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Patricia Greninger


pgreninger@computer.org

Journal articles

2012
Mathew J Garnett, Elena J Edelman, Sonja J Heidorn, Chris D Greenman, Anahita Dastur, King Wai Lau, Patricia Greninger, I Richard Thompson, Xi Luo, Jorge Soares, Qingsong Liu, Francesco Iorio, Didier Surdez, Li Chen, Randy J Milano, Graham R Bignell, Ah T Tam, Helen Davies, Jesse A Stevenson, Syd Barthorpe, Stephen R Lutz, Fiona Kogera, Karl Lawrence, Anne McLaren-Douglas, Xeni Mitropoulos, Tatiana Mironenko, Helen Thi, Laura Richardson, Wenjun Zhou, Frances Jewitt, Tinghu Zhang, Patrick O'Brien, Jessica L Boisvert, Stacey Price, Wooyoung Hur, Wanjuan Yang, Xianming Deng, Adam Butler, Hwan Geun Choi, Jae Won Chang, Jose Baselga, Ivan Stamenkovic, Jeffrey A Engelman, Sreenath V Sharma, Olivier Delattre, Julio Saez-Rodriguez, Nathanael S Gray, Jeffrey Settleman, P Andrew Futreal, Daniel A Haber, Michael R Stratton, Sridhar Ramaswamy, Ultan McDermott, Cyril H Benes (2012)  Systematic identification of genomic markers of drug sensitivity in cancer cells.   Nature 483: 7391. 570-575 Mar  
Abstract: Clinical responses to anticancer therapies are often restricted to a subset of patients. In some cases, mutated cancer genes are potent biomarkers for responses to targeted agents. Here, to uncover new biomarkers of sensitivity and resistance to cancer therapeutics, we screened a panel of several hundred cancer cell lines--which represent much of the tissue-type and genetic diversity of human cancers--with 130 drugs under clinical and preclinical investigation. In aggregate, we found that mutated cancer genes were associated with cellular response to most currently available cancer drugs. Classic oncogene addiction paradigms were modified by additional tissue-specific or expression biomarkers, and some frequently mutated genes were associated with sensitivity to a broad range of therapeutic agents. Unexpected relationships were revealed, including the marked sensitivity of Ewing's sarcoma cells harbouring the EWS (also known as EWSR1)-FLI1 gene translocation to poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibitors. By linking drug activity to the functional complexity of cancer genomes, systematic pharmacogenomic profiling in cancer cell lines provides a powerful biomarker discovery platform to guide rational cancer therapeutic strategies.
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Anurag Singh, Michael F Sweeney, Min Yu, Alexa Burger, Patricia Greninger, Cyril Benes, Daniel A Haber, Jeff Settleman (2012)  TAK1 inhibition promotes apoptosis in KRAS-dependent colon cancers.   Cell 148: 4. 639-650 Feb  
Abstract: Colon cancers frequently harbor KRAS mutations, yet only a subset of KRAS mutant colon cancer cell lines are dependent upon KRAS signaling for survival. In a screen for kinases that promote survival of KRAS-dependent colon cancer cells, we found that the TAK1 kinase (MAP3K7) is required for tumor cell viability. The induction of apoptosis by RNAi-mediated depletion or pharmacologic inhibition of TAK1 is linked to its suppression of hyperactivated Wnt signaling, evident in both endogenous and genetically reconstituted cells. In APC mutant/KRAS-dependent cells, KRAS stimulates BMP-7 secretion and BMP signaling, leading to TAK1 activation and enhancement of Wnt-dependent transcription. An in vitro-derived "TAK1 dependency signature" is enriched in primary human colon cancers with mutations in both APC and KRAS, suggesting potential clinical utility in stratifying patient populations. Together, these findings identify TAK1 inhibition as a potential therapeutic strategy for a treatment-refractory subset of colon cancers exhibiting aberrant KRAS and Wnt pathway activation.
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2010
S Michael Rothenberg, Gayatry Mohapatra, Miguel N Rivera, Daniel Winokur, Patricia Greninger, Mai Nitta, Peter M Sadow, Gaya Sooriyakumar, Brian W Brannigan, Matthew J Ulman, Rushika M Perera, Rui Wang, Angela Tam, Xiao-Jun Ma, Mark Erlander, Dennis C Sgroi, James W Rocco, Mark W Lingen, Ezra E W Cohen, David N Louis, Jeffrey Settleman, Daniel A Haber (2010)  A genome-wide screen for microdeletions reveals disruption of polarity complex genes in diverse human cancers.   Cancer Res 70: 6. 2158-2164 Mar  
Abstract: In a genome-wide screen of 684 cancer cell lines, we identified homozygous intragenic microdeletions involving genes encoding components of the apical-basal cell polarity complexes. Among these, PARD3 is disrupted in cell lines and primary tumors from squamous carcinomas and glioblastomas. Reconstituting PARD3 expression in both cell types restores tight junctions and retards contact-dependent proliferation. Searching specifically for small intragenic microdeletions using high-resolution genomic arrays may be complementary to other genomic deletion screens and resequencing efforts in identifying new tumor suppressor genes.
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Fabrizio Galimberti, Sarah L Thompson, Xi Liu, Hua Li, Vincent Memoli, Simon R Green, James DiRenzo, Patricia Greninger, Sreenath V Sharma, Jeff Settleman, Duane A Compton, Ethan Dmitrovsky (2010)  Targeting the cyclin E-Cdk-2 complex represses lung cancer growth by triggering anaphase catastrophe.   Clin Cancer Res 16: 1. 109-120 Jan  
Abstract: Cyclin-dependent kinases (Cdk) and their associated cyclins are targets for lung cancer therapy and chemoprevention given their frequent deregulation in lung carcinogenesis. This study uncovered previously unrecognized consequences of targeting the cyclin E-Cdk-2 complex in lung cancer.
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2009
Ultan McDermott, Rachel Y Ames, A John Iafrate, Shyamala Maheswaran, Hannah Stubbs, Patricia Greninger, Kaitlin McCutcheon, Randy Milano, Angela Tam, Diana Y Lee, Laury Lucien, Brian W Brannigan, Lindsey E Ulkus, Xiao-Jun Ma, Mark G Erlander, Daniel A Haber, Sreenath V Sharma, Jeffrey Settleman (2009)  Ligand-dependent platelet-derived growth factor receptor (PDGFR)-alpha activation sensitizes rare lung cancer and sarcoma cells to PDGFR kinase inhibitors.   Cancer Res 69: 9. 3937-3946 May  
Abstract: Platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) receptors (PDGFR) and their ligands play critical roles in several human malignancies. Sunitinib is a clinically approved multitargeted tyrosine kinase inhibitor that inhibits vascular endothelial growth factor receptor, c-KIT, and PDGFR, and has shown clinical activity in various solid tumors. Activation of PDGFR signaling has been described in gastrointestinal stromal tumors (PDGFRA mutations) as well as in chronic myeloid leukemia (BCR-PDGFRA translocation), and sunitinib can yield clinical benefit in both settings. However, the discovery of PDGFR activating mutations or gene rearrangements in other tumor types could reveal additional patient populations who might benefit from treatment with anti-PDGFR therapies, such as sunitinib. Using a high-throughput cancer cell line screening platform, we found that only 2 of 637 tested human tumor-derived cell lines show significant sensitivity to single-agent sunitinib exposure. These two cell lines [a non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and a rhabdomyosarcoma] showed expression of highly phosphorylated PDGFRA. In the sunitinib-sensitive adenosquamous NSCLC cell line, PDGFRA expression was associated with focal PFGRA gene amplification, which was similarly detected in a small fraction of squamous cell NSCLC primary tumor specimens. Moreover, in this NSCLC cell line, focal amplification of the gene encoding the PDGFR ligand PDGFC was also detected, and silencing PDGFRA or PDGFC expression by RNA interference inhibited proliferation. A similar codependency on PDGFRA and PDGFC was observed in the sunitinib-sensitive rhabdomyosarcoma cell line. These findings suggest that, in addition to gastrointestinal stromal tumors, rare tumors that show PDGFC-mediated PDGFRA activation may also be clinically responsive to pharmacologic PDGFRA or PDGFC inhibition.
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Anurag Singh, Patricia Greninger, Daniel Rhodes, Louise Koopman, Sheila Violette, Nabeel Bardeesy, Jeff Settleman (2009)  A gene expression signature associated with "K-Ras addiction" reveals regulators of EMT and tumor cell survival.   Cancer Cell 15: 6. 489-500 Jun  
Abstract: K-ras mutations occur frequently in epithelial cancers. Using short hairpin RNAs to deplete K-Ras in lung and pancreatic cancer cell lines harboring K-ras mutations, two classes were identified-lines that do or do not require K-Ras to maintain viability. Comparing these two classes of cancer cells revealed a gene expression signature in K-Ras-dependent cells, associated with a well-differentiated epithelial phenotype, which was also seen in primary tumors. Several of these genes encode pharmacologically tractable proteins, such as Syk and Ron kinases and integrin beta6, depletion of which induces epithelial-mesenchymal transformation (EMT) and apoptosis specifically in K-Ras-dependent cells. These findings indicate that epithelial differentiation and tumor cell viability are associated, and that EMT regulators in "K-Ras-addicted" cancers represent candidate therapeutic targets.
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2008
Ultan McDermott, A John Iafrate, Nathanael S Gray, Toshi Shioda, Marie Classon, Shyamala Maheswaran, Wenjun Zhou, Hwan Geun Choi, Shannon L Smith, Lori Dowell, Lindsey E Ulkus, Georgiana Kuhlmann, Patricia Greninger, James G Christensen, Daniel A Haber, Jeffrey Settleman (2008)  Genomic alterations of anaplastic lymphoma kinase may sensitize tumors to anaplastic lymphoma kinase inhibitors.   Cancer Res 68: 9. 3389-3395 May  
Abstract: Selective kinase inhibitors have had a substantial impact on the field of medical oncology. Whereas these agents can elicit dramatic clinical responses in some settings, their activity is generally limited to a subset of treated patients whose tumor cells harbor a specific genetic lesion. We have established an automated platform for examining the sensitivity to various molecularly targeted inhibitors across a large panel of human tumor-derived cell lines to identify additional genotype-correlated responses that may be clinically relevant. Among the inhibitors tested in a panel of 602 cell lines derived from a variety of human cancers, we found that a selective inhibitor of the anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) potently suppressed growth of a small subset of tumor cells. This subset included lines derived from anaplastic large cell lymphomas, non-small-cell lung cancers, and neuroblastomas. ALK is a receptor tyrosine kinase that was first identified as part of a protein fusion derived from a chromosomal translocation detected in the majority of anaplastic large cell lymphoma patients, and has recently been implicated as an oncogene in a small fraction of non-small-cell lung cancers and neuroblastomas. Significantly, sensitivity in these cell lines was well correlated with specific ALK genomic rearrangements, including chromosomal translocations and gene amplification. Moreover, in such cell lines, ALK kinase inhibition can lead to potent suppression of downstream survival signaling and an apoptotic response. These findings suggest that a subset of lung cancers, lymphomas, and neuroblastomas that harbor genomic ALK alterations may be clinically responsive to pharmacologic ALK inhibition.
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2007
Ultan McDermott, Sreenath V Sharma, Lori Dowell, Patricia Greninger, Clara Montagut, Jennifer Lamb, Heidi Archibald, Raul Raudales, Angela Tam, Diana Lee, S Michael Rothenberg, Jeffrey G Supko, Raffaella Sordella, Lindsey E Ulkus, A John Iafrate, Shyamala Maheswaran, Ching Ni Njauw, Hensin Tsao, Lisa Drew, Jeff H Hanke, Xiao-Jun Ma, Mark G Erlander, Nathanael S Gray, Daniel A Haber, Jeffrey Settleman (2007)  Identification of genotype-correlated sensitivity to selective kinase inhibitors by using high-throughput tumor cell line profiling.   Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 104: 50. 19936-19941 Dec  
Abstract: Kinase inhibitors constitute an important new class of cancer drugs, whose selective efficacy is largely determined by underlying tumor cell genetics. We established a high-throughput platform to profile 500 cell lines derived from diverse epithelial cancers for sensitivity to 14 kinase inhibitors. Most inhibitors were ineffective against unselected cell lines but exhibited dramatic cell killing of small nonoverlapping subsets. Cells with exquisite sensitivity to EGFR, HER2, MET, or BRAF kinase inhibitors were marked by activating mutations or amplification of the drug target. Although most cell lines recapitulated known tumor-associated genotypes, the screen revealed low-frequency drug-sensitizing genotypes in tumor types not previously associated with drug susceptibility. Furthermore, comparing drugs thought to target the same kinase revealed striking differences, predictive of clinical efficacy. Genetically defined cancer subsets, irrespective of tissue type, predict response to kinase inhibitors, and provide an important preclinical model to guide early clinical applications of novel targeted inhibitors.
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