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Mendez, Lourdes

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Mendez

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Lourdes

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Mendez, Lourdes

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Now showing 1 - 3 of 3
  • Publication

    MUC1 Inhibition Leads to Decrease in PD-L1 Levels via Up-Regulation of miRNAs

    (Springer Nature, 2017) Pyzer, Athalia Rachel; Stroopinsky, Dina; Rosenblatt, Jacalyn; Anastasiadou, Eleni; Rajabi, Hasan; Washington, Abigail; Tagde, Ashujit; Chu, Jen-Hwa; Coll, Maxwell; Jiao, AL; Tsai, LT; Tenen, DE; Cole, Leandra Samantha; Palmer, Kristen; Ephraim, A; Leaf, Rebecca Karp; Nahas, Myrna; Apel, Arie; Bar-Natan, M; Jain, Salvia; McMasters, Malgorzata; Mendez, Lourdes; Arnason, Jon; Raby, Benjamin; Slack, Frank; Kufe, Donald; Avigan, David

    The PD-L1/PD-1 pathway is a critical component of the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment in acute myeloid leukemia (AML), but little is known about its regulation. We investigated the role of the MUC1 oncoprotein in modulating PD-L1 expression in AML. Silencing of MUC1 in AML cell lines suppressed PD-L1 expression without a decrease in PD-L1 mRNA levels, suggesting a post-transcriptional mechanism of regulation. We identified the microRNAs miR-200c and miR-34a as key regulators of PD-L1 expression in AML. Silencing of MUC1 in AML cells led to a marked increase in miR-200c and miR-34a levels, without changes in precursor microRNA, suggesting that MUC1 might regulate microRNA-processing. MUC1 signaling decreased the expression of the microRNA-processing protein DICER, via the suppression of c-Jun activity. NanoString (Seattle, WA, USA) array of MUC1-silenced AML cells demonstrated an increase in the majority of probed microRNAs. In an immunocompetent murine AML model, targeting of MUC1 led to a significant increase in leukemia-specific T cells. In concert, targeting MUC1 signaling in human AML cells resulted in enhanced sensitivity to T-cell-mediated lysis. These findings suggest MUC1 is a critical regulator of PD-L1 expression via its effects on microRNA levels and represents a potential therapeutic target to enhance anti-tumor immunity.

  • Publication

    A non-cell-autonomous role for Pml in the maintenance of leukemia from the niche

    (Nature Publishing Group UK, 2018) Guarnerio, Jlenia; Mendez, Lourdes; Asada, Noboru; Menon, Archita Venugopal; Fung, Jacqueline; Berry, Kelsey; Frenette, Paul S.; Ito, Keisuke; Pandolfi, Pier Paolo

    Disease recurrence after therapy, due to the persistence of resistant leukemic cells, represents a fundamental problem in the treatment of leukemia. Elucidating the mechanisms responsible for the maintenance of leukemic cells, before and after treatment, is therefore critical to identify curative modalities. It has become increasingly clear that cell-autonomous mechanisms are not solely responsible for leukemia maintenance. Here, we report a role for Pml in mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) in supporting leukemic cells of both CML and AML. Mechanistically, we show that Pml regulates pro-inflammatory cytokines within MSCs, and that this function is critical in sustaining CML-KLS and AML ckit+ leukemic cells non-cell autonomously.

  • Publication

    Deregulated PP1α phosphatase activity towards MAPK activation is antagonized by a tumor suppressive failsafe mechanism

    (Nature Publishing Group UK, 2018) Chen, Ming; Wan, Lixin; Zhang, Jiangwen; Zhang, Jinfang; Mendez, Lourdes; Clohessy, John; Berry, Kelsey; Victor, Joshua; Yin, Qing; Zhu, Yuan; Wei, Wenyi; Pandolfi, Pier Paolo

    The mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway is frequently aberrantly activated in advanced cancers, including metastatic prostate cancer (CaP). However, activating mutations or gene rearrangements among MAPK signaling components, such as Ras and Raf, are not always observed in cancers with hyperactivated MAPK. The mechanisms underlying MAPK activation in these cancers remain largely elusive. Here we discover that genomic amplification of the PPP1CA gene is highly enriched in metastatic human CaP. We further identify an S6K/PP1α/B-Raf signaling pathway leading to activation of MAPK signaling that is antagonized by the PML tumor suppressor. Mechanistically, we find that PP1α acts as a B-Raf activating phosphatase and that PML suppresses MAPK activation by sequestering PP1α into PML nuclear bodies, hence repressing S6K-dependent PP1α phosphorylation, 14-3-3 binding and cytoplasmic accumulation. Our findings therefore reveal a PP1α/PML molecular network that is genetically altered in human cancer towards aberrant MAPK activation, with important therapeutic implications.