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Dive into the research topics where Theocharis Panaretakis is active.

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Featured researches published by Theocharis Panaretakis.


The EMBO Journal | 2009

Mechanisms of pre‐apoptotic calreticulin exposure in immunogenic cell death

Theocharis Panaretakis; Oliver Kepp; Ulf Brockmeier; Antoine Tesniere; Ann-Charlotte Björklund; Daniel C. Chapman; Michael Durchschlag; Nicholas Joza; Gérard Pierron; Peter van Endert; Junying Yuan; Laurence Zitvogel; Frank Madeo; David B. Williams; Guido Kroemer

Dying tumour cells can elicit a potent anticancer immune response by exposing the calreticulin (CRT)/ERp57 complex on the cell surface before the cells manifest any signs of apoptosis. Here, we enumerate elements of the pathway that mediates pre‐apoptotic CRT/ERp57 exposure in response to several immunogenic anticancer agents. Early activation of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER)‐sessile kinase PERK leads to phosphorylation of the translation initiation factor eIF2α, followed by partial activation of caspase‐8 (but not caspase‐3), caspase‐8‐mediated cleavage of the ER protein BAP31 and conformational activation of Bax and Bak. Finally, a pool of CRT that has transited the Golgi apparatus is secreted by SNARE‐dependent exocytosis. Knock‐in mutation of eIF2α (to make it non‐phosphorylatable) or BAP31 (to render it uncleavable), depletion of PERK, caspase‐8, BAP31, Bax, Bak or SNAREs abolished CRT/ERp57 exposure induced by anthracyclines, oxaliplatin and ultraviolet C light. Depletion of PERK, caspase‐8 or SNAREs had no effect on cell death induced by anthracyclines, yet abolished the immunogenicity of cell death, which could be restored by absorbing recombinant CRT to the cell surface.


OncoImmunology | 2014

Consensus guidelines for the detection of immunogenic cell death

Oliver Kepp; Laura Senovilla; Ilio Vitale; Erika Vacchelli; Sandy Adjemian; Patrizia Agostinis; Lionel Apetoh; Fernando Aranda; Vincenzo Barnaba; Norma Bloy; Laura Bracci; Karine Breckpot; David Brough; Aitziber Buqué; Maria G. Castro; Mara Cirone; María I. Colombo; Isabelle Cremer; Sandra Demaria; Luciana Dini; Aristides G. Eliopoulos; Alberto Faggioni; Silvia C. Formenti; Jitka Fucikova; Lucia Gabriele; Udo S. Gaipl; Jérôme Galon; Abhishek D. Garg; François Ghiringhelli; Nathalia A. Giese

Apoptotic cells have long been considered as intrinsically tolerogenic or unable to elicit immune responses specific for dead cell-associated antigens. However, multiple stimuli can trigger a functionally peculiar type of apoptotic demise that does not go unnoticed by the adaptive arm of the immune system, which we named “immunogenic cell death” (ICD). ICD is preceded or accompanied by the emission of a series of immunostimulatory damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs) in a precise spatiotemporal configuration. Several anticancer agents that have been successfully employed in the clinic for decades, including various chemotherapeutics and radiotherapy, can elicit ICD. Moreover, defects in the components that underlie the capacity of the immune system to perceive cell death as immunogenic negatively influence disease outcome among cancer patients treated with ICD inducers. Thus, ICD has profound clinical and therapeutic implications. Unfortunately, the gold-standard approach to detect ICD relies on vaccination experiments involving immunocompetent murine models and syngeneic cancer cells, an approach that is incompatible with large screening campaigns. Here, we outline strategies conceived to detect surrogate markers of ICD in vitro and to screen large chemical libraries for putative ICD inducers, based on a high-content, high-throughput platform that we recently developed. Such a platform allows for the detection of multiple DAMPs, like cell surface-exposed calreticulin, extracellular ATP and high mobility group box 1 (HMGB1), and/or the processes that underlie their emission, such as endoplasmic reticulum stress, autophagy and necrotic plasma membrane permeabilization. We surmise that this technology will facilitate the development of next-generation anticancer regimens, which kill malignant cells and simultaneously convert them into a cancer-specific therapeutic vaccine.


Cell Death & Differentiation | 2008

The co-translocation of ERp57 and calreticulin determines the immunogenicity of cell death

Theocharis Panaretakis; N. Joza; Nazanine Modjtahedi; Antoine Tesniere; Ilio Vitale; Michael Durchschlag; Gian Maria Fimia; Oliver Kepp; Mauro Piacentini; K. U. Froehlich; P. van Endert; Laurence Zitvogel; Frank Madeo; Guido Kroemer

The exposure of calreticulin (CRT) on the plasma membrane can precede anthracycline-induced apoptosis and is required for cell death to be perceived as immunogenic. Mass spectroscopy, immunofluorescence and immunoprecipitation experiments revealed that CRT co-translocates to the surface with another endoplasmic reticulum-sessile protein, the disulfide isomerase ERp57. The knockout and knockdown of CRT or ERp57 inhibited the anthracycline-induced translocation of ERp57 or CRT, respectively. CRT point mutants that fail to interact with ERp57 were unable to restore ERp57 translocation upon transfection into crt−/− cells, underscoring that a direct interaction between CRT and ERp57 is strictly required for their co-translocation to the surface. ERp57low tumor cells generated by retroviral introduction of an ERp57-specific shRNA exhibited a normal apoptotic response to anthracyclines in vitro, yet were resistant to anthracycline treatment in vivo. Moreover, ERp57low cancer cells (which failed to expose CRT) treated with anthracyclines were unable to elicit an anti-tumor response in conditions in which control cells were highly immunogenic. The failure of ERp57low cells to elicit immune responses and to respond to chemotherapy could be overcome by exogenous supply of recombinant CRT protein. These results indicate that tumors that possess an intrinsic defect in the CRT-translocating machinery become resistant to anthracycline chemotherapy due to their incapacity to elicit an anti-cancer immune response.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2012

Tumor cell-derived exosomes: A message in a bottle.

Pedram Kharaziha; Sophia Ceder; Qiao Li; Theocharis Panaretakis

Exosomes constitute the newest mode of intercellular communication, transmitting information between cells. This exchange of molecular information is facilitated by their unique composition which is enriched with enzymes, structural proteins, adhesion molecules, lipid rafts and RNAs. Following the discovery that cancer cells secrete excessive amounts of exosomes compared to normal cells, it became evident that i) these vesicles can be used as diagnostic markers; ii) their active secretion has functional implications, albeit unknown whether they are tumor promoting or suppressing. Notably, the interplay via the exchange of exosomes between cancer cells and between cancer cells and the tumor stroma may promote the transfer of oncogenes (e.g. β-catenin, CEA, HER2, Melan-A/Mart-1 and LMP-1) and onco-microRNAs (e.g. let7, miR1, miR15, miR16 and miR375) from one cell to another, leading to the reprogramming of the recipient cells. The molecular composition and functional role of tumor cell-derived exosomes in tumorigenesis, metastasis and response to therapy are slowly decrypted and the latest findings as well as potential therapeutic strategies are discussed in this review.


Cell Death & Differentiation | 2009

Cell death induced by dexamethasone in lymphoid leukemia is mediated through initiation of autophagy

Edward Laane; K. Pokrovskaja Tamm; E. Buentke; K. Ito; P. Khahariza; J. Oscarsson; Martin Corcoran; Ann-Charlotte Björklund; K. Hultenby; J. Lundin; Mats Heyman; Stefan Söderhäll; Joanna Mazur; A. Porwit; P. P. Pandolfi; Boris Zhivotovsky; Theocharis Panaretakis; Dan Grandér

Glucocorticoids are fundamental drugs used in the treatment of lymphoid malignancies with apoptotic cell death as the hitherto proposed mechanism of action. Recent studies, however, showed that an alternative mode of cell death, autophagy, is involved in the response to anticancer drugs. The specific role of autophagy and its relationship to apoptosis remains, nevertheless, controversial: it can either lead to cell survival or can function in cell death. We show that dexamethasone induced autophagy upstream of apoptosis in acute lymphoblastic leukemia cells. Inhibition of autophagy by siRNA-mediated repression of Beclin 1 expression inhibited apoptosis showing an important role of autophagy in dexamethasone-induced cell death. Dexamethasone treatment caused an upregulation of promyelocytic leukemia protein, PML, its complex formation with protein kinase B or Akt and a PML-dependent Akt dephosphorylation. Initiation of autophagy and the onset of apoptosis were both dependent on these events. PML knockout thymocytes were resistant to dexamethasone-induced death and upregulation of PML correlated with the ability of dexamethasone to kill primary leukemic cells. Our data reveal key mechanisms of dexamethasone-induced cell death that may inform the development of improved treatment protocols for lymphoid malignancies.


International Journal of Cancer | 2007

Acute apoptosis by cisplatin requires induction of reactive oxygen species but is not associated with damage to nuclear DNA.

Maria Berndtsson; Maria Hägg; Theocharis Panaretakis; Aleksandra Mandic Havelka; Maria C. Shoshan; Stig Linder

Cisplatin is a broad‐spectrum anticancer drug that is also widely used in experimental studies on DNA damage‐induced apoptosis. Induction of apoptosis within 24–48 hr requires cisplatin concentrations that are at least one order of magnitude higher than the IC50. Here, we show that such high, apoptosis‐inducing cisplatin concentrations induce cellular superoxide formation and that apoptosis is inhibited by superoxide scavengers. The same concentration limit and the requirement for superoxide are also true for induction of caspase activation in enucleated cells (cytoplasts), showing that cisplatin‐induced apoptosis occurs independently of nuclear DNA damage. In contrast, lower cisplatin concentrations, which do not induce acute apoptosis, are sufficient for induction of DNA damage signaling. We propose that the antiproliferative effects of cisplatin at IC50 doses involve premature senescence and secondary, nonstress‐induced apoptosis. The higher doses currently used in in vitro studies lead to acute, stress‐induced apoptosis that involves induction of superoxide but is largely DNA damage‐independent.


Cancer Research | 2008

Improved Cellular Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics Underlie the Wide Anticancer Activity of Sagopilone

Jens Hoffmann; Ilio Vitale; Bernd Buchmann; Lorenzo Galluzzi; Wolfgang Schwede; Laura Senovilla; Werner Skuballa; Sonia Vivet; Rosemarie Lichtner; Jose Miguel Vicencio; Theocharis Panaretakis; Gerhard Siemeister; Hermann Lage; Lisa Nanty; Stefanie Hammer; Kevin Mittelstaedt; Sebastian Winsel; Julia Eschenbrenner; Maria Castedo; Carine Demarche; Ulrich Klar; Guido Kroemer

Sagopilone (ZK-EPO) is the first fully synthetic epothilone undergoing clinical trials for the treatment of human tumors. Here, we investigate the cellular pathways by which sagopilone blocks tumor cell proliferation and compare the intracellular pharmacokinetics and the in vivo pharmacodynamics of sagopilone with other microtubule-stabilizing (or tubulin-polymerizing) agents. Cellular uptake and fractionation/localization studies revealed that sagopilone enters cells more efficiently, associates more tightly with the cytoskeleton, and polymerizes tubulin more potently than paclitaxel. Moreover, in contrast to paclitaxel and other epothilones [such as the natural product epothilone B (patupilone) or its partially synthetic analogue ixabepilone], sagopilone is not a substrate of the P-glycoprotein efflux pumps. Microtubule stabilization by sagopilone caused mitotic arrest, followed by transient multinucleation and activation of the mitochondrial apoptotic pathway. Profiling of the proapoptotic signal transduction pathway induced by sagopilone with a panel of small interfering RNAs revealed that sagopilone acts similarly to paclitaxel. In HCT 116 colon carcinoma cells, sagopilone-induced apoptosis was partly antagonized by the knockdown of proapoptotic members of the Bcl-2 family, including Bax, Bak, and Puma, whereas knockdown of Bcl-2, Bcl-X(L), or Chk1 sensitized cells to sagopilone-induced cell death. Related to its improved subcellular pharmacokinetics, however, sagopilone is more cytotoxic than other epothilones in a large panel of human cancer cell lines in vitro and in vivo. In particular, sagopilone is highly effective in reducing the growth of paclitaxel-resistant cancer cells. These results underline the processes behind the therapeutic efficacy of sagopilone, which is now evaluated in a broad phase II program.


Cancer Research | 2007

Leveraging the Immune System during Chemotherapy: Moving Calreticulin to the Cell Surface Converts Apoptotic Death from “Silent” to Immunogenic

Michel Obeid; Theocharis Panaretakis; Antoine Tesniere; Nick Joza; Roberta Tufi; Lionel Apetoh; François Ghiringhelli; Laurence Zitvogel; Guido Kroemer

In contrast to prior belief, tumor cell apoptosis is not necessarily silent but can be immunogenic. By tracing how anthracyclines and gamma-irradiation trigger immunogenic cell deaths, we found that they were causally connected to the exposure of calreticulin on the tumor cell surface, before apoptosis in the tumor cell itself occurred. Furthermore, we showed that calreticulin exposure was necessary and sufficient to increase proimmunogenic killing by other chemotherapies. Our findings suggest that calreticulin could serve as a biomarker to predict therapy-associated immune responses, and that tactics to expose calreticulin might improve the clinical efficacy of many cancer therapies.


Cell Death & Differentiation | 2008

Reduction of endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ levels favors plasma membrane surface exposure of calreticulin

Roberta Tufi; Theocharis Panaretakis; K Bianchi; Alfredo Criollo; Barbara Fazi; F Di Sano; Antoine Tesniere; Oliver Kepp; Patrizia Paterlini-Bréchot; Laurence Zitvogel; Mauro Piacentini; Guido Kroemer

Some chemotherapeutic agents can elicit apoptotic cancer cell death, thereby activating an anticancer immune response that influences therapeutic outcome. We previously reported that anthracyclins are particularly efficient in inducing immunogenic cell death, correlating with the pre-apoptotic exposure of calreticulin (CRT) on the plasma membrane surface of anthracyclin-treated tumor cells. Here, we investigated the role of cellular Ca2+ homeostasis on CRT exposure. A neuroblastoma cell line (SH-SY5Y) failed to expose CRT in response to anthracyclin treatment. This defect in CRT exposure could be overcome by the overexpression of Reticulon-1C, a manipulation that led to a decrease in the Ca2+ concentration within the endoplasmic reticulum lumen. The combination of Reticulon-1C expression and anthracyclin treatment yielded more pronounced endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ depletion than either of the two manipulations alone. Chelation of intracellular (and endoplasmic reticulum) Ca2+, targeted expression of the ligand-binding domain of the IP3 receptor and inhibition of the sarco-endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase pump reduced endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ load and promoted pre-apoptotic CRT exposure on the cell surface, in SH-SY5Y and HeLa cells. These results provide evidence that endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ levels control the exposure of CRT.


International Journal of Cancer | 2008

Potentiation of chemotherapeutic drugs by energy metabolism inhibitors 2‐deoxyglucose and etomoxir

Emma Hernlund; Linda Strandberg Ihrlund; Omar Khan; Yildiz Ozlem Ates; Stig Linder; Theocharis Panaretakis; Maria C. Shoshan

Inhibition of energy production as a strategy for potentiation of anticancer chemotherapy was investigated using 1 glycolysis inhibitor and 1 fatty acid β‐oxidation inhibitor—2‐deoxyglucose and etomoxir, respectively, both known to be clinically well tolerated. Eighteen anticancer drugs were screened for potentiation by these inhibitors. 2‐deoxyglucose potentiated acute apoptosis (24 hr) induced mainly by some, but not all, genotoxic drugs, whereas etomoxir had effect only on cisplatin. By contrast, etomoxir did potentiate the overall, 48 hr effects of some genotoxic drugs, and was in addition more efficient than deoxyglucose in potentiating the overall effects of several non‐genotoxic drugs. Both types of potentiation were largely lost in the absence of p53. Because cisplatin was potentiated by both energy inhibitors in both types of assay, it was investigated at additional concentrations and over longer time. Both energy inhibitors strongly potentiated non‐apoptotic concentrations of cisplatin in p53‐wildtype as well as in p53‐deficient, cisplatin‐resistant HCT116 colon carcinoma cells. Reduced ATP levels correlated with, but were not sole determinants, the antiproliferative effects. We conclude that the long‐term effects of cisplatin potentiation are important and either p53‐independent or improved by a lack of p53. We also conclude that although the potentiated drugs as yet have no obvious mechanistic factor in common, the strategy holds promise with genotoxic as well non‐genotoxic anticancer drugs.

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