Romesh Subramanian
Harvard University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Romesh Subramanian.
Cancer Cell | 2003
Jean Zhao; Ole Gjoerup; Romesh Subramanian; Yuan Cheng; Wen Chen; Thomas M. Roberts; William C. Hahn
Recent studies have demonstrated that introduction of hTERT in combination with SV40 large T antigen (LT), small t antigen (st), and H-rasV12 suffices to transform many primary human cells. In human mammary epithelial cells (HMECs) expressing elevated c-Myc, activated H-Ras is dispensable for anchorage-independent growth. Using this system, we show that st activates the PI3K pathway and that constitutive PI3K signaling substitutes for st in transformation. Moreover, using constitutively active versions of Akt1 and Rac1, we show that these downstream pathways of PI3K synergize to achieve anchorage-independent growth. At lower levels of c-myc expression, activated PI3K also replaces st to complement H-rasV12 and LT and confers both soft agar growth and tumorigenicity. However, elevated c-myc expression cannot replace H-rasV12 for tumorigenesis. These observations begin to define the pathways perturbed during the transformation of HMECs.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2015
Romesh Subramanian; Mark A. Wysk; Kathleen M. Ogilvie; Abhijit Bhat; Bing Kuang; Thomas Dino Rockel; Markus Weber; Eugen Uhlmann; Arthur M. Krieg
The in vivo potency of antisense oligonucleotides (ASO) has been significantly increased by reducing their length to 8–15 nucleotides and by the incorporation of high affinity RNA binders such as 2′, 4′-bridged nucleic acids (also known as locked nucleic acid or LNA, and 2′,4′-constrained ethyl [cET]). We now report the development of a novel ASO design in which such short ASO monomers to one or more targets are co-synthesized as homo- or heterodimers or multimers via phosphodiester linkers that are stable in plasma, but cleaved inside cells, releasing the active ASO monomers. Compared to current ASOs, these multimers and multi-targeting oligonucleotides (MTOs) provide increased plasma protein binding and biodistribution to liver, and increased in vivo efficacy against single or multiple targets with a single construct. In vivo, MTOs synthesized in both RNase H-activating and steric-blocking oligonucleotide designs provide ≈4–5-fold increased potency and ≈2-fold increased efficacy, suggesting broad therapeutic applications.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2002
Craig Furman; Sarah Short; Romesh Subramanian; Bruce R. Zetter; Thomas M. Roberts
Archive | 2013
Eugen Uhlmann; Markus Weber; Romesh Subramanian; Thomas Dino Rockel; Arthur M. Krieg
Archive | 2013
Arthur M. Krieg; Romesh Subramanian; James Mcswiggen; Jeannie T. Lee
Archive | 2013
Arthur M. Krieg; Romesh Subramanian; James Mcswiggen; Jeannie T. Lee
Archive | 2013
Arthur M. Krieg; Romesh Subramanian; James Mcswiggen; Jeannie T. Lee
International Journal of Oncology | 2012
Romesh Subramanian; Akio Yamakawa
Archive | 2013
Arthur M. Krieg; Romesh Subramanian; James Mcswiggen; Jeannie T. Lee
Archive | 2013
Arthur M. Krieg; Romesh Subramanian; James Mcswiggen; Jeannie T. Lee