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Dive into the research topics where Sandra Heesch is active.

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Featured researches published by Sandra Heesch.


Blood | 2013

Whole-exome sequencing in adult ETP-ALL reveals a high rate of DNMT3A mutations

Martin Neumann; Sandra Heesch; Cornelia Schlee; Stefan Schwartz; Nicola Gökbuget; Dieter Hoelzer; Nikola P. Konstandin; Bianka Ksienzyk; Sebastian Vosberg; Alexander Graf; Stefan Krebs; Helmut Blum; Thorsten Raff; Monika Brüggemann; Wolf-Karsten Hofmann; Jochen Hecht; Stefan K. Bohlander; Philipp A. Greif; Claudia D. Baldus

Early T-cell precursor (ETP) acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is a high-risk subgroup of T-lineage ALL characterized by specific stem cell and myeloid features. In adult ETP-ALL, no comprehensive studies on the genetic background have been performed to elucidate molecular lesions of this distinct subgroup. We performed whole-exome sequencing of 5 paired ETP-ALL samples. In addition to mutations in genes known to be involved in leukemogenesis (ETV6, NOTCH1, JAK1, and NF1), we identified novel recurrent mutations in FAT1 (25%), FAT3 (20%), DNM2 (35%), and genes associated with epigenetic regulation (MLL2, BMI1, and DNMT3A). Importantly, we verified the high rate of DNMT3A mutations (16%) in a larger cohort of adult patients with ETP-ALL (10/68). Mutations in epigenetic regulators support clinical trials, including epigenetic-orientated therapies, for this high-risk subgroup. Interestingly, more than 60% of adult patients with ETP-ALL harbor at least a single genetic lesion in DNMT3A, FLT3, or NOTCH1 that may allow use of targeted therapies.


Blood Cancer Journal | 2012

Clinical and molecular characterization of early T-cell precursor leukemia: a high-risk subgroup in adult T-ALL with a high frequency of FLT3 mutations

Martin Neumann; Sandra Heesch; Nicola Gökbuget; Stefan Schwartz; Cornelia Schlee; Ouidad Benlasfer; Nasrin Farhadi-Sartangi; Julia Thibaut; Thomas Burmeister; Dieter Hoelzer; Wolf-Karsten Hofmann; Eckhard Thiel; Claudia D. Baldus

A subgroup of pediatric acute T-lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) was characterized by a gene expression profile comparable to that of early T-cell precursors (ETPs) with a highly unfavorable outcome. We have investigated clinical and molecular characteristics of the ETP-ALL subgroup in adult T-ALL. As ETP-ALL represents a subgroup of early T-ALL we particularly focused on this cohort and identified 178 adult patients enrolled in the German Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia Multicenter studies (05/93–07/03). Of these, 32% (57/178) were classified as ETP-ALL based on their characteristic immunophenotype. The outcome of adults with ETP-ALL was poor with an overall survival of only 35% at 10 years, comparable to the inferior outcome of early T-ALL with 38%. The molecular characterization of adult ETP-ALL revealed distinct alterations with overexpression of stem cell-related genes (BAALC, IGFBP7, MN1, WT1). Interestingly, we found a low rate of NOTCH1 mutations and no FBXW7 mutations in adult ETP-ALL. In contrast, FLT3 mutations, rare in the overall cohort of T-ALL, were very frequent and nearly exclusively found in ETP-ALL characterized by a specific immunophenotype. These molecular characteristics provide biologic insights and implications with respect to innovative treatment strategies (for example, tyrosine kinase inhibitors) for this high-risk subgroup of adult ETP-ALL.


PLOS ONE | 2013

FLT3 Mutations in Early T-Cell Precursor ALL Characterize a Stem Cell Like Leukemia and Imply the Clinical Use of Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors

Martin Neumann; Ebru Coskun; Lars Fransecky; Liliana H. Mochmann; Isabelle Bartram; Nasrin Farhadi Sartangi; Sandra Heesch; Nicola Gökbuget; Stefan Schwartz; Christian Brandts; Cornelia Schlee; Rainer Haas; Ulrich Dührsen; Martin Griesshammer; Hartmut Döhner; Gerhard Ehninger; Thomas Burmeister; Olga Blau; Eckhard Thiel; Dieter Hoelzer; Wolf-Karsten Hofmann; Claudia D. Baldus

Early T-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ETP-ALL) has been identified as high-risk subgroup of acute T-lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) with a high rate of FLT3-mutations in adults. To unravel the underlying pathomechanisms and the clinical course we assessed molecular alterations and clinical characteristics in a large cohort of ETP-ALL (n = 68) in comparison to non-ETP T-ALL adult patients. Interestingly, we found a high rate of FLT3-mutations in ETP-ALL samples (n = 24, 35%). Furthermore, FLT3 mutated ETP-ALL was characterized by a specific immunophenotype (CD2+/CD5-/CD13+/CD33-), a distinct gene expression pattern (aberrant expression of IGFBP7, WT1, GATA3) and mutational status (absence of NOTCH1 mutations and a low frequency, 21%, of clonal TCR rearrangements). The observed low GATA3 expression and high WT1 expression in combination with lack of NOTCH1 mutations and a low rate of TCR rearrangements point to a leukemic transformation at the pluripotent prothymocyte stage in FLT3 mutated ETP-ALL. The clinical outcome in ETP-ALL patients was poor, but encouraging in those patients with allogeneic stem cell transplantation (3-year OS: 74%). To further explore the efficacy of targeted therapies, we demonstrate that T-ALL cell lines transfected with FLT3 expression constructs were particularly sensitive to tyrosine kinase inhibitors. In conclusion, FLT3 mutated ETP-ALL defines a molecular distinct stem cell like leukemic subtype. These data warrant clinical studies with the implementation of FLT3 inhibitors in addition to early allogeneic stem cell transplantation for this high risk subgroup.


Blood Cancer Journal | 2011

Antileukemic activity of the HSP70 inhibitor pifithrin-μ in acute leukemia

Martin Kaiser; Kühnl A; Reins J; Fischer S; Ortiz-Tanchez J; Cornelia Schlee; Mochmann Lh; Sandra Heesch; Ouidad Benlasfer; Wolf-Karsten Hofmann; Eckhard Thiel; Claudia D. Baldus

Heat shock protein (HSP) 70 is aberrantly expressed in different malignancies and has emerged as a promising new target for anticancer therapy. Here, we analyzed the in vitro antileukemic effects of pifithrin-μ (PFT-μ), an inhibitor of inducible HSP70, in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) cell lines, as well as in primary AML blasts. PFT-μ significantly inhibited cell viability at low micromolar concentrations in all cell lines tested, with IC50 values ranging from 2.5 to 12.7 μ, and was highly active in primary AML blasts with a median IC50 of 8.9 μ (range 5.7–37.2). Importantly, higher IC50 values were seen in normal hematopoietic cells. In AML and ALL, PFT-μ induced apoptosis and cell cycle arrest in a dose-dependent fashion. PFT-μ also led to an increase of the active form of caspase-3 and reduced the intracellular concentrations of AKT and ERK1/2 in NALM-6 cells. Moreover, PFT-μ enhanced cytotoxicity of cytarabine, 17-(allylamino)-17-desmethoxygeldanamycin, suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid, and sorafenib in NALM-6, TOM-1 and KG-1a cells. This is the first study demonstrating significant antileukemic effects of the HSP70 inhibitor PFT-μ, alone and in combination with different antineoplastic drugs in both AML and ALL. Our results suggest a potential therapeutic role for PFT-μ in acute leukemias.


Blood | 2010

High BAALC expression predicts chemoresistance in adult B-precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia

Andrea Kühnl; Nicola Gökbuget; Andrea Stroux; Thomas Burmeister; Martin Neumann; Sandra Heesch; Torsten Haferlach; Dieter Hoelzer; Wolf-Karsten Hofmann; Eckhard Thiel; Claudia D. Baldus

Overexpression of BAALC is an adverse prognostic factor in adults with cytogenetically normal acute myeloid leukemia and T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). Here, we analyzed the prognostic significance of BAALC in B-precursor ALL. BAALC MRNA expression was determined in 368 primary adult B-precursor ALL patients enrolled on the 06/99 and 07/03 GMALL trials. Patients were grouped into tertiles according to BAALC expression (T1-T3). Higher BAALC expression (T3 vs T2 vs T1) was associated with higher age (P < .001), a higher white blood cell count (P = .008), CD34 (P = .001), BCR-ABL (P < .001), and MLL-AF4 (P < .001). Higher BAALC expression predicted primary therapy resistance in the overall cohort (P = .002) and in the BCR-ABL(-) and MLL-AF4(-) subgroup (P = .01). In BCR-ABL(-) and MLL-AF4(-) patients, higher BAALC expression was associated with a shorter overall survival (OS; 5-year OS: T3, 38%; T2, 52%; T1, 70%; P = .004) and independently predicted OS in multivariate models (P = .03). Gene-expression profiling revealed an up-regulation of stem cell markers and genes involved in chemoresistance (TSPAN7 and LYN) in the high BAALC group. Thus, high BAALC expression is associated with an immature, chemoresistant leukemic phenotype and identifies patients with inferior OS. Determination of BAALC might contribute to risk assessment of molecularly undefined adult B-precursor ALL.


Haematologica | 2010

Prognostic implications of mutations and expression of the Wilms tumor 1 (WT1) gene in adult acute T-lymphoblastic leukemia

Sandra Heesch; Nicola Goekbuget; Andrea Stroux; Jutta Ortiz Tanchez; Cornelia Schlee; Thomas Burmeister; Stefan Schwartz; Olga Blau; Ulrich Keilholz; Antonia Busse; Dieter Hoelzer; Eckhard Thiel; Wolf-Karsten Hofmann; Claudia D. Baldus

Background The role of the Wilms tumor 1 gene (WT1) in acute leukemias has been underscored by mutations found in acute myeloid leukemia identifying patients with inferior survival. Furthermore, aberrant expression of WT1 in acute myeloid leukemia was associated with an increased risk of relapse. No larger studies have performed a combined approach including WT1 mutation and expression analyses in acute T-lymphoblastic leukemia. Design and Methods We analyzed the WT1 mutations and the expression status in a total of 252 consecutive adult patients with newly diagnosed T-lymphoblastic leukemia, who were registered on the GMALL 06/99 and 07/03 protocols and had sufficient material available. The GMALL protocols included intensive chemotherapy as well as stem cell transplantation according to a risk-based model with indication for stem cell transplantation in first complete remission for early and mature T-lymphoblastic leukemia patients; patients with thymic T-lymphoblastic leukemia were allocated to a standard risk group and treated with intensive chemotherapy. Results Twenty of the 238 patients analyzed had WT1 mutations (WT1mut) in exon 7. WT1mut cases were characterized by immature features such as an early immunophenotype and higher WT1 expression. In thymic T-lymphoblastic leukemia, WT1mut patients had an inferior relapse-free survival compared to WT1 wild-type patients. T-lymphoblastic leukemia patients with aberrant WT1 expression (high or negative) showed a higher relapse rate and an inferior outcome compared to patients with intermediate WT1 expression. In the standard risk group of thymic T-lymphoblastic leukemia, aberrant WT1 expression was predictive for an inferior relapse-free survival as compared to patients with intermediate expression. In multivariate analysis, WT1 expression was of independent prognostic significance for relapse-free survival. Conclusions WT1 mutations were associated with an inferior relapse-free survival in standard risk thymic T-lymphoblastic leukemia patients. Moreover, altered expression associated with inferior outcome also suggests a role of WT1 in T-lymphoblastic leukemia and the potential use of molecularly-based treatment stratification to improve outcome.


Leukemia Research | 2011

High expression of IGFBP2 is associated with chemoresistance in adult acute myeloid leukemia

Andrea Kühnl; Martin Kaiser; Martin Neumann; Lars Fransecky; Sandra Heesch; Michael D. Radmacher; Guido Marcucci; Clara D. Bloomfield; Wolf-Karsten Hofmann; Eckhard Thiel; Claudia D. Baldus

Insulin-like growth factor (IGF) signaling plays an important role in many tumors and overexpression of IGF Binding Protein (IGFBP) 2 has been associated with adverse outcome in childhood leukemia. Here, we evaluated IGFBP2 mRNA expression and its prognostic implications in 99 adult acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients by quantitative real-time RT-PCR. High IGFBP2 was associated with a high incidence of primary resistant disease (IGFBP2 high 65%, IGFBP2 low 32%; P=0.02) and was independently predictive for therapy resistance [OR 3.6 (95% CI 1.2-11); P=0.02] in multivariate analyses. Gene-expression profiling revealed an up-regulation of genes implicated in leukemogenesis (MYB, MEIS1, HOXB3, HOXA9) and genes associated with adverse outcome (ERG, WT1) in patients with high IGFBP2 expression. Thus, our data suggest a role of IGFBP2 and IGF signaling in chemoresistance of AML. Patients with high IGFBP2 expression might benefit from molecular therapies targeting the IGF pathway.


Leukemia Research | 2013

MicroRNA profiling reveals aberrant microRNA expression in adult ETP-ALL and functional studies implicate a role for miR-222 in acute leukemia

Ebru Coskun; Martin Neumann; Cornelia Schlee; Frauke Liebertz; Sandra Heesch; Nicola Goekbuget; Dieter Hoelzer; Claudia D. Baldus

Early T-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ETP-ALL) has been identified as high-risk subgroup in acute T-cell lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL). To investigate the immature and myeloid nature of ETP-ALL we examined global microRNA (miRNA) expression in adult ETP-ALL. miRNA profiling of ETP-ALL (n=8), non-ETP T-ALL (n=6), and healthy controls was performed and results were validated in independent cohorts of 66 ETP-ALL and 111 non-ETP T-ALL using real-time RT-PCR. Furthermore, in vitro studies were performed on deregulated miRNAs in acute leukemia. We identified miR-221 and miR-222 as the most upregulated and six miRNAs (miR-151-3p, miR-19a, miR-20b, miR-342-3p, miR-363, and miR-576-3p) as downregulated in ETP-ALL compared to non-ETP T-ALL. In the validation cohorts, miR-221 and miR-222 were significantly upregulated in ETP-ALL, and miR-363 and miR-19a were downregulated in ETP-ALL. ETS1, downregulated in ETP-ALL, was identified as direct target of miR-222. In our in vitro studies miR-222 significantly inhibited proliferation, and caused cell cycle arrest and apoptosis in leukemic cells. In conclusion, our study revealed aberrant miRNA expression in ETP-ALL, with miR-221 and miR-222 as the most overexpressed miRNAs and implied a functional role for miR-222 in leukemic cells. Importantly, miR-222 may impact leukemogenesis by altering expression of the proto-oncogene ETS1 in acute leukemia.


Cancer Science | 2011

Expression of IGFBP7 in acute leukemia is regulated by DNA methylation

Sandra Heesch; Isabelle Bartram; Martin Neumann; Jana Reins; Maximilian Mossner; Cornelia Schlee; Andrea Stroux; Torsten Haferlach; Nicola Goekbuget; Dieter Hoelzer; Wolf-Karsten Hofmann; Eckhard Thiel; Claudia D. Baldus

The important role of insulin‐like growth factor binding protein 7 (IGFBP7) as a tumor suppressor in solid tumors has been revealed in several studies. Interestingly, in a recent study IGFBP7 was also shown to be aberrantly expressed in acute leukemia. Moreover, in acute T‐lymphoblastic leukemia (T‐ALL), high IGFBP7 expression predicts primary therapy resistance. In order to elucidate the mechanisms underlying aberrant IGFBP7 expression, we used pyrosequencing technology to investigate the DNA methylation of IGFBP7 in 109 T‐ALL patient samples. Aberrant methylation was shown and hypomethylation was associated with an early immunophenotype and co‐expression of the stem cell markers CD117 (P < 0.001) and CD34 (P < 0.001). In concordance, gene expression profiles of 86 T‐ALL patients revealed upregulation of stem cell markers (CD34 and CD133) as well as genes associated with poor outcome and pathogenesis of leukemia (MN1, BAALC, FLT3) in the high IGFBP7 expression group. In conclusion, aberrant IGFBP7 expression is regulated by DNA methylation in acute leukemia. Hypomethylation of the gene is likely to characterize an immature and a more malignant subtype of the disease. (Cancer Sci 2011; 102: 253–259)


Leukemia Research | 2009

Epigenetic control of differential expression of specific ERG isoforms in acute T-lymphoblastic leukemia

Arend Bohne; Cornelia Schlee; M. Mossner; Julia Thibaut; Sandra Heesch; Eckhard Thiel; Wolf-Karsten Hofmann; Claudia D. Baldus

Expression of ERG is of prognostic significance in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and T-lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) pointing to its role in leukemogenesis. To unravel its transcriptional regulation we analyzed the expression of ERG specific isoforms. Expression of the two main isoforms ERG2 and ERG3 was found in AML and normal CD34+ cells, whereas T-ALL blasts only expressed ERG isoforms harboring exon 5 (ERG3) lacking expression of ERG2. Bisulfite sequencing revealed hypermethylation of a CpG island within the ERG2 promoter region in T-ALL. Treatment of the T-lymphoblastic cell line BE13 with decitabine led to re-expression of ERG2 and pyrosequencing showed concordant DNA hypomethylation, thus confirming a methylation regulated expression of ERG2. Moreover, the identification of a new ERG isoform (ERG3Deltaex12) suggests the association with different interaction partners and adds to the complexity of downstream pathways mediated by the expression of specific ERG transcripts in acute leukemia.

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Dieter Hoelzer

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Nicola Gökbuget

Goethe University Frankfurt

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