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CURRICULUM VITAE Date Prepared: June 2, 2013 Name: Catherine Ju-Ying Wu Office Address: Dana-Farber Cancer Institute Harvard Institutes of Medicine 77 Avenue Louis Pasteur -- Room 420 Boston, MA 02115 Home Address: 117 Mason Terrace, Brookline MA 02446 Work Phone: 617 632-5943 Work Email: [email protected] Work FAX: 617-632-3351 Place of Birth: New York City, NY Education 1988 A.B. Biochemistry 1994 M.D. Medicine Harvard University, Cambridge, MA Stanford University, Stanford, CA Postdoctoral Training 06/94-06/97 Resident Medicine Brigham &Women’s Hospital, Boston, MA 07/94-06/00 Clinical Fellow Medicine Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 07/97-06/00 Fellow Dana-Farber/Partners CancerCare, Boston MA 07/97-06/00 Clinical Fellow Hematology/ Oncology Medicine Brigham &Women’s Hospital Faculty Academic Appointments 07/00-02/06 Instructor Medicine Harvard Medical School 03/06-01/13 Assistant Professor Medicine Harvard Medical School 02/13present Associate Professor Medicine Harvard Medical School Appointments at Hospitals/Affiliated Institutions 07/00- Active Staff Medical Oncology 07/00- Associate Physician Medicine Dana-Farber Cancer Institute Brigham and Women’s Hospital Committee Service Local 1996-1999 Premedical Advisory Committee, Mather House 1996-1998 1998-1999 Harvard College, Cambridge MA 2001 Internal Medicine Residency Program Admissions Committee Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Member 2007-present Harvard Premedical Society Harvard College Mentor 2008 PhD Thesis Committee (Tanya Knickerbocker) Harvard College, Chemistry Department, Member 2013 PhD Thesis Committee (Sylvan Baca) Division of Medical Sciences, Department of Biological and Biomedical Sciences, Harvard University Chair and Resident Tutor Non-resident Premedical Tutor National 2008 NIH Consensus Conference on Sickle Cell Disease, Sub-committee on Research Priorities in Allotransplantation NIH-National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, Bethesda MD Member 2008- External Eligibility Review Panel Blood and Marrow Clinical Trials Network Protocol 0601 (Unrelated donor hematopoietic cell transplantation for children with severe sickle cell disease using a reduced intensity conditioning regimen) Member 2008- Steering Committee STRIDE (Sickle cell Transplantation to 2 Prevent Disease Exacerbation in Young Adults) collaborative trial Member Professional Societies 2000American Society of Hematology 2008, 2009 2008 Member Member, Abstract Selection Committee Session Moderator 2000- American Society of Blood and Marrow Transplantation 2011 Member 2011- American Association for Cancer Research Member 2012- American Society for Clinical Investigation Member 2012- Program in Leder Human Biology and Translational Medicine, PhD Program in Biological and Biomedical Science, Harvard Medical School Faculty member Grant Review Activities 2008-2010 Medical Student Research Fellows Program Member, Organizing and Abstract Selection Committee Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Bethesda MD Member 2009present KL2 Medical Research Investigator Training Award Harvard Catalyst Program, Harvard Medical School Member 2011 Transplantation, Tolerance and Tumor Immunity Study Section NIH Ad hoc Member 2012 Blood Cell Therapies Special Emphasis Panel NIH Ad hoc Reviewer 2012 Scholar Award Study Section American Society of Hematology Ad hoc Reviewer Editorial Activities • Ad hoc Reviewer 3 Clinical Cancer Research British Journal of Hematology The Hematology Journal Blood Journal of Immunology European Journal of Immunology Molecular and Cellular Proteomics New England Journal of Medicine Leukemia Honors and Prizes 1988 1988-89 1990 1998 1999 2000 Magna cum Laude Graduate Scholarship Stanford Medical Scholars Research Fellowship Medical Student Research Fellowship Continuing Studies Fellowship Katherine McCormick Research Award Graduating Honors Award Graduating Honors Award Travel Award Travel Award Forbeck Scholar Award 2002 Travel Award 2010 Travel Award 1990-1991 1991-1993 1992 1994 1994 Harvard College Rotary International, Nice, France Stanford Medical School Biochemistry Biochemistry Research Howard Hughes Medical Institute Research Howard Hughes Medical Institute Research Stanford Medical School Research Stanford Medical School Research Stanford Medical School Clinical Medicine American Society of Hematology American Society of Hematology William G. Forbeck Research Foundation American Society of Blood and Marrow Transplantation American Society of Blood and Marrow Transplantation Research Research Research Research Research Report of Funded and Unfunded Projects Funding Information Past 1999-2000 Serologic identification of antigens associated with the graft-versus-leukemia effect of donor lymphocyte infusion (DLI) for relapsed chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) after bone marrow transplantation (BMT) Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Postdoctoral Research Fellowship for Physicians. 4 PI ($130,000) The major goal of this study is to characterize the humoral immune response developing against antigens expressed on chronic myelogenous leukemia cells in association with effective clinical responses to donor lymphocyte infusion (DLI). 2000-2005 Leukemia antigens following donor lymphocyte infusion NIH- NHLBI/K08 HL04293-01 (Mentored Clinical Scientist Development Award) PI ($589,625) The major goals of this study are to characterize the gene expression patterns and the antibody and T cell responses elicited by donor lymphocyte infusion-associated antigens. 2002-2007 Non-myeloablative stem cell transplant for severe hemoglobinopathies Doris Duke Clinical Mentored Scientist Award PI ($507,826) The major goal of this study is determine the safety and feasibility of a conditioning region consisting of non-myeloablative doses of busulfan and fludarabine prior to allo-stem cell transplantation to treat patients with sickle cell disease and thalassemia major. By using molecular assays of chimerism and detailed analysis of T cell function, the efficacy and longer-term immunologic impact of the proposed treatment regimen can be assessed. 2004-2005 Nonmyelolablative allogeneic stem cell transplantation for treatment of severe hemoglobinopathies Brigham and Women’s Hospital Young Investigator Award PI ($37,500) The major goal of this study is to develop sensitive assays to measure lineage specific chimerism that can be applied to monitoring response following nonmyeloablative allostem cell transplantation for the treatment of hemoglobinopathies. 2004-2006 GM-K562 vaccination for treatment of minimal residual disease in patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia. DFCI Dunkin’ Donuts Award for Outstanding Clinical Investigation PI ($142,755) The major goal of this study is to test the biologic effects of vaccination using irradiated GM-K562 cells for the treatment of minimal residual disease in patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia. 2005-2007 GM-CSF producing tumor cells as a chronic myelogenous leukemia vaccine. NIH-NCI/R21 CA 115043-01 PI ($381,652) The major goals of this study are to determine the safety and toxicity of irradiated GMK562 cell vaccination in chronic myelogenous leukemia patients, to determine its effects on disease burden, and to characterize the immune activity of GM-K562 cells in chronic myelogenous leukemia patients. 2006-2007 Parallel monitoring of antigen-specific humoral immunity following immune-based therapy for chronic myelogenous leukemia 5 Dana-Farber Cancer Institute Fellowship, Eleanor and Miles Shore Program. PI ($28,181) The major goal of this study is to identify a set of reliable markers against which immunity consistently develops following immune-based intervention for chronic myelogenous leukemia, using large-scale serologic analysis 2006-2011 T cell immunity against novel leukemia antigens Howard Hughes Medical Institute Physician-Scientist Early Career Award. PI ($375,000) The major goals of this study are identify to chronic myelogenous leukemia progenitor cell associated antigens and to determine if they induce T and B cell responses following vaccination with a cell-based chronic myelogenous leukemia vaccine 2007-2009 Toll-like receptor (TLR) activation in tumor immunity following allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation Claudia Adams Barr Program in Cancer Research PI ($300,803) The major goals of this study are to identify the specific leukemia-associated antigens that form complexes with immunostimulatory nucleic acids to activate TLRs, identify the immune cells that are stimulated by these complexes, and define the mechanism by which immunity against these antigens can be initiated and enhanced following donor lymphocyte infusion (DLI). 2007-2010 Immune-targeted leukemia antigens for eradication of chronic myelogenous leukemia stem cells Damon-Runyon Clinical Investigator Award. PI ($300,000) The major goals of this study are to advance our mechanistic understanding of the GvL effect that can eradicate chronic myelogenous leukemia stem cells by identifying target antigens in leukemia cells as well as innate mechanisms that initiate GvL. 2007-2010 Immune-targeted leukemia antigens for the immunotherapy of chronic lymphocytic leukemia. Leukemia and Lymphoma Society Translational Research Program Award PI ($540,540) The major goals of this study are to characterize expression of chronic lymphocyticassociated donor lymphocyte infusion antigens, and analyze the serologic and T cell responses developing against them in the donor lymphocyte infusion setting. 2008-2009 Defining personal tumor-specific neoantigens for induction of anti-tumor immunity SPARC award, Broad Institute Co-PI ($146,004) The major goal of this study is to undertake whole genome and exome sequencing of tumors to define genetic alterations that could be targeted immunologically. 2008-2010 GM-CSF secreting tumor cell vaccines to enhance post-transplant anti-chronic 6 lymphocytic leukemia immunity NIH-NCI/R21 CA132232-01 PI ($442,526) The major goals of this study are to determine the feasibility, safety, and toxicity of administering a vaccine consisting of irradiated autologous tumor cells admixed with GMK562 cells following reduced intensity transplantation in patients with advanced chronic lymphocytic leukemia. This study will determine if tumor/GM-K562 vaccination in transplanted chronic lymphocytic leukemia patients stimulates antigen-specific B and T cell immunity. 2010-2012 Developing adoptive cellular therapy for the treatment of chronic lymphocytic leukemia Damon-Runyon Cancer Research Foundation Clinical Investigator Award PI ($250,000) The major goals of this study are to determine whether post-transplant cellular vaccines consistently induce expansion of chronic lymphocytic leukemia-specific donor T cells in patients and whether chronic lymphocytic leukemia-reactive T cells also be expanded from naïve normal donors. Current 2010-2014 Post-transplant vaccines to enhance graft-versus-leukemia responses NIH-NHLBI/1RO1HL103532-01 PI ($1,000,000) The major goals of this study are to determine if cell-based vaccination enhances immune reconstitution and enhances donor T cell reactivity against chronic lymphocytic leukemiarestricted antigens relative to broadly-expressed self antigens; and whether target antigens of CD8+ T cells induced by post-transplant chronic lymphocytic leukemia vaccines can be identified 2011-2013 Clinical and biologic activity of whole chronic lymphocytic leukemia-based posttransplant vaccines Leukemia and Lymphoma Society Translational Research Program Award PI ($360,000) The major goal of this study is to define the clinical efficacy of vaccination in this phase I/II study of patients with advanced chronic lymphocytic leukemia, and to determine if patients following vaccination develop chronic lymphocytic leukemia-specific antibody responses 2011-2014 Coupled genetic and functional dissection of chronic lymphocytic leukemia American Association for Cancer Research SU2C Innovative Research Grant PI ($681,818) The major goals of this study are to select candidate genes and pathways that drive chronic lymphocytic leukemia, assess the value of driver mutations and their expression in predicting clinical outcomes, and define the functional effects of genetically altered genes and pathways 7 2011-2014 Hematopoietic cell therapy for young adults with sickle cell disease 1R34 HL 108761-01 (Krishnamurti, Lakshmanan) Investigator The major goal of this study is to determine the feasibility and tolerability of hematopoietic stem cell transplantation in young adults with sickle cell disease, and measure the impact of donor hematopoiesis on end-organ function 2011-2016 Personal tumor antigens for immunity against chronic lymphocytic leukemia NIH-NCI/1R01CA155010-01A1 PI ($1,037,500) The major goals of this study are to determine whether the genes with somatic mutations in chronic lymphocytic leukemia patients generate mutated peptides that elicit T cell responses that are lytic to leukemia cells. 2012-2014 The role of mutations in RNA splicing pathway genes in chronic lymphocytic leukemia Lymphoma Research Foundation PI ($250,000) The major goals of this study are to determine the mechanisms by which mutations in the RNA splicing pathway contribute to pathogenesis of chronic lymphocytic leukemia 2012-2015 Targeting the spliceosome in CLL Leukemia Lymphoma Society PI ($540,054) The major goals of this study are to determine effects of the spliceosome inhibitors on RNA splicing in primary CLL cells and in a mouse model of CLL. 2012-2017 The role of the SF3B1 splicing factor in chronic lymphocytic leukemia NIH/R01HL116452-01 PI The major goals of this study are to define the mechanisms by which mutated SF3B1 promotes leukemogenesis in CLL. Current Unfunded Projects 2000- Co-Investigator, Protocol 00-159. Donation of Blood Cells for Examination of Immune Function This protocol seeks the collection of peripheral blood mononuclear cells from adult volunteers by research leukapheresis for research studies of immune function. 8 2004- Co-Investigator, Protocol 04-126. GM-K562 + Gleevec in chronic myelogenous leukemia CML. I conceived and designed this protocol, which seeks to assess the safety and biologic activity of vaccinating chronic myelogenous leukemia patients with persistent residual disease on Gleevec with a vaccine consisting of irradiated K562 cells (a chronic myelogenous leukemia cell line), that has been engineered to secrete the cytokine adjuvant GM-CSF. 2006- Principal Investigator, Protocol 06-196. Reduced intensity stem cell transplantation for advanced chronic lymphocytic leukemia followed by vaccination with lethally irradiated autologous tumor cells admixed with granulocyte macrophage-colony stimulating factor secreting K562 cells. I conceived and designed this protocol, which seeks to assess the safety and toxicity of vaccination with irradiated autologous tumor cells admixed with irradiated bystander cells secreting the cytokine adjuvant GM-K562 cells, which is administered in the early post-allogeneic transplant period following reduced intensity conditioning for chronic lymphocytic leukemia patients with advanced disease. I have enrolled and been treating physician for a number of patients on this study. 2006- Principal Investigator, Protocol 06-200. Banking of chronic lymphocytic leukemia tumor cells for vaccine generation. I conceived and designed this protocol, which seeks to bank tumor cells from patients with advanced chronic lymphocytic leukemia CLL, collected by marrow biopsy, lymph node biopsy or from venipuncture. I have been responsible for undertaking informed consent for a number of patients on this study, as well as marrow harvest of tumor cells. 2009- Principal Investigator, Protocol 09-013. Whole Genome Sequencing to Discover Personal Tumor Neoantigens. This study seeks to request permission from cancer patients for whole genome analysis of their tumors, including sequencing. In addition to conceiving and designing this protocol, I have undertaken informed consent with several subjects of this study. Report of Local Teaching and Training Teaching of Students in Courses 1996 1997 Didactic and bedside teaching of topics in Internal Medicine Harvard Medical School Third year (10 medical students) and fourth year (6 medical students) Daily M-F for one month Physical examination in Hematology Second year medical students Harvard Medical School ½ day per semester 9 2003- 2012 HST 160 (Molecular Biology and Genetics in Modern Medicine) 1-4th year medical, PhD or M/PhD students Harvard Medical School 2 students per year, 40 hours per student for discussion and instruction BIO312 (Consultation) Harvard School of Public Health 2nd-4th years doctoral biostatistics students 3 hours per semester (12 students) Formal Teaching of Residents, Clinical Fellows and Research Fellows (post-docs) 2009Introduction to Basic Science Lecture Series Dana-Farber/Partners CancerCare 1st year Clinical Fellows, Medical Oncology 1 hour lecture Clinical Supervisory and Training Responsibilities. 2000- Inpatient Blood and Marrow Transplant Service, Brigham and Women’s Hospital 4 weeks per year 2000- Inpatient consult attending, Hematologic Malignancies, Brigham and Women’s Hospital 4 weeks per year Laboratory and Other Research Supervisory and Training Responsibilities 2004- Supervise 10 post-doctoral fellows, 4 medical students and 4 research assistants/ DFCI Daily mentorship for 8 years Formally Supervised Trainees and Faculty 2004-2006 Yun Lin, MD PhD/ Associate Scientist, Temple University, Philadelphia, PA First author on article in JCI; ASH Abstract Achievement and Travel Award, 2006 2006-2007 Ovidiu Marina, MD/ PGY-3, Resident in Radiation Oncology, William Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak, MI HHMI-funded Medical Student Research Fellow (Case Western Reserve Medical School) First author on articles in J Prot Res, Cancer Res, and Methods in Mol Biol and Recipient of HHMI Medical Student Research Fellowship ASH Abstract Achievement and Travel Award, 2007 2007-2008 Melinda Biernacki, MD/ PGY-3, Resident in Medicine & Pediatrics, Brown University/Lifespan Hospitals, Providence, RI 5 year Honors Medical Student Research Fellow (University of Connecticut Medical 10 School); ASH Abstract Achievement and Travel Award, 2008 First author on articles in Cancer Res and Blood; co-author on papers in Blood, Biol BMT, Can Res, J Prot Res, Br J Haematol, Exp Hem. 2007-2012 Ann X. Cai, MD / Intern in Medicine, UCSF HHMI-funded Medical Student Research Fellow (HMS) Recipient of the Proctor Foundation Scholarship ASH Abstract Achievement and Travel Award recipient, 2010 Co-author on 3 papers in Cancer Research and JCI Lead author of an article in Clinical Cancer Research 2008-2010 Ursula Hainz, PhD / Post-doctoral research fellow, Children’s Cancer Research Institute, Vienna, Austria American Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation Travel award, 2010 Co-author on article in Can Research, Cancer Immunotherapy Immunology 2008- Lili Wang, MD PhD/ Post-doctoral research fellow Co-first author on article in NEJM, co-author on article in Cell ASH Abstract Achievement and Travel Award 2010, 2011, 2012 Recipient of Lymphoma Research Foundation Postdoctoral Award 2013 2008-2010 Li Zhang, PhD/ Associate Professor, West China Hospital, Sichuan University Co-first author on article in JCI; co-author on article in NEJM 2009 Ana M. Brusic, MBBS, BMedSc / Intern, Eastern Health Hospital Group, Melbourne, Victoria Honours/First Class Masters research thesis, Monash University, Australia Lead author of an article in Oncoimmunology 2009-2011 Quinlan Sievers /2nd year MD-PhD student, Harvard Medical School Co-author on article in NEJM 2009- Mohini Rajasagi, PhD / Post-doctoral research fellow Co-author on an manuscript to Cancer Immunotherapy, Immunology ASH Abstract Achievement and Travel Award 2012 2010- Youzhong Wan, PhD / Post-doctoral research fellow Co-first author on article in NEJM ASH Abstract Achievement and Travel Award, 2011 Recipient of Leukemia and Lymphoma Society Postdoctoral Award, 2012 2010-2012 Masayasu Naito, MD PhD / Assistant Professor, Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Fukuoka University School of Medicine, Japan ASH Abstract Achievement and Travel Award, 2011 Lead author of an manuscript in Cancer Immunotherapy, Immunology 11 2011- Ute M. Burkhardt, PhD/ Post-doctoral research fellow Oral abstract presenter at ASBMT, 2012 Co-author on an in press manuscript to Cancer Immunotherapy, Immunology Lead author of a manuscript under review at Journal of Clinical Investigation Abstract achievement award, NCI-Relapse Workshop 2012 2011- Dan-Avi Landau, MD/ Post-doctoral research fellow American Society of Hematology Abstract Achievement Award, 2011; Recipient of a 2011 American Society of Hematology Research Training Award for Fellows Recipient of American Cancer Society Postdoctoral Fellowship, 2012 Lead author of a paper in Cell, 2013 Plenary abstract session speaker at the 2012 Annual American Society of Hematology meeting 2012- Jintaek Kim, PhD/Post-doctoral research fellow Local Invited Presentations No presentations below were sponsored by outside entities. 2001 Identification of antigen targets of the graft-versus-leukemia response/ Immunology Seminar Series Harvard Institutes of Medicine, Harvard Medical School 2002 Dissecting the graft-versus-leukemia effect: identification of target antigens / Grand Rounds Division of Blood and Marrow Transplantation (BMT), Harvard Medical School 2002 Nonmyeloablative allogeneic stem cell transplantation for severe hemoglobinopathies / Hematology Seminar Series Division of Hematology, Brigham and Women’s Hospital 2003 Nonmyeloablative allogeneic stem cell transplantation for severe hemoglobinopathies / Hematology Seminar Series Division of Hematology, Brigham and Women’s Hospital 2004 Nonmyeloablative allogeneic stem cell transplantation for severe hemoglobinopathies / Grand Rounds BMT, Harvard Medical School 2004 Stem cell therapy for hemoglobinopathies / Clinical Pathology Seminar Series Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School 2005 Stem cell transplantation for sickle cell anemia/ BWH Medicine-Pathology Conference Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School 12 2006 Cellular vaccines for chronic myelogenous leukemia / Joint Immunology Research Seminar DFCI-BWH-JDC, Harvard Medical School 2006 Cellular vaccines for chronic myelogenous leukemia / Cancer Immunology Seminar Series Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Medical School 2007 Identification of antigen targets of the graft-versus-leukemia response/ Immunology Seminar Series Harvard Institutes of Medicine, Harvard Medical School 2007 Dissecting the GvL response—identification and characterization of target antigens/ Grand Rounds BMT, Harvard Medical School 2007 Nonmyeloablative allogeneic stem cell transplantation for severe hemoglobinopathies/Hematology Seminar Series Division of Hematology, Brigham and Women’s Hospital 2007 Monitoring of erythroid-lineage specific engraftment following transplantation for hemoglobinopathies / Transfusion Medicine Grand Rounds Harvard Medical School 2008 Molecular monitoring of lineage specific chimerism / Clinical Pathology Grand Rounds Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School 2009 Marrow hematopoietic progenitors as chronic lymphocytic leukemia-initiating cells / Seminar Series Lecture MGH Cancer Center, Harvard Medical School 2010 Dissecting and enhancing immunity against leukemia / Grand Rounds MGH Cancer Center, Harvard Medical School 2010 Dissecting and enhancing immunity against chronic lymphocytic leukemia / Retreat speaker Lymphoma and Myeloma Retreat, DFCI 2010 Developing novel immunotherapy for chronic lymphocytic leukemia and understanding chronic lymphocytic leukemia biology/Invited speaker Broad Institute, Cambridge, MA 2010 Whole tumor cell based vaccines to enhance immunity against chronic lymphocytic leukemia / Grand Rounds Bone Marrow Ttransplantation, Harvard Medical School 13 2011 Discovery of driver mutations in chronic lymphocytic leukemia / Speaker Broad Institute Cancer Genome Working Group, Cambridge, MA 2011 Discovery of driver mutations and pathways in chronic lymphocytic leukemia based on whole genome and exome sequencing/ Hematologic Neoplasia Division Seminar DFCI 2011 Whole tumor cell based vaccines to enhance immunity against chronic lymphocytic leukemia / Hematologic Neoplasia Division Seminar DFCI 2011 Discovery of driver mutations in chronic lymphocytic leukemia / Cancer Program Seminar Series Broad Institute, Cambridge, MA 2011 Large-scale genome analysis of chronic lymphocytic leukemia reveals novel cancer genes including SF3B1/ Hematologic Neoplasia Division Seminar DFCI 2011 Discovery of personal neoantigens/ Cancer Program Seminar Series Broad Institute 2012 Understanding the role of mutated SF3B1 in CLL/ Cancer Program Seminar Series Broad Institute 2012 Coupled genetic and functional dissection of chronic lymphocytic leukemia / Invited speaker Barr Presidential Advisory Committee, DFCI 2012 Developing a personalized neoantigen cancer vaccine/ Invited speaker Broad Institute Cancer Genome Workshop seminar series 2012 Tumor heterogeneity in CLL: detection and implications/Invited speaker, Single Cell Genomics Collaborative Special Seminar Broad Institute, Cambridge MA 2012 Developing a personalized neoantigen cancer vaccine/Invited speaker Broad Institute Annual Retreat, Harvard Medical School, Boston 2013 Developing a personalized neoantigen cancer vaccine/Invited speaker DFHCC AML Retreat, Beth Israel/Deaconess Hospital, Boston 2013 Evolution and impact of subclonal mutations in CLL/ Invited speaker Leukemia Research Conference/Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston 2013 Developing a personalized neoantigen cancer vaccine/Invited speaker 14 Broad Institute Cancer Biology seminar series/Cambridge MA Report of Regional, National and International Invited Teaching and Presentations Invited Presentations and Courses No presentations below were sponsored by outside entities. Regional 2004 Nonmyeloablative allogeneic stem cell transplantation for severe hemoglobinopathies/Invited speaker Department of Hematology, Boston University Medical Center, Boston MA 2007 Cellular vaccines for the treatment of CLL/Symposium on Advances in Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia Tufts-New England Medical Center, Boston, MA 2007 Hematopoietic allogeneic stem cell transplant for severe hemoglobinopathies/ Grand Rounds Hematology-Oncology, University of Connecticut School of Medicine, Farmington, CT 2011 From graft-versus-leukemia to effective cancer vaccines/ Keynote speaker and panel discussant HHMI Northeast Regional Medical Fellows Program, Boston MA 2012 Tumor immunity and cancer genomics/ Discussion leader Broad Institute Cancer Program Retreat, Chatham MA 2013 Clonal heterogeneity in CLL: Immunotherapeutic implications/invited speaker Pathology Seminar Series Boston University School of Medicine Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Boston MA National 1998 Reconstitution of T cell receptor repertoire diversity following allogeneic bone marrow transplantation is related to hematopoietic chimerism / Abstract presenter American Society of Hematology Annual Meeting, Miami, FL 1999 Serologic identification of antigens associated with response to donor lymphocyte infusion (DLI) for relapsed CML after allogeneic BMT/ Abstract presenter American Society of Hematology Annual Meeting, New Orleans, LA 15 2002 CML28 and CML66 are GVL-associated antigens that are overexpressed in malignant hematopoietic tissue/ Abstract presenter American Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation Annual Meeting, Orlando, FL 2003 Dissecting the Graft-versus-Leukemia Effect: Identification of Target Antigens/ Invited Speaker Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA 2004 Nonmyeloablative allogeneic stem cell transplantation for severe hemoglobinopathies/ Grand Rounds Division of Hematology-Oncology, Louisiana State University at Shreveport, Shreveport, LA 2005 Dissecting the graft-versus-leukemia effect: Identification of target antigens/ Invited speaker University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 2005 Graft-versus-leukemia target antigens in chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) are expressed on myeloid progenitor cells/ Abstract presenter 5th Annual Meeting of the Federation of Clinical Immunology Societies (FOCIS), Boston, MA 2005 Nonmyeloablative allogeneic stem cell transplant for severe sickle cell anemia/Invited speaker Wayne State University, Detroit, MI 2006 Effective graft-versus-leukemia responses are associated with the presence of nucleic acidimmunoglobulin complexes that stimulate TLR8 and TLR9/ Abstract presenter American Society of Hematology Annual Meeting, Orlando, FL 2010 Graft-versus-leukemia antigen CML66 elicits coordinated B and T cell immunity after donor lymphocyte infusion/Abstract presenter American Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation Annual Meeting; Orlando, FL 2010 Safety and clinical efficacy of early vaccination after non-myeloablative transplant for advanced chronic lymphocytic leukemia /Abstract presenter American Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation Annual meeting; Orlando, FL 2010 Dissecting and enhancing immunity against leukemia / Grand Rounds Hematology/Oncology, Northwestern University, Chicago, IL 2011 Hematopoietic allogeneic stem cell transplantation for sickle cell disease/ Education session speaker American Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation Annual Meeting, Honolulu, HI 2011 Early-post transplant whole tumor cell vaccination elicits anti-tumor T cell responses in 16 patients with advanced CLL/ Abstract presenter American Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation Annual Meeting; Honolulu, HI 2011 Large-scale CLL genome analysis reveals novel cancer genes, including SF3B1 / Invited speaker CLL Research Consortium meeting, San Diego, CA 2011 Large-scale CLL genome analysis reveals novel cancer genes, including SF3B1 / Invited speaker Second International CLL Research Colloqium, San Diego, CA 2012 Dissecting and enhancing immunity against leukemia/ Invited speaker National Cancer Institute; Bethesda MD 2012 Mining the tumor genome for graft-versus-leukemia targets / Plenary session chair and speaker American Society of Blood and Marrow Transplantation, San Diego, CA CLL Research Consortium meeting, San Diego, CA 2012 Developing effective immune therapy for the treatment of CLL / Invited speaker DamonRunyon Cancer Research Foundation Symposium, New York City NY 2012 Coupled genetic and functional dissection of chronic lymphocytic leukemia / Invited speaker AACR/SU2C symposium, Chicago IL 2012 Coupled genetic and functional dissection of chronic lymphocytic leukemia / Invited speaker Ohio State University Medical Center, Columbus OH 2012 Coupled genetic and functional dissection of chronic lymphocytic leukemia/ Invited speaker, Grand Rounds Vanderbilt Medical Center, Nashville TN 17 2012 Tumor Genomics: Biology and Implications for Cellular Therapies/Invited Speaker 2nd International Workshop on the Biology, Prevention and Treatment of Relapse after Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation, NCI/NIH, Bethesda MD 2012 Coupled genetic and functional dissection of chronic lymphocytic leukemia/ Invited speaker, Leukemia Grand Rounds University of Texas/MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston TX 2012 Clonal evolution in CLL: Therapeutic implications/ Invited speaker Alliance Leukemia Correlative Science Committee Meeting, Chicago IL 2012 Coupled genetic and functional dissection of chronic lymphocytic leukemia/ Invited speaker, Leukemia Grand Rounds LI Jewish Medical Center, Manhasset NY 2012 Clonal evolution in CLL: therapeutic implications/ Invited speaker, CLL Research Consortium symposium; Atlanta GA 2012 Understanding the role of mutations in SF3B1 and splicing in CLL/ Invited speaker/ American Society of Hematology Scientific Education Program, Subcommittee on Hematopoiesis/ Atlanta GA 2012 RNA Splicing in Normal and Malignant Hematopoiesis/ Invited speaker/ American Society of Hematology Scientific Forum/ Atlanta GA 2013 Clonal heterogeneity in CLL: Therapeutic implications/Hematology-Oncology Grand Rounds speaker Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York City, NY 2013 Clonal heterogeneity in CLL: Immunotherapeutic implications/invited speaker University of California at San Diego, La Jolla CA 2013 Impact of subclonal mutations in CLL/Invited speaker/ American Society of Cancer Research Annual meeting Scientific Education Session, Washington DC 2013 Intraclonal heterogeneity in CLL/Invited speaker/Stand Up to Cancer Special Session, American Society of Cancer Research Annual meeting, Washington DC 2013 Coupled genetic and functional dissection of chronic lymphocytic leukemia/ Invited Speaker/ CLL Research Consortium Retreat, San Diego CA International 2005 Nonmyeloablative allogeneic stem cell transplant for severe sickle cell anemia/ Invited speaker 18 King’s College, London, England 2011 Early-post transplant whole tumor cell vaccination elicits anti-tumor T cell responses in patients with advanced CLL/ Abstract presenter European Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation, Paris, France 2011 Large-Scale CLL Genome Analysis Reveals Novel Cancer Genes, Including SF3B1/ Invited speaker / Joint NCI-Japan Society for Promotion of Science workshop on Cancer Genomics, Kyoto, Japan 2012 Coupled genetic and functional dissection of chronic lymphocytic leukemia/ Invited speaker/ 8th International CLL Workshop, Salzburg, Austria Report of Clinical Activities and Innovations Current Licensure and Certification 1996 Massachusetts Medical License 1997 American Board of Internal Medicine Certificate 2001 American Board of Internal Medicine, Medical Oncology 2002,2012 American Board of Internal Medicine, Hematology 2012 American Board of Internal Medicine, Hematology Practice Activities 2000- Inpatient Care 2000- Ambulatory Care Adult blood and marrow transplantation, Brigham and Women’s Hospital Adult blood and marrow transplantation, DFCI 4 weeks per year ½ session per week Report of Technological and Other Scientific Innovations Methods to detect lineage-specific cells. U.S. Provisional Application Serial No. 60/506221, filed September 25, 2003, and U.S. Provisional Application Serial No. 60/509594, filed October 8, 2003. WU CJ, Ritz J, inventors. As a member of the Ritz lab, I generated a molecular assay that uses quantitative measurement of transcripts expressed uniquely in a particular cell lineage as a marker to measure lineage-specific chimerism. This type of assay is now being used in a number of national collaborative clinical 19 trials of allotransplantation of sickle cell disease to functionally assess impact of transplantation. Immunogenic tumor antigens: nucleic acids and polypeptides encoding the same and methods of use thereof. US Patent Application 20363-006, filed 2002. WU CJ, Yang XF, Ritz J, inventors. As a member of the Ritz lab, I demonstrated that serologic approaches could be utilized to rapidly identify the tumor antigens CML28 and CML66 that could be targets of immunotherapy directed against CML. Compositions and US Patent Application: 13/108,610. Filed May 16, 2011 methods of Hacohen N, WU CJ, inventors. identifying tumorspecific neoantigens This application describes the application of genomic approaches to identify genetic alterations that may elicit immunologic reactivity, derived from tumors. Report of Education of Patients and Service to the Community No activities below were sponsored by outside entities. 2002 Allogeneic Stem Cell Transplantation for Sickle Cell Disease / Keynote speaker; Boston Pan-African Medical Society Annual Meeting, Boston MA 2003 Current advances in the care of patients with sickle cell disease / Invited speaker; Boston Community Sickle Cell Support Group, Boston MA 2004 Current advances in the care of patients with sickle cell disease./ Invited speaker and panel discussant; Boston Community Sickle Cell Support Group, Boston MA Recognition 2004 Medical Service Award Boston Community Sickle Cell Support Group Report of Scholarship Peer reviewed publications in print or other media • Research investigations 20 1. WU CJ, Karttunen JT, Chin DHL, Sen D, Gilbert W. Murine memory B cells are double isotype expressors. Immunology 1991; 72: 48-55. 2. WU CJ, Lovett M, Wong-Lee J, Moeller F, Kitamura M, Billingham ME, Starnes VA, Clayberger C. Cytokine gene expression in rejecting cardiac allografts. Transplantation 1992; 54: 326-32. 3. Whitehead BF, Stoehr C, WU CJ, Patterson G, Burchard EG, Theodore J, Clayberger C, Starnes VA. Cytokine gene expression in human lung transplant recipients. Transplantation 1993; 56:95661. 4. WU CJ, Kurbegov D, Lattin B, Burchard EG, Valantine H, Billingham ME, Starnes VA, Clayberger C. Cytokine gene expression in human cardiac allograft recipients. Transplant Immunology 1994; 2: 199-207. 5. WU CJ, Vasconcelles M, DePiro P, Van den Abbeele A, Rakusin A, Bechard K, Skarin A. Primary cardiac angiosarcoma presenting as a malignant pericardial effusion. J Clin Oncol 1998; 16: 39135. 6. WU CJ, Scadden D. Posttransplant Kaposi's sarcoma treated with paclitaxel. J Clin Oncol 1998; 16: 3478-9. 7. WU CJ, Alyea EP, Chillemi A, Neuberg D, Soiffer R, Ritz J. Reconstitution of T cell receptor repertoire diversity following allogeneic bone marrow transplantation is related to hematopoietic chimerism. Blood 2000; 95: 352-9. 8. WU CJ, Yang XF, McLaughlin S, Neuberg D, Canning C, Stein B, Alyea EP, Soiffer RJ, Dranoff G, Ritz J. Detection of a potent humoral response associated with immune-induced remission of chronic myelogenous leukemia. J Clin Invest 2000; 106: 705-14. 9. Yang XF, WU CJ, McLaughlin S, Chillemi A, Wang KS, Canning C, Alyea EP, Kantoff P, Soiffer RJ, Dranoff G, Ritz J. CML66, a novel broadly immunogenic tumor antigen elicits a humoral immune response associated with remission of chronic myelogenous leukemia. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 2001; 98: 7492-7. 10. Hochberg EP, Chillemi AC, WU CJ, Neuberg D, Canning C, Hartman K, Alyea EP, Soiffer RJ, Kalams SA, Ritz J. Quantitation of T cell neogenesis in vivo after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation in adults. Blood 2001; 98: 1116-21. 11. Zorn E, Orsini E, WU CJ, Stein B, Chillemi A, Canning C, Alyea EP, Soiffer RJ, Ritz J (1). A CD4+ T cell clone selected from a CML patient after donor lymphocyte infusion recognizes BCRABL breakpoint peptides but not tumor cells. Transplantation 2001; 71: 1131-7. 12. Bellucci R, Alyea EP, Weller E, Chillemi A, Hochberg E, WU CJ, Canning C, Schlossman R, Soiffer RJ, Anderson KC, Ritz J. Immunologic effects of prophylactic donor lymphocyte infusion after allogeneic marrow transplantation for multiple myeloma. Blood 2002; 99: 4610-7. 21 13. Soiffer RJ, Alyea EP, Hochberg E, WU C, Canning C, Parikh B, Zahrieh D, Webb I, Antin J, Ritz J. Randomized trial of CD8+ T-cell depletion in the prevention of graft-versus-host disease associated with donor lymphocyte infusion. Biol Blood Marrow Transplant 2002: 8: 625-32. 14. Yang XF*, WU CJ*, Chen LY, Alyea EP, Canning C, Kantoff P, Soiffer RJ, Dranoff G, Ritz J. CML28 is a broadly immunogenic antigen which is overexpressed in tumor cells. Cancer Res 2002: 62: 5517-22. (* denotes equal contributors) 15. WU CJ, Neuberg D, Chillemi A, McLaughlin S, Hochberg EP, Galinsky I, DeAngelo D, Soiffer R, Alyea EP, Capdeville R, Stone RM, Ritz J. Quantitative monitoring of BCR/ABL transcript during STI-571 therapy. Leuk Lymph 2002; 43:2281-9. 16. WU CJ, Hochberg EP, Rogers SA, Biernacki M, Nascimento A, Kutok JL, Marks P, Bridges KR, Ritz J. Molecular assessment of erythroid lineage chimerism following non-myeloablative allogeneic stem cell transplantation. Exp Hematol 2003; 31: 924-33. 17. Antin JH, Kim HT, Cutler C, Ho VT, Lee SJ, Miklos DB, Hochberg EP, WU CJ, Alyea EP, Soiffer RJ (1). Sirolimus, tacrolimus and low-dose methotrexate for graft-versus-host disease prophylaxis in mismatched related donor or unrelated donor transplant. Blood 2003; 102: 1601-5. 18. Yan Y, Phan L, Yang F, Talpaz M, Yang Y, Xiong Z, Ng B, Timchenko NA, WU CJ, Ritz J, Wang H, Yang XF. A novel mechanism of alternative promoter and splicing regulates the epitope generation of tumor antigen CML66-L. J Immunol 2004; 172: 651-60. 19. Srinivasan J, WU CJ, Amato A. Inflammatory myopathy associated with imatinib meslyate therapy. J Clin Neuromusc Dis 2004; 5: 119-21. 20. Bellucci R, WU CJ, Chiaretti S, Weller E, Davies FE, Alyea EP, Dranoff G, Anderson KC, Munshi NC, Ritz J. Complete response to donor lymphocyte infusion in multiple myeloma is associated with antibody responses to highly expressed antigens. Blood 2004; 103: 656-63. 21. Miklos DB, Kim HT, Miller KH, Guo L, Zorn E, Lee SJ, Hochberg EP, WU CJ, Alyea EP, Cutler C, Ho V, Soiffer RJ, Antin JH, Ritz J. Antibody responses to H-Y minor histocompatibility antigens correlate with chronic graft versus host disease and disease remission. Blood 2005; 105: 2973-8. 22. Bellucci R, Alyea EP, Chiaretti S, WU CJ, Zorn E, Weller E, WU B, Canning C, Schlossman R, Munshi NC, Anderson KC, Ritz J. Graft-versus-tumor response in patients with multiple myeloma is associated with antibody response to BCMA, a plasma cell membrane receptor. Blood 2005; 105:3945-50. 23. WU CJ, Biernacki M, Kutok JL, Rogers S, Chen LY, Yang XF, Soiffer RJ, Ritz J. Graft-versusleukemia target antigens in chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) are expressed on myeloid progenitor cells. Clin Cancer Res 2005; 11: 4504-11. 24. WU CJ, Krishnamurti L, Kutok JL, Biernacki M, Rogers S, Zhang W, Antin JH, Ritz J. Evidence 22 for ineffective erythropoiesis in severe sickle cell disease. Blood 2005; 106: 3639-45. 25. WU CJ, Gladwin M, Tisdale J, Hsieh M, Biernacki M, Rogers S, Wang X, Walters M, Zahrieh D, Antin JH, Ritz J, Krishnamurti L. Mixed hematopoietic chimerism for sickle cell disease prevents intravascular hemolysis. Br J Haematol 2007; 139: 504-7. 26. Nardi V, Raz T, Cao X, WU CJ, Stone R, Cortes J, Deininger M, Church G, Zhu J, Daley GQ (2). Quantitative monitoring by polymerase colony assay of known mutations resistant to ABL kinase inhibitors. Oncogene 2008; 27: 775-82. 27. Armistead PM, Mohseni M, Gerwin R, Walsh EC, Iravani M, Chahardouli B, Rhostami S, Zhang W, Neuberg D, Rioux J, Ghavamzadeh A, Ritz J, Antin JH, WU CJ. Erythroid-lineage specific engraftment in patients with severe hemoglobinopathy following allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. Exp Hematol 2008; 36: 1205-15. 28. Krishnamurti L, Kharbanda S, Biernacki MA, Zhang W, Baker SB, Wagner JE, WU CJ. Stable long term donor engraftment following reduced intensity hematopoietic cell transplantation for sickle cell disease. Biol BMT 2008; 14:1270-8. 29. Marina O, Biernacki MA, Brusic V, WU CJ. A concentration-dependent analysis method for highdensity protein microarray. J Prot Res 2008; 7: 2059-68. 30. Jagani Z, Song K, Kutok JL, Dewar MR, Melet A, Santos T, Grassian A, Ghaffari S, WU C, Yeckes-Rodin H, Ren R, Miller K, Khosravi-Far R. Proteasome inhibition causes regression of leukemia and abrogates BCR-ABL- induced evasion of apoptosis in part through regulation of forkhead tumor suppressors. Cancer Res 2009; 69:6546-55. 31. Ofran Y, Kim HS, Brusic V, Blake L, Mandrell M, WU CJ, Sarantopoulos S, Bellucci R, Keskin DB, Soiffer RJ, Antin JH, Ritz J. Diverse patterns of T cell response against multiple newly identified human Y chromosome encoded minor histocompatibility epitopes. Clin Cancer Res 2010; 16:1642-51. 32. Weisberg E, Choi HW, Ray A, Barrett R, Zhang JM, Sim T, Zhou WJ, Seelinger M, Cameron M, Azam M, Mayeda M, Moreno D, Kung AL, Janne PA, Khosravi-Far R, Melo J, Manley PW, Adamia S, WU C, Gray N, Griffin JD. Discovery of a small molecule type II inhibitor of wild-type and gatekeeper mutants of BCR-ABL, PDGFRƒÑ, Kit, and Src kinases. Blood 2010; 115:4206-16. 33. Biernacki MA, Marina O, Zhang W, Liu FL, Bruns I, Cai A, Zhang W, Neuberg D, Canning CM, Alyea EP, Soiffer RJ, Brusic V, Ritz J, WU CJ. Antigen targets of remission-inducing immune therapy are expressed on CML progenitor cells. Cancer Res 2010; 70:906-15. 34. Zhang W, Choi JW, Zeng WY, Rogers SA, Alyea EP, Rheinwald JG, Canning CM, Brusic V, Sasada T, Reinherz EL, Ritz J, Soiffer RJ, WU CJ. Graft-versus-leukemia antigen CML66 elicits coordinated B and T cell immunity after donor lymphocyte infusion. Clin Cancer Res 2010; 16:2729-39. 23 35. Marina O, Hainz U, Biernacki MA, Zhang W, Cai A, Duke-Cohan JS, Liu FL, Brusic V, Neuberg D, Kutok JL, Alyea EP, Canning CM, Soiffer RJ, Ritz J, WU CJ. Serologic markers of effective tumor immunity against chronic lymphocytic leukemia include non-mutated B cell antigens. Cancer Res 2010; 70:1344-55. 36. Koreth J, Biernacki M, Aldridge J, Kim HT, Alyea EP, Armand P, Cutler C, Ho VT, WU CJ, Antin JH, Soiffer RJ. Syngeneic donor hematopoietic stem cell transplantation is associated with high rates of engraftment syndrome. Biol Blood Marrow Transplant 2011; 17: 421-8. 37. Anderson KS*, Zeng WY*, Sasada T*, Choi JW, Riemer AB, Su M, Drakoulakos D, Kang YJ, Brusic V, WU CJ, Reinherz EL. Impaired tumor antigen processing by immunoproteasomeexpressing CD40-activated B cells and dendritic cells. Cancer Immunol Immunotherapy 2011; 60:857-67. (*denotes equal contributors) 38. Lin Y*, Zhang L*, Cai AX, Lee M, Zhang W, Neuberg D, Canning CM, Soiffer RJ, Alyea AP, Ritz J, Hacohen N, Means TK, WU CJ. Effective post-transplant anti-tumor immunity is associated with TLR-stimulating nucleic acid-immunoglobulin complexes in humans. J Clin Invest 2011; 121:1574-84. (* denotes equal contributors) 39. Huynh HD, Zheng JK, Umikawa M, Silvany R, Xie XJ, WU CJ, Holzenberger M, Wang QM, and Zhang CC. Components of the hematopoietic compartments in tumor stroma and tumor-bearing mice. PLoS ONE 2011; 6: e18054 40. Wang L*, Lawrence MS*, Wan YZ* Stojanov P, Sougnez C, Stevenson K, Werner L, Sivachenko A, Deluca DS, Zhang L, Zhang W, Vartanov A, Fernandes SM, Goldstein NR, Folco EG, Cibulskis K, Tesar B, Sievers QL, Shefler E, Gabriel S, Hacohen N, Reed R, Meyerson M, Golub TR, Lander ES, Neuberg D, Brown JR*, Getz G*, WU CJ*. Sequencing of chronic lymphocytic leukemia reveals frequent mutations in SF3B1, a component of the spliceosome. N Engl J Med 2011;365(26):2497-506 (* denotes equal contributors) 41. Biernacki MA, Tai YT, Zhang GL, Alonso A, Zhang W, Prabhala R, Zhang L, Munshi N, Neuberg D, Soiffer RJ, Ritz J, Alyea EP, Brusic V, Anderson KC, WU CJ. Novel myeloma-associated antigens revealed in the context of syngeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. Blood 2012 119(13):3142-50. 42. Brown JR, Hanna M, Tesar B, Pochet N, Vartanov A, Fernandes SM, Werner L, Ash M, Roden CA, MacConaill L, Hainz U, Longtine J, Wang YE, Correll M, Van De Peer Y, Regev A, WU CJ, Neuberg D, Freedman AS. Germline copy number variation associated with Mendelian inheritance of CLL in two families. Leukemia 2012; 26(7): 1710-3. 43. Brown JR, Hanna M, Tesar B, Werner L, Pochet N, Asara JM, Wang YE, Dal Cin P, Fernandes S, Thompson C, Macconaill LE, WU CJ, Van de Peer Y, Correll M, Regev A, Neuberg D, Freedman AS. Integrative genomic analysis implicates gain of PIK3CA at 3q26 and MYC at 8q24 in chronic lymphocytic leukemia. Clin Cancer Res. 2012;18 (4): 3791-3802 44. Brusic A, Hainz U, Wadleigh M, Neuberg D, Su M, Canning CM, DeAngelo D, Stone RM, Ritz J 24 Dranoff G, Sasada T, WU CJ. Detecting T-cell reactivity to whole cell vaccines: proof of concept analysis of T-cell response to K562 cell antigens in CML patients. Oncoimmunology 2012 1:7; 1-9 45. Cai A, Keskin DB, Deluca DS, Alonso A, Zhang W, Zhang GL, Hammond NN, Nardi V, Stone RM, Neuberg D, Sidney J, Brusic V, WU CJ. Mutated BCR-ABL generates immunogenic T cell epitopes in CML Patients. Clin Cancer Res 2012; 18(20):5761-72 46. Brown JR, Kim HT, Armand A, Cutler C, Fisher DC, Ho V, Koreth J, Ritz J, WU CJ, Antin,JH, Soiffer RJ, Gribben JG, Alyea EP. Long-term follow-up of reduced intensity allogeneic stem cell transplantation for chronic lymphocytic leukemia: prognostic model to predict outcome Leukemia 2012;Aug 14 [Epub ahead of print]. 47. Naito M, Hainz U, Fu BY, Stevenson KE, Burkhardt U, Ahove DA, Rajasagi M, Zhu BG, Alonso A, Witten E, Matsuoka KI Neuberg D, Duke-Cohan J, WU CJ* and Freeman G*. CD40L-Tri, a novel formulation of recombinant human CD40L that effectively activates B cells (* denotes equal contributors) Cancer Immunotherapy, Immunology 2012 Aug 25 [Epub ahead of print]. 48. Davids MS, Deng J, Wiestner A, Lannutti BJ, Wang L, WU CJ, Wilson WH, Brown JR, Letai A. Decreased mitochondrial apoptotic priming underlies stroma-mediated treatment resistance in chronic lymphocytic leukemia, Blood 2012; 120(17): 3501-9. 49. Shalek AK, Gaublomme JT, Wang L, Yosef N, Chevrier N, Andersen MS, Robinson JT, Pochet N, Neuberg D, Gertner RS, Amit I, Brown JR, Hacohen N, Regev A, WU CJ, Park H. Nanowiremediated delivery enables functional interrogation of primary immune cells: application to the analysis of chronic lymphocytic leukemia. Nano Lett. 2012 Dec 12;12(12):6498-504. 50. Landau DA*, Carter SL*, Stojanov P*, McKenna A, Stevenson K, Lawrence MS, Sougnez C, Stewart C, Sivachenko A, Wang L, Wan YZ, Zhang W, Shukla SA, Vartanov A, Fernandes SM, Saksena G, Cibulskis K, Tesar B, Gabriel S, Hacohen N, Meyerson M, Lander ES, Neuberg D, Brown JR, Getz G*, WU CJ* Evolution and impact of subclonal mutations in chronic lymphocytic leukemia. Cell 2013; 152(4):714-26. 51. Burkhardt UE, Hainz U, Stevenson K, Goldstein NR, Pasek M, Naito M, Wu D, Ho VT. Alonso A, Hammond NN, Wong J, Sievers QL, Brusic A, McDonough SM, Zeng WY, Perrin A, Brown JR, Canning CM, Koreth J, Cutler C, Armand P, Neuberg D, Lee JS. Antin JH. Mulligan RC, Sasada T, Ritz J, Soiffer RJ, Dranoff G, Alyea EP, WU CJ. Autologous CLL cell vaccination early after transplant induces leukemia-specific T-cells. Journal of Clinical Investigation (in press) • Other peer-reviewed publications 1. WU CJ. Immunologic targeting of the cancer stem cell. In: Girard, L, editor. The Stem Book. Cambridge, MA: Harvard Stem Cell Institute, Harvard University; 2008 (http://www.stembook.org). 25 Non-peer reviewed scientific or medical publications/materials in print or other media • Proceedings of meetings or other non-peer-reviewed research publications 1. Bellucci R, WU CJ, Chiaretti S, Alyea EP, Munshi NC, Ritz J. Antibody response to BCMA in patients with multiple myeloma. Proceedings of the 12th International Congress of Immunology and 4th Annual Conference of FOCIS; 2004 July 18-23; Montreal, Canada. Malden, MA: Wiley: 2004. 2. Gress RE, Miller JS, Battiwalla M, Hardy NM, Landau DA, WU CJ. Proceedings from the 2nd NCI International Workshop on the Biology, Prevention and Treatment of Relapse after Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation: Report from the Committee on Biology of Relapse after Transplantation; 2012 Nov 12-13; Bethesda MD • Reviews, chapters, monographs and editorials 1. WU CJ, Ritz J. The immunocompromised host. In: Austen FR, editor. Samter's Immunologic Diseases, 6th ed. Boston: Little, Brown and Company; 200l. p. 1067-85. 2. WU CJ, Ritz J. The induction of tumor immunity following allogeneic stem cell transplantation. In: Dranoff, G and Alt, F: editors. Advances in Immunology. Amsterdam: Elsevier; 2006. p. 129169. 3. Brusic V, Marina O, WU CJ, Reinherz EL. Proteome informatics for cancer research: From molecules to clinic. Proteomics 2007; 7:976-91. 4. Marina O, Brusic V, WU CJ. Target discovery using proteomic microarrays. BIOforum Europe 2007; 11: 20-2. 5. WU CJ. Allogeneic stem cell transplantation for the treatment of hemoglobinopathies. In: Soiffer, RJ, editor. Stem Cell Transplantation for Hematologic Malignancies. New York: Springer-Verlag, LLC; 2008. p. 201-21. 6. WU CJ, Ritz J. Revealing tumor-specific immunity following allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. Clin Can Res 2009; 15: 4515-7. 7. Marina O, Duke-Cohan JS, WU CJ. A co-precipitation-based validation methodology for interactions identified using protein microarrays. Methods in Mol Biol 2011; 723: 239-54. 8. Deluca DS, Marina O, Ray S, Zhang GL, WU CJ, Brusic V. Data processing and analysis for protein microarrays. Methods in Mol Biol, 2011; 723:337-47. 26 9. Hsieh MM, WU CJ, Tisdale JF. In mixed hematopoietic chimerism, the donor red cells win. Haematologica 2011; 96: 1-3. 10. Brusic A, WU CJ. Anti-cancer vaccines following hematopoietic stem cell transplantation to enhance graft-versus-leukemia responses. Front Biosci 2012; 17:635-55. 11. Chapman M, Warren EH 3rd, WU CJ. Applications of next-generation sequencing to blood and marrow transplantation. Biol Blood Marrow Transplant 2012 18: S151-60.\ 12. WU CJ. CLL clonal heterogeneity: an ecology of competing subpopulations. Blood 2012 Nov 15;120(20):4117-8. PMC Journal - In Process 13. Wan YZ, WU CJ. SF3B1 mutations in chronic lymphocytic leukemia. Blood. 2013 Apr 8. [Epub ahead of print] 14. Landau DA WU CJ. Chronic lymphocytic leukemia at the forefront of high throughput genomic investigation. Genome Med (in press) 15. Hacohen N, Fritsch EF, Carter TA, Lander ES, WU CJ. Getting personal with neoantigens-based therapeutic vaccines. Cancer Immunology Research (in press). • Books/Textbooks for the medical or scientific community 1. WU CJ, editor. Protein Microarrays for Disease Analysis. New York: Humana Press: 2011. Abstracts, Poster Presentations and Exhibits Presented at Professional Meetings 1. Hainz U, Pozdnyakova O, Aldridge J, Kim HS, Canning CM, Soiffer RJ, Ritz J, Alyea EP, WU CJ. Effective graft-versus-leukemia responses to donor lymphocyte infusion are associated with pre-existing CD8+ T cell marrow infiltrates. American Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation; 2010 Feb 24-28; Orlando FL. 2. Hainz U, Sievers QL, Stevenson KE, Goldstein NR, Dorfman DM, Brown JR, Freeman GJ, WU CJ. Marrow-infiltrating T cells in patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia display functional impairment and express PD-1. American Society of Hematology; 2010 Orlando FL. Narrative Report Overall summary Almost all of my major activities are devoted to basic science research; the rest to 27 teaching/mentoring and clinical duties. My research focuses on dissecting the underlying mechanisms of pathobiology of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) as a means to more rationally generate effective immune-based therapy for the treatment of this common adult leukemia. These studies have resulted in several pioneering publications and many ongoing projects. My teaching/mentoring includes: lectures on cancer vaccines, CLL genome analysis, and post-transplant immune reconstitution; and mentoring of 4 medical students and 9 postdoctoral fellows. Clinical responsibilities include: 1 month attending per year on the BWH blood/marrow transplantation service; and PI of a phase I/II study that I initiated of posttransplant whole tumor cell vaccination for CLL. Area of Excellence: Investigation (a) Understanding graft-versus-leukemia (GvL). I am investigating the basis for curative responses following allogeneic stem cell transplantation, identifying components required for effective anti-leukemia immunity in human CLL and chronic myeloid leukemia (CML). My published studies have demonstrated that long-lived GvL responses are associated with coordinated adaptive and innate polyclonal immune responses directed against antigens, such as CML66 and CML28, that are highly expressed in leukemia progenitor cells but low in normal tissue. We are now completing an analysis of the activation state of leukemia-infiltrating T cells before and after allotransplantation for CML and CLL, which appear to be predictive of clinical response. (b) Whole tumor vaccines to augment the GvL effect. I am leading a high-priority clinical trial at DFCI to examine the safety and immunologic effects of vaccination with whole tumor cells (using irradiated autologous leukemia cells) and the cytokine adjuvant GM-CSF in posttransplant patients. Vaccinated subjects have developed CD8+ T cell responses to CLL-specific antigens, independent of allo-immunity, implying that personalized whole tumor cell vaccination can enhance anti-tumor immunity with minimal toxicity. Our completed and ongoing studies of this vaccine are laying the groundwork for using the post-transplant setting as a platform for developing tumor vaccines. (c) Genome analysis of CLL. We integrated sequencing data of 91 CLL samples with clinical annotation, defining 9 key mutated genes and 6 pathways involved in CLL pathogenesis, and have discovered novel associations with prognostic factors. Our ongoing studies focus on: (1) systematic analyses to couple tumor genotype with phenotype; (2) understanding CLL tumor heterogeneity; (3) mechanistic studies of specific tumors drivers, such as SF3B1. (d) Discovery of personalized tumor neoantigens. A high priority in cancer immunotherapy is the identification of tumor-specific antigens that would allow effective tumor targeting without collateral toxicity. We are pioneering the use of exome and transcriptome sequencing technologies to identify unique mutated CLL antigens that arise from individual-specific genetic alterations within a tumor, thus paving the way for developing personalized tumor vaccines. Integration. As a physician-scientist, my goal is to move from bench to bedside and back to patients to understand CLL biology and tumor vaccines, and to develop new treatments. My studies have broad implications for understanding mechanisms of human tumor immunity and 28 biology, dissecting existing methods of immunotherapy and devising new approaches to tumor vaccines. Significant Supporting Activity: Clinical Expertise Given the close apposition of my laboratory research interests and its impact on clinical care, I attend on the inpatient transplant service at BWH one month a year, and evaluate and enroll patients for my clinical trials in the Hematologic Malignancies outpatient clinic, with a particular focus on patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia. 29