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Dive into the research topics where Thomas A. Milne is active.

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Featured researches published by Thomas A. Milne.


Cell Reports | 2015

MLL-Rearranged Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemias Activate BCL-2 through H3K79 Methylation and Are Sensitive to the BCL-2-Specific Antagonist ABT-199

Juliana Benito; Laura Godfrey; Kensuke Kojima; Leah Hogdal; Mark Wunderlich; Huimin Geng; Isabel Marzo; Karine Harutyunyan; Leonard S Golfman; Phillip S. North; Jon Kerry; Erica Ballabio; Triona Ni Chonghaile; Oscar Gonzalo; Yihua Qiu; Irmela Jeremias; La Kiesha Debose; Eric O'Brien; Helen Ma; Ping Zhou; Rodrigo Jacamo; Eugene Park; Kevin R. Coombes; Nianxiang Zhang; Deborah A. Thomas; Susan O'Brien; Hagop M. Kantarjian; Joel D. Leverson; Steven M. Kornblau; Michael Andreeff

Summary Targeted therapies designed to exploit specific molecular pathways in aggressive cancers are an exciting area of current research. Mixed Lineage Leukemia (MLL) mutations such as the t(4;11) translocation cause aggressive leukemias that are refractory to conventional treatment. The t(4;11) translocation produces an MLL/AF4 fusion protein that activates key target genes through both epigenetic and transcriptional elongation mechanisms. In this study, we show that t(4;11) patient cells express high levels of BCL-2 and are highly sensitive to treatment with the BCL-2-specific BH3 mimetic ABT-199. We demonstrate that MLL/AF4 specifically upregulates the BCL-2 gene but not other BCL-2 family members via DOT1L-mediated H3K79me2/3. We use this information to show that a t(4;11) cell line is sensitive to a combination of ABT-199 and DOT1L inhibitors. In addition, ABT-199 synergizes with standard induction-type therapy in a xenotransplant model, advocating for the introduction of ABT-199 into therapeutic regimens for MLL-rearranged leukemias.


Cancer Cell | 2016

Instructive Role of MLL-Fusion Proteins Revealed by a Model of t(4;11) Pro-B Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia.

Shan Lin; Roger T. Luo; Anetta Ptasinska; Jon Kerry; Salam A. Assi; Mark Wunderlich; Toshihiko Imamura; Joseph J. Kaberlein; Ahmad Rayes; Mark J. Althoff; John Anastasi; Maureen M. O’Brien; Amom Ruhikanta Meetei; Thomas A. Milne; Constanze Bonifer; James C. Mulloy; Michael J. Thirman

The t(4;11)(q21;q23) fuses mixed-lineage leukemia (MLL) to AF4, the most common MLL-fusion partner. Here we show that MLL fused to murine Af4, highly conserved with human AF4, produces high-titer retrovirus permitting efficient transduction of human CD34+ cells, thereby generating a model of t(4;11) pro-B acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) that fully recapitulates the immunophenotypic and molecular aspects of the disease. MLL-Af4 induces a B ALL distinct from MLL-AF9 through differential genomic target binding of the fusion proteins leading to specific gene expression patterns. MLL-Af4 cells can assume a myeloid state under environmental pressure but retain lymphoid-lineage potential. Such incongruity was also observed in t(4;11) patients in whom leukemia evaded CD19-directed therapy by undergoing myeloid-lineage switch. Our model provides a valuable tool to unravel the pathogenesis of MLL-AF4 leukemogenesis.


The FASEB Journal | 2015

The integrin-adhesome is required to maintain muscle structure, mitochondrial ATP production, and movement forces in Caenorhabditis elegans

Timothy Etheridge; Mizanur Rahman; Christopher J. Gaffney; Debra J. Shaw; Freya Shephard; Jignesh Magudia; Deepak E. Solomon; Thomas A. Milne; Jerzy Blawzdziewicz; Dumitru Constantin-Teodosiu; Paul L. Greenhaff; Siva A. Vanapalli; Nathaniel J. Szewczyk

The integrin‐adhesome network, which contains >150 proteins, is mechano‐transducing and located at discreet positions along the cell‐cell and cell‐extracellular matrix interface. A small subset of the integrin‐adhesome is known to maintain normal muscle morphology. However, the importance of the entire adhesome for muscle structure and function is unknown. We used RNA interference to knock down 113 putative Caenorhabditis elegans homologs constituting most of the mammalian adhesome and 48 proteins known to localize to attachment sites in C. elegans muscle. In both cases, we found >90% of components were required for normal muscle mitochondrial structure and/or proteostasis vs. empty vector controls. Approximately half of these, mainly proteins that physically interact with each other, were also required for normal sarcomere and/or adhesome structure. Next we confirmed that the dystrophy observed in adhesome mutants associates with impaired maximal mitochondrial ATP production (P < 0.01), as well as reduced probability distribution of muscle movement forces compared with wild‐type animals. Our results show that the integrin‐adhesome network as a whole is required for maintaining both muscle structure and function and extend the current understanding of the full complexities of the functional adhesome in vivo.—Etheridge, T., Rahman, M., Gaffney, C. J., Shaw, D., Shephard, F., Magudia, J., Solomon, D. E., Milne, T., Blawzdziewicz, J., Constantin‐Teodosiu, D., Greenhaff, P. L., Vanapalli, S. A., Szewczyk, N. J. The integrin‐adhesome is required to maintain muscle structure, mitochondrial ATP production, and movement forces in Caenorhabditis elegans. FASEB J. 29, 1235‐1246 (2015). www.fasebj.org


Cell Reports | 2017

MLL-AF4 Spreading Identifies Binding Sites that Are Distinct from Super-Enhancers and that Govern Sensitivity to DOT1L Inhibition in Leukemia

Jon Kerry; Laura Godfrey; Emmanouela Repapi; Marta Tapia; Neil P. Blackledge; Helen Ma; Erica Ballabio; Sorcha O'Byrne; Frida Ponthan; Olaf Heidenreich; Anindita Roy; Irene Roberts; Marina Konopleva; Robert J. Klose; Huimin Geng; Thomas A. Milne

Summary Understanding the underlying molecular mechanisms of defined cancers is crucial for effective personalized therapies. Translocations of the mixed-lineage leukemia (MLL) gene produce fusion proteins such as MLL-AF4 that disrupt epigenetic pathways and cause poor-prognosis leukemias. Here, we find that at a subset of gene targets, MLL-AF4 binding spreads into the gene body and is associated with the spreading of Menin binding, increased transcription, increased H3K79 methylation (H3K79me2/3), a disruption of normal H3K36me3 patterns, and unmethylated CpG regions in the gene body. Compared to other H3K79me2/3 marked genes, MLL-AF4 spreading gene expression is downregulated by inhibitors of the H3K79 methyltransferase DOT1L. This sensitivity mediates synergistic interactions with additional targeted drug treatments. Therefore, epigenetic spreading and enhanced susceptibility to epidrugs provides a potential marker for better understanding combination therapies in humans.


Blood | 2017

Mouse models of MLL leukemia: recapitulating the human disease.

Thomas A. Milne

Chromosome translocations involving the mixed lineage leukemia (MLL) gene fuse it in frame with multiple partner genes creating novel fusion proteins (MLL-FPs) that cause aggressive acute leukemias in humans. Animal models of human disease are important for the exploration of underlying disease mechanisms as well as for testing novel therapeutic approaches. Patients carrying MLL-FPs have very few cooperating mutations, making MLL-FP driven leukemias ideal for animal modeling. The fact that the MLL-FP is the main driver mutation has allowed for a wide range of different experimental model systems designed to explore different aspects of MLL-FP leukemogenesis. In addition, MLL-FP driven acute myeloid leukemia (AML) in mice is often used as a general model for AML. This review provides an overview of different MLL-FP mouse model systems and discusses how well they have recapitulated aspects of the human disease as well as highlights the biological insights each model has provided into MLL-FP leukemogenesis. Many promising new drugs fail in the early stages of clinical trials. Lessons learned from past and present MLL-FP models may serve as a paradigm for designing more flexible and dynamic preclinical models for these as well as other acute leukemias.


Nature Communications | 2017

Hepcidin is regulated by promoter-associated histone acetylation and HDAC3

Sant-Rayn Pasricha; Pei Jin Lim; Tiago L. Duarte; Carla Casu; Dorenda Oosterhuis; Katarzyna Mleczko-Sanecka; Maria Suciu; Ana Rita Da Silva; Kinda Al-Hourani; João Arezes; Kirsty McHugh; Sarah Gooding; Joe N Frost; Katherine Wray; Ana Mafalda Santos; Graça Porto; Emmanouela Repapi; Nicki Gray; Simon J. Draper; Neil Ashley; Elizabeth J. Soilleux; Peter Olinga; Martina U. Muckenthaler; Jim R. Hughes; Stefano Rivella; Thomas A. Milne; Andrew E. Armitage; Hal Drakesmith

Hepcidin regulates systemic iron homeostasis. Suppression of hepcidin expression occurs physiologically in iron deficiency and increased erythropoiesis but is pathologic in thalassemia and hemochromatosis. Here we show that epigenetic events govern hepcidin expression. Erythropoiesis and iron deficiency suppress hepcidin via erythroferrone-dependent and -independent mechanisms, respectively, in vivo, but both involve reversible loss of H3K9ac and H3K4me3 at the hepcidin locus. In vitro, pan-histone deacetylase inhibition elevates hepcidin expression, and in vivo maintains H3K9ac at hepcidin-associated chromatin and abrogates hepcidin suppression by erythropoietin, iron deficiency, thalassemia, and hemochromatosis. Histone deacetylase 3 and its cofactor NCOR1 regulate hepcidin; histone deacetylase 3 binds chromatin at the hepcidin locus, and histone deacetylase 3 knockdown counteracts hepcidin suppression induced either by erythroferrone or by inhibiting bone morphogenetic protein signaling. In iron deficient mice, the histone deacetylase 3 inhibitor RGFP966 increases hepcidin, and RNA sequencing confirms hepcidin is one of the genes most differentially regulated by this drug in vivo. We conclude that suppression of hepcidin expression involves epigenetic regulation by histone deacetylase 3.Hepcidin controls systemic iron levels by inhibiting intestinal iron absorption and iron recycling. Here, Pasricha et al. demonstrate that the hepcidin-chromatin locus displays HDAC3-mediated reversible epigenetic modifications during both erythropoiesis and iron deficiency.


Experimental Hematology | 2017

MLL-AF4 binds directly to a BCL-2 specific enhancer and modulates H3K27 acetylation

Laura Godfrey; Jon Kerry; Ross Thorne; Emmanouela Repapi; James O. J. Davies; Marta Tapia; Erica Ballabio; Jim R. Hughes; Huimin Geng; Marina Konopleva; Thomas A. Milne

Survival rates for children and adults carrying mutations in the Mixed Lineage Leukemia (MLL) gene continue to have a very poor prognosis. The most common MLL mutation in acute lymphoblastic leukemia is the t(4;11)(q21;q23) chromosome translocation that fuses MLL in-frame with the AF4 gene producing MLL-AF4 and AF4-MLL fusion proteins. Previously, we found that MLL-AF4 binds to the BCL-2 gene and directly activates it through DOT1L recruitment and increased H3K79me2/3 levels. In the study described here, we performed a detailed analysis of MLL-AF4 regulation of the entire BCL-2 family. By measuring nascent RNA production in MLL-AF4 knockdowns, we found that of all the BCL-2 family genes, MLL-AF4 directly controls the active transcription of both BCL-2 and MCL-1 and also represses BIM via binding of the polycomb group repressor 1 (PRC1) complex component CBX8. We further analyzed MLL-AF4 activation of the BCL-2 gene using Capture-C and identified a BCL-2-specific enhancer, consisting of two clusters of H3K27Ac at the 3′ end of the gene. Loss of MLL-AF4 activity results in a reduction of H3K79me3 levels in the gene body and H3K27Ac levels at the 3′ BCL-2 enhancer, revealing a novel regulatory link between these two histone marks and MLL-AF4-mediated activation of BCL-2.


Cancer Cell | 2018

Ezh2 and Runx1 Mutations Collaborate to Initiate Lympho-Myeloid Leukemia in Early Thymic Progenitors

C Booth; Nikolaos Barkas; Wen Hao Neo; Hanane Boukarabila; Elizabeth J. Soilleux; George Giotopoulos; Noushin Rahnamay Farnoud; Alice Giustacchini; Neil Ashley; Joana Carrelha; Lauren Jamieson; Deborah Atkinson; Tiphaine Bouriez-Jones; Rab K. Prinjha; Thomas A. Milne; David T. Teachey; Elli Papaemmanuil; Brian J. P. Huntly; Sten Eirik W. Jacobsen; Adam Mead

Lympho-myeloid restricted early thymic progenitors (ETPs) are postulated to be the cell of origin for ETP leukemias, a therapy-resistant leukemia associated with frequent co-occurrence of EZH2 and RUNX1 inactivating mutations, and constitutively activating signaling pathway mutations. In a mouse model, we demonstrate that Ezh2 and Runx1 inactivation targeted to early lymphoid progenitors causes a marked expansion ofxa0pre-leukemic ETPs, showing transcriptional signatures characteristic of ETP leukemia. Addition of a RAS-signalingxa0pathway mutation (Flt3-ITD) results in an aggressive leukemia co-expressing myeloid and lymphoid genes, which can be established and propagated inxa0vivo by the expanded ETPs. Both mouse and human ETP leukemias show sensitivity to BET inhibition inxa0vitro and inxa0vivo, which reverses aberrant gene expression induced by Ezh2 inactivation.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2018

The Cks1/Cks2 axis fine-tunes Mll1 expression and is crucial for MLL-rearranged leukaemia cell viability.

William Grey; Adam Ivey; Thomas A. Milne; Torsten Haferlach; David Grimwade; Frank Uhlmann; Edwige Voisset; Veronica P. C. C. Yu

The Cdc28 protein kinase subunits, Cks1 and Cks2, play dual roles in Cdk-substrate specificity and Cdk-independent protein degradation, in concert with the E3 ubiquitin ligase complexes SCFSkp2 and APCCdc20. Notable targets controlled by Cks include p27 and Cyclin A. Here, we demonstrate that Cks1 and Cks2 proteins interact with both the MllN and MllC subunits of Mll1 (Mixed-lineage leukaemia 1), and together, the Cks proteins define Mll1 levels throughout the cell cycle. Overexpression of CKS1B and CKS2 is observed in multiple human cancers, including various MLL-rearranged (MLLr) AML subtypes. To explore the importance of MLL-Fusion Protein regulation by CKS1/2, we used small molecule inhibitors (MLN4924 and C1) to modulate their protein degradation functions. These inhibitors specifically reduced the proliferation of MLLr cell lines compared to primary controls. Altogether, this study uncovers a novel regulatory pathway for MLL1, which may open a new therapeutic approach to MLLr leukaemia.


Nature Communications | 2017

In situ functional dissection of RNA cis-regulatory elements by multiplex CRISPR-Cas9 genome engineering.

Qianxin Wu; Quentin Rv Ferry; Toni A Baeumler; Yale S. Michaels; Dimitrios M. Vitsios; Omer Habib; Roland Arnold; Xiaowei Jiang; Stefano Maio; Bruno R. Steinkraus; Marta Tapia; Paolo Piazza; Ni Xu; Georg A. Holländer; Thomas A. Milne; Jin-Soo Kim; Anton J. Enright; Andrew Bassett; Tudor A. Fulga

RNA regulatory elements (RREs) are an important yet relatively under-explored facet of gene regulation. Deciphering the prevalence and functional impact of this post-transcriptional control layer requires technologies for disrupting RREs without perturbing cellular homeostasis. Here we describe genome-engineering based evaluation of RNA regulatory element activity (GenERA), a clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR)-Cas9 platform for in situ high-content functional analysis of RREs. We use GenERA to survey the entire regulatory landscape of a 3′UTR, and apply it in a multiplex fashion to analyse combinatorial interactions between sets of miRNA response elements (MREs), providing strong evidence for cooperative activity. We also employ this technology to probe the functionality of an entire MRE network under cellular homeostasis, and show that high-resolution analysis of the GenERA dataset can be used to extract functional features of MREs. This study provides a genome editing-based multiplex strategy for direct functional interrogation of RNA cis-regulatory elements in a native cellular environment.RNA regulatory elements (RREs) are important post-transcriptional control features but studying them requires disrupting their activity without disturbing cellular homeostasis. Here the authors present GenERA, a CRISPR-Cas9 screening platform of in situ analysis of native RREs.

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Huimin Geng

University of California

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Debra J. Shaw

Peninsula College of Medicine and Dentistry

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Freya Shephard

University of Nottingham

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