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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

The Role of the Rho GEF Arhgef2 in RAS Tumorigenesis

Cullis, Jane 02 August 2013 (has links)
Tumorigenesis is driven by the sequential accumulation of genetic lesions within a cell, each which confer the cell with traits that enable its abnormal growth. The result is a mass of dysregulated cells, or tumor, which, upon further mutation, may spread, or metastasize, to other organs of the body. The dissemination of tumor cells makes treatment difficult, and thus confers cancer with its associated lethality. Over the past 30 years, the RAS genes have been critical in teaching us the mechanisms underlying the molecular progression of cancer. RAS is mutated in 33% of all cancers and is often an early event in its stepwise progression. As a result, the RAS genes are widely accepted as ‘drivers’ or ‘initiators’ of human tumorigenesis. Unfortunately, efforts directed at targeting RAS in the clinic have as of yet been unsuccessful. This has triggered a need to identify genes that are required for RAS tumorigenesis that are therapeutically tractable. My research has focused on deciphering the potential role of the Rho GEF Arhgef2 in RAS-mediated tumorigenesis. I have found that Arhgef2 is a bona fide transcriptional target of RAS and is upregulated in human tumors harboring RAS mutations. Importantly, depletion of Arhgef2 in RAS-mutated cells inhibits their survival, proliferation, and tumor growth in murine models. In search of the mechanism underlying the requirement of Arhgef2 in RAS tumorigenesis, I have uncovered a novel function for Arhgef2 as a positive regulator of a central RAS pathway, the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway. Thus, Arhgef2 is part of a positive feedback loop in which RAS-dependent increases in Arhgef2 expression results in the amplification of RAS signaling. Moreover, Arhgef2 confers tumor cells with properties favoring their malignant conversion, thereby implicating Arhgef2 in the formation of metastases. Together, these studies suggest that Arhgef2 plays an important role at multiple stages of tumorigenic progression and may therefore be a promising therapeutic target in RAS-mutated tumors.
2

The Role of the Rho GEF Arhgef2 in RAS Tumorigenesis

Cullis, Jane 02 August 2013 (has links)
Tumorigenesis is driven by the sequential accumulation of genetic lesions within a cell, each which confer the cell with traits that enable its abnormal growth. The result is a mass of dysregulated cells, or tumor, which, upon further mutation, may spread, or metastasize, to other organs of the body. The dissemination of tumor cells makes treatment difficult, and thus confers cancer with its associated lethality. Over the past 30 years, the RAS genes have been critical in teaching us the mechanisms underlying the molecular progression of cancer. RAS is mutated in 33% of all cancers and is often an early event in its stepwise progression. As a result, the RAS genes are widely accepted as ‘drivers’ or ‘initiators’ of human tumorigenesis. Unfortunately, efforts directed at targeting RAS in the clinic have as of yet been unsuccessful. This has triggered a need to identify genes that are required for RAS tumorigenesis that are therapeutically tractable. My research has focused on deciphering the potential role of the Rho GEF Arhgef2 in RAS-mediated tumorigenesis. I have found that Arhgef2 is a bona fide transcriptional target of RAS and is upregulated in human tumors harboring RAS mutations. Importantly, depletion of Arhgef2 in RAS-mutated cells inhibits their survival, proliferation, and tumor growth in murine models. In search of the mechanism underlying the requirement of Arhgef2 in RAS tumorigenesis, I have uncovered a novel function for Arhgef2 as a positive regulator of a central RAS pathway, the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway. Thus, Arhgef2 is part of a positive feedback loop in which RAS-dependent increases in Arhgef2 expression results in the amplification of RAS signaling. Moreover, Arhgef2 confers tumor cells with properties favoring their malignant conversion, thereby implicating Arhgef2 in the formation of metastases. Together, these studies suggest that Arhgef2 plays an important role at multiple stages of tumorigenic progression and may therefore be a promising therapeutic target in RAS-mutated tumors.
3

Functional characterization of asymmetric cell division associated genes in hematopoietic stem cells and bone marrow failure syndromes

Chan, Derek January 2020 (has links)
Hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) are critical to the development of the hematopoietic system during ontogeny and maintaining hematopoiesis under steady-state. Several genes implicated in asymmetric cell division (ACD) have been found to influence HSC self-renewal in normal hematopoiesis and various leukemias. From a separate survey of genes associated with ACD, I now present the results from dedicated functional studies on two genes – Arhgef2 and Staufen1 – in HSCs and identify their potential contributions to benign hematopoietic disorders. Specifically, I present evidence that demonstrates a conserved role of Arhgef2 in orienting HSC division, the loss of which leads to HSC exhaustion that may underlie and contribute to the pathogenesis of Shwachman-Diamond syndrome. I also identify Staufen1 as a critical RNA-binding protein (RBP) in HSC function, downregulation of which elicits expression signatures consistent with clinical anemias reminiscent of aplastic anemia and/or paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria. I end by reviewing how RBPs function in HSCs and discuss future research directions that could further elucidate how bone marrow failure syndromes arise at the stem cell level. / Thesis / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)

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