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Dive into the research topics where Shamith Samarajiwa is active.

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Featured researches published by Shamith Samarajiwa.


Nature | 2012

The genomic and transcriptomic architecture of 2,000 breast tumours reveals novel subgroups

Christina Curtis; Sohrab P. Shah; Suet-Feung Chin; Gulisa Turashvili; Oscar M. Rueda; Mark J. Dunning; Doug Speed; Andy G. Lynch; Shamith Samarajiwa; Yinyin Yuan; Stefan Gräf; Gavin Ha; Gholamreza Haffari; Ali Bashashati; Roslin Russell; Steven McKinney; Anita Langerød; Andrew T. Green; Elena Provenzano; G.C. Wishart; Sarah Pinder; Peter H. Watson; Florian Markowetz; Leigh Murphy; Ian O. Ellis; Arnie Purushotham; Anne Lise Børresen-Dale; James D. Brenton; Simon Tavaré; Carlos Caldas

The elucidation of breast cancer subgroups and their molecular drivers requires integrated views of the genome and transcriptome from representative numbers of patients. We present an integrated analysis of copy number and gene expression in a discovery and validation set of 997 and 995 primary breast tumours, respectively, with long-term clinical follow-up. Inherited variants (copy number variants and single nucleotide polymorphisms) and acquired somatic copy number aberrations (CNAs) were associated with expression in ∼40% of genes, with the landscape dominated by cis- and trans-acting CNAs. By delineating expression outlier genes driven in cis by CNAs, we identified putative cancer genes, including deletions in PPP2R2A, MTAP and MAP2K4. Unsupervised analysis of paired DNA–RNA profiles revealed novel subgroups with distinct clinical outcomes, which reproduced in the validation cohort. These include a high-risk, oestrogen-receptor-positive 11q13/14 cis-acting subgroup and a favourable prognosis subgroup devoid of CNAs. Trans-acting aberration hotspots were found to modulate subgroup-specific gene networks, including a TCR deletion-mediated adaptive immune response in the ‘CNA-devoid’ subgroup and a basal-specific chromosome 5 deletion-associated mitotic network. Our results provide a novel molecular stratification of the breast cancer population, derived from the impact of somatic CNAs on the transcriptome.


Science | 2011

Spatial Coupling of mTOR and Autophagy Augments Secretory Phenotypes

Masako Narita; Andrew J. Young; Satoko Arakawa; Shamith Samarajiwa; Takayuki Nakashima; Sei Yoshida; Sungki Hong; Lorraine S. Berry; Stefanie Reichelt; Manuela Ferreira; Simon Tavaré; Ken Inoki; Shigeomi Shimizu; Masashi Narita

A cellular compartment allows simultaneous protein synthesis and degradation. Protein synthesis and autophagic degradation are regulated in an opposite manner by mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR), whereas under certain conditions it would be beneficial if they occurred in unison to handle rapid protein turnover. We observed a distinct cellular compartment at the trans side of the Golgi apparatus, the TOR-autophagy spatial coupling compartment (TASCC), where (auto)lysosomes and mTOR accumulated during Ras-induced senescence. mTOR recruitment to the TASCC was amino acid– and Rag guanosine triphosphatase–dependent, and disruption of mTOR localization to the TASCC suppressed interleukin-6/8 synthesis. TASCC formation was observed during macrophage differentiation and in glomerular podocytes; both displayed increased protein secretion. The spatial coupling of cells’ catabolic and anabolic machinery could augment their respective functions and facilitate the mass synthesis of secretory proteins.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Type I interferon receptors : Biochemistry and biological functions

Nicole Anne De Weerd; Shamith Samarajiwa; Paul J. Hertzog

The type I interferon (IFN)2 receptor (IFNAR) is comprised, as other cytokine receptors, of multiple components, in this case designated IFNAR1 and IFNAR2. However it is unique among cytokine receptors in the number of cognate ligands, including 13 IFN subtypes, , , , , and others in some species. The type I IFN receptors are distinct from those required for the type II IFN (IFNGR1 and IFNGR2) and type III IFNs (IFNLR and IL10R ). Nevertheless, genes encoding a component of each type of IFN receptor, namely IFNAR1, IFNAR2, IFNGR2, and IL10R , are located on human chromosome 21q22.1 in a cytokine receptor gene cluster, as typical of functionally related genes. Although IFNswere identified 50 years ago and the existence of IFN receptors 10 years later, it was in 1990when the first type I IFN receptor, now designated IFNAR1, was cloned. This was achieved utilizing human gene libraries expressed in murine cells and rescue of the definitive, species specific antiviral activity of human IFN 8 (1). IFNAR2 cloning was achieved first by identifying a human IFN binding activity in urine, peptide sequencing, and then by gene library screening with derived oligonucleotides (2). It was subsequently discovered that the original cDNA encoded only one isoform of the IFNAR2 gene, which also encoded a long transmembrane isoform that transduced a signal, a truncated transmembrane isoform, and a soluble/secreted isoform (3) (Fig. 1A). Subsequently, the functions of the type I IFN receptors have been elucidated with respect to ligand interaction, mechanisms of signal transduction, and biological responses. The pioneering studies that discovered IFNARs and their mechanisms of actions in vitro have been largely validated in vivo using genetargetedmice. This body of work has highlighted the important roles of IFNARs inmediating type I IFN responses in hemopoiesis and innate and acquired immunity to infection and cancer. However, IFNs elicit many biological effects that can even be opposite in different cell types. For example, type I IFN inhibits proliferation and is proapoptotic for many cell types (4), yet it prolongs the survival of memory T cells (5). Understanding the function of the IFNAR complexwill elucidate how such a diversity of biological outcomes is generated.


Nature Medicine | 2012

Silencing of Irf7 pathways in breast cancer cells promotes bone metastasis through immune escape

Bradley N. Bidwell; Clare Y. Slaney; Nimali P. Withana; Samuel C. Forster; Yuan Cao; Sherene Loi; Daniel M. Andrews; Thomas Mikeska; Niamh E. Mangan; Shamith Samarajiwa; Nicole Anne De Weerd; Jodee Gould; Pedram Argani; Andreas Möller; Mark J. Smyth; Robin L. Anderson; Paul J. Hertzog; Belinda S. Parker

Breast cancer metastasis is a key determinant of long-term patient survival. By comparing the transcriptomes of primary and metastatic tumor cells in a mouse model of spontaneous bone metastasis, we found that a substantial number of genes suppressed in bone metastases are targets of the interferon regulatory factor Irf7. Restoration of Irf7 in tumor cells or administration of interferon led to reduced bone metastases and prolonged survival time. In mice deficient in the interferon (IFN) receptor or in natural killer (NK) and CD8+ T cell responses, metastasis was accelerated, indicating that Irf7-driven suppression of metastasis was reliant on IFN signaling to host immune cells. We confirmed the clinical relevance of these findings in over 800 patients in which high expression of Irf7-regulated genes in primary tumors was associated with prolonged bone metastasis–free survival. This gene signature may identify patients that could benefit from IFN-based therapies. Thus, we have identified an innate immune pathway intrinsic to breast cancer cells, the suppression of which restricts immunosurveillance to enable metastasis.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2009

INTERFEROME: the database of interferon regulated genes

Shamith Samarajiwa; Samuel C. Forster; Katie Auchettl; Paul J. Hertzog

INTERFEROME is an open access database of types I, II and III Interferon regulated genes (http://www.interferome.org) collected from analysing expression data sets of cells treated with IFNs. This database of interferon regulated genes integrates information from high-throughput experiments with annotation, ontology, orthologue sequences from 37 species, tissue expression patterns and gene regulatory information to enable a detailed investigation of the molecular mechanisms underlying IFN biology. INTERFEROME fulfils a need in infection, immunity, development and cancer research by providing computational tools to assist in identifying interferon signatures in gene lists generated by high-throughput expression technologies, and their potential molecular and biological consequences.


Molecular Cell | 2012

Independence of Repressive Histone Marks and Chromatin Compaction during Senescent Heterochromatic Layer Formation

Tamir Chandra; Kristina Kirschner; Jean Yves Thuret; Benjamin D. Pope; Tyrone Ryba; Scott Newman; Kashif Ahmed; Shamith Samarajiwa; Rafik Salama; Thomas Carroll; Rory Stark; Rekin’s Janky; Masako Narita; Lixiang Xue; Agustin Chicas; Sabrina Nũnez; Ralf Janknecht; Yoko Hayashi-Takanaka; Michael D. Wilson; Aileen Marshall; Duncan T. Odom; M. Madan Babu; David P. Bazett-Jones; Simon Tavaré; Paul A.W. Edwards; Scott W. Lowe; Hiroshi Kimura; David M. Gilbert; Masashi Narita

The expansion of repressive epigenetic marks has been implicated in heterochromatin formation during embryonic development, but the general applicability of this mechanism is unclear. Here we show that nuclear rearrangement of repressive histone marks H3K9me3 and H3K27me3 into nonoverlapping structural layers characterizes senescence-associated heterochromatic foci (SAHF) formation in human fibroblasts. However, the global landscape of these repressive marks remains unchanged upon SAHF formation, suggesting that in somatic cells, heterochromatin can be formed through the spatial repositioning of pre-existing repressively marked histones. This model is reinforced by the correlation of presenescent replication timing with both the subsequent layered structure of SAHFs and the global landscape of the repressive marks, allowing us to integrate microscopic and genomic information. Furthermore, modulation of SAHF structure does not affect the occupancy of these repressive marks, nor vice versa. These experiments reveal that high-order heterochromatin formation and epigenetic remodeling of the genome can be discrete events.


Embo Molecular Medicine | 2011

ZNF703 is a common Luminal B breast cancer oncogene that differentially regulates luminal and basal progenitors in human mammary epithelium

Daniel G. Holland; Angela Burleigh; Anna Git; Mae Akilina Goldgraben; Pedro A. Pérez-Mancera; Suet-Feung Chin; Antonio Hurtado; Alejandra Bruna; H. Raza Ali; Wendy Greenwood; Mark J. Dunning; Shamith Samarajiwa; Suraj Menon; Oscar M. Rueda; Andy G. Lynch; Steven McKinney; Ian O. Ellis; Connie J. Eaves; Jason S. Carroll; Christina Curtis; Samuel Aparicio; Carlos Caldas

The telomeric amplicon at 8p12 is common in oestrogen receptor‐positive (ER+) breast cancers. Array‐CGH and expression analyses of 1172 primary breast tumours revealed that ZNF703 was the single gene within the minimal amplicon and was amplified predominantly in the Luminal B subtype. Amplification was shown to correlate with increased gene and protein expression and was associated with a distinct expression signature and poor clinical outcome. ZNF703 transformed NIH 3T3 fibroblasts, behaving as a classical oncogene, and regulated proliferation in human luminal breast cancer cell lines and immortalized human mammary epithelial cells. Manipulation of ZNF703 expression in the luminal MCF7 cell line modified the effects of TGFβ on proliferation. Overexpression of ZNF703 in normal human breast epithelial cells enhanced the frequency of in vitro colony‐forming cells from luminal progenitors. Taken together, these data strongly point to ZNF703 as a novel oncogene in Luminal B breast cancer.


Blood | 2011

HIV infection of dendritic cells subverts the IFN induction pathway via IRF-1 and inhibits type 1 IFN production.

Andrew N. Harman; Joey Lai; Stuart Turville; Shamith Samarajiwa; Lachlan Robert Gray; Valerie Marsden; Sarah K. Mercier; Kate L. Jones; Najla Nasr; Arjun Rustagi; Helen Cumming; Heather Donaghy; Johnson Mak; Michael Gale; Melissa Churchill; Paul J. Hertzog; Anthony L. Cunningham

Many viruses have developed mechanisms to evade the IFN response. Here, HIV-1 was shown to induce a distinct subset of IFN-stimulated genes (ISGs) in monocyte-derived dendritic cells (DCs), without detectable type I or II IFN. These ISGs all contained an IFN regulatory factor 1 (IRF-1) binding site in their promoters, and their expression was shown to be driven by IRF-1, indicating this subset was induced directly by viral infection by IRF-1. IRF-1 and -7 protein expression was enriched in HIV p24 antigen-positive DCs. A HIV deletion mutant with the IRF-1 binding site deleted from the long terminal repeat showed reduced growth kinetics. Early and persistent induction of IRF-1 was coupled with sequential transient up-regulation of its 2 inhibitors, IRF-8, followed by IRF-2, suggesting a mechanism for IFN inhibition. HIV-1 mutants with Vpr deleted induced IFN, showing that Vpr is inhibitory. However, HIV IFN inhibition was mediated by failure of IRF-3 activation rather than by its degradation, as in T cells. In contrast, herpes simplex virus type 2 markedly induced IFNβ and a broader range of ISGs to higher levels, supporting the hypothesis that HIV-1 specifically manipulates the induction of IFN and ISGs to enhance its noncytopathic replication in DCs.


Breast Cancer Research | 2012

Effects of BRCA2 cis-regulation in normal breast and cancer risk amongst BRCA2 mutation carriers

Ana Teresa Maia; Antonis C. Antoniou; Martin O'Reilly; Shamith Samarajiwa; Mark J. Dunning; Christiana Kartsonaki; Suet Feung Chin; Christina Curtis; Lesley McGuffog; Susan M. Domchek; Douglas F. Easton; Susan Peock; Debra Frost; D G R Evans; Ros Eeles; Louise Izatt; Julian Adlard; Diana Eccles; Olga M. Sinilnikova; Sylvie Mazoyer; Dominique Stoppa-Lyonnet; Marion Gauthier-Villars; Laurence Faivre; Laurence Venat-Bouvet; Capucine Delnatte; Heli Nevanlinna; Fergus J. Couch; Andrew K. Godwin; Maria Adelaide Caligo; Rosa B. Barkardottir

IntroductionCis-acting regulatory single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) at specific loci may modulate penetrance of germline mutations at the same loci by introducing different levels of expression of the wild-type allele. We have previously reported that BRCA2 shows differential allelic expression and we hypothesize that the known variable penetrance of BRCA2 mutations might be associated with this mechanism.MethodsWe combined haplotype analysis and differential allelic expression of BRCA2 in breast tissue to identify expression haplotypes and candidate cis-regulatory variants. These candidate variants underwent selection based on in silico predictions for regulatory potential and disruption of transcription factor binding, and were functionally analyzed in vitro and in vivo in normal and breast cancer cell lines. SNPs tagging the expression haplotypes were correlated with the total expression of several genes in breast tissue measured by Taqman and microarray technologies. The effect of the expression haplotypes on breast cancer risk in BRCA2 mutation carriers was investigated in 2,754 carriers.ResultsWe identified common haplotypes associated with differences in the levels of BRCA2 expression in human breast cells. We characterized three cis-regulatory SNPs located at the promoter and two intronic regulatory elements which affect the binding of the transcription factors C/EBPα, HMGA1, D-binding protein (DBP) and ZF5. We showed that the expression haplotypes also correlated with changes in the expression of other genes in normal breast. Furthermore, there was suggestive evidence that the minor allele of SNP rs4942440, which is associated with higher BRCA2 expression, is also associated with a reduced risk of breast cancer (per-allele hazard ratio (HR) = 0.85, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 0.72 to 1.00, P-trend = 0.048).ConclusionsOur work provides further insights into the role of cis-regulatory variation in the penetrance of disease-causing mutations. We identified small-effect genetic variants associated with allelic expression differences in BRCA2 which could possibly affect the risk in mutation carriers through altering expression levels of the wild-type allele.


PLOS Genetics | 2015

Phenotype specific analyses reveal distinct regulatory mechanism for chronically activated p53.

Kristina Kirschner; Shamith Samarajiwa; Jonathan M. Cairns; Suraj Menon; Pedro A. Pérez-Mancera; Kosuke Tomimatsu; Camino Bermejo-Rodríguez; Yoko Ito; Tamir Chandra; Masako Narita; Scott K. Lyons; Andy G. Lynch; Hiroshi Kimura; Tetsuya Ohbayashi; Simon Tavaré; Masashi Narita

The downstream functions of the DNA binding tumor suppressor p53 vary depending on the cellular context, and persistent p53 activation has recently been implicated in tumor suppression and senescence. However, genome-wide information about p53-target gene regulation has been derived mostly from acute genotoxic conditions. Using ChIP-seq and expression data, we have found distinct p53 binding profiles between acutely activated (through DNA damage) and chronically activated (in senescent or pro-apoptotic conditions) p53. Compared to the classical ‘acute’ p53 binding profile, ‘chronic’ p53 peaks were closely associated with CpG-islands. Furthermore, the chronic CpG-island binding of p53 conferred distinct expression patterns between senescent and pro-apoptotic conditions. Using the p53 targets seen in the chronic conditions together with external high-throughput datasets, we have built p53 networks that revealed extensive self-regulatory ‘p53 hubs’ where p53 and many p53 targets can physically interact with each other. Integrating these results with public clinical datasets identified the cancer-associated lipogenic enzyme, SCD, which we found to be directly repressed by p53 through the CpG-island promoter, providing a mechanistic link between p53 and the ‘lipogenic phenotype’, a hallmark of cancer. Our data reveal distinct phenotype associations of chronic p53 targets that underlie specific gene regulatory mechanisms.

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Paul J. Hertzog

Hudson Institute of Medical Research

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Masako Narita

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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Hiroshi Kimura

Tokyo Institute of Technology

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Samuel C. Forster

Hudson Institute of Medical Research

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