13 research outputs found

    Novel distal occluder washout method for prevention of no-reflow during stenting of saphenous vein grafts

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    This study assessed safety of the distal occlusion washout (DOW) method for prevention of no-reflow during stenting of degenerated saphenous vein grafts (SVGs). The DOW method involves protection of distal native coronary circulation with an occlusive balloon during the pretreatment and washout steps prior to stenting. Outcomes of stenting of 23 grafts in 21 patients after pretreatment with the DOW method were evaluated. The mean graft age was 7.4 ± 4.3 years. The mean treated lesion length was 53 ± 28 mm. Total occlusions were treated in 6 grafts and thrombotic lesions in 10 nontotally occluded grafts. One non-Q-wave MI and one acute stent thrombosis were observed. No deaths, Q-wave MIs, or subacute thromboses occurred. Follow-up in 18/21 (85.7%) patients at 28 ± 8 weeks demonstrated target graft revascularization in 1 (5%) patient. The DOW method prevented clinically significant no-reflow in all 23 degenerated SVGs stented

    Rationally designed BCL6 inhibitors target activated B cell diffuse large B cell lymphoma

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    Diffuse large B cell lymphomas (DLBCLs) arise from proliferating B cells transiting different stages of the germinal center reaction. In activated B cell DLBCLs (ABC-DLBCLs), a class of DLBCLs that respond poorly to current therapies, chromosomal translocations and amplification lead to constitutive expression of the B cell lymphoma 6 (BCL6) oncogene. The role of BCL6 in maintaining these lymphomas has not been investigated. Here, we designed small-molecule inhibitors that display higher affinity for BCL6 than its endogenous corepressor ligands to evaluate their therapeutic efficacy for targeting ABC-DLBCL. We used an in silico drug design functional-group mapping approach called SILCS to create a specific BCL6 inhibitor called FX1 that has 10-fold greater potency than endogenous corepressors and binds an essential region of the BCL6 lateral groove. FX1 disrupted formation of the BCL6 repression complex, reactivated BCL6 target genes, and mimicked the phenotype of mice engineered to express BCL6 with corepressor binding site mutations. Low doses of FX1 induced regression of established tumors in mice bearing DLBCL xenografts. Furthermore, FX1 suppressed ABC-DLBCL cells in vitro and in vivo, as well as primary human ABC-DLBCL specimens ex vivo. These findings indicate that ABC-DLBCL is a BCL6-dependent disease that can be targeted by rationally designed inhibitors that exceed the binding affinity of natural BCL6 ligands

    Distinct evolution and dynamics of epigenetic and genetic heterogeneity in acute myeloid leukemia

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    Genetic heterogeneity contributes to clinical outcome and progression of most tumors. Yet, little is known regarding allelic diversity for epigenetic compartments and almost no data exists for acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Here we examined epigenetic heterogeneity as assessed by cytosine methylation within defined genomic loci with four CpGs (epigenetic alleles), somatic mutations and transcriptomes of AML patient samples at serial time points. We observe that epigenetic allele burden is linked to inferior outcome and varies considerably during disease progression. Epigenetic and genetic allelic burden and patterning follow different patterns and kinetics during disease progression. We observed a subset of AMLs with high epiallele and low somatic mutation burden at diagnosis, a subset with high somatic mutation and lower epiallele burdens at diagnosis, and a subset with a mixed profile, suggesting distinct modes of tumor heterogeneity. Genes linked to promoter-associated epiallele shifts during tumor progression display increased single-cell transcriptional variance and differential expression, suggesting functional impact on gene regulation. Thus, genetic and epigenetic heterogeneity can occur with distinct kinetics, each likely able to impact biological and clinical features of tumors

    DNA methylome analysis in Burkitt and follicular lymphomas identifies differentially methylated regions linked to somatic mutation and transcriptional control

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    Although Burkitt lymphomas and follicular lymphomas both have features of germinal center B cells, they are biologically and clinically quite distinct. Here we performed whole-genome bisulfite, genome and transcriptome sequencing in 13 IG-MYC translocation-positive Burkitt lymphoma, nine BCL2 translocation-positive follicular lymphoma and four normal germinal center B cell samples. Comparison of Burkitt and follicular lymphoma samples showed differential methylation of intragenic regions that strongly correlated with expression of associated genes, for example, genes active in germinal center dark-zone and light-zone B cells. Integrative pathway analyses of regions differentially methylated in Burkitt and follicular lymphomas implicated DNA methylation as cooperating with somatic mutation of sphingosine phosphate signaling, as well as the TCF3-ID3 and SWI/SNF complexes, in a large fraction of Burkitt lymphomas. Taken together, our results demonstrate a tight connection between somatic mutation, DNA methylation and transcriptional control in key B cell pathways deregulated differentially in Burkitt lymphoma and other germinal center B cell lymphomas
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