodies. Arsenic-induced differentiation is impaired in cells transformed by a non-degradable PML–RARα SUMOylation mutant or in APL cells transduced with a dominant-negative RNF4, directly implicating PML–RARα catabolism in the therapeutic response. We thus identify PML as the first protein degraded by SUMO-dependent polyubiquitination. As PML SUMOylation recruits not only RNF4, ubiquitin and proteasomes, but also many SUMOylated proteins onto PML nuclear bodies, these domains could physically integrate the SUMOylation, ubiquitination and degradation pathways.
Nature Medicine | 2008
Rihab Nasr; Marie-Claude Guillemin; Omar Ferhi; Hassan Soilihi; Laurent Peres; Caroline Berthier; Philippe Rousselot; Macarena Robledo-Sarmiento; Valérie Lallemand-Breitenbach; Bernard Gourmel; Dominique Vitoux; Pier Paolo Pandolfi; Cécile Rochette-Egly; Jun Zhu
Retinoic acid and arsenic trioxide target the protein stability and transcriptional repression activity of the fusion oncoprotein PML-RARA, resulting in regression of acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL). Phenotypically, retinoic acid induces differentiation of APL cells. Here we show that retinoic acid also triggers growth arrest of leukemia-initiating cells (LICs) ex vivo and their clearance in PML-RARA mouse APL in vivo. Retinoic acid treatment of mouse APLs expressing the fusion protein PLZF-RARA triggers full differentiation, but not LIC loss or disease remission, establishing that differentiation and LIC loss can be uncoupled. Although retinoic acid and arsenic synergize to clear LICs through cooperative PML-RARA degradation, this combination does not enhance differentiation. A cyclic AMP (cAMP)-dependent phosphorylation site in PML-RARA is crucial for retinoic acid–induced PML-RARA degradation and LIC clearance. Moreover, activation of cAMP signaling enhances LIC loss by retinoic acid, identifying cAMP as another potential APL therapy. Thus, whereas transcriptional activation of PML-RARA is likely to control differentiation, its catabolism triggers LIC eradication and long-term remission of mouse APL. Therapy-triggered degradation of oncoproteins could be a general strategy to eradicate cancer stem cells.
Lancet Oncology | 2004
Ali Bazarbachi; David Ghez; Yves Lepelletier; Rihab Nasr; Marwan El-Sabban; Olivier Hermine
Adult T-cell leukaemia or lymphoma is an aggressive malignant disease of mature activated T cells caused by human T-cell lymphotropic virus type I. Patients with this disease have a very poor outlook because of intrinsic chemoresistance and severe immunosuppression. In acute adult T-cell leukaemia, clinical trials in Japan show that although non-targeted combinations of chemotherapy improve response, they do not have a significant effect on complete remission and survival. Antiretroviral therapy with combination zidovudine and interferon alfa, which induces a high rate of complete remission and lengthens survival, should be the first treatment option in acute adult T-cell leukaemia. Patients with adult T-cell lymphoma might benefit from initial aggressive chemotherapy followed by antiretroviral therapy. To prevent relapse in all patients allogeneic bone-marrow transplantation when feasible, or additional targeted therapy, should be mandatory. Based on current pathophysiology, we discuss promising new drugs such as arsenic trioxide, proteasome inhibitors, retinoids, and angiogenesis inhibitors, as well as cellular immunotherapy.
Oncogene | 2005
Rihab Nasr; Marwan El-Sabban; José-Antonio Karam; Ghassan Dbaibo; Youmna Kfoury; Bertrand Arnulf; Yves Lepelletier; Françoise Bex; Olivier Hermine; Ali Bazarbachi
HTLV-I associated adult T-cell leukemia (ATL) and HTLV-I-negative peripheral T-cell lymphomas are associated with poor prognosis. Using pharmacological concentrations of the proteasome inhibitor PS-341, we demonstrate inhibition of cell proliferation and induction of apoptosis in fresh ATL cells, HTLV-I transformed and HTLV-I-negative malignant T cells, while normal resting or activated T lymphocytes were resistant. Combination of PS-341 and doxorubicin or etoposide resulted in an additive growth inhibition. In HTLV-I-negative malignant cells, PS-341 treatment significantly downregulated the antiapoptotic protein X-IAP and to a lesser extent c-IAP-1 and bcl-XL and resulted in caspase-dependent apoptosis. In HTLV-I transformed cells, the inhibition of the proteasomal degradation of Tax by PS-341 likely explains the relative protection of HTLV-I infected cells against caspase-dependent apoptosis. PS-341 treatment of these cells stabilized IκBα, IκBβ, IκBɛ, p21, p27 and p53 proteins and selectively inhibited Rel-A DNA binding NF-κB complexes. In both HTLV-I-positive and -negative cells, PS-341 treatment induced ceramide accumulation that correlated with apoptosis. We conclude that PS-341 affects multiple pathways critical for the survival of HTLV-I-positive and -negative malignant T cells supporting a potential therapeutic role for PS-341 in both ATL and HTLV-I-negative T-cell lymphomas, whether alone or in combination with chemotherapy.
Clinical Cancer Research | 2009
Rihab Nasr; Valérie Lallemand-Breitenbach; Jun Zhu; Marie-Claude Guillemin
Acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) is characterized by a specific t(15;17) chromosomal translocation that yields the PML/RARA fusion gene. Clinically, besides chemotherapy, two drugs induce clinical remissions: retinoic acid (RA) and arsenic trioxide (As). Both agents directly target PML/RARA-mediated transcriptional repression and protein stability, inducing to various extent promyelocyte differentiation and clinical remission of APL patients. RA targets the RARA moiety of the fusion, whereas arsenic targets its PML part. PML/RARA expression in the mouse is sufficient to initiate APL. The RA-As association, which synergizes for PML/RARA degradation but not for differentiation, rapidly clears leukemia initiating cells (LIC), resulting in APL eradication in murine APL models, but also in several APL clinical trials. Cyclic AMP triggered PML/RARA phosphorylation also enhances RA-induced APL regression, PML/RARA degradation, and LIC clearance, raising new options for therapy-resistant patients. Although differentiation has a major role in debulking of the tumor, PML/RARA degradation seems to be the primary basis for APL eradication by the RA-As association. Oncoprotein degradation could be a general therapeutic strategy that may be extended beyond APL. (Clin Cancer Res 2009;15(20):6321–6)
Leukemia | 2000
Ali Bazarbachi; Rihab Nasr; Marwan El-Sabban; A Mahé; Renaud Mahieux; Antoine Gessain; Nadine Darwiche; Ghassan Dbaibo; J Kersual; Y Zermati; L Dianoux; Mk Chelbi-Alix; Olivier Hermine
The combination of the anti-viral agents, zidovudine (AZT) and interferon-α (IFN), is a potent treatment of HTLV-I-associated adult T cell leukemia/lymphoma (ATL). In this study we investigate the possible mechanism of action of this combination by examining several cellular parameters including cell proliferation, cell cycle distribution and apoptosis. The ATL-derived T cell lines HuT-102 and MT-2 served as models. HTLV-I negative T cell lines (CEM and Jurkat) were used as controls. No significant modification of cell growth was observed except at suprapharmacological doses of AZT and IFN. Moreover, these effects were less pronounced in HTLV-I-infected cell lines compared to control cell lines. AZT and IFN treatment did not induce any significant modification of the expression of bcl-2 and p53. Interestingly no in vitrocytotoxic effect of AZT/IFN combination was observed on fresh leukemic cells derived from an acute ATL patient at diagnosis despite achievement of in vivo complete remission using the same therapy. These results suggest that the therapeutic effect of AZT and IFN is not through a direct cytotoxic effect of these drugs on the leukemic cells.
Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2010
Hiba El Hajj; Marwan El-Sabban; Hideki Hasegawa; Ghazi Zaatari; Julien Ablain; Shahrazad Saab; Anne Janin; Rami Mahfouz; Rihab Nasr; Youmna Kfoury; Christophe Nicot; Olivier Hermine; William W. Hall; Ali Bazarbachi
Treatment with a combination of interferon-α and arsenic trioxide ablates leukemia-initiating activity before reducing primary tumor bulk in a murine model of adult T cell leukemia.
Oncogene | 2008
Youmna Kfoury; Rihab Nasr; Arnaud Favre-Bonvin; Marwan El-Sabban; Noémie Renault; Marie-Louise Giron; N. Setterblad; H El Hajj; Estelle Chiari; A. G. Mikati; Olivier Hermine; Ali Saïb; Claudine Pique; Ali Bazarbachi
Constitutive activation of the NF-κB pathway by the Tax oncoprotein plays a crucial role in the proliferation and transformation of HTLV-I infected T lymphocytes. We have previously shown that Tax ubiquitylation on C-terminal lysines is critical for binding of Tax to IκB kinase (IKK) and its subsequent activation. Here, we report that ubiquitylated Tax is not associated with active cytosolic IKK subunits, but binds endogenous IKK-α, -β, -γ, targeting them to the centrosome. K63-ubiquitylated Tax colocalizes at the centrosome with IKK-γ, while K48-ubiquitylated Tax is stabilized upon proteasome inhibition. Altogether, these results support a model in which K63-ubiquitylated Tax activates IKK in a centrosome-associated signalosome, leading to the production of Tax-free active cytoplasmic IKK. These observations highlight an unsuspected link between Tax-induced IKK activation and the centrosome.
Cancer Research | 2004
Ali Bazarbachi; Raghida Abou Merhi; Antoine Gessain; Rabih S. Talhouk; Hilda El-Khoury; Rihab Nasr; Olivier Gout; Rita Sulahian; Fadia R. Homaidan; Olivier Hermine; Marwan El-Sabban
Extravasation of tumor cells through the endothelial barrier is a critical step in cancer metastasis. Human T-cell lymphotropic virus type I (HTLV-I)-associated adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma (ATL) is an aggressive disease characterized by visceral invasion. We show that ATL and HTLV-I-associated myelopathy patients exhibit high plasma levels of functional vascular endothelial growth factor and basic fibroblast growth factor. The viral oncoprotein Tax transactivates the promoter of the gap-junction protein connexin-43 and enhances gap-junction-mediated heterocellular communication with endothelial cells. The interaction of HTLV-I-transformed cells with endothelial cells induces the gelatinase activity of matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-2 and MMP-9 in endothelial cells and down-regulates the tissue inhibitor of MMP. This leads to subendothelial basement membrane degradation followed by endothelial cell retraction, allowing neoplastic lymphocyte extravasation. We propose a model that offers a mechanistic explanation for extravasation of HTLV-I-infected cells: after specific adhesion to endothelia of target organs, tumor cells induce a local and transient angiogenesis-like mechanism through paracrine stimulation and direct cell-cell communication with endothelial cells. This culminates in a breach of the endothelial barrier function, allowing cancer cell invasion. This local and transient angiogenesis-like sequence that may facilitate visceral invasion in ATL represents a potential target for ATL therapy.
Leukemia | 2012
G. A. S. dos Santos; R. S. Abreu e Lima; Cezar R. Pestana; Anderson Lima; P. S. Scheucher; C. H. Thome; H. L. Gimenes-Teixeira; B. A. A. Santana-Lemos; Antonio R. Lucena-Araujo; Fernando P. Rodrigues; Rihab Nasr; Sérgio A. Uyemura; Roberto P. Falcao; Pier Paolo Pandolfi; Carlos Curti; Eduardo M. Rego
The vitamin E derivative (+)α-tocopheryl succinate (α-TOS) exerts pro-apoptotic effects in a wide range of tumors and is well tolerated by normal tissues. Previous studies point to a mitochondrial involvement in the action mechanism; however, the early steps have not been fully elucidated. In a model of acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) derived from hCG-PML-RARα transgenic mice, we demonstrated that α-TOS is as effective as arsenic trioxide or all-trans retinoic acid, the current gold standards of therapy. We also demonstrated that α-TOS induces an early dissipation of the mitochondrial membrane potential in APL cells and studies with isolated mitochondria revealed that this action may result from the inhibition of mitochondrial respiratory chain complex I. Moreover, α-TOS promoted accumulation of reactive oxygen species hours before mitochondrial cytochrome c release and caspases activation. Therefore, an in vivo antileukemic action and a novel mitochondrial target were revealed for α-TOS, as well as mitochondrial respiratory complex I was highlighted as potential target for anticancer therapy.