Natini Jinawath

Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA

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Publications (14)85.19 Total impact

  • Article: NAC1 is an actin-binding protein that is essential for effective cytokinesis in cancer cells.
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    ABSTRACT: NAC1 is a transcriptional corepressor protein that is essential to sustain cancer cell proliferation and migration. However, the underlying molecular mechanisms of NAC1 function in cancer cells remain unknown. In this study, we show that NAC1 functions as an actin monomer-binding protein. The conserved BTB protein interaction domain in NAC1 is the minimal region for actin binding. Disrupting NAC1 complex function by dominant-negative or siRNA strategies reduced cell retraction and abscission during late-stage cytokinesis, causing multinucleation in cancer cells. In Nac1-deficient murine fibroblasts, restoring NAC1 expression was sufficient to partially avert multinucleation. We found that siRNA-mediated silencing of the actin-binding protein profilin-1 in cancer cells caused a similar multinucleation phenotype and that NAC1 modulated the binding of actin to profillin-1. Taken together, our results indicate that the NAC1/actin/profilin-1 complex is crucial for cancer cell cytokinesis, with a variety of important biologic and clinical implications.
    Cancer Research 07/2012; 72(16):4085-96. · 7.86 Impact Factor
  • Article: Mosaic trisomy 13: understanding origin using SNP array.
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    ABSTRACT: Trisomy 13 occurs in 1/10,000-20,000 live births, and mosaicism accounts for 5% of these cases. Phenotype and outcome of mosaic trisomy 13 are variable and poorly understood. Microsatellite analyses of trisomy 13 have indicated the high incidence of maternal meiotic origin and reduced recombination, but no study has focused on mosaic trisomy 13 in live born patients. Single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) array, fluorescence in situ hybridisation and bioinformatics analyses were performed in three cases of mosaic trisomy 13. Two cases of complete mosaic trisomy 13 originated from meiosis I non-disjunction followed by trisomic rescue; one had crossovers resulting in segmental uniparental disomy in the disomic line, and one had no crossover. Mosaicism for partial trisomy 13 in the third complex case either arose from meiosis II non-disjunction without crossover or in early mitosis followed by anaphase lags. The extra chromosome 13 was maternal in origin in all three cases. Mosaicism percentage calculated from B allele frequencies ranged from 30 to 50. Genotypes and copy number information provided by SNP array allow determination of parental origin and uniparental disomy status and direct quantification of mosaicism. Such information may lead to a better understanding of mechanisms underlying mosaic aneuploidies and the observed phenotypic variability and better prediction of recurrent risk.
    Journal of Medical Genetics 11/2010; 48(5):323-6. · 6.36 Impact Factor
  • Article: Complex rearrangement of chromosomes 1, 7, 21, 22 in Ewing sarcoma.
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    ABSTRACT: The Ewing sarcoma (ES) family of tumors is characterized by nonrandom chromosomal translocations involving the EWSR1 gene on chromosome 22 with one of the members of the ETS family of transcription factors. The majority of ES tumors are characterized by a balanced translocation t(11;22)(q24;q12), which results in the fusion of the 5' portion of EWSR1 gene with the 3'end of the FLI1 gene. Fusions with ERG, another member of the ETS family, occur in less than 10% of ES tumors, and can arise through complex chromosomal rearrangements. Here, we report a case of a 5-year-old female with an ES tumor in the thoracic region. G-banding and spectral karyotyping analysis demonstrated 46,XX,t(1;21;7)(q25;q22.3;q22). Metaphase fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) using the EWSR1 break-apart probe demonstrated a normal signal on both apparently normal chromosomes 22, and an additional EWSR1-5' signal on the derivative chromosome 21. Reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction analysis of RNA isolated from the tumor demonstrated a EWSR1-ERG fusion transcript, fusing exon 7 of EWSR1 and exon 11 of ERG. These results are consistent with an additional copy of the 5' portion of EWSR1, which inverted and then inserted on chromosome 21 and fused to the 3' end of ERG. To our knowledge, this is the first report of a EWSR1-ERG fusion in an ES tumor with an apparently duplicated 5' portion of EWSR1, and with a complex translocation involving chromosomes 1, 7, and 21. This case adds to the spectrum of genetic rearrangements identified in ES tumors.
    Cancer genetics and cytogenetics 08/2010; 201(1):42-7. · 1.54 Impact Factor
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    Article: Oncoproteomic analysis reveals co-upregulation of RELA and STAT5 in carboplatin resistant ovarian carcinoma.
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    ABSTRACT: Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal types of female malignancy. Although most patients are initially responsive to platinum-based chemotherapy, almost all develop recurrent chemoresistant tumors and succumb to their diseases. Elucidating the pathogenesis underlying drug resistance is fundamental to the development of new therapeutics, leading to improved clinical outcomes in these patients. We compared the proteomes of paired primary and recurrent post-chemotherapy ovarian high-grade serous carcinomas from nine ovarian cancer patients using CIEF/Nano-RPLC coupled with ESI-Tandem MS. As compared to their primary tumors, more than half of the recurrent tumors expressed higher levels of several proteins including CP, FN1, SYK, CD97, AIF1, WNK1, SERPINA3, APOD, URP2, STAT5B and RELA (NF-kappaB p65), which were also validated by quantitative RT-PCR. Based on shRNA screening for the upregulated genes in in vitro carboplatin-resistant cells, we found that simultaneous knockdown of RELA and STAT5B was most effective in sensitizing tumor cells for carboplatin treatment. Similarly, the NF-kappaB inhibitor, BMS-345541, and the STAT5 inhibitor, Dasatinib, significantly enhanced cell sensitivity to carboplatin. Moreover, both RELA and STAT5 are known to bind to the promoter region of Bcl-X, regulating its promoter activity. In this regard, augmented Bcl-xL expression was detected in carboplatin-resistant cells. Combined ectopic expression of RELA and STAT5B enhanced Bcl-xL promoter activity while treatment with BMS-345541 and Dasatinib decreased it. Chromatin immunoprecipitation of the Bcl-X promoter region using a STAT5 antibody showed induction of RELA and STAT5 DNA-binding segments both in naïve cells treated with a high concentration of carboplatin as well as in carboplatin-resistant cells. Proteomic analysis identified RELA and STAT5 as two major proteins associated with carboplatin resistance in ovarian tumors. Our results further showed that NF-kappaB and STAT5 inhibitor could sensitize carboplatin-resistant cells and suggest that such inhibitors can be used to benefit patients with carboplatin-resistant recurrent ovarian cancer.
    PLoS ONE 01/2010; 5(6):e11198. · 4.09 Impact Factor
  • Article: Quantitative proteomic analysis of ovarian cancer cells identified mitochondrial proteins associated with Paclitaxel resistance.
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    ABSTRACT: Paclitaxel has been widely used as an anti-mitotic agent in chemotherapy for a variety of cancers and adds substantial efficacy as the first-line chemotherapeutic regimen for ovarian cancers. However, the frequent occurrence of paclitaxel resistance limits its function in long-term management. Despite abundant clinical and cellular demonstration of paclitaxel resistant tumors, the molecular mechanisms leading to paclitaxel resistance are poorly understood. Using genomic approaches, we have previously identified an association between a BTB/POZ gene, Nac1, and paclitaxel resistance in ovarian cancer. The experiments presented here have applied multiple quantitative proteomic methods to identify protein changes associated with paclitaxel resistance and Nac1 function. The SKOV-3 ovarian serous carcinoma cell line, which has inducible expression of dominant negative Nac1, was used to determine the paclitaxel treatment associated changes in the presence and absence of functional Nac1. Quantitative proteomic analyses were performed using iTRAQ labeling and mass spectrometry. Two label-free quantitative proteomic methods: LC-MS and spectral count were used to increase confidence of proteomic quantification. A total of 1371 proteins were quantified by at least one of the quantitative proteomic methods. Candidate proteins related to paclitaxel and NAC1 function were identified in this study. Go analysis of the protein changes identified upon paclitaxel resistance revealed that cell component enrichment related to mitochondria. Moreover, tubulin and mitochondrial proteins were the major cellular components with changes associated with paclitaxel treatment. This suggests that mitochondria may play a role in paclitaxel resistance.
    PROTEOMICS - CLINICAL APPLICATIONS 11/2009; 3(11):1288-95. · 1.81 Impact Factor
  • Article: A rare e14a3 (b3a3) BCR-ABL fusion transcript in chronic myeloid leukemia: diagnostic challenges in clinical laboratory practice.
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    ABSTRACT: Patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia have a t(9;22)(q34;q11.2) or variant translocation that results in a BCR-ABL fusion gene. BCR-ABL detection by quantitative reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) is the standard practice for monitoring residual disease in patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia who receive tyrosine kinase inhibitor therapies. In this study, we describe a patient who tested positive for the BCR-ABL translocation by fluorescence in situ hybridization and cytogenetic analysis but tested negative by qRT-PCR molecular analysis at the time of diagnosis. Further PCR analysis and DNA sequencing with alternative primer sets demonstrated the presence of an e14a3 (also known as b3a3) BCR-ABL fusion. The e14a3 fusion is rare, but may be underreported as a result of many commercially available and laboratory-developed primer sets that fail to detect breakpoints in the ABL gene that are downstream of intron 1. For this patient, if the qRT-PCR assay had been used to monitor disease response/progression after treatment and not in conjunction with fluorescence in situ hybridization or cytogenetics at the time of diagnosis, the negative result would have been misinterpreted as molecular remission.
    The Journal of molecular diagnostics: JMD 08/2009; 11(4):359-63. · 3.48 Impact Factor
  • Article: Analysis of DNA copy number alterations in ovarian serous tumors identifies new molecular genetic changes in low-grade and high-grade carcinomas.
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    ABSTRACT: Ovarian serous carcinoma, the most common and lethal type of ovarian cancer, is thought to develop from two distinct molecular pathways. High-grade (HG) serous carcinomas contain frequent TP53 mutations, whereas low-grade (LG) carcinomas arise from serous borderline tumors (SBT) and harbor mutations in KRAS/BRAF/ERBB2 pathway. However, the molecular alterations involved in the progression from SBT to LG carcinoma remain unknown. In addition, the extent of deletion of tumor suppressors in ovarian serous carcinomas has not been well studied. To further address these two issues, we assessed DNA copy number changes among affinity-purified tumor cells from 37 ovarian serous neoplasms including SBT, LG, and HG tumors using high-density 250K single nucleotide polymorphism arrays. Chromosomal instability index as measured by changes in DNA copy number was significantly higher in HG than in LG serous carcinomas. Hemizygous ch1p36 deletion was common in LG serous carcinomas but was rarely seen in SBT. This region contains several candidate tumor suppressors including miR-34a. In contrast, in HG serous carcinomas, significant numbers of amplifications and deletions, including homozygous deletions, were identified. Among homozygous deletions, loci containing Rb1, CDKN2A/B, CSMD1, and DOCK4 were most common, being present in 10.6%, 6.4%, 6.4%, and 4.3%, respectively, in independent 47 affinity-purified HG serous carcinomas. Except for the CDKN2A/B region, these homozygous deletions were not present in either SBT or LG tumors. Our study provides a genome-wide homozygous deletion profile in HG serous carcinomas, which can serve as a molecular foundation to study tumor suppressors in ovarian cancer.
    Cancer Research 05/2009; 69(9):4036-42. · 7.86 Impact Factor
  • Article: Functional analysis of 11q13.5 amplicon identifies Rsf-1 (HBXAP) as a gene involved in paclitaxel resistance in ovarian cancer.
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    ABSTRACT: The chromosome 11q13.5 locus is frequently amplified in several types of human cancer. We have previously shown that 11q13.5 amplification was associated with significantly shorter overall survival in ovarian cancer patients, but the molecular mechanisms of how amplification of this locus contributes to disease aggressiveness remain unclear. Because ovarian cancer mortality is primarily related to resistance of chemotherapeutic agents, we screened the top six candidate genes within this amplicon for their contribution to drug resistance. Rsf-1 (also known as HBXAP) was found to be the only gene in which gene knockdown sensitized tumor cells to paclitaxel. Rsf-1 has been known to interact with hSNF2H to form an ISWI chromatin remodeling complex. We found that Rsf-1 was up-regulated in paclitaxel-resistant ovarian cancer cell lines, and Rsf-1 immunoreactivity in primary ovarian carcinoma tissues correlated with in vitro paclitaxel resistance. Ectopic expression of Rsf-1 significantly enhanced paclitaxel resistance in ovarian cancer cells. Down-regulation of hSNF2H or disruption of hSNF2H and Rsf-1 interaction enhanced paclitaxel sensitivity in tumor cells with Rsf-1 up-regulation. Rsf-1 expression altered expression in several genes and activated certain signaling pathways that may contribute to drug resistance. In conclusion, our results suggest that Rsf-1 is the major gene within the 11q13.5 amplicon that contributes to paclitaxel resistance, and the formation of the Rsf-1/hSNF2H complex is required for inducing this phenotype.
    Cancer Research 03/2009; 69(4):1407-15. · 7.86 Impact Factor
  • Article: Functional genomic analysis identified epidermal growth factor receptor activation as the most common genetic event in oral squamous cell carcinoma.
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    ABSTRACT: A 250K single-nucleotide polymorphism array was used to study subchromosomal alterations in oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC). The most frequent amplification was found at 7p11.2 in 9 of 29 (31%) oral cancer patients. Minimal genomic mapping verified a unique amplicon spanning from 54.6 to 55.3 Mb on chromosome 7, which contains SEC61G and epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR). Results from fluorescence in situ hybridization, transcriptome, and immunohistochemistry analyses indicated that the expression level of EGFR, but not of SEC61G, was up-regulated and tightly correlated with DNA copy number in 7p11.2 amplified tumors. Among the members of the erbB family, EGFR (HER1) was found to be the most frequently amplified and highly expressed gene in both human and mouse oral tumors (P < 0.01). Genes for downstream effectors of EGFR, including KRAS, mitogen-activated protein kinase 1, and CCND1, were also found amplified or mutated, which resulted in activation of EGFR signaling in 55% of OSCC patients. Head and neck squamous cancer cells with different EGFR expression levels showed differential sensitivity to antitumor effects of AG1478, a potent EGFR inhibitor. AG1478-induced EGFR inactivation significantly suppressed tumor development and progression in a mouse oral cancer model. Our data suggest that EGFR signaling is important in oral cancer development and that anti-EGFR therapy would benefit patients who carry the 7p11.2 amplicon in their tumors.
    Cancer Research 03/2009; 69(6):2568-76. · 7.86 Impact Factor
  • Article: Amplicon profiles in ovarian serous carcinomas.
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    ABSTRACT: Ovarian serous carcinoma is the most common and lethal type of ovarian cancer and its molecular etiology remains poorly understood. As an ongoing effort to elucidate the pathogenesis of ovarian serous carcinomas, we assessed the DNA copy number changes in 33 high-grade serous carcinomas and 10 low-grade serous tumors by using a genome-wide technique, single nucleotide polymorphism array, performed on affinity-purified tumor cells from fresh surgical specimens. Compared to low-grade tumors, high-grade serous carcinomas showed widespread DNA copy number changes. The most frequent alterations were in loci harboring candidate oncogenes: cyclin E1 (CCNE1), AKT2, Notch3 and PIK3CA as well as in novel loci, including 12p13, 8q24, 12p13 and 12q15. Seven amplicons were selected for dual color fluorescence in situ hybridization analysis in approximately 90 high-grade serous carcinomas and 26 low-grade serous tumors, and a high level of DNA copy number gain (amplification) was found in CCNE1, Notch3, HBXAP/Rsf-1, AKT2, PIK3CA and chr12p13 occurring in 36.1%, 7.8%, 15.7%, 13.6%, 10.8% and 7.3% of high-grade serous carcinomas. In contrast, we did not observe high level of ERBB2 amplification in any of the samples. Low-grade tumors did not show DNA copy number gain in any of the loci, except in 2 (8%) of 24 low-grade tumors showing low copy number gain in the Notch3 locus. Taken together, our results provide the first comprehensive analysis of DNA copy number changes in highly pure ovarian serous carcinoma. These findings may have important biological and clinical implications.
    International Journal of Cancer 07/2007; 120(12):2613-7. · 5.44 Impact Factor
  • Article: A BTB/POZ protein, NAC-1, is related to tumor recurrence and is essential for tumor growth and survival.
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    ABSTRACT: Recent studies have suggested an oncogenic role of the BTB/POZ-domain genes in hematopoietic malignancy. The aim of this study is to identify and characterize BTB/POZ-domain genes in the development of human epithelial cancers, i.e., carcinomas. In this study, we focused on ovarian carcinoma and analyzed gene expression levels using the serial analysis of gene expression (SAGE) data in all 130 deduced BTB/POZ genes. Our analysis reveals that NAC-1 is significantly overexpressed in ovarian serous carcinomas and several other types of carcinomas. Immunohistochemistry studies in ovarian serous carcinomas demonstrate that NAC-1 is localized in discrete nuclear bodies (tentatively named NAC-1 bodies), and the levels of NAC-1 expression correlate with tumor recurrence. Furthermore, intense NAC-1 immunoreactivity in primary tumors predicts early recurrence in ovarian cancer. Both coimmunoprecipitation and double immunofluorescence staining demonstrate that NAC-1 molecules homooligomerize through the BTB/POZ domain. Induced expression of the NAC-1 mutant containing only the BTB/POZ domain disrupts NAC-1 bodies, prevents tumor formation, and promotes tumor cell apoptosis in established tumors in a mouse xenograft model. Overexpression of full-length NAC-1 enhanced tumorigenicity of ovarian surface epithelial cells and NIH 3T3 cells in athymic nu/nu mice. In summary, NAC-1 is a tumor recurrence-associated gene with oncogenic potential, and the interaction between BTB/POZ domains of NAC-1 proteins is critical to form the discrete NAC-1 nuclear bodies and essential for tumor cell proliferation and survival.
    Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 01/2007; 103(49):18739-44. · 9.68 Impact Factor
  • Article: Comparison of gene expression profiles between Opisthorchis viverrini and non-Opisthorchis viverrini associated human intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma.
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    ABSTRACT: Intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (ICC) is the second most common primary cancer in the liver, and its incidence is highest in the northeastern part of Thailand. ICCs in this region are known to be associated with infection with liver flukes, particularly Opisthorchis viverrini (OV), as well as nitrosamines from food. To clarify molecular mechanisms of ICC associated with or without liver flukes, we analyzed gene expression profiles of OV-associated ICCs from 20 Thai patients and compared their profiles with those of 20 Japanese ICCs that were not associated with OV, by means of laser microbeam microdissection and a cDNA microarray containing 27,648 genes. We identified 77 commonly upregulated genes and 325 commonly downregulated genes in the two ICC groups. Unsupervised hierarchical cluster analysis separated the 40 ICCs into two major branches almost completely according to the fluke status. The putative signature of OV-associated ICC exhibited elevated expression of genes involved in xenobiotic metabolism (UGT2B11, UGT1A10, CHST4, SULT1C1), whereas that of non-OV-associated ICC represented enhanced expression of genes related to growth factor signaling (TGFBI, PGF, IGFBP1, IGFBP3). Additional random permutation tests identified a total of 49 genes whose expression levels were significantly different between the two groups. We also identified genes associated with macroscopic type of ICCs. In conclusion, these data may not only contribute to clarification of common and OV-specific mechanisms underlying ICC, but also may serve as a starting point for the identification of novel diagnostic markers or therapeutic targets for the disease.
    Hepatology 11/2006; 44(4):1025-38. · 11.66 Impact Factor
  • Article: Comparison of gene-expression profiles between diffuse- and intestinal-type gastric cancers using a genome-wide cDNA microarray.
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    ABSTRACT: Gastric cancer is the fourth leading cause of cancer-related death in the world. Two histologically distinct types of gastric carcinoma, 'intestinal' and 'diffuse', have different epidemiological and pathophysiological features that suggest different mechanisms of carcinogenesis. A number of studies have investigated intestinal-type gastric cancers at the molecular level, but little is known about mechanisms involved in the diffuse type, which has a more invasive phenotype and poorer prognosis. To clarify the mechanisms that underlie its development and/or progression, we compared the expression profiles of 20 laser-microbeam-microdissected diffuse-type gastric-cancer tissues with corresponding noncancerous mucosae by means of a cDNA microarray containing 23,040 genes. We identified 153 genes that were commonly upregulated and more than 1500 that were commonly downregulated in the tumors. We also identified a number of genes related to tumor progression. Furthermore, comparison of the expression profiles of diffuse-type with those of intestinal-type gastric cancers identified 46 genes that may represent distinct molecular signatures of each histological type. The putative signature of diffuse-type cancer exhibited altered expression of genes related to cell-matrix interaction and extracellular-matrix (ECM) components, whereas that of intestinal-type cancer represented enhancement of cell growth. These data provide insight into different mechanisms underlying gastric carcinogenesis and may also serve as a starting point for identifying novel diagnostic markers and/or therapeutic targets for diffuse-type gastric cancers.
    Oncogene 10/2004; 23(40):6830-44. · 6.37 Impact Factor
  • Article: Identification of NOL8, a nucleolar protein containing an RNA recognition motif (RRM), which was overexpressed in diffuse-type gastric cancer.
    Natini Jinawath, Yoichi Furukawa, Yusuke Nakamura
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    ABSTRACT: In an attempt to identify novel therapeutic targets for diffuse-type gastric cancer, we had previously compared expression profiles of 20 diffuse-type gastric-cancer tissues with corresponding non-cancerous mucosae by means of a cDNA microarray consisting of 23,040 genes. Among 153 genes whose expression levels were elevated in cancers compared to non-cancerous mucosae, we focused on a gene termed NOL8 that encodes a putative 150-kDa protein with an RNA-recognition motif (RRM) domain in its amino-acid terminal region. Comparison of expression profiles between diffuse-type and intestinal-type gastric cancers showed that NOL8 was specifically up-regulated in diffuse-type cancers. Northern blot analysis revealed that NOL8 was expressed in skeletal muscle, but not expressed or hardly detectable in 22 other tissues examined. Immunocytochemical staining of NOL8 showed specific localization in the nucleolus. Subsequent protein phosphatase analysis coupled with western analysis revealed the presence of the phosphorylated form. Furthermore, transfection of short-interfering RNA (siRNA) specific to NOL8 into three diffuse-type gastric cancer cells, St-4, MKN45 and TMK-1, effectively reduced expression of this gene and induced apoptosis in these cells. These findings provide a new insight into diffuse-type gastric carcinogenesis and may contribute to the development of new therapeutic strategies for diffuse-type gastric cancer.
    Cancer Science 06/2004; 95(5):430-5. · 3.33 Impact Factor