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Dive into the research topics where Vera Okpanyi is active.

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Featured researches published by Vera Okpanyi.


Genes, Chromosomes and Cancer | 2013

Next-generation-sequencing-based risk stratification and identification of new genes involved in structural and sequence variations in near haploid lymphoblastic leukemia†‡

Cai Chen; Christoph Bartenhagen; Michael Gombert; Vera Okpanyi; Vera Binder; Silja Röttgers; Jutta Bradtke; Andrea Teigler-Schlegel; Jochen Harbott; Sebastian Ginzel; Ralf Thiele; Ute Fischer; Martin Dugas; Jianda Hu; Arndt Borkhardt

Near haploidy (23–29 chromosomes) is a numerical cytogenetic aberration in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) associated with particularly poor outcome. In contrast, high hyperdiploidy (51–67 chromosomes) has a favorable prognosis. Correct classification and appropriate risk stratification of near haploidy is frequently hampered by the presence of apparently high hyperdiploid clones that arise by endoreduplication of the original near haploid clone. We evaluated next‐generation‐sequencing (NGS) to distinguish between “high hyperdiploid” leukemic clones of near haploid and true high hyperdiploid origin. Five high hyperdiploid ALL cases and the “high hyperdiploid” cell line MHH‐CALL‐2, derived from a near haploid clone, were tested for uniparental isodisomy. NGS showed that all disomic chromosomes of MHH‐CALL‐2, but none of the patients, were of uniparental origin, thus reliably discriminating these subtypes. Whole‐exome‐ and whole‐genome‐sequencing of MHH‐CALL‐2 revealed homozygous non‐synonymous coding mutations predicted to be deleterious for the protein function of 63 genes, among them known cancer‐associated genes, such as FANCA, NF1, TCF7L2, CARD11, EP400, histone demethylases, and transferases (KDM6B, KDM1A, PRDM11). Only eight of these were also, but heterozygously, mutated in the high hyperdiploid patients. Structural variations in MHH‐CALL‐2 include a homozygous deletion (MTAP/CDKN2A/CDKN2B/ANRIL), a homozygous inversion (NCKAP5), and an unbalanced translocation (FAM189A1). Together, the sequence variations provide MHH‐CALL‐2 with capabilities typically acquired during cancer development, e.g., loss of cell cycle control, enhanced proliferation, lack of DNA repair, cell death evasion, and disturbance of epigenetic gene regulation. Poorer prognosis of near haploid ALL most likely results from full penetrance of a large array of detrimental homozygous mutations.


Pediatric Blood & Cancer | 2011

Analysis of the adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) gene in childhood and adolescent germ cell tumors

Vera Okpanyi; Dominik Schneider; Susanne Zahn; Sonja Sievers; Gabriele Calaminus; James Nicholson; Roger D. Palmer; Ivo Leuschner; Arndt Borkhardt; Stefan Schönberger

Aberrant Wnt signaling due to deregulation of Wnt regulators is implicated in the development and progression of numerous embryonal tumors. This study addresses the questions if activation of Wnt signaling in germ cell tumors (GCTs) arising during childhood and adolescence is associated with aberrations of the tumor suppressor adenomatous polyposis coli (APC), and whether APC aberrations might be responsible for progression from benign teratoma to malignant yolk sac tumor (YST).


Leukemia Research | 2015

Next-generation-sequencing of recurrent childhood high hyperdiploid acute lymphoblastic leukemia reveals mutations typically associated with high risk patients

Cai Chen; Christoph Bartenhagen; Michael Gombert; Vera Okpanyi; Vera Binder; Silja Röttgers; Jutta Bradtke; Andrea Teigler-Schlegel; Jochen Harbott; Sebastian Ginzel; Ralf Thiele; Peter Husemann; Pina Fanny Ida Krell; Arndt Borkhardt; Martin Dugas; Jianda Hu; Ute Fischer

20% of children suffering from high hyperdiploid acute lymphoblastic leukemia develop recurrent disease. The molecular mechanisms are largely unknown. Here, we analyzed the genetic landscape of five patients at relapse, who developed recurrent disease without prior high-risk indication using whole-exome- and whole-genome-sequencing. Oncogenic mutations of RAS pathway genes (NRAS, KRAS, FLT3, n=4) and deactivating mutations of major epigenetic regulators (CREBBP, EP300, each n=2 and ARID4B, EZH2, MACROD2, MLL2, each n=1) were prominent in these cases and virtually absent in non-recurrent cases (n=6) or other pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia cases (n=18). In relapse nucleotide variations were detected in cell fate determining transcription factors (GLIS1, AKNA). Structural genomic alterations affected genes regulating B-cell development (IKZF1, PBX1, RUNX1). Eleven novel translocations involved the genes ART4, C12orf60, MACROD2, TBL1XR1, LRRN4, KIAA1467, and ELMO1/MIR1200. Typically, patients harbored only single structural variations, except for one patient who displayed massive rearrangements in the context of a germline tumor suppressor TP53 mutation and a Li-Fraumeni syndrome-like family history. Another patient harbored a germline mutation in the DNA repair factor ATM. In summary, the relapse patients of our cohort were characterized by somatic mutations affecting the RAS pathway, epigenetic and developmental programs and germline mutations in DNA repair pathways.


Human Mutation | 2014

A new workflow for whole-genome sequencing of single human cells.

Vera Binder; Christoph Bartenhagen; Vera Okpanyi; Michael Gombert; Birte Moehlendick; Bianca Behrens; Hans-Ulrich Klein; Harald Rieder; Pina Fanny Ida Krell; Martin Dugas; Nikolas H. Stoecklein; Arndt Borkhardt

Unbiased amplification of the whole‐genome amplification (WGA) of single cells is crucial to study cancer evolution and genetic heterogeneity, but is challenging due to the high complexity of the human genome. Here, we present a new workflow combining an efficient adapter‐linker PCR‐based WGA method with second‐generation sequencing. This approach allows comparison of single cells at base pair resolution. Amplification recovered up to 74% of the human genome. Copy‐number variants and loss of heterozygosity detected in single cell genomes showed concordance of up to 99% to pooled genomic DNA. Allele frequencies of mutations could be determined accurately due to an allele dropout rate of only 2%, clearly demonstrating the low bias of our PCR‐based WGA approach. Sequencing with paired‐end reads allowed genome‐wide analysis of structural variants. By direct comparison to other WGA methods, we further endorse its suitability to analyze genetic heterogeneity.


Genes, Chromosomes and Cancer | 2013

EPCAM–A novel molecular target for the treatment of pediatric and adult germ cell tumors

Stefan Schönberger; Vera Okpanyi; Gabriele Calaminus; Sebastian Heikaus; Ivo Leuschner; James Nicholson; Nikolas H. Stoecklein; Dominik T. Schneider; Arndt Borkhardt

Germ cell tumors (GCTs) are thought to develop from totipotent primordial germ cells. Although the epithelial cell adhesion molecule (EPCAM) is expressed on embryonic stem cells as well as different tumor cells, it has not yet been extensively studied in GCTs. We analyzed EPCAM expression by quantitative RT‐PCR in 48 fresh‐frozen GCT specimens of different histology (10 mature teratoma, MT; 6 immature teratoma, IT; 7 dysgerminoma; 6 mixed malignant GCTs; 19 yolk sac tumor, YST) and in the GCT cell lines NCCIT, TE76.T, JAR and 2102Ep, and correlated its expression with AFP and hCG protein levels, histologic differentiation, and clinical follow‐up data. EPCAM protein was visualized by immunohistochemistry of selected corresponding paraffin embedded tumor tissues. EPCAM was expressed in malignant but not in benign GCTs irrespective of age, sex, site and clinical stage of tumor (P = 0.001). In primary teratomas, EPCAM expression increased with their grade of immaturity (mean 2−ΔCt values: MT 0.23, IT 1.61, P = 0.007) and significantly correlated with serum AFP (P = 0.03) and hCG (P = 0.03) levels in malignant GCTs. Particularly high EPCAM levels were found in nonseminomatous GCTs such as YSTs (8.49) and choriocarcinoma (13.54). Immunohistochemical analysis verified gene expression data showing a distinct EPCAM staining in YST. Similarly in vitro, highest EPCAM expression was measured in GCT cell lines comprising yolk sac (2102Ep: 5.59) or choriocarcinoma (JAR: 10.65) components. This first comprehensive analysis of EPCAM in GCTs revealed high EPCAM expression in YSTs and choriocarcinomas. Thus, these nonseminomatous GCTs may be interesting targets for EPCAM immunotherapy, which has to be evaluated in further studies.


Cancer Research | 2017

Infection exposure promotes ETV6-RUNX1 precursor B cell leukemia via impaired H3K4 demethylases

Guillermo Rodríguez-Hernández; Julia Hauer; Alberto Martín-Lorenzo; Daniel Schäfer; Christoph Bartenhagen; Idoia García-Ramírez; Franziska Auer; Inés González-Herrero; Lucía Ruiz-Roca; Michael Gombert; Vera Okpanyi; Ute Fischer; Cai Chen; Martin Dugas; Sanil Bhatia; René Martin Linka; Marta Garcia-Suquia; María Victoria Rascón-Trincado; Ángel García-Sánchez; Oscar Blanco; María Begoña García-Cenador; Francisco Javier García-Criado; César Cobaleda; Diego Alonso-López; Javier De Las Rivas; Markus Müschen; Carolina Vicente-Dueñas; Isidro Sánchez-García; Arndt Borkhardt

ETV6-RUNX1 is associated with the most common subtype of childhood leukemia. As few ETV6-RUNX1 carriers develop precursor B-cell acute lymphocytic leukemia (pB-ALL), the underlying genetic basis for development of full-blown leukemia remains to be identified, but the appearance of leukemia cases in time-space clusters keeps infection as a potential causal factor. Here, we present in vivo genetic evidence mechanistically connecting preleukemic ETV6-RUNX1 expression in hematopoetic stem cells/precursor cells (HSC/PC) and postnatal infections for human-like pB-ALL. In our model, ETV6-RUNX1 conferred a low risk of developing pB-ALL after exposure to common pathogens, corroborating the low incidence observed in humans. Murine preleukemic ETV6-RUNX1 pro/preB cells showed high Rag1/2 expression, known for human ETV6-RUNX1 pB-ALL. Murine and human ETV6-RUNX1 pB-ALL revealed recurrent genomic alterations, with a relevant proportion affecting genes of the lysine demethylase (KDM) family. KDM5C loss of function resulted in increased levels of H3K4me3, which coprecipitated with RAG2 in a human cell line model, laying the molecular basis for recombination activity. We conclude that alterations of KDM family members represent a disease-driving mechanism and an explanation for RAG off-target cleavage observed in humans. Our results explain the genetic basis for clonal evolution of an ETV6-RUNX1 preleukemic clone to pB-ALL after infection exposure and offer the possibility of novel therapeutic approaches. Cancer Res; 77(16); 4365-77. ©2017 AACR.


Haematologica | 2017

Infection as a cause of childhood leukemia: virus detection employing whole genome sequencing

Christoph Bartenhagen; Ute Fischer; Klaus Korn; Stefan M. Pfister; Michael Gombert; Cai Chen; Vera Okpanyi; Julia Hauer; Anna Rinaldi; Jean-Pierre Bourquin; Cornelia Eckert; Jianda Hu; Armin Ensser; Martin Dugas; Arndt Borkhardt

Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is the most common type of cancer in childhood and its incidence has risen steadily over the past decades. Growing evidence from epidemiological studies strongly suggests that the increased leukemia rate is likely related to an abnormal immune response to


Anticancer Research | 2018

Mutational and Functional Analysis of as a Candidate Gene for Sporadic Head and Neck Squamous Cell Carcinomas.

Marcel Fabian Glaas; Constanze Wiek; Linda-Maria Wolter; Katharina Roellecke; Vera Balz; Vera Okpanyi; Martin Wagenmann; Thomas K. Hoffmann; Rene Grässlin; Christian Plettenberg; J. Schipper; Helmut Hanenberg; Kathrin Scheckenbach


CURAC | 2016

Oramod - Software-basierte multimodale Prädiktion des Outcome von Patienten mit Mundhöhlenkarzinomen.

Kathrin Scheckenbach; Lena Colter; Vera Okpanyi; J. Schipper; Thomas Klenzner; Stefan Wesarg; Florian Jung; Ruud H. Brakenhoff; Steven W. Mes; Marc van de Wiel; V. Karampali; A. Ruggeri; M. Cereda; Götz Lehnerdt; Jochen Windfuhr; Silke Gronau; Oramod Konsortium; Tito Poli


Blood | 2013

Chromothripsis-Mediated Structural Variations and Clonal Evolution In Recurrent Childhood High Hyperdiploid Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia

Cai Chen; Christoph Bartenhagen; Michael Gombert; Vera Okpanyi; Vera Binder; Andrea Teigler-Schlegel; Jutta Bradtke; Silja Roettgers; Jochen Harbott; Sebastian Ginzel; Ralf Thiele; Martin Dugas; Jianda Hu; Arndt Borkhardt

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Arndt Borkhardt

University of Düsseldorf

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Michael Gombert

University of Düsseldorf

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Cai Chen

University of Düsseldorf

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Vera Binder

University of Düsseldorf

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Ute Fischer

University of Düsseldorf

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