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Full-Text Articles in Medical Genetics

The Scaffolding Function Of Lsd1 Controls Dna Methylation In Mouse Escs, Sandhya Malla, Kanchan Kumari, Carlos A García-Prieto, Jonatan Caroli, Anna Nordin, Trinh T T Phan, Devi Prasad Bhattarai, Carlos Martinez-Gamero, Eshagh Dorafshan, Stephanie Stransky, Damiana Álvarez-Errico, Paulina Avovome Saiki, Weiyi Lai, Cong Lyu, Ludvig Lizana, Jonathan D Gilthorpe, Hailin Wang, Simone Sidoli, Andre Mateus, Dung-Fang Lee, Claudio Cantù, Manel Esteller, Andrea Mattevi, Angel-Carlos Roman, Francesca Aguilo Sep 2024

The Scaffolding Function Of Lsd1 Controls Dna Methylation In Mouse Escs, Sandhya Malla, Kanchan Kumari, Carlos A García-Prieto, Jonatan Caroli, Anna Nordin, Trinh T T Phan, Devi Prasad Bhattarai, Carlos Martinez-Gamero, Eshagh Dorafshan, Stephanie Stransky, Damiana Álvarez-Errico, Paulina Avovome Saiki, Weiyi Lai, Cong Lyu, Ludvig Lizana, Jonathan D Gilthorpe, Hailin Wang, Simone Sidoli, Andre Mateus, Dung-Fang Lee, Claudio Cantù, Manel Esteller, Andrea Mattevi, Angel-Carlos Roman, Francesca Aguilo

Student and Faculty Publications

Lysine-specific histone demethylase 1 (LSD1), which demethylates mono- or di- methylated histone H3 on lysine 4 (H3K4me1/2), is essential for early embryogenesis and development. Here we show that LSD1 is dispensable for mouse embryonic stem cell (ESC) self-renewal but is required for mouse ESC growth and differentiation. Reintroduction of a catalytically-impaired LSD1 (LSD1MUT) recovers the proliferation capability of mouse ESCs, yet the enzymatic activity of LSD1 is essential to ensure proper differentiation. Indeed, increased H3K4me1 in Lsd1 knockout (KO) mouse ESCs does not lead to major changes in global gene expression programs related to stemness. However, ablation of LSD1 but …


The Icf Syndrome Protein Cdca7 Harbors A Unique Dna Binding Domain That Recognizes A Cpg Dyad In The Context Of A Non-B Dna, Swanand Hardikar, Ren Ren, Zhengzhou Ying, Jujun Zhou, John R Horton, Matthew D Bramble, Bin Liu, Yue Lu, Bigang Liu, Luis Della Coletta, Jianjun Shen, Jiameng Dan, Xing Zhang, Xiaodong Cheng, Taiping Chen Aug 2024

The Icf Syndrome Protein Cdca7 Harbors A Unique Dna Binding Domain That Recognizes A Cpg Dyad In The Context Of A Non-B Dna, Swanand Hardikar, Ren Ren, Zhengzhou Ying, Jujun Zhou, John R Horton, Matthew D Bramble, Bin Liu, Yue Lu, Bigang Liu, Luis Della Coletta, Jianjun Shen, Jiameng Dan, Xing Zhang, Xiaodong Cheng, Taiping Chen

Student and Faculty Publications

CDCA7, encoding a protein with a carboxyl-terminal cysteine-rich domain (CRD), is mutated in immunodeficiency, centromeric instability, and facial anomalies (ICF) syndrome, a disease related to hypomethylation of juxtacentromeric satellite DNA. How CDCA7 directs DNA methylation to juxtacentromeric regions is unknown. Here, we show that the CDCA7 CRD adopts a unique zinc-binding structure that recognizes a CpG dyad in a non-B DNA formed by two sequence motifs. CDCA7, but not ICF mutants, preferentially binds the non-B DNA with strand-specific CpG hemi-methylation. The unmethylated sequence motif is highly enriched at centromeres of human chromosomes, whereas the methylated motif is distributed throughout …


3d Chromatin Architecture, Brd4, And Mediator Have Distinct Roles In Regulating Genome-Wide Transcriptional Bursting And Gene Network, Pawel Trzaskoma, Seolkyoung Jung, Aleksandra Pękowska, Christopher H Bohrer, Xiang Wang, Faiza Naz, Stefania Dell'orso, Wendy D Dubois, Ana Olivera, Supriya V Vartak, Yongbing Zhao, Subhashree Nayak, Andrew Overmiller, Maria I Morasso, Vittorio Sartorelli, Daniel R Larson, Carson C Chow, Rafael Casellas, John J O'Shea Aug 2024

3d Chromatin Architecture, Brd4, And Mediator Have Distinct Roles In Regulating Genome-Wide Transcriptional Bursting And Gene Network, Pawel Trzaskoma, Seolkyoung Jung, Aleksandra Pękowska, Christopher H Bohrer, Xiang Wang, Faiza Naz, Stefania Dell'orso, Wendy D Dubois, Ana Olivera, Supriya V Vartak, Yongbing Zhao, Subhashree Nayak, Andrew Overmiller, Maria I Morasso, Vittorio Sartorelli, Daniel R Larson, Carson C Chow, Rafael Casellas, John J O'Shea

Student and Faculty Publications

Discontinuous transcription is evolutionarily conserved and a fundamental feature of gene regulation; yet, the exact mechanisms underlying transcriptional bursting are unresolved. Analyses of bursting transcriptome-wide have focused on the role of cis-regulatory elements, but other factors that regulate this process remain elusive. We applied mathematical modeling to single-cell RNA sequencing data to infer bursting dynamics transcriptome-wide under multiple conditions to identify possible molecular mechanisms. We found that Mediator complex subunit 26 (MED26) primarily regulates frequency, MYC regulates burst size, while cohesin and Bromodomain-containing protein 4 (BRD4) can modulate both. Despite comparable effects on RNA levels among these perturbations, acute depletion …


Brain-Age Prediction: Systematic Evaluation Of Site Effects, And Sample Age Range And Size, Yuetong Yu, Hao-Qi Cui, Shalaila S Haas, Faye New, Nicole Sanford, Kevin Yu, Denghuang Zhan, Guoyuan Yang, Jia-Hong Gao, Dongtao Wei, Jiang Qiu, Nerisa Banaj, Dorret I Boomsma, Alan Breier, Henry Brodaty, Randy L Buckner, Jan K Buitelaar, Dara M Cannon, Xavier Caseras, Vincent P Clark, Patricia J Conrod, Fabrice Crivello, Eveline A Crone, Udo Dannlowski, Christopher G Davey, Lieuwe De Haan, Greig I De Zubicaray, Annabella Di Giorgio, Lukas Fisch, Simon E Fisher, Barbara Franke, David C Glahn, Dominik Grotegerd, Oliver Gruber, Raquel E Gur, Ruben C Gur, Tim Hahn, Ben J Harrison, Sean Hatton, Ian B Hickie, Hilleke E Hulshoff Pol, Alec J Jamieson, Terry L Jernigan, Jiyang Jiang, Andrew J Kalnin, Sim Kang, Nicole A Kochan, Anna Kraus, Jim Lagopoulos, Luisa Lazaro, Brenna C Mcdonald, Colm Mcdonald, Katie L Mcmahon, Benson Mwangi, Fabrizio Piras, Raul Rodriguez-Cruces, Jessica Royer, Perminder S Sachdev, Theodore D Satterthwaite, Andrew J Saykin, Gunter Schumann, Pierluigi Sevaggi, Jordan W Smoller, Jair C Soares, Gianfranco Spalletta, Christian K Tamnes, Julian N Trollor, Dennis Van't Ent, Daniela Vecchio, Henrik Walter, Yang Wang, Bernd Weber, Wei Wen, Lara M Wierenga, Steven C R Williams, Mon-Ju Wu, Giovana B Zunta-Soares, Boris Bernhardt, Paul Thompson, Sophia Frangou, Ruiyang Ge Jul 2024

Brain-Age Prediction: Systematic Evaluation Of Site Effects, And Sample Age Range And Size, Yuetong Yu, Hao-Qi Cui, Shalaila S Haas, Faye New, Nicole Sanford, Kevin Yu, Denghuang Zhan, Guoyuan Yang, Jia-Hong Gao, Dongtao Wei, Jiang Qiu, Nerisa Banaj, Dorret I Boomsma, Alan Breier, Henry Brodaty, Randy L Buckner, Jan K Buitelaar, Dara M Cannon, Xavier Caseras, Vincent P Clark, Patricia J Conrod, Fabrice Crivello, Eveline A Crone, Udo Dannlowski, Christopher G Davey, Lieuwe De Haan, Greig I De Zubicaray, Annabella Di Giorgio, Lukas Fisch, Simon E Fisher, Barbara Franke, David C Glahn, Dominik Grotegerd, Oliver Gruber, Raquel E Gur, Ruben C Gur, Tim Hahn, Ben J Harrison, Sean Hatton, Ian B Hickie, Hilleke E Hulshoff Pol, Alec J Jamieson, Terry L Jernigan, Jiyang Jiang, Andrew J Kalnin, Sim Kang, Nicole A Kochan, Anna Kraus, Jim Lagopoulos, Luisa Lazaro, Brenna C Mcdonald, Colm Mcdonald, Katie L Mcmahon, Benson Mwangi, Fabrizio Piras, Raul Rodriguez-Cruces, Jessica Royer, Perminder S Sachdev, Theodore D Satterthwaite, Andrew J Saykin, Gunter Schumann, Pierluigi Sevaggi, Jordan W Smoller, Jair C Soares, Gianfranco Spalletta, Christian K Tamnes, Julian N Trollor, Dennis Van't Ent, Daniela Vecchio, Henrik Walter, Yang Wang, Bernd Weber, Wei Wen, Lara M Wierenga, Steven C R Williams, Mon-Ju Wu, Giovana B Zunta-Soares, Boris Bernhardt, Paul Thompson, Sophia Frangou, Ruiyang Ge

Student and Faculty Publications

Structural neuroimaging data have been used to compute an estimate of the biological age of the brain (brain‐age) which has been associated with other biologically and behaviorally meaningful measures of brain development and aging. The ongoing research interest in brain‐age has highlighted the need for robust and publicly available brain‐age models pre‐trained on data from large samples of healthy individuals. To address this need we have previously released a developmental brain‐age model. Here we expand this work to develop, empirically validate, and disseminate a pre‐trained brain‐age model to cover most of the human lifespan. To achieve this, we selected the …


Hur Controls Glutaminase Rna Metabolism, Douglas Adamoski, Larissa M Dos Reis, Ana Carolina Paschoalini Mafra, Felipe Corrêa-Da-Silva, Pedro Manoel Mendes De Moraes-Vieira, Ioana Berindan-Neagoe, George A Calin, Sandra Martha Gomes Dias Jul 2024

Hur Controls Glutaminase Rna Metabolism, Douglas Adamoski, Larissa M Dos Reis, Ana Carolina Paschoalini Mafra, Felipe Corrêa-Da-Silva, Pedro Manoel Mendes De Moraes-Vieira, Ioana Berindan-Neagoe, George A Calin, Sandra Martha Gomes Dias

Student and Faculty Publications

Glutaminase (GLS) is directly related to cell growth and tumor progression, making it a target for cancer treatment. The RNA-binding protein HuR (encoded by the ELAVL1 gene) influences mRNA stability and alternative splicing. Overexpression of ELAVL1 is common in several cancers, including breast cancer. Here we show that HuR regulates GLS mRNA alternative splicing and isoform translation/stability in breast cancer. Elevated ELAVL1 expression correlates with high levels of the glutaminase isoforms C (GAC) and kidney-type (KGA), which are associated with poor patient prognosis. Knocking down ELAVL1 reduces KGA and increases GAC levels, enhances glutamine anaplerosis into the TCA cycle, and …


A Deep Catalogue Of Protein-Coding Variation In 983,578 Individuals, Kathie Y Sun, Xiaodong Bai, Siying Chen, Suying Bao, Chuanyi Zhang, Manav Kapoor, Joshua Backman, Tyler Joseph, Evan Maxwell, George Mitra, Alexander Gorovits, Adam Mansfield, Boris Boutkov, Sujit Gokhale, Lukas Habegger, Anthony Marcketta, Adam E Locke, Liron Ganel, Alicia Hawes, Michael D Kessler, Deepika Sharma, Jeffrey Staples, Jonas Bovijn, Sahar Gelfman, Alessandro Di Gioia, Veera M Rajagopal, Alexander Lopez, Jennifer Rico Varela, Jesús Alegre-Díaz, Jaime Berumen, Roberto Tapia-Conyer, Pablo Kuri-Morales, Jason Torres, Jonathan Emberson, Rory Collins, Regeneron Genetics Center, Rgc-Me Cohort Partners; Michael Cantor, Michael Cantor, Timothy Thornton, Hyun Min Kang, John D Overton, Alan R Shuldiner, M Laura Cremona, Mona Nafde, Aris Baras, Gonçalo Abecasis, Jonathan Marchini, Jeffrey G Reid, William Salerno, Suganthi Balasubramanian Jul 2024

A Deep Catalogue Of Protein-Coding Variation In 983,578 Individuals, Kathie Y Sun, Xiaodong Bai, Siying Chen, Suying Bao, Chuanyi Zhang, Manav Kapoor, Joshua Backman, Tyler Joseph, Evan Maxwell, George Mitra, Alexander Gorovits, Adam Mansfield, Boris Boutkov, Sujit Gokhale, Lukas Habegger, Anthony Marcketta, Adam E Locke, Liron Ganel, Alicia Hawes, Michael D Kessler, Deepika Sharma, Jeffrey Staples, Jonas Bovijn, Sahar Gelfman, Alessandro Di Gioia, Veera M Rajagopal, Alexander Lopez, Jennifer Rico Varela, Jesús Alegre-Díaz, Jaime Berumen, Roberto Tapia-Conyer, Pablo Kuri-Morales, Jason Torres, Jonathan Emberson, Rory Collins, Regeneron Genetics Center, Rgc-Me Cohort Partners; Michael Cantor, Michael Cantor, Timothy Thornton, Hyun Min Kang, John D Overton, Alan R Shuldiner, M Laura Cremona, Mona Nafde, Aris Baras, Gonçalo Abecasis, Jonathan Marchini, Jeffrey G Reid, William Salerno, Suganthi Balasubramanian

Student and Faculty Publications

Rare coding variants that substantially affect function provide insights into the biology of a gene1-3. However, ascertaining the frequency of such variants requires large sample sizes4-8. Here we present a catalogue of human protein-coding variation, derived from exome sequencing of 983,578 individuals across diverse populations. In total, 23% of the Regeneron Genetics Center Million Exome (RGC-ME) data come from individuals of African, East Asian, Indigenous American, Middle Eastern and South Asian ancestry. The catalogue includes more than 10.4 million missense and 1.1 million predicted loss-of-function (pLOF) variants. We identify individuals with rare biallelic pLOF variants in 4,848 genes, 1,751 of …


Genetic Analysis Of Seven Patients With Inherited Ichthyosis And Nagashima-Type Palmoplantar Keratoderma, Jing Zhang, Yue Yao, Ya Tan, Hua-Ying Hu, Lin-Xi Zeng, Guo-Qiang Zhang Jul 2024

Genetic Analysis Of Seven Patients With Inherited Ichthyosis And Nagashima-Type Palmoplantar Keratoderma, Jing Zhang, Yue Yao, Ya Tan, Hua-Ying Hu, Lin-Xi Zeng, Guo-Qiang Zhang

Student and Faculty Publications

Inherited ichthyosis comprises a series of heterogeneous dermal conditions; it mainly manifests as widespread hyperkeratosis, xerosis and scaling of the skin. At times, overlapping symptoms require differential diagnosis between ichthyosis and several other similar disorders. The present study reports seven patients with confirmed or suspected to be associated with ichthyosis by conducting a thorough clinical and genetic investigation. Genetic testing was conducted using whole-exome sequencing, with Sanger sequencing as the validation method. The MEGA7 program was used to analyze the conservation of amino acid residues affected by the detected missense variants. The enrolled patients exhibited ichthyosis-like but distinct clinical manifestations. …


Clinical And Genomic Profile Of Primary Cranial Neurolymphomatosis, Emily B Wolf, Robin Imperial, Liuyan Jiang, Amit K Agarwal, Han W Tun Jun 2024

Clinical And Genomic Profile Of Primary Cranial Neurolymphomatosis, Emily B Wolf, Robin Imperial, Liuyan Jiang, Amit K Agarwal, Han W Tun

Student and Faculty Publications

Primary cranial neurolymphomatosis (PCNL) is a rare subtype of primary CNS lymphoma (PCNSL) in which infiltrative lymphomatous involvement is confined to cranial nerves. Here, we report a case of PCNL with successful genomic profiling. A 57-year-old male had a lengthy prediagnostic phase spanning approximately 30 months, characterized by multiple episodes of cranial neuropathies managed by steroids. At the time of diagnosis, the patient had right-sided cranial neuropathies involving cranial nerves (CN) V, VI, and VII. Pathological findings of the right cavernous lesion biopsy were consistent with large B-cell lymphoma-infiltrating nerve fibers. The clinical course was aggressive and refractory, characterized by …


Multiple Omics Levels Of Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia, Aleksander Turk, Eva Čeh, George A Calin, Tanja Kunej Jun 2024

Multiple Omics Levels Of Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia, Aleksander Turk, Eva Čeh, George A Calin, Tanja Kunej

Student and Faculty Publications

Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) is a lymphoproliferative malignancy characterized by the proliferation of functionally mature but incompetent B cells. It is the most prevalent type of leukemia in Western populations, accounting for approximately 25% of new leukemia cases. While recent advances, such as ibrutinib and venetoclax treatment have improved patient outlook, aggressive forms of CLL such as Richter transformation still pose a significant challenge. This discrepancy may be due to the heterogeneity of factors contributing to CLL development at multiple -omics levels. However, information on the omics of CLL is fragmented, hindering multi-omics-based research into potential treatment options. To address …


Discovery Of Runs-Of-Homozygosity Diplotype Clusters And Their Associations With Diseases In Uk Biobank, Ardalan Naseri, Degui Zhi, Shaojie Zhang Jun 2024

Discovery Of Runs-Of-Homozygosity Diplotype Clusters And Their Associations With Diseases In Uk Biobank, Ardalan Naseri, Degui Zhi, Shaojie Zhang

Student and Faculty Publications

Runs-of-homozygosity (ROH) segments, contiguous homozygous regions in a genome were traditionally linked to families and inbred populations. However, a growing literature suggests that ROHs are ubiquitous in outbred populations. Still, most existing genetic studies of ROH in populations are limited to aggregated ROH content across the genome, which does not offer the resolution for mapping causal loci. This limitation is mainly due to a lack of methods for the efficient identification of shared ROH diplotypes. Here, we present a new method, ROH-DICE (runs-of-homozygous diplotype cluster enumerator), to find large ROH diplotype clusters, sufficiently long ROHs shared by a sufficient number …


Perspective: The Evolution Of Hormones And Person Perception-A Quantitative Genetic Framework, Christopher I Gurguis, Tyler S Kimm, Teresa A Pigott Jun 2024

Perspective: The Evolution Of Hormones And Person Perception-A Quantitative Genetic Framework, Christopher I Gurguis, Tyler S Kimm, Teresa A Pigott

Student and Faculty Publications

Evolutionary biology provides a unifying theory for testing hypotheses about the relationship between hormones and person perception. Person perception usually receives attention from the perspective of sexual selection. However, because person perception is one trait in a suite regulated by hormones, univariate approaches are insufficient. In this Perspectives article, quantitative genetics is presented as an important but underutilized framework for testing evolutionary hypotheses within this literature. We note tacit assumptions within the current literature on psychiatric genetics, which imperil the interpretation of findings thus far. As regulators of a diverse manifold of traits, hormones mediate tradeoffs among an array of …


Ikzf1 And Ubr4 Gene Variants Drive Autoimmunity And Th2 Polarization In Igg4-Related Disease, Qingxiang Liu, Yanyan Zheng, Ines Sturmlechner, Abhinav Jain, Maryam Own, Qiankun Yang, Huimin Zhang, Filippo Pinto E Vairo, Karen Cerosaletti, Jane H Buckner, Kenneth J Warrington, Matthew J Koster, Cornelia M Weyand, Jörg J Goronzy Jun 2024

Ikzf1 And Ubr4 Gene Variants Drive Autoimmunity And Th2 Polarization In Igg4-Related Disease, Qingxiang Liu, Yanyan Zheng, Ines Sturmlechner, Abhinav Jain, Maryam Own, Qiankun Yang, Huimin Zhang, Filippo Pinto E Vairo, Karen Cerosaletti, Jane H Buckner, Kenneth J Warrington, Matthew J Koster, Cornelia M Weyand, Jörg J Goronzy

Student and Faculty Publications

IgG4-related disease (IgG4-RD) is a systemic immune-mediated fibroinflammatory disease whose pathomechanisms remain poorly understood. Here, we identified gene variants in familial IgG4-RD and determined their functional consequences. All 3 affected members of the family shared variants of the transcription factor IKAROS, encoded by IKZF1, and the E3 ubiquitin ligase UBR4. The IKAROS variant increased binding to the FYN promoter, resulting in higher transcription of FYN in T cells. The UBR4 variant prevented the lysosomal degradation of the phosphatase CD45. In the presence of elevated FYN, CD45 functioned as a positive regulatory loop, lowering the threshold for T cell activation. Consequently, …


Rest-Dependent Downregulation Of Von Hippel-Lindau Tumor Suppressor Promotes Autophagy In Shh-Medulloblastoma, Ashutosh Singh, Donghang Cheng, Jyothishmathi Swaminathan, Yanwen Yang, Yan Zheng, Nancy Gordon, Vidya Gopalakrishnan Jun 2024

Rest-Dependent Downregulation Of Von Hippel-Lindau Tumor Suppressor Promotes Autophagy In Shh-Medulloblastoma, Ashutosh Singh, Donghang Cheng, Jyothishmathi Swaminathan, Yanwen Yang, Yan Zheng, Nancy Gordon, Vidya Gopalakrishnan

Student and Faculty Publications

The RE1 silencing transcription factor (REST) is a driver of sonic hedgehog (SHH) medulloblastoma genesis. Our previous studies showed that REST enhances cell proliferation, metastasis and vascular growth and blocks neuronal differentiation to drive progression of SHH medulloblastoma tumors. Here, we demonstrate that REST promotes autophagy, a pathway that is found to be significantly enriched in human medulloblastoma tumors relative to normal cerebella. In SHH medulloblastoma tumor xenografts, REST elevation is strongly correlated with increased expression of the hypoxia-inducible factor 1-alpha (HIF1α)-a positive regulator of autophagy, and with reduced expression of the von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) tumor suppressor protein - a …


Effects Of Protein-Enriched Nutritional Support On Skeletal Muscle Mass And Rehabilitative Outcomes In Brain Tumor Patients: A Randomized Controlled Trial, Kye Hee Cho, Eun Young Han, Min Kyu Jung, Chang Moo Kang, Ji Cheol Shin, Sang Hee Im Jun 2024

Effects Of Protein-Enriched Nutritional Support On Skeletal Muscle Mass And Rehabilitative Outcomes In Brain Tumor Patients: A Randomized Controlled Trial, Kye Hee Cho, Eun Young Han, Min Kyu Jung, Chang Moo Kang, Ji Cheol Shin, Sang Hee Im

Student and Faculty Publications

Patients with brain tumors require extensive and prolonged rehabilitation efforts as they suffer from lesion-induced motor weakness as well as treatment-related side effects, often leading to a significant decline in function. Protein supplements have shown positive effects on promoting muscle strength and physical performance in various tumor etiologies. However, reports on their effects specifically in brain tumor patients remain scarce. This study aims to investigate the feasibility and efficacy of protein supplements in enhancing rehabilitative outcomes via muscle strengthening and functional gain in brain tumor patients with neurological demise. Sixty brain tumor patients were randomly assigned to either a protein …


A Process To Reanalyze Clinical Dna Sequencing Data For Biomarker Matching In The Lung-Map Master Protocol., Joel W Neal, Katherine Minichiello, Ryan Brennick, Richard S P Huang, Matthew C Hiemenz, Cornel Amler, Jyoti Patel, Roy Herbst, Karen L Reckamp, Hossein Borghaei, Louise Highleyman, Mary W Redman, Lincoln W Pasquina, David E Kozono Jun 2024

A Process To Reanalyze Clinical Dna Sequencing Data For Biomarker Matching In The Lung-Map Master Protocol., Joel W Neal, Katherine Minichiello, Ryan Brennick, Richard S P Huang, Matthew C Hiemenz, Cornel Amler, Jyoti Patel, Roy Herbst, Karen L Reckamp, Hossein Borghaei, Louise Highleyman, Mary W Redman, Lincoln W Pasquina, David E Kozono

Student and Faculty Publications

For cancer clinical trials that require central confirmation of tumor genomic profiling, exhaustion of tissue from standard-of-care testing may prevent enrollment. For Lung-MAP, a master protocol that requires results from a defined centralized clinical trial assay to assign patients to a therapeutic substudy, we developed a process to repurpose existing commercial vendor raw genomic data for eligibility: genomic data reanalysis (GDR). Molecular results for substudy assignment were successfully generated for 369 of the first 374 patients (98.7%) using GDR for Lung-MAP, with a median time from request to result of 9 days. During the same period, 691 of 791 (87.4%) …


Clinical Features And Genomic Epidemiology Of Bloodstream Infections Due To Enterococcal Species Other Than Enterococcus Faecalis Or E Faecium In Patients With Cancer, Dierdre B Axell-House, Patrycja A Ashley, Stephanie L Egge, Truc T Tran, Claudia Pedroza, Meng Zhang, An Q Dinh, Shelby R Simar, Pranoti V Sahasrabhojane, William R Miller, Samuel A Shelburne, Blake M Hanson, Cesar A Arias Jun 2024

Clinical Features And Genomic Epidemiology Of Bloodstream Infections Due To Enterococcal Species Other Than Enterococcus Faecalis Or E Faecium In Patients With Cancer, Dierdre B Axell-House, Patrycja A Ashley, Stephanie L Egge, Truc T Tran, Claudia Pedroza, Meng Zhang, An Q Dinh, Shelby R Simar, Pranoti V Sahasrabhojane, William R Miller, Samuel A Shelburne, Blake M Hanson, Cesar A Arias

Student and Faculty Publications

BACKGROUND: Non–Enterococcus faecium, non–E. faecalis (NFF) enterococci are a heterogeneous group of clinically pathogenic enterococci that include species with intrinsic low-level vancomycin resistance. Patients with cancer are at increased risk for bacteremia with NFF enterococci, but their clinical and molecular epidemiology have not been extensively described.

METHODS: We conducted a retrospective review of all patients (n = 70) with NFF bacteremia from 2016 to 2022 at a major cancer center. The main outcomes assessed were 30-day mortality, microbiological failure (positive blood cultures for ≥4 days), and recurrence of bacteremia (positive blood cultureclearance). Whole-genome sequencing was performed on all …


Genetic Evidence For Functional Diversification Of Gram-Negative Intermembrane Phospholipid Transporters, Ashutosh K Rai, Katsuhiro Sawasato, Haley C Bennett, Anastasiia Kozlova, Genevieve C Sparagna, Mikhail Bogdanov, Angela M Mitchell Jun 2024

Genetic Evidence For Functional Diversification Of Gram-Negative Intermembrane Phospholipid Transporters, Ashutosh K Rai, Katsuhiro Sawasato, Haley C Bennett, Anastasiia Kozlova, Genevieve C Sparagna, Mikhail Bogdanov, Angela M Mitchell

Student and Faculty Publications

The outer membrane of gram-negative bacteria is a barrier to chemical and physical stress. Phospholipid transport between the inner and outer membranes has been an area of intense investigation and, in E. coli K-12, it has recently been shown to be mediated by YhdP, TamB, and YdbH, which are suggested to provide hydrophobic channels for phospholipid diffusion, with YhdP and TamB playing the major roles. However, YhdP and TamB have different phenotypes suggesting distinct functions. It remains unclear whether these functions are related to phospholipid metabolism. We investigated a synthetic cold sensitivity caused by deletion of fadR, a transcriptional regulator …


Validation Of Human Telomere Length Multi-Ancestry Meta-Analysis Association Signals Identifies Pop5 And Kbtbd6 As Human Telomere Length Regulation Genes, Rebecca Keener, Surya B Chhetri, Carla J Connelly, Margaret A Taub, Matthew P Conomos, Joshua Weinstock, Bohan Ni, Benjamin Strober, Stella Aslibekyan, Paul L Auer, Lucas Barwick, Lewis C Becker, John Blangero, Eugene R Bleecker, Jennifer A Brody, Brian E Cade, Juan C Celedon, Yi-Cheng Chang, L Adrienne Cupples, Brian Custer, Barry I Freedman, Mark T Gladwin, Susan R Heckbert, Lifang Hou, Marguerite R Irvin, Carmen R Isasi, Jill M Johnsen, Eimear E Kenny, Charles Kooperberg, Ryan L Minster, Take Naseri, Satupa'itea Viali, Sergei Nekhai, Nathan Pankratz, Patricia A Peyser, Kent D Taylor, Marilyn J Telen, Baojun Wu, Lisa R Yanek, Ivana V Yang, Christine Albert, Donna K Arnett, Allison E Ashley-Koch, Kathleen C Barnes, Joshua C Bis, Thomas W Blackwell, Eric Boerwinkle, Esteban G Burchard, April P Carson, Zhanghua Chen, Yii-Der Ida Chen, Dawood Darbar, Mariza De Andrade, Patrick T Ellinor, Myriam Fornage, Bruce D Gelb, Frank D Gilliland, Jiang He, Talat Islam, Stefan Kaab, Sharon L R Kardia, Shannon Kelly, Barbara A Konkle, Rajesh Kumar, Ruth J F Loos, Fernando D Martinez, Stephen T Mcgarvey, Deborah A Meyers, Braxton D Mitchell, Courtney G Montgomery, Kari E North, Nicholette D Palmer, Juan M Peralta, Benjamin A Raby, Susan Redline, Stephen S Rich, Dan Roden, Jerome I Rotter, Ingo Ruczinski, David Schwartz, Frank Sciurba, M Benjamin Shoemaker, Edwin K Silverman, Moritz F Sinner, Nicholas L Smith, Albert V Smith, Hemant K Tiwari, Ramachandran S Vasan, Scott T Weiss, L Keoki Williams, Yingze Zhang, Elad Ziv, Laura M Raffield, Alexander P Reiner, Nhlbi Trans-Omics For Precision Medicine (Topmed) Consortium, Topmed Hematology And Hemostasis Working Group, Topmed Structural Variation Working Group, Marios Arvanitis, Carol W Greider, Rasika A Mathias, Alexis Battle May 2024

Validation Of Human Telomere Length Multi-Ancestry Meta-Analysis Association Signals Identifies Pop5 And Kbtbd6 As Human Telomere Length Regulation Genes, Rebecca Keener, Surya B Chhetri, Carla J Connelly, Margaret A Taub, Matthew P Conomos, Joshua Weinstock, Bohan Ni, Benjamin Strober, Stella Aslibekyan, Paul L Auer, Lucas Barwick, Lewis C Becker, John Blangero, Eugene R Bleecker, Jennifer A Brody, Brian E Cade, Juan C Celedon, Yi-Cheng Chang, L Adrienne Cupples, Brian Custer, Barry I Freedman, Mark T Gladwin, Susan R Heckbert, Lifang Hou, Marguerite R Irvin, Carmen R Isasi, Jill M Johnsen, Eimear E Kenny, Charles Kooperberg, Ryan L Minster, Take Naseri, Satupa'itea Viali, Sergei Nekhai, Nathan Pankratz, Patricia A Peyser, Kent D Taylor, Marilyn J Telen, Baojun Wu, Lisa R Yanek, Ivana V Yang, Christine Albert, Donna K Arnett, Allison E Ashley-Koch, Kathleen C Barnes, Joshua C Bis, Thomas W Blackwell, Eric Boerwinkle, Esteban G Burchard, April P Carson, Zhanghua Chen, Yii-Der Ida Chen, Dawood Darbar, Mariza De Andrade, Patrick T Ellinor, Myriam Fornage, Bruce D Gelb, Frank D Gilliland, Jiang He, Talat Islam, Stefan Kaab, Sharon L R Kardia, Shannon Kelly, Barbara A Konkle, Rajesh Kumar, Ruth J F Loos, Fernando D Martinez, Stephen T Mcgarvey, Deborah A Meyers, Braxton D Mitchell, Courtney G Montgomery, Kari E North, Nicholette D Palmer, Juan M Peralta, Benjamin A Raby, Susan Redline, Stephen S Rich, Dan Roden, Jerome I Rotter, Ingo Ruczinski, David Schwartz, Frank Sciurba, M Benjamin Shoemaker, Edwin K Silverman, Moritz F Sinner, Nicholas L Smith, Albert V Smith, Hemant K Tiwari, Ramachandran S Vasan, Scott T Weiss, L Keoki Williams, Yingze Zhang, Elad Ziv, Laura M Raffield, Alexander P Reiner, Nhlbi Trans-Omics For Precision Medicine (Topmed) Consortium, Topmed Hematology And Hemostasis Working Group, Topmed Structural Variation Working Group, Marios Arvanitis, Carol W Greider, Rasika A Mathias, Alexis Battle

Student and Faculty Publications

Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have become well-powered to detect loci associated with telomere length. However, no prior work has validated genes nominated by GWAS to examine their role in telomere length regulation. We conducted a multi-ancestry meta-analysis of 211,369 individuals and identified five novel association signals. Enrichment analyses of chromatin state and cell-type heritability suggested that blood/immune cells are the most relevant cell type to examine telomere length association signals. We validated specific GWAS associations by overexpressing KBTBD6 or POP5 and demonstrated that both lengthened telomeres. CRISPR/Cas9 deletion of the predicted causal regions in K562 blood cells reduced expression of …


Exome Sequencing Implicates Ancestry-Related Mendelian Variation At Syne1 In Childhood-Onset Essential Hypertension, Ian Copeland, Edmond Wonkam-Tingang, Monesha Gupta-Malhotra, S Shahrukh Hashmi, Yixing Han, Aarti Jajoo, Nancy J Hall, Paula P Hernandez, Natasha Lie, Dan Liu, Jun Xu, Jill Rosenfeld, Aparna Haldipur, Zelene Desire, Zeynep H Coban-Akdemir, Daryl A Scott, Qing Li, Hsiao-Tuan Chao, Ana M Zaske, James R Lupski, Dianna M Milewicz, Sanjay Shete, Jennifer E Posey, Neil A Hanchard May 2024

Exome Sequencing Implicates Ancestry-Related Mendelian Variation At Syne1 In Childhood-Onset Essential Hypertension, Ian Copeland, Edmond Wonkam-Tingang, Monesha Gupta-Malhotra, S Shahrukh Hashmi, Yixing Han, Aarti Jajoo, Nancy J Hall, Paula P Hernandez, Natasha Lie, Dan Liu, Jun Xu, Jill Rosenfeld, Aparna Haldipur, Zelene Desire, Zeynep H Coban-Akdemir, Daryl A Scott, Qing Li, Hsiao-Tuan Chao, Ana M Zaske, James R Lupski, Dianna M Milewicz, Sanjay Shete, Jennifer E Posey, Neil A Hanchard

Student and Faculty Publications

Childhood-onset essential hypertension (COEH) is an uncommon form of hypertension that manifests in childhood or adolescence and, in the United States, disproportionately affects children of African ancestry. The etiology of COEH is unknown, but its childhood onset, low prevalence, high heritability, and skewed ancestral demography suggest the potential to identify rare genetic variation segregating in a Mendelian manner among affected individuals and thereby implicate genes important to disease pathogenesis. However, no COEH genes have been reported to date. Here, we identify recessive segregation of rare and putatively damaging missense variation in the spectrin domain of spectrin repeat containing nuclear envelope …


Using Genome And Transcriptome Data From African-Ancestry Female Participants To Identify Putative Breast Cancer Susceptibility Genes, Jie Ping, Guochong Jia, Qiuyin Cai, Xingyi Guo, Ran Tao, Christine Ambrosone, Dezheng Huo, Stefan Ambs, Mollie E Barnard, Yu Chen, Montserrat Garcia-Closas, Jian Gu, Jennifer J Hu, Esther M John, Christopher I Li, Katherine Nathanson, Barbara Nemesure, Olufunmilayo I Olopade, Tuya Pal, Michael F Press, Maureen Sanderson, Dale P Sandler, Toshio Yoshimatsu, Prisca O Adejumo, Thomas Ahearn, Abenaa M Brewster, Anselm J M Hennis, Timothy Makumbi, Paul Ndom, Katie M O'Brien, Andrew F Olshan, Mojisola M Oluwasanu, Sonya Reid, Song Yao, Ebonee N Butler, Maosheng Huang, Atara Ntekim, Bingshan Li, Melissa A Troester, Julie R Palmer, Christopher A Haiman, Jirong Long, Wei Zheng May 2024

Using Genome And Transcriptome Data From African-Ancestry Female Participants To Identify Putative Breast Cancer Susceptibility Genes, Jie Ping, Guochong Jia, Qiuyin Cai, Xingyi Guo, Ran Tao, Christine Ambrosone, Dezheng Huo, Stefan Ambs, Mollie E Barnard, Yu Chen, Montserrat Garcia-Closas, Jian Gu, Jennifer J Hu, Esther M John, Christopher I Li, Katherine Nathanson, Barbara Nemesure, Olufunmilayo I Olopade, Tuya Pal, Michael F Press, Maureen Sanderson, Dale P Sandler, Toshio Yoshimatsu, Prisca O Adejumo, Thomas Ahearn, Abenaa M Brewster, Anselm J M Hennis, Timothy Makumbi, Paul Ndom, Katie M O'Brien, Andrew F Olshan, Mojisola M Oluwasanu, Sonya Reid, Song Yao, Ebonee N Butler, Maosheng Huang, Atara Ntekim, Bingshan Li, Melissa A Troester, Julie R Palmer, Christopher A Haiman, Jirong Long, Wei Zheng

Student and Faculty Publications

African-ancestry (AA) participants are underrepresented in genetics research. Here, we conducted a transcriptome-wide association study (TWAS) in AA female participants to identify putative breast cancer susceptibility genes. We built genetic models to predict levels of gene expression, exon junction, and 3' UTR alternative polyadenylation using genomic and transcriptomic data generated in normal breast tissues from 150 AA participants and then used these models to perform association analyses using genomic data from 18,034 cases and 22,104 controls. At Bonferroni-corrected P < 0.05, we identified six genes associated with breast cancer risk, including four genes not previously reported (CTD-3080P12.3, EN1, LINC01956 and NUP210L). Most of these genes showed a stronger association with risk of estrogen-receptor (ER) negative or triple-negative than ER-positive breast cancer. We also replicated the associations with 29 genes reported in previous TWAS at P < 0.05 (one-sided), providing further support for an association of these genes with breast cancer risk. Our study sheds new light on the genetic basis of breast cancer and highlights the value of conducting research in AA populations.


Genomic Signatures Of Strawberry Domestication And Diversification, Zhen Fan, Vance M Whitaker May 2024

Genomic Signatures Of Strawberry Domestication And Diversification, Zhen Fan, Vance M Whitaker

Student and Faculty Publications

Cultivated strawberry (Fragaria × ananassa) has a brief history of less than 300 yr, beginning with the hybridization of octoploids Fragaria chiloensis and Fragaria virginiana. Here we explored the genomic signatures of early domestication and subsequent diversification for different climates using whole-genome sequences of 289 wild, heirloom, and modern varieties from two major breeding programs in the United States. Four nonadmixed wild octoploid populations were identified, with recurrent introgression among the sympatric populations. The proportion of F. virginiana ancestry increased by 20% in modern varieties over initial hybrids, and the proportion of F. chiloensis subsp. pacifica rose from 0% to …


Chromosomal 3q Amplicon Encodes Essential Regulators Of Secretory Vesicles That Drive Secretory Addiction In Cancer, Xiaochao Tan, Shike Wang, Guan-Yu Xiao, Chao Wu, Xin Liu, Biyao Zhou, Jiang Yu, Dzifa Yawa Duose, Yuanxin Xi, Jing Wang, Kunika Gupta, Apar Pataer, Jack A Roth, Michael P Kim, Fengju Chen, Chad J Creighton, William K Russell, Jonathan M Kurie Apr 2024

Chromosomal 3q Amplicon Encodes Essential Regulators Of Secretory Vesicles That Drive Secretory Addiction In Cancer, Xiaochao Tan, Shike Wang, Guan-Yu Xiao, Chao Wu, Xin Liu, Biyao Zhou, Jiang Yu, Dzifa Yawa Duose, Yuanxin Xi, Jing Wang, Kunika Gupta, Apar Pataer, Jack A Roth, Michael P Kim, Fengju Chen, Chad J Creighton, William K Russell, Jonathan M Kurie

Student and Faculty Publications

Cancer cells exhibit heightened secretory states that drive tumor progression. Here, we identify a chromosome 3q amplicon that serves as a platform for secretory regulation in cancer. The 3q amplicon encodes multiple Golgi-resident proteins, including the scaffold Golgi integral membrane protein 4 (GOLIM4) and the ion channel ATPase Secretory Pathway Ca2+ Transporting 1 (ATP2C1). We show that GOLIM4 recruits ATP2C1 and Golgi phosphoprotein 3 (GOLPH3) to coordinate calcium-dependent cargo loading and Golgi membrane bending and vesicle scission. GOLIM4 depletion disrupts the protein complex, resulting in a secretory blockade that inhibits the progression of 3q-amplified malignancies. In addition to its role …


Genome-Wide Screening Identifies Trim33 As An Essential Regulator Of Dendritic Cell Differentiation, Ioanna Tiniakou, Pei-Feng Hsu, Lorena S Lopez-Zepeda, Görkem Garipler, Eduardo Esteva, Nicholas M Adams, Geunhyo Jang, Chetna Soni, Colleen M Lau, Fan Liu, Alireza Khodadadi-Jamayran, Tori C Rodrick, Drew Jones, Aristotelis Tsirigos, Uwe Ohler, Mark T Bedford, Stephen D Nimer, Vesa Kaartinen, Esteban O Mazzoni, Boris Reizis Apr 2024

Genome-Wide Screening Identifies Trim33 As An Essential Regulator Of Dendritic Cell Differentiation, Ioanna Tiniakou, Pei-Feng Hsu, Lorena S Lopez-Zepeda, Görkem Garipler, Eduardo Esteva, Nicholas M Adams, Geunhyo Jang, Chetna Soni, Colleen M Lau, Fan Liu, Alireza Khodadadi-Jamayran, Tori C Rodrick, Drew Jones, Aristotelis Tsirigos, Uwe Ohler, Mark T Bedford, Stephen D Nimer, Vesa Kaartinen, Esteban O Mazzoni, Boris Reizis

Student and Faculty Publications

The development of dendritic cells (DCs), including antigen-presenting conventional DCs (cDCs) and cytokine-producing plasmacytoid DCs (pDCs), is controlled by the growth factor Flt3 ligand (Flt3L) and its receptor Flt3. We genetically dissected Flt3L-driven DC differentiation using CRISPR-Cas9-based screening. Genome-wide screening identified multiple regulators of DC differentiation including subunits of TSC and GATOR1 complexes, which restricted progenitor growth but enabled DC differentiation by inhibiting mTOR signaling. An orthogonal screen identified the transcriptional repressor Trim33 (TIF-1γ) as a regulator of DC differentiation. Conditional targeting in vivo revealed an essential role of Trim33 in the development of all DCs, but not of monocytes …


Nardilysin-Regulated Scission Mechanism Activates Polo-Like Kinase 3 To Suppress The Development Of Pancreatic Cancer, Jie Fu, Jianhua Ling, Ching-Fei Li, Chi-Lin Tsai, Wenjuan Yin, Junwei Hou, Ping Chen, Yu Cao, Ya'an Kang, Yichen Sun, Xianghou Xia, Zhou Jiang, Kenei Furukawa, Yu Lu, Min Wu, Qian Huang, Jun Yao, David H Hawke, Bih-Fang Pan, Jun Zhao, Jiaxing Huang, Huamin Wang, E I Mustapha Bahassi, Peter J Stambrook, Peng Huang, Jason B Fleming, Anirban Maitra, John A Tainer, Mien-Chie Hung, Chunru Lin, Paul J Chiao Apr 2024

Nardilysin-Regulated Scission Mechanism Activates Polo-Like Kinase 3 To Suppress The Development Of Pancreatic Cancer, Jie Fu, Jianhua Ling, Ching-Fei Li, Chi-Lin Tsai, Wenjuan Yin, Junwei Hou, Ping Chen, Yu Cao, Ya'an Kang, Yichen Sun, Xianghou Xia, Zhou Jiang, Kenei Furukawa, Yu Lu, Min Wu, Qian Huang, Jun Yao, David H Hawke, Bih-Fang Pan, Jun Zhao, Jiaxing Huang, Huamin Wang, E I Mustapha Bahassi, Peter J Stambrook, Peng Huang, Jason B Fleming, Anirban Maitra, John A Tainer, Mien-Chie Hung, Chunru Lin, Paul J Chiao

Student and Faculty Publications

Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) develops through step-wise genetic and molecular alterations including Kras mutation and inactivation of various apoptotic pathways. Here, we find that development of apoptotic resistance and metastasis of KrasG12D-driven PDAC in mice is accelerated by deleting Plk3, explaining the often-reduced Plk3 expression in human PDAC. Importantly, a 41-kDa Plk3 (p41Plk3) that contains the entire kinase domain at the N-terminus (1-353 aa) is activated by scission of the precursor p72Plk3 at Arg354 by metalloendopeptidase nardilysin (NRDC), and the resulting p32Plk3 C-terminal Polo-box domain (PBD) is removed by proteasome degradation, preventing the inhibition of p41Plk3 by PBD. We find …


The Saga Of E. Faecium, Rishika Prasad, Robert R Jenq Apr 2024

The Saga Of E. Faecium, Rishika Prasad, Robert R Jenq

Student and Faculty Publications

An enzyme that remodels the cell wall of Enterococcus faecium helps these gut bacteria to divide and generate peptide fragments that enhance the immune response against cancer.


Genome-Wide Crispr Screen Reveals The Synthetic Lethality Between Bcl2l1 Inhibition And Radiotherapy, Ling Yin, Xiaoding Hu, Guangsheng Pei, Mengfan Tang, You Zhou, Huimin Zhang, Min Huang, Siting Li, Jie Zhang, Citu Citu, Zhongming Zhao, Bisrat G Debeb, Xu Feng, Junjie Chen Apr 2024

Genome-Wide Crispr Screen Reveals The Synthetic Lethality Between Bcl2l1 Inhibition And Radiotherapy, Ling Yin, Xiaoding Hu, Guangsheng Pei, Mengfan Tang, You Zhou, Huimin Zhang, Min Huang, Siting Li, Jie Zhang, Citu Citu, Zhongming Zhao, Bisrat G Debeb, Xu Feng, Junjie Chen

Student and Faculty Publications

Radiation therapy (RT) is one of the most commonly used anticancer therapies. However, the landscape of cellular response to irradiation, especially to a single high-dose irradiation, remains largely unknown. In this study, we performed a whole-genome CRISPR loss-of-function screen and revealed temporal inherent and acquired responses to RT. Specifically, we found that loss of the IL1R1 pathway led to cellular resistance to RT. This is in part because of the involvement of radiation-induced IL1R1-dependent transcriptional regulation, which relies on the NF-κB pathway. Moreover, the mitochondrial anti-apoptotic pathway, particularly the BCL2L1 gene, is crucially important for cell survival after radiation. BCL2L1 …


Case Of Human Orthohantavirus Infection, Michigan, Usa, 2021, Samuel M Goodfellow, Robert A Nofchissey, Dustin Arsnoe, Chunyan Ye, Seonghyeon Lee, Jieun Park, Won-Keun Kim, Kartik Chandran, Shannon L M Whitmer, John D Klena, Jonathan W Dyal, Trevor Shoemaker, Diana Riner, Mary Grace Stobierski, Kimberly Signs, Steven B Bradfute Apr 2024

Case Of Human Orthohantavirus Infection, Michigan, Usa, 2021, Samuel M Goodfellow, Robert A Nofchissey, Dustin Arsnoe, Chunyan Ye, Seonghyeon Lee, Jieun Park, Won-Keun Kim, Kartik Chandran, Shannon L M Whitmer, John D Klena, Jonathan W Dyal, Trevor Shoemaker, Diana Riner, Mary Grace Stobierski, Kimberly Signs, Steven B Bradfute

Student and Faculty Publications

Orthohantaviruses cause hantavirus cardiopulmonary syndrome; most cases occur in the southwest region of the United States. We discuss a clinical case of orthohantavirus infection in a 65-year-old woman in Michigan and the phylogeographic link of partial viral fragments from the patient and rodents captured near the presumed site of infection.


Deep Sequencing Of Candidate Genes Identified 14 Variants Associated With Smoking Abstinence In An Ethnically Diverse Sample, Paul M Cinciripini, David W Wetter, Jian Wang, Robert Yu, George Kypriotakis, Tapsi Kumar, Jason D Robinson, Yong Cui, Charles E Green, Andrew W Bergen, Thomas R Kosten, Steven E Scherer, Sanjay Shete Mar 2024

Deep Sequencing Of Candidate Genes Identified 14 Variants Associated With Smoking Abstinence In An Ethnically Diverse Sample, Paul M Cinciripini, David W Wetter, Jian Wang, Robert Yu, George Kypriotakis, Tapsi Kumar, Jason D Robinson, Yong Cui, Charles E Green, Andrew W Bergen, Thomas R Kosten, Steven E Scherer, Sanjay Shete

Student and Faculty Publications

Despite the large public health toll of smoking, genetic studies of smoking cessation have been limited with few discoveries of risk or protective loci. We investigated common and rare variant associations with success in quitting smoking using a cohort from 8 randomized controlled trials involving 2231 participants and a total of 10,020 common and 24,147 rare variants. We identified 14 novel markers including 6 mapping to genes previously related to psychiatric and substance use disorders, 4 of which were protective (CYP2B6 (rs1175607105), HTR3B (rs1413172952; rs1204720503), rs80210037 on chr15), and 2 of which were associated with reduced cessation (PARP15 (rs2173763), SCL18A2 …


Transcriptomic, Proteomic, And Genomic Mutational Fraction Differences Based On Hpv Status Observed In Patient-Derived Xenograft Models Of Penile Squamous Cell Carcinoma, Niki M Zacharias, Luis Segarra, Keiko Akagi, Natalie Wall Fowlkes, Huiqin Chen, Angelita Alaniz, Carolyn De La Cerda, Pedro Pesquera, Yuanxin Xi, Jing Wang, Jad Chahoud, Xin Lu, Priya Rao, Magaly Martinez-Ferrer, Curtis A Pettaway Mar 2024

Transcriptomic, Proteomic, And Genomic Mutational Fraction Differences Based On Hpv Status Observed In Patient-Derived Xenograft Models Of Penile Squamous Cell Carcinoma, Niki M Zacharias, Luis Segarra, Keiko Akagi, Natalie Wall Fowlkes, Huiqin Chen, Angelita Alaniz, Carolyn De La Cerda, Pedro Pesquera, Yuanxin Xi, Jing Wang, Jad Chahoud, Xin Lu, Priya Rao, Magaly Martinez-Ferrer, Curtis A Pettaway

Student and Faculty Publications

Simple Summary

Penile cancer is a rare but aggressive cancer. After it metastasizes, the median survival time is less than 12 months. The overall response rate to common first-line combination chemotherapy treatments is approximately 50%. There is an urgent need in advanced-penile-cancer treatment to find novel therapies that would generate better response rates than standard chemotherapy thus far and have less toxicity. Partially due to its rarity, there are few animal models and cell lines of penile cancer. We report on the generation of seven penile cancer animal models that were created by directly implanting human tumor tissue into immunocompromised …


Chimeric Systems Composed Of Swapped Tra Subunits Between Distantly-Related F Plasmids Reveal Striking Plasticity Among Type Iv Secretion Machines, Kouhei Kishida, Yang Grace Li, Natsumi Ogawa-Kishida, Pratick Khara, Abu Amar M Al Mamun, Rachel E Bosserman, Peter J Christie Mar 2024

Chimeric Systems Composed Of Swapped Tra Subunits Between Distantly-Related F Plasmids Reveal Striking Plasticity Among Type Iv Secretion Machines, Kouhei Kishida, Yang Grace Li, Natsumi Ogawa-Kishida, Pratick Khara, Abu Amar M Al Mamun, Rachel E Bosserman, Peter J Christie

Student and Faculty Publications

Bacterial type IV secretion systems (T4SSs) are a versatile family of macromolecular translocators, collectively able to recruit diverse DNA and protein substrates and deliver them to a wide range of cell types. Presently, there is little understanding of how T4SSs recognize substrate repertoires and form productive contacts with specific target cells. Although T4SSs are composed of a number of conserved subunits and adopt certain conserved structural features, they also display considerable compositional and structural diversity. Here, we explored the structural bases underlying the functional versatility of T4SSs through systematic deletion and subunit swapping between two conjugation systems encoded by the …