Karin Grunebaum Cancer Research Foundation Fellow Profile

Adam Bass Boston, MA

Instructor in Medicine, Harvard Medical School

Fellow Profile

Current Site Of Practice: Harvard Medical SchoolDana-Farber Cancer Institute
Hospital Affiliation: Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
Focus of Research: Genomic Discovery and Translation in Gastrointestinal Cancer
Fellowship Year: 2011 – 2012
Attended: Harvard

Publications

SOX2 is an amplified lineage-survival oncogene in lung and esophageal squamous cell carcinomas

Co-Authors Watanabe H, Mermel CH, Yu S, Perner S, Verhaak RG, Kim SY, Wardwell L, Tamayo P, Gat-Viks I, Ramos AH, Woo MS, Weir BA, Getz G, Beroukhim R, O'Kelly M, Dutt A, Rozenblatt-Rosen O, Dziunycz P, Komisarof J, Chirieac LR, Lafargue CJ, Scheble V, Wilbertz T, M

Lineage-survival oncogenes are activated by somatic DNA alterations in cancers arising from the cell lineages in which these genes play a role in normal development. Here we show that a peak of genomic amplification on chromosome 3q26.33 found in squamous cell carcinomas (SCCs) of the lung and esophagus contains the transcription factor gene SOX2, which is mutated in hereditary human esophageal malformations, is necessary for normal esophageal squamous development, promotes differentiation and proliferation of basal tracheal cells and cooperates in induction of pluripotent stem cells. SOX2 expression is required for proliferation and anchorage-independent growth of lung and esophageal cell lines, as shown by RNA interference experiments. Furthermore, ectopic expression of SOX2 here cooperated with FOXE1 or FGFR2 to transform immortalized tracheobronchial epithelial cells. SOX2-driven tumors show expression of markers of both squamous differentiation and pluripotency. These characteristics identify SOX2 as a lineage-survival oncogene in lung and esophageal SCC.

PMID: 19801978

More: http://www.nature.com/ng/journal/v41/n11/abs/ng.465.html