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Khalil Abou‐El‐Ardat

Goethe University Frankfurt

ORCID: 0000-0002-7096-6172

Publishes on Acute Myeloid Leukemia Research, Myeloproliferative Neoplasms: Diagnosis and Treatment, Glioma Diagnosis and Treatment. 45 papers and 1.7k citations.

45Publications
1.7kTotal Citations

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Association of Mutations Contributing to Clonal Hematopoiesis With Prognosis in Chronic Ischemic Heart Failure
Lena Dorsheimer, Birgit Aßmus, Tina Rasper et al.|JAMA Cardiology|2018
Cited by 463Open Access

Importance: Somatic mutations causing clonal expansion of hematopoietic cells (clonal hematopoiesis of indeterminate potential [CHIP]) are increased with age and associated with atherosclerosis and inflammation. Age and inflammation are the major risk factors for heart failure, yet the association of CHIP with heart failure in humans is unknown. Objective: To assess the potential prognostic significance of CHIP in patients with chronic heart failure (CHF) owing to ischemic origin. Design, Setting, and Participants: We analyzed bone marrow-derived mononuclear cells from 200 patients with CHF by deep targeted amplicon sequencing to detect the presence of CHIP and associated such with long-term prognosis in patients with CHF at University Hospital Frankfurt, Frankfurt, Germany. Data were analyzed between October 2017 and April 2018. Results: Median age of the patients was 65 years. Forty-seven mutations with a variant allele fraction (VAF) of at least 0.02 were found in 38 of 200 patients with CHF (18.5%). The somatic mutations most commonly occurred in the genes DNMT3A (14 patients), TET2 (9 patients), KDM6A (4 patients), and BCOR (3 patients). Patients with CHIP were older and more frequently had a history of hypertension. During a median follow-up of 4.4 years, a total of 53 patients died, and 23 patients required hospitalization for heart failure. There was a significantly worse long-term clinical outcome for patients with either DNMT3A or TET2 mutations compared with non-CHIP carriers. By multivariable Cox proportional regression analysis, the presence of somatic mutations within TET2 or DNMT3A (HR, 2.1; 95% CI, 1.1-4.0; P = .02, for death combined with heart failure hospitalization) and age (HR, 1.04; 95% CI, 1.01-1.07 per year; P = .005) but not a history of hypertension remained independently associated with adverse outcome. Importantly, there was a significant dose-response association between VAF and clinical outcome. Conclusions and Relevance: Our data suggest that somatic mutations in hematopoietic cells, specifically in the most commonly mutated CHIP driver genes TET2 and DNMT3A, may be significantly associated with the progression and poor prognosis of CHF. Future studies will have to validate our findings in larger cohorts and address whether targeting specific inflammatory pathways may be valuable for precision medicine in patients with CHF carrying specific mutations encoding for CHIP.

Clonal haematopoiesis in chronic ischaemic heart failure: prognostic role of clone size for <i>DNMT3A</i>- and <i>TET2</i>-driver gene mutations
Birgit Aßmus, Sebastian Cremer, Klara Kirschbaum et al.|European Heart Journal|2020
Cited by 158

AIMS: Somatic mutations of the epigenetic regulators DNMT3A and TET2 causing clonal expansion of haematopoietic cells (clonal haematopoiesis; CH) were shown to be associated with poor prognosis in chronic ischaemic heart failure (CHF). The aim of our analysis was to define a threshold of variant allele frequency (VAF) for the prognostic significance of CH in CHF. METHODS AND RESULTS: We analysed bone marrow and peripheral blood-derived cells from 419 patients with CHF by error-corrected amplicon sequencing. Cut-off VAFs were optimized by maximizing sensitivity plus specificity from a time-dependent receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis from censored data. 56.2% of patients were carriers of a DNMT3A- (N = 173) or a TET2- (N = 113) mutation with a VAF >0.5%, with 59 patients harbouring mutations in both genes. Survival ROC analyses revealed an optimized cut-off value of 0.73% for TET2- and 1.15% for DNMT3A-CH-driver mutations. Five-year-mortality was 18% in patients without any detected DNMT3A- or TET2 mutation (VAF < 0.5%), 29% with only one DNMT3A- or TET2-CH-driver mutations above the respective cut-off level and 42% in patients harbouring both DNMT3A- and TET2-CH-driver mutations above the respective cut-off levels. In carriers of a DNMT3A mutation with VAF ≥ 1.15%, 5-year mortality was 31%, compared with 18% mortality in those with VAF < 1.15% (P = 0.048). Likewise, in patients with TET2 mutations, 5-year mortality was 32% with VAF ≥ 0.73%, compared with 19% mortality with VAF < 0.73% (P = 0.029). CONCLUSION: The present study defines novel threshold levels for clone size caused by acquired somatic mutations in the CH-driver genes DNMT3A and TET2 that are associated with worse outcome in patients with CHF.

Comprehensive molecular characterization of multifocal glioblastoma proves its monoclonal origin and reveals novel insights into clonal evolution and heterogeneity of glioblastomas
Cited by 113Open Access

Background: The evolution of primary glioblastoma (GBM) is poorly understood. Multifocal GBM (ie, multiple synchronous lesions in one patient) could elucidate GBM development. Methods: We present the first comprehensive study of 12 GBM foci from 6 patients using array-CGH, spectral karyotyping, gene expression arrays, and next-generation sequencing. Results: Multifocal GBMs genetically resemble primary GBMs. Comparing foci from the same patient proved their monoclonal origin. All tumors harbored alterations in the 3 GBM core pathways: RTK/PI3K, p53, and RB regulatory pathways with aberrations of EGFR and CDKN2A/B in all (100%) patients. This unexpected high frequency reflects a distinct genetic signature of multifocal GBMs and might account for their highly malignant and invasive phenotype. Surprisingly, the types of mutations in these genes/pathways were different in tumor foci from the same patients. For example, we found distinct mutations/aberrations in PTEN, TP53, EGFR, and CDKN2A/B, which therefore must have occurred independently and late during tumor development. We also identified chromothripsis as a late event and in tumors with wild-type TP53. Only 2 events were found to be early in all patients: single copy loss of PTEN and TERT promoter point mutations. Conclusions: Multifocal GBMs develop through parallel genetic evolution. The high frequency of alterations in 3 main pathways suggests that these are essential steps in GBM evolution; however, their late occurrence indicates that they are not founder events but rather subclonal drivers. This might account for the marked genetic heterogeneity seen in primary GBM and therefore has important implications for GBM therapy.

Gravity‐sensitive signaling drives 3‐dimensional formation of multicellular thyroid cancer spheroids
Johannes Grosse, Markus Wehland, Jessica Pietsch et al.|The FASEB Journal|2012
Cited by 83

This study focused on the effects induced by a random positioning machine (RPM) on FTC‐133 thyroid cancer cells and evaluated signaling elements involved in 3‐dimensional multicellular tumor spheroid (MCTS) formation. The cells were cultured on the RPM, a device developed to simulate microgravity, and under static 1‐ g conditions. After 24 h on the RPM, MCTSs swimming in culture supernatants were found, in addition to growth of adherent (AD) cells. Cells grown on the RPM showed higher levels of NF‐κB p65 protein and apoptosis than 1‐ g controls, a result also found earlier in endothelial cells. Employing microarray analysis, we found 487 significantly regulated transcripts belonging not only to the apoptosis pathway but also to other biological processes. Selected transcripts were analyzed with quantitative real‐time PCR using the same samples. Compared with 1‐ g IL‐6, IL‐8, CD44 , and OPN were significantly up‐regulated in AD cells but not in MCTSs, while ERK1/2, CAV2, TLN1 , and CTGF were significantly down‐regulated in AD cells. Simultaneously, the expression of ERK2, IL‐6, CAV2, TLN1 , and CTGF was reduced in MCTSs. IL‐6 protein expression and secretion mirrored its gene expression. Thus, we concluded that the signaling elements IL‐6, IL‐8, OPN, TLN1, and CTGF are involved with NF‐κB p65 in RPM‐dependent thyroid carcinoma cell spheroid formation.—Grosse, J., Wehland, M., Pietsch, J., Schulz, H., Saar, K., Hübner, N., Eilles, C., Bauer, J., Abou‐El‐Ardat, K., Baatout, S., Ma, X., Infanger, M., Hemmersbach, R., Grimm, D. Gravity‐sensitive signaling drives 3‐dimensional formation of multicellular thyroid cancer spheroids. FASEB J. 26, 5124–5140 (2012). www.fasebj.org