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Appointments:
Professor
Department of Medicine
Section of
Hematology/Oncology
Cancer Research Center
Committee on Cancer Biology
Committee on Genetics
Committee on Molecular Medicine/MPMM
Committee on Clinical Pharmacology
and Pharmacogenomics
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Education:
Ph.D., Purdue, 1983
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Contact:
Phone: (773) 702-4441
Fax:
(773) 702-3002
E-Mail: edolan@medicine.bsd.uchicago.edu
Address:
The University of Chicago
FMI I213, (MC 2115)
5841 South Maryland Avenue
Chicago, Illinois 60637
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Related Research Interests:
Chromosome
Damage/Repair
DNA Repair
Drug
Resistance/Toxicology
Pharmacogenetics
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M. Eileen Dolan, Ph.D.
Modulation of DNA Repair to Enhance Chemotherapy
Research Summary
Recent advances
in genome research have suggested strong associations between genetic
factors
and complex human traits, such as an individual’s disease
susceptibility,
response to therapy, and gene expression levels. The objective of our
work is
to identify genetic determinants contributing to cellular
susceptibility to
chemotherapeutic agents. Most chemotherapeutic drugs exhibit serious
toxicity;
hence elucidating the genetic variants that alter their pharmacodynamic
effects
is an important but challenging project. Challenges include our
inability to do
family studies evaluating the effects of chemotherapy on individuals
without
cancer and the multigenic nature of drug response. Therefore, we have
developed
several cell based models to identify genetic variants important in
chemotherapeutic-induced toxicity. The models employ EBV-transformed
lymphoblastoid cell lines from related healthy Caucasians of European
descent
(CEPH) and Yorubans of African descent to evaluate
chemotherapeutic-induced
cytotoxicity and/or apoptosis. These family-based cell lines allow us to apply familial genetic strategies
to determine
the heritability and the genetic components contributing to complex
phenotypes
such as susceptibility to chemotherapy. The pedigrees have
microsatellite and
SNP data available for linkage mapping studies. Furthermore, the HapMap
trios
contained within these large pedigrees have over 3 million SNPs
genotyped. We
have performed expression array to allow for studies of population
differences
in gene expression and cellular susceptibility to chemotherapy. Our laboratory was the first to demonstrate
susceptibility to chemotherapy-induced cytotoxicity is significantly
heritable
and that susceptibility to chemotherapeutic toxicity in Caucasians and
Africans
is significantly different for certain drugs. Our long-term goal is to
identify
genetic variants and gene expression, including those in an underserved
population that predict risk for adverse reactions to chemotherapeutic
agents.
Previous to my
interest in whole genome studies to improve chemotherapy, my laboratory
took a
candidate gene approach to evaluate the contribution of a DNA repair
protein
(MGMT) to resistance to chemotherapeutic alkylating agents. We developed
O6-benzylguanine (BG), an
inactivator of the MGMT protein based on our understanding of the
substrate
specificity of the repair protein and the SN2 bimolecular nature of the
reaction. The preclinical and clinical development of BG has been a
major focus
of my laboratory. We incorporated biochemical, pharmacokinetic,
pharmacodynamic
and metabolic correlative studies into clinical trials. We identified
the
enzymes responsible for conversion of BG to its metabolites and studied
drug-drug interactions. We recently found that BG enhances the toxicity
of
other bi-functional agents (i.e. cisplatin, carboplatin) not known to
produce
an O6-guanine adduct. Enhancement is independent of AGT status
indicating a
separate and novel mechanism that we are currently investigating.
Selected Papers
Long L, and Dolan
ME. (2001). Role of CYP450 isoenzymes in
metabolism of O6-benzylguanine:
Implications for dacarbazine activation.
Clinical Cancer Res.,
7:4239-4244.
Fishel
ML,
Delaney SM, Friesen LD, Hansen RJ, Zuhowski EG, Moschel RC,
Egorin MJ, and Dolan ME. (2003). Enhancement of platinum-induced cytotoxicity by O6-benzylguanine. Molec
Cancer Ther, 2:633-640.
Nagasubramanian
R, Dolan ME. (2003).
Pharmacogenomics: Racing toward personalized prescriptions. J Lab Med,
9:651-659.
Wu
MH, Chen P,
Wu X, Liu W, Strom S, Das S, Cook EH, and Dolan ME.
(2004). Determination and analysis of single nucleotide prolymorphisms
and haplotype
structure of the human carboxylesterase 2 gene. Pharmacogenetics,
14:1-11.
Dolan ME,
Newbold KG,
Nagasubramanian R, Wu X, Ratain MJ, Cook EH, and Badner JA. (2004).
Heritability and linkage analysis of sensitivity to cisplatin-induced
cytotoxicity. Cancer Res 64(12):4353-4356.
Shukla
SJ and Dolan ME. (2005). Use
of CEPH and nonCEPH cells in
pharmacogenetic studies. Pharmacogenomics,
6:303-310.
Hansen
RJ, Nagasubramanian R, Delaney SM, Cherian MM, Kogan
SC, Lin S, Dolan ME. (2005). Role of O6-alkylguanine-DNA
alkyltransferase in protecting against BCNU-induced long-term
toxicities. JPET,
315:1247-1255.
Rabik
CA, Njoku MC and Dolan
ME. (2006). Inactivation of O6-alkylguanine
DNA alkyltransferase as a means to enhance chemotherapy. Cancer
Treatment Reviews, 32:261-276.
Rabik
CA, Dolan ME.
(2006). Molecular Mechanisms of
Platinating Agents’ Reistance Toxicity. Cancer
Treatment Reviews, 32: 261-276.
Huang
RS, Kistner EO, Bleibel WK, Shukla SJ, Dolan
ME. (2007). Effect of population and Gender on Chemotherapeutic
Agent-Induced
Cytotoxicity. Molecular Cancer
Therapeutics, 6, 31-36.
Weingart
J, Grossman SA, Carson KA,
Fisher JD, Delaney SM, Rosenbum ML, Olivi A, Judy K, Tatter SB, Dolan
ME. (2007). Phase I Trial of Polifeprosan 20 with
Carmustine Implant
Plus Continuous Infusion of Intravenous O6-Benzylguanine
in Adults with Recurrent Malignant Glioma: A
New Approaches to Brain Tumor Therapy CNS Consortium Trial, JCO 28(4);
399-404.
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Faculty and Research
Programs
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