Publications by authors named "G Lacaud"

Article Synopsis
  • Researchers studied two proteins, KAT6A and KMT2A, that can cause leukemia when changed or damaged.
  • They tested a new medicine, WM-1119, which stops KAT6A from working to see if it could help fight a kind of leukemia.
  • The results showed that WM-1119 was very effective at stopping cancer cells from growing and helped the cells become more like normal blood cells.
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Recent findings suggest that Hematopoietic Stem Cells (HSC) and progenitors arise simultaneously and independently of each other already in the embryonic aorta-gonad mesonephros region, but it is still unknown how their different features are established. Here, we uncover IκBα (Nfkbia, the inhibitor of NF-κB) as a critical regulator of HSC proliferation throughout development. IκBα balances retinoic acid signaling levels together with the epigenetic silencer, PRC2, specifically in HSCs.

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During chronic infections and tumor progression, CD8 T cells gradually lose their effector functions and become exhausted. These exhausted CD8 T cells are heterogeneous and comprised of different subsets, including self-renewing progenitors that give rise to Ly108 CX3CR1 effector-like cells. Generation of these effector-like cells is essential for the control of chronic infections and tumors, albeit limited.

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Hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) develop from the hemogenic endothelium (HE) in the aorta- gonads-and mesonephros (AGM) region and reside within Intra-aortic hematopoietic clusters (IAHC) along with hematopoietic progenitors (HPC). The signalling mechanisms that distinguish HSCs from HPCs are unknown. Notch signaling is essential for arterial specification, IAHC formation and HSC activity, but current studies on how Notch segregates these different fates are inconsistent.

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The emergence of castration-resistant prostate cancer remains an area of unmet clinical need. We recently identified a subpopulation of normal prostate progenitor cells, characterized by an intrinsic resistance to androgen deprivation and expression of LY6D. We here demonstrate that conditional deletion of PTEN in the murine prostate epithelium causes an expansion of transformed LY6D progenitor cells without impairing stem cell properties.

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