Investigator

Kit Curtius

Research Health Scientist (PI) · VA San Diego Healthcare System

KCKit Curtius
Papers(1)
Specific Mechanisms o…
Collaborators(9)
Mary-Anne DurinNadeem ShaikhSarah E. McClellandTanya N. SolimanCatherine M. GreenDaniela MoralliDaniel MuliaditanEleni ManiatiJennifer R. McGuinness
Institutions(2)
Queen Mary University…University of Oxford

Papers

Specific Mechanisms of Chromosomal Instability Indicate Therapeutic Sensitivities in High-Grade Serous Ovarian Carcinoma

Abstract Chromosomal instability (CIN) comprises continual gain and loss of chromosomes or parts of chromosomes and occurs in the majority of cancers, often conferring poor prognosis. Because of a scarcity of functional studies and poor understanding of how genetic or gene expression landscapes connect to specific CIN mechanisms, causes of CIN in most cancer types remain unknown. High-grade serous ovarian carcinoma (HGSC), the most common subtype of ovarian cancer, is the major cause of death due to gynecologic malignancy in the Western world, with chemotherapy resistance developing in almost all patients. HGSC exhibits high rates of chromosomal aberrations and knowledge of causative mechanisms would represent an important step toward combating this disease. Here we perform the first in-depth functional characterization of mechanisms driving CIN in HGSC in seven cell lines that accurately recapitulate HGSC genetics. Multiple mechanisms coexisted to drive CIN in HGSC, including elevated microtubule dynamics and DNA replication stress that can be partially rescued to reduce CIN by low doses of paclitaxel and nucleoside supplementation, respectively. Distinct CIN mechanisms indicated relationships with HGSC-relevant therapy including PARP inhibition and microtubule-targeting agents. Comprehensive genomic and transcriptomic profiling revealed deregulation of various genes involved in genome stability but were not directly predictive of specific CIN mechanisms, underscoring the importance of functional characterization to identify causes of CIN. Overall, we show that HGSC CIN is complex and suggest that specific CIN mechanisms could be used as functional biomarkers to indicate appropriate therapy. Significance: These findings characterize multiple deregulated mechanisms of genome stability that lead to CIN in ovarian cancer and demonstrate the benefit of integrating analysis of said mechanisms into predictions of therapy response.

63Works
1Papers
9Collaborators

Positions

2023–

Research Health Scientist (PI)

VA San Diego Healthcare System

2020–

Assistant Professor

University of California, San Diego · Biomedical Informatics

2018–

UKRI Rutherford Research Fellow

Barts Cancer Institute · Barts Cancer Institute

2016–

Postdoctoral Research Fellow

Queen Mary University of London · Barts Cancer Institute

2015–

Senior Fellow

University of Washington · Medicine, Gastroenterology

2011–

NSF Graduate Research Fellow

University of Washington · Applied Mathematics

Education

2015

PhD

University of Washington · Applied Mathematics

2011

MSc

University of Washington · Applied Mathematics

2010

BS with Highest Honors

University of California Los Angeles · Mathematics