Publications by authors named "Heather C Etchevers"

Article Synopsis
  • Melanoma becomes metastatic when special skin cells change and start to move and invade other body parts, similar to certain nervous system cells.
  • Researchers found that changes in DNA methylation are important for this process, and a specific protein called NR2F2-Iso2 plays a key role in helping melanoma cells spread.
  • The study shows that when this protein is turned back on due to changes in DNA, it helps melanoma cells act more like these other cell types, leading to further growth and spread in the body.
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  • * The H1047R mutation is linked to developmental issues including macrocephaly and cleft palates, particularly affecting neuroectodermal derivatives and causing vascular anomalies associated with neural crest-derived tissues.
  • * By studying mouse models, researchers found new lineages that could contribute to disease development and observed that certain cell types, like Schwann cell precursors, show a connection to vascular tumors when activated, offering insights into potential human PIK
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The MAPK/ERK pathway regulates a variety of physiological cellular functions, including cell proliferation and survival. It is abnormally activated in many types of human cancers in response to driver mutations in regulators of this pathway that trigger tumor initiation. The early steps of oncogenic progression downstream of ERK overactivation are poorly understood due to a lack of appropriate models.

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  • The Human Developmental Cell Atlas (HDCA) initiative aims to create a comprehensive reference map of human cells throughout development to enhance understanding of various health aspects like organ growth, genetic mutations, and diseases.
  • It seeks to unite efforts from a growing community of scientists, similar to the Human Genome Project, by using advanced technologies to address challenges in mapping human development.
  • The initiative has already achieved early milestones, utilizing human stem-cell cultures, organoids, and animal models, particularly for difficult-to-obtain prenatal tissues, and provides a roadmap for completing the atlas.
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  • Cutaneous melanomas in children present various clinical forms, each with distinct prognoses that can be affected by factors such as the size of congenital nevi and age.
  • Lateral and deep nodular transformations of nevi have different rarity occurrences and are linked to specific age groups, while superficial spreading melanoma can develop from small, previously invisible nevi after puberty, indicating a potential cancer predisposition.
  • Spitz tumors are common in adolescents and span benign to malignant forms, generally showing a favorable outcome despite complexity, while nevoid melanomas and a small subset of unclassified melanomas pose diagnostic challenges and have uncertain prognoses.
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  • 40% of somatotroph tumors have activating mutations known as oncogenes, but the expression levels of -negative tumors vary widely, with some resembling those carrying the oncogene.
  • Changes in the imprinting of these -negative tumors may impact their expression levels and tumor growth, as seen in multi-omics analysis of two tumor cohorts.
  • In the study, 43% of -negative tumors displayed relaxed imprinting, which linked to lower expression levels and reduced effectiveness against treatments, suggesting a more aggressive tumor behavior.
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Anomalies in the cardiac outflow tract (OFT) are among the most frequent congenital heart defects (CHDs). During embryogenesis, the cardiac OFT is a dynamic structure at the arterial pole of the heart. Heart tube elongation occurs by addition of cells from pharyngeal, splanchnic mesoderm to both ends.

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The goal of lineage tracing is to understand body formation over time by discovering which cells are the progeny of a specific, identified, ancestral progenitor. Subsidiary questions include unequivocal identification of what they have become, how many descendants develop, whether they live or die, and where they are located in the tissue or body at the end of the window examined. A classical approach in experimental embryology, lineage tracing continues to be used in developmental biology and stem cell and cancer research, wherever cellular potential and behavior need to be studied in multiple dimensions, of which one is time.

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Congenital melanocytic nevi (CMN) are cutaneous malformations whose prevalence is inversely correlated with projected adult size. CMN are caused by somatic mutations, but epidemiological studies suggest that germline genetic factors may influence CMN development. In CMN patients from the U.

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To discover epigenetic changes that may underly neuroblastoma pathogenesis, we identified differentially methylated genes in neuroblastoma cells compared to neural crest cells, the presumptive precursors cells for neuroblastoma, by using genome-wide DNA methylation analysis. We previously described genes that were hypermethylated in neuroblastoma; in this paper we report on 67 hypomethylated genes, which were filtered to select genes that showed transcriptional over-expression and an association with poor prognosis in neuroblastoma, highlighting GATA3 for detailed studies. Specific methylation assays confirmed the hypomethylation of GATA3 in neuroblastoma, which correlated with high expression at both the RNA and protein level.

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Noonan syndrome and related disorders are a group of clinically and genetically heterogeneous conditions caused by mutations in genes of the RAS/MAPK pathway. Noonan syndrome causes multiple congenital anomalies, which are frequently accompanied by hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM). We report here a Tunisian patient with a severe phenotype of Noonan syndrome including neonatal HCM, facial dysmorphism, severe failure to thrive, cutaneous abnormalities, pectus excavatum and severe stunted growth, who died in her eighth month of life.

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We review here some of the historical highlights in exploratory studies of the vertebrate embryonic structure known as the neural crest. The study of the molecular properties of the cells that it produces, their migratory capacities and plasticity, and the still-growing list of tissues that depend on their presence for form and function, continue to enrich our understanding of congenital malformations, paediatric cancers and evolutionary biology. Developmental biology has been key to our understanding of the neural crest, starting with the early days of experimental embryology and through to today, when increasingly powerful technologies contribute to further insight into this fascinating vertebrate cell population.

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Neuroblastoma is the most common childhood solid tumor, yet the prognosis for high-risk disease remains poor. We demonstrate here that arginase 2 (ARG2) drives neuroblastoma cell proliferation via regulation of arginine metabolism. Targeting arginine metabolism, either by blocking cationic amino acid transporter 1 (CAT-1)-dependent arginine uptake or therapeutic depletion of arginine by pegylated recombinant arginase BCT-100, significantly delayed tumor development and prolonged murine survival.

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Members of the large family of Hox transcription factors are encoded by genes whose tightly regulated expression in development and in space within different embryonic tissues confer positional identity from the neck to the tips of the limbs. Many structures of the face, head, and heart develop from cell populations expressing few or no Hox genes. Hoxb1 is the member of its chromosomal cluster expressed in the most rostral domain during vertebrate development, but never by the multipotent neural crest cell population anterior to the cerebellum.

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Mutations in effectors of the hedgehog signaling pathway are responsible for a wide variety of ocular developmental anomalies. These range from massive malformations of the brain and ocular primordia, not always compatible with postnatal life, to subtle but damaging functional effects on specific eye components. This review will concentrate on the effects and effectors of the major vertebrate hedgehog ligand for eye and brain formation, Sonic hedgehog (SHH), in tissues that constitute the eye directly and also in those tissues that exert indirect influence on eye formation.

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Background: MC1R, a G-protein coupled receptor with high affinity for alpha-melanocyte stimulating hormone (αMSH), modulates pigment production in melanocytes from many species and is associated with human melanoma risk. MC1R mutations affecting human skin and hair color also have pleiotropic effects on the immune response and analgesia. Variants affecting human pigmentation in utero alter the congenital phenotype of both oculocutaneous albinism and congenital melanocytic naevi, and have a possible effect on birthweight.

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Giant congenital melanocytic nevi may be symptomatically isolated or syndromic. Associations with capillary malformations are exceptional, and development of epidermal cysts has not been described. A 71-year-old patient with a giant congenital melanocytic nevus (CMN) of the lower back, buttocks, and thighs was asymptomatic except for unexpected hemorrhage during partial surgical excision years before.

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Neuroblastoma is a tumor of the peripheral sympathetic nervous system, derived from multipotent neural crest cells (NCCs). To define core regulatory circuitries (CRCs) controlling the gene expression program of neuroblastoma, we established and analyzed the neuroblastoma super-enhancer landscape. We discovered three types of identity in neuroblastoma cell lines: a sympathetic noradrenergic identity, defined by a CRC module including the PHOX2B, HAND2 and GATA3 transcription factors (TFs); an NCC-like identity, driven by a CRC module containing AP-1 TFs; and a mixed type, further deconvoluted at the single-cell level.

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Article Synopsis
  • * Researchers used genome-wide DNA methylation analysis to compare neuroblastomas with neural crest precursor cells, identifying 93 genes with altered methylation patterns, including the tumor suppressor gene MEGF10.
  • * MEGF10 is found to be repressed in neuroblastoma due to hypermethylation, and lower expression of this gene is associated with worse outcomes for patients, indicating its potential role in cancer progression.
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Ocular developmental anomalies (ODA) such as anophthalmia/microphthalmia (AM) or anterior segment dysgenesis (ASD) have an estimated combined prevalence of 3.7 in 10,000 births. Mutations in SOX2 are the most frequent contributors to severe ODA, yet account for a minority of the genetic drivers.

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Background: Retinoic acid (RA), the bioactive derivative of vitamin A, is essential for vertebrate heart development. Both excess and reduced RA signaling lead to cardiovascular malformations affecting the outflow tract (OFT). To address the cellular mechanisms underlying the effects of RA signaling during OFT morphogenesis, we used transient maternal RA supplementation to rescue the early lethality resulting from inactivation of the murine retinaldehyde dehydrogenase 2 (Raldh2) gene.

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  • Large and giant congenital melanocytic nevi are uncommon skin conditions that provide insights into how nevi develop both before and after birth, as well as their potential to turn into cancer.
  • The research by Charbel et al. highlights advanced detection methods to identify specific genetic mutations (NRAS and BRAF) that are often hard to find in these nevi.
  • The study allows for a better understanding of congenital melanocytic nevi, moving beyond just size to include molecular characteristics that may indicate a higher risk for cancer.
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Patent ductus arteriosus is a life-threatening condition frequent in premature newborns but also present in some term infants. Current mouse models of this malformation generally lead to perinatal death, not reproducing the full phenotypic spectrum in humans, in whom genetic inheritance appears complex. The ductus arteriosus (DA), a temporary fetal vessel that bypasses the lungs by shunting the aortic arch to the pulmonary artery, is constituted by smooth muscle cells of distinct origins (SMC1 and SMC2) and many fewer melanocytes.

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