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Dive into the research topics where Tom Daniel is active.

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Featured researches published by Tom Daniel.


Leukemia | 2012

Cereblon is a direct protein target for immunomodulatory and antiproliferative activities of lenalidomide and pomalidomide

Antonia Lopez-Girona; Derek Mendy; Takumi Ito; Karen Miller; Anita Gandhi; Jian Kang; Satoki Karasawa; Gilles Carmel; Pilgrim Jackson; Mahan Abbasian; Afshin Mahmoudi; Brian E. Cathers; Emily Rychak; Svetlana Gaidarova; R Chen; Peter H. Schafer; Hiroshi Handa; Tom Daniel; Jilly F. Evans; Rajesh Chopra

Thalidomide and the immunomodulatory drug, lenalidomide, are therapeutically active in hematological malignancies. The ubiquitously expressed E3 ligase protein cereblon (CRBN) has been identified as the primary teratogenic target of thalidomide. Our studies demonstrate that thalidomide, lenalidomide and another immunomodulatory drug, pomalidomide, bound endogenous CRBN and recombinant CRBN–DNA damage binding protein-1 (DDB1) complexes. CRBN mediated antiproliferative activities of lenalidomide and pomalidomide in myeloma cells, as well as lenalidomide- and pomalidomide-induced cytokine production in T cells. Lenalidomide and pomalidomide inhibited autoubiquitination of CRBN in HEK293T cells expressing thalidomide-binding competent wild-type CRBN, but not thalidomide-binding defective CRBNYW/AA. Overexpression of CRBN wild-type protein, but not CRBNYW/AA mutant protein, in KMS12 myeloma cells, amplified pomalidomide-mediated reductions in c-myc and IRF4 expression and increases in p21WAF-1 expression. Long-term selection for lenalidomide resistance in H929 myeloma cell lines was accompanied by a reduction in CRBN, while in DF15R myeloma cells resistant to both pomalidomide and lenalidomide, CRBN protein was undetectable. Our biophysical, biochemical and gene silencing studies show that CRBN is a proximate, therapeutically important molecular target of lenalidomide and pomalidomide.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Optimized clinical performance of growth hormone with an expanded genetic code

Ho Cho; Tom Daniel; Ying Buechler; David C. Litzinger; Zhenwei Maio; Anna-Maria A. Hays Putnam; Bee-Cheng Sim; Stuart Bussell; Tsotne Javahishvili; Sami Kaphle; Guillermo Viramontes; Mike Ong; Stephanie Chu; Becky Gc; Ricky Lieu; Nick Knudsen; Paola Castiglioni; Thea Norman; Douglas W. Axelrod; Andrew R. Hoffman; Peter G. Schultz; Richard D. DiMarchi; Bruce E. Kimmel

The ribosomal incorporation of nonnative amino acids into polypeptides in living cells provides the opportunity to endow therapeutic proteins with unique pharmacological properties. We report here the first clinical study of a biosynthetic protein produced using an expanded genetic code. Incorporation of p-acetylphenylalanine (pAcF) at distinct locations in human growth hormone (hGH) allowed site-specific conjugation with polyethylene glycol (PEG) to produce homogeneous hGH variants. A mono-PEGylated mutant hGH modified at residue 35 demonstrated favorable pharmacodynamic properties in GH-deficient rats. Clinical studies in GH-deficient adults demonstrated efficacy and safety comparable to native human growth hormone therapy but with increased potency and reduced injection frequency. This example illustrates the utility of nonnative amino acids to optimize protein therapeutics in an analogous fashion to the use of medicinal chemistry to optimize conventional natural products, low molecular weight drugs, and peptides.


British Journal of Haematology | 2011

Lenalidomide downregulates the cell survival factor, interferon regulatory factor‐4, providing a potential mechanistic link for predicting response

Antonia Lopez-Girona; Daniel Heintel; Ling-Hua Zhang; Derek Mendy; Svetlana Gaidarova; Helen Brady; J. B. Bartlett; Peter H. Schafer; Martin Schreder; Arnold Bolomsky; Bernadette Hilgarth; Niklas Zojer; Heinz Gisslinger; Heinz Ludwig; Tom Daniel; Ulrich Jäger; Rajesh Chopra

Overexpression of the transcription factor interferon regulatory factor‐4 (IRF4), which is common in multiple myeloma (MM), is associated with poor prognosis. Patients with higher IRF4 expression have significantly poorer overall survival than those with low IRF4 expression. Lenalidomide is an IMiD® immunomodulatory compound that has both tumouricidal and immunomodulatory activity in MM. This study showed that lenalidomide downregulated IRF4 levels in MM cell lines and bone marrow samples within 8 h of drug exposure. This was associated with a decrease in MYC levels, as well as an initial G1 cell cycle arrest, decreased cell proliferation, and cell death by day 5 of treatment. In eight MM cell lines, high IRF4 levels correlated with increased lenalidomide sensitivity. The clinical significance of this observation was investigated in 154 patients with MM. Among MM patients with high levels of IRF4 expression, treatment with lenalidomide led to a significantly longer overall survival than other therapies in a retrospective analysis. These data confirm the central role of IRF4 in MM pathogenesis; indicate that this is an important mechanism by which lenalidomide exerts its antitumour effects; and may provide a mechanistic biomarker to predict response to lenalidomide.


British Journal of Haematology | 2014

Measuring cereblon as a biomarker of response or resistance to lenalidomide and pomalidomide requires use of standardized reagents and understanding of gene complexity.

Anita Gandhi; Derek Mendy; Michelle Waldman; Gengxin Chen; Emily Rychak; Karen Miller; Svetlana Gaidarova; Yan Ren; Maria Wang; Michael Breider; Gilles Carmel; Afshin Mahmoudi; Pilgrim Jackson; Mahan Abbasian; Brian E. Cathers; Peter H. Schafer; Tom Daniel; Antonia Lopez-Girona; Anjan Thakurta; Rajesh Chopra

Cereblon, a member of the cullin 4 ring ligase complex (CRL4), is the molecular target of the immunomodulatory drugs (IMiDs) lenalidomide and pomalidomide and is required for the antiproliferative activity of these agents in multiple myeloma (MM) and immunomodulatory activity in T cells. Cereblons central role as a target of lenalidomide and pomalidomide suggests potential utility as a predictive biomarker of response or resistance to IMiD therapy. Our studies characterized a cereblon monoclonal antibody CRBN65, with high sensitivity and specificity in Western analysis and immunohistochemistry that is superior to commercially available antibodies. We identified multiple cereblon splice variants in both MM cell lines and primary cells, highlighting challenges with conventional gene expression assays given this gene complexity. Using CRBN65 antibody and TaqMan quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction assays, we showed lack of correlation between cereblon protein and mRNA levels. Furthermore, lack of correlation between cereblon expression in MM cell lines and sensitivity to lenalidomide was shown. In cell lines made resistant to lenalidomide and pomalidomide, cereblon protein is greatly reduced. These studies show limitations to the current approaches of cereblon measurement that rely on commercial reagents and assays. Standardized reagents and validated assays are needed to accurately assess the role of cereblon as a predictive biomarker.


British Journal of Haematology | 2014

An activin receptor IIA ligand trap promotes erythropoiesis resulting in a rapid induction of red blood cells and haemoglobin

Soraya Carrancio; Jennifer Markovics; Piu Wong; Jim Leisten; Paola Castiglioni; Matthew C. Groza; Heather Raymon; Carla Heise; Tom Daniel; Rajesh Chopra; Victoria Sung

Sotatercept (ACE‐011), a recombinant human fusion protein containing the extracellular domain of the human Activin receptor IIA, binds to and inhibits activin and other members of the transforming growth factor ‐β (TGF‐β) superfamily. Administration of sotatercept led to a rapid and sustained increase in red blood cell (RBC) count and haemoglobin (Hb) in healthy volunteers (phase I clinical trials), but the mechanism is not fully understood. Mice treated with RAP‐011 (murine ortholog of ACE‐011) respond with a rapid (within 24 h) increase in haematocrit, Hb, and RBC count. These effects are accompanied by an equally rapid stimulation of late‐stage erythroid precursors in the bone marrow (BM). RAP‐011 also induces a significant increase in erythroid burst‐forming units and erythropoietin, which could contribute to additional, sustained effects on RBC production. Further in vitro co‐culture studies demonstrate that BM accessory cells are required for RAP‐011 effects. To better understand which TGF‐β family ligand(s) mediate RAP‐011 effects, we evaluated the impact of several of these ligands on erythroid differentiation. Our data suggest that RAP‐011 may act to rescue growth differentiation factor 11/Activin A‐induced inhibition of late‐stage erythropoiesis. These data define the mechanism of action of a novel agent that regulates RBC differentiation and provide the rationale to develop sotatercept for the treatment of anaemia and ineffective erythropoiesis.


Blood | 2015

CC-122, a pleiotropic pathway modifier, mimics an interferon response and has antitumor activity in DLBCL

Patrick Hagner; Hon Wah Man; Maria Wang; Suzana Couto; Mike Breider; Chad C. Bjorklund; Courtney G. Havens; Lu G; Emily Rychak; Heather Raymon; Rama Krishna Narla; Leo Barnes; Gody Khambatta; Hsiling Chiu; Jolanta Kosek; Jian Kang; Amantangelo; Michelle Waldman; Antonia Lopez-Girona; Cai T; Michael Pourdehnad; Matthew Trotter; Tom Daniel; Peter H. Schafer; Anke Klippel; Anjan Thakurta; Rajesh Chopra; Anita Gandhi

Cereblon (CRBN), a substrate receptor of the Cullin 4 RING E3 ubiquitin ligase complex, is the target of the immunomodulatory drugs lenalidomide and pomalidomide. Recently, it was demonstrated that binding of these drugs to CRBN promotes the ubiquitination and subsequent degradation of 2 common substrates, transcription factors Aiolos and Ikaros. Here we report that CC-122, a new chemical entity termed pleiotropic pathway modifier, binds CRBN and promotes degradation of Aiolos and Ikaros in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) and T cells in vitro, in vivo, and in patients, resulting in both cell autonomous as well as immunostimulatory effects. In DLBCL cell lines, CC-122-induced degradation or short hairpin RNA-mediated knockdown of Aiolos and Ikaros correlates with increased transcription of interferon (IFN)-stimulated genes independent of IFN-α, -β, and -γ production and/or secretion and results in apoptosis in both activated B-cell (ABC) and germinal center B-cell DLBCL cell lines. Our results provide mechanistic insight into the cell-of-origin independent antilymphoma activity of CC-122, in contrast to the ABC subtype selective activity of lenalidomide.


Blood | 2011

Direct Binding with Cereblon Mediates the Antiproliferative and Immunomodulatory Action of Lenalidomide and Pomalidomide

Antonia Lopez-Girona; Derek Mendy; Karen Miller; Anita Gandhi; Jian Kang; Gilles Carmel; Mahan Abbasian; Afshin Mahmoudi; Pilgrim Jackson; Brian E. Cathers; Emily Rychak; Normand Richard; Helen Brady; Peter H. Schafer; Jilly F. Evans; Tom Daniel; Rajesh Chopra


Blood | 2010

Lenalidomide Induces Capping of CD20 and Cytoskeleton Proteins to Enhance Rituximab Immune Recognition of Malignant B-Cells

Svetlana Gaidarova; Derek Mendy; Carla Heise; Sharon Lea Aukerman; Tom Daniel; Rajesh Chopra; Antonia Lopez-Girona


Blood | 2012

Detection and Quantification of Cereblon Protein and mRNA in Multiple Myeloma Cell Lines and Primary CD138 + multiple Myeloma Cells

Anita Gandhi; Hervé Avet-Loiseau; Michelle Waldman; Anjan Thakurta; Sharon Lea Aukerman; Gengxin Chen; Derek Mendy; Emily Rychak; Karen Miller; Svetlana Gaidarova; Michael Gonzales; Brian E. Cathers; Peter H. Schafer; Tom Daniel; Antonia Lopez-Girona; Rajesh Chopra


Archive | 2013

METHODS OF TREATING A DISEASE OR DISORDER ASSOCIATED WITH BRUTON'S TYROSINE KINASE

Tom Daniel; Kenichi Takeshita; Kenneth A. Foon; Jay Mei

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