333 Bostwick Avenue, N.E., Grand Rapids, Michigan 49503
Phone 616.234.5000 Fax 616.234.5001 www.vai.org
Van Andel Research InstituteScientific Report 2009
Scientific R
eport
09
Cover photo: The micrograph at the top of the cover shows astrocytes in the murine retina (see p. 46); photo by Jennifer Bromberg-White. The center photo shows the VARI Phase II construc-tion from the west as it appeared in May 2009; photo by David Nadziejka. The lower figure is a series of liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry (LC-MS) spectrographs of complex protein samples (see p. 34); graphs courtesy of Greg Cavey.
VARI | 2009
Van Andel Research Institute Scientific Report 2009
Culture of prostate epithelial cells.
Confocal microscopic image of prostate epithelial cell (PEC) acini. Cells were cultured on Matrigel for 15 days and immunostained with antibod-ies against integrin beta 1 (green) and laminin 5 (red) to delineate the interface of the cell and the secreted basement membrane. Blue is from Hoechst staining of DNA in the nuclei. The equatorial cross section shows that this is a hollow structure, recapitulating the in vivo character-istics of the prostate gland. Three-dimensional culture may provide a more physiologically relevant approach than traditional two-dimensional cultures for studying the regulation of survival pathways, cellular architecture, and other cellular processes ex vivo. Photo by Laura Lamb of the Miranti lab.
Van Andel Research Institute | Scientific Report
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Copyright 2009 by the Van Andel Institute; all rights reserved. Van Andel Institute, 333 Bostwick Avenue, N.E., Grand Rapids, Michigan 49503, U.S.A.
VARI | 2009
iii
Director’s Introduction 1 George F. Vande Woude, Ph.D.
Laboratory Reports 7
Arthur S. Alberts, Ph.D. Cell Structure and Signal Integration 8
Brian Cao, M.D. Antibody Technology 11
Gregory S. Cavey, B.S. Mass Spectrometry and Proteomics 14
Nicholas S. Duesbery, Ph.D. Cancer and Developmental Cell Biology 17
Bryn Eagleson, B.S., RLATG Vivarium and Transgenics Program 20
Kyle A. Furge, Ph.D. Computational Biology 23
Brian B. Haab, Ph.D. Cancer Immunodiagnostics 26
Jeffrey P. MacKeigan, Ph.D. Systems Biology 30
Cindy K. Miranti, Ph.D. Integrin Signaling and Tumorigenesis 35
James H. Resau, Ph.D. Division of Quantitative Sciences Analytical, Cellular, and Molecular Microscopy Microarray Technology Molecular Epidemiology 39
Pamela J. Swiatek, Ph.D., M.B.A. Germline Modification and Cytogenetics 43
Bin T. Teh, M.D., Ph.D. Cancer Genetics 47
Steven J. Triezenberg, Ph.D. Transcriptional Regulation 51
George F. Vande Woude, Ph.D. Molecular Oncology 55
Craig P. Webb, Ph.D. Program for Translational Medicine 59
Michael Weinreich, Ph.D. Chromosome Replication 64
Bart O. Williams, Ph.D. Cell Signaling and Carcinogenesis 68
H. Eric Xu, Ph.D. Structural Sciences 72
Table of Contents
Van Andel Research Institute | Scientific Report
Daniel Nathans Memorial Award 76
Dennis J. Slamon, M.D., Ph.D., and Genentech, Inc.
Postdoctoral Fellowship Program 78
List of Fellows
Student Programs 80
Grand Rapids Area Pre-College Engineering Program Summer Student Internship Program
Han-Mo Koo Memorial Seminar Series 84
2008 | 2009 Seminars
Van Andel Research Institute Organization 89
Boards Office of the Director VAI Administrative Organization
iv
VARI | 2009
1
Director’s Introduction
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Van Andel Research Institute | Scientific Report
George F. Vande Woude
Director’s Introduction
The year 2008 was extraordinary for the Van Andel Research Institute, with many of the highlights coming late. On October 1,
the Institute celebrated the “topping out” of our Phase II building project with the installation of the topmost beam of the
structure. Van Andel staff had a chance to sign the beam before the ceremony and to watch as it was swung aloft and bolted
into place.
In December, we celebrated the year’s recipients of the Daniel Nathans Award. VARI was pleased to honor Dr. Dennis J.
Slamon, of the University of California, Los Angeles, and the firm Genentech for their roles in the development of the cancer
therapeutic Herceptin. Dr. Slamon gave a Scientific Lecture entitled “Molecular diversity of human breast cancer: clinical and
therapeutic implications”. Dr. Arthur D. Levinson accepted for the many members of Genentech who moved forward the first of
the modern-era drugs that target known cancer genes. Dr. Levinson, CEO of Genentech, was one of its champions. He gave
a Scientific Lecture entitled “Herceptin: lessons and prospects for the development of individualized cancer therapeutics”.
And to start the new year, early in 2009 came the announcement of a new director, Jeff Trent, and a new alliance with the
Translational Genomics Research Institute (TGen); more about that below.
Personnel
Kudos and congratulations go to Craig Webb and Michael Weinreich, who were promoted to Senior Scientific Investigator
in September 2008. Craig’s Program of Translational Medicine is developing the infrastructure and biomarkers to bring into
practice individualized medical treatment of diseases like cancer, with the expectation of more-effective treatments from this
approach. Michael’s Laboratory of Chromosome Replication studies molecules that control or regulate the copying of DNA
within a cell and how alterations in the process are related to cancer.
Also in September, Steve Triezenberg, the Dean of the VAI Graduate School and head of the Laboratory of Transcriptional
Regulation, was named Director of the Van Andel Education Institute, succeeding Gordon Van Harn. Our congratulations
to Steve on this new hat to wear. We also congratulate Gordon for his extraordinary contributions in building the Van Andel
Education Institute.
The past year also brought appointments to Brian Haab, who became a member of the Editorial Advisory Board of the
Journal of Proteome Research, and to Bart Williams, who was named to the NIH Skeletal Biology Development and
Disease Study Section.
VARI | 2009
3
We continued to receive grant funding from both federal agencies and other funding organizations in 2008. Brian Haab received
a three-year R33 award from the National Cancer Institute for his project “Defining Secreted Glycan Alterations in Pancreatic
Cancer”. Early in 2008, Cindy Miranti was awarded a three-year DOD grant to study “Mechanisms of KAI1/CD82-Induced
Prostate Cancer Metastasis”. One of her students, Laura Lamb, also received a grant for two years for the project “Survival
Signaling in Prostate Cancer: Role of Androgen Receptor and Integrins in Regulating Survival”.
Brian Cao received 18 months of funding from the Lustgarten Foundation for Pancreatic Cancer Research for his project to
“Generate Monoclonal Antibodies (mAbs) against Pancreatic Cancer Bio-marker Proteins”. Nicholas Duesbery received two
awards, one from the Pardee Foundation for the project “Tumor Endothelial Response to MKK Inhibition”, and another for “Pilot
Investigation of the Causes of Hemangiosarcoma in Clumber Spaniels”. The Vande Woude lab received a grant from the Breast
Cancer Research Foundation for “Met – An Important New Target for Breast Cancer”.
Art Alberts, Brian Cao, and Greg Cavey were recipients of grants from the Michigan Economic Development Corporation during
2008. Bin Teh has been funded to study “Expression Profiling of Renal Cell Carcinoma Utilizing Tissue from CALGB 90206” via
the Roswell Park Cancer Institute. Craig Webb received funds for three years of work to be done on “The Ivy-Genomics-Based
Medicine Project”, via the Translational Genomics Research Institute (TGen).
Chih-Shia Lee of the Duesbery lab and Tingting Yue of the Haab lab received travel awards from the AACR and the Society for
Glycobiology, respectively.
Big Changes
On February 11, 2009, Van Andel Institute (VAI) announced my retirement from the role of research director. I am proud to
have been a part of VAI’s growth and development over the course of ten wonderful years, watching exciting research unfold
and getting to know the remarkable people and minds of the Van Andel Institute and the Grand Rapids community. We have
built a truly special place, and it is especially gratifying to look at the life sciences construction surrounding the Institute and
know that we have inspired a phenomenon that will benefit patients and families in West Michigan and around the world. With
extraordinary construction to accommodate the Michigan State University College of Human Medicine, the Spectrum Health
and St. Mary’s cancer centers, the expansion of the Helen DeVos Children’s Hospital, and our own expansion, it is truly one of
the most exciting times for Grand Rapids, the state of Michigan, and our nation.
Dr. Jeffrey Trent succeeds me as president and research director while retaining his roles at TGen in Phoenix, Arizona. I have
known Dr. Trent professionally for nearly 20 years. We overlapped at NIH, and I have always admired him as one of the nation’s
leading scientists. This is a very special moment for both institutions and is the right moment and the right place for their perfect
fit to flourish.
I will retain my role as head of the Laboratory of Molecular Oncology at VAI, achieving a long-held desire to return to the lab
full-time. I look forward to being a witness to the Institute’s next phase of growth as we open the Phase II building expansion
and deepen our partnership with TGen.
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Van Andel Research Institute | Scientific Report
The NEW Alliance for Precision Medicine
Van AndelResearch Institute®
About the Translational Genomics Research Institute
The TraTraT nslational Genomics Research Institute (TGen) is a non-profit biomedical research institute based in Phoenix, Arizona, focused on research that can help patients with cancer,r,r neurological disorders, diabetes and other debilitating conditions. Working with aa wworldwide network of collaborators in the scienscientific and medical communities, TGen reseearchers study the genetic components of botboth common and complex diseases. Through gennomic analysis, we learn how DNA, genes andd proteins – the microscopic building block of lifelife – can affecffecf t human health. Our 41 lead inveestigators and nearly 300 support personnel at sisites in Phoenix, Scottsdale and Flagstafffff , Arizoizona, are dedicated to improving patient caree and quality of life through precision medicimedicine, best defined as the right therapy,y,y for thee right patient, at the right time.
For additional information,For additional information,visit: visit: www.tgen.org
About Van AndelResearch Institute
Established by Jay and Betty Van AndelAndel in 1996, Van Andel Institute (VAI)VAI)V is an independent independent research and educational organizationganization based in Grand Rapids, Michigan, dedicateddedicated to preserving, enhancing and expandingexpanding the frontiers of medical science, and to achieving excellence in education by probing funndamental
.ssecorpggninraelehtdnanoitacudefoseussiVARI,VARI,V the research arm of VAI,VAI,V is dedicateddedicated to studying the genetic, cellular and molecular molecular origins of cancer,r,r Parkinson’s and other diseases and working to translate those findings into effectiveffectivef therapies. This is accomplished through the work of over 250 scientists and stafffff in 18 on-site laboratories, in laboratories in Singapore and Nanjing, and in collaborative partnerships that span the globe.
For adr adr ditional information, visit: www.vai.org
On December 1, 2009,Van Andel Research Institute
(VARI) and the Translational
Genomics Research Institute
(TGen) will complete a
strategic alliance and affiliation
agreement, enabling both to
maximize their contributions to
science and health. Under the
agreement, Dr. Jeffrey Trent,
TGen’s President and Research
Director, also will become
VARI’s President and Research
Director. Dr. Trent will replace
Dr. George Vande Woude, who
in 1998 was appointed the
founding Director of VARI. Dr.
Vande Woude, a member of the
prestigious National Academy
of Sciences, will remain at VARI
as head of the Laboratory of
Molecular Oncology, allowing
him to achieve a long-held
desire to return to the lab
full-time.
Dr. George Vande WoudeDirector of VARI’s Laboratory of Molecular Oncology
Dr. Jeffrey TrentPresident andResearch Director, VARI and TGen
T Gen presents numerous opportunities for innovative
scientists and physicians at various career levels.
Our faculty have access to the latest technologies – often serving as a test site for new technology platforms – for studying genes and proteins, including advances in next-generation sequencing techniques as applied to medical benefit.
In addition to TGen’s research into the genetic basis of cancer,r,r neurological conditions and metabolic disorders, TGen also plays a role in national security and bio-defense at TGen North, our facility in Flagstaff,ff,f Arizona, under the leadership of internationally recognized pathogen expert, Dr.r.r Paul Keim.
TGen’s Clinical Research Service (TCRS) at Scottsdale Healthcare provides TGen with a clinical research site. Dr. Daniel VonVonV Hoff,ff,f TGen’s Physician-in-Chief, also serves as Chief Scientific Officer for TCRS, where clinicians focus on clinical trials with targeted agents and genomics-based individualized therapy. TCRS, with an initial focus on cancer,r,r allows the unique opportunity for TGen
to transition its laboratory-based research to patient care centered on individualized therapy. With nearly 25 active clinical trials for advanced and/or rare cancers, TCRS is one of the nation’s leading centers for PhaseII oncology trials.
TGen’s innovations have resulted in several partnerships and non-profit as well as for-profit spin-offsffsf involving: physician resources, molecular profiling, business consulting, venture capital, drug development and clinical trials. In partnership with ASU’s Biodesign Institute, Seattle’s Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Institute and Seattle’s Institute for Systems Biology,y,y TGen most recently established the Partnership for Personalized Medicine.
The goal of TGen’s education and outreach programs is to increase the working knowledge of genomics within the community at large and to help educate, train and excite the next generation of scientists. The Institute’s role ineducationcontinuouslyevolves, and currently includes programs for high school, undergraduate and graduate students, pre- and post-doctoral students, and fellowships.
Why the Translational Genomics Research Institute?
Van AndelResearch Institute®
333 Bostwick Ave NEGrand Rapids, MI 49503
(616) 234 5000 | www.vai.org
445 N 5th StreetPhoenix, AZ 85004
(602) 343 8400 | www.tgen.org
“There are a lot of exceptionally talented scientists at TGen; there are particular strengths in translational research and in equipment relatedto that strength. This includes the infrastructure to perform andorganize clinical trials.’’
— Dr. Bart WilliamsHead of VARI’s Laboratory of Cell Signaling and Carcinogenesis, following his visits to TGen
“The“The e a lot of exceptionally talented scientists at TGen; the
Translational Genomics Research InstitutePhoenix, Arizona
Laboratory Reports
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VARI | 2009
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Van Andel Research Institute | Scientific Report
In 1993, Dr. Art Alberts received his Ph.D. in Physiology and Pharmacology at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine, where he studied with Jim Feramisco. Dr. Alberts trained as a postdoctoral fellow from 1994 to 1997 with Richard Treisman at the Imperial Cancer Research Fund in London, England, where Dr. Treisman is the current Director. From 1997 through 1999, Dr. Alberts was an Assistant Research Biochemist in the laboratory of Frank McCormick at the University of California, San Francisco. In January 2000, Dr. Alberts joined VARI as a Scientific Investigator; he was promoted in 2006 to Senior Scientific Investigator. Also in 2006, he established and became the Director of the Flow Cytometry core facility.
Kathryn Eisenmann, Ph.D.Leanne Lash-Van Wyhe, Ph.D.Richard A. West, M.S.Susan Kitchen, B.S.Debra GuthreyKellie Leali
Aaron DeWard, B.S.Jonathan RawsonAlbert RodriguezSara SternbergerKatja Strunk
Stephen Matheson, Ph.D.Brad Wallar, Ph.D.
Arthur S. Alberts, Ph.D.Laboratory of Cell Structure and Signal Integration
Staff Students Visiting Scientists
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VARI | 2009
Research Interests
The Laboratory of Cell Structure and Signal Integration is devoted to understanding how defects in cellular architecture affect
the progression to malignancy and support the tumorigenic platform. The driving hypothesis is that the cytoskeleton does not
only structurally support cell morphology, division, and migration, but with its dynamic nature, it organizes intracellular signaling
networks in order to effectively interpret proliferative and migratory responses to extracellular cues. On a molecular basis, we
are interested in how cells build and control the cytoskeletal assembly machines and how these molecular machines work in
concert within the cell. Through combined molecular, cellular, and genetic approaches, the ultimate goal of the lab is identifying
defective nodes in the networks governing cytoskeletal remodeling in order to improve diagnosis and devising molecular tools
to correct the defective circuits.
Our focus is the role of Rho GTPases in signal transduction networks that control cell proliferation and motility. These highly
conserved molecular switches act within growth factor responses by alternating between GTP- and GDP-bound forms. Upon
GTP binding, Rho proteins undergo a conformational change that allows them to bind to and modulate the activity of effectors
that remodel cell shape, drive motility and division, or alter gene expression patterns. One set of GTPase effector proteins acts
as machines that assemble components of the cytoskeleton. The mammalian Diaphanous-related formin (mDia) family of actin-
nucleating proteins initiate and control the elongation of new actin filaments. The three conserved mDia proteins (mDia1–3),
along with insect Diaphanous protein and their budding yeast counterpart Bni1p, are canonical members of the formin family.
With our discovery of one of the first formin proteins, mDia2, we have taken a leading role in their characterization.
To study the role of mDia1 in vivo, the murine Drf1 gene was knocked out by conventional gene-targeting methods. Both Drf1+/–
and Drf1–/– mice become progressively lympho- and myelodysplastic. Drf1-targeted mice are prone to developing tumors;
cancers observed thus far include various leukemias, monocytosis, and plasmocytomas. Overall, mice lacking one or both
Drf1 alleles phenocopy human myelodysplastic syndrome. Numerous defects in cytoskeletal remodeling have been observed
in immune cells, including impaired T cell adhesion, impaired migration, and the appearance of supernumerary centrosomes,
which are indicative of failed cell division. These results have been published in the Journal of Biological Chemistry, Cancer
Research, and Oncogene.
Overall, the mDia1 knock-out phenotype resembles human chronic myeloproliferative syndrome (MPS) and myelodysplastic
syndrome (MDS). Both MPS and MDS have been characterized as preleukemic states, with variable lymphopenia, excess
or dysfunctional erythrocytes, chronic myelomonocytic leukemia, ineffective hematopoiesis, and, in some cases, advancing
myelofibrosis. Instances of neutrophilic dermatoses (Sweet syndrome) can also accompany MDS and MPS. MDS is a frequent
hematologic disorder that typically affects older patients and is thought to be a stem cell disorder. Dysplastic features of
the nucleus or cytoplasm, as observed in the mDia1 knock-out mice, and altered cellularity of the bone marrow are also
characteristic of MDS. The effect of Drf1 gene targeting and the resulting mDia1 knock-out suggests that the DRF1 gene for
human mDia1 is affected in MPS, MDS, or other preleukemic pathologies. Ongoing studies are focused on examining if defects
in the human gene encoding mDia1 might be defective in MDS patients.
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Van Andel Research Institute | Scientific Report
Recent Publications
DeWard, Aaron D., and Arthur S. Alberts. 2009. Ubiquitin-mediated degradation of the formin mDia2 upon completion of
cell division. Journal of Biological Chemistry 284(30): 20061–20069.
DeWard, Aaron D., Kellie Leali, Richard A. West, George C. Prendergast, and Arthur S. Alberts. 2009. Loss of RhoB
expression enhances the myelodysplastic phenotype of mammalian Diaphanous-related formin mDia1 knockout mice.
PLoS One 4(9): e7102.
Eisenmann, K.M., K.J. Dykema, S.F. Matheson, N.F. Kent, A.D. DeWard, R.A. West, R. Tibes, K.A. Furge, and A.S. Alberts.
2009. 5q– Myelodysplastic syndromes: chromosome 5q genes direct a tumor suppression network sensing actin dynamics.
Oncogene 28(39): 3429–3441.
Shi, Yongquan, Baoxia Dong, Helen Miliotis, Junye Liu, Arthur S. Alberts, Jinyi Zhang, and Katherine A. Siminovitch. 2009.
Src kinase Hck association with the WASp and mDia1 cytoskeletal regulators promotes chemoattractant-induced Hck
membrane targeting and activation in neutrophils. Biochemistry and Cell Biology 87(1): 207–216.
DeWard, Aaron D., and Arthur S. Alberts. 2008. Microtubule stabilization: formins assert their independence.
Current Biology 18(14): R605–R608.
Kamasani, Uma, James B. DuHadaway, Arthur S. Alberts, and George C. Prendergast. 2007. mDia function is critical for the
cell suicide program triggered by farnesyl transferase inhibition. Cancer Biology & Therapy 6(9): 1422–1427.
From left: Matheson, DeWard, West, Kempston, Kitchen, Alberts, Leali, Rodriguez, Lash-Van Wyhe
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VARI | 2009
Brian Cao, M.D.Laboratory of Antibody Technology
Dr. Cao obtained his M.D. from Peking University Medical Center, People’s Republic of China, in 1986. On receiving a CDC fellowship award, he was a visiting scientist at the National Center for Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Colorado (1991–1994). He next served as a postdoctoral fellow at Harvard (1994–1995) and at Yale (1995–1996). From 1996 to 1999, Dr. Cao was a Scientist Associate in charge of the Monoclonal Antibody Production Laboratory at the Advanced BioScience Laboratories–Basic Research Program at the National Cancer Institute, Frederick Cancer Research and Development Center, Maryland. Dr. Cao joined VARI as a Special Program Investigator in June 1999 and was promoted to Senior Scientific Investigator in July 2006.
Quliang Gu, Ph.D.Ping Zhao, Ph.D.Tessa Grabinski, B.S.Amy Nelson
Ximin Chen, M.S.Guipeng Ding, M.S.Hong Lin, M.S.Rui Sun, M.S.Xiaoting Wang, M.S.Victoria HledinJessica Karasiewicz
Jin Zhu, Ph.D.Yunqian Li, M.S.
Staff Students Visiting Scientists
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Van Andel Research Institute | Scientific Report
Research Interests
Functioning as an antibody production core facility at VARI, our lab develops state-of-the-art services and technology platforms
for monoclonal antibody (mAb) production and characterization. Antibodies are primary tools of biomedical science. In basic
research, the characterization and analysis of almost any molecule involves the production of specific monoclonal or polyclonal
antibodies that react with it. Antibodies are also widely used in clinical diagnostic applications. Further, antibodies are making
rapid inroads into clinical treatment of a variety of diseases, driven by technological evolution from chimeric and humanized to
fully human antibodies.
Our technologies and services include antigen preparation and animal immunization; peptide design and coupling to protein
carriers; immunization with living or fixed cells; conventional antigen/adjuvant preparation; and immunizing a wide range of
antibody-producing models (including mice, rats, rabbits, and transgenic or knock-out mice). Our work also includes the
generation of hybridomas from spleen cells of immunized mice and rats; hybridoma expansion and subcloning; cryopreserva-
tion of hybridomas; mAb isotyping; ELISA screening of hybridoma supernatants; mAb characterization by immunoprecipitation,
immunohistochemistry, immunofluorescence staining, western blot, FACS, and in vitro bioassays; conjugation of mAbs to
enzymes, biotin/streptavidin, or fluorescent reporters; and development of detection kits such as sandwich ELISA. We contract
our services to biotechnology companies, producing and purifying mAbs for their research and for diagnostic kit development.
We have also taken part over the past year in the following research projects.
• A single neutralizing mAb against the HGF/SF alpha domain. Hepatocyte growth factor/scatter factor (HGF/
SF) is a multifunctional heterodimeric polypeptide produced by mesenchymal cells; it is an effector of cells
expressing the Met tyrosine kinase receptor. We previously generated a cocktail of three or four neutral-
izing mAbs against HGF/SF that significantly inhibited the HGF-Met signaling pathway in Met-expressing
cells. In a glioblastoma multiforme xenograft model, our cocktail showed potent inhibition of tumor growth.
Amgen and others have reported a single anti-HGF/SF b-subunit mAb that is able to inhibit biological activities
of HGF/SF; it is in early clinical trials. We hypothesized that two mAbs that react with different subunits
(a and b) of HGF/SF in combination would have stronger anti-tumor activity than any single antibody. Using
a unique immunization protocol, we have generated a mAb against the HGF/SF a subunit (designated HGF8)
that has neutralizing activity. Our current results show that HGF8 is able to block HGF/SF-induced scattering
of MDCK cells, and in collaboration with the Vande Woude lab, we have shown that HGF8 also significantly
inhibits the Met-HGF/SF signaling pathway in vitro using uPA and cell proliferation assays. The in vivo anti-
tumor activity of HGF8 is now under investigation in a brain tumor xenograft model using HGF/SF transgenic
mice established by the Vande Woude lab.
• Development of highly specific anti-Met mouse mAbs with potential application for clinical immunohistochemi-
cal diagnosis. In collaboration with Beatrice Knudsen’s lab at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center,
we have developed a monoclonal antibody, designated MET4, with the goal of accurately and reproducibly
measuring MET in formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) tissues. MET4 was selected as the best probe
from a pool of MET-avid monoclonal antibodies, based on its specific staining pattern in FFPE preparations of
normal human prostate tissues. The reliability of MET4 immunohistochemistry was assessed by comparing
MET4-IHC in FFPE cell pellets with immunoblotting analysis, which demonstrated a high avidity of MET4 for
formalin-treated MET. These properties encourage further development of MET4 as a multipurpose molecular
diagnostic reagent to help guide the selection of individual patients being considered for treatment with MET
antagonistic drugs.
VARI | 2009
13
• Generation of monoclonal antibodies against pancreatic cancer biomarkers. In March 2008, the Lustgarten
Foundation officially launched the Pancreatic Cancer Biomarker Development Initiative. Identifying key pan-
creatic cancer biomarkers and producing antibodies against them is the first step toward developing a blood
test for this disease. A consortium of investigators representing four leading cancer research organizations—
including the Canary Foundation, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, University of California, San Francisco, and
Van Andel Research Institute—will study a total of 60 candidate biomarkers. We have been assigned 15
biomarkers and funding for 18 months. The project is to develop monoclonal antibodies against those bio-
markers, including paired mAbs for sandwich ELISA development, mAbs specifically for western blotting and
immunohistochemical study, etc. All biomarkers need to be expressed and purified by the lab. This project
also requires collaboration with other labs and core facilities. For example, we will collaborate with Brian
Haab’s VARI lab to identify paired mAbs for sandwich ELISA development using antibody array technology.
We will also use James Resau’s VARI histology/pathology core and tissue microarray technology to character-
ize the mAbs that work best for immunohistochemical staining.
From left: Ding, Lin, Wang, Cao, Grabinski, Zhu, Nelson, Zhao
Recent Publications
Knudsen, Beatrice S., Ping Zhao, James Resau, Sandra Cottingham, Ermanno Gherardi, Eric Xu, Bree Berghuis,
Jennifer Daugherty, Tessa Grabinski, Jose Toro, et al. 2009. A novel multipurpose monoclonal antibody for evaluating human
c-Met expression in preclinical and clinical settings. Applied Immunohistochemistry and Molecular Morphology 17(1): 56–67.
Nguyen, Melissa L., Sherry R. Crowe, Sridevi Kurella, Simon Teryzan, Brian Cao, Jimmy D. Ballard, Judith A. James, and
A. Darise Farris. 2009. Sequential B cell epitopes of Bacillus anthracis lethal factor bind lethal toxin–neutralizing antibodies.
Infection and Immunity 77(1): 162–169.
Wang, Xin, and Brian B. Cao. 2009. Screening of specific internalization Fab fragments from human naïve phage library
by combinational bio-panning. In Therapeutic Antibodies: Methods and Protocols, Antony S. Dimitrov, ed. Methods in
Molecular Biology series, Vol. 525. New York: Humana Press, pp. 161–174.
Chen, Jindong, Kunihiko Futami, David Petillo, Jun Peng, PengFei Wang, Jared Knol, Yan Li, Sok Kean Khoo, Dan Huang,
Chao-Nan Qian, et al. 2008. Deficiency of FLCN in mouse kidney led to development of polycystic kidneys and renal neoplasia.
PLoS One 3(10): e3581.
Xie, Qian, Ryan Thompson, Kim Hardy, Lisa DeCamp, Bree Berghuis, Robert Sigler, Beatrice Knudsen, Sandra Cottingham,
Ping Zhao, Karl Dykema, et al. 2008. A highly invasive human glioblastoma pre-clinical model for testing therapeutics.
Journal of Translational Medicine 6: 77.
Gregory S. Cavey, B.S.Laboratory of Mass Spectrometry and Proteomics
Mr. Cavey received his B.S. degree from Michigan State University in 1990. Prior to joining VARI he was employed at Pharmacia in Kalamazoo, Michigan, for nearly 15 years. As a member of a biotechnology development unit, he was group leader for a protein characterization core laboratory. More recently as a research scientist, he was principal in the establishment and application of a state-of-the-art proteomics laboratory for drug discovery. Mr. Cavey joined VARI as a Special Program Investigator in July 2002.
Paula Davidson, M.S.Caryn Lehner, M.S.Matthew Welsh, B.S.Debra Guthrey
Staff
Van Andel Research Institute | Scientific Report
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VARI | 2009
Research Interests
Mass spectrometry–based proteomics is now an important and widespread tool in basic and clinical research. In 2005, VARI
purchased a Waters quadrupole time-of-flight (Q-Tof) mass spectrometry system that remains at the cutting edge of many
research applications. This equipment allows us to provide routine mass spectrometry services and to develop new services
such as protein profiling for biomarker discovery and protein phosphorylation analysis.
Protein identification and protein molecular weight determination are routine services performed on sub-microgram amounts
of material to address a wide variety of biological questions. Protein identification via mass spectrometry is mainly used to
identify novel protein-protein interactions and can be performed on proteins in SDS-PAGE gels or in solutions. Molecular
weight determination of protein solutions is typically used to confirm the expression and purification of recombinant proteins to
be used as reagents in x-ray crystallographic experiments or drug screening/cell-based assays. Our research emphasis is on
1) developing liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry (LC-MS) protein profiling analysis for systems biology research and
biomarker discovery and 2) improving methods for identifying and quantifying the phosphorylation of proteins.
LC-MS protein profiling
Our lab collaborates with Waters Corporation, a major manufacturer of mass spectrometry and HPLC equipment, to evaluate
and improve existing methods while applying LC-MS to the research efforts of VARI scientists and of external clients. Our
LC-MS system employs a novel data acquisition method unique to Waters mass spectrometers, termed LC-MSE, whereby
quantitative and qualitative data are collected in a single analysis. Protein samples are first digested into peptides using
trypsin and then analyzed by reverse-phase nanoscale LC-MS. Recording peptide mass, HPLC retention time, and intensity
as measured in the mass spectrometer, we digitize the data to allow comparisons across samples. Quantitation is based on
measuring and comparing the chromatographic peak area for each peptide across samples. Qualitative protein identification
data is collected in a multiplexed, non-intensity-biased fashion concurrent with quantitative data. One current pilot project is a
time-course analysis of protein secretion (secretome) from mouse 3T3-L1 pre-adipocytes as they differentiate in response to
treatment with dexamethasone/insulin, versus the response to the PPARg antagonist rosiglitazone. A second study is of the
secretome of a cell line model of cachexia.
In addition to mechanism-of-action studies, our goal is to use LC-MS to discover candidate biomarkers of disease. Current
research efforts focus on sample processing techniques to reproducibly fractionate highly complex samples such as blood
plasma, tissue, and urine to allow quantitative analysis. Replicate LC-MS analysis of carefully chosen samples and multivari-
ate data analysis will allow us to differentiate between normal biological variation and disease.
Protein phosphorylation analysis
Mapping post-translational protein modifications such as phosphorylation is an important yet difficult undertaking. In cancer
research, phosphorylation regulates many protein pathways that could serve as targets for drug therapy. In recent years,
mass spectrometry has emerged as a primary tool in determining site-specific phosphorylation and relative quantitation.
Phosphorylation analysis is complicated by many factors, but principally by the low-stoichiometry modifications that may
regulate pathways: we are sometimes dealing with 0.01% or less of phosphorylated protein among a large excess of a
nonphosphorylated counterpart.
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As with most mass spectrometry–based methods, the mapping of phosphorylation sites on proteins begins by enzymatically
digesting protein into peptides using trypsin, Lys-C, Staph V8, or chymotrypsin. Peptides are separated by nanoscale reverse-
phase HPLC and analyzed by on-line electrospray ionization on a Q-Tof mass spectrometer. Samples are analyzed using MSE
data acquisition. MSE toggles the collision energy in the mass spectrometer between high and low every second throughout
the analytic run. Low-collision-energy data acquisition allows peptide mass to be recorded at high sensitivity with high mass
accuracy to implicate phosphorylation based on mass alone. The peptide intensity measured in the mass spectrometer is
also recorded and used for relative quantitation in time course studies. During high-collision-energy acquisition, all peptides
are fragmented to identify the protein(s) that the peptides were liberated from and to locate specific phosphorylated amino
acids. MSE differs from other mass spectrometry approaches because fragmentation occurs for all peptides, not just for the
most abundant peptides. We recently used this method for mapping phosphorylation sites on RhoA and RhoC following in
vitro phosphorylation by protein kinase C epsilon (PKCe). We are currently analyzing RhoA and RhoC in a head and neck
squamous cell carcinoma tissue culture model with or without the expression of PKCe using siRNA knock-down.
External Collaborators
Gary Gibson, Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, Michigan
Quintin Pan, Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center
Waters Corporation
Recent Publications
Yang, Maozhou, Xinli Wang, Liang Zhang, Chiyang Yu, Bingbing Zhang, William Cole, Greg Cavey, Paula Davidson, and
Gary Gibson. 2008. Demonstration of the interaction of transforming growth factor beta 2 and type X collagen using a
modified tandem affinity purification tag. Journal of Chromatography B 875(2): 493–501.
From left to right, standing: Cavey, Lehner, Davidson; seated: Guthrey, Welsh
Nicholas S. Duesbery, Ph.D.Laboratory of Cancer and Developmental Cell Biology
Nick Duesbery received a B.Sc. (Hon.) in biology (1987) from Queen’s University, Canada, and both his M.Sc. (1990) and Ph.D. (1996) degrees in zoology from the University of Toronto, Canada, under the supervision of Yoshio Masui. Before his appointment as a Scientific Investigator at VARI in April 1999, he was a postdoctoral fellow in the laboratory of George Vande Woude in the Molecular Oncology Section of the Advanced BioScience Laboratories–Basic Research Program at the National Cancer Institute, Frederick Cancer Research and Development Center, Maryland. Dr. Duesbery was promoted to Senior Scientific Investigator and appointed Deputy Director for Research Operations in 2006.
Jennifer Bromberg-White, Ph.D.Jaclyn Lynem, B.S.Elissa BoguslawskiLaura Holman
Chih-Shia Lee, M.S.Danielle Hawkins, B.S.Emily Olenzek, B.S.Michelle DawesShannon Moran
Roe Froman, D.V.M.
Staff Students Visiting Scientist
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Research Interests
Many malignant sarcomas such as fibrosarcomas are refractory to available treatments. However, sarcomas possess unique
vascular properties which indicate they may be more responsive to therapeutic agents that target endothelial function. Mitogen-
activated protein kinase kinases (MKKs) play an essential role in the growth of carcinomas, and we hypothesize that signaling
through multiple MKK pathways is also essential for sarcomas. One objective of our research is to define the role of MKK
signaling in the growth and vascularization of human sarcomas and to determine whether MKK inhibitors can form the basis of
a novel and innovative approach to the treatment of human sarcoma.
In 2008, we published a study showing that inhibition of MKK signaling by lethal toxin (LeTx) caused a rapid and dramatic
decrease in tumor perfusion that was followed by a long-term reduction in tumor vascularization. Follow-up histologic analysis
in collaboration with VARI’s James Resau (Laboratory of Analytical, Cellular, and Molecular Microscopy) showed this acute
decrease in tumor perfusion was caused by increased leakiness of tumor blood vessels. This was unexpected, because anti-
angiogenic agents typically lead to a regression of neovascularization over the course of weeks, not hours. Moreover, these
agents typically normalize tumor-associated blood vessels, rendering them less leaky. The results of our study show that while
MKK activity is required for tumor cell proliferation, it also plays an important role in tumor vascular function.
With funding from the Elsa Pardee Foundation, we have continued our investigation of the effects of MKK inhibition on vascular
function in sarcomas. In parallel, Jenn Bromberg-White, a postdoctoral fellow, has begun an investigation into the roles MKK
pathways play in the formation of vascular networks in the developing mouse eye, while Chih-Shia Lee, a graduate student, is
performing a detailed study of the individual contributions of MKK pathways to melanoma survival.
In 2008 we also began a new project on hemangiosarcomas, a soft-tissue tumor for which there are currently no effective
treatments. Although rare in humans, hemangiosarcomas are relatively common in certain breeds of dogs such as Golden
Retrievers, German Shepherds, and Clumber Spaniels. Hemangiosarcomas seem to run in families, indicating that there is an
underlying hereditary or genetic component to this disease.
To study these tumors, we have established the Canine Hereditary Cancer Consortium (CHCC). With the support of the
American Kennel Club Canine Health Foundation (AKC CHF Grant 1114) and the Clumber Spaniel Health Foundation, the
CHCC will take advantage of new genetic resources and technologies at Van Andel Research Institute to develop genetic
screens, diagnostic tests, and treatments for hereditary canine cancers, as well as to gain insight into the biology of human
disease. In our pilot proposal, we have focused on hemangiosarcomas in Clumber Spaniels; later we will include other
breeds and additional hereditary cancers. We will analyze collected DNA and RNA samples from Clumber Spaniels for genetic
patterns that are associated with this disease. These patterns may form the basis of genetic tests that can tell us whether a
particular dog is a carrier of a defective gene that will cause cancer. Also, these studies may provide important clues about
hemangiosarcomas in humans. Key laboratories participating in this project include the Laboratory of Cancer Genetics; the
Laboratory of Analytical, Cellular, and Molecular Microscopy; the Laboratory of Computational Biology; and the Laboratory of
Cancer & Developmental Cell Biology. Dr. Roe Froman, D.V.M., is our consulting veterinarian.
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From left: Lee, Boguslawski, Holman, Duesbery, Froman, Bromberg-White; foreground: D Too, a Clumber Spaniel
Recent Publications
Alfano, Randall W., Stephen H. Leppla, Shihui Liu, Thomas H. Bugge, Cynthia J. Meininger, Terry C. Lairmore,
Arlynn F. Mulne, Samuel H. Davis, Nicholas S. Duesbery, and Arthur E. Frankel. 2009. Matrix metalloproteinase–
activated anthrax lethal toxin inhibits endothelial invasion and neovasculature formation during in vitro morphogenesis.
Molecular Cancer Research 7(4): 452–461.
Bromberg-White, Jennifer L., Elissa Boguslawski, and Nicholas S. Duesbery. 2009. Perturbation of mouse retinal vascular
morphogenesis by anthrax lethal toxin. PLoS One 4(9): e6956.
Alfano, Randall W., Stephen H. Leppla, Shihui Liu, Thomas H. Bugge, Meenhard Herlyn, Keiran S. Smalley,
Jennifer L. Bromberg-White, Nicholas S. Duesbery, and Arthur E. Frankel. 2008. Cytotoxicity of the matrix metalloproteinase–
activated anthrax lethal toxin is dependent on gelatinase expression and B-RAF status in human melanoma cells.
Molecular Cancer Therapeutics 7(5): 1218–1226.
Ding, Yan, Elissa A. Boguslawski, Bree D. Berghuis, John J. Young, Zhongfa Zhang, Kim Hardy, Kyle Furge, Eric Kort,
Arthur E. Frankel, Rick V. Hay, et al. 2008. Mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase signaling promotes growth and
vascularization of fibrosarcoma. Molecular Cancer Therapeutics 7(3): 648–658.
Kuo, Shu-Ru, Mark C. Willingham, Sarah H. Bour, Elissa A. Andreas, Seong Kyu Park, Carney Jackson, Nicholas S. Duesbery,
Stephen H. Leppla, Wei-Jen Tang, and Arthur E. Frankel. 2008. Anthrax toxin–induced shock in rats is associated with
pulmonary edema and hemorrhage. Microbial Pathogenesis 44(6): 467–472.
Bryn Eagleson, B.S., RLATGVivarium and Transgenics Program
Bryn Eagleson began her career in laboratory animal services in 1981 with Litton Bionetics at the National Cancer Institute’s Frederick Cancer Research and Development Center (NCI–FCRDC) in Maryland. In 1983, she joined the Johnson & Johnson Biotechnology Center in San Diego, California. In 1988, she returned to NCI–FCRDC, where she continued to develop her skills in transgenic technology and managed the transgenic mouse colony. In 1999, she joined VARI as the Vivarium Director and Transgenics Special Program Manager.
Lisa DeCamp, B.S.Dawna Dylewski, B.S.Audra Guikema, B.S., L.V.T.Tristan Kempston, B.S.Angie Rogers, B.S.Elissa Boguslawski, RALATTina Schumaker, ALAT
Sylvia Marinelli, Vivarium SupervisorCrystal BradyNeil BrandowJarred GramsRishard MoodyJanelle PostDrew RappBobbie Vitt
Alma Klotz
Technical Staff Animal Caretaker Staff IACUC Coordinator
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Research Interests
The goal of the vivarium and the transgenics program is to develop, provide, and support high-quality mouse modeling services
for the Van Andel Research Institute investigators, Michigan collaborators, and the greater research community. We use three
Topaz Technologies software products—Granite, Scion, and Topaz Protocols and Reviews—for integrated management of the
vivarium finances, the mouse breeding colony, and the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC) protocols and
records, respectively. Imaging equipment, such as the PIXImus mouse densitometer and the ACUSON Sequoia 512 ultrasound
machine, is available for noninvasive imaging of mice. Also provided by the vivarium technical staff are an extensive xenograft
model development and analysis service, rederivation, surgery, dissection, necropsy, breeding, and health-status monitoring.
Transgenics
Fertilized eggs contain two pronuclei, one that is derived from the egg and contains the maternal genetic material and one
derived from the sperm that contains the paternal genetic material. As development proceeds, these two pronuclei fuse,
the genetic material mixes, and the cell proceeds to divide and develop into an embryo. Transgenic mice are produced by
injecting small quantities of foreign DNA (the transgene) into a pronucleus of a one-cell fertilized egg. DNA microinjected into a
pronucleus randomly integrates into the mouse genome and will theoretically be present in every cell of the resulting organism.
Expression of the transgene is controlled by elements called promoters that are genetically engineered into the transgenic
DNA. Depending on the selection of the promoter, the transgene can be expressed in every cell of the mouse or in specific cell
populations such as neurons, skin cells, or blood cells. Temporal expression of the transgene during development can also
be controlled by genetic engineering. These transgenic mice are excellent models for studying the expression and function of
the transgene in vivo.
Recent Publications
Monks, Douglas Ashley, Jamie A. Johansen, Kaiguo Mo, Pengcheng Rao, Bryn Eagleson, Zhigang Yu, Andrew P. Lieberman,
S. Marc Breedlove, and Cynthia L. Jordan. 2007. Overexpression of wild-type androgen receptor in muscle recapitulates
polyglutamine disease. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences U.S.A. 104(46): 18259–18264.
From left: Vitt, Brandow, Marinelli, Brady, Eagleson, Moody, Klotz, Schumaker, Rapp, Boguslawski, Kempston, Dylewski, DeCamp, Guikema, Grams, Post
Mouse liver cells
Although it looks like a child’s fingerpainting, this is a micrograph of mouse liver cells. Green stain marks endothelial cells, red stain marks the actin cytoskeleton of fibroblasts, and blue stain marks cell nuclei. Photo by Veronique Schulz of the Miranti lab.
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Kyle A. Furge, Ph.D.Laboratory of Computational Biology
Dr. Furge received his Ph.D. in biochemistry from the Vanderbilt University School of Medicine in 2000. Prior to obtaining his degree, he worked as a software engineer at YSI, Inc., where he wrote operating systems for remote environmental sensors. Dr. Furge did his postdoctoral work in the laboratory of George Vande Woude. He became a Bioinformatics Scientist at VARI in June of 2001 and a Scientific Investigator in May of 2005.
Karl Dykema, B.A.Amy Nelson
Craig Johnson, P.S.M.Jeff Klomp, M.S.Theresa Gipson
Staff Students
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Research Interests
High-throughput technologies—such as DNA sequencing, gene and protein expression profiling, DNA copy number analysis,
and single nucleotide polymorphism genotyping—produce large amounts of data and have created a need for new tools that
can assist in extracting the significant biological information from these data sets. Bioinformatics and computational biology
are new disciplines that develop methods for the storage, distribution, integration, and analysis of these large data sets. The
Computational Biology laboratory at VARI uses mathematical and computer science approaches to analyze and integrate
complex data sets with a goal of understanding how cancer cells differ from normal cells at the molecular level. In addition,
members of the lab provide assistance in data analysis and other computational projects on a collaborative and/or fee-for-
service basis.
In the past year, the laboratory has taken part in many collaborative projects to further the research efforts at VARI. We have
contributed gene expression analysis to projects ranging from identifying mechanisms of oncogene transformation to identifying
genes associated with drug resistance. In recent work led by the Laboratory of Chromosome Replication, we examined how
the deregulation of genes involved in chromosome replication are associated with the development and progression of several
types of cancer. We have worked closely with the Laboratory of Cancer Genetics in developing gene expression–based models
for the diagnosis and prognosis of renal cell carcinoma. We are also part of a multi-lab project spearheaded by the Laboratory
of Cancer and Developmental Cell Biology to identify and characterize genes associated with the development of hereditary
hemangiosarcomas in canines. Our role in this project focuses on the integration of data from single nucleotide polymorphism,
gene expression, and pathway modeling studies.
In addition to collaborative work, the lab has a particular interest in developing and applying computational models that use
gene expression data to identify large chromosomal abnormalities in cancer cells. In humans, each cell contains a set of
approximately 6 billion DNA bases that are packaged into 46 chromosomes. From these chromosomes, at least 20,000
different types of messenger RNAs (mRNAs) and hundreds of non-coding RNAs (ncRNAs) are produced. Structural changes
in chromosomes, such as translocations, deletions, rearrangements, and amplifications, commonly occur in cancer cells and
likely contribute to the development and progression of the disease through disruptions in RNA production. We are building
computational tools that use RNA expression to both identify chromosomal abnormalities and identify which single RNA (or
set of RNAs), when deregulated, contributes to tumor development. In recent work, these RNA-based models predicted that
high-grade papillary renal cell carcinoma contained a chromosome 8q amplification associated with overexpression of the
c-MYC gene and activation of the MYC transcriptional program. This prediction was subsequently confirmed using molecular
and cell biology experiments, highlighting the potential of gene expression profiling data for building integrative computational
models of tumor development and progression.
The use of RNA-based models has the potential to identify even more-subtle chromosomal changes, such as changes in
chromosome conformation. Examination of gene expression data derived from a subtype of renal cancer, renal oncocytoma,
revealed that the population of RNAs produced from chromosome 19 was significantly up-regulated relative to the RNAs
produced in normal kidney cells. Although no structural abnormality on chromosome 19 was identified, a more detailed
cytogenetic analysis of renal oncocytoma cells showed that the chromosome 19 homologues had become intertwined or
“paired”. The pairing was associated with the changes in the amount of mRNA produced from this chromosome. We are
currently working to determine if chromosome pairing is present in other types of tumor cells and to determine the role of the
chromosomal state in tumor development and progression.
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Recent Publications
Eisenmann, K.M., K.J. Dykema, S.F. Matheson, N.F. Kent, A.D. DeWard, R.A. West, R. Tibes, K.A. Furge, and A.S. Alberts. 2009.
5q– Myelodysplastic syndromes: chromosome 5q genes direct a tumor suppression network sensing actin dynamics.
Oncogene 28(39): 3429–3441.
Hui, Zhouguang, Maria Tretiakova, Zhongfa Zhang, Yan Li, Xiaozhen Wang, Julie Xiaohong Zhu, Yuanhong Gao, Weiyuan Mai,
Kyle Furge, Chao-Nan Qian, et al. 2009. Radiosensitization by inhibiting STAT1 in renal cell carcinoma. International Journal
of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics 73(1): 288–295.
Wang, Y., O. Roche, M.S. Yan, G. Finak, A.J. Evans, J.L. Metcalf, B.E. Hast, S.C. Hanna, B. Wondergem, K.A. Furge, et al.
2009. Regulation of endocytosis via the oxygen-sensing pathway. Nature Medicine 15(3): 319–324.
Bonte, Dorine, Charlotta Lindvall, Hongyu Liu, Karl Dykema, Kyle Furge, and Michael Weinreich. 2008. Cdc7-Dbf4 kinase
overexpression in multiple cancers and tumor cell lines is correlated with p53 inactivation. Neoplasia 10(9): 920–931.
Camparo, Philippe, Viorel Vasiliu, Vincent Molinié, Jerome Couturier, Karl J. Dykema, David Petillo, Kyle A. Furge, Eva M.
Comperat, Marick Laé, Raymonde Bouvier, et al. 2008. Renal translocation carcinomas: clinicopathologic, immunohistochemi-
cal, and gene expression profiling analysis of 31 cases with a review of the literature. American Journal of Surgical Pathology
32(5): 656–670.
Chen, Jindong, Kunihiko Futami, David Petillo, Jun Peng, PengFei Wang, Jared Knol, Yan Li, Sok Kean Khoo, Dan Huang,
Chao-Nan Qian, et al. 2008. Deficiency of FLCN in mouse kidney led to development of polycystic kidneys and renal neoplasia.
PLoS One 3(10): e3581.
Koeman, Julie M., Ryan C. Russell, Min-Han Tan, David Petillo, Michael Westphal, Katherine Koelzer, Julie L. Metcalf,
Zhongfa Zhang, Daisuke Matsuda, Karl J. Dykema, et al. 2008. Somatic pairing of chromosome 19 in renal oncocytoma is
associated with deregulated EGLN2-mediated oxygen-sensing response. PLoS Genetics 4(9): e1000176.
Kort, Eric J., Leslie Farber, Maria Tretiakova, David Petillo, Kyle A. Furge, Ximing J. Yang, Albert Cornelius, and Bin T. Teh. 2008.
The E2F3–Oncomir-1 axis is activated in Wilms’ tumor. Cancer Research 68(11): 4034–4038.
Zhang, Zhong-Fa, Daisuke Matsuda, Sok Kean Khoo, Kristen Buzzitta, Elizabeth Block, David Petillo, Stéphane Richard,
John Anema, Kyle A. Furge, and Bin T. Teh. 2008. A comparison study reveals important features of agreement and disagree-
ment between summarized DNA and RNA data obtained from renal cell carcinoma. Mutation Research 657(1): 77–83.
From left: Dykema, Furge, Klomp, Nelson
Brian B. Haab, Ph.D.Laboratory of Cancer Immunodiagnostics
Dr. Haab obtained his Ph.D. in chemistry from the University of California at Berkeley in 1998. He then served as a postdoctoral fellow in the laboratory of Patrick Brown in the Department of Biochemistry at Stanford University. Dr. Haab joined VARI as a Special Program Investigator in May 2000, became a Scientific Investigator in 2004, and was promoted to Senior Scientific Investigator in 2007.
John Buchweitz, Ph.D.Yi-Mi Wu, Ph.D.Derek Bergsma, B.S.Steven Kluck, B.S.Andrew Porter, B.S.Amy Nelson
Rob Antecki, B.S.Kim Babins, B.S.Carrie Fiebig, B.S.Lee Heeringa, B.S.Kevin Maupin, B.A.Arkadeep Sinha, B.S.
Dan HekmanChristopher MadziarRandi VanOckerTingting Yue, B.S.
David Nowack, Ph.D.
Staff Students Visiting Scientist
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Research Interests
All cells secrete molecules that are used to send signals and perform functions in the local and distant spaces of the body. The
molecular secretions of cancer cells often are significantly different from those of their normal counterparts. Our lab studies
particular proteins and carbohydrates secreted by cancer cells in order to understand their roles in cancer progression, as well
as to develop novel clinical tests for the detection and diagnosis of cancer.
Glycoprotein biomarkers for pancreatic cancer
A great need exists for better tools to detect and diagnose incipient pancreatic cancer. Our laboratory is addressing this problem
by taking advantage of a frequently observed molecular feature of pancreatic cancer, i.e., alterations to the carbohydrate side
chains of cell-surface and secreted proteins. Most secreted proteins have carbohydrates known as glycans attached to them,
and some of the secreted proteins with altered carbohydrates are released into the blood of cancer patients. The measurement
of certain secreted glycoproteins, along with their attached glycans, could form the basis of effective diagnostic markers.
A particularly valuable platform for probing glycan variants on specific proteins is the antibody-lectin sandwich array (ALSA),
developed earlier in our laboratory. The method starts with a microarray of antibodies that target various glycoproteins of
interest. A complex biological sample is incubated on the array, resulting in the capture of glycoproteins by the antibodies.
Then the array is probed with a lectin (a protein with carbohydrate-binding activity), which binds to the captured glycoproteins
that bear the lectin’s glycan target. The amount of lectin binding at each antibody indicates the amount of glycan on the
proteins captured by that antibody. Diverse lectins can be used to probe a variety of glycans on a given sample. In addition,
the captured proteins can be probed with antibodies targeting the core proteins, as in a “sandwich” immunoassay, to obtain
the levels of the proteins in parallel assays.
Relative to other technologies, the platform offers a unique combination of capabilities such as reproducible glycan measure-
ments on specific proteins, high-throughput sample processing, and high-sensitivity detection directly from biological samples.
These features make the platform ideal for glycoprotein-based biomarker studies. A product based on this technology is now
available from GenTel Biosciences (Madison, Wisconsin).
Using this tool, we can now explore the hypotheses that particular glycan structures on specific proteins are found uniquely in
certain disease states and that their measurement yields effective detection of cancer. We have characterized the prevalence
in pancreatic cancer patients of a variety of glycan structures on several types of mucin proteins. Some glycan alterations
were found in a high percentage of the cancer patients but not at all in healthy
subjects. Furthermore, the glycan levels were altered independently of
changes to the protein level, so that measuring both the glycan and protein
level gives improved biomarker performance relative to measuring only protein
levels as in standard immunoassays. The performance of these initial studies
already suggests improvement upon the best current biomarkers for pan-
creatic cancer. Now we are working to characterize and develop detection
methods for both the protein forms that carry cancer-associated glycans and
the glycans themselves.
Figure 1. Protein and glycan detection using antibody arrays. a) Array-based sandwich assays for protein detection. Multiple antibodies are immobilized on a planar support, and the captured proteins are probed using biotinylated detection antibodies, followed by fluorescence detection using phycoerythrin-labeled streptavidin. b) Antibody-lectin sandwich arrays (ALSA). This format is similar to a), but the detection reagents target the glycans on the capture proteins rather than the core proteins. The glycans on the immobilized antibodies are chemically derivatized to prevent lectin binding to those glycans. c) Example antibody array results for core protein detection (left) and glycan measurement (right). SA-PE, streptavidin-phycoerythrin.
Figure 1
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We work with clinical collaborators at several institutions to address various clinical needs. One such need is to help doctors
make a more accurate diagnosis of patients with suspected pancreatic cancer. Since pancreatic cancer can be difficult to
distinguish from benign conditions of the gastrointestinal tract, highly accurate biomarkers are needed to match patients to the
appropriate procedures at the earliest possible time. We also are developing biomarkers to screen for clinically undetectable
pancreatic cancer. Among populations at an increased risk for developing pancreatic cancer—including those suffering from
chronic pancreatitis or with a family history of pancreatic cancer—an accurate screening test could detect new cancers early
enough to allow more effective treatment. Further, we are testing our novel biomarkers for use in drug trials. Biomarkers that
give early indications of the effectiveness of a candidate drug could accelerate drug trials and better match patients with the
drugs that benefit them most.
Another novel class of biomarker we are developing is for the diagnosis of patients with pancreatic cysts. Cystic lesions of the
pancreas are increasingly being recognized due to the widespread use of high-resolution abdominal imaging. Since certain
cyst types are precursors of invasive cancer, this situation presents an opportunity to intervene prior to malignant progression.
Effective implementation of that strategy has been hampered by difficulties in clearly distinguishing cystic lesions based on
differences in their malignant potential. In collaboration with Dr. Diane Simeone at the University of Michigan, we have identified
glycan variants of secreted mucins that distinguish benign from pre-cancerous cysts with an 87% accuracy—better than the best
current markers. Ongoing work is aimed at validating and building upon these results. Ultimately, we hope to implement a test
that could be used to determine which pancreatic cysts should be surgically removed in order to prevent progression to cancer.
Origin and function of secreted glycan alterations in pancreatic cancer
Our laboratory also studies the origins and functions of cancer-cell secretions bearing altered glycans. The carbohydrate
alterations observed in pancreatic tumors are strongly associated with accelerated disease progression, but it is not known
whether these alterations functionally contribute to that progression. We have shown that certain glycoprotein alterations
are likely the product of subpopulations of tumor
cells that are more likely to be aggressive. Using
ALSA in a study of cultured pancreatic cancer
cells, we have shown that cells bearing markers
of high tumor-forming capability (termed “cancer
stem cell markers”) display distinct glycan char-
acteristics. The glycans of such cancer cells
are distinctly altered in response to inflammatory
signaling from the environment, showing the link
between secreted glycan structures and the
cellular state. Additional studies have shown
distinct glycan alterations produced when cells
transition from a stationary to a migratory state.
This transition initiates metastasis and results in
tumors at new sites. This work clearly links the
origin of particular cancer-associated glycans with
aggressive cancer cells.
Figure 2
Figure 2. Distinct changes to glycan levels associated with cell type. Cell lines were treated with various pro-inflammatory signals, including oxidative stress (H2O2) and the cytokines IFNg, TNFa, or IL-a1. The cell lines and their treatments are indicated by the column labels. Six cell lines were treated: two bearing cell-surface markers characteristic of tumorigenicity (labeled in red); two not bearing the markers (labeled in black); and two partially bearing the markers (labeled in green). Using the ALSA assay, the levels of various glycans on the mucins MUC1, MUC5AC, and MUC16 in the secretions of the cells were measured before and after treatment. The row labels indicate the lectin used for detection (which determines the glycan detected) and the capture antibody. The color of each square represents the fold-change of the signal after treatment divided by the signal before treatment. The cells bearing markers of tumorigenicity uniquely increased particular glycans, showing a difference from the other cells in their glycan characteristics.
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External Collaborators
Michelle Anderson, Philip Andrews, Dean Brenner, Irwin Goldstein, Venkat Keshamouni, Gilbert Omenn, and Diane Simeone,
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Randall Brand and Anna Lokshin, University of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
William Catalona, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois
Terry Du Clos, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque
Ziding Feng and Samir Hanash, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, Washington
Weimin Gao, Texas Tech University, Lubbock
William Hancock, Northeastern University, Boston, Massachusetts
Michael A. Hollingsworth, University of Nebraska, Omaha
Raju Kucherlapati, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts
Recent Publications
Wu, Yi-Mi, and Brian. Haab. In press. The nature and function of glycan alterations in pancreatic cancer. In Drug Discovery in
Pancreatic Cancer: Models and Techniques, Haiyong Han and Paul Grippo, eds. Springer Verlag.
Hung, K.E., V. Faca, K. Song, D. Sarracino, L.G. Richard, B. Krastins, S. Forrester, A. Porter, A. Kunin, U. Mahmood,
B.B. Haab, et al. 2009. Comprehensive proteome analysis of an Apc mouse model uncovers proteins associated with
intestinal tumorigenesis. Cancer Prevention and Research 2(3): 224–233.
Wu, Yi-Mi, D. David Novack, Gilbert S. Omenn and Brian B. Haab. 2009. Mucin glycosylation is altered by pro-inflammatory
signaling in pancreatic cancer cells. Journal of Proteome Research 8(4): 1876–1886.
Yue, Tingting, and Brian B. Haab. 2009. Microarrays in glycoproteomics research. Clinics in Laboratory Medicine
29(1): 15–29.
Chen, S., and B.B. Haab. 2008. Antibody microarrays for protein and glycan detection. In Clinical Proteomics, J. Van Eyk
and M. Dunn, eds. Weinheim, Germany: Wiley-VCH.
From left: Sinha, Antecki, Wu, Haab, Nelson, Maupin, VanOcker, Babins, Kluck, Yue
We are pursuing the hypothesis that the distinct glycans and glycoproteins secreted by aggressive or tumor-initiation cancer
cells contribute to cancer progression through interactions with cells and proteins of the tumor environment. Evidence from our
laboratory suggests that these secretions produce a higher state of inflammation and weaker immune recognition of the cancer
cells. Our goals are to characterize the glycan alterations and their protein carriers that are unique to aggressive subsets of
cancer cells and to understand the mechanisms by which these molecules affect host cells and promote tumor progression.
In addition, we are investigating new strategies for treating cancer based on these observations. Targeting the functions of the
aggressive subpopulations of cancer cells could be highly effective.
Jeffrey P. MacKeigan, Ph.D.Laboratory of Systems Biology
Dr. MacKeigan received his Ph.D. in microbiology and immunology at the University of North Carolina Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center in 2002. He then served as a postdoctoral fellow in the laboratory of John Blenis in the Department of Cell Biology at Harvard Medical School. In 2004, he joined Novartis Institutes for Biomedical Research in Cambridge, Massachusetts, as an investigator and project leader in the Molecular and Developmental Pathways expertise platform. Dr. MacKeigan joined VARI in June 2006 as a Scientific Investigator.
Brendan Looyenga, Ph.D.Amy Nelson
Megan Goodall, B.S.Jon Karnes, B.S.Michael Shaheen, B.S.Katie Sian, B.S.Laura Westrate, B.S.Natalie Wolters, B.S.Cheri AckermanJames Hogan
Bodour Salhia, Ph.D.Brad Brooks, Ph.D.
Staff Students Visiting Scientists
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Research Interests
The primary focus of the Systems Biology laboratory is identifying and understanding the genes and signaling pathways that,
when mutated, contribute to the pathophysiology of cancer. We take advantage of RNA interference (RNAi) and novel proteomic
approaches to identify the enzymes that control cell growth, proliferation, and survival. For example, after screening the human
genome for more than 600 kinases and 200 phosphatases—called the “kinome” and “phosphatome”, respectively—that act
with chemotherapeutic agents in controlling apoptosis, we identified several essential kinases and phosphatases whose roles
in cell survival were previously unrecognized. We are asking several questions. How are these survival enzymes regulated at
the molecular level? What signaling pathway(s) do they regulate? Does changing the number of enzyme molecules present
inhibit waves of compensatory changes at the cellular level (system-level changes)? What are the system-level changes after
reduction or loss of each gene?
Mitochondrial dysfunction in cancer
Mitochondria are dynamic organelles that house many crucial cellular processes. While mitochondria are best known for
producing more than 90% of cellular ATP and for releasing cytochrome c during apoptosis, they also modulate mitochondrial
dynamics and ion homeostasis, oxidize carbohydrates and fatty acids, and participate in numerous other molecular signaling
pathways. Disruption of mitochondrial function contributes to the etiology of at least fifty diseases, including cancer, underscor-
ing the importance of identifying the molecular components that regulate normal and pathological function in these organelles.
Similar to the discovery of the BCL-2
family members, which play key roles in
mitochondrial apoptosis, the discovery
of enzymes that regulate mitochondrial
function (cytochrome c release, ATP pro-
duction, and fission/fusion) will provide
critical insights into the physiology of
this organelle and how this physiology is
disrupted in cancer.
Figure 1. Mitochondrial dynamics as visualized by MitoTraker staining (red). As an outcome, mitochondrial dysfunction from a single kinase or phosphatase may have consequences that range from defects in energy metabolism to the etiology of complex diseases such as cancer. Our preliminary data with a mitochondrial kinase and two different mitochondrial phosphatases demonstrate that, when lost, the kinase decreases ATP production and drives mitochondrial fusion, while each phosphatase studied leads to an increase in ATP production. We have data that excessive or even modest increases in ATP levels may completely prevent mitochondrial-dependent apoptosis. The significance of our work is that we have identified the specific mitochondrial signaling proteins that interact in a complex with key components of the electron transport chain and also with the mitochondrial fission/fusion machinery. Related to this, we have also identified a mitochondrial-specific kinase that controls the dynamic nature of the mitochondria, specifically mitochondrial fission and fusion.
Figure 1
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Monitoring cellular signaling and autophagy
Macroautophagy is a dynamic process whereby portions of the cytosol are encapsulated in double-membrane vesicles and
delivered to a lysosome for degradation. Phosphatidylinositol-3-phosphate, or PI(3)P, is generated on the earliest autophagic
membrane (phagophore) and recruits effector proteins needed for this process. The production of PI(3)P by the class III PI3-
kinase Vps34 has been well established, but phosphatases that dephosphorylate this lipid during autophagy are unknown. To
identify such enzymes, we screened human phosphatase genes by RNA interference (RNAi) and found that loss of a specific
phosphatase in the human genome increases cellular PI(3)P and hyperactivates autophagy. This autophagic phenotype was
confirmed in knock-out MEFs when compared with wild-type counterparts. Further, we discovered that this classically defined
phosphatase harbors lipid phosphatase activity and its active site binds PI(3)P. Our findings suggest a novel role for these
enzymes in cancer and provide insight into the regulation of autophagy. Mechanistic knowledge of this process is critical for
understanding and targeting therapies for several human diseases, including Alzheimer disease and prostate cancer, in which
abnormal autophagy may be pathological.
Uncontrolled cellular survival and chemoresistance is a therapeutic problem that severely limits successful treatment of most
human cancers. This is particularly true of colorectal cancer, in which the development of resistance is common: most anti-
cancer regimens are ineffective, with the five-year survival rates for late-stage colorectal cancer being only 8%. How colorectal
cancer resistance develops is largely unknown, and the response to therapy varies based on individual patient tumors. With
this in mind, how can we prevent cancer emergence or progression at the level of individual tumors? Recent studies have
shown that a large percentage of colorectal tumors have mutations in a key gene, for class I PI3 kinase. While mutations play
an important causative role in colorectal cancer, it is currently unclear how these mutations can be exploited as drug targets
and whether we can develop targeted cancer agents based on the gene. We have ongoing projects to determine the molecular
pathways (and genes) that can be used to prevent the progression of precancerous lesions to colorectal cancer.
Parkinson disease–associated genes in cancer
Dysregulation of receptor tyrosine kinase signaling is a common oncogenic mechanism in human cancer. Abnormal activa-
tion of these receptors is associated with a loss of growth factor dependence, resulting in uncontrolled proliferation and
survival of cancer cells. The receptor tyrosine kinase MET is often genetically amplified and overexpressed in human tumors.
Because simple overexpression of MET is insufficient to mediate its activation, additional “hits” such as activating mutations
or overexpression of its ligand, hepatocyte growth factor (HGF), often accompany MET genetic amplification. In the absence
of these secondary events, it is not always clear how MET becomes activated and drives oncogenesis. We have identified a
novel mechanism for MET activation that is driven by genetic co-amplification of a second protein kinase. The identification of
alternative mechanisms that mediate MET activation in these instances is crucial for
the design of rationally targeted therapies aimed at interruption of oncogenic signaling
in cancer. This project is a collaboration with VARI’s Kyle Furge, Bin Teh, and George
Vande Woude.
Figure 2
Figure 2. Depletion of specific kinases using RNAi decreases receptor tyrosine kinase activation. Global analysis of RTK phosphorylation in kidney cancer cells demonstrates significant activation of only EGFR (black arrow) and MET (white arrow) under basal conditions.
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VARI | 2009
From left: Sian, Wolters, MacKeigan, Nelson, Looyenga, Goodall, Karnes, Westrate
External Collaborators
Dana Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, Massachusetts
McGill Cancer Center, Montreal, Canada
Michigan Medical, P.C., Grand Rapids
Michigan State University, East Lansing
Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, U.K.
Novartis Institutes for Biomedical Research, Cambridge, Massachusetts
Ontario Cancer Institute, Toronto, Canada
Spectrum Health, Grand Rapids, Michigan
St. Jude Children’s Hospital, Memphis, Tennessee
Translational Genomics Research Institute, Phoenix, Arizona
University of Virginia, Charlottesville
Recent Publications
Nicklin, Paul, Philip Bergman, Bailin Zhang, Ellen Triantafellow, Henry Wang, Beat Nyfeler, Haidi Yang, Marc Hild, Charles
Kung, Christopher Wilson, et al. 2009. Bidirectional transport of amino acids regulates mTOR and autophagy. Cell 136(3):
521–534.
Looyenga, Brendan D., Alyse M. DeHaan, and Jeffrey P. MacKeigan. 2008. PINK1 (PARK6). UCSD-Nature Molecule Pages.
June. doi:10.1038/mp.a003826.01. http://www.signaling-gateway.org/molecule/query?afcsid=A003826
Quantitative mass spectrometry: it’s all in the peaks!
Liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) is being widely used to identify, quantify, and compare hundreds, even thousands of proteins in diseased versus normal samples, with a goal of better understanding cancer systems biology and finding biomarkers that will improve clinical decision making. Shown in various colors are sections of mass spectra from LC-MS chromatograms of cachexia, metastatic, and non-metastatic disease models, demonstrating the fine detail of protein characterization that can be obtained from complex protein samples. Graphs courtesy of Greg Cavey.
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Van Andel Research Institute | Scientific Report
Cindy K. Miranti, Ph.D.Laboratory of Integrin Signaling and Tumorigenesis
Dr. Miranti received her M.S. in microbiology from Colorado State University in 1982 and her Ph.D. in biochemistry from Harvard Medical School in 1995. She was a postdoctoral fellow in the laboratory of Joan Brugge at ARIAD Pharmaceuticals, Cambridge, Massachusetts, from 1995 to 1997 and in the Department of Cell Biology at Harvard Medical School from 1997 to 2000. Dr. Miranti joined VARI as a Scientific Investigator in January 2000. She is also an Adjunct Assistant Professor in the Department of Physiology at Michigan State University and an Assistant Professor in the Van Andel Education Institute.
Electa Park, Ph.D.Kristin Saari, M.S.Lia Tesfay, M.S.Veronique Schulz, B.A.
Jelani Zarif, M.S.Laura Lamb, B.S.Susan Spotts, B.S.Erica BechtelEric GrafFraser HolleywoodGary Rajah, Jr.
Staff Students
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Research Interests
Our laboratory is interested in understanding the mechanisms by which integrin receptors, interacting with the extracellular
matrix (ECM), regulate cell processes involved in the development and progression of cancer. Using tissue culture models,
biochemistry, molecular genetics, and mouse models, we are defining the cellular and molecular events involved in integrin-
dependent adhesion and downstream signaling that are important for prostate tumorigenesis and metastasis.
Project 1: Integrin crosstalk in normal and tumor prostate epithelial cells
In the human prostate gland, a3b1 and a6b4 integrins on epithelial cells bind to the ECM protein laminin 5 in the basement
membrane. In tumor cells, however, the a3 and b4 integrin subunits disappear—as does laminin 5—and the tumor cells
express primarily a6b1 and adhere to a basement membrane containing laminin 10. There is also an increase in the expression
of the receptor tyrosine kinases EGFR and c-Met in tumor cells, and our laboratory has demonstrated that integrins cooperate
with these receptors. Two fundamental questions in our lab are whether the changes in integrin and matrix interactions that
occur in tumor cells are required for or help to drive the survival of tumor cells, and whether integrin cooperation with EGFR or
c-Met is important for that cell survival.
Integrins and RTKs in prostate epithelial cell survival
By interacting with the ECM, integrins stimulate intracellular signaling transduction pathways that regulate cell shape, prolifera-
tion, migration, survival, gene expression, and differentiation. Integrins do not act autonomously, but “crosstalk” or cooperate
with receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs) to regulate many of these cellular processes. Published studies from our lab indicate
that integrin-mediated adhesion to ECM proteins activates the epidermal growth factor receptors EGFR/ErbB2 and the HGF/
SF receptor c-Met. We have shown that integrin-mediated activation of these receptors is ligand-independent and is required
for integrin-mediated cell survival of prostate epithelial cells. However, the mechanisms by which the RTKs cooperate with
integrins to regulate survival are different.
The ability of EGFR to support integrin-mediated cell survival of normal primary prostate epithelial cells (PECs) on their
endogenous matrix, laminin 5, is mediated through a3b1 integrin and requires signaling downstream to Erk. Disruption of
this pathway leads to a caspase-independent mechanism of cell death resembling senescence/differentiation. On the other
hand, loss of c-Met results in classic apoptotic cell death. Surprisingly, we found that c-Met regulates integrin-mediated
survival by stabilizing a3b1 integrin expression and that regulation of integrin expression by c-Met occurs independently
of its kinase activity. We are mapping the domains on c-Met that are required to rescue a3b1 integrin expression. The
hypothesis being tested involves a potential scaffolding function of c-Met in suppressing the function of a cell surface death
receptor called Fas and preventing the loss of a3b1 integrin and induction of death.
Integrin control of the autophagy survival pathway
During these studies, we also discovered that growth factor–deprived PECs adherent to laminin 5 robustly activate the autophagy
survival pathway. Disruption of this pathway leads to apoptotic cell death, and a3b1 integrin is required for efficient autophagy
induction. Because loss of c-Met reduces a3b1 integrin expression, autophagy induction is blocked in c-Met-inhibited cells.
Preliminary data suggest that a3b1 integrin regulates the assembly of autophagosomes. Future work will be focused on
identifying which molecules in the autophagy pathway are controlled by integrins. Our hypothesis is that under starvation
conditions, integrins regulate the assembly of a FAK/FIP200 complex that controls autophagy.
It is quite controversial as to whether inhibition or augmentation of autophagy is required for tumorigenesis and metastasis.
Interestingly, immortalization of PECs or fibroblasts completely blocks the ability of autophagy-inducing stimuli to induce
autophagy. In PECs immortalized by HPV E6/E7, we discovered a dramatic increase in PI-3K activity, which is known to inhibit
autophagy via activation of mTor. However, blocking this pathway failed to restore the autophagic response. E7 is known to
inhibit PP2A, and PP2A is required for autophagy induction in yeast downstream of mTor, but its role in mammalian cells has
not been investigated. We will be following this line of investigation in both the virally immortalized PECs and in spontaneously
immortalized cells. Ultimately, the effect of introducing prostate-specific oncogenes into PECs on the autophagy response will
be analyzed.
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Project 2: Integrin and AR relationships in prostate cancer
All primary and metastatic prostate cancers express the androgen receptor (AR), and in late-stage disease it is often amplified
or mutated. In the normal gland, the AR-expressing epithelial cells do not interact with the ECM in the basement membrane;
however, all AR-expressing tumor cells do have such interactions. In normal cells, AR expression suppresses growth and
promotes differentiation, but in tumor cells AR expression promotes cell growth and is required for cell survival. The mecha-
nisms that lead to the change from growth inhibition and differentiation to growth promotion and survival are unknown. Our
hypothesis is that adhesion to the ECM by the tumor cells is responsible for driving the change in AR function by initiating
crosstalk between AR and integrins.
AR and integrin-mediated survival signaling in prostate tumor cells
Adhesion of PC3 metastatic prostate cancer cells to laminin and treatment with PI-3K inhibitors induces cell death. However,
we found that reexpression of AR prevented that cell death in an androgen-independent manner. We have determined that
AR expression results in increased expression of a6b1 integrin, the receptor for laminin. In addition, there is an increase in
Bcl-xL levels. The increase in Bcl-xL is dependent on a6 integrin, and both integrin and Bcl-xL are dependent on AR. Thus,
AR-expressing tumor cells are likely to survive better when they remain adherent to the laminin-rich ECM that is present in the
prostate gland. Survival under these conditions appears to depend on the ability of AR to enhance expression of the laminin
receptor, a6b1 integrin, which in turn stimulates Bcl-xL expression. These findings have broad implications for therapies
specifically targeting the PI-3K pathway, in that AR-expressing cells may harbor an alternative survival pathway via integrins.
We are currently determining how AR regulates the expression of a6 integrin and whether the transcriptional function of AR is
required for the survival phenotype.
AR-expressing cells also have elevated Src activity. Loss of Src did not impact cell survival, but these cells display increased
cell adhesion, spreading, and migration. Future studies will be aimed at determining if these cells are also more aggressive in
our in vivo metastasis models and if AR is responsible for controlling this. The survival signaling pathways observed in vitro will
also be tested in our metastasis animal models.
AR and integrin crosstalk in primary prostate epithelial cells
Our ability to understand AR function in tumor cells relative to normal cells is hampered by the lack of a cell culture model in
which normal cells naturally express AR. We sought to solve this problem by identifying the conditions necessary to induce
the differentiation of normal human prostate basal epithelial cells (which do not express AR) into secretory AR-expressing
cells. Combined treatment of confluent monolayers of human basal prostate epithelial cells with KGF and DHT stimulates the
production of a second layer of cells, analogous to a stratified epithelium. The upper-layer cells express epithelial differentiation
markers, AR, and AR-regulated genes, but no longer express integrins or basal cell markers. The upper secretory cell layer can
easily be dissociated from the bottom basal cell layer and analyzed biochemically. Because integrins are no longer expressed
in the secretory cells (as seen in vivo), we sought to determine how these cells survive. We found a dramatic increase in
E-cadherin expression in the differentiated cells. The secretory AR-positive cells no longer rely on integrin or integrin-activated
signaling pathways such as EGFR/c-Met/Erk; they now depend on E-cadherin and PI-3K signaling for their survival. Also, as
has been demonstrated in in vivo models, these cells do not need androgen or AR for survival.
Now that we have established a working differentiation model, we are poised to manipulate the cells by systematic introduction
of oncogenic mutations known to be associated with the development of prostate cancer. As proof of concept, we are also
capable of inducing the differentiation response in our immortalized PECs. Our hypothesis is that activation of oncogenes
during differentiation will cause a dependence on AR for survival, which will elevate a6b1 integrin.
Thus we have established two different models for studying AR in prostate cells. In both models the expression of AR has a
major impact on integrin expression and function, indicating there is significant “crosstalk” between integrins and AR.
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Van Andel Research Institute | Scientific Report
From left: Miranti, Schulz, Spotts, Lamb, Saari, Tesfay, Park, Zarif
Recent Publications
Miranti, C.K. 2009. Controlling cell surface dynamics and signaling: how CD82/KAI1 suppresses metastasis. Cellular Signalling
21(2): 196–211.
Project 3: Role of CD82 in prostate cancer metastasis
Death from prostate cancer is due to the development of metastatic disease, which is difficult to control. CD82/KAI1 is a
metastasis suppressor gene whose expression is specifically lost in metastatic cancer, but not in primary tumors. Interestingly,
CD82/KAI1 (a member of the tetraspanin family) is known to associate with both integrins and receptor tyrosine kinases. Our
goal has been to determine how loss of CD82/KAI1 expression promotes metastasis by studying the role of CD82/KAI1 in
integrin and receptor tyrosine kinase crosstalk.
Mechanism of CD82 suppression of c-Met
We have found that reexpression of CD82/KAI1 in metastatic tumor cells suppresses laminin-specific migration and invasion
via suppression of both integrin- and ligand-induced activation of c-Met. Thus, CD82/KAI1 normally acts to regulate signaling
through c-Met; upon CD82 loss in tumor cells, signaling through c-Met is increased, leading to increased invasion. We
are currently determining the mechanism by which CD82/KAI1 down-regulates c-Met signaling. So far our studies indicate
that c-Met and CD82 do not directly interact, and CD82 may act to suppress c-Met signaling indirectly by dispersing the
c-Met aggregates on metastatic tumor cells into monomers, thus blocking signaling. We have generated mutants of CD82 to
determine which part of the CD82 molecule is required for suppression of c-Met activity. In addition, we have determined that
reexpression of CD82 in tumor cells induces a physical association between CD82 and a related family member, CD9. Loss
of CD9 prevents CD82 from suppressing c-Met. We are currently determining whether CD82/CD9 association with integrins
is required to suppress c-Met.
CD82 control of metastasis and c-Met activation in vivo
We have initiated several mouse studies to determine the mechanism by which loss of CD82 promotes metastasis in vivo. The
ability of DU145 prostate cancer cells to metastasize depends on activation of c-Met. Using transgenic SCID mice that express
the human version of HGF (only human HGF will activate human c-Met), we have been able to demonstrate that DU145 tumor
cells will metastasize only in the HGF/SCID mice, but not in regular SCID mice. Under these conditions, reexpression of CD82
completely suppresses metastasis and there is a dramatic reduction in c-Met activity in the tumors. Mutants that no longer
suppress c-Met activity in vitro will be used to demonstrate that they are also no longer capable of suppressing metastasis in
the HGF/SCID mice.
In addition, we have generated mice with conditional loss of CD82 expression in the prostate, as well as mice with complete
CD82 loss in all tissues. These mice have been crossed with mice that develop only primary tumors (Pten conditional) in order
to determine if the loss of CD82 is sufficient to induce prostate cancer metastasis. The mice are currently aging and being
monitored for the development of tumors and metastases. Future studies will include back-crossing to alternative backgrounds
and crossings with other tumor-prone mice.
James H. Resau, Ph.D.Division of Quantitative Sciences
Laboratory of Analytical, Cellular, and Molecular Microscopy Laboratory of Microarray Technology
Laboratory of Molecular Epidemiology
Dr. Resau received his Ph.D. from the University of Maryland School of Medicine in 1985. He has been involved in clinical and basic science imaging and pathology-related research since 1972. Between 1968 and 1994, he was in the U.S. Army (active duty and reserve assignments) and served in Vietnam. From 1985 until 1992, Dr. Resau was a tenured faculty member at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, Department of Pathology. Dr. Resau was the Director of the Analytical, Cellular and Molecular Microscopy Laboratory in the Advanced BioScience Laboratories–Basic Research Program at the National Cancer Institute, Frederick Cancer Research and Development Center, Maryland, from 1992 to 1999. He joined VARI as a Special Program Senior Scientific Investigator in June 1999 and in 2003 was promoted to Deputy Director. In 2004, Dr. Resau assumed as well the direction of the Laboratory of Microarray Technology to consolidate the imaging and quantification of clinical samples in a CLIA-type research laboratory program. In 2005, Dr. Resau was made the Division Director of the quantitative laboratories (pathology-histology, microarray, proteomics, epidemiology, and bioinformatics), and in 2006 he was promoted to Distinguished Scientific Investigator.
Eric Kort, M.D.Sok Kean Khoo, Ph.D.Brendan Looyenga, Ph.D.Bree Berghuis, B.S., HTL (ASCP), QIHCEric Hudson, B.S.Angie Jason, B.S.Natalie Kent, B.S.Ken Olinger, B.S.Kristin VandenBeldt, B.S.JC Goolsby, A.A.
Danielle Burgenske, B.S.Kevin Coalter, B.S.Pete Haak, B.S.Kimberly Paquette, B.S.Sarah BarneyJanell CarruthersKatsuo HisanoRebecca O’LearySara RamirezAllison Vander PloegKatie Van Drunen
StudentsStaffYair Andegeko
Visiting Scientist
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Research Interests
The Division of Quantitative Sciences includes the laboratories of Analytical, Cellular, and Molecular Microscopy (ACMM),
Microarray Technology, Computational Biology, Molecular Epidemiology, and Mass Spectrometry and Proteomics. The Divi-
sion’s laboratories use objective measures to define pathophysiologic events and processes.
The ACMM laboratory prepares samples by either paraffin or frozen methods and has programs in pathology, histology, and
imaging to describe and visualize changes in cell, tissue, or organ structure. Our imaging instruments allow us to visualize
cells and their components with striking clarity, and they enable researchers to determine where in a cell particular molecules
are located. An archive of pathology tissues in paraffin blocks (Van Andel Tissue Repository, or VATR) is being accumulated
with the cooperation of local hospitals. The archive currently has approximately 250,000 paraffin blocks representing 150,000
cases. In collaboration with Tom Barney from VAI-IT, clinical data is being added into VATR for hundreds of the samples each
week by digital parsing of pathology report texts sent electronically from the hospital files. VATR is used to track samples
coming from the hospitals, along with all of the data and images generated from research. Images from the Aperio ScanScope
are automatically imported into VATR and associated with the appropriate sample. The ACMM lab also carries out research
that will improve our ability to quantify images. We are able to image using either fluorescent (e.g., FITC, GFP) or chromatic
agents (e.g., DAB, H&E) and separate the components using our confocal, Nuance, or Maestro instruments.
The Laboratory of Microarray Technology provides gene expression arrays, miRNA arrays, and array CGH using the Agilent
microarray platform and cDNA platform capability. Samples can be prepared from a variety of species. Genomic DNA or total
RNA from a wide range of tissues including blood and fresh or frozen tissues have been analyzed. A recent gene expression
discovery was made using archived newborn blood spots, in collaboration with Dr. Nigel Paneth at MSU. We showed that
thousands of gene signatures can be obtained using low-resolution gene expression arrays, enabling clinical research into
the origins, epidemiology, and diagnosis of human pediatric diseases. Feature extraction software reads and processes the
raw microarray image files in an automated mode. Application-specific QC reports summarize the results and provide an
accurate quality assessment. The output files are compatible with statistical analysis packages such as R and GeneSpring.
Microarray technology plays an important part in the discovery of genetic signatures, copy number variations, and biomarkers
for therapeutic purposes.
Hauenstein Parkinson’s Center
Throughout 2008 we continued our collaboration with the Hauenstein Parkinson’s Center, collecting blood samples and control
samples from 216 individuals. Mutations/polymorphisms in the NR4A2 gene are being studied by DNA sequence analysis,
motivated by our previous identification of this gene in a genomic screen for neuroprotective factors. We are particularly
interested in polymorphisms in the DNA-binding domain of NR4A2, as changes to this region of the gene are most likely to
affect its function.
Identification of novel Parkinson-modifying genes with siRNA screening
Small interfering RNA (siRNA) technology allows the specific knockdown of any mRNA/protein pair. Under the direction of
VARI’s Jeff MacKeigan, postdoctoral fellow Brendan Looyenga has begun to use a subset of the siRNA library developed by
Qiagen to individually target several classes of enzymes having pharmaceutical potential. Specifically, we are continuing a
project to identify molecules that attenuate oxidative stress–induced toxicity in dopaminergic neurons; our initial focus is on
phosphatases and kinases. We are validating the initial screening studies and we hope to extend these studies to include
nuclear hormone receptors and G protein–coupled receptors.
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Mouse models of Parkinson disease
James Resau and Brendan Looyenga, in collaboration with VARI’s Bart Williams, are generating novel rodent models of dop-
aminergic cell loss in the brain using the DAT-cre mouse line, which specifically expresses the cre recombinase in dopaminergic
neurons of the brain. Projects based on the DAT-cre mouse model include the following.
• Imaging and isolation of primary dopaminergic neurons from mouse brain. Brendan Looyenga is continuing a
project to generate mice that specifically express the LacZ reporter gene in dopaminergic neurons. With these
mice we will assess the effect of cytotoxic agents (e.g., MMTP, rotenone, or 6-hydroxydopamine) on the number
of dopaminergic cells, and more importantly, assess the ability of mice to recover from these insults. The DAT-cre/
ROSA26 mice will also provide a source of highly pure dopaminergic neurons for in vitro studies.
• Functional roles of the phosphatase PTEN in dopaminergic neurons. The phosphatase PTEN is a crucial signaling
node in mammalian cells. PTEN catalyzes the removal of 3´ phosphates from phosphoinositol (PI), effectively
antagonizing the activity of PI3-kinase. Loss of PTEN results in constitutively elevated levels of the phospholipids
PI(3,4)P2 and PI(3,4,5)P3, which strongly activate downstream effectors including AKT/PKB and mTOR. Hyperac-
tive AKT is traditionally associated with cell survival and proliferation, while hyperactivation of mTOR is associated
with cellular hypertrophy. Interestingly, these two effects often occur in mutually exclusive fashion depending on
the status of the cell in which PTEN is deleted. Terminally differentiated cells usually display hypertrophy, and they
rarely reenter the cell cycle upon PTEN deletion.
To confirm that the DAT-cre mice only express the cre recombinase in terminally differentiated cells, we have crossed them
to mice bearing a conditional knock-out allele for PTEN (PTENloxP). As expected, dopaminergic neurons in DAT-cre/PTENloxP
mice demonstrate constitutive activation of AKT and mTOR; however, they fail to develop neuronal tumors, suggesting that the
loss of PTEN in dopaminergic neurons does not induce hyperproliferation. These cells do appear larger, consistent with the
induction of hypertrophy. We are currently quantifying these observations for publication.
We are also using the DAT-cre/PTENloxP mice to elucidate the connection between PTEN and mitochondrial function. This
connection is based on the ability of PTEN to increase expression of the familial Parkinson gene, PINK1, in cultured tumor cells.
Several studies have shown that PINK1 plays a crucial role in the maintenance of mitochondrial fission/fusion homeostasis,
implying that PTEN indirectly regulates mitochondrial function by controlling cellular PINK1 levels. To determine whether PTEN
regulates PINK1 and mitochondrial function in normal cells, we are analyzing PINK1 expression levels and mitochondrial
function in the dopaminergic neurons of DAT-cre/PTENloxP mice. We hypothesize that loss of PTEN in these cells will result
in decreased PINK1 expression, imbalances in mitochondrial fission/fusion, and increased oxidative stress. Studies in brain
tissues and cultured primary neurons are ongoing.
Other highlights
Our GRAPCEP mentorship program continues for the ninth year and is now funded by Schering Plough. In 2008 we had two
students from GRAPCEP, several undergraduate summer interns, and a graduate school student rotation.
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Recent Publications
Knudsen, Beatrice S., Ping Zhao, James Resau, Sandra Cottingham, Ermanno Gherardi, Eric Xu, Bree Berghuis, Jennifer
Daugherty, Tessa Grabinski, Jose Toro, et al. 2009. A novel multipurpose monoclonal antibody for evaluating human c-Met
expression in preclinical and clinical settings. Applied Immunohistochemistry and Molecular Morphology 17(1): 56–67.
Kort, Eric, Paul Norton, Peter Haak, Bree Berghuis, Sara Ramirez, and James Resau. 2009. Gene expression profiling
in veterinary and human medicine: overview of applications and proposed quality control practices. Veterinary Pathology,
46(4): 598–603.
Golan, Maya, Amnon Hizi, James H. Resau, Neora Yaal-Hahoshen, Hadar Reichman, Iafa Keydar, and Ilan Tsarfaty.
2008. Human endogenous retrovirus (HERV-K) reverse transcriptase as a breast cancer prognostic marker. Neoplasia
10(6): 521–533.
Haak, Peterson T., Julia V. Busik, Eric J. Kort, Maria Tikhonenko, Nigel Paneth, and James H. Resau. 2008. Archived unfrozen
neonatal blood spots are amenable to quantitative gene expression analysis. Neonatology 95(3): 210–216.
Lindemann, Kristina, Nadia Harbeck, Ernst Lengyel, and James H. Resau. 2008. A special key for unlocking the door to
targeted therapies of breast cancer. The Scientific World Journal 8: 905–908.
Xie, Qian, Ryan Thompson, Kim Hardy, Lisa DeCamp, Bree Berghuis, Robert Sigler, Beatrice Knudsen, Sandra Cottingham,
Ping Zhao, Karl Dykema, et al. 2008. A highly invasive human glioblastoma pre-clinical model for testing therapeutics.
Journal of Translational Medicine 6: 77.
From left: Resau, Kort, Haak, Goolsby, Khoo, Jason, Kent, VandenBeldt, Paquette, Hudson, Carruthers, Ramirez, Berghuis
Pamela J. Swiatek, Ph.D., M.B.A.Laboratory of Germline Modification and Cytogenetics
Dr. Swiatek received her M.S. (1984) and Ph.D. (1988) degrees in pathology from Indiana University. From 1988 to 1990, she was a postdoctoral fellow at the Tampa Bay Research Institute. From 1990 to 1994, she was a postdoctoral fellow at the Roche Institute of Molecular Biology in the laboratory of Tom Gridley. From 1994 to 2000, Dr. Swiatek was a research scientist and Director of the Transgenic Core Facility at the Wadsworth Center in Albany, N.Y., and an Assistant Professor in the Department of Biomedical Sciences at the State University of New York at Albany. She joined VARI as a Special Program Investigator in August 2000. She was the chair of the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee from 2002 to 2008, and she is an Adjunct Assistant Professor in the College of Veterinary Medicine at Michigan State University. Dr. Swiatek received her M.B.A. in 2005 from Krannert School of Management at Purdue University, and in 2006 she was promoted to Senior Scientific Investigator.
Sok Kean Khoo, Ph.D.Kellie Sisson, B.S.Laura Mowry, B.S.Julie Koeman, B.S., CLSp(CG)Diana Lewis
Juraj Zahatnansky, B.S.
Staff Student
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Research Interests
The Germline Modification and Cytogenetics lab is a full-service lab that functions at the levels of service, research, and
teaching to develop, analyze, and maintain mouse models of human disease. Our lab applies a business philosophy to core
service offerings for both the VARI community and external entities. Our mission is to support mouse model and cytogenetics
research with scientific innovation, customer satisfaction, and service excellence.
Gene targeting
Mouse models are produced using gene-targeting technology, a well-established, powerful method for inserting specific
genetic changes into the mouse genome. The resulting mice can be used to study the effects of these changes in the complex
biological environment of a living organism. The genetic changes can include the introduction of a gene into a specific site in
the genome (gene “knock-in”) or the inactivation of a gene already in the genome (gene “knock-out”). Since these mutations
are introduced into the reproductive cells known as the germline, they can be used to study the developmental aspects of gene
function associated with inherited genetic diseases.
The germline modification lab can also produce mouse models in which the gene of interest is inactivated in a target organ
or cell line instead of in the entire animal. These models, known as conditional knock-outs, are particularly useful in studying
genes that, if missing, cause the mouse to die as an embryo. The lab can produce mutant embryos that have a wild-type
placenta using tetraploid embryo technology, which is useful when the gene-targeted mutation prevents implantation of the
mouse embryo in the uterus. We also assist in the development of embryonic stem (ES) or fibroblast cell lines from mutant
embryos, to allow for in vitro studies of the gene mutation.
Our gene-targeting service encompasses three major procedures: DNA electroporation, clone expansion and cryopreserva-
tion, and microinjection. Gene targeting is initiated by mutating the genomic DNA of interest and inserting it into ES cells via
electroporation. The mutated gene integrates into the genome and, by a process called homologous recombination, replaces
one of the two wild-type copies of the gene in the ES cells. Clones are identified, isolated, and cryopreserved, and genomic
DNA is extracted from each clone and delivered to the client for analysis. Correctly targeted ES cell clones are thawed,
established into tissue culture, and cryopreserved in liquid nitrogen. Gene-targeting mutations are introduced by microinjection
of the pluripotent ES cell clones into 3.5-day-old mouse embryos (blastocysts). These embryos, containing a mixture of
wild-type and mutant ES cells, develop into mice called chimeras. The offspring of chimeras that inherit the mutated gene are
heterozygotes possessing one copy of the mutated gene. The heterozygous mice are bred together to produce “knock-out
mice” that completely lack the normal gene and have two copies of the mutant gene.
Embryo/sperm cryopreservation
We provide cryopreservation services for archiving and reconstituting valuable mouse strains. These cost-effective procedures
decrease the need to continuously breed valuable mouse models, and they provide added insurance against the loss of custom
mouse lines due to disease outbreak or a catastrophic event. Mouse embryos at various stages of development, as well as
mouse sperm, can be cryopreserved and stored in liquid nitrogen; they can be thawed and used, respectively, by implantation
into the oviducts of recipient mice or by in vitro fertilization of oocytes.
VARI | 2009
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Cytogenetics
Our lab also directs the VARI cytogenetics core, which uses advanced molecular techniques to identify structural and numerical
chromosomal aberrations in mouse, rat, and human cells. Tumor, fibroblast, blood, or ES cells can be grown in tissue culture,
growth-arrested, fixed, and spread onto glass slides. Karyotyping of chromosomes using Leishman- or Giemsa-stained
(G-banded) chromosomes is our basic service; spectral karyotyping (SKY) analysis of metaphase chromosome spreads in 24
colors can aid in detecting subtle and complex chromosomal rearrangements. Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) analysis,
using indirectly or directly labeled bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) or plasmid probes, can also be performed on metaphase
spreads or on interphase nuclei derived from tissue touch preps or nondividing cells. Sequential staining of identical metaphase
spreads using FISH and SKY can help identify the integration site of a randomly integrated transgene. Recently, FISH has been
widely used to validate microarray data by confirming amplification/gain or deletion/loss of chromosomal regions of interest.
Speed congenics
Congenic mouse strain development traditionally involves a series of backcrosses, transferring a targeted mutation or genetic
region of interest from a mixed genetic donor background to a defined genetic recipient background (usually an inbred strain).
This process requires about ten generations (2.5 to 3 years) to attain 99.9% of the recipient’s genome. Since congenic mice
have a more defined genetic background, phenotypic characteristics are less variable and the effects of modifier genes can be
more pronounced.
Speed congenics, also called marker-assisted breeding, uses DNA markers in a progressive breeding selection to accelerate
the congenic process. For high-throughput genotyping, we use the state-of-the-art Sentrix BeadChip technology from Illumina,
which contains 1,449 mouse single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). These SNPs are strain-specific and cover the 10 most
commonly used inbred mouse strains for optimal marker selection. The client provides the genomic DNA of male mice from
the second, third, and fourth backcross generations for genotyping. The males having the highest percentage of the recipient’s
genome from each generation are identified, and these mice are bred by the client. Using speed congenics, 99.9% of congenic-
ity can be achieved in five generations (about 1.5 years).
Recent Publications
Graveel, C.R., J.D. DeGroot, Y. Su, J.M. Koeman, K. Dykema, S. Leung, J. Snider, S.R. Davies, P.J. Swiatek, S. Cottingham,
et al. 2009. Met induces diverse breast carcinomas in mice and is associated with human basal breast cancer. Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences U.S.A. 106(31): 12909–12914.
From left: Swiatek, Sisson, Mowry, Lewis, Koeman
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Van Andel Research Institute | Scientific Report
Astrocytes in mouse retina
An epifluorescent image of a mouse retina at postnatal day 7, showing astrocytes stained green with glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP, which measures activated glial cells) and endothelial blood vessel cells stained red with GSA lectin. The image shows the intricate guidance pattern between the astrocytes and the vasculature in the superficial layer of the retina. Red dots are sprouting blood vessels seen in cross section as they penetrate to other retinal layers. Original magnification, 400×. Photo by Jennifer Bromberg-White of the Duesbery lab.
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VARI | 2009
Bin T. Teh, M.D., Ph.D.Laboratory of Cancer Genetics
Dr. Teh obtained his M.D. from the University of Queensland, Australia, in 1992, and his Ph.D. from the Karolinska Institute, Sweden, in 1997. Before joining the Van Andel Research Institute, he was an Associate Professor of Medical Genetics at the Karolinska Institute. Dr. Teh joined VARI as a Senior Scientific Investigator in January 2000. His research mainly focuses on kidney cancer, and he is currently on the Medical Advisory Board of the Kidney Cancer Association. Dr. Teh was promoted to Distinguished Scientific Investigator in 2005.
Eric Kort, M.D.Jindong Chen, Ph.D.Yan Ding, Ph.D.Vanessa Fogg, Ph.D.Dan Huang, Ph.D.Aikseng Ooi, Ph.D.David Petillo, Ph.D.
StaffZhongfa (Jacob) Zhang, Ph.D.Mario Lucia, B.S.Sabrina Noyes, B.S.Doug Roossien Jr., B.S.Bill Wondergem, B.S.
Mike AvalloneKristin BuzzittaJim FitzgeraldJohn Snider
Students
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Van Andel Research Institute | Scientific Report
Research Interests
Kidney cancer, or renal cell carcinoma (RCC), is the tenth most common cancer in the United States (51,000 new cases and
more than 13,000 deaths a year). Its incidence has been increasing, a phenomenon that cannot be accounted for by the wider
use of imaging procedures. We have established a comprehensive and integrated kidney research program, and our major
research goals are 1) to identify the molecular signatures of different subtypes of kidney tumors, both hereditary and sporadic,
and to understand how genes function and interact in giving rise to the tumors and their progression; 2) to identify and develop
diagnostic and prognostic biomarkers for kidney cancer; 3) to identify and study novel and established molecular drug targets
and their sensitivity and resistance; and 4) to develop animal models for drug testing and preclinical bioimaging.
Our program to date has established a worldwide network of collaborators; a tissue bank containing fresh-frozen tumor pairs
(over 1,500 cases) and serum; and a gene expression profiling database of 700 tumors, with long-term clinical follow-up
information for half of them. Our program includes molecular subclassification using microarray gene expression profiling and
bioinformatic analysis, generation of RCC mouse models, and more recently, molecular therapeutic studies.
RCC genomics
We have been using high-density single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) arrays to genotype RCC samples, and by combing
this data and the gene expression data (see below), we have identified candidate chromosomal regions and genes that are
involved in different subsets of tumors.
Gene expression profiling and bioinformatics
To date, we have studied over 600 RCC specimens. We are currently focusing on analysis and data mining. Clinically, we
continue to subclassify the tumors by correlation with clinicopathological information, including rarer forms of RCC such as
translation-related papillary RCC, mixed epithelial and stromal tumors, and adult Wilms. We are also in the process of trying to
understand the underlying molecular signatures of some of the so-called unclassified group of tumors for which the histological
diagnosis is “unknown”. Our database has proven to be very useful in RCC research, since we can obtain differential expres-
sion data for any gene in seconds.
Mouse models of kidney cancer and molecular therapeutic studies
We have generated several kidney-specific conditional knock-outs including BHD, PTEN, and VHL. The first two knock-outs
give rise to renal cysts and tumors including urothelial cancer of the renal pelvis, whereas the VHL knock-out remains neoplasia-
free; double knock-outs are also being studied. We have successfully generated nine xenograft RCC models via subcapsular
injection that have characteristic clinical features and outcomes. Tumors and serum have been harvested for a baseline data
set. We are currently performing in vitro and in vivo studies on several new drugs for kidney cancer.
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VARI | 2009
Targeted therapeutic studies
We have focused on several targets we identified using gene expression profiling studies. In vitro and in vivo studies are being
performed to verify these targets and their role in therapeutics. These include cell-cycle, proliferation, and migration assays
to assess the cellular effects of these genes. In vivo studies are performed to understand the involvement of blood vessels in
drug response.
External Collaborators
We have extensive collaborations with researchers and clinicians in the United States and overseas.
Recent Publications
Furge, K., and B.T. Teh. In press. Genetics of sporadic renal cell carcinoma. In Renal Cell Carcinoma, B.I. Rini and
S.C. Campbell, eds. Clinical Oncology series, BC Decker Inc.
Van Haaften, G., G.L. Dalgliesh, H. Davies, G. Bigness, C. Greenman, S. Edkins, C. Hardy, S. O’Meara, L. Chen, J. Teague,
et al. In press. Somatic mutations of the histone H3K27 demethylase, UTX, in human cancer. Nature Genetics.
Howell, Viive M., Anthony Gill, Adele Clarkson, Anne E. Nelson, Robert Dunne, Leigh W. Delbridge, Bruce G. Robinson,
Bin T. Teh, Oliver Gimm, and Deborah J. Marsh. 2009. Accuracy of combined protein gene product 9.5 and parafibro-
min markers for immunohistochemical diagnosis of parathyroid carcinoma. Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism
94(2): 434–441.
Hui, Zhouguang, Maria Tretiakova, Zhongfa Zhang, Yan Li, Xiaozhen Wang, Julie Xiaohong Zhu, Yuanhong Gao, Weiyuan Mai,
Kyle Furge, Chao-Nan Qian, et al. 2009. Radiosensitization by inhibiting STAT1 in renal cell carcinoma. International Journal
of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics 73(1): 288–295.
Macher-Goeppinger, Stephan, Sebastian Aulmann, Katrin E. Tagscherer, Nina Wagener, Axel Haferkamp, Roland Penzel,
Antje Brauckhoff, Markus Hohenfellner, Jaromir Sykora, Henning Walczak, et al. 2009. Prognostic value of tumor
necrosis factor–related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) and TRAIL receptors in renal cell cancer. Clinical Cancer Research
15(2): 650–659.
Wang, Y., O. Roche, M.S. Yan, G. Finak, A.J. Evans, J.L. Metcalf, B.E. Hast, S.C. Hanna, B. Wondergem, K.A. Furge, et al.
2009. Regulation of endocytosis via the oxygen-sensing pathway. Nature Medicine 15(3): 319–324.
Zhou, Ming, Eric Kort, Philip Hoekstra, Michael Westphal, Cristina Magi-Galluzzi, Linda Sercia, Brian Lane, Brian Rini,
Ronald Bukowski, and Bin T. Teh. 2009. Adult cystic nephroma and mixed epithelial and stromal tumor of the kidney are
the same disease entity: molecular and histological evidence. American Journal of Surgical Pathology 33(1): 72–80.
Camparo, Philippe, Viorel Vasiliu, Vincent Molinié, Jerome Couturier, Karl J. Dykema, David Petillo, Kyle A. Furge,
Eva M. Comperat, Marick Laé, Raymonde Bouvier, et al. 2008. Renal translocation carcinomas: clinicopathologic, immuno-
histochemical, and gene expression profiling analysis of 31 cases with a review of the literature. American Journal of Surgical
Pathology 32(5): 656–670.
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Van Andel Research Institute | Scientific Report
Chen, Jindong, Kunihiko Futami, David Petillo, Jun Peng, PengFei Wang, Jared Knol, Yan Li, Sok Kean Khoo, Dan Huang,
Chao-Nan Qian, et al. 2008. Deficiency of FLCN in mouse kidney led to development of polycystic kidneys and renal neoplasia.
PLoS One 3(10): e3581.
Farber, Leslie, and Bin Tean Teh. 2008. CDC73 (cell division cycle 73, Paf1/RNA polymerase II complex
component, homolog (S. cerevisiae)). Atlas of Genetics and Cytogenetics in Oncology and Haematology. February.
http://AtlasGeneticsOncology.org/Genes/CDC73D181ch1q31.html.
Koeman, Julie M., Ryan C. Russell, Min-Han Tan, David Petillo, Michael Westphal, Katherine Koelzer, Julie L. Metcalf,
Zhongfa Zhang, Daisuke Matsuda, Karl J. Dykema, et al. 2008. Somatic pairing of chromosome 19 in renal oncocytoma is
associated with deregulated EGLN2-mediated oxygen-sensing response. PLoS Genetics 4(9): e1000176.
Kort, Eric J., Leslie Farber, Maria Tretiakova, David Petillo, Kyle A. Furge, Ximing J. Yang, Albert Cornelius, and Bin T. Teh. 2008.
The E2F3–Oncomir-1 axis is activated in Wilms’ tumor. Cancer Research 68(11): 4034–4038.
Matsuda, Daisuke, Sok Kean Khoo, Aaron Massie, Masatsugu Iwamura, Jindong Chen, David Petillo, Bill Wondergem,
Michael Avallone, Stephanie J. Kloostra, Min-Han Tan, et al. 2008. Identification of copy number alterations and its association
with pathological features in clear cell and papillary RCC. Cancer Letters 272(2): 260–267.
Sarquis, Marta S., Leticia G. Silveira, Flavio J. Pimenta, Eduardo P. Dias, Bin T. Teh, Eitan Friedman, Ricardo S. Gomez,
Gabriela C. Tavares, Charis Eng, and Luiz De Marco. 2008. Familial hyperparathyroidism: surgical outcome after 30 years
follow-up in three families with germline HRPT2 mutations. Surgery 143(5): 630–640.
Zhang, Zhong-Fa, Daisuke Matsuda, Sok Kean Khoo, Kristen Buzzitta, Elizabeth Block, David Petillo, Stéphane Richard,
John Anema, Kyle A. Furge, and Bin T. Teh. 2008. A comparison study reveals important features of agreement and disagree-
ment between summarized DNA and RNA data obtained from renal cell carcinoma. Mutation Research 657(1): 77–83.
From left: Fogg, Ooi, Noyes, Ding, Zhang, Chen, Huang, Lucia, Petillo, Wondergem, Teh, Roossien
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VARI | 2009
Steven J. Triezenberg, Ph.D.Laboratory of Transcriptional Regulation
Dr. Triezenberg received his bachelor’s degree in biology and education at Calvin College in Grand Rapids, Michigan. His Ph.D. training in cell and molecular biology at the University of Michigan was followed by postdoctoral research in the laboratory of Steven L. McKnight at the Carnegie Institu-tion of Washington. Dr. Triezenberg was a faculty member of the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology at Michigan State University for more than 18 years, where he also served as associate director of the Graduate Program in Cell and Molecular Biology. In 2006, Dr. Triezenberg was recruited to VAI to serve as the founding Dean of the Van Andel Institute Graduate School and as a Scientific Investigator in the Van Andel Research Institute. He succeeded Gordon Van Harn as the Director of the Van Andel Education Institute in January 2009.
Xu Lu, Ph.D.Jennifer Klomp, M.S.Glen Alberts, B.S. Carol Rappley
Sebla Kutluay, B.S.Tim CaldwellJustyne MathenyMarian Testori
Staff Students
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Van Andel Research Institute | Scientific Report
Research Interests
The genetic information encoded in DNA must first be copied, in the form of RNA, before it can be translated into the proteins
that do most of the work in a cell. Some genes must be expressed more or less constantly throughout the life of any eukaryotic
cell. Others must be turned on (or turned off) in particular cells either at specific times or in response to a specific signal or
event. Thus, regulation of gene expression is a key determinant of cell function. Our laboratory explores the mechanisms that
regulate the first step in that flow, the process termed transcription.
Over the past 20 years, my laboratory has used infection by herpes simplex virus as an experimental context for exploring the
mechanisms of transcriptional activation. In the past 10 years, we have also asked similar questions in a very different biological
context, the acclimation of plants to cold temperature.
Transcriptional activation during herpes simplex virus infection
Herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) causes the common cold sore or fever blister. The initial lytic (or productive) infection
by HSV-1 results in the obvious symptoms in the skin and mucosa, typically in or around the mouth. After the initial infection
resolves, HSV-1 finds its way into nerve cells, where the virus can hide in a latent mode for long times—essentially for the
lifetime of the host organism. Occasionally, some trigger event (such as emotional stress, damage to the nerve from a sunburn,
or a root canal operation) will cause the latent virus to reactivate, producing new viruses in the nerve cell and sending those
viruses back to the skin to cause a recurrence of the cold sore.
The DNA of HSV-1 encodes approximately 80 different proteins. However, the virus does not have its own machinery for
expressing those genes; instead, the virus must divert the gene expression machinery of the host cell. That process is triggered
by a viral regulatory protein designated VP16, whose function is to stimulate transcription of the first viral genes to be expressed
in the infected cell (the immediate-early, or IE, genes).
Chromatin-modifying coactivators in herpes virus infection and a paradox
The strands of DNA in which the human genome is encoded are much longer than the diameter of a typical human cell. To help
fit the DNA into the space of a cell, eukaryotic DNA is typically packaged as chromatin, in which the DNA is wrapped around
“spools” of histone proteins, and these spools are then further arranged into higher-order structures. This elaborate packaging
creates a problem when access is needed to the information carried in the DNA, such as when particular genes need to be
expressed. This problem is solved in part by chromatin-modifying coactivator proteins, which either chemically change the
histone proteins or else slide or remove them.
Transcriptional activator proteins such as VP16 can recruit these chromatin-modifying coactivator proteins to target genes. We
have shown this to be true for artificial reporter genes in human cells or in yeast, and it’s also true for the viral genes that VP16
activates during an active infection. Curiously, however, the DNA of herpes simplex virus is not wrapped around histones inside
the viral particle, and it also seems to stay free of histones inside the infected cell. That observation leads to a paradox: why
would VP16 recruit chromatin-modifying coactivators to the viral DNA if the viral DNA doesn’t have any chromatin to modify?
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VARI | 2009
We took several approaches to test whether the coactivators that are recruited to viral DNA by the VP16 activation domain
really play a significant role in transcriptional activation. In some experiments, we knocked down expression of given coactiva-
tors using short interfering RNAs (siRNAs) and then measured viral gene expression during subsequent infection by HSV-1.
In other experiments, we used cell lines that have mutations disrupting the expression or activity of a given coactivator. A
third set of experiments used curcumin, derived from the curry spice turmeric, which is thought to inhibit the enzymatic
activity of certain coactivators. In each of these situations, we expected to find that viral gene expression was inhibited, but
the experiments yielded unexpected results: in each case, expression of the viral genes was essentially unaffected. We were
forced to conclude that our initial hypothesis was wrong; the coactivators, although present, are not required for viral gene
expression during lytic infection.
The death of one hypothesis, however, gives life to new ideas. After the initial infection of a cold sore subsides, herpes simplex
virus establishes a lifelong latent infection in sensory neurons. In the latent state, the viral genome is essentially quiet: very few
viral genes are expressed. Moreover, the viral genome becomes packaged in chromatin much like the silent genes of the host
cell. So our new hypothesis is that the coactivators recruited by VP16 are required to reactivate the viral genes from the latent
or quiescent state. We’ve begun to test that hypothesis in quiescent infections in cultured cells, but the key tests will be in
whole organisms with genuinely latent herpesvirus infections.
Gene activation during cold acclimation of plants
Although plants and their cells obviously have very different forms and functions than animals and their cells, the mechanisms used
for expressing genetic information are quite similar. For the past decade, we have explored the role of chromatin-modifying coacti-
vators in regulating genes that are turned on in low-temperature conditions. Some plants, including the prominent experimental
organism Arabidopsis, can sense low (but nonfreezing) temperature in a way that provides protection from subsequent freezing
temperatures, a process known as cold acclimation. We have collaborated with Michael Thomashow, a plant scientist at Michigan
State University, to explore the mechanisms involved in activating genes during cold acclimation. To this point, we have focused
on one particular histone acetyltransferase, termed GCN5, and two of its accessory proteins, ADA2a and ADA2b. Mutations in the
genes encoding these coactivator proteins result in diminished expression of cold-regulated genes. Moreover, histones located
at these cold-regulated genes become more highly acetylated during initial stages of cold acclimation. However, contrary to our
expectations, the GCN5 and ADA2 proteins are not responsible for this cold-induced acetylation. In fact, we’ve tested several other
Arabidopsis histone acetyltransferases, and none (on their own) seem solely responsible for this acetylation. It seems likely that
redundant mechanisms are at work, such that when we disrupt one pathway, another pathway compensates.
We also collaborated with groups in Greece and Pennsylvania to explore the distinct biological activities of the two ADA2
proteins. Although the two proteins have very similar sequences and both are expressed throughout the plant, mutations in the
genes encoding these two proteins have very different phenotypes. The ada2b mutants are very short, have smaller cells than
normal, and are sterile. In contrast, the ada2a mutants seem quite normal in most attributes. Plants with mutations in both ADA2a
and ADA2b are strikingly similar to plants with mutations in GCN5. We suspect that GCN5 can partner with either ADA2a or
ADA2b and that these two distinct complexes affect different sets of genes and thus different developmental and stress response
pathways. This work may help us understand whether the mechanisms by which plants express their genes can be modulated
so as to protect crops from loss in yield or viability due to environmental stresses such as low temperature.
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Van Andel Research Institute | Scientific Report
External Collaborators
Kanchan Pavangadkar and Michael F. Thomashow, Michigan State University, East LansingAmy S. Hark, Muhlenberg College, Allentown, PennsylvaniaKostas Vlachonasios, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece
Recent Publications
Lu, Xu, and Steven J. Triezenberg. In press. Chromatin assembly on herpes simplex virus genomes during lytic infection. Biochimica et Biophysica Acta - Gene Regulatory Mechanisms.
Hark, Amy T., Konstantinos E. Vlachonasios, Kanchan A. Pavangadkar, Sumana Rao, Hillary Gordon, Ioannis- Dimosthenis Adamakis, Athanasios Kaldis, Michael F. Thomashow, and Steven J. Triezenberg. 2009. Two Arabidopsis orthologs of the transcriptional coactivator ADA2 have distinct biological functions. Biochimica et Biophysica Acta - Gene Regulatory Mechanisms 1789(2): 117–124.
Kutluay, Sebla B., Sarah L. DeVos, Jennifer E. Klomp, and Steven J. Triezenberg. 2009. Transcriptional coactivators are not required for herpes symplex virus type 1 immediate-early gene expression in vitro. Journal of Virology 83(8): 3436–3449.
Kutluay, Sebla B., and Steven J. Triezenberg. 2009. Regulation of histone deposition on the herpes simplex virus type 1 genome during lytic infection. Journal of Virology 83(11): 5835–5845.
Kutluay, Sebla B., and Steven J. Triezenberg. 2009. Role of chromatin during herpesvirus infections. Biochimica et Biophysica Acta 1790(6): 456–466.
From left: Testori, Alberts, Klomp, Kutluay, Triezenberg, Rappley, Lu
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VARI | 2009
George F. Vande Woude, Ph.D.Laboratory of Molecular Oncology
Dr. Vande Woude received his M.S. (1962) and Ph.D. (1964) from Rutgers University. From 1964–1972, he served first as a postdoctoral research associate, then as a research virologist for the U.S. Department of Agriculture at Plum Island Animal Disease Center. In 1972, he joined the National Cancer Institute as Head of the Human Tumor Studies and Virus Tumor Biochemistry sections and, in 1980, was appointed Chief of the Laboratory of Molecular Oncology. In 1983, he became Director of the Advanced Bioscience Laboratories–Basic Research Program at the National Cancer Institute’s Frederick Cancer Research and Development Center, a position he held until 1998. From 1995, Dr. Vande Woude first served as Special Advisor to the Director, and then as Director for the Division of Basic Sciences at the National Cancer Institute. In 1999, he was recruited to become the founding Director of the Van Andel Research Institute. In 2009, Vande Woude stepped down as Director and assumed the new title of Distinguished Scientific Fellow, while retaining his role of head of the Labora-tory of Molecular Oncology.
Laboratory Staff
Qian Xie, M.D., Ph.D.Yu-Wen Zhang, M.D., Ph.D.Chongfeng Gao, Ph.D.Carrie Graveel, Ph.D.Dafna Kaufman, M.Sc.Angelique Berens, B.S.Jack DeGroot, B.S.Curt Essenburg, B.S.Betsy Haak, B.S.
StaffAla’a AbughoushSara KunzKathleen Pollock
StudentsDavid Wenkert, M.D.Yuehai Shen, Ph.D.Edwin Chen, B.S.
Visiting ScientistsLiang Kang, B.S.Rachel Kuznar, B.S.Benjamin Staal, B.S.Ryan Thompson, B.S.Yanli Su, A.M.A.T Laura HolmanAmy Nelson
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Van Andel Research Institute | Scientific Report
Research Interests
The Laboratory of Molecular Oncology is focused on understanding the numerous and diverse roles that MET and HGF/SF
play in malignant progression and metastasis. Our work involves a wide variety of cancers, animal models, and drug therapies.
The combination of studies, coupled with our examination of MET signaling, will lead to a greater understanding of tumor
progression and new knowledge for developing and delivering novel targeted therapies.
Tumor phenotypic switching
Malignant progression leading to metastasis is the primary cause of death due to cancer. Metastasis begins with proliferating
tumor cells that become invasive and detach from the primary tumor mass, invading the extracellular matrix, entering the
bloodstream or lymphatic vessels, and establishing metastases or secondary tumors as proliferating colonies at distant sites.
Since phenotypic switching from proliferative to invasive and the return to proliferative is crucial for malignant progression, we
use in vitro and in vivo methods to select proliferative and invasive subclones from tumor cell populations.
We explored the signal pathway underlying phenotypic switching by integrative genomic studies including gene expression
analysis, spectral karyotyping (SKY), and fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH). We observed that subtle and specific changes
in chromosome content ratio are virtually the same as the changes in the chromosome transcriptome ratio, showing that major
changes in gene expression are mediated by gains or losses in chromosome content. Importantly, a significant number of the
genes whose expression change is greater than twofold are functionally consistent with changes in the proliferative or invasive
phenotypes. Our results imply that chromosome instability can provide the diversity of gene expression that allows a tumor to
switch between proliferative and invasive phenotypes during tumor progression.
Met in murine mammary tumors and human basal breast cancers
Understanding the signaling pathways that drive aggressive breast cancers is critical to the development of effective
therapeutics. The oncogene MET is associated with decreased survival in breast cancer, yet the role it plays in the various
breast cancer subtypes is unclear. We are investigating the role that this oncogene plays in breast cancer progression and
metastasis by using a novel mouse model of mutationally activated Met (Metmut). We discovered that mutationally activated
Met induces a high incidence of diverse mammary tumors in mice, and these Metmut mice tumors have several characteristics
similar to those of aggressive human breast cancers, such as the absence of progesterone receptor and ERBB2 expres-
sion. These results led us to examine how MET is associated with the various human breast cancer subtypes. With gene
expression and tissue microarray analysis, we observed that high MET expression in human breast cancers significantly
correlated with estrogen receptor–negative/ERBB2-negative tumors and with basal breast cancers. Few treatment options
exist for breast cancers of the basal or trastuzumab-resistant ERBB2 subtypes. We conclude from these studies that MET
is a key oncogene in the development of the most aggressive breast cancer subtypes and may be a significant therapeutic
target. Currently, we are investigating the similarities and differences in signaling pathways involved in MET-driven versus
ERBB2-driven breast cancers.
Tumor xenograft models for preclinical testing of MET drugs
Aberrant activation of the HGF-Met signaling pathway is one of the causal events in cancer development and progression
and is frequently observed in almost all types of human cancers. MET is becoming an ideal target for cancer intervention,
and the movements toward developing MET drugs are very active. In the past several years, many drugs targeting the
HGF-MET pathway have been developed, including neutralizing antibodies against HGF or MET and various small-molecule
kinase inhibitors of MET. This has resulted in the need for suitable animal models for preclinically testing the drug efficacies
in vivo.
VARI | 2009
57
We had previously generated a transgenic mouse that produces human HGF in the severe combined immune deficiency
(SCID) background. This animal model provides species-compatible ligand for human MET and is ideal for investigating
paracrine MET signaling in human cancer cells (mouse HGF has very low activity on human MET). We found that, compared
with control SCID mice, the human HGFtg-SCID (huHGFtg-SCID) mice significantly enhance tumor xenograft growth of many
MET-positive human cancer cells derived from lung, breast, stomach, colon, kidney, and pancreas. Currently, we are using
those xenograft models established in the huHGFtg-SCID mice for testing MET drugs alone or in combination with other cancer
drugs. Meanwhile, we are also developing metastatic models in the huHGFtg-SCID mice.
In vivo modeling of glioblastoma multiforme
Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is one of the most devastating cancers. The hallmark of GBM is the invasiveness of the
tumor cells infiltrating into normal brain parenchyma, making it virtually impossible to remove the tumor completely by surgery
and inevitably leading to recurrent disease. Progress in understanding GBM pathobiology and in developing novel antitumor
therapies could be greatly accelerated with animal model systems that display characteristics of human GBM and that enable
tumor monitoring through noninvasive imaging in real time. Subjecting human cancer cells to an experimental metastasis assay
(ELM) often yields highly metastatic cells with higher proliferative and invasive potential. However, the ELM assay has not been
tested previously with GBM, most likely because extracranial metastases of human GBM are clinically rare.
In this study, we used ELM to enrich metastatic cell populations and found that three of four commonly used GBM lines
(U251, U87, and DBTRG-05MG) were highly metastatic after repeated (M2) ELM selection. These GBM-M2 lines grew more
aggressive orthotopically, and all showed significant multifold increases in IL6, IL8, MCP-1, and GM-CSF, which are cytokines
and factors associated with poor GBM prognosis. DBM2 cells, derived from the DBTRG-05MG cell line, are highly invasive
when grown as an orthotopic tumor (with areas of central necrosis, vascular hyperplasia, and intracranial dissemination),
and also erode the skull, permitting the use of high-resolution micro-ultrasound in real time to non-invasively observe tumor
growth and vascularization. We conclude that commonly used GBM cells have intrinsic metastatic potential which can be
selected for in ELM assays. When implanted in the brain, the metastatic potential of GBM cells can be realized as a highly
invasive phenotype. The DBM2 mouse model has characteristics that mimic the aggressively invasive behavior of clinical GBM,
providing a valuable tool for investigating the factors that modulate glioblastoma growth, assessing invasion and vascularity,
and evaluating novel therapeutic agents in real time. Currently we are in the process of using this model to test MET drugs
and possible combinations for the purpose of blocking GBM invasion and studying the micro-environment of the host-tumor
response to the treatment.
The role of Mig-6 in cancer and joint disease
The signaling mediated by receptor tyrosine kinases such as Met and EGFR plays a very important role in many developmental
and physiological processes, and it is fine-tuned by many factors for proper action. Mitogen-inducible gene-6 (Mig-6), a
scaffolding molecule, is one of the factors that can regulate Met and EGFR signaling through a negative feedback loop.
Mig-6 is an immediate early response gene that can be rapidly up-regulated by growth factors like HGF and EGF, as well as
by many stress stimuli such as mechanical stress. The Mig-6 gene locus is at human chromosome 1p36 that is frequently
associated with various cancers. Studies in both humans and mice indicate that Mig-6 is a tumor suppressor gene. Decreased
expression of Mig-6 is observed in several human cancers including breast, skin, pancreatic, and ovarian cancers, while
targeted elimination of Mig-6 in mice leads to the development of neoplasms in the lung, gallbladder, bile duct, and skin. We
also identified several Mig-6 gene mutations in lung cancer, even though mutation in Mig-6 seems to be a rare event. Besides
its role in cancer, Mig-6 also plays an important role in maintaining normal joint function: its deficiency in mice results in the
development of early-onset degenerative joint disease. Currently, we are investigating what roles Mig-6 may play in cancer
development and in maintenance of joint function, and the mechanism of how losing Mig-6 activity leads to the pathological
conditions of cancer and joint disease.
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External Research CollaboratorsDonald Bottaro and Benedetta Peruzzi, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, Maryland
Sandra Cottingham, Spectrum Health Hospital, Grand Rapids, Michigan
Sherri Davies and Matthew Ellis, Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri
Francesco DeMayo, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas
Ermanno Gherardi, MRC Center, Cambridge, England
Beatrice Knudsen, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, Washington
Stephanie Kermorgant, Queen Mary and Westfield College, University of London, U.K.
Ernest Lengyel and Ravi Salgia, University of Chicago, Illinois
Kangda Liu, Zhongshan Hospital, Fudan University, P.R.C.
Patricia LoRusso and Fred Miller, Barbara Ann Karmanos Cancer Institute, Detroit, Michigan
Benjamin Neel, University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Ilan Tsarfaty, Tel Aviv University, Israel
Robert Wondergem, East Tennessee State University, Johnson City
Recent Publications
Gao, C.-F., Q. Xie, Y.-W. Zhang, Y. Su, P. Zhao, B. Cao, K. Furge, J. Sun, K. Rex, T. Osgood, et al. 2009. Therapeutic
potential of hepatocyte growth factor/scatter factor neutralizing antibodies: inhibition of tumor growth in both authcrine and
paracrine hepatocyte growth factor/scatter factor:c-Met–driven models of leiomyosarcoma. Molecular Cancer Therapeutics
8(10): 2803–2810.
Graveel, C.R., J.D. DeGroot, Y. Su, J.M. Koeman, K. Dykema, S. Leung, J. Snider, S.R. Davies, P.J. Swiatek,
S. Cottingham, et al. 2009. Met induces diverse breast carcinomas in mice and is associated with human basal breast cancer.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences U.S.A. 106(31): 12909–12914.
Kort, Eric J., Nigel Paneth, and George F. Vande Woude. 2009. The decline in U.S. cancer mortality in people born since
1925. Cancer Research 69(16): 6500–6505.
VanBrocklin, Matthew W., James P. Robinson, Todd Whitwam, Adam R. Guibeault, Julie Koeman, Pamela J. Swiatek,
George F. Vande Woude, Joseph D. Khoury, and Sheri L. Holmen. 2009. Met amplification and tumor progression in
Cdkn2a-deficient melanocytes. Pigment Cell & Melanoma Research 22(4): 454–460.
Standing, from left: Zhang, Nelson, Essenburg, Graveel, Staal, Su, DeGroot, Thompson, Haak, Xie, Gao; seated, from left: Holman, Vande Woude, Kaufman
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Craig P. Webb, Ph.D.Program for Translational Medicine
Dr. Webb received his Ph.D. in cell biology from the University of East Anglia, England, in 1995. He then served as a postdoctoral fellow in the laboratory of George Vande Woude in the Molecular Oncology Section of the Advanced BioScience Laboratories–Basic Research Program at the National Cancer Institute, Frederick Cancer Research and Development Center, Maryland (1995–1999). Dr. Webb joined VARI as a Scientific Investigator in October 1999; he now oversees the Program for Translational Medicine as Senior Scientific Investigator.
David Cherba, Ph.D.Jessica Hessler, Ph.D.Jeremy Miller, Ph.D.David Monsma, Ph.D.Emily Eugster, M.S.Patrick Richardson, M.S.Sujata Srikanth, M.Phil.Dawna Dylewski, B.S.
Richard Leach, M.D.
Staff Visiting ScentistNicole BeuschelOrrie CloseBess ConnorsMolly DobbPhillip DumasSean Vance
StudentsBrian Hillary, B.A.Hailey Jahn, B.S.Marcy Ross, B.S.Stephanie Scott, B.S.Theresa Wood, B.A.Katherine Koehler
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Research Interests
Molecular biomarkers are widely expected to revolutionize the current trial-and-error practice of medicine by enabling a
more predictive discipline in which therapies are targeted toward the molecular constitution of individual patients and their
disease. This concept is often termed “personalized medicine”. Biomarkers are being widely evaluated for their ability to
assess disease risk, detect and monitor disease over time, accurately identify disease stage, approximate prognosis, and
predict optimal targeted treatments. The Program for Translational Medicine was launched in 2006 to extend the Institute’s
translational research capabilities, with a focus on the development of molecular biomarker strategies with clinical implications.
The program’s activities have focused on building the critical translational infrastructure and technologies, fostering clinical and
industrial partnerships, and coordinating the multidisciplinary project teams required to implement molecular-based approaches
in medicine. The Program of Translational Medicine, with its multidisciplinary partners, strives to create an efficient pipeline
between the clinic and the research laboratory for efficient discovery and clinical application of novel biomarker strategies. We
also work to increase the readiness of the community to implement advances in molecular medicine, benefiting human health
and promoting West Michigan as a leader in biomarker research.
Translational informatics
To accelerate the implementation of personalized medicine, the consolidation and real-time analysis of standardized molecular
and clinical/preclinical data is critical. Thus, much of our effort over the past several years has focused on the development of
an integrated informatics solution known as the XenoBase BioIntegration Suite (XB-BIS; see http://xbtransmed.com). XB-BIS
supports essential features of data management, data analysis, knowledge management, and reporting within an integrated
framework, enabling the efficient exchange of information between the basic research laboratory and the clinic. XB-BIS has
recently been licensed to industrial and academic partners with an interest in biomarker research and the development of
molecular-based diagnostics; these include Children’s Memorial Medical Center, Qiagen, and Sequenom.
Community partnerships and economic development
Productive partnerships are pivotal to our efforts in biomarker research and personalized medicine. In the Center for Molecular
Medicine, the Van Andel Institute and Spectrum Health Hospitals created a CLIA-certified/CAP-accredited clinical diagnostics
laboratory for biomarker qualification and the development of associated diagnostic assays. This entity was recently acquired
by Sequenom, but it continues to offer cutting-edge molecular diagnostic tests and remains central to our personalized
medicine initiatives. For example, ongoing research activities with Sequenom are geared toward implementation of novel,
molecular-based technologies into our personalized medicine initiative.
ClinXus (http://www.clinxus.org) was developed to coordinate the emerging West Michigan translational research enterprise.
In September 2006, ClinXus was awarded a Michigan 21st Century Jobs Fund grant to support early-stage development and
operations, and it has membership in the Predictive Safety and Testing Consortium (PSTC) of the Critical Path Institute. The
PSTC brings pharmaceutical companies together to share and validate each other’s safety testing methods under advisement
of the FDA and the European Medicines Agency. Membership in this consortium will help ensure that West Michigan remains
at the forefront of biomarker research and development and will further the community’s rapidly emerging life sciences and
health care industry.
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Predictive therapeutics protocol
Translational research represents the interface where hypotheses advance to studies that ultimately provide definitive informa-
tion for a clinical decision. A fundamental challenge in clinical cancer research remains how to make best use of current
biomarker technologies, advances in computational biology, the expanding pharmacopeia, and a rapidly expanding knowledge
of disease networks to deliver targeted treatments to cancer patients with optimal therapeutic index. Our research is focused
on developing, testing, and refining biomarker-driven analytical methods to systematically predict combinations of drugs that
target the tumor. We are also considering the means by which such information should be conveyed to the treating physician
in support of medical decision-making.
In 2008, we completed a feasibility study of 50 late-stage pediatric and adult cancer patients in which tumor-derived gene
expression profiles were analyzed to identify potential drugs to target perturbed molecular components of each patient’s
specific tumor. With patient consent, tumor biopsies were collected, qualified by pathology, and processed within the CMM to
generate a standardized gene expression profile for the tumor. These molecular data were uploaded into XB-BIS along with
pertinent clinical data and compared with other patient samples within the database. Within XB-BIS, deregulated patterns
of gene expression were identified and analyzed to identify drugs that have predicted efficacy based upon their molecular
mechanism of action and the tumor’s genomic data. A report scoring a series of drugs for predicted efficacy was generated
within XB-BIS and conveyed to the treating physician in an actionable, electronic format for consideration in treatment planning.
To be compatible with real-time prospective decision making, the process from patient consent to molecular report had to be
completed in 5-10 days. In parallel, a series of tumor grafts was established in immune-compromised mice, which closely
resembles the human disease at the phenotypic and molecular level. This resource is currently being used to test biomarker-
driven predictive models (and the identified drugs) in a more systematic fashion and to evaluate novel targeted agents. Over the
long term, the treatments are captured within XB-BIS together with critical outcome variables, allowing the predictive analytical
methods to be refined and optimized.
Anecdotal signs of success in a handful of patients have provided the impetus to launch a series of follow-up studies with an
expanded patient population using a more rigorous statistical design. Collaborative studies on glioblastoma through The Ben and
Catherine Ivy Foundation and on neuroblastoma through the Vermont Cancer Center and University of Vermont are planned for
2009. In conjunction with our laboratory efforts to isolate, characterize, and target the putative cancer stem-cell subpopulation of
metastatic tumors, biomarker-driven approaches that identify a rational treatment regimen targeting the molecular composition
of the patient’s tumor hold promise for the future treatment of metastatic and refractory malignancies.
From left: Jahn, Srikanth, Richardson, Koehler, Monsma, Dylewski, Eugster, Scott, Miller, Wood, Dumas, Cherba, Webb
Van Andel Research Institute | Scientific Report
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External CollaboratorsAcademic Surgical Associates, Advanced Radiology Services, Cancer & Hematology Centers of Western Michigan, P.C.,
DeVos Children’s Hospital, Digestive Disease Institute, Grand Valley Medical Specialists, Grand Valley State University,
MMPC, Saint Mary’s Health Care, Spectrum Health, and West Michigan Heart, all of Grand Rapids, Michigan
Barbara Ann Karmanos Institute and Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, Michigan
The Ben and Catherine Ivy Foundation, Palo Alto, California
Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, Cleveland, Ohio
GeneGo, Inc., and Oncology Care Associates, St. Joseph, Michigan
Jackson Laboratory-West, Sacramento, California
Jasper Clinical Research & Development, Inc., Kalamazoo, Michigan
Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland
M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas
Mary Crowley Cancer Center, Dallas, Texas
Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota
Michigan State University, East Lansing
New York University, New York City
The Ohio State University, Columbus
Pfizer, Ann Arbor, Michigan; Saint Louis, Missouri; Groton, Connecticut
TGen, Phoenix, Arizona
University of Alabama at Birmingham
University of California, San Francisco
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Vermont Cancer Center and University of Vermont
Recent Publications
Littman, B., J. Thompson, and C.P. Webb. In press. Where are we heading/What do we really need? In Biomarkers in Drug
Development: A Handbook of Practice, Application, and Strategy, Michael Bleavins, Ramin Rahbari, Malle Jurima-Romet, and
Claudio Carini, eds. New York; Wiley.
Ivanov, S.V., J. Miller, R. Lucito, C. Tang, A.V. Ivanova, J. Pei, M. Carbone, C. Cruz, A. Beck, C. Webb, et al. 2009. Genomic
events associated with progression of pleural malignant mesothelioma. International Journal of Cancer 124(3): 589–599.
Webb, C.P., and D. Cherba. 2009. Systems biology of personalized medicine. In Bioinformatics for Systems Biology:
Second Edition, Introduction to Informatics, Stephen Krawetz, ed. New York: Humana, pp. 615–630.
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Retina whole mount
Images of mouse retina whole mounts, postnatal day 14. Red stain is GSA lectin on endothelial blood vessel cells; green stain is FITC dextran perfusion of blood vessels. At the right center of the red image is a clump of remnant hyaloid blood vessels; few of these vessels can be seen in the green image because they no longer have blood flow. Original magnification 40×. Photo by Jennifer Bromberg-White of the Duesbery lab.
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Michael Weinreich, Ph.D.Laboratory of Chromosome Replication
Dr. Weinreich received his Ph.D. in biochemistry from the University of Wisconsin–Madison in 1993. He then was a postdoctoral fellow in the laboratory of Bruce Stillman, Director of the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, New York, from 1993 to 2000. Dr. Weinreich joined VARI as a Scientific Investigator in March 2000. He was promoted to Senior Scientific Investigator in September 2008.
Dorine Savreux, Ph.D.FuJung Chang, M.S.Carrie Gabrielse, B.S.
Ying-Chou Chen, M.S.Charles Miller, B.S.Christina GourlayCaitlin MayChristina Untersperger
Staff Students
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65
Research Interests
We study early events that promote the initiation of DNA synthesis, which occurs at specific sequences termed replication
origins. Various genome-wide approaches have identified from 320 to 420 possible replication origins in budding yeast, and
there are perhaps 10,000 origins in human cells. The initiation of DNA replication occurs in a temporally distinct manner during
G1 and S phase, and no origin initiates replication (fires) more than once per cell cycle to maintain normal diploid content. In
G1 phase, each origin assembles approximately 40 polypeptides in a temporally defined order, culminating in the initiation of
DNA replication at the G1/S phase boundary. The first stage of this process is called pre-replicative complex assembly and
requires the origin recognition complex (ORC), Cdc6, and Cdt1. ORC directly binds to origin sequences and then recruits Cdt1
and Cdc6 during G1 phase. These three proteins cooperate to load the MCM DNA helicase at origins in an ATP-dependent
reaction. Cyclin-dependent kinases and the Cdc7-Dbf4 kinase then catalyze the association of additional proteins with the
MCM helicase to activate it, ultimately causing unwinding of the duplex DNA and the initiation of bidirectional DNA synthesis
(Figure 1). In our lab we study three key aspects of DNA replication:
1) Replication origin structure
2) How Cdc6-ATP functions to load the MCM helicase within a chromatin context
3) How Cdc7-Dbf4 kinase contributes to the normal cell cycle and human malignancies
Studies to understand the basic molecular biology of DNA replication and cell cycle progression are highly relevant for cancer
biology, given that malignant cells often contain mutations in the cell growth and checkpoint pathways that drive normal
proliferation. Here we describe recent studies on the Cdc7-Dbf4 kinase, which is a crucial regulator of DNA replication in all
eukaryotic cells.
Cdc7-Dbf4 is a conserved, two-subunit, serine/threonine protein kinase that catalyzes DNA synthesis at individual replication
origins. Cdc7-Dbf4 promotes DNA synthesis after MCM helicase loading at the origin, likely by activating its helicase activity.
This leads to origin unwinding and the assembly of DNA polymerases that initiate bidirectional DNA synthesis. Although Cdc7
is a member of the protein kinase superfamily, it requires the Dbf4 regulatory subunit to activate its kinase activity. We have
determined the regions of Dbf4 that bind to and activate Cdc7 kinase by mutational analysis, and we are also investigating how
Dbf4 targets Cdc7 kinase to its various substrates in the cell.
Figure 1
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In Figure 2, we summarize our analysis of Dbf4 functional regions. The N-terminal third of Dbf4 is dispensable for DNA replica-
tion. However, the N-terminus encodes several functions that are important for Dbf4 function. There are two putative classic
nuclear localization sequences (NLSs) at 55-61 and 251-257. Although the first sequence is dispensable, deletion of both
sequences is lethal. Functionality is restored to a dbf4 mutant lacking the first 265 residues by addition of a heterologous NLS
from the SV40 large T-antigen, suggesting that there are no NLS sequences in the Dbf4 C-terminus.
We also identified a BRCT-like domain from residues 115-219 that is apparently conserved in all Dbf4 orthologs. BRCT
domains are often present in DNA damage-responsive proteins and they interact with phosphorylated residues. Although Dbf4
mutants deleting this region are viable, they exhibit a slow S-phase and defects in response to DNA-damaging agents such as
hydroxyurea, bleomycin, and methylmethane sulfonate. Whether the BRCT-like region governs a DNA repair function for Dbf4
is uncertain, because addition of an SV40 NLS to the dbf4-ND221 deletion mutant reverses most of these DNA replication and
damage phenotypes. This suggests that the damage sensitivity is a secondary consequence of lowered nuclear localization
and, therefore, compromised initiation activity. Consistent with this explanation, we found that many initiation mutants also
exhibit secondary DNA damage sensitivities. Interestingly, deletion of the BRCT-like domain causes defects in late-origin
activation, but early origins are activated normally. This raises the intriguing possibility that the BRCT-like domain targets the
kinase to late replication origins.
We also constructed a series of C-terminal deletion Dbf4 mutants; such mutants that remove a conserved Zn-finger motif are
viable. This indicates that C-terminal residues are not essential for Dbf4 activity. However, deletion of C-terminal residues
results in a markedly slower S-phase progression, temperature sensitivity, and DNA damage sensitivity. This suggests that the
C-terminus is required to activate full Cdc7 kinase activity or to target it to important replication substrates. Using recombinant
Cdc7 and Dbf4 proteins, we found that Dbf4 mutants lacking the C-terminus have a profound defect in Cdc7 kinase activation.
The Zn-finger motif also interacts with Cdc7 via a two-hybrid assay, and this interaction depends on conserved residues in the
Zn-finger. Lastly, there is a second Cdc7 binding site that overlaps motif M. We found that either Cdc7 binding region could
be deleted individually and still allow Cdc7 binding, but deletion of both domains does not allow Cdc7 binding.
We would like to identify proteins that interact with the Dbf4 N-terminus and determine the functional consequences of those
interactions. Clearly the N-terminal third of Dbf4 is not required for DNA replication, but these residues are conserved in mouse
and human cells and so must confer some critical function. Using a two-hybrid approach, we found that the Dbf4 N-terminus
interacts with Polo kinase, a key regulator of mitotic progression. Detailed analysis of this interaction suggests that Dbf4
influences chromosome segregation, which represents a totally new activity for Cdc7-Dbf4 kinase.
Figure 2. Functional regions of Dbf4 determined by deletion analysis. Dbf4 contains three regions called motifs N, M, and C that are conserved among Dbf4 orthologs. A BRCT-like domain spans motif N. Motif C encodes a single C2H2 type Zn-finger. Finally, two regions spanning motif M and C interact with Cdc7 and activate its kinase activity.
Figure 2
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External Collaborators
Catherine Fox, University of Wisconsin–Madison
Carol Newlon, University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, Newark
Philippe Pasero, CNRS, Montpellier, France
Alain Verreault, University of Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Wolfgang Zachariae, Max Plank Institute, Dresden, Germany
Recent Publications
Harkins, V., Carrie Gabrielse, L. Haste, and M. Weinreich. In press. Budding yeast Dbf4 sequences required for Cdc7 kinase
activation and identification of a functional relationship between the Dbf4 and Rev1 BRCT domains. Genetics.
Miller, Charles T., Carrie Gabrielse, Ying-Chou Chen, and Michael Weinreich. 2009. Cdc7p-Dbf4p regulates mitotic exit by
inhibiting polo kinase. PLoS Genetics 5(5): e1000498.
Bonte, Dorine, Charlotta Lindvall, Hongyu Liu, Karl Dykema, Kyle Furge, and Michael Weinreich. 2008. Cdc7-Dbf4 kinase
overexpression in multiple cancers and tumor cell lines is correlated with p53 inactivation. Neoplasia 10(9): 920–931.
Chang, FuJung, James F. Theis, Jeremy Miller, Conrad A. Nieduszynski, Carol S. Newlon, and Michael Weinreich. 2008.
Analysis of chromosome III replicators reveals an unusual structure for the ARS318 silencer origin and a conserved WTW
sequence within the origin recognition complex binding site. Molecular and Cellular Biology 28(16): 5071–5081.
Fox, Catherine A., and Michael Weinreich. 2008. Beyond heterochromatin: SIR2 inhibits the initiation of DNA replication.
Cell Cycle 7(21): 3330–3334.
From left: Savreux, Gabrielse, Chang, Miller, Chen, Weinreich
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Bart O. Williams, Ph.D.Laboratory of Cell Signaling and Carcinogenesis
Dr. Williams received his B.S. degree from Carroll College in Waukesha, Wisconsin. In 1996, he re-ceived his Ph.D. in Biology from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology for studies in the laboratory of Tyler Jacks characterizing mouse models carrying mutations in the Rb and p53 genes. From 1996 to 1999, he was a postdoctoral fellow at the National Institutes of Health in the laboratory of Harold Varmus, former Director of NIH. Dr. Williams joined VARI as a Scientific Investigator in July 1999 and was promoted to Senior Scientific Investigator in 2006.
Charlotta Lindvall, M.D., Ph.D.Alex Zhen-Dong Zhong, Ph.D.Cassandra Zylstra Diegel, B.S.Angela Lake, B.S.Ammar Saladhar, B.S.Kyle VanKoevering, B.S.
Stephanie BerrySathyanarayanan ElumalaiAudrey SandersCassie Schumacher
Staff Students
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Research Interests
Our laboratory is interested in understanding how alterations in the Wnt signaling pathway cause human disease. Specifically,
we have focused our efforts on the functions of the Wnt co-receptors, Lrp5 and Lrp6. Wnt signaling is an evolutionarily
conserved process that functions in the differentiation of most tissues within the body. Given its central role in growth and
differentiation, it is not surprising that alterations in the pathway are among the most common events associated with human
cancer. In addition, several other human diseases, including osteoporosis, cardiovascular disease, and diabetes, have been
linked to altered regulation of this pathway.
A specific focus of work in our laboratory is characterizing the role of Wnt signaling in bone formation. Our interest is not only
from the perspective of normal bone development, but also in trying to understand whether aberrant Wnt signaling plays a role
in the predisposition of some common tumor types (for example, prostate, breast, lung, and renal tumors) to metastasize to
and grow in bone. The long-term goal of this work is to provide insights useful in developing strategies to lessen the morbidity
and mortality associated with skeletal metastasis.
Wnt signaling in normal bone development
Mutations in the Wnt receptor Lrp5 have been causally linked to alterations in human bone development. We have character-
ized a mouse strain deficient in Lrp5 and shown that it recapitulates the low-bone-density phenotype seen in human patients
who have Lrp5 deficiency. We have further shown that mice carrying mutations in both Lrp5 and the related Lrp6 protein have
even more-severe defects in bone density.
To test whether Lrp5 deficiency causes changes in bone density due to aberrant signaling through b-catenin, we created mice
carrying an osteoblast-specific deletion of b-catenin (OC-cre;b-catenin-flox/flox mice). In collaboration with Tom Clemens of
the University of Alabama at Birmingham, we found that alterations of Wnt/b-catenin signaling in osteoblasts lead to changes
in the expression of RANKL and osteoprotegerin (OPG). Consistent with this, histomorphometric evaluation of bone in the mice
with osteoblast-specific deletions of either Apc or b-catenin revealed significant alterations in osteoclastogenesis.
We are addressing how other genetic alterations linked to Wnt/b-catenin signaling affect bone development and osteoblast
function. We have generated mice with conditional alleles of Lrp6 and Lrp5 that can be inactivated via cre-mediated recom-
bination, and we are assessing the roles of these genes at different stages of osteoblast differentiation using both OC-cre and
Dermo1-cre. Finally, we are working to determine what other signaling pathways may impinge on b-catenin signaling to control
osteoblast differentiation and function.
Wnt signaling in mammary development and cancer
We are also addressing the relative roles of Lrp5 and Lrp6 in Wnt1-induced mammary carcinogenesis. A deficiency in Lrp5
dramatically inhibits the development of mammary tumors, and a germline deficiency for Lrp5 or Lrp6 results in delayed
mammary development. Because Lrp5-deficient mice are viable and fertile, we have focused our initial efforts on these mice.
In collaboration with Caroline Alexander’s laboratory, we have found dramatic reductions in the number of mammary progenitor
cells in these mice, and we are examining the mechanisms underlying this reduction. We have also found that Lrp6 plays a key
role in mammary development, and we are focusing on the mechanisms underlying this unique role. Finally, we are defining
the relative roles of b-catenin and mTOR signaling in the initiation and progression of Wnt1-induced mammary tumors. We are
particularly interested in the role(s) of these pathways in regulating the proliferation of normal mammary progenitor cells, as well
as of tumor-initiating cells.
Wnt signaling in metabolic syndrome
Several studies have linked mutations in Lrp5 and/or Lrp6 to the development of diabetes, dyslipedemias, and hypertension in
humans and mice. We are exploring the roles of these genes in this context by creating mice carrying conditional deletions in
hepatocytes or in adipocytes and evaluating their phenotypes.
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Wnt signaling in prostate development and cancer
Two hallmarks of advanced prostate cancer are the development of skeletal osteoblastic metastasis and the ability of the tumor
cells to become independent of androgen for survival. The association of Wnt signaling with bone growth, plus the fact that
b-catenin can bind to the androgen receptor and make it more susceptible to activation with steroid hormones other than DHT,
make Wnt signaling an attractive candidate for explaining some phenotypes associated with advanced prostate cancer. We
have created mice with a prostate-specific deletion of the Apc gene. These mice develop fully penetrant prostate hyperplasia
by four months of age, and these tumors progress to frank carcinomas by seven months. We have found that these tumors
initially regress under androgen ablation but show signs of androgen-independent growth some months later.
VARI mutant mouse repository
With support from the Institute, our laboratory maintains a repository of mutant mouse strains to support the general develop-
ment of animal models of human disease.
External Collaborators
Bone developmentMary Bouxsein, Beth Israel Deaconness Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts
Thomas Clemens, University of Alabama–Birmingham
Marie-Claude Faugere, University of Kentucky, Lexington
Fanxin Long and David Ornitz, Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri
Merry Jo Oursler, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota
Matthew Warman, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts
Prostate cancerWade Bushman, University of Wisconsin–Madison
Valeri Vashioukhin, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, Washington
Mammary developmentCaroline Alexander, University of Wisconsin–Madison
Yi Li, Baylor Breast Center, Houston, Texas
Metabolic syndromeTim Garvey, University of Alabama-Birmingham
Jiandie Lin and Ormond MacDougald, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Other organ systems/mechanisms of Wnt signalingKathleen Cho and Eric Fearon, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Kang-Yell Choi, Yansei University, Seoul, South Korea
Silvio Gutkind, National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research, Bethesda, Maryland
Kun-Liang Guan, University of California, San Diego
Richard Lang and Aaron Zorn, Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center, Ohio
Malathy Shekhar, Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan
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Recent Publications
Li, Y., A. Ferris, B.C. Lewis, S. Orsulic, B.O. Williams, E.C. Holland, and S.H. Hughes. In press. The RCAS/TVA somatic
gene transfer method in modeling human cancer. In Mouse Models for Cancer Research, J. Green and T. Ried, eds.,
Springer Verlag.
Williams, B.O., and K.L. Insogna. 2009. Where Wnts went: the exploding field of Lrp5 and Lrp6 signaling. Journal of Bone
and Mineral Research 24(2): 171–178.
Badders, Nisha M., Shruti Goel, Rod J. Clark, Kristine S. Klos, Soyoung Kim, Anna Bafico, Charlotta Lindvall,
Bart O. Williams, and Caroline M. Alexander. 2009. The Wnt receptor, Lrp5, is expressed by mouse mammary stem cells
and is required to maintain the basal lineage. PLoS One 4(8): e6594.
Castilho, Rogerio M., Cristiane H. Squarize, Lewis A. Chodosh, Bart O. Williams, and J. Silvio Gutkind. 2009. mTOR
mediates Wnt-induced epidermal stem cell exhaustion and aging. Cell Stem Cell 5(3): 279–289.
Lindvall, Charlotta, Cassandra R. Zylstra, Nicole Evans, Richard A. West, Karl Dykema, Kyle A. Furge, and Bart O. Williams.
2009. The Wnt co-receptor Lrp6 is required for normal mouse mammary gland development. PLoS One 4(6): e5813.
Chen, Jindong, Kunihiko Futami, David Petillo, Jun Peng, PengFei Wang, Jared Knol, Yan Li, Sok Kean Khoo, Dan Huang,
Chao-Nan Qian, et al. 2008. Deficiency of FLCN in mouse kidney led to development of polycystic kidneys and renal
neoplasia. PLoS One 3(10): e3581.
VanKoevering, K.K., and B.O. Williams. 2008. Transgenic mouse strains for conditional gene deletion during skeletal
development. IBMS BoneKEy 5(5): 151–170.
Zylstra, C.R., C. Wan, K.K. VanKoevering, A.K. Sanders, C. Lindvall, T.L. Clemens, and B.O Williams. 2008. Gene
targeting approaches in mice: assessing the roles of LRP5 and LRP6 in osteoblasts. Journal of Muskuloskeletal
& Neuronal Interactions 8(4): 291–293.
Standing, from left: Zhong, Sanders, Lindvall, Lake, Elumalai; seated, from left: Diegel, Williams
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H. Eric Xu, Ph.D.Laboratory of Structural Sciences
Dr. Xu went to Duke University and the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, where he earned his Ph.D. in molecular biology and biochemistry. Following a postdoctoral fellowship with Carl Pabo at MIT, he moved to GlaxoWellcome in 1996 as a research investigator in nuclear receptor drug discovery. Dr. Xu joined VARI as a Senior Scientific Investigator in July 2002 and was promoted to Distinguished Scientific Investigator in March 2007.
Abhishek Bandyopadhyay, Ph.D.Ajian He, Ph.D.Jiyuan Ke, Ph.D.Schoen Kruse, Ph.D.Raghu Malapaka, Ph.D.Karsten Melcher, Ph.D.Augie Pioszak, Ph.D.David Tolbert, Ph.D.Yong Xu, Ph.D.Chenghai Zhang, Ph.D.
StaffX. Edward Zhou, Ph.D.Jennifer Holtrop, B.S.Amanda Kovach, B.S.Naomi Parker, B.S.Kelly Powell, B.S.Debra Guthrey
Cee Wah ChenAoife ConneelyXiang GaoClara JureckyShiva KumarKuntal PalEmily PopmaLeonor RuivoRachel TalaskiXiaoyong Zhi
StudentsJun Li, Ph.D.Ross Reynolds, Ph.D.
Visiting Scientists
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Research Interests
My major research interest is the structures and functions of protein/ligand complexes that play key roles in major hormone signaling pathways. My secondary research interest is to explore the structural information with a goal of developing therapeutic agents for treating human disease, including cancer and diabetes. Research in my group currently focuses on three areas—nuclear hormone receptors, the Met tyrosine kinase receptor, and G protein–coupled receptors—because these proteins, beyond their fundamental roles in biology, are important drug targets. Our studies use multidisciplinary approaches, including molecular and cellular biology, biochemistry, animal physiology, and X-ray crystallography.
Nuclear hormone receptors
Nuclear hormone receptors form a large family comprising ligand-regulated and DNA-binding transcriptional factors, including receptors for classic steroid hormones such as estrogen, progesterone, androgens, and glucocorticoids, as well as receptors for peroxisome proliferator activators, vitamin D, vitamin A, and thyroid hormones. These classic receptors are among the most suc-cessful targets in the history of drug discovery: every receptor has one or more synthetic ligands currently being used as medicines. In the last five years, we have developed the following projects centering on the structural biology of nuclear receptors.
Peroxisome proliferator–activated receptors
The peroxisome proliferator–activated receptors (PPARa, d, and g) are key regulators of glucose and fatty acid homeostasis and as such are important therapeutic targets for treating cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and cancer. Millions of patients have benefited from treatment with the PPARg ligands rosiglitazone and pioglitazone for type II diabetes. To understand the molecular basis of ligand-mediated signaling by PPARs, we have determined crystal structures of each PPAR’s ligand-binding domain (LBD) bound to many diverse ligands, including fatty acids, the lipid-lowering fibrates, and a new generation of anti-diabetic drugs, the glitazones. We have also determined the crystal structures of these receptors bound to coactivators or co-repressors, and that of PPARg bound to natural ligand-nitrated fatty acid. These structures provide a framework for un-derstanding the mechanisms of PPAR agonists and antagonists, as well as the recruitment of coactivators and co-repressors. We have discovered a number of natural ligands of PPARg. The specific plan of this project is to test the physiological roles of these PPAR ligands in glucose and insulin regulation, to unravel their molecular and structural mechanisms of action, and to develop them as therapeutics for diabetes and dislipidemia treatment.
Human glucocorticoid and mineralocorticoid receptors
The human glucocorticoid receptor (GR) and mineralocorticoid receptor (MR) are classic steroid hormone receptors that have crucial effects on immune/inflammatory responses, metabolic homeostasis, and control of blood pressure. Both GR and MR are well-established drug targets, and drugs targeting these receptors are sold for more than $10 billion annually. GR ligands such as dexamethasone (Dex) and fluticasone propionate (FP) are used to treat asthma, leukemia, and autoimmune diseases; MR ligands such as spironolactone and eplerenone are used to treat hypertension and heart failure. However, the clinical use of these ligands is limited by undesirable side effects partly associated with their receptor cross-reactivity or low potency. Thus, the discovery of highly potent and more-selective ligands for GR (such ligands are called “dissociated glucocorticoids”, which can separate good effects from bad ones) remains an intensive goal of pharmaceutical research.
Recently we determined the structure of GR bound to deacylcortivazol (DAC), which binds to GR with 200-fold more potency than cortisol, the physiological glucocorticoid. The GR DAC structure reveals that the GR ligand binding pocket can be expanded dramatically, to twice its normal size. This new pocket provides a tremendous opportunity for drug design and screening. Using a computational screen, we have identified several nonsteroidal ligands that like dissociated glucocorticoids in our cell-based assay. We are now running animal studies to confirm the physiological activities of these novel nonsteroidal ligands, which could lead to new methods of treating inflammation and autoimmune diseases. In addition, we plan to study the molecular and structural mechanisms of the dissociated glucocorticoids identified by our research.
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The human androgen receptor
The androgen receptor (AR) is the central molecule in the development and progression of prostate cancer. Mutations of the AR can alter the three-dimensional structure of the receptor in cancer cells and allow the cells to escape the repression of anti-androgen treatment. In this project, we intend to determine the structural basis of the mutant AR proteins. We have discovered that AR mutation in prostate cancers often results in enhanced binding to a particular coactivator, SRC-3 (which is also called “amplified in breast cancer 1”, or AIB1). We plan to study the structural and molecular mechanism of AR antagonists used in prostate cancer treatment and to determine a crystal structure of full-length AR bound to DNA and coactivator motifs.
Structural genomics of nuclear receptor ligand-binding domains
The LBDs of nuclear receptors contain key structural elements that mediate ligand-dependent regulation of nuclear receptors; as such, they have been the focus of intense structural study. In the past two years, we have focused on structural char-acterization of two orphan receptors: constitutive androstane receptor (CAR) and steroidogenic factor-1 (SF-1), and we have made significant progress in understanding their ligand binding relationships. In addition, we have identified retinoic acid as a low-affinity ligand for COUP-TF, which is one of the most conserved nuclear receptors and has essential roles in angiogenesis, heart development, CNS activity, and metabolic homeostasis. We plan to solve the structures of the remaining orphan receptors, of which there are only four left.
The Met tyrosine kinase receptor
The MET receptor is a tyrosine kinase that is activated by hepatocyte growth factor/scatter factor (HGF/SF). Aberrant activation of the Met receptor has been linked with development and metastasis of many types of solid tumors and has been correlated with poor clinical prognosis. In collaboration with George Vande Woude and Ermanno Gherardi, we plan to develop HGF-Met antagonists for treating solid tumors.
G protein–coupled receptors
GPCRs form the largest family of receptors in the human genome; they receive signals from photons, ions, small chemicals, peptides, and protein hormones. Although these receptors account for over 40% of drug targets, their structure remains a challenge because they are seven-transmembrane receptors. There are only a few crystal structures for class A GPCRs, and many important questions regarding GPCR ligand binding and activation remain unanswered. Currently my group is focused on Class B GPCRs, which includes receptors for parathyroid hormone (PTH), corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF), glucagon, and glucagon-like peptide 1. We have determined crystal structures of the ligand binding domain of the PTH and CRF receptors, and we are developing hormone analogs for treating osteoporosis, depression, and diabetes. In addition, we are developing a mammalian overexpression system and plan to use this system for expressing full-length GPCRs for crystallization and structure studies.
From left, standing: Zhi, Jurecky, Holtrop, Pioszak, Guthrey, Powell, Kovach, Melcher, Parker, Bandyopadhyay, Zhang, E. Xu, Tolbert, Li, Ke, Ruivo
kneeling: Malapaka, Y. Xu, Reynolds, Zhou, He
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External Collaborators
Eugene Chen and Doug Engel, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Bruce Freeman, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pennsylvania
Thomas J. Gardella, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School
Ermanno Gherardi, University of Cambridge, London, United Kingdom
Steve Kliewer and David Mangelsdorf, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas
Dan R. Littman, New York University School of Medicine, New York
Donald MacDonnell, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina
Clay F. Semenkovich, Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri
Stoney Simmons, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland
Scott Thacher, Orphagen Pharmaceuticals, San Diego, California
Brad Thompson and Raj Kumar, University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston
Ming-Jer Tsai and Sophia Tsai, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas
Jiemin Wong, Eastern China Normal University, Shanghai
Eu Leong Yong, National University of Singapore
Pfizer Pharmaceuticals
Schering-Plough Pharmaceuticals
Recent Publications
Pioszak, Augen A., Naomi R. Parker, Thomas J. Gardella, and H. Eric Xu. 2009. Structural basis for parathyriod
hormone–related protein binding to the parathyriod hormone receptor and design of conformation-selective peptides.
Journal of Biological Chemistry 284(41): 28382–28391.
Chakravarthy, Manu V., Irfan J. Lodhi, Li Yin, Raghu V. Malapaka, H. Eric Xu, John Turk, and Clay F. Semenkovich.
2009. Identification of a physiologically relevant endogenous ligand for PPARa in liver. Cell 138(3): 467–488.
Knudsen, Beatrice S., Ping Zhao, James Resau, Sandra Cottingham, Ermanno Gherardi, Eric Xu, Bree Berghuis,
Jennifer Daugherty, Tessa Grabinski, Jose Toro, et al. 2009. A novel multipurpose monoclonal antibody for evaluating
human c-Met expression in preclinical and clinical settings. Applied Immunohistochemistry and Molecular Morphology
17(1): 56–67.
Wang, Zhu, X. Edward Zhou, Daniel L. Motola, Xin Gao, Kelly Suino-Powell, Aoife Conneely, Craig Ogata, Kamalesh K. Sharma,
Richard J. Auchus, James B. Lok, et al. 2009. Identification of the nuclear receptor DAF-12 as a therapeutic target in
parasitic nematodes. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences U.S.A.106(23): 9138–9143.
Kruse, Schoen W., Kelly Suino-Powell, X. Edward Zhou, Jennifer E. Kretschman, Ross Reynolds, Clemens Vonrhein,
Yong Xu, Liliang Wang, Sophia Y. Tsai, Ming-Jer Tsai, and H. Eric Xu. 2008. Identification of COUP-TFII orphan nuclear
receptor as a retinoic acid–activated receptor. PLoS Biology 6(9): e227.
Li, Yong, Jifeng Zhang, Francisco J. Schopfer, Dariusz Martynowski, Minerva T. Garcia-Barrio, Amanda Kovach, Kelly
Suino-Powell, Paul R.S. Baker, Bruce A. Freeman, Y. Eugene Chen, and H. Eric Xu. 2008. Molecular recognition of
nitrated fatty acids by PPARg. Nature Structural & Molecular Biology 15(8): 865–867.
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Daniel Nathans Memorial Award
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Daniel Nathans Memorial Award
The Daniel Nathans Memorial Award was established in memory of Dr. Daniel Nathans, a distinguished member of our scientific
community and a founding member of VARI’s Board of Scientific Advisors. We established this award to recognize individuals
who emulate Dan and his contributions to biomedical and cancer research. It is our way of thanking and honoring him for his
help and guidance in bringing Jay and Betty Van Andel’s dream to reality. The Daniel Nathans Memorial Award was announced
at our inaugural symposium, “Cancer & Molecular Genetics in the Twenty-First Century”, in September 2000.
Award Recipients
2000 Richard D. Klausner, M.D.
2001 Francis S. Collins, M.D., Ph.D.
2002 Lawrence H. Einhorn, M.D.
2003 Robert A. Weinberg, Ph.D.
2004 Brian Druker, M.D.
2005 Tony Hunter, Ph.D., and Tony Pawson, Ph.D.
2006 Harald zur Hausen, M.D., and Douglas R. Lowy, M.D.
2007 Dennis J. Slamon, M.D., Ph.D., and Genentech, Inc.
From left: Nathans awardees Arthur D. Levinson, Ph.D., representing Genentech, Inc., and Dennis J. Slamon, M.D., Ph.D., with VARI Director George F. Vande Woude at the Nathans Award ceremony.
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Postdoctoral Fellowship Program
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Postdoctoral Fellowship Program
The Van Andel Research Institute provides postdoctoral training opportunities to Ph.D. scientists beginning their research careers.
The fellowships help promising scientists advance their knowledge and research experience while at the same time supporting
the research endeavors of VARI. The fellowships are funded in three ways: 1) by the laboratories to which the fellow is assigned;
2) by the VARI Office of the Director; or 3) by outside agencies. Each fellow is assigned to a scientific investigator who oversees
the progress and direction of research. Fellows who worked in VARI laboratories in 2008 and early 2009 are listed below.
Abhishek BandyopadhyayUniversity of Cambridge, United KingdomVARI mentor: Eric Xu
Jennifer Bromberg-WhitePennsylvania State University College of Medicine, HersheyVARI mentor: Nicholas Duesbery
John BuchweitzMichigan State University, East LansingVARI mentor: Brian Haab
Kathryn EisenmannUniversity of Minnesota, MinneapolisVARI mentor: Arthur Alberts
Leslie FarberGeorge Washington University, Washington, D.C.VARI mentor: Bin Teh
Quliang GuSun Yat-sen University of Medicine, ChinaVARI mentor: Brian Cao
Dan HuangPeking Union Medical College, ChinaVARI mentor: Bin Teh
Schoen KruseUniversity of Colorado, BoulderVARI mentor: Eric Xu
Leanne Lash-Van WyheUniversity of Texas Medical Branch, GalvestonVARI mentor: Arthur Alberts
Yan LiPeking Union Medical College, ChinaVARI mentor: Bin Teh
Brendan LooyengaUniversity of Michigan, Ann ArborVARI mentor: James Resau
Xu LuUniversity of Texas Health Sciences Center, San AntonioVARI mentor: Steven Triezenberg
Venkata MalapakaWestern Michigan University, KalamazooVARI mentor: Eric Xu
Daisuke MatsudaKitasato University, JapanVARI mentor: Bin Teh
Aikseng OoiUniversity of Malaya, Kuala LumpurVARI mentor: Bin Teh
Electa ParkLouisiana State University Health Sciences Center, New OrleansVARI mentor: Cindy Miranti
Augen PioszakUniversity of Michigan, Ann ArborVARI mentor: Eric Xu
Dorine SavreuxVirology University, FranceVARI mentor: Michael Weinreich
Yi-Mi WuNational Tsin-Hua University, TaiwanVARI mentor: Brian Haab
Yong XuShanghai Institute of Materia Medica, ChinaVARI mentor: Eric Xu
Chenghai ZhangVirus Institute of the CDC, ChinaVARI mentor: Eric Xu
Alex ZhongSun Yat-sen University, Guangzhou, ChinaVARI mentor: Bart Williams
Xiaoyin ZhouUniversity of Alabama – BirminghamVARI mentor: Eric Xu
From left: Wu, Park, Lash-Van Wyhe, Ooi, Bandyopadhyay, Bromberg-White, Malapaka, Lu, Pioszak, Zhang, Looyenga, Huang, Zhou, Xu
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Student Programs
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Grand Rapids Area Pre-College Engineering Program
The Grand Rapids Area Pre-College Engineering Program (GRAPCEP) is administered by Davenport University and jointly
sponsored and funded by Schering Plough and VARI. The program is designed to provide selected high school students,
who have plans to major in science or genetic engineering in college, with the opportunity to work in a research laboratory. In
addition to research methods, the students also learn workplace success skills such as teamwork and leadership. The four
2008 GRAPCEP students were
Chris Fletcher (Hay/Vande Woude)
Creston High School
Rebecca O’Leary (Resau/Duesbery)
Creston High School
Elisa Van Dyke (Hay/Vande Woude)
Creston High school
Allison Vander Ploeg (Resau/Duesbery)
Creston High School
From left: Fletcher, Van Dyke, Vander Ploeg, O’Leary
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Aquinas College, Grand Rapids, Michigan Kevin Coalter (Resau) Sara Kunz (Hay/Vande Woude) Kathleen Pollock* (Hay/Vande Woude) Audrey Sanders (Williams) Randi VanOcker (Haab)
Butler University, Indianapolis, Indiana Kevin Maupin (Haab)
Calvin College, Grand Rapids, Michigan Cheri Ackerman* (MacKeigan) Lee Heeringa (Haab) John Snider (Teh) Katie Van Drunen (Resau)
DePaul University, Chicago, Illinois Cassie Schumacher* (Williams)
DePauw University, Greencastle, Indiana Victoria Hledin (Cao)
Ferris State University, Big Rapids, Michigan Carrie Fiebig (Haab)
Grand Rapids Community College, Michigan Sara Ramirez (Resau) Albert Rodriguez (Alberts)
Grand Valley State University, Allendale, Michigan Ala’a Abughoush (Hay/Vande Woude) Erica Bechtel (Miranti) Janell Carruthers (Resau) Molly Dobb (Webb) Eric Graf (Miranti) Craig Johnson (Furge) Caitlin May* (Weinreich) Gary Rajah, Jr. (Miranti) Jonathan Rawson* (Alberts) Patrick Richardson (Webb) Doug Roossien, Jr.* (Teh)
Hope College, Holland, Michigan Nicole Beuschel (Webb)
Indiana University, Bloomington Sarah Barney (Resau)
Marquette University, Milwaukee, Wisconsin Michael Avallone (Teh)
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge Shannon Moran (Duesbery)
Michigan State University, East Lansing Tim Caldwell (Triezenberg) Ying-Chou Chen, M.S. (Weinreich) Michelle Dawes* (Duesbery) Aaron DeWard, B.S. (Alberts) Pete Haak, B.S. (Resau) Sebla Kutluay, B.S. (Triezenberg) Laura Lamb, B.S. (Miranti) Chih-Shia Lee, M.S. (Duesbery) Justyne Matheny* (Triezenberg) Charles Miller, B.S. (Weinreich) Michael Shaheen (MacKeigan) Katie Sian, B.S. (MacKeigan) Susan Spotts, B.S. (Miranti) Rachel Talaski* (Xu) Jelani Zarif, M.S. (Miranti)
Nanjing Medical University, China Guipeng Ding (Cao)
Northern Illinois University, DeKalb Katsuo Hisano (Resau)
Northern Michigan University, Marquette Jessica Karasiewicz* (Cao)
Sun Yat-sen University, Guangzhou, China Rui Sun (Cao)
University of Bath, United Kingdom Cee Wah Chen (Xu) Aoife Conneely (Xu) Fraser Holleywood (Miranti)
University of Dayton, Ohio Jim Fitzgerald (Teh)
University of Mannheim, Germany Katja Strunk (Alberts)
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Stephanie Berry (Williams) Xiang Gao (Xu) Theresa Gipson* (Furge) Dan Hekman* (Haab) Hailey Hines (Webb) Jimmy Hogan (MacKeigan) Dan Overbeek* (Cavey) Kyle VanKoevering (Williams)
University of Notre Dame, South Bend, Indiana Kristin Buzzitta (Teh)
Summer Student Internship Program
The VARI student internships were established to provide college students with an opportunity to work with professional research-
ers in their fields of interest, to use state-of-the-art equipment and technologies, and to learn valuable people and presentation
skills. At the completion of the 10-week program, the students summarize their projects in an oral presentation or poster.
From January 2008 to March 2009, VARI hosted more than 65 students from 24 colleges and universities in formal summer
internships under the Frederik and Lena Meijer Student Internship Program and in other student positions during the year. An
asterisk (*) indicates a Meijer student intern.
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Summer interns 2008: 1. Cheri Ackerman; 2. Dani Burgenske; 3. Dan Hekman; 4. Jim Fitzgerald; 5. John Snider; 6. Tim Caldwell; 7. Chris Fletcher; 8. Jessica Karasiewicz; 9. Xiang Gao; 10. Randi VanOcker; 11. Jimmy Hogan; 12. Caitlin May; 13. Justyne Matheny; 14. Stephanie Berry; 15. Cassie Schumacher; 16. Theresa Gipson; 17. Nicole Beuschel; 18. Bess Conners; 19. Rebecca O’Leary; 20. Rachel Talaski; 21. Elisa Van Dyke; 22. Josh Van Alstyne; 23. Victoria Hleden; 24. Katie Van Drunen; 25. Leanne Day; 26. Doug Roossien, Jr.; 27. Mitchell Zoerhoff; 28. Chris Cleasby; 29. Allison Vander Ploeg; 30. Dan Overbeek; 31. Michael Shaheen; 32. Naveen Reddy; 33. Kathleen Pollock; 34. Brett Butler; 35. Jonathan Rawson.
University of Wisconsin – Madison Dani Burgenske* (Resau)
Wellesley College, Wellesley, Massachusetts Bess Connors (Webb)
Other Van Andel Institute internsDavenport University, Grand Rapids, Michigan Sara Hop (Development) Josh Van Alstyne (Information Technology)
Ferris State University, Big Rapids, Michigan Chris Cleasby (Facilities) Leanne Day (General Counsel)
Grand Valley State University, Allendale, MIchigan Brett Butler (Information Technology) Naveen Reddy (Business Development)
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Mitchell Zoerhoff (Finance)
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Han-Mo Koo Memorial Seminar Series
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Han-Mo Koo Memorial Seminar Series
This seminar series is dedicated to the memory of Dr. Han-Mo Koo, who was a VARI Scientific Investigator from 1999 until his
passing in May of 2004.
February 2008 David N. Zacks, University of Michigan “Photoreceptor survival during disease: life hanging in the balance”
Anthony J. Senagore, Spectrum Health “Economic issues in translational medicine: laparoscopic colectomy”
March Robert M. Strieter, University of Virginia “CXC chemokines in angiogenesis and metastases of cancer”
Graham J. Burton, University of Cambridge “Trophoblast invasion in human pregnancy: functions, mechanisms, and regulation”
Valeri I. Vasioukhin, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center “Mechanisms of prostate cancer initiation and progression”
April Anirban Maitra, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine “New therapeutic targets for pancreatic cancer”
Patricia E. Fast, International AIDS Vaccine Initiative “HIV prevention with vaccines and other new prevention technologies:
where do we stand in 2008?”
John L. Cleveland, Scripps Research Institute “Checkpoints in Myc-induced lymphomagenesis”
Cory Abate-Shen, Columbia University “Targeting differentiation pathways in mouse models of prostate and bladder cancer”
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June Donald J. Tindall, Mayo Clinic “Androgen regulation of gene expression in prostate cancer”
Terry W. Du Clos, University of New Mexico “C-reactive protein, receptors, ligands, and autoimmunity”
David B. Solit, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center “Genetic predictors of BRAF/MEK-dependence in human tumors”
Kim Orth, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center “Black death, black spot, black pearl: dissecting the targets of pathogenic effectors”
July Brian I. Rini, Case Western Reserve University “BEGF-targeted therapy in metastatic RCC”
August Ormond A. MacDougald, University of Michigan “Role of Wnt signaling in adipose tissues”
Bill M. Bement, University of Wisconsin–Madison “A Rho GTPase signal treadmill”
September Bruce H. Littman, Translational Medicine Associates “The value of translational medicine”
Peter A. Campochiaro, Johns Hopkins Hospital School of Medicine “Pathogenesis and treatment of ocular neovascularization and excessive vascular permeability”
Sean J. Morrison, University of Michigan “Stem cell self-renewal and cancer cell proliferation”
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October Teresa K. Woodruff, Northwestern University “Regulation of follicle development in vitro and in vivo”
Benjamin G. Neel, Ontario Cancer Institute “Shp2 mutations in human disease”
Andreas G. Ladurner, European Molecular Biology Laboratory “The language of chromatin plasticity: identifying new modules and ligands in the regulation of
nucleosome structure”
November William B. Mattes, Critical Path Institute “The predictive safety testing consortium: reinventing translational safety assessment through
interdisciplinary and interorganizational collaboration”
Dan R. Littman, New York University Medical Center and Howard Hughes Medical Institute “Role of the orphan nuclear receptor RORyt in immune system homeostasis”
December Grant D. Barish, Salk Institute of Biological Studies “Nuclear receptor and co-repressor control of inflammation: getting SMRT about atherosclerosis”
Dennis J. Slamon, University of California, Los Angeles Nathans Award Public Lecture: “The diversity of human breast cancer”
Nathans Award Scientific Lecture: “Molecular diversity of human breast cancer: clinical and
therapeutic implications”
Arthur D. Levinson, Genentech Nathans Award Public Lecture: “Cancer biology and the future of personalized medicine”
Nathans Award Scientific Lecture: “Herceptin: lessons and prospects for the development of
individualized cancer therapeutics”
Jiandie Lin, University of Michigan “Metabolic control through the PGC-1 coactivator networks”
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January 2009 Xu Cao, University of Alabama, Birmingham “TGFb1 as a coupling factor for bone resorption and formation”
February Tom Mikkelsen, Henry Ford Hospital “Advances in brain tumor diagnosis and therapy”
M. Arthur Moseley, Duke University “Gel-free, label-free LC/MS differential expression proteomics: applications at the bench and
at the bedside”
March John E. Niederhuber, National Cancer Institute “Cancer as an organ system: the tumor microenviromnent”
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Van Andel Research Institute Organization
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Van Andel Research Institute | Scientific Report
David L. Van Andel, Chairman and CEO, Van Andel Institute
VARI Board of Trustees
David L. Van Andel, Chairman and CEO
James Fahner, M.D.
Fritz M. Rottman, Ph.D.
Board of Scientific Advisors
The Board of Scientific Advisors advises the CEO and the Board of Trustees, providing recommendations and suggestions
regarding the overall goals and scientific direction of VARI. The members are
Michael S. Brown, M.D., Chairman
Richard Axel, M.D.
Joseph L. Goldstein, M.D.
Tony Hunter, Ph.D.
Phillip A. Sharp, Ph.D.
Scientific Advisory Board
The Scientific Advisory Board advises the VARI Director, providing recommendations and suggestions specific to the ongoing
research, especially in the areas of cancer, genomics, and genetics. It also coordinates and oversees the scientific review
process for the Institute’s research programs. The members are
Alan Bernstein, Ph.D.
Joan Brugge, Ph.D.
Webster Cavenee, Ph.D.
Frank McCormick, Ph.D.
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Office of the Director Staff
Office of the Director
Jeffrey M. Trent, Ph.D., F.A.C.M.G. President and Research Director
Deputy Director for Special Programs James H. Resau, Ph.D.
Deputy Director for Research Operations Nicholas S. Duesbery, Ph.D.
Director for Research Administration Roberta Jones
Administrator to the Director Michelle Bassett
Science Editor David E. Nadziejka
From left: Guthrey, Novakowski, Koo, Klotz, Minard, Resau, Nelson, Lewis, Noyes, Verlin, Patrick
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Van Andel Research Institute | Scientific Report
Van Andel Institute Administrative OrganizationThe organizational units listed below provide administrative support to both the Van Andel Research Institute and the Van Andel Education Institute.
Executive David Van Andel, Chairman and CEO Steven R. Heacock, Chief Administrative Officer and General Counsel R. Jack Frick, Chief Financial Officer Christy Goss, Executive Assistant Ann Schoen, Executive Assistant Laura Lohr
Business Development Jerry Callahan, Ph.D., M.B.A., Vice President Brent Mulder, Ph.D., M.B.A. Andrea DeJongeThomas DeKoning Jennifer McGrail
Communications and Development Joseph P. Gavan, Vice PresidentJaime BrookmeyerTim HawkinsSarah HopSarah LambGerilyn MaySarah Smedes
Facilities Samuel Pinto, ManagerJeff CoolingJason DawesKristi GentryKen De YoungShelly KingTracy LewisLewis LipseyDave MarvinGirlie PetersonKaren PittmanRichard SalJose SantosRichard UlrichPete VanConantJeff Wilbourn
Finance Timothy Myers, ControllerStephanie BirgyCory CooperSandi DulmesRichard HerrickKeri JacksonAngela LawrenceHeather LySusan RaymondCindy TurnerJamie VanPortfleetTheresa Wood
Glassware and Media Services Richard M. Disbrow, C.P.M., Manager Bob Sadowski Marlene Sal
Grants and Contracts Carolyn W. Witt, Director Anita Boven Nicole Doppel Sara O’Neal David Ross
Human Resources Linda Zarzecki, Director Margie Hoving Stephanie Koelewyn Pamela Murray Angela Plutschouw
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Information Technology Bryon Campbell, Ph.D., Chief Information Officer David Drolett, Manager Bill Baillod Tom Barney Phil Bott Nathan Bumstead Brad Covell Charles Grabinski Kenneth Hoekman Kimberlee Jeffries Jason Kotecki Thad Roelofs Russell Vander Mey Candy Wilkerson
Investments Office Kathleen Vogelsang, Director Benjamin Carlson Ted Heilman
Logistic Services Richard M. Disbrow, C.P.M., Manager Chris Kutschinski Shannon Moore
Procurement Services Richard M. Disbrow, C.P.M., Manager Heather Frazee Amy Poplaski John Waldon
Security Kevin Denhof, CPP, Chief Andriana Vincent, Team Leader Amy Davis Sean Mooney Maria Straatsma Chris Wilson
Contract Support Sarah Lowen, Librarian (Grand Valley State University) Jim Kidder, Safety Manager (Michigan State University)
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Van Andel Education InstituteBoard of Trustees
David Van Andel, Chairman Donald W. Maine
Juan R. Olivarez, Ph.D. Gordon Van Harn, Ph.D. Gordon Van Wylen, Sc.D.
Van Andel Education InstituteDirector
Steven J. Triezenberg, Ph.D.
Chief Financial OfficerR. Jack Frick
Chief Executive OfficerDavid Van Andel
VP Communicationsand Development
Joseph P. Gavan
Board of Scientific AdvisorsMichael S. Brown, M.D., Chairman
Richard Axel, M.D. Joseph L. Goldstein, M.D.
Tony Hunter, Ph.D. Phillip A. Sharp, Ph.D.
Van Andel Research InstituteBoard of Trustees
David Van Andel, Chairman James Fahner, M.D.
Fritz M. Rottman, Ph.D.
Van Andel Research Institute President and
Research DirectorJeffrey M. Trent, Ph.D., F.A.C.M.G.
Chief Administrative Officerand General Counsel
Steven R. Heacock
Van Andel Institute
Van Andel Institute Board of TrusteesDavid Van Andel, Chairman
Peter C. Cook (emeritus) Ralph W. Hauenstein (emeritus)
Michael Jandernoa John C. Kennedy
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Van Andel Research Institute
PRESIDENT AND RESEARCH DIRECTOR – Jeffrey M. Trent, Ph.D., F.A.C.M.G.
Deputy Directors Special Programs James Resau, Ph.D. Research Operations Nick Duesbery, Ph.D.
Director for Research Administration Roberta Jones
BASIC SCIENCE
SCIENTIFIC ADVISORY BOARD Alan Bernstein, Ph.D. Joan Brugge, Ph.D. Webster Cavenee, Ph.D. Frank McCormick, Ph.D.
SPECIAL PROGRAMS
Cancer Cell BiologyBrian Haab, Ph.D. Cancer Immunodiagnostics
George Vande Woude, Ph.D. Molecular Oncology
Craig Webb, Ph.D. Tumor Metastasis & Angiogenesis
Signal TransductionArt Alberts, Ph.D. Cell Structure & Signal Intergration
Cindy Miranti, Ph.D. Integrin Signaling & Tumorigenesis
DNA Replication & RepairMichael Weinreich, Ph.D. Chromosome Replication
Animal ModelsNicholas Duesbery, Ph.D. Cancer & Developmental Cell Biology
Bart Williams, Ph.D. Cell Signaling & Carcinogenesis
Cancer GeneticsBin Teh, M.D., Ph.D. Cancer Genetics
Structural BiologyEric Xu, Ph.D. Structural Sciences
Systems BiologyJeffrey MacKeigan, Ph.D. Systems Biology
Gene RegulationSteven Triezenberg, Ph.D. Transcriptional Regulation Dean of VAI Graduate School
Division of Quantitative SciencesJames Resau, Ph.D.
James Resau, Ph.D. Analytical, Cellular, & Molecular MIcroscopy
James Resau, Ph.D. Microarray Technology
Kyle Furge, Ph.D. Computational Biology
Greg Cavey, B.S. Mass Spectrometry & Proteomics
James Resau, Ph.D. Molecular Epidemiology
Brian Cao, M.D. Antibody Technology
Pamela Swiatek, Ph.D., M.B.A. Germline Modification & Cytogenetics
Bryn Eagleson, B.S, RLATG Transgenics and Vivarium
Bin Teh, M.D., Ph.D. Sequencing
Art Alberts, Ph.D. Flow Cytometry
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