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Dive into the research topics where Rumana Rafiq is active.

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Featured researches published by Rumana Rafiq.


Cancer Discovery | 2011

Functional viability profiles of breast cancer.

Rachel Brough; Jessica Frankum; David Sims; Alan Mackay; Ana M. Mendes-Pereira; Ilirjana Bajrami; Sara Costa-Cabral; Rumana Rafiq; Amar Ahmad; Maria Antonietta Cerone; Rachael Natrajan; Rachel Sharpe; Kai-Keen Shiu; Daniel Wetterskog; Konstantine J. Dedes; Maryou B. Lambros; Teeara Rawjee; Spiros Linardopoulos; Jorge S. Reis-Filho; Nicholas C. Turner; Christopher J. Lord; Alan Ashworth

UNLABELLED The design of targeted therapeutic strategies for cancer has largely been driven by the identification of tumor-specific genetic changes. However, the large number of genetic alterations present in tumor cells means that it is difficult to discriminate between genes that are critical for maintaining the disease state and those that are merely coincidental. Even when critical genes can be identified, directly targeting these is often challenging, meaning that alternative strategies such as exploiting synthetic lethality may be beneficial. To address these issues, we have carried out a functional genetic screen in >30 commonly used models of breast cancer to identify genes critical to the growth of specific breast cancer subtypes. In particular, we describe potential new therapeutic targets for PTEN-mutated cancers and for estrogen receptor-positive breast cancers. We also show that large-scale functional profiling allows the classification of breast cancers into subgroups distinct from established subtypes. SIGNIFICANCE Despite the wealth of molecular profiling data that describe breast tumors and breast tumor cell models, our understanding of the fundamental genetic dependencies in this disease is relatively poor. Using high-throughput RNA interference screening of a series of pharmacologically tractable genes, we have generated comprehensive functional viability profiles for a wide panel of commonly used breast tumor cell models. Analysis of these profiles identifies a series of novel genetic dependencies, including that of PTEN-null breast tumor cells upon mitotic checkpoint kinases, and provides a framework upon which additional dependencies and candidate therapeutic targets may be identified.


Cancer Research | 2014

Genome-wide Profiling of Genetic Synthetic Lethality Identifies CDK12 as a Novel Determinant of PARP1/2 Inhibitor Sensitivity

I. Bajrami; Jessica Frankum; Asha Konde; Rowan Miller; Farah L. Rehman; Rachel Brough; James Campbell; David Sims; Rumana Rafiq; Sean Hooper; Lina Chen; Iwanka Kozarewa; Ioannis Assiotis; Kerry Fenwick; Rachael Natrajan; Christopher J. Lord; Alan Ashworth

Small-molecule inhibitors of PARP1/2, such as olaparib, have been proposed to serve as a synthetic lethal therapy for cancers that harbor BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutations. Indeed, in clinical trials, PARP1/2 inhibitors elicit sustained antitumor responses in patients with germline BRCA gene mutations. In hypothesizing that additional genetic determinants might direct use of these drugs, we conducted a genome-wide synthetic lethal screen for candidate olaparib sensitivity genes. In support of this hypothesis, the set of identified genes included known determinants of olaparib sensitivity, such as BRCA1, RAD51, and Fanconis anemia susceptibility genes. In addition, the set included genes implicated in established networks of DNA repair, DNA cohesion, and chromatin remodeling, none of which were known previously to confer sensitivity to PARP1/2 inhibition. Notably, integration of the list of candidate sensitivity genes with data from tumor DNA sequencing studies identified CDK12 deficiency as a clinically relevant biomarker of PARP1/2 inhibitor sensitivity. In models of high-grade serous ovarian cancer (HGS-OVCa), CDK12 attenuation was sufficient to confer sensitivity to PARP1/2 inhibition, suppression of DNA repair via homologous recombination, and reduced expression of BRCA1. As one of only nine genes known to be significantly mutated in HGS-OVCa, CDK12 has properties that should confirm interest in its use as a biomarker, particularly in ongoing clinical trials of PARP1/2 inhibitors and other agents that trigger replication fork arrest.


Nature Communications | 2016

ATR inhibitors as a synthetic lethal therapy for tumours deficient in ARID1A

Chris T. Williamson; Rowan Miller; Helen N. Pemberton; Samuel E. Jones; James D. Campbell; Asha Konde; Nicholas Badham; Rumana Rafiq; Rachel Brough; Aditi Gulati; Colm J. Ryan; Jeff Francis; Peter B. Vermulen; Andrew R. Reynolds; Philip Michael Reaper; John Pollard; Alan Ashworth; Christopher J. Lord

Identifying genetic biomarkers of synthetic lethal drug sensitivity effects provides one approach to the development of targeted cancer therapies. Mutations in ARID1A represent one of the most common molecular alterations in human cancer, but therapeutic approaches that target these defects are not yet clinically available. We demonstrate that defects in ARID1A sensitize tumour cells to clinical inhibitors of the DNA damage checkpoint kinase, ATR, both in vitro and in vivo. Mechanistically, ARID1A deficiency results in topoisomerase 2A and cell cycle defects, which cause an increased reliance on ATR checkpoint activity. In ARID1A mutant tumour cells, inhibition of ATR triggers premature mitotic entry, genomic instability and apoptosis. The data presented here provide the pre-clinical and mechanistic rationale for assessing ARID1A defects as a biomarker of single-agent ATR inhibitor response and represents a novel synthetic lethal approach to targeting tumour cells.


Cell Reports | 2016

Large-Scale Profiling of Kinase Dependencies in Cancer Cell Lines

James J. Campbell; Colm J. Ryan; Rachel Brough; Ilirjana Bajrami; Helen N. Pemberton; Irene Y. Chong; Sara Costa-Cabral; Jessica Frankum; Aditi Gulati; Harriet Holme; Rowan Miller; Sophie Postel-Vinay; Rumana Rafiq; Wenbin Wei; Chris T. Williamson; David A. Quigley; Joe E. Tym; Bissan Al-Lazikani; Tim Fenton; Rachael Natrajan; Sandra J. Strauss; Alan Ashworth; Christopher J. Lord

Summary One approach to identifying cancer-specific vulnerabilities and therapeutic targets is to profile genetic dependencies in cancer cell lines. Here, we describe data from a series of siRNA screens that identify the kinase genetic dependencies in 117 cancer cell lines from ten cancer types. By integrating the siRNA screen data with molecular profiling data, including exome sequencing data, we show how vulnerabilities/genetic dependencies that are associated with mutations in specific cancer driver genes can be identified. By integrating additional data sets into this analysis, including protein-protein interaction data, we also demonstrate that the genetic dependencies associated with many cancer driver genes form dense connections on functional interaction networks. We demonstrate the utility of this resource by using it to predict the drug sensitivity of genetically or histologically defined subsets of tumor cell lines, including an increased sensitivity of osteosarcoma cell lines to FGFR inhibitors and SMAD4 mutant tumor cells to mitotic inhibitors.


Molecular Cancer Therapeutics | 2016

Synthetic Lethal Targeting of ARID1A-Mutant Ovarian Clear Cell Tumors with Dasatinib

Rowan Miller; Rachel Brough; Ilirjana Bajrami; Chris T. Williamson; Simon S. McDade; James J. Campbell; Asha Kigozi; Rumana Rafiq; Helen N. Pemberton; Rachel Natrajan; Josephine Joel; Holly Astley; Claire Mahoney; Jonathan D. Moore; Chris Torrance; John D. Gordan; James T. Webber; Rebecca S. Levin; Kevan M. Shokat; Sourav Bandyopadhyay; Christopher J. Lord; Alan Ashworth

New targeted approaches to ovarian clear cell carcinomas (OCCC) are needed, given the limited treatment options in this disease and the poor response to standard chemotherapy. Using a series of high-throughput cell-based drug screens in OCCC tumor cell models, we have identified a synthetic lethal (SL) interaction between the kinase inhibitor dasatinib and a key driver in OCCC, ARID1A mutation. Imposing ARID1A deficiency upon a variety of human or mouse cells induced dasatinib sensitivity, both in vitro and in vivo, suggesting that this is a robust synthetic lethal interaction. The sensitivity of ARID1A-deficient cells to dasatinib was associated with G1–S cell-cycle arrest and was dependent upon both p21 and Rb. Using focused siRNA screens and kinase profiling, we showed that ARID1A-mutant OCCC tumor cells are addicted to the dasatinib target YES1. This suggests that dasatinib merits investigation for the treatment of patients with ARID1A-mutant OCCC. Mol Cancer Ther; 15(7); 1472–84. ©2016 AACR.


Molecular Cancer Therapeutics | 2017

Modeling Therapy Resistance in BRCA1/2-Mutant Cancers

Amy Dréan; Chris T. Williamson; Rachel Brough; Inger Brandsma; Malini Menon; Asha Konde; Isaac Garcia-Murillas; Helen N. Pemberton; Jessica Frankum; Rumana Rafiq; Nicholas Badham; James J. Campbell; Aditi Gulati; Nicholas C. Turner; Stephen J. Pettitt; Alan Ashworth; Christopher J. Lord

Although PARP inhibitors target BRCA1- or BRCA2-mutant tumor cells, drug resistance is a problem. PARP inhibitor resistance is sometimes associated with the presence of secondary or “revertant” mutations in BRCA1 or BRCA2. Whether secondary mutant tumor cells are selected for in a Darwinian fashion by treatment is unclear. Furthermore, how PARP inhibitor resistance might be therapeutically targeted is also poorly understood. Using CRISPR mutagenesis, we generated isogenic tumor cell models with secondary BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutations. Using these in heterogeneous in vitro culture or in vivo xenograft experiments in which the clonal composition of tumor cell populations in response to therapy was monitored, we established that PARP inhibitor or platinum salt exposure selects for secondary mutant clones in a Darwinian fashion, with the periodicity of PARP inhibitor administration and the pretreatment frequency of secondary mutant tumor cells influencing the eventual clonal composition of the tumor cell population. In xenograft studies, the presence of secondary mutant cells in tumors impaired the therapeutic effect of a clinical PARP inhibitor. However, we found that both PARP inhibitor–sensitive and PARP inhibitor–resistant BRCA2 mutant tumor cells were sensitive to AZD-1775, a WEE1 kinase inhibitor. In mice carrying heterogeneous tumors, AZD-1775 delivered a greater therapeutic benefit than olaparib treatment. This suggests that despite the restoration of some BRCA1 or BRCA2 gene function in “revertant” tumor cells, vulnerabilities still exist that could be therapeutically exploited. Mol Cancer Ther; 16(9); 2022–34. ©2017 AACR.


Scientific Data | 2017

Genome-wide barcoded transposon screen for cancer drug sensitivity in haploid mouse embryonic stem cells

Stephen J. Pettitt; Dragomir B. Krastev; Helen N. Pemberton; Yari Fontebasso; Jessica Frankum; Farah L. Rehman; Rachel Brough; Feifei Song; Ilirjana Bajrami; Rumana Rafiq; Fredrik Wallberg; Iwanka Kozarewa; Kerry Fenwick; Javier Armisen-Garrido; Amanda Swain; Aditi Gulati; James F. Campbell; Alan Ashworth; Christopher J. Lord

We describe a screen for cellular response to drugs that makes use of haploid embryonic stem cells. We generated ten libraries of mutants with piggyBac gene trap transposon integrations, totalling approximately 100,000 mutant clones. Random barcode sequences were inserted into the transposon vector to allow the number of cells bearing each insertion to be measured by amplifying and sequencing the barcodes. These barcodes were associated with their integration sites by inverse PCR. We exposed these libraries to commonly used cancer drugs and profiled changes in barcode abundance by Ion Torrent sequencing in order to identify mutations that conferred sensitivity. Drugs tested included conventional chemotherapeutics as well as targeted inhibitors of topoisomerases, poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP), Hsp90 and WEE1.


Scientific Reports | 2018

Chemosensitivity profiling of osteosarcoma tumour cell lines identifies a model of BRCAness

Harriett Holme; Aditi Gulati; Rachel Brough; Emmy D.G. Fleuren; Ilirjana Bajrami; James J. Campbell; Irene Y. Chong; Sara Costa-Cabral; Richard Elliott; Tim Fenton; Jessica Frankum; Samuel E. Jones; Malini Menon; Rowan Miller; Helen N. Pemberton; Sophie Postel-Vinay; Rumana Rafiq; Joanna Selfe; Alex von Kriegsheim; Amaya Garcia Munoz; Javier Rodríguez; Janet Shipley; Winette T. A. van der Graaf; Chris T. Williamson; Colm J. Ryan; Stephen J. Pettitt; Alan Ashworth; Sandra J. Strauss; Christopher J. Lord

Osteosarcoma (OS) is an aggressive sarcoma, where novel treatment approaches are required. Genomic studies suggest that a subset of OS, including OS tumour cell lines (TCLs), exhibit genomic loss of heterozygosity (LOH) patterns reminiscent of BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutant tumours. This raises the possibility that PARP inhibitors (PARPi), used to treat BRCA1/2 mutant cancers, could be used to target OS. Using high-throughput drug sensitivity screening we generated chemosensitivity profiles for 79 small molecule inhibitors, including three clinical PARPi. Drug screening was performed in 88 tumour cell lines, including 18 OS TCLs. This identified known sensitivity effects in OS TCLs, such as sensitivity to FGFR inhibitors. When compared to BRCA1/2 mutant TCLs, OS TCLs, with the exception of LM7, were PARPi resistant, including those with previously determined BRCAness LoH profiles. Post-screen validation experiments confirmed PARPi sensitivity in LM7 cells as well as a defect in the ability to form nuclear RAD51 foci in response to DNA damage. LM7 provides one OS model for the study of PARPi sensitivity through a potential defect in RAD51-mediated DNA repair. The drug sensitivity dataset we generated in 88 TCLs could also serve as a resource for the study of drug sensitivity effects in OS.


Scientific Reports | 2018

Author Correction: Chemosensitivity profiling of osteosarcoma tumour cell lines identifies a model of BRCAness

Harriett Holme; Aditi Gulati; Rachel Brough; Emmy D.G. Fleuren; Ilirjana Bajrami; James F. Campbell; Irene Y. Chong; Sara Costa-Cabral; Richard Elliott; Tim Fenton; Jessica Frankum; Samuel E. Jones; Malini Menon; Rowan Miller; Helen N. Pemberton; Sophie Postel-Vinay; Rumana Rafiq; Joanna Selfe; Alex von Kriegsheim; Amaya Garcia Munoz; Javier M. Rodríguez; Janet Shipley; Winette T. A. van der Graaf; Chris T. Williamson; Colm J. Ryan; Stephen J. Pettitt; Alan Ashworth; Sandra J. Strauss; Christopher J. Lord

A correction to this article has been published and is linked from the HTML and PDF versions of this paper. The error has been fixed in the paper.


European Journal of Cancer | 2014

88 Genome-wide drug sensitivity screens in haploid mouse embryonic stem cells

Stephen J. Pettitt; D. Krastev; Helen N. Pemberton; Yari Fontebasso; I. Bajrami; Iwanka Kozarewa; Jessica Frankum; Rumana Rafiq; James F. Campbell; Rachel Brough; Alan Ashworth; Christopher J. Lord

osteosarcoma cell line in vitro and in vivo. The SJSA-1 cell line possesses an amplified MDM2 gene and wild-type p53 and is sensitive to SAR405838 and other MDM2 inhibitors in vitro and in vivo. In vitro treatment of the SJSA-1 cells with SAR405838 using two different treatment protocols resulted in acquired resistance to the drug. Analysis of these resistant cells showed that p53 is mutated in the DNA binding domain and cannot be activated by SAR405838. Treatment of mice bearing the parental SJSA-1 xenograft tumors with SAR405838 led to rapid tumor regression, but tumors eventually returned after treatment cessation. A number of cell lines were established by culturing the regrown tumors and, surprisingly, these sublines showed minimal loss of sensitivity to SAR405838 as compared to the parental SJSA-1 cell line. Consistently, analysis of thesesublines showed that p53 retains its wild-type status, with the exception of one subline, that harbored a single heterozygous mutation C176F. Computational modeling suggested that the p53 C176F mutant may still be capable of binding to target DNA to elicit gene transcription, which was confirmed by in vitro treatment with SAR405838. Xenografts of representative sublines lacking p53 C176F mutation obtained from regrown tumors treated with one-round SAR405838 were still responsive to SAR405838 treatment. Interestingly, after a second round of in vivo treatment with SAR405838, all sublines established from harvested tumors uniformly harbored a heterozygous C176F p53 mutation, which were still responsive to SAR405838, albeit with reduced sensitivity. Our study showed that the SJSA-1 tumor cells acquired profound resistance to MDM2 inhibitor SAR405838 in vitro and developed inactivating p53 mutations in its DNA binding domain. But in vivo, SJSA-1 tumor cells only acquired minimal or modest resistance when treated with either oneor two-rounds of SAR405838. Our study suggests that tumor cells respond differently to drug treatment under in vitro and in vivo environments and consequently develop different types of resistance.

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Christopher J. Lord

Institute of Cancer Research

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Rachel Brough

Institute of Cancer Research

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Alan Ashworth

University of California

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Helen N. Pemberton

Institute of Cancer Research

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Jessica Frankum

Institute of Cancer Research

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Aditi Gulati

Institute of Cancer Research

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Ilirjana Bajrami

Institute of Cancer Research

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Rowan Miller

University College London

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Stephen J. Pettitt

Institute of Cancer Research

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Chris T. Williamson

Institute of Cancer Research

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