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Dive into the research topics where Wendy Sol is active.

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Featured researches published by Wendy Sol.


Cancer Discovery | 2013

Loss of 53BP1 Causes PARP Inhibitor Resistance in Brca1-Mutated Mouse Mammary Tumors

Janneke E. Jaspers; Ariena Kersbergen; Ute Boon; Wendy Sol; Liesbeth van Deemter; Serge A.L. Zander; Rinske Drost; Ellen Wientjens; Jiuping Ji; Amal Aly; James H. Doroshow; Aaron Cranston; Niall Morrison Barr Martin; Alan Lau; Mark J. O'Connor; Shridar Ganesan; Piet Borst; Jos Jonkers; Sven Rottenberg

UNLABELLED Inhibition of PARP is a promising therapeutic strategy for homologous recombination-deficient tumors, such as BRCA1-associated cancers. We previously reported that BRCA1-deficient mouse mammary tumors may acquire resistance to the clinical PARP inhibitor (PARPi) olaparib through activation of the P-glycoprotein drug efflux transporter. Here, we show that tumor-specific genetic inactivation of P-glycoprotein increases the long-term response of BRCA1-deficient mouse mammary tumors to olaparib, but these tumors eventually developed PARPi resistance. In a fraction of cases, this resistance is caused by partial restoration of homologous recombination due to somatic loss of 53BP1. Importantly, PARPi resistance was minimized by long-term treatment with the novel PARP inhibitor AZD2461, which is a poor P-glycoprotein substrate. Together, our data suggest that restoration of homologous recombination is an important mechanism for PARPi resistance in BRCA1-deficient mammary tumors and that the risk of relapse of BRCA1-deficient tumors can be effectively minimized by using optimized PARP inhibitors. SIGNIFICANCE In this study, we show that loss of 53BP1 causes resistance to PARP inhibition in mouse mammary tumors that are deficient in BRCA1. We hypothesize that low expression or absence of 53BP1 also reduces the response of patients with BRCA1-deficient tumors to PARP inhibitors.


Nature | 2015

REV7 counteracts DNA double-strand break resection and affects PARP inhibition

Guotai Xu; J. Ross Chapman; Inger Brandsma; Jingsong Yuan; Martin Mistrik; Peter Bouwman; Jirina Bartkova; Ewa Gogola; Daniël O. Warmerdam; Marco Barazas; Janneke E. Jaspers; Kenji Watanabe; Mark Pieterse; Ariena Kersbergen; Wendy Sol; Patrick H. N. Celie; Philip C. Schouten; Bram van den Broek; Ahmed M. Salman; Marja Nieuwland; Iris de Rink; Jorma J. de Ronde; Kees Jalink; Simon J. Boulton; Junjie Chen; Dik C. van Gent; Jiri Bartek; Jos Jonkers; Piet Borst; Sven Rottenberg

Error-free repair of DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) is achieved by homologous recombination (HR), and BRCA1 is an important factor for this repair pathway. In the absence of BRCA1-mediated HR, the administration of PARP inhibitors induces synthetic lethality of tumour cells of patients with breast or ovarian cancers. Despite the benefit of this tailored therapy, drug resistance can occur by HR restoration. Genetic reversion of BRCA1-inactivating mutations can be the underlying mechanism of drug resistance, but this does not explain resistance in all cases. In particular, little is known about BRCA1-independent restoration of HR. Here we show that loss of REV7 (also known as MAD2L2) in mouse and human cell lines re-establishes CTIP-dependent end resection of DSBs in BRCA1-deficient cells, leading to HR restoration and PARP inhibitor resistance, which is reversed by ATM kinase inhibition. REV7 is recruited to DSBs in a manner dependent on the H2AX–MDC1–RNF8–RNF168–53BP1 chromatin pathway, and seems to block HR and promote end joining in addition to its regulatory role in DNA damage tolerance. Finally, we establish that REV7 blocks DSB resection to promote non-homologous end-joining during immunoglobulin class switch recombination. Our results reveal an unexpected crucial function of REV7 downstream of 53BP1 in coordinating pathological DSB repair pathway choices in BRCA1-deficient cells.


Cancer Research | 2012

Impact of Intertumoral Heterogeneity on Predicting Chemotherapy Response of BRCA1-Deficient Mammary Tumors

Sven Rottenberg; Marieke Anne Vollebergh; Bas de Hoon; Jorma J. de Ronde; Philip C. Schouten; Ariena Kersbergen; Serge A.L. Zander; Marina Pajic; Janneke E. Jaspers; Martijn Jonkers; Martin Loden; Wendy Sol; Eline van der Burg; Jelle Wesseling; Jean-Pierre Gillet; Michael M. Gottesman; Joost Gribnau; Lodewyk F. A. Wessels; Sabine C. Linn; Jos Jonkers; Piet Borst

The lack of markers to predict chemotherapy responses in patients poses a major handicap in cancer treatment. We searched for gene expression patterns that correlate with docetaxel or cisplatin response in a mouse model for breast cancer associated with BRCA1 deficiency. Array-based expression profiling did not identify a single marker gene predicting docetaxel response, despite an increase in Abcb1 (P-glycoprotein) expression that was sufficient to explain resistance in several poor responders. Intertumoral heterogeneity explained the inability to identify a predictive gene expression signature for docetaxel. To address this problem, we used a novel algorithm designed to detect differential gene expression in a subgroup of the poor responders that could identify tumors with increased Abcb1 transcript levels. In contrast, standard analytical tools, such as significance analysis of microarrays, detected a marker only if it correlated with response in a substantial fraction of tumors. For example, low expression of the Xist gene correlated with cisplatin hypersensitivity in most tumors, and it also predicted long recurrence-free survival of HER2-negative, stage III breast cancer patients treated with intensive platinum-based chemotherapy. Our findings may prove useful for selecting patients with high-risk breast cancer who could benefit from platinum-based therapy.


Cancer Research | 2015

BRCA2-Deficient Sarcomatoid Mammary Tumors Exhibit Multidrug Resistance

Janneke E. Jaspers; Wendy Sol; Ariena Kersbergen; Andreas Schlicker; Charlotte Guyader; Guotai Xu; Lodewyk F. A. Wessels; Piet Borst; Jos Jonkers; Sven Rottenberg

Pan- or multidrug resistance is a central problem in clinical oncology. Here, we use a genetically engineered mouse model of BRCA2-associated hereditary breast cancer to study drug resistance to several types of chemotherapy and PARP inhibition. We found that multidrug resistance was strongly associated with an EMT-like sarcomatoid phenotype and high expression of the Abcb1b gene, which encodes the drug efflux transporter P-glycoprotein. Inhibition of P-glycoprotein could partly resensitize sarcomatoid tumors to the PARP inhibitor olaparib, docetaxel, and doxorubicin. We propose that multidrug resistance is a multifactorial process and that mouse models are useful to unravel this.


PLOS ONE | 2012

EZN-2208 (PEG-SN38) Overcomes ABCG2-Mediated Topotecan Resistance in BRCA1-Deficient Mouse Mammary Tumors

Serge A.L. Zander; Wendy Sol; Lee M. Greenberger; Yixian Zhang; Olaf van Tellingen; Jos Jonkers; Piet Borst; Sven Rottenberg

BRCA1 dysfunction in hereditary breast cancer causes defective homology-directed DNA repair and sensitivity towards DNA damaging agents like the clinically used topoisomerase I inhibitors topotecan and irinotecan. Using our conditional K14cre;Brca1F/F;p53F/F mouse model, we showed previously that BRCA1;p53-deficient mammary tumors initially respond to topotecan, but frequently acquire resistance by overexpression of the efflux transporter ABCG2. Here, we tested the pegylated SN38 compound EZN-2208 as a novel approach to treat BRCA1-mutated tumors that express ABCG2. We found that EZN-2208 therapy resulted in more pronounced and durable responses of ABCG2-positive tumors than topotecan or irinotecan therapy. We also evaluated tumor-specific ABCG2 inhibition by Ko143 in Abcg2−/− host animals that carried tumors with topotecan-induced ABCG2 expression. Addition of Ko143 moderately increased overall survival of these animals, but did not yield tumor responses like those seen after EZN-2208 therapy. Our results suggest that pegylation of Top1 inhibitors may be a useful strategy to circumvent efflux transporter-mediated resistance and to improve their efficacy in the clinic.


American Journal of Pathology | 2017

Systemic Monocyte Chemotactic Protein-1 Inhibition Modifies Renal Macrophages and Restores Glomerular Endothelial Glycocalyx and Barrier Function in Diabetic Nephropathy

Margien G.S. Boels; M. Cristina Avramut; Wendy Sol; Gangqi Wang; Annemarie M. van Oeveren-Rietdijk; Anton Jan van Zonneveld; Hetty C. de Boer; Johan van der Vlag; Cees van Kooten; Dirk Eulberg; Bernard M. van den Berg; Daphne H.T. IJpelaar; Ton J. Rabelink

Inhibition of monocyte chemotactic protein-1 (MCP-1) with the Spiegelmer emapticap pegol (NOX-E36) shows long-lasting albuminuria-reducing effects in diabetic nephropathy. MCP-1 regulates inflammatory cell recruitment and differentiation of macrophages. Because the endothelial glycocalyx is also reduced in diabetic nephropathy, we hypothesized that MCP-1 inhibition restores glomerular barrier function through influencing macrophage cathepsin L secretion, thus reducing activation of the glycocalyx-degrading enzyme heparanase. Four weeks of treatment of diabetic Apoe knockout mice with the mouse-specific NOX-E36 attenuated albuminuria without any change in systemic hemodynamics, despite persistent loss of podocyte function. MCP-1 inhibition, however, increased glomerular endothelial glycocalyx coverage, with preservation of heparan sulfate. Mechanistically, both glomerular cathepsin L and heparanase expression were reduced. MCP-1 inhibition resulted in reduced CCR2-expressing Ly6Chi monocytes in the peripheral blood, without affecting overall number of kidney macrophages at the tissue level. However, the CD206+/Mac3+ cell ratio, as an index of presence of anti-inflammatory macrophages, increased in diabetic mice after treatment. Functional analysis of isolated renal macrophages showed increased release of IL-10, whereas tumor necrosis factor and cathepsin L release was reduced, further confirming polarization of tissue macrophages toward an anti-inflammatory phenotype during mouse-specific NOX-E36 treatment. We show that MCP-1 inhibition restores glomerular endothelial glycocalyx and barrier function and reduces tissue inflammation in the presence of ongoing diabetic injury, suggesting a therapeutic potential for NOX-E36 in diabetic nephropathy.


Cancer Prevention Research | 2012

Lack of ABCG2 shortens latency of BRCA1-deficient mammary tumors and this is not affected by genistein or resveratrol

Serge A.L. Zander; Ariena Kersbergen; Wendy Sol; Maaike Gonggrijp; Koen van de Wetering; Jos Jonkers; Piet Borst; Sven Rottenberg

In addition to their role in drug resistance, the ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters ABCG2 and ABCB1 have been suggested to protect cells from a broad range of substances that may foster tumorigenesis. Phytoestrogens or their metabolites are substrates of these transporters and the influence of these compounds on breast cancer development is controversial. Estrogen-like properties might accelerate tumorigenesis on the one hand, whereas their proposed health-protective properties might antagonize tumorigenesis on the other. To address this issue, we used a newer generation mouse model of BRCA1-mutated breast cancer and examined tumor latency in K14cre;Brca1F/F; p53F/F, Abcb1a/b−/−;K14cre;Brca1F/F; p53F/F, or Abcg2−/−;K14cre;Brca1F/F; p53F/F animals, fed with genistein- or resveratrol-supplemented diets. Ovariectomized K14cre;Brca1F/F; p53F/F animals were included to evaluate whether any estrogen-mimicking effects can restore mammary tumor development in the absence of endogenous estrogens. Compared with the ABC transporter proficient model, ABCG2-deficient animals showed a reduced median tumor latency of 17.5 days (P < 0.001), whereas no significant difference was observed for ABCB1-deficient animals. Neither genistein nor resveratrol altered this latency reduction in Abcg2−/−;K14cre;Brca1F/F; p53F/F animals. Ovariectomy resulted in nearly complete loss of mammary tumor development, which was not restored by genistein or resveratrol. Our results show that ABCG2 contributes to the protection of genetically instable epithelial cells against carcinogenesis. Diets containing high levels of genistein or resveratrol had no effect on mammary tumorigenesis, whether mice were lacking ABCG2 or not. Because genistein and resveratrol only delayed skin tumor development of ovariectomized animals, we conclude that these phytoestrogens are no effective modulators of mammary tumor development in our mouse model. Cancer Prev Res; 5(8); 1053–60. ©2012 AACR.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2017

Selected alkylating agents can overcome drug tolerance of G0-like tumor cells and eradicate BRCA1-deficient mammary tumors in mice.

Marina Pajic; Sohvi Blatter; Charlotte Guyader; Maaike Gonggrijp; Ariena Kersbergen; Aslı Küçükosmanoğlu; Wendy Sol; Rinske Drost; Jos Jonkers; Piet Borst; Sven Rottenberg

Purpose: We aimed to characterize and target drug-tolerant BRCA1-deficient tumor cells that cause residual disease and subsequent tumor relapse. Experimental Design: We studied responses to various mono- and bifunctional alkylating agents in a genetically engineered mouse model for BRCA1/p53-mutant breast cancer. Because of the large intragenic deletion of the Brca1 gene, no restoration of BRCA1 function is possible, and therefore, no BRCA1-dependent acquired resistance occurs. To characterize the cell-cycle stage from which Brca1−/−;p53−/− mammary tumors arise after cisplatin treatment, we introduced the fluorescent ubiquitination-based cell-cycle indicator (FUCCI) construct into the tumor cells. Results: Despite repeated sensitivity to the MTD of platinum drugs, the Brca1-mutated mammary tumors are not eradicated, not even by a frequent dosing schedule. We show that relapse comes from single-nucleated cells delaying entry into the S-phase. Such slowly cycling cells, which are present within the drug-naïve tumors, are enriched in tumor remnants. Using the FUCCI construct, we identified nonfluorescent G0-like cells as the population most tolerant to platinum drugs. Intriguingly, these cells are more sensitive to the DNA-crosslinking agent nimustine, resulting in an increased number of multinucleated cells that lack clonogenicity. This is consistent with our in vivo finding that the nimustine MTD, among several alkylating agents, is the most effective in eradicating Brca1-mutated mouse mammary tumors. Conclusions: Our data show that targeting G0-like cells is crucial for the eradication of BRCA1/p53–deficient tumor cells. This can be achieved with selected alkylating agents such as nimustine. Clin Cancer Res; 23(22); 7020–33. ©2017 AACR.


bioRxiv | 2018

Radiosensitivity is an acquired vulnerability of PARPi-resistant BRCA1-deficient tumors

Marco Barazas; Alessia Gasparini; Yike Huang; Aslı Küçükosmanoğlu; Stefano Annunziato; Peter Bouwman; Wendy Sol; Ariena Kersbergen; Natalie Proost; Marieke van de Ven; Jos Jonkers; Gerben R. Borst; Sven Rottenberg

The homologous recombination (HR) defect in BRCA1-associated cancers can be therapeutically exploited by the treatment with DNA-damaging agents and poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibitors. We and others previously reported that BRCA1-deficient tumors are initially hypersensitive to the inhibition of topoisomerase I/II and PARP, but acquire drug resistance through restoration of HR activity by the loss of end-resection antagonists of the 53BP1/RIF1/REV7/Shieldin/CST pathway. Here, we identified radiotherapy as an acquired vulnerability of 53BP1;BRCA1-deficient cells in vitro and in vivo. In contrast to the radioresistance caused by HR restoration through BRCA1 reconstitution, HR restoration by 53BP1 pathway inactivation further increases radiosensitivity. This highlights the relevance of this pathway for the repair of radiotherapy-induced damage. Moreover, our data show that BRCA1-mutated tumors that acquired drug resistance due to BRCA1-independent HR restoration can be targeted by radiotherapy. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE In this study, we uncovered radiosensitivity as a novel therapeutically exploitable vulnerability of BRCA1-deficient mouse mammary cells that have acquired drug resistance due to the loss of the 53BP1 pathway.


Molecular Cell | 2016

HELB Is a Feedback Inhibitor of DNA End Resection

Ján Tkáč; Guotai Xu; Hemanta Adhikary; Jordan T.F. Young; David Gallo; Cristina Escribano-Diaz; Jana Krietsch; Alexandre Orthwein; Meagan Munro; Wendy Sol; Abdallah Al-Hakim; Zhen-Yuan Lin; Jos Jonkers; Piet Borst; Grant W. Brown; Anne-Claude Gingras; Sven Rottenberg; Jean-Yves Masson; Daniel Durocher

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Jos Jonkers

Netherlands Cancer Institute

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Piet Borst

Netherlands Cancer Institute

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Ariena Kersbergen

Netherlands Cancer Institute

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Janneke E. Jaspers

Netherlands Cancer Institute

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Serge A.L. Zander

Netherlands Cancer Institute

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Guotai Xu

Netherlands Cancer Institute

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Charlotte Guyader

Netherlands Cancer Institute

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Jorma J. de Ronde

Netherlands Cancer Institute

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