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Dive into the research topics where Sylwia Flis is active.

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Featured researches published by Sylwia Flis.


Blood | 2012

Rac2-MRC-cIII-generated ROS cause genomic instability in chronic myeloid leukemia stem cells and primitive progenitors

Margaret Nieborowska-Skorska; Piotr Kopinski; Regina Ray; Grazyna Hoser; Danielle Ngaba; Sylwia Flis; Kimberly Cramer; Mamatha M. Reddy; Mateusz Koptyra; Tyrone Penserga; Eliza Glodkowska-Mrowka; Elisabeth Bolton; Tessa L. Holyoake; Connie J. Eaves; Sabine Cerny-Reiterer; Peter Valent; Andreas Hochhaus; Timothy P. Hughes; Heiko van der Kuip; Martin Sattler; Wieslaw Wiktor-Jedrzejczak; Charles C. Richardson; Adrienne M. Dorrance; Tomasz Stoklosa; David A. Williams; Tomasz Skorski

Chronic myeloid leukemia in chronic phase (CML-CP) is induced by BCR-ABL1 oncogenic tyrosine kinase. Tyrosine kinase inhibitors eliminate the bulk of CML-CP cells, but fail to eradicate leukemia stem cells (LSCs) and leukemia progenitor cells (LPCs) displaying innate and acquired resistance, respectively. These cells may accumulate genomic instability, leading to disease relapse and/or malignant progression to a fatal blast phase. In the present study, we show that Rac2 GTPase alters mitochondrial membrane potential and electron flow through the mitochondrial respiratory chain complex III (MRC-cIII), thereby generating high levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in CML-CP LSCs and primitive LPCs. MRC-cIII-generated ROS promote oxidative DNA damage to trigger genomic instability, resulting in an accumulation of chromosomal aberrations and tyrosine kinase inhibitor-resistant BCR-ABL1 mutants. JAK2(V617F) and FLT3(ITD)-positive polycythemia vera cells and acute myeloid leukemia cells also produce ROS via MRC-cIII. In the present study, inhibition of Rac2 by genetic deletion or a small-molecule inhibitor and down-regulation of mitochondrial ROS by disruption of MRC-cIII, expression of mitochondria-targeted catalase, or addition of ROS-scavenging mitochondria-targeted peptide aptamer reduced genomic instability. We postulate that the Rac2-MRC-cIII pathway triggers ROS-mediated genomic instability in LSCs and primitive LPCs, which could be targeted to prevent the relapse and malignant progression of CML.


Blood | 2013

Genomic instability may originate from imatinib-refractory chronic myeloid leukemia stem cells.

Elisabeth Bolton-Gillespie; Mirle Schemionek; Hans-Ulrich Klein; Sylwia Flis; Grazyna Hoser; Thoralf Lange; Margaret Nieborowska-Skorska; Jacqueline Maier; Linda Kerstiens; Mateusz Koptyra; Martin C. Müller; Hardik Modi; Tomasz Stoklosa; Ilona Seferynska; Ravi Bhatia; Tessa L. Holyoake; Steffen Koschmieder; Tomasz Skorski

Genomic instability is a hallmark of chronic myeloid leukemia in chronic phase (CML-CP) resulting in BCR-ABL1 mutations encoding resistance to tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) and/or additional chromosomal aberrations leading to disease relapse and/or malignant progression. TKI-naive and TKI-treated leukemia stem cells (LSCs) and leukemia progenitor cells (LPCs) accumulate high levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and oxidative DNA damage. To determine the role of TKI-refractory LSCs in genomic instability, we used a murine model of CML-CP where ROS-induced oxidative DNA damage was elevated in LSCs, including quiescent LSCs, but not in LPCs. ROS-induced oxidative DNA damage in LSCs caused clinically relevant genomic instability in CML-CP-like mice, such as TKI-resistant BCR-ABL1 mutations (E255K, T315I, H396P), deletions in Ikzf1 and Trp53, and additions in Zfp423 and Idh1. Despite inhibition of BCR-ABL1 kinase, imatinib did not downregulate ROS and oxidative DNA damage in TKI-refractory LSCs to the levels detected in normal cells, and CML-CP-like mice treated with imatinib continued to accumulate clinically relevant genetic aberrations. Inhibition of class I p21-activated protein kinases by IPA3 downregulated ROS in TKI-naive and TKI-treated LSCs. Altogether, we postulate that genomic instability may originate in the most primitive TKI-refractory LSCs in TKI-naive and TKI-treated patients.


Leukemia | 2013

BCR-ABL1 kinase inhibits uracil DNA glycosylase UNG2 to enhance oxidative DNA damage and stimulate genomic instability

Artur Slupianek; Rafal Falinski; Pawel Znojek; Tomasz Stoklosa; Sylwia Flis; Valentina Doneddu; Dariusz Pytel; Ewelina Synowiec; Janusz Blasiak; Alfonso Bellacosa; Tomasz Skorski

Tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) revolutionized the treatment of chronic myeloid leukemia in chronic phase (CML-CP). Unfortunately, 25% of TKI-naive patients and 50–90% of patients developing TKI-resistance carry CML clones expressing TKI-resistant BCR-ABL1 kinase mutants. We reported that CML-CP leukemia stem and progenitor cell populations accumulate high amounts of reactive oxygen species, which may result in accumulation of uracil derivatives in genomic DNA. Unfaithful and/or inefficient repair of these lesions generates TKI-resistant point mutations in BCR-ABL1 kinase. Using an array of specific substrates and inhibitors/blocking antibodies we found that uracil DNA glycosylase UNG2 were inhibited in BCR-ABL1-transformed cell lines and CD34+ CML cells. The inhibitory effect was not accompanied by downregulation of nuclear expression and/or chromatin association of UNG2. The effect was BCR-ABL1 kinase-specific because several other fusion tyrosine kinases did not reduce UNG2 activity. Using UNG2-specific inhibitor UGI, we found that reduction of UNG2 activity increased the number of uracil derivatives in genomic DNA detected by modified comet assay and facilitated accumulation of ouabain-resistant point mutations in reporter gene Na+/K+ATPase. In conclusion, we postulate that BCR-ABL1 kinase-mediated inhibition of UNG2 contributes to accumulation of point mutations responsible for TKI resistance causing the disease relapse, and perhaps also other point mutations facilitating malignant progression of CML.


Leukemia | 2014

AKT-induced reactive oxygen species generate imatinib-resistant clones emerging from chronic myeloid leukemia progenitor cells

Margaret Nieborowska-Skorska; Sylwia Flis; Tomasz Skorski

AKT-induced reactive oxygen species generate imatinib-resistant clones emerging from chronic myeloid leukemia progenitor cells


Blood | 2017

Ruxolitinib-induced defects in DNA repair cause sensitivity to PARP inhibitors in myeloproliferative neoplasms

Margaret Nieborowska-Skorska; Silvia Maifrede; Yashodhara Dasgupta; Katherine Sullivan; Sylwia Flis; Bac Viet Le; Martyna Solecka; Elizaveta A. Belyaeva; Lucia Kubovcakova; Morgan Nawrocki; Martin Kirschner; Huaqing Zhao; Josef T. Prchal; Katarzyna Piwocka; Alison R. Moliterno; Mariusz A. Wasik; Steffen Koschmieder; Tony Green; Radek C. Skoda; Tomasz Skorski

Myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPNs) often carry JAK2(V617F), MPL(W515L), or CALR(del52) mutations. Current treatment options for MPNs include cytoreduction by hydroxyurea and JAK1/2 inhibition by ruxolitinib, both of which are not curative. We show here that cell lines expressing JAK2(V617F), MPL(W515L), or CALR(del52) accumulated reactive oxygen species-induced DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) and were modestly sensitive to poly-ADP-ribose polymerase (PARP) inhibitors olaparib and BMN673. At the same time, primary MPN cell samples from individual patients displayed a high degree of variability in sensitivity to these drugs. Ruxolitinib inhibited 2 major DSB repair mechanisms, BRCA-mediated homologous recombination and DNA-dependent protein kinase-mediated nonhomologous end-joining, and, when combined with olaparib, caused abundant accumulation of toxic DSBs resulting in enhanced elimination of MPN primary cells, including the disease-initiating cells from the majority of patients. Moreover, the combination of BMN673, ruxolitinib, and hydroxyurea was highly effective in vivo against JAK2(V617F)+ murine MPN-like disease and also against JAK2(V617F)+, CALR(del52)+, and MPL(W515L)+ primary MPN xenografts. In conclusion, we postulate that ruxolitinib-induced deficiencies in DSB repair pathways sensitized MPN cells to synthetic lethality triggered by PARP inhibitors.


Blood | 2012

BCR-ABL1 Kinase Inhibits DNA Glycosylases to Enhance Oxidative DNA Damage and Stimulate Genomic Instability

Artur Slupianek; Rafal Falinski; Pawel Znojek; Tomasz Stoklosa; Sylwia Flis; Valentina Doneddu; Ewelina Synowiec; Janusz Blasiak; Alfonso Bellacosa; Tomasz Skorski


Blood | 2011

Targeting DNA Repair Gene, RAD52, Induces Exhaustion of the Proliferating CML-CP Leukemia Stem Cells Carrying Oxidative DNA Damage

Kimberly Cramer; Elisabeth Bolton; Margaret Nieborowska-Skorska; Sylwia Flis; Tomasz Skorski


Blood | 2011

Targeting Rac2 - Mitochondrial Respiratory Chain Complex III Signaling to Prevent Genomic Instability in Leukemia Stem and Progenitor Cells

Margaret Nieborowska-Skorska; Piotr Kopinski; Regina Ray; Grazyna Hoser; Danielle Ngaba; Sylwia Flis; Kimberly Cramer; Mamatha M. Reddy; Mateusz Koptyra; Tyrone Penserga; Eliza Glodkowska-Mrowka; Magdalena Ambrozek; Ilona Seferynska; Joanna Niesiobedzka-Krezel; Elisabeth Bolton; Artur Slupianek; Tessa L. Holyoake; Connie J. Eaves; Sabine Cerny-Reiterer; Peter Valent; Andreas Hochhaus; Timothy P. Hughes; Heiko van der Kuip; Martin Sattler; Wieslaw Wiktor-Jedrzejczak; Charles C. Richardson; Adrienne M. Dorrance; Tomasz Stoklosa; David A. Williams; Tomasz Skorski


Blood | 2014

Chronic Myeloid Leukemia Stem Cells (LSCs) and Leukemia Progenitor Cells (LPCs) Display Overlapping and Unique Mechanisms of Genomic Instability: The Role of PI3k-AKT and PI3k-Rac2-PAK Pathways

Margaret Nieborowska-Skorska; Sylwia Flis; Tomasz Skorski


Archive | 2013

myeloid leukemia stem cells Genomic instability may originate from imatinib-refractory chronic

Tomasz Skorski; C. Müller; Hardik Modi; Tomasz Stoklosa; Ilona Seferynska; Ravi Bhatia; Tessa L. Holyoake; Margaret Nieborowska-Skorska; Jacqueline Maier; Linda Kerstiens; Mateusz Koptyra; Mirle Schemionek; Hans-Ulrich Klein; Sylwia Flis; Grazyna Hoser

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Tomasz Stoklosa

Medical University of Warsaw

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Hardik Modi

City of Hope National Medical Center

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