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Featured researches published by Vijay Alla.


Journal of the National Cancer Institute | 2010

E2F1 in Melanoma Progression and Metastasis

Vijay Alla; David Engelmann; Annett Niemetz; Jens Pahnke; Anke Schmidt; Manfred Kunz; Stephan Emmrich; Marc Steder; Dirk Koczan; Brigitte M. Pützer

Metastases are responsible for cancer deaths, but the molecular alterations leading to tumor progression are unclear. Overexpression of the E2F1 transcription factor is common in high-grade tumors that are associated with poor patient survival. To investigate the association of enhanced E2F1 activity with aggressive phenotype, we performed a gene-specific silencing approach in a metastatic melanoma model. Knockdown of endogenous E2F1 via E2F1 small hairpin RNA (shRNA) expression increased E-cadherin expression of metastatic SK-Mel-147 melanoma cells and reduced their invasive potential but not their proliferative activity. Although growth rates of SK-Mel-147 and SK-Mel-103 xenograft tumors expressing E2F1 shRNA or control shRNA were similar, mice implanted with cells expressing E2F1 shRNA had a smaller area of metastases per lung than control mice (n = 3 mice per group; 5% vs 46%, difference = 41%, 95% confidence interval = 15% to 67%; P = .01; one-way analysis of variance). We identified epidermal growth factor receptor as a direct target of E2F1 and demonstrated that inhibition of receptor signaling abrogates E2F1-induced invasiveness, emphasizing the importance of the E2F1-epidermal growth factor receptor interaction as a driving force in melanoma progression that may serve as a paradigm for E2F1-induced metastasis in other human cancers.


Cell Cycle | 2012

E2F1 confers anticancer drug resistance by targeting ABC transporter family members and Bcl-2 via the p73/DNp73-miR-205 circuitry

Vijay Alla; Bhavani S. Kowtharapu; David Engelmann; Stephan Emmrich; Ulf Schmitz; Marc Steder; Brigitte M. Pützer

Resistance to anti-neoplastic agents is the major cause of therapy failure, leading to disease recurrence and metastasis. E2F1 is a strong inducer of apoptosis in response to DNA damage through its capacity to activate p53/p73 death pathways. Recent evidence, however, showed that E2F1, which is aberrantly expressed in advanced malignant melanomas together with antagonistic p73 family members, drives cancer progression. Investigating mechanisms responsible for dysregulated E2F1 losing its apoptotic function, we searched for genomic signatures in primary and late clinical tumor stages to allow the prediction of downstream effectors associated with apoptosis resistance and survival of aggressive melanoma cells. We identified miR-205 as specific target of p73 and found that upon genotoxic stress, its expression is sufficiently abrogated by endogenous DNp73. Significantly, metastatic cells can be rescued from drug resistance by selective knockdown of DNp73 or overexpression of miR-205 in p73-depleted cells, leading to increased apoptosis and the reduction of tumor growth in vivo. Our data delineate an autoregulatory circuit, involving high levels of E2F1 and DNp73 to downregulate miR-205, which, in turn, controls E2F1 accumulation. Finally, drug resistance associated to this genetic signature is mediated by removing the inhibitory effect of miR-205 on the expression of Bcl-2 and the ATP-binding cassette transporters A2 (ABCA2) and A5 (ABCA5) related to multi-drug resistance and malignant progression. These results define the E2F1-p73/DNp73-miR-205 axis as a crucial mechanism for chemoresistance and, thus, as a target for metastasis prevention.


Cancer Cell | 2013

DNp73 Exerts Function in Metastasis Initiation by Disconnecting the Inhibitory Role of EPLIN on IGF1R-AKT/STAT3 Signaling

Marc Steder; Vijay Alla; Claudia Meier; Alf Spitschak; Jens Pahnke; Katharina Fürst; Bhavani S. Kowtharapu; David Engelmann; Janine Petigk; Friederike Egberts; Susanne G. Schäd-Trcka; Gerd Gross; Dirk M. Nettelbeck; Annett Niemetz; Brigitte M. Pützer

Dissemination of cancer cells from primary tumors is the key event in metastasis, but specific determinants are widely unknown. Here, we show that DNp73, an inhibitor of the p53 tumor suppressor family, drives migration and invasion of nonmetastatic melanoma cells. Knockdown of endogenous DNp73 reduces this behavior in highly metastatic cell lines. Tumor xenografts expressing DNp73 show a higher ability to invade and metastasize, while growth remains unaffected. DNp73 facilitates an EMT-like phenotype with loss of E-cadherin and Slug upregulation. We provide mechanistic insight toward regulation of LIMA1/EPLIN by p73/DNp73 and demonstrate a direct link between the DNp73-EPLIN axis and IGF1R-AKT/STAT3 activation. These findings establish initiation of the invasion-metastasis cascade via EPLIN-dependent IGF1R regulation as major activity of DNp73.


Journal of Molecular Cell Biology | 2013

E2F1 promotes angiogenesis through the VEGF-C/VEGFR-3 axis in a feedback loop for cooperative induction of PDGF-B

David Engelmann; Deborah Mayoli-Nüssle; Christian Mayrhofer; Katharina Fürst; Vijay Alla; Anja Stoll; Alf Spitschak; Kerstin Abshagen; Brigitte Vollmar; Sophia Ran; Brigitte M. Pützer

Angiogenesis is essential for primary tumor growth and metastatic dissemination. E2F1, frequently upregulated in advanced cancers, was recently shown to drive malignant progression. In an attempt to decipher the molecular events underlying this behavior, we demonstrate that the tumor cell-associated vascular endothelial growth factor-C/receptor-3 (VEGF-C/VEGFR-3) axis is controlled by E2F1. Activation or forced expression of E2F1 in cancer cells leads to the upregulation of VEGFR-3 and its ligand VEGF-C, whereas E2F1 depletion prevents their expression. E2F1-dependent receptor induction is crucial for tumor cells to enhance formation of capillary tubes and neovascularization in mice. We further provide evidence for a positive feedback loop between E2F1 and VEGFR-3 signaling to stimulate pro-angiogenic platelet-derived growth factor B (PDGF-B). E2F1 or VEGFR-3 knockdown results in reduced PDGF-B levels, while the coexpression synergistically upregulates promoter activity and endogenous protein expression of PDGF-B. Our findings delineate an as yet unrecognized function of E2F1 as enhancer of angiogenesis via regulation of VEGF-C/VEGFR-3 signaling in tumors to cooperatively activate PDGF-B expression. Targeting this pathway might be reasonable to complement standard anti-angiogenic treatment of cancers with deregulated E2F1.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

Transcriptional Repression of the Prosurvival Endoplasmic Reticulum Chaperone GRP78/BIP by E2F1

Tomáš Racek; Sven Buhlmann; Franziska Rüst; Susanne Knoll; Vijay Alla; Brigitte M. Pützer

The endoplasmic reticulum chaperone GRP78/BIP plays a central role in the prosurvival machinery, and its enhanced expression has been implicated in drug resistance, carcinogenesis, and metastasis. E2F1, as part of an antitumor safeguard mechanism, promotes apoptosis regardless of functional p53. Using cells that are defective in p53, we show that E2F1 represses GRP78/BIP at the transcriptional level, and this requires its DNA binding domain. Analysis of human GRP78/BIP promoter reporter constructs revealed that the region between -371 and -109 of the proximal promoter contains major E2F1-responsive elements. Toward understanding the underlying mechanism of this regulation, we performed chromatin immunoprecipitation and gel shift assays, demonstrating that E2F1 directly binds to GC-rich regions in the distal GC-box and endoplasmic reticulum stress response element -126 by interfering with the binding of positive regulatory proteins Sp1 and TFII-I of the ER stress response element-binding factor complex. We further show that TFII-I, which is required for optimal stress induction of GRP78/BIP, is suppressed by E2F1 on the protein level. Finally, our studies suggest a molecular link between the inhibition of GRP78/BIP and E2F1-mediated chemosensitization of tumor cells, underscoring its relevance for cancer treatment. Together, the data provide a new mechanism for the incompletely understood tumor suppressor function of E2F1.


The Journal of Pathology | 2014

Association of RHAMM with E2F1 promotes tumour cell extravasation by transcriptional up-regulation of fibronectin.

Claudia Meier; Alf Spitschak; Kerstin Abshagen; Shailendra K. Gupta; Joel M. Mor; Olaf Wolkenhauer; Jörg Haier; Brigitte Vollmar; Vijay Alla; Brigitte M. Pützer

Dissemination of cancer cells from primary to distant sites is a complex process; little is known about the genesis of metastatic changes during disease development. Here we show that the metastatic potential of E2F1‐dependent circulating tumour cells (CTCs) relies on a novel function of the hyaluronan‐mediated motility receptor RHAMM. E2F1 directly up‐regulates RHAMM, which in turn acts as a co‐activator of E2F1 to stimulate expression of the extracellular matrix protein fibronectin. Enhanced fibronectin secretion links E2F1/RHAMM transcriptional activity to integrin‐β1–FAK signalling associated with cytoskeletal remodelling and enhanced tumour cell motility. RHAMM depletion abolishes fibronectin expression and cell transmigration across the endothelial layer in E2F1‐activated cells. In a xenograft model, knock‐down of E2F1 or RHAMM in metastatic cells protects the liver parenchyma of mice against extravasation of CTCs, whereas the number of transmigrated cells increases in response to E2F1 induction. Expression data from clinical tissue samples reveals high E2F1 and RHAMM levels that closely correlate with malignant progression. These findings suggest a requirement for RHAMM in late‐stage metastasis by a mechanism involving cooperative stimulation of fibronectin, with a resultant tumourigenic microenvironment important for enhanced extravasation and distant organ colonization. Therefore, stimulation of the E2F1–RHAMM axis in aggressive cancer cells is of high clinical significance. Targeting RHAMM may represent a promising approach to avoid E2F1‐mediated metastatic dissemination. Copyright


Nucleic Acids Research | 2016

Epigenetic factor EPC1 is a master regulator of DNA damage response by interacting with E2F1 to silence death and activate metastasis-related gene signatures

Yajie Wang; Vijay Alla; Deborah Goody; Shailendra K. Gupta; Alf Spitschak; Olaf Wolkenhauer; Brigitte M. Pützer; David Engelmann

Transcription factor E2F1 is a key regulator of cell proliferation and apoptosis. Recently, it has been shown that aberrant E2F1 expression often detectable in advanced cancers contributes essentially to cancer cell propagation and characterizes the aggressive potential of a tumor. Conceptually, this requires a subset of malignant cells capable of evading apoptotic death through anticancer drugs. The molecular mechanism by which the pro-apoptotic activity of E2F1 is antagonized is widely unclear. Here we report a novel function for EPC1 (enhancer of polycomb homolog 1) in DNA damage protection. Depletion of EPC1 potentiates E2F1-mediated apoptosis in response to genotoxic treatment and abolishes tumor cell motility. We found that E2F1 directly binds to the EPC1 promoter and EPC1 vice versa physically interacts with bifunctional E2F1 to modulate its transcriptional activity in a target gene-specific manner. Remarkably, nuclear-colocalized EPC1 activates E2F1 to upregulate the expression of anti-apoptotic survival genes such as BCL-2 or Survivin/BIRC5 and inhibits death-inducing targets. The uncovered cooperativity between EPC1 and E2F1 triggers a metastasis-related gene signature in advanced cancers that predicts poor patient survival. These findings unveil a novel oncogenic function of EPC1 for inducing the switch into tumor progression-relevant gene expression that may help to set novel therapies.


Expert Review of Anticancer Therapy | 2010

Predicting and preventing melanoma invasiveness: advances in clarifying E2F1 function.

Brigitte M. Pützer; Marc Steder; Vijay Alla

Malignant melanoma of the skin is one of the most aggressive human cancers with increasing incidence, despite efforts to improve primary prevention. In particular, the prognosis of patients at late stages of the disease has not significantly improved in the last three decades, because systemic therapies have proven disappointing. Thus, metastatic melanoma continues to be a daunting clinical problem. The increasingly high rates of lethal outcome associated with advanced melanoma rely on the acquisition of invasiveness, early metastatic dissemination of tumor cells from their primary sites, and generation of chemoresistance as a consequence of alteration of key molecules involved in the regulation of cell survival. Thus far, extensive studies have been conducted to understand the molecular mechanisms that drive tumor progression, but the specific requirements underlying the aggressive behavior are still widely unknown. Understanding the determinants of this process is key to unveiling its dynamics, especially those that promote invasiveness, and may open new routes for the development of therapeutic strategies that control metastatic spread, and eventually the prevention of life-threatening metastases. Here, we review recent advances on molecular aspects, particularly of E2F1 transcription factor function, in the context of patient data, and discuss the implications for targeting melanoma cells when they begin to invade and metastasize.


Cancer Research | 2016

p73 and IGF1R Regulate Emergence of Aggressive Cancer Stem-like Features via miR-885-5p Control

Claudia Meier; Philip Hardtstock; Sophie Joost; Vijay Alla; Brigitte M. Pützer

Cancer stem-like cells (CSC) have been proposed to promote cancer progression by initiating tumor growth at distant sites, suggesting that stem-like cell features can support metastatic efficiency. Here, we demonstrate that oncogenic DNp73, a dominant-negative variant of the tumor-suppressor p73, confers cancer cells with enhanced stem-like properties. DNp73 overexpression in noninvasive melanoma and lung cancer cells increased anchorage-independent growth and elevated the expression of the pluripotency factors CD133, Nanog, and Oct4. Conversely, DNp73 depletion in metastatic cells downregulated stemness genes, attenuated sphere formation and reduced the tumor-initiating capability of spheroids in tumor xenograft models. Mechanistic investigations indicated that DNp73 acted by attenuating expression of miR-885-5p, a direct regulator of the IGF1 receptor (IGF1R) responsible for stemness marker expression. Modulating this pathway was sufficient to enhance chemosensitivity, overcoming DNp73-mediated drug resistance. Clinically, we established a correlation between low p73 function and high IGF1R/CD133/Nanog/Oct4 levels in melanoma specimens that associated with reduced patient survival. Our work shows how DNp73 promotes cancer stem-like features and provides a mechanistic rationale to target the DNp73-IGF1R cascade as a therapeutic strategy to eradicate CSC.


Cancer Research | 2016

Abstract B26: Epigenetic master regulator EPC1 is a decisive factor for E2F1 to silence cell death and activate metastatic gene signatures in response to DNA damage

David Engelmann; Yajie Wang; Vijay Alla; Deborah Goody; Shailendra K. Gupta; Alf Spitschak; Brigitte M. Pützer

The transcription factor E2F1 is a key regulator of cell proliferation and apoptosis. Recently, it has been shown that aberrant E2F1 expression often detectable in advanced-stage metastatic and chemoresistant cancers contributes essentially to malignant progression and characterizes the aggressive potential of a tumor. Conceptually, this requires a subset of malignant cells capable of evading apoptotic death through anticancer drugs. The molecular mechanism by which the pro-apoptotic activity of E2F1 is antagonized is widely unclear. Here we report a novel function for enhancer of polycomb homolog 1 (EPC1) in DNA damage protection. Depletion of EPC1 potentiates E2F1-mediated apoptosis in response to genotoxic treatment and abolishes tumor cell motility. We found that E2F1 directly binds and activates the EPC1 promoter and EPC1 vice versa physically interacts with bifunctional E2F1 to modulate its transcriptional activity in a target gene-specific manner. Remarkably, nuclear-colocalized EPC1 activates E2F1 to upregulate the expression of anti-apoptotic survival genes such as BCL-2 or Survivin and inhibits death-inducing targets including p27 and Bim. Mechanistically, we observed that EPC1 is required for recruitment of Tip60, a subunit of the NuA4 acetyltransferase complex, to E2F sites of the Bcl-2 promoter, causing increased activating histone acetylation levels. In contrast, ablation of EPC1 removes the PRC2 component EZH2 from the p27 promoter, resulting in decreased histone methylation for E2F1-mediated gene activation. In this scenario, EPC1 acts as a crucial bridging factor to connect E2F1 with essential components of the chromatin remodeling complexes Nu4A and PRC2. The uncovered cooperativity between EPC1 and E2F1 triggers a gene signature in advanced cancers that predicts metastatic behavior and poor patient survival. These findings unveil a novel oncogenic function of EPC1 for inducing the switch into tumor progression-relevant gene expression that may help to set novel therapies. This work was supported by German Cancer Aid, Dr. Mildred Scheel Stiftung (109801 to B.M.P. and D.E.) and German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) as part of the eBio:SysMet project (0316171 to B.M.P.). Note: This abstract was not presented at the conference. Citation Format: David Engelmann, Yajie Wang, Vijay Alla, Deborah Goody, Shailendra K. Gupta, Alf Spitschak, Brigitte M. Putzer. Epigenetic master regulator EPC1 is a decisive factor for E2F1 to silence cell death and activate metastatic gene signatures in response to DNA damage. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the AACR Special Conference on Tumor Metastasis; 2015 Nov 30-Dec 3; Austin, TX. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2016;76(7 Suppl):Abstract nr B26.

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