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Christine M. Scaduto

Mount Sinai Hospital

ORCID: 0000-0002-9099-9422

Publishes on Antifungal resistance and susceptibility, Pancreatic and Hepatic Oncology Research, Microtubule and mitosis dynamics. 10 papers and 288 citations.

10Publications
288Total Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Oncogene-like addiction to aneuploidy in human cancers
Cited by 160Open Access

Most cancers exhibit aneuploidy, but its functional significance in tumor development is controversial. Here, we describe ReDACT (Restoring Disomy in Aneuploid cells using CRISPR Targeting), a set of chromosome engineering tools that allow us to eliminate specific aneuploidies from cancer genomes. Using ReDACT, we created a panel of isogenic cells that have or lack common aneuploidies, and we demonstrate that trisomy of chromosome 1q is required for malignant growth in cancers harboring this alteration. Mechanistically, gaining chromosome 1q increases the expression of MDM4 and suppresses p53 signaling, and we show that TP53 mutations are mutually exclusive with 1q aneuploidy in human cancers. Thus, tumor cells can be dependent on specific aneuploidies, raising the possibility that these “aneuploidy addictions” could be targeted as a therapeutic strategy.

Epigenetic control of pheromone MAPK signaling determines sexual fecundity in <i>Candida albicans</i>
Christine M. Scaduto, Shail Kabrawala, Grégory Thomson et al.|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|2017
Cited by 20Open Access

Significance A central theme in biology is to understand how different signaling outputs can be accomplished by changes to signal transduction pathways. Here, we examined epigenetic differences between two cell states in the human fungal pathogen Candida albicans . We show that cells in the “white” state are sterile due to multiple bottlenecks in MAPK signaling relative to mating-competent “opaque” cells. Alleviation of these bottlenecks by reverse engineering effectively converts sterile white cells into sexually competent cells. These results have broad implications for understanding how epigenetic changes can impact MAPK expression and signaling output, including events associated with tumorigenesis. We also propose a model for how the white-opaque switch gained control of sexual reproduction in Candida during evolution.

Oncogene-like addiction to aneuploidy in human cancers
Vishruth Girish, Asad A. Lakhani, Christine M. Scaduto et al.|bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)|2023
Cited by 17Open Access

Most cancers exhibit aneuploidy, but its functional significance in tumor development is controversial. Here, we describe ReDACT (Restoring Disomy in Aneuploid cells using CRISPR Targeting), a set of chromosome engineering tools that allow us to eliminate specific aneuploidies from cancer genomes. Using ReDACT, we created a panel of isogenic cells that have or lack common aneuploidies, and we demonstrate that trisomy of chromosome 1q is required for malignant growth in cancers harboring this alteration. Mechanistically, gaining chromosome 1q increases the expression of MDM4 and suppresses TP53 signaling, and we show that TP53 mutations are mutually-exclusive with 1q aneuploidy in human cancers. Thus, specific aneuploidies play essential roles in tumorigenesis, raising the possibility that targeting these "aneuploidy addictions" could represent a novel approach for cancer treatment.