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Kathleen Stabla

Philipps University of Marburg

Publishes on Acute Myeloid Leukemia Research, Colorectal Cancer Treatments and Studies, Genetic factors in colorectal cancer. 13 papers and 426 citations.

13Publications
426Total Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Oncogenic RAS Enables DNA Damage- and p53-Dependent Differentiation of Acute Myeloid Leukemia Cells in Response to Chemotherapy
Cited by 31Open Access

Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a clonal disease originating from myeloid progenitor cells with a heterogeneous genetic background. High-dose cytarabine is used as the standard consolidation chemotherapy. Oncogenic RAS mutations are frequently observed in AML, and are associated with beneficial response to cytarabine. Why AML-patients with oncogenic RAS benefit most from high-dose cytarabine post-remission therapy is not well understood. Here we used bone marrow cells expressing a conditional MLL-ENL-ER oncogene to investigate the interaction of oncogenic RAS and chemotherapeutic agents. We show that oncogenic RAS synergizes with cytotoxic agents such as cytarabine in activation of DNA damage checkpoints, resulting in a p53-dependent genetic program that reduces clonogenicity and increases myeloid differentiation. Our data can explain the beneficial effects observed for AML patients with oncogenic RAS treated with higher dosages of cytarabine and suggest that induction of p53-dependent differentiation, e.g. by interfering with Mdm2-mediated degradation, may be a rational approach to increase cure rate in response to chemotherapy. The data also support the notion that the therapeutic success of cytotoxic drugs may depend on their ability to promote the differentiation of tumor-initiating cells.

Expression profiling reveals specific gene expression signatures in gastric MALT lymphomas
Minh Q. Huynh, Hans‐Heinrich Wacker, Thomas Wündisch et al.|Leukemia & lymphoma/Leukemia and lymphoma|2008
Cited by 22

The purpose of this study is to identify genes that are involved in the etiology of Helicobacter pylori induced gastric MALT lymphoma. We compared gene expression profiles of gastric MALT lymphoma with their corresponding gastric MALT (chronic gastritis with formation of follicles and aggregates). cDNA microarrays were used to compare these two tissue types from the same patient (n = 21). Quantitative PCR and immunohistochemical staining were performed to validate the microarray results. Three hundred and fifty eight out of 11,552 genes were differentially expressed between gastric MALT lymphomas and gastric MALT. Thirty eight genes are implicated in immune response, 66 in signal transduction and 36 in cell proliferation. Interestingly, chromosome 6 was the only chromosome which was significantly over-represented with 25 genes (EASE score p = 0.01254). Several surface markers of haematopoietic cells, such as CD1c, CD40, CD44, CD53, CD83, CD86 and members of the HLA-D family were up-regulated in lymphoma tissues, indicating antigen-dependent survival of lymphoma cells. We conclude that gastric MALT lymphoma shows a specific gene expression profile, which allows the differentiation from H. pylori induced lymphoid gastritis.