Rotem Karni
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
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Featured researches published by Rotem Karni.
Oncogene | 1999
Rotem Karni; Richard Jove; Alexander Levitzki
Tumors that overexpress HER-2/neu receptor or exhibit enhanced EGFR signaling have been reported to possess constitutively activated Src family kinases, especially pp60c-Src. High levels of pp60c-Src activity have also been reported for cell lines that overexpress the EGFR or the chimeric EGFR-HER-2 receptor. It has therefore been suggested that Src kinases may contribute significantly to the oncogenic phenotype of these cells and to the degree of malignancy of tumors that overexpress EGFR family receptors. In this study we show that the induced expression of c-SRC antisense RNA or the application of a selective Src kinase inhibitor induces growth arrest, programmed cell death and reverses the transformed properties of cells that overexpress EGFR or HER-2 receptors. We show that inhibition of Src kinase expression or activity results in the reduction of Stat3 tyrosine phosphorylation, decline of Bcl-XL expression, and induction of cell death. Using a construct in which the promoter of Bcl-X, which possesses putative Stat3 sites, is tethered to the luciferase reporter gene, we show that inhibition of Src activity or expression induces a decline in Bcl-X expression. We also show that the expression of activated Src induces activation of the Bcl-X promoter. This activation is inhibited by the expression of kinase dead Src or of Stat3β, the dominant-negative form of Stat3. Taken together, these results support the hypothesis that Src positively regulates the transformed phenotype of cells overexpressing EGFR family kinases. Furthermore, these results also suggest that Src positively regulates Bcl-XL expression via Stat3 activation and thus acts not only as a potent mitogenic signaling element, but also as an anti-apoptotic signaling protein. The combination of both activities probably confers upon activated Src its oncogenic activity. Since Src kinase is activated in many tumors, pp60c-Src kinase inhibitors may prove useful as anti-cancer agents for many types of cancer.
Cell Metabolism | 2011
Shay Porat; Noa Weinberg-Corem; Sharona Tornovsky-Babaey; Rachel Schyr-Ben-Haroush; Ayat Hija; Miri Stolovich-Rain; Daniela Dadon; Zvi Granot; Vered Ben-Hur; Peter S. White; Christophe Girard; Rotem Karni; Klaus H. Kaestner; Frances M. Ashcroft; Mark A. Magnuson; Ann Saada; Joseph Grimsby; Benjamin Glaser; Yuval Dor
Recent studies revealed a surprising regenerative capacity of insulin-producing β cells in mice, suggesting that regenerative therapy for human diabetes could in principle be achieved. Physiologic β cell regeneration under stressed conditions relies on accelerated proliferation of surviving β cells, but the factors that trigger and control this response remain unclear. Using islet transplantation experiments, we show that β cell mass is controlled systemically rather than by local factors such as tissue damage. Chronic changes in β cell glucose metabolism, rather than blood glucose levels per se, are the main positive regulator of basal and compensatory β cell proliferation in vivo. Intracellularly, genetic and pharmacologic manipulations reveal that glucose induces β cell replication via metabolism by glucokinase, the first step of glycolysis, followed by closure of K(ATP) channels and membrane depolarization. Our data provide a molecular mechanism for homeostatic control of β cell mass by metabolic demand.
Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2012
Olga Anczuków; Avi Z. Rosenberg; Martin Akerman; Shipra Das; Lixing Zhan; Rotem Karni; Senthil K. Muthuswamy; Adrian R. Krainer
The splicing-factor oncoprotein SRSF1 (also known as SF2/ASF or ASF/SF2) is upregulated in breast cancers. We investigated the ability of SRSF1 to transform human and mouse mammary epithelial cells in vivo and in vitro. SRSF1-overexpressing COMMA-1D cells formed tumors, following orthotopic transplantation to reconstitute the mammary gland. In three-dimensional (3D) culture, SRSF1-overexpressing MCF-10A cells formed larger acini than control cells, reflecting increased proliferation and delayed apoptosis during acinar morphogenesis. These effects required the first RNA-recognition motif and nuclear functions of SRSF1. SRSF1 overexpression promoted alternative splicing of BIM (also known as BCL2L11) and BIN1 to produce isoforms that lack pro-apoptotic functions and contribute to the phenotype. Finally, SRSF1 cooperated specifically with MYC to transform mammary epithelial cells, in part by potentiating eIF4E activation, and these cooperating oncogenes are significantly coexpressed in human breast tumors. Thus, SRSF1 can promote breast cancer, and SRSF1 itself or its downstream effectors may be valuable targets for the development of therapeutics.
Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2010
Shuying Sun; Zuo Zhang; Rahul Sinha; Rotem Karni; Adrian R. Krainer
SF2/ASF is a prototypical serine- and arginine-rich protein, with important roles in splicing and other aspects of mRNA metabolism. Splicing factor, arginine/serine-rich 1 (SFRS1), the gene encoding SF2/ASF, is a potent proto-oncogene with abnormal expression in many tumors. We found that SF2/ASF negatively autoregulates its expression to maintain homeostatic levels. We characterized six alternatively spliced SF2/ASF mRNA isoforms: the major isoform encodes full-length protein, whereas the others are either retained in the nucleus or degraded by nonsense-mediated mRNA decay. Unproductive splicing accounts for only part of the autoregulation, which occurs primarily at the translational level. The effect is specific to SF2/ASF and requires RNA recognition motif 2 (RRM2). The ultraconserved 3′ untranslated region (UTR) is necessary and sufficient for downregulation. SF2/ASF overexpression shifts the distribution of target mRNA toward monoribosomes, and translational repression is partly independent of Dicer and a 5′ cap. Thus, multiple post-transcriptional and translational mechanisms are involved in fine-tuning the expression of SF2/ASF.
Cancer Research | 2011
Michal Cohen; Asaf Shilo; Sung-Suk Suh; Arianna Bakàcs; Luigi Coppola; Rotem Karni
The process of alternative splicing is widely misregulated in cancer, but the contribution of splicing regulators to cancer development is largely unknown. In this study, we found that the splicing factor hnRNP A2/B1 is overexpressed in glioblastomas and is correlated with poor prognosis. Conversely, patients who harbor deletions of the HNRNPA2B1 gene show better prognosis than average. Knockdown of hnRNP A2/B1 in glioblastoma cells inhibited tumor formation in mice. In contrast, overexpression of hnRNP A2/B1 in immortal cells led to malignant transformation, suggesting that HNRNPA2B1 is a putative proto-oncogene. We then identified several tumor suppressors and oncogenes that are regulated by HNRNPA2B1, among them are c-FLIP, BIN1, and WWOX, and the proto-oncogene RON. Knockdown of RON inhibited hnRNP A2/B1 mediated transformation, which implied that RON is one of the mediators of HNRNPA2B1 oncogenic activity. Together, our results indicate that HNRNPA2B1 is a novel oncogene in glioblastoma and a potential new target for glioblastoma therapy.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008
Rotem Karni; Yoshitaka Hippo; Scott W. Lowe; Adrian R. Krainer
The splicing factor SF2/ASF is an oncoprotein that is up-regulated in many cancers and can transform immortal rodent fibroblasts when slightly overexpressed. The mTOR signaling pathway is activated in many cancers, and pharmacological blockers of this pathway are in clinical trials as anticancer drugs. We examined the activity of the mTOR pathway in cells transformed by SF2/ASF and found that this splicing factor activates the mTORC1 branch of the pathway, as measured by S6K and eIF4EBP1 phosphorylation. This activation is specific to mTORC1 because no activation of Akt, an mTORC2 substrate, was detected. mTORC1 activation by SF2/ASF bypasses upstream PI3K/Akt signaling and is essential for SF2/ASF-mediated transformation, as inhibition of mTOR by rapamycin blocked transformation by SF2/ASF in vitro and in vivo. Moreover, shRNA-mediated knockdown of mTOR, or of the specific mTORC1 and mTORC2 components Raptor and Rictor, abolished the tumorigenic potential of cells overexpressing SF2/ASF. These results suggest that clinical tumors with SF2/ASF up-regulation could be especially sensitive to mTOR inhibitors.
FEBS Letters | 2003
Rotem Karni; Sarit Mizrachi; Ella Reiss-Sklan; Aviv Gazit; Oded Livnah; Alexander Levitzki
Glutathione‐S‐transferase (GST)‐pp60c‐Src (GST‐Src) expressed in Escherichia coli is as catalytically active as purified, activated pp60c‐Src protein derived from human platelets. We utilized the bacterially expressed enzyme, together with information about the structures of Src family kinases in complex with their inhibitors PP1 and PP2, to modify PP1 in a quest for improved inhibitors. Despite the detailed structural information on Hck‐PP1 and Lck‐PP2 complexes, which shows that PP1 and PP2 bind to the adenosine triphosphate (ATP) pocket, we were unable to improve the affinity between modified PP1 and Src. Puzzled, we examined in detail the mechanism by which PP1 inhibits the kinase activity of Src. Here we report that PP1 is non‐competitive with ATP for the inhibition of Src, at variance with what is currently accepted, and is a ‘mixed competitive inhibitor’ vis‐à‐vis the substrate. These findings shed new light on the mechanism whereby PP1‐like molecules inhibit Src. Examination of the homology between the kinase domain of Src and those of Hck and Lck reveals significant differences outside the ATP binding pocket, whereas they are identical within the ATP binding domain. These results suggest that PP1 may be a leading compound for ATP non‐competitive inhibitors of Src family kinases. Since Src in its active form is the hallmark of numerous cancers, understanding how PP1 inhibits activated Src will aid in the discovery of potent and selective Src kinase inhibitors.
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2010
Rahul Sinha; Eric Allemand; Zuo Zhang; Rotem Karni; Michael P. Myers; Adrian R. Krainer
ABSTRACT Alternative splicing and posttranslational modifications (PTMs) are major sources of protein diversity in eukaryotic proteomes. The SR protein SF2/ASF is an oncoprotein that functions in pre-mRNA splicing, with additional roles in other posttranscriptional and translational events. Functional studies of SR protein PTMs have focused exclusively on the reversible phosphorylation of Ser residues in the C-terminal RS domain. We confirmed that human SF2/ASF is methylated at residues R93, R97, and R109, which were identified in a global proteomic analysis of Arg methylation, and further investigated whether these methylated residues regulate the properties of SF2/ASF. We show that the three arginines additively control the subcellular localization of SF2/ASF and that both the positive charge and the methylation state are important. Mutations that block methylation and remove the positive charge result in the cytoplasmic accumulation of SF2/ASF. The consequent decrease in nuclear SF2/ASF levels prevents it from modulating the alternative splicing of target genes, results in higher translation stimulation, and abrogates the enhancement of nonsense-mediated mRNA decay. This study addresses the mechanisms by which Arg methylation and the associated positive charge regulate the activities of SF2/ASF and emphasizes the significance of localization control for an oncoprotein with multiple functions in different cellular compartments.
The Journal of Pathology | 2013
Michal Cohen-Eliav; Zahava Siegfried; Claus L. Andersen; Kasper Thorsen; Torben F. Ørntoft; David Mu; Rotem Karni
An increasing body of evidence connects alterations in the process of alternative splicing with cancer development and progression. However, a direct role of splicing factors as drivers of cancer development is mostly unknown. We analysed the gene copy number of several splicing factors in colon and lung tumours, and found that the gene encoding for the splicing factor SRSF6 is amplified and over‐expressed in these cancers. Moreover, over‐expression of SRSF6 in immortal lung epithelial cells enhanced proliferation, protected them from chemotherapy‐induced cell death and converted them to be tumourigenic in mice. In contrast, knock‐down of SRSF6 in lung and colon cancer cell lines inhibited their tumourigenic abilities. SRSF6 up‐ or down‐regulation altered the splicing of several tumour suppressors and oncogenes to generate the oncogenic isoforms and reduce the tumour‐suppressive isoforms. Our data suggest that the splicing factor SRSF6 is an oncoprotein that regulates the proliferation and survival of lung and colon cancer cells.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2015
Miri Danan-Gotthold; Eli Eisenberg; Keren Meir; Rotem Karni; Erez Y. Levanon
Cancer is a complex disease that involves aberrant gene expression regulation. Discriminating the modified expression patterns driving tumor biology from the many that have no or little contribution is important for understanding cancer molecular basis. Recurrent deregulation patterns observed in multiple cancer types are enriched for such driver events. Here, we studied splicing alterations in hundreds of matched tumor and normal RNA-seq samples of eight solid cancer types. We found hundreds of cassette exons for which splicing was altered in multiple cancer types and identified a set of highly frequent altered splicing events. Specific splicing regulators, including RBFOX2, MBNL1/2 and QKI, appear to account for many splicing alteration events in multiple cancer types. Together, our results provide a first global analysis of regulated splicing alterations in cancer and identify common events with a potential causative role in solid tumor development.