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Dive into the research topics where Robert Lesurf is active.

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Featured researches published by Robert Lesurf.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Met induces mammary tumors with diverse histologies and is associated with poor outcome and human basal breast cancer

Marisa G. Ponzo; Robert Lesurf; Stephanie Petkiewicz; Frances P. O'Malley; Dushanthi Pinnaduwage; Irene L. Andrulis; Shelley B. Bull; Naila Chughtai; Dongmei Zuo; Margarita Souleimanova; David Germain; Atilla Omeroglu; Robert D. Cardiff; Michael Hallett; Morag Park

Elevated MET receptor tyrosine kinase correlates with poor outcome in breast cancer, yet the reasons for this are poorly understood. We thus generated a transgenic mouse model targeting expression of an oncogenic Met receptor (Metmt) to the mammary epithelium. We show that Metmt induces mammary tumors with multiple phenotypes. These reflect tumor subtypes with gene expression and immunostaining profiles sharing similarities to human basal and luminal breast cancers. Within the basal subtype, Metmt induces tumors with signatures of WNT and epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT). Among human breast cancers, MET is primarily elevated in basal and ERBB2-positive subtypes with poor prognosis, and we show that MET, together with EMT marker, SNAIL, are highly predictive of poor prognosis in lymph node-negative patients. By generating a unique mouse model in which the Met receptor tyrosine kinase is expressed in the mammary epithelium, along with the examination of MET expression in human breast cancer, we have established a specific link between MET and basal breast cancer. This work identifies basal breast cancers and, additionally, poor-outcome breast cancers, as those that may benefit from anti-MET receptor therapies.


Nature Genetics | 2017

CIViC is a community knowledgebase for expert crowdsourcing the clinical interpretation of variants in cancer

Malachi Griffith; Nicholas C. Spies; Kilannin Krysiak; Joshua F. McMichael; Adam Coffman; Arpad M. Danos; Benjamin J. Ainscough; Cody Ramirez; Damian Tobias Rieke; Lynzey Kujan; Erica K. Barnell; Alex H. Wagner; Zachary L. Skidmore; Amber Wollam; Connor Liu; Martin R. Jones; Rachel L. Bilski; Robert Lesurf; Yan Yang Feng; Nakul M. Shah; Melika Bonakdar; Lee Trani; Matthew Matlock; Avinash Ramu; Katie M. Campbell; Gregory Spies; Aaron Graubert; Karthik Gangavarapu; James M. Eldred; David E. Larson

CIViC is an expert-crowdsourced knowledgebase for Clinical Interpretation of Variants in Cancer describing the therapeutic, prognostic, diagnostic and predisposing relevance of inherited and somatic variants of all types. CIViC is committed to open-source code, open-access content, public application programming interfaces (APIs) and provenance of supporting evidence to allow for the transparent creation of current and accurate variant interpretations for use in cancer precision medicine.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

PTEN Deficiency in a Luminal ErbB-2 Mouse Model Results in Dramatic Acceleration of Mammary Tumorigenesis and Metastasis

Babette Schade; Trisha Rao; Nathalie Dourdin; Robert Lesurf; Michael Hallett; Robert D. Cardiff; William J. Muller

Overexpression and/or amplification of the ErbB-2 oncogene as well as inactivation of the PTEN tumor suppressor are two important genetic events in human breast carcinogenesis. To address the biological impact of conditional inactivation of PTEN on ErbB-2-induced mammary tumorigenesis, we generated a novel transgenic mouse model that utilizes the murine mammary tumor virus (MMTV) promoter to directly couple expression of activated ErbB-2 and Cre recombinase to the same mammary epithelial cell (MMTV-NIC). Disruption of PTEN in the mammary epithelium of the MMTV-NIC model system dramatically accelerated the formation of multifocal and highly metastatic mammary tumors, which exhibited homogenous pathology. PTEN-deficient/NIC-induced tumorigenesis was associated with an increase in angiogenesis. Moreover, inactivation of PTEN in the MMTV-NIC mouse model resulted in hyperactivation of the phosphatidylinositol 3′-kinase/Akt signaling pathway. However, like the parental strain, tumors obtained from PTEN-deficient/NIC mice displayed histopathological and molecular features of the luminal subtype of primary human breast cancer. Taken together, our findings provide important implications in understanding the molecular determinants of mammary tumorigenesis driven by PTEN deficiency and ErbB-2 activation and could provide a valuable tool for testing the efficacy of therapeutic strategies that target these critical signaling pathways.


Cancer Research | 2008

Phosphatase and Tensin Homologue Deleted on Chromosome 10 Deficiency Accelerates Tumor Induction in a Mouse Model of ErbB-2 Mammary Tumorigenesis

Nathalie Dourdin; Babette Schade; Robert Lesurf; Michael Hallett; Robert J. Munn; Robert D. Cardiff; William J. Muller

Loss of the tumor suppressor phosphatase and tensin homologue deleted on chromosome 10 (PTEN) and amplification or elevated expression of ErbB-2 are both involved in human breast cancer. To directly test the importance of these genetic events in mammary tumorigenesis, we have assessed whether mammary-specific disruption of PTEN could cooperate with activation of ErbB-2. Transgenic mice expressing ErbB-2 under the transcriptional control of its endogenous promoter (ErbB-2(KI)) were interbred with mice carrying conditional PTEN alleles and an MMTV/Cre transgene. Loss of one or both PTEN alleles resulted in a dramatic acceleration of mammary tumor onset and an increased occurrence of lung metastases in the ErbB-2(KI) strain. Tumor progression in PTEN-deficient/ErbB-2(KI) strains was associated with elevated ErbB-2 protein levels, which were not due to ErbB-2 amplification or to a dramatic increase in ErbB-2 transcripts. Moreover, the PTEN-deficient/ErbB-2(KI)-derived mouse mammary tumors display striking morphologic heterogeneity in comparison with the homogeneous pathology of the ErbB-2(KI) parental strain. Therefore, inactivation of PTEN would not only have a dramatic effect on ErbB-2-induced mammary tumorigenesis but would also lead to the formation of mammary tumors that, in part, display pathologic and molecular features associated with the basal-like subtype of primary human breast cancer.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Met synergizes with p53 loss to induce mammary tumors that possess features of claudin-low breast cancer

Jennifer F. Knight; Robert Lesurf; Hong Zhao; Dushanthi Pinnaduwage; Ryan R. Davis; Sadiq M. Saleh; Dongmei Zuo; Monica A. Naujokas; Naila Chughtai; Jason I. Herschkowitz; Aleix Prat; Anna Marie Mulligan; William J. Muller; Robert D. Cardiff; Jeff P. Gregg; Irene L. Andrulis; Michael Hallett; Morag Park

Significance Triple-negative breast cancers lack targeted therapies and are subdivided into molecular subtypes, including basal and claudin-low. Preclinical models representing these subtypes are limited. We have developed a murine model in which mammary gland expression of a receptor tyrosine kinase (MET) and loss of tumor suppressor gene p53 (Trp53), synergize to promote tumors with pathological and molecular features of claudin-low breast cancer. These tumors require MET signaling for proliferation, as well as mesenchymal characteristics, which are key features of claudin-low biology. This work associates MET expression and p53 loss with claudin-low breast cancers and highly proliferative breast cancers of poor outcome. Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) accounts for ∼20% of cases and contributes to basal and claudin-low molecular subclasses of the disease. TNBCs have poor prognosis, display frequent mutations in tumor suppressor gene p53 (TP53), and lack targeted therapies. The MET receptor tyrosine kinase is elevated in TNBC and transgenic Met models (Metmt) develop basal-like tumors. To investigate collaborating events in the genesis of TNBC, we generated Metmt mice with conditional loss of murine p53 (Trp53) in mammary epithelia. Somatic Trp53 loss, in combination with Metmt, significantly increased tumor penetrance over Metmt or Trp53 loss alone. Unlike Metmt tumors, which are histologically diverse and enriched in a basal-like molecular signature, the majority of Metmt tumors with Trp53 loss displayed a spindloid pathology with a distinct molecular signature that resembles the human claudin-low subtype of TNBC, including diminished claudins, an epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition signature, and decreased expression of the microRNA-200 family. Moreover, although mammary specific loss of Trp53 promotes tumors with diverse pathologies, those with spindloid pathology and claudin-low signature display genomic Met amplification. In both models, MET activity is required for maintenance of the claudin-low morphological phenotype, in which MET inhibitors restore cell-cell junctions, rescue claudin 1 expression, and abrogate growth and dissemination of cells in vivo. Among human breast cancers, elevated levels of MET and stabilized TP53, indicative of mutation, correlate with highly proliferative TNBCs of poor outcome. This work shows synergy between MET and TP53 loss for claudin-low breast cancer, identifies a restricted claudin-low gene signature, and provides a rationale for anti-MET therapies in TNBC.


Cancer Research | 2013

β-catenin signaling is a critical event in ErbB2-mediated mammary tumor progression

Babette Schade; Robert Lesurf; Sanguin-Gendreau; T Bui; Geneviève Deblois; Sandra A O'Toole; Ewan K.A. Millar; S. J Zardawi; Elena Lopez-Knowles; R. Sutherland; Giguere; Michael Kahn; Michael Hallett; William J. Muller

Although ERBB2 amplification and overexpression is correlated with poor outcome in breast cancer, the molecular mechanisms underlying the aggressive nature of these tumors has not been fully elucidated. To investigate this further, we have used a transgenic mouse model of ErbB2-driven tumor progression (ErbB2(KI) model) that recapitulates clinically relevant events, including selective amplification of the core erbB2 amplicon. By comparing the transcriptional profiles of ErbB2(KI) mammary tumors and human ERBB2-positive breast cancers, we show that ErbB2(KI) tumors possess molecular features of the basal subtype of ERBB2-positive human breast cancer, including activation of canonical β-catenin signaling. Inhibition of β-catenin-dependent signaling in ErbB2(KI)-derived tumor cells using RNA interference impaired tumor initiation and metastasis. Furthermore, treatment of ErbB2(KI) or human ERBB2-overexpressing tumor cells with a selective β-catenin/CBP inhibitor significantly decreased proliferation and ErbB2 expression. Collectively, our data indicate that ERBB2-mediated breast cancer progression requires β-catenin signaling and can be therapeutically targeted by selective β-catenin/CBP inhibitors.


Bioinformatics | 2016

GenVisR: Genomic Visualizations in R

Zachary L. Skidmore; Alex H. Wagner; Robert Lesurf; Katie M. Campbell; Jason Kunisaki; Obi L. Griffith; Malachi Griffith

Summary: Visualizing and summarizing data from genomic studies continues to be a challenge. Here, we introduce the GenVisR package to addresses this challenge by providing highly customizable, publication-quality graphics focused on cohort level genome analyses. GenVisR provides a rapid and easy-to-use suite of genomic visualization tools, while maintaining a high degree of flexibility by leveraging the abilities of ggplot2 and Bioconductor. Availability and Implementation: GenVisR is an R package available via Bioconductor (https://bioconductor.org/packages/GenVisR) under GPLv3. Support is available via GitHub (https://github.com/griffithlab/GenVisR/issues) and the Bioconductor support website. Contacts: [email protected] or [email protected] Supplementary information: Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.


Cell Reports | 2014

The Prognostic Ease and Difficulty of Invasive Breast Carcinoma

Ali Tofigh; Matthew Suderman; Eric R. Paquet; Julie Livingstone; Nicholas Bertos; Sadiq M. Saleh; Hong Zhao; Margarita Souleimanova; Sean Cory; Robert Lesurf; Solmaz Shahalizadeh; Norberto Garcia Lopez; Yasser Riazalhosseini; Atilla Omeroglu; Josie Ursini-Siegel; Morag Park; Vanessa Dumeaux; Michael Hallett

Breast carcinoma (BC) has been extensively profiled by high-throughput technologies for over a decade, and broadly speaking, these studies can be grouped into those that seek to identify patient subtypes (studies of heterogeneity) or those that seek to identify gene signatures with prognostic or predictive capacity. The sheer number of reported signatures has led to speculation that everything is prognostic in BC. Here, we show that this ubiquity is an apparition caused by a poor understanding of the interrelatedness between subtype and the molecular determinants of prognosis. Our approach constructively shows how to avoid confounding due to a patients subtype, clinicopathological profile, or treatment profile. The approach identifies patients who are predicted to have good outcome at time of diagnosis by all available clinical and molecular markers but who experience a distant metastasis within 5 years. These inherently difficult patients (~7% of BC) are prioritized for investigations of intratumoral heterogeneity.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2016

ORegAnno 3.0: a community-driven resource for curated regulatory annotation

Robert Lesurf; Kelsy C. Cotto; Grace Wang; Malachi Griffith; Katayoon Kasaian; Steven J.M. Jones; Stephen B. Montgomery; Obi L. Griffith

The Open Regulatory Annotation database (ORegAnno) is a resource for curated regulatory annotation. It contains information about regulatory regions, transcription factor binding sites, RNA binding sites, regulatory variants, haplotypes, and other regulatory elements. ORegAnno differentiates itself from other regulatory resources by facilitating crowd-sourced interpretation and annotation of regulatory observations from the literature and highly curated resources. It contains a comprehensive annotation scheme that aims to describe both the elements and outcomes of regulatory events. Moreover, ORegAnno assembles these disparate data sources and annotations into a single, high quality catalogue of curated regulatory information. The current release is an update of the database previously featured in the NAR Database Issue, and now contains 1 948 307 records, across 18 species, with a combined coverage of 334 215 080 bp. Complete records, annotation, and other associated data are available for browsing and download at http://www.oreganno.org/.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Ets2 in tumor fibroblasts promotes angiogenesis in breast cancer.

Julie A. Wallace; Fu Li; Subhasree Balakrishnan; Carmen Z. Cantemir-Stone; Thierry Pécot; Chelsea K. Martin; Raleigh D. Kladney; Sudarshana M. Sharma; Anthony J. Trimboli; Soledad Fernandez; Lianbo Yu; Thomas J. Rosol; Paul C. Stromberg; Robert Lesurf; Michael Hallett; Morag Park; Gustavo Leone; Michael C. Ostrowski

Tumor fibroblasts are active partners in tumor progression, but the genes and pathways that mediate this collaboration are ill-defined. Previous work demonstrates that Ets2 function in stromal cells significantly contributes to breast tumor progression. Conditional mouse models were used to study the function of Ets2 in both mammary stromal fibroblasts and epithelial cells. Conditional inactivation of Ets2 in stromal fibroblasts in PyMT and ErbB2 driven tumors significantly reduced tumor growth, however deletion of Ets2 in epithelial cells in the PyMT model had no significant effect. Analysis of gene expression in fibroblasts revealed a tumor- and Ets2-dependent gene signature that was enriched in genes important for ECM remodeling, cell migration, and angiogenesis in both PyMT and ErbB2 driven-tumors. Consistent with these results, PyMT and ErbB2 tumors lacking Ets2 in fibroblasts had fewer functional blood vessels, and Ets2 in fibroblasts elicited changes in gene expression in tumor endothelial cells consistent with this phenotype. An in vivo angiogenesis assay revealed the ability of Ets2 in fibroblasts to promote blood vessel formation in the absence of tumor cells. Importantly, the Ets2-dependent gene expression signatures from both mouse models were able to distinguish human breast tumor stroma from normal stroma, and correlated with patient outcomes in two whole tumor breast cancer data sets. The data reveals a key function for Ets2 in tumor fibroblasts in signaling to endothelial cells to promote tumor angiogenesis. The results highlight the collaborative networks that orchestrate communication between stromal cells and tumor cells, and suggest that targeting tumor fibroblasts may be an effective strategy for developing novel anti-angiogenic therapies.

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Malachi Griffith

Washington University in St. Louis

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Obi L. Griffith

Washington University in St. Louis

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Katie M. Campbell

Washington University in St. Louis

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Zachary L. Skidmore

Washington University in St. Louis

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