@article{RichterHuettmannRekowskietal.2019, author = {Richter, Julia and H{\"u}ttmann, Andreas and Rekowski, Jan and Schmitz, Christine and G{\"a}rtner, Selina and Rosenwald, Andreas and Hansmann, Martin-Leo and Hartmann, Sylvia and M{\"o}ller, Peter and Wacker, Hans-Heinrich and Feller, Alfred and Thorns, Christoph and M{\"u}ller, Stefan and D{\"u}hrsen, Ulrich and Klapper, Wolfram}, title = {Molecular characteristics of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma in the Positron Emission Tomography-Guided Therapy of Aggressive Non-Hodgkin lymphomas (PETAL) trial: correlation with interim PET and outcome}, series = {Blood Cancer Journal}, volume = {9}, journal = {Blood Cancer Journal}, doi = {10.1038/s41408-019-0230-8}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-226185}, pages = {67}, year = {2019}, abstract = {No abstract available}, language = {en} } @article{LopezKleinheinzAukemaetal.2019, author = {L{\´o}pez, Cristina and Kleinheinz, Kortine and Aukema, Sietse M. and Rohde, Marius and Bernhart, Stephan H. and H{\"u}bschmann, Daniel and Wagener, Rabea and Toprak, Umut H. and Raimondi, Francesco and Kreuz, Markus and Waszak, Sebastian M. and Huang, Zhiqin and Sieverling, Lina and Paramasivam, Nagarajan and Seufert, Julian and Sungalee, Stephanie and Russell, Robert B. and Bausinger, Julia and Kretzmer, Helene and Ammerpohl, Ole and Bergmann, Anke K. and Binder, Hans and Borkhardt, Arndt and Brors, Benedikt and Claviez, Alexander and Doose, Gero and Feuerbach, Lars and Haake, Andrea and Hansmann, Martin-Leo and Hoell, Jessica and Hummel, Michael and Korbel, Jan O. and Lawerenz, Chris and Lenze, Dido and Radlwimmer, Bernhard and Richter, Julia and Rosenstiel, Philip and Rosenwald, Andreas and Schilhabel, Markus B. and Stein, Harald and Stilgenbauer, Stephan and Stadler, Peter F. and Szczepanowski, Monika and Weniger, Marc A. and Zapatka, Marc and Eils, Roland and Lichter, Peter and Loeffler, Markus and M{\"o}ller, Peter and Tr{\"u}mper, Lorenz and Klapper, Wolfram and Hoffmann, Steve and K{\"u}ppers, Ralf and Burkhardt, Birgit and Schlesner, Matthias and Siebert, Reiner}, title = {Genomic and transcriptomic changes complement each other in the pathogenesis of sporadic Burkitt lymphoma}, series = {Nature Communications}, volume = {10}, journal = {Nature Communications}, organization = {ICGC MMML-Seq Consortium}, doi = {10.1038/s41467-019-08578-3}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-237281}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Burkitt lymphoma (BL) is the most common B-cell lymphoma in children. Within the International Cancer Genome Consortium (ICGC), we performed whole genome and transcriptome sequencing of 39 sporadic BL. Here, we unravel interaction of structural, mutational, and transcriptional changes, which contribute to MYC oncogene dysregulation together with the pathognomonic IG-MYC translocation. Moreover, by mapping IGH translocation breakpoints, we provide evidence that the precursor of at least a subset of BL is a B-cell poised to express IGHA. We describe the landscape of mutations, structural variants, and mutational processes, and identified a series of driver genes in the pathogenesis of BL, which can be targeted by various mechanisms, including IG-non MYC translocations, germline and somatic mutations, fusion transcripts, and alternative splicing.}, language = {en} } @article{CarmelaVeglianteRoyoPalomeroetal.2011, author = {Carmela Vegliante, Maria and Royo, Cristina and Palomero, Jara and Salaverria, Itziar and Balint, Balazs and Martin-Guerrero, Idoia and Agirre, Xabier and Lujambio, Amaia and Richter, Julia and Xargay-Torrent, Silvia and Bea, Silvia and Hernandez, Luis and Enjuanes, Anna and Jose Calasanz, Maria and Rosenwald, Andreas and Ott, German and Roman-Gomez, Jose and Prosper, Felipe and Esteller, Manel and Jares, Pedro and Siebert, Reiner and Campo, Elias and Martin-Subero, Jose I. and Amador, Virginia}, title = {Epigenetic Activation of SOX11 in Lymphoid Neoplasms by Histone Modifications}, series = {PLoS ONE}, volume = {6}, journal = {PLoS ONE}, number = {6}, doi = {10.1371/journal.pone.0021382}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-135325}, pages = {e21382}, year = {2011}, abstract = {Recent studies have shown aberrant expression of SOX11 in various types of aggressive B-cell neoplasms. To elucidate the molecular mechanisms leading to such deregulation, we performed a comprehensive SOX11 gene expression and epigenetic study in stem cells, normal hematopoietic cells and different lymphoid neoplasms. We observed that SOX11 expression is associated with unmethylated DNA and presence of activating histone marks (H3K9/14Ac and H3K4me3) in embryonic stem cells and some aggressive B-cell neoplasms. In contrast, adult stem cells, normal hematopoietic cells and other lymphoid neoplasms do not express SOX11. Such repression was associated with silencing histone marks H3K9me2 and H3K27me3. The SOX11 promoter of non-malignant cells was consistently unmethylated whereas lymphoid neoplasms with silenced SOX11 tended to acquire DNA hypermethylation. SOX11 silencing in cell lines was reversed by the histone deacetylase inhibitor SAHA but not by the DNA methyltransferase inhibitor AZA. These data indicate that, although DNA hypermethylation of SOX11 is frequent in lymphoid neoplasms, it seems to be functionally inert, as SOX11 is already silenced in the hematopoietic system. In contrast, the pathogenic role of SOX11 is associated with its de novo expression in some aggressive lymphoid malignancies, which is mediated by a shift from inactivating to activating histone modifications.}, language = {en} } @article{AukemaKreuzKohleretal.2014, author = {Aukema, Sietse M. and Kreuz, Markus and Kohler, Christian W. and Rosolowski, Maciej and Hasenclever, Dirk and Hummel, Michael and K{\"u}ppers, Ralf and Lenze, Diddo and Ott, German and Pott, Christiane and Richter, Julia and Rosenwald, Andreas and Szczepanowski, Monika and Schwaenen, Carsten and Stein, Harald and Trautmann, Heiko and Wessendorf, Swen and Tr{\"u}mper, Lorenz and Loeffler, Markus and Spang, Rainer and Kluin, Philip M. and Klapper, Wolfram and Siebert, Reiner}, title = {Biological characterization of adult MYC-translocation-positive mature B-cell lymphomas other than molecular Burkitt lymphoma}, series = {Haematologica}, volume = {99}, journal = {Haematologica}, number = {4}, issn = {1592-8721}, doi = {10.3324/haematol.2013.091827}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-116882}, pages = {726-735}, year = {2014}, abstract = {Chromosomal translocations affecting the MYC oncogene are the biological hallmark of Burkitt lymphomas but also occur in a subset of other mature B-cell lymphomas. If accompanied by a chromosomal break targeting the BCL2 and/or BCL6 oncogene these MYC translocation-positive (MYC+) lymphomas are called double-hit lymphomas, otherwise the term single-hit lymphomas is applied. In order to characterize the biological features of these MYC+ lymphomas other than Burkitt lymphoma we explored, after exclusion of molecular Burkitt lymphoma as defined by gene expression profiling, the molecular, pathological and clinical aspects of 80 MYC-translocation-positive lymphomas (31 single-hit, 46 double-hit and 3 MYC+-lymphomas with unknown BCL6 status). Comparison of single-hit and double-hit lymphomas revealed no difference in MYC partner (IG/non-IG), genomic complexity, MYC expression or gene expression profile. Double-hit lymphomas more frequently showed a germinal center B-cell-like gene expression profile and had higher IGH and MYC mutation frequencies. Gene expression profiling revealed 130 differentially expressed genes between BCL6(+)/MYC+ and BCL2(+)/MYC+ double-hit lymphomas. BCL2(+)/MYC+ double-hit lymphomas more frequently showed a germinal center B-like gene expression profile. Analysis of all lymphomas according to MYC partner (IG/non-IG) revealed no substantial differences. In this series of lymphomas, in which immunochemotherapy was administered in only a minority of cases, single-hit and double-hit lymphomas had a similar poor outcome in contrast to the outcome of molecular Burkitt lymphoma and lymphomas without the MYC break. Our data suggest that, after excluding molecular Burkitt lymphoma and pediatric cases, MYC+ lymphomas are biologically quite homogeneous with single-hit and double-hit lymphomas as well as IG-MYC and non-IG-MYC+ lymphomas sharing various molecular characteristics.}, language = {en} }