Stacey L. Edwards
QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute
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Featured researches published by Stacey L. Edwards.
Nature | 2008
Stacey L. Edwards; Rachel Brough; Christopher J. Lord; Rachael Natrajan; Radost Vatcheva; Douglas A. Levine; Jeff Boyd; Js Reis-Filho; Alan Ashworth
Cells with loss of BRCA2 function are defective in homologous recombination (HR) and are highly sensitive to inhibitors of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP), which provides the basis for a new therapeutic approach. Here we show that resistance to PARP inhibition can be acquired by deletion of a mutation in BRCA2. We derived PARP-inhibitor-resistant (PIR) clones from the human CAPAN1 pancreatic cancer cell line, which carries the protein-truncating c.6174delT frameshift mutation. PIR clones could form DNA-damage-induced RAD51 nuclear foci and were able to limit genotoxin-induced genomic instability, both hallmarks of a competent HR pathway. New BRCA2 isoforms were expressed in the resistant lines as a result of intragenic deletion of the c.6174delT mutation and restoration of the open reading frame (ORF). Reconstitution of BRCA2-deficient cells with these revertant BRCA2 alleles rescued PARP inhibitor sensitivity and HR deficiency. Most of the deletions in BRCA2 were associated with small tracts of homology, and possibly arose from error-prone repair caused by BRCA2 deficiency. Similar ORF-restoring mutations were present in carboplatin-resistant ovarian tumours from c.6174delT mutation carriers. These observations have implications for understanding drug resistance in BRCA mutation carriers as well as in defining functionally important domains within BRCA2.
Human Mutation | 2012
Brooke L. Brewster; Francesca Rossiello; Juliet D. French; Stacey L. Edwards; Ming Wong; Ania Wronski; Phillip Whiley; Nic Waddell; Xiaowei Chen; Betsy Bove; kConFab; John L. Hopper; Esther M. John; Irene L. Andrulis; Mary B. Daly; Sara Volorio; Loris Bernard; Bernard Peissel; Siranoush Manoukian; Monica Barile; Sara Pizzamiglio; Paolo Verderio; Amanda B. Spurdle; Paolo Radice; Andrew K. Godwin; Melissa C. Southey; Melissa A. Brown; Paolo Peterlongo
Mutations in the BRCA1 gene confer a substantial increase in breast cancer risk, yet routine clinical genetic screening is limited to the coding regions and intron–exon boundaries, precluding the identification of mutations in noncoding and untranslated regions (UTR). As 3′UTR mutations can influence cancer susceptibility by altering protein and microRNA (miRNA) binding regions, we screened the BRCA1 3′UTR for mutations in a large series of BRCA‐mutation negative, population and clinic‐based breast cancer cases, and controls. Fifteen novel BRCA1 3′UTR variants were identified, the majority of which were unique to either cases or controls. Using luciferase reporter assays, three variants found in cases, c.*528G>C, c.*718A>G, and c.*1271T>C and four found in controls, c.*309T>C, c.*379G>A, c.*823C>T, and c.*264C>T, reduced 3′UTR activity (P < 0.02), whereas two variants found in cases, c.*291C>T and c.*1139G>T, increased 3′UTR activity (P < 0.01). Three case variants, c.*718A>G, c.*800T>C, and c.*1340_1342delTGT, were predicted to create new miRNA binding sites and c.*1340_1342delTGT caused a reduction (25%, P = 0.0007) in 3′UTR reporter activity when coexpressed with the predicted targeting miRNA, miR‐103. This is the most comprehensive identification and analysis of BRCA1 3′UTR variants published to date. Hum Mutat 33:1665–1675, 2012.
PLOS ONE | 2012
Lasse Holm Lauridsen; Hadi Al. Shamaileh; Stacey L. Edwards; Elena Taran; Rakesh N. Veedu
Background Nucleic acids based therapeutic approaches have gained significant interest in recent years towards the development of therapeutics against many diseases. Recently, research on aptamers led to the marketing of Macugen®, an inhibitor of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) for the treatment of age related macular degeneration (AMD). Aptamer technology may prove useful as a therapeutic alternative against an array of human maladies. Considering the increased interest in aptamer technology globally that rival antibody mediated therapeutic approaches, a simplified selection, possibly in one-step, technique is required for developing aptamers in limited time period. Principal Findings Herein, we present a simple one-step selection of DNA aptamers against α-bungarotoxin. A toxin immobilized glass coverslip was subjected to nucleic acid pool binding and extensive washing followed by PCR enrichment of the selected aptamers. One round of selection successfully identified a DNA aptamer sequence with a binding affinity of 7.58 µM. Conclusion We have demonstrated a one-step method for rapid production of nucleic acid aptamers. Although the reported binding affinity is in the low micromolar range, we believe that this could be further improved by using larger targets, increasing the stringency of selection and also by combining a capillary electrophoresis separation prior to the one-step selection. Furthermore, the method presented here is a user-friendly, cheap and an easy way of deriving an aptamer unlike the time consuming conventional SELEX-based approach. The most important application of this method is that chemically-modified nucleic acid libraries can also be used for aptamer selection as it requires only one enzymatic step. This method could equally be suitable for developing RNA aptamers.
Nature Genetics | 2016
Timothy Cheng; D Thompson; Tracy O'Mara; Jodie N. Painter; Dylan M. Glubb; Susanne Flach; Annabelle Lewis; Juliet D. French; Luke Freeman-Mills; David N. Church; Maggie Gorman; Lynn Martin; Shirley Hodgson; Penelope M. Webb; John Attia; Elizabeth G. Holliday; Mark McEvoy; Rodney J. Scott; Anjali K. Henders; Nicholas G. Martin; Grant W. Montgomery; Dale R. Nyholt; Shahana Ahmed; Catherine S. Healey; Mitul Shah; Joe Dennis; Peter A. Fasching; Matthias W. Beckmann; Alexander Hein; Arif B. Ekici
We conducted a meta-analysis of three endometrial cancer genome-wide association studies (GWAS) and two follow-up phases totaling 7,737 endometrial cancer cases and 37,144 controls of European ancestry. Genome-wide imputation and meta-analysis identified five new risk loci of genome-wide significance at likely regulatory regions on chromosomes 13q22.1 (rs11841589, near KLF5), 6q22.31 (rs13328298, in LOC643623 and near HEY2 and NCOA7), 8q24.21 (rs4733613, telomeric to MYC), 15q15.1 (rs937213, in EIF2AK4, near BMF) and 14q32.33 (rs2498796, in AKT1, near SIVA1). We also found a second independent 8q24.21 signal (rs17232730). Functional studies of the 13q22.1 locus showed that rs9600103 (pairwise r2 = 0.98 with rs11841589) is located in a region of active chromatin that interacts with the KLF5 promoter region. The rs9600103[T] allele that is protective in endometrial cancer suppressed gene expression in vitro, suggesting that regulation of the expression of KLF5, a gene linked to uterine development, is implicated in tumorigenesis. These findings provide enhanced insight into the genetic and biological basis of endometrial cancer.
PLOS ONE | 2012
Camille Dubois; Stacey L. Edwards; Lasse Holm Lauridsen; Jesper Wengel; Rakesh N. Veedu
Background Modified nucleotides are increasingly being utilized in the de novo selection of aptamers for enhancing their drug-like character and abolishing the need for time consuming trial-and-error based post-selection modifications. Locked nucleic acid (LNA) is one of the most prominent and successful nucleic acid analogues because of its remarkable properties, and widely explored as building blocks in therapeutic oligonucleotides. Evolution of LNA-modified RNA aptamers requires an efficient reverse transcription method for PCR enrichment of the selected RNA aptamer candidates. Establishing this key step is a pre-requisite for performing LNA-modified RNA aptamer selection. Methodology In this study three different reverse transcriptases were investigated towards the enzymatic recognition of LNA nucleotides. Both incorporation as well as reading capabilities of the LNA nucleotides was investigated to fully understand the limitations of the enzymatic recognition. Conclusions We found that SuperScript® III Reverse Transcriptase is an efficient enzyme for the recognition of LNA nucleotides, making it a prime candidate to be used in de novo selection of LNA containing RNA aptamers
Chemical Communications | 2015
Stacey L. Edwards; Vasanthanathan Poongavanam; Jagat R. Kanwar; Kislay Roy; Kristine M. Hillman; Neerati Prasad; Rikke Leth-Larsen; Michael Petersen; Maja Marušič; Janez Plavec; Jesper Wengel; Rakesh N. Veedu
In this study, we investigated the efficacy of an LNA (locked nucleic acid)-modified DNA aptamer named RNV66 targeting VEGF against various breast cancer cell lines. Our results demonstrate that RNV66 efficiently inhibits breast cancer cell proliferation both in vitro and in vivo. Introduction of LNA nucleotides were crucial for higher efficacy. Furthermore, the binding interaction of RNV66 with VEGF was investigated using molecular dynamic simulations leading to the first computational model of the LNA aptamer-VEGF complex blocking its interaction with VEGF-receptor.
Oncogene | 2011
Chanel E. Smart; Ania Wronski; Juliet D. French; Stacey L. Edwards; M-L Asselin-Labat; Nicola Waddell; Kate M. Peters; Brooke L. Brewster; Kelly Brooks; Kaylene J. Simpson; N. W. Manning; Sunil R. Lakhani; Sean M. Grimmond; Geoffrey J. Lindeman; Jane E. Visvader; Melissa A. Brown
Disruption of the breast cancer susceptibility gene Brca1 results in defective lobular-alveolar development in the mammary gland and a predisposition to breast tumourigenesis in humans and in mice. Recent evidence suggests that BRCA1 loss in humans is associated with an expansion of the luminal progenitor cell compartment in the normal breast and tumours with a luminal progenitor-like expression profile. To further investigate the role of BRCA1 in the mammary gland, we examined the consequences of Brca1 loss in mouse mammary epithelial cells in vitro and in vivo. Here, we show that Brca1 loss is associated with defective morphogenesis of SCp2 and HC11 mouse mammary epithelial cell lines and that in the MMTV-Cre Brca1Co/Co mouse model of Brca1 loss, there is an accumulation of luminal progenitor (CD61+CD29loCD24+) cells during pregnancy. By day 1 of lactation, there are marked differences in the expression of 1379 genes, with most significantly altered pathways and networks, including lactation, the immune response and cancer. One of the most differentially expressed genes was the luminal progenitor marker, c-kit. Immunohistochemical analysis revealed that the increase in c-kit levels is associated with an increase in c-kit positivity. Interestingly, an inverse association between Brca1 and c-kit expression was also observed during mammary epithelial differentiation, and small interfering RNA-mediated knockdown of Brca1 resulted in a significant increase in c-kit mRNA levels. We found no evidence that c-kit plays a direct role in regulating differentiation of HC11 cells, suggesting that Brca1-mediated induction of c-kit probably contributes to Brca1-associated tumourigenesis via another cellular process, and that c-kit is likely to be a marker rather than a mediator of defective lobular-alveolar development resulting from Brca1 loss.
Human Molecular Genetics | 2016
Michael J. G. Milevskiy; Fares Al-Ejeh; Jodi M. Saunus; Korinne S. Northwood; Peter Bailey; Joshua A. Betts; Amy E. McCart Reed; Kenneth P. Nephew; Andrew Stone; Julia Margaret Wendy Gee; Dennis H. Dowhan; Eloise Dray; Annette M. Shewan; Juliet D. French; Stacey L. Edwards; Susan J. Clark; Sunil R. Lakhani; Melissa A. Brown
Predicting response to endocrine therapy and survival in oestrogen receptor positive breast cancer is a significant clinical challenge and novel prognostic biomarkers are needed. Long-range regulators of gene expression are emerging as promising biomarkers and therapeutic targets for human diseases, so we have explored the potential of distal enhancer elements of non-coding RNAs in the prognostication of breast cancer survival. HOTAIR is a long non-coding RNA that is overexpressed, promotes metastasis and is predictive of decreased survival. Here, we describe a long-range transcriptional enhancer of the HOTAIR gene that binds several hormone receptors and associated transcription factors, interacts with the HOTAIR promoter and augments transcription. This enhancer is dependent on Forkhead-Box transcription factors and functionally interacts with a novel alternate HOTAIR promoter. HOTAIR expression is negatively regulated by oestrogen, positively regulated by FOXA1 and FOXM1, and is inversely correlated with oestrogen receptor and directly correlated with FOXM1 in breast tumours. The combination of HOTAIR and FOXM1 enables greater discrimination of endocrine therapy responders and non-responders in patients with oestrogen receptor positive breast cancer. Consistent with this, HOTAIR expression is increased in cell-line models of endocrine resistance. Analysis of breast cancer gene expression data indicates that HOTAIR is co-expressed with FOXA1 and FOXM1 in HER2-enriched tumours, and these factors enhance the prognostic power of HOTAIR in aggressive HER2+ breast tumours. Our study elucidates the transcriptional regulation of HOTAIR, identifies HOTAIR and its regulators as novel biomarkers of patient response to endocrine therapy and corroborates the importance of transcriptional enhancers in cancer.
Human Molecular Genetics | 2016
Joseph E. Powell; Jenny N. Fung; Konstantin Shakhbazov; Yadav Sapkota; Nicole Cloonan; Gibran Hemani; Kristine M. Hillman; Susanne Kaufmann; Hien T.T. Luong; Lisa Bowdler; Jodie N. Painter; Sarah J. Holdsworth-Carson; Peter M. Visscher; Marcel E. Dinger; Martin Healey; Dale R. Nyholt; Juliet D. French; Stacey L. Edwards; Peter A. W. Rogers; Grant W. Montgomery
Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified markers within the WNT4 region on chromosome 1p36.12 showing consistent and strong association with increasing endometriosis risk. Fine mapping using sequence and imputed genotype data has revealed strong candidates for the causal SNPs within these critical regions; however, the molecular pathogenesis of these SNPs is currently unknown. We used gene expression data collected from whole blood from 862 individuals and endometrial tissue from 136 individuals from independent populations of European descent to examine the mechanism underlying endometriosis susceptibility. Association mapping results from 7,090 individuals (2,594 cases and 4,496 controls) supported rs3820282 as the SNP with the strongest association for endometriosis risk (P = 1.84 × 10−5, OR = 1.244 (1.126-1.375)). SNP rs3820282 is a significant eQTL in whole blood decreasing expression of LINC00339 (also known as HSPC157) and increasing expression of CDC42 (P = 2.0 ×10−54 and 4.5x10−4 respectively). The largest effects were for two LINC00339 probes (P = 2.0 ×10−54; 1.0 × 10−34). The eQTL for LINC00339 was also observed in endometrial tissue (P = 2.4 ×10−8) with the same direction of effect for both whole blood and endometrial tissue. There was no evidence for eQTL effects for WNT4. Chromatin conformation capture provides evidence for risk SNPs interacting with the promoters of both LINC00339 and CDC4 and luciferase reporter assays suggest the risk SNP rs12038474 is located in a transcriptional silencer for CDC42 and the risk allele increases expression of CDC42. However, no effect of rs3820282 was observed in the LINC00339 expression in Ishikawa cells. Taken together, our results suggest that SNPs increasing endometriosis risk in this region act through CDC42, but further functional studies are required to rule out inverse regulation of both LINC00339 and CDC42.
Oncotarget | 2016
Juliet D. French; Sharon E. Johnatty; Yi Lu; Jonathan Beesley; Bo Gao; Murugan Kalimutho; Michelle J. Henderson; Amanda J. Russell; Siddhartha Kar; Xiaoqing Chen; Kristine M. Hillman; Susanne Kaufmann; Haran Sivakumaran; Martin O’Reilly; Chen Wang; Darren Korbie; Australian Cancer Study; Diether Lambrechts; Evelyn Despierre; Els Van Nieuwenhuysen; Sandrina Lambrechts; Ignace Vergote; Beth Y. Karlan; Jenny Lester; Sandra Orsulic; C. Walsh; Peter A. Fasching; Matthias W. Beckmann; Arif B. Ekici; Alexander Hein
Women with epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) are usually treated with platinum/taxane therapy after cytoreductive surgery but there is considerable inter-individual variation in response. To identify germline single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) that contribute to variations in individual responses to chemotherapy, we carried out a multi-phase genome-wide association study (GWAS) in 1,244 women diagnosed with serous EOC who were treated with the same first-line chemotherapy, carboplatin and paclitaxel. We identified two SNPs (rs7874043 and rs72700653) in TTC39B (best P=7×10−5, HR=1.90, for rs7874043) associated with progression-free survival (PFS). Functional analyses show that both SNPs lie in a putative regulatory element (PRE) that physically interacts with the promoters of PSIP1, CCDC171 and an alternative promoter of TTC39B. The C allele of rs7874043 is associated with poor PFS and showed increased binding of the Sp1 transcription factor, which is critical for chromatin interactions with PSIP1. Silencing of PSIP1 significantly impaired DNA damage-induced Rad51 nuclear foci and reduced cell viability in ovarian cancer lines. PSIP1 (PC4 and SFRS1 Interacting Protein 1) is known to protect cells from stress-induced apoptosis, and high expression is associated with poor PFS in EOC patients. We therefore suggest that the minor allele of rs7874043 confers poor PFS by increasing PSIP1 expression.