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Featured researches published by Sankar Mohan.


Nature | 2010

The mutation spectrum revealed by paired genome sequences from a lung cancer patient

William Lee; Zhaoshi Jiang; Jinfeng Liu; Peter M. Haverty; Yinghui Guan; Jeremy Stinson; Peng Yue; Yan Zhang; Krishna P. Pant; Deepali Bhatt; Connie Ha; Stephanie Johnson; Michael Kennemer; Sankar Mohan; Igor Nazarenko; Colin K. Watanabe; Andrew Sparks; David S. Shames; Robert Gentleman; Frederic J. de Sauvage; Howard M. Stern; Ajay Pandita; Dennis G. Ballinger; Radoje Drmanac; Zora Modrusan; Somasekar Seshagiri; Zemin Zhang

Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer-related mortality worldwide, with non-small-cell lung carcinomas in smokers being the predominant form of the disease. Although previous studies have identified important common somatic mutations in lung cancers, they have primarily focused on a limited set of genes and have thus provided a constrained view of the mutational spectrum. Recent cancer sequencing efforts have used next-generation sequencing technologies to provide a genome-wide view of mutations in leukaemia, breast cancer and cancer cell lines. Here we present the complete sequences of a primary lung tumour (60× coverage) and adjacent normal tissue (46×). Comparing the two genomes, we identify a wide variety of somatic variations, including >50,000 high-confidence single nucleotide variants. We validated 530 somatic single nucleotide variants in this tumour, including one in the KRAS proto-oncogene and 391 others in coding regions, as well as 43 large-scale structural variations. These constitute a large set of new somatic mutations and yield an estimated 17.7 per megabase genome-wide somatic mutation rate. Notably, we observe a distinct pattern of selection against mutations within expressed genes compared to non-expressed genes and in promoter regions up to 5 kilobases upstream of all protein-coding genes. Furthermore, we observe a higher rate of amino acid-changing mutations in kinase genes. We present a comprehensive view of somatic alterations in a single lung tumour, and provide the first evidence, to our knowledge, of distinct selective pressures present within the tumour environment.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2011

Evidence for Sequenced Molecular Evolution of IDH1 Mutant Glioblastoma From a Distinct Cell of Origin

Albert Lai; Samir Kharbanda; Whitney B. Pope; Anh Tran; Orestes E. Solis; Franklin Peale; William F. Forrest; Kanan Pujara; Jose Carrillo; Ajay Pandita; Benjamin M. Ellingson; Chauncey W. Bowers; Robert Soriano; Nils Ole Schmidt; Sankar Mohan; William H. Yong; Somasekar Seshagiri; Zora Modrusan; Zhaoshi Jiang; Kenneth D. Aldape; Paul S. Mischel; Linda M. Liau; Cameron Escovedo; Weidong Chen; Phioanh L. Nghiemphu; C. David James; Michael D. Prados; Manfred Westphal; Katrin Lamszus; Timothy F. Cloughesy

PURPOSE Mutation in isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 (IDH1) at R132 (IDH1(R132MUT)) is frequent in low-grade diffuse gliomas and, within glioblastoma (GBM), has been proposed as a marker for GBMs that arise by transformation from lower-grade gliomas, regardless of clinical history. To determine how GBMs arising with IDH1(R132MUT) differ from other GBMs, we undertook a comprehensive comparison of patients presenting clinically with primary GBM as a function of IDH1(R132) mutation status. PATIENTS AND METHODS In all, 618 treatment-naive primary GBMs and 235 lower-grade diffuse gliomas were sequenced for IDH1(R132) and analyzed for demographic, radiographic, anatomic, histologic, genomic, epigenetic, and transcriptional characteristics. RESULTS Investigation revealed a constellation of features that distinguishes IDH1(R132MUT) GBMs from other GBMs (including frontal location and lesser extent of contrast enhancement and necrosis), relates them to lower-grade IDH1(R132MUT) gliomas, and supports the concept that IDH1(R132MUT) gliomas arise from a neural precursor population that is spatially and temporally restricted in the brain. The observed patterns of DNA sequence, methylation, and copy number alterations support a model of ordered molecular evolution of IDH1(R132MUT) GBM in which the appearance of mutant IDH1 protein is an initial event, followed by production of p53 mutant protein, and finally by copy number alterations of PTEN and EGFR. CONCLUSION Although histologically similar, GBMs arising with and without IDH1(R132MUT) appear to represent distinct disease entities that arise from separate cell types of origin as the result of largely nonoverlapping sets of molecular events. Optimal clinical management should account for the distinction between these GBM disease subtypes.


Molecular Cancer Research | 2009

Exon Array Profiling Detects EML4-ALK Fusion in Breast, Colorectal, and Non―Small Cell Lung Cancers

Eva Lin; Li Li; Yinghui Guan; Robert Soriano; Celina Sanchez Rivers; Sankar Mohan; Ajay Pandita; Jerry Tang; Zora Modrusan

The echinoderm microtubule-associated protein-like 4–anaplastic lymphoma kinase (EML4-ALK) fusion gene has been identified as an oncogene in a subset of non–small cell lung cancers (NSCLC). We used profiling of cancer genomes on an exon array to develop a novel computational method for the global search of gene rearrangements. This approach led to the detection of EML4-ALK fusion in breast and colorectal carcinomas in addition to NSCLC. Screening of a large collection of patient tumor samples showed the presence of EML4-ALK fusion in 2.4% of breast (5 of 209), 2.4% of colorectal (2 of 83), and in 11.3% of NSCLC (12 of 106). Besides previously known EML4-ALK variants 1 (E13; A20) and 2 (E20; A20), a novel variant E21; A20 was found in colorectal carcinoma. The presence of an EML-ALK rearrangement was verified by identifying genomic fusion points in tumor samples representative of breast, colon, and NSCLC. EML4-ALK translocation was also confirmed by fluorescence in situ hybridization assay, which revealed its substantial heterogeneity in both primary tumors and tumor-derived cell lines. To elucidate the functional significance of EML4-ALK, we examined the growth of cell lines harboring the fusion following EML4 and ALK silencing by small interfering RNA. Significant growth inhibition was observed in some but not all cell lines, suggesting their variable dependence on ALK-mediated cell survival signaling. Collectively, these findings show the recurrence of EML4-ALK fusion in multiple solid tumors and further substantiate its role in tumorigenesis. (Mol Cancer Res 2009;7(9):1466–76)


Clinical Cancer Research | 2012

Phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) Pathway Alterations are Associated with Histologic Subtypes and are Predictive of Sensitivity to PI3K Inhibitors in Lung Cancer Preclinical Models

Jill M. Spoerke; Carol O'Brien; Ling Huw; Hartmut Koeppen; Jane Fridlyand; Rainer K. Brachmann; Peter M. Haverty; Ajay Pandita; Sankar Mohan; Deepak Sampath; Lori S. Friedman; Leanne Ross; Garret Hampton; Lukas Amler; David S. Shames; Mark R. Lackner

Purpose: Class 1 phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) plays a major role in cell proliferation and survival in a wide variety of human cancers. Here, we investigated biomarker strategies for PI3K pathway inhibitors in non–small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Experimental Design: Molecular profiling for candidate PI3K predictive biomarkers was conducted on a collection of NSCLC tumor samples. Assays included comparative genomic hybridization, reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction gene expression, mutation detection for PIK3CA and other oncogenes, PTEN immunohistochemistry, and FISH for PIK3CA copy number. In addition, a panel of NSCLC cell lines characterized for alterations in the PI3K pathway was screened with PI3K and dual PI3K/mTOR inhibitors to assess the preclinical predictive value of candidate biomarkers. Results: PIK3CA amplification was detected in 37% of squamous tumors and 5% of adenocarcinomas, whereas PIK3CA mutations were found in 9% of squamous and 0% of adenocarcinomas. Total loss of PTEN immunostaining was found in 21% of squamous tumors and 4% of adenocarcinomas. Cell lines harboring pathway alterations (receptor tyrosine kinase activation, PI3K mutation or amplification, and PTEN loss) were exquisitely sensitive to the PI3K inhibitor GDC-0941. A dual PI3K/mTOR inhibitor had broader activity across the cell line panel and in tumor xenografts. The combination of GDC-0941 with paclitaxel, erlotinib, or a mitogen-activated protein–extracellular signal-regulated kinase inhibitor had greater effects on cell viability than PI3K inhibition alone. Conclusions: Candidate biomarkers for PI3K inhibitors have predictive value in preclinical models and show histology-specific alterations in primary tumors, suggesting that distinct biomarker strategies may be required in squamous compared with nonsquamous NSCLC patient populations. Clin Cancer Res; 18(24); 6771–83. ©2012 AACR.


Nature | 2011

COP1 is a tumour suppressor that causes degradation of ETS transcription factors

Alberto C. Vitari; Kevin G. Leong; Kim Newton; Cindy Yee; Karen O’Rourke; Jinfeng Liu; Lilian Phu; Rajesh Vij; Ronald E. Ferrando; Suzana S. Couto; Sankar Mohan; Ajay Pandita; Jo-Anne Hongo; David Arnott; Ingrid E. Wertz; Wei-Qiang Gao; Dorothy French; Vishva M. Dixit

The proto-oncogenes ETV1, ETV4 and ETV5 encode transcription factors in the E26 transformation-specific (ETS) family, which includes the most frequently rearranged and overexpressed genes in prostate cancer. Despite being critical regulators of development, little is known about their post-translational regulation. Here we identify the ubiquitin ligase COP1 (also known as RFWD2) as a tumour suppressor that negatively regulates ETV1, ETV4 and ETV5. ETV1, which is mutated in prostate cancer more often, was degraded after being ubiquitinated by COP1. Truncated ETV1 encoded by prostate cancer translocation TMPRSS2:ETV1 lacks the critical COP1 binding motifs and was 50-fold more stable than wild-type ETV1. Almost all patient translocations render ETV1 insensitive to COP1, implying that this confers a selective advantage to prostate epithelial cells. Indeed, COP1 deficiency in mouse prostate elevated ETV1 and produced increased cell proliferation, hyperplasia, and early prostate intraepithelial neoplasia. Combined loss of COP1 and PTEN enhanced the invasiveness of mouse prostate adenocarcinomas. Finally, rare human prostate cancer samples showed hemizygous loss of the COP1 gene, loss of COP1 protein, and elevated ETV1 protein while lacking a translocation event. These findings identify COP1 as a tumour suppressor whose downregulation promotes prostatic epithelial cell proliferation and tumorigenesis.


Cancer Research | 2008

Functional Genomics Identifies ABCC3 as a Mediator of Taxane Resistance in HER2-Amplified Breast Cancer

Carol O'Brien; Guy Cavet; Ajay Pandita; Xiaolan Hu; Lauren Haydu; Sankar Mohan; Karen Toy; Celina Sanchez Rivers; Zora Modrusan; Lukas C. Amler; Mark R. Lackner

Breast cancer is a heterogeneous disease with distinct molecular subtypes characterized by differential response to targeted and chemotherapeutic agents. Enhanced understanding of the genetic alterations characteristic of different subtypes is needed to pave the way for more personalized administration of therapeutic agents. We have taken a functional genomics approach using a well-characterized panel of breast cancer cell lines to identify putative biomarkers of resistance to antimitotic agents such as paclitaxel and monomethyl-auristatin-E (MMAE). In vitro studies revealed a striking difference in sensitivity to these agents between cell lines from different subtypes, with basal-like cell lines being significantly more sensitive to both agents than luminal or HER2-amplified cell lines. Genome-wide association studies using copy number data from Affymetrix single nucleotide polymorphism arrays identified amplification of the chromosome 17q21 region as being highly associated with resistance to both paclitaxel and MMAE. An unbiased approach consisting of RNA interference and high content analysis was used to show that amplification and concomitant overexpression of the gene encoding the ABCC3 drug transporter is responsible for conferring in vitro resistance to paclitaxel and MMAE. We also show that amplification of ABCC3 is present in primary breast tumors and that it occurs predominantly in HER2-amplified and luminal tumors, and we report on development of a specific fluorescence in situ hybridization assay that may have utility as a predictive biomarker of taxane resistance in breast cancer.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2014

Biomarker Analyses from a Placebo-Controlled Phase II Study Evaluating Erlotinib ± Onartuzumab in Advanced Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer: MET Expression Levels Are Predictive of Patient Benefit

Hartmut Koeppen; Wei Yu; Jiping Zha; Ajay Pandita; Elicia Penuel; Linda Rangell; Rajiv Raja; Sankar Mohan; Rajesh Patel; Rupal Desai; Ling Fu; An Do; Vaishali Parab; Xiaoling Xia; Tom Januario; Sharianne G. Louie; Ellen Filvaroff; David S. Shames; Ignacio I. Wistuba; Marina Lipkind; Jenny Huang; Mirella Lazarov; Vanitha Ramakrishnan; Lukas Amler; See-Chun Phan; Premal Patel; Amy Peterson; Robert L. Yauch

Purpose: In a recent phase II study of onartuzumab (MetMAb), patients whose non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) tissue scored as positive for MET protein by immunohistochemistry (IHC) experienced a significant benefit with onartuzumab plus erlotinib (O+E) versus erlotinib. We describe development and validation of a standardized MET IHC assay and, retrospectively, evaluate multiple biomarkers as predictors of patient benefit. Experimental Design: Biomarkers related to MET and/or EGF receptor (EGFR) signaling were measured by IHC, FISH, quantitative reverse transcription PCR, mutation detection techniques, and ELISA. Results: A positive correlation between IHC, Western blotting, and MET mRNA expression was observed in NSCLC cell lines/tissues. An IHC scoring system of MET expression taking proportional and intensity-based thresholds into consideration was applied in an analysis of the phase II study and resulted in the best differentiation of outcomes. Further analyses revealed a nonsignificant overall survival (OS) improvement with O+E in patients with high MET copy number (mean ≥5 copies/cell by FISH); however, benefit was maintained in “MET IHC-positive”/MET FISH-negative patients (HR, 0.37; P = 0.01). MET, EGFR, amphiregulin, epiregulin, or HGF mRNA expression did not predict a significant benefit with onartuzumab; a nonsignificant OS improvement was observed in patients with high tumor MET mRNA levels (HR, 0.59; P = 0.23). Patients with low baseline plasma hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) exhibited an HR for OS of 0.519 (P = 0.09) in favor of onartuzumab treatment. Conclusions: MET IHC remains the most robust predictor of OS and progression-free survival benefit from O+E relative to all examined exploratory markers. Clin Cancer Res; 20(17); 4488–98. ©2014 AACR.


Molecular Cancer Research | 2009

Oncogenic activating mutations are associated with local copy gain.

Barmak Modrek; Lin Ge; Ajay Pandita; Eva Lin; Sankar Mohan; Peng Yue; Steve Guerrero; William M. Lin; Thinh Pham; Zora Modrusan; Somasekar Seshagiri; Howard M. Stern; Paul Waring; Levi A. Garraway; John Chant; David Stokoe; Guy Cavet

Although activating mutations and gains in copy number are key mechanisms for oncogene activation, the relationship between the two is not well understood. In this study, we focused on KRAS copy gains and mutations in non–small cell lung cancer. We found that KRAS copy gains occur more frequently in tumors with KRAS activating mutations and are associated with large increases in KRAS expression. These copy gains tend to be more focal in tumors with activating mutations than in those with wild-type KRAS. Fluorescence in situ hybridization analysis revealed that some tumors have homogeneous low-level gains of the KRAS locus, whereas others have high-level amplification of KRAS, often in only a fraction of tumor cells. Associations between activating mutation and copy gains were also observed for other oncogenes (EGFR in non–small cell lung cancer, BRAF and NRAS in melanoma). Activating mutations were associated with copy gains only at the mutated oncogene locus but not other oncogene loci. However, KRAS activating mutations in colorectal cancer were not associated with copy gains. Future work is warranted to clarify the relationship among the different mechanisms of oncogene activation. (Mol Cancer Res 2009;7(8):1244–52)


British Journal of Cancer | 2015

PTEN loss in circulating tumour cells correlates with PTEN loss in fresh tumour tissue from castration-resistant prostate cancer patients

Elizabeth Punnoose; Roberta Ferraldeschi; Edith Szafer-Glusman; Eric Tucker; Sankar Mohan; Penelope Flohr; Ruth Riisnaes; Susana Miranda; Ines Figueiredo; Daniel Nava Rodrigues; Aurelius Omlin; Carmel Pezaro; Jin Zhu; Lukas Amler; Premal Patel; Yibing Yan; Natalee Bales; Shannon L Werner; Jessica Louw; Ajay Pandita; Dena Marrinucci; Gerhardt Attard; Johann S. de Bono

Background:PTEN gene loss occurs frequently in castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) and may drive progression through activation of the PI3K/AKT pathway. Here, we developed a novel CTC-based assay to determine PTEN status and examined the correlation between PTEN status in CTCs and matched tumour tissue samples.Methods:PTEN gene status in CTCs was evaluated on an enrichment-free platform (Epic Sciences) by fluorescence in situ hybridisation (FISH). PTEN status in archival and fresh tumour tissue was evaluated by FISH and immunohistochemistry.Results:Peripheral blood was collected from 76 patients. Matched archival and fresh cancer tissue was available for 48 patients. PTEN gene status detected in CTCs was concordant with PTEN status in matched fresh tissues and archival tissue in 32 of 38 patients (84%) and 24 of 39 patients (62%), respectively. CTC counts were prognostic (continuous, P=0.001). PTEN loss in CTCs associated with worse survival in univariate analysis (HR 2.05; 95% CI 1.17–3.62; P=0.01) and with high lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) in metastatic CRPC patients.Conclusions:Our results illustrate the potential use of CTCs as a non-invasive, real-time liquid biopsy to determine PTEN gene status. The prognostic and predictive value of PTEN in CTCs warrants investigation in CRPC clinical trials of PI3K/AKT-targeted therapies.


Science Translational Medicine | 2011

CD40 Pathway Activation Status Predicts Response to CD40 Therapy in Diffuse Large B Cell Lymphoma

Bart Burington; Peng Yue; Xiaoyan Shi; Ranjana H. Advani; Jeffrey Lau; Jenille Tan; Susanna Stinson; Jeremy Stinson; Thomas Januario; Sven de Vos; Stephen M. Ansell; Andres Forero-Torres; Grazyna Fedorowicz; Teddy T C Yang; Kristi Elkins; Changchun Du; Sankar Mohan; Nancy Yu; Zora Modrusan; Somasekar Seshagiri; Shang Fan Yu; Ajay Pandita; Hartmut Koeppen; Dorothy French; Andrew G. Polson; Rienk Offringa; Nancy Whiting; Allen Ebens; David Dornan

A 15-gene expression signature predicts whether a patient with diffuse large B cell lymphoma will respond to dacetuzumab, a therapeutic antibody. Matching Treatment to Tumor If physicians could predict the future, it would take the guess work out of designing the right treatment regimen for every patient’s cancer. The results presented by Burington et al. move us closer to clearing the crystal ball for diffuse large B cell lymphomas, a common type of non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma in which a cell surface receptor, CD40, presents a seemingly attractive target for therapy. Although stimulation of CD40 by ligand binding can cause apoptosis of B cells—a trait that one would predict to be desirable for a B cell lymphoma drug—it can also induce undesirable proliferation of some lymphoma cells. This murky paradox makes it unclear when to prescribe dacetuzumab, a CD40-targeted therapeutic monoclonal antibody. The authors have now identified a 15-gene expression signature that signals the biochemical status of a lymphoma, thus clarifying whether it can be subdued by anti-CD40 therapy. The authors collected an array of cell lines derived from non-Hodgkin’s lymphomas that show a range of sensitivity to anti-CD40 therapy. By assessing gene expression before and after CD40 stimulation and creating a score that reflected CD40 pathway activation, Burington et al. found that cell lines with higher baseline activation of the CD40 pathway tended to be unresponsive to anti-CD40 stimulation. The researchers then identified a group of 15 active genes whose expression in formalin-fixed tissue (as would be obtained from patients) correctly predicted susceptibility to anti-CD40 treatment 77% of the time, a result verified in another set of cells lines and by quantitative polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Next, in a real-world test of the utility of this 15-gene predictor, tumor tissue samples from 39 patients who had been treated with dacetuzumab were scored for CD40 pathway activation with the new gene signature. A large majority (88%) of the patients predicted by the gene signature to be resistant to therapy in fact did not respond to therapy, showing a median progression-free survival of 40 days; 67% of those predicted to respond to dacetuzumab did so, with median progression-free survival extended to 169 days. These results encourage further testing in a prospective clinical trial designed to examine the ability of the 15-gene signature to predict which lymphoma patients will benefit from dacetuzumab treatment. If this index proves useful, it can be added to the catalog of prognostic tools at the service of the oncologist as they match drug to patient—without the need of a crystal ball. The primary function of B cells, critical components of the adaptive immune response, is to produce antibodies against foreign antigens, as well as to perform isotype class switching, which changes the heavy chain of an antibody so that it can interact with different repertoires of effector cells. CD40 is a member of the tumor necrosis factor superfamily of cell surface receptors that transmits survival signals to B cells. In contrast, in B cell cancers, stimulation of CD40 signaling results in a heterogeneous response in which cells can sometimes undergo cell death in response to treatment, depending on the system studied. We found an association between sensitivity to CD40 stimulation and mutation of the tumor suppressor p53 in a panel of non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma cell lines. Consistent with p53’s tumor suppressor role, we found that higher levels of intrinsic DNA damage and increased proliferation rates, as well as higher levels of BCL6, a transcriptional repressor proto-oncogene, were associated with sensitivity to CD40 stimulation. In addition, CD40 treatment–resistant cell lines were sensitized to CD40 stimulation after the introduction of DNA-damaging agents. Using gene expression analysis, we also showed that resistant cell lines exhibited a preexisting activated CD40 pathway and that an mRNA expression signature comprising CD40 target genes predicted sensitivity and resistance to CD40-activating agents in cell lines and mouse xenograft models. Finally, the gene signature predicted tumor shrinkage and progression-free survival in patients with diffuse large B cell lymphoma treated with dacetuzumab, a monoclonal antibody with partial CD40 agonist activity. These data show that CD40 pathway activation status may be useful in predicting the antitumor activity of CD40-stimulating therapeutic drugs.

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