Browsing by Author "Li, J."
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Item Open Access A global reference for human genetic variation(Nature Publishing Group, 2015) Auton, A.; Abecasis, G. R.; Altshuler, D. M.; Durbin, R. M.; Bentley, D. R.; Chakravarti, A.; Clark, A. G.; Donnelly, P.; Eichler, E. E.; Flicek, P.; Gabriel, S. B.; Gibbs, R. A.; Green, E. D.; Hurles, M. E.; Knoppers, B. M.; Korbel, J. O.; Lander, E. S.; Lee, C.; Lehrach, H.; Mardis, E. R.; Marth, G. T.; McVean, G. A.; Nickerson, D. A.; Schmidt, J. P.; Sherry, S. T.; Wang, J.; Wilson, R. K.; Boerwinkle, E.; Doddapaneni, H.; Han, Y.; Korchina, V.; Kovar, C.; Lee, S.; Muzny, D.; Reid, J. G.; Zhu, Y.; Chang, Y.; Feng, Q.; Fang, X.; Guo, X.; Jian, M.; Jiang, H.; Jin, X.; Lan, T.; Li, G.; Li, J.; Li, Y.; Liu, S.; Liu, X.; Lu, Y.; Ma, X.; Tang, M.; Wang, B.; Wang, G.; Wu, H.; Wu, R.; Xu, X.; Yin, Y.; Zhang, D.; Zhang, W.; Zhao, J.; Zhao, M.; Zheng, X.; Gupta, N.; Gharani, N.; Toji, L. H.; Gerry, N. P.; Resch, A. M.; Barker, J.; Clarke, L.; Gil, L.; Hunt, S. E.; Kelman, G.; Kulesha, E.; Leinonen, R.; McLaren, W. M.; Radhakrishnan, R.; Roa, A.; Smirnov, D.; Smith, R. E.; Streeter, I.; Thormann, A.; Toneva, I.; Vaughan, B.; Zheng-Bradley, X.; Grocock, R.; Humphray, S.; James, T.; Kingsbury, Z.; Sudbrak, R.; Albrecht, M. W.; Amstislavskiy, V. S.; Borodina, T. A.; Lienhard, M.; Mertes, F.; Sultan, M.; Timmermann, B.; Yaspo, Marie-Laure; Fulton, L.; Ananiev, V.; Belaia, Z.; Beloslyudtsev, D.; Bouk, N.; Chen, C.; Church, D.; Cohen, R.; Cook, C.; Garner, J.; Hefferon, T.; Kimelman, M.; Liu, C.; Lopez, J.; Meric, P.; O'Sullivan, C.; Ostapchuk, Y.; Phan, L.; Ponomarov, S.; Schneider, V.; Shekhtman, E.; Sirotkin, K.; Slotta, D.; Zhang, H.; Balasubramaniam, S.; Burton, J.; Danecek, P.; Keane, T. M.; Kolb-Kokocinski, A.; McCarthy, S.; Stalker, J.; Quail, M.; Davies, C. J.; Gollub, J.; Webster, T.; Wong, B.; Zhan, Y.; Campbell, C. L.; Kong, Y.; Marcketta, A.; Yu, F.; Antunes, L.; Bainbridge, M.; Sabo, A.; Huang, Z.; Coin, L. J. M.; Fang, L.; Li, Q.; Li, Z.; Lin, H.; Liu, B.; Luo, R.; Shao, H.; Xie, Y.; Ye, C.; Yu, C.; Zhang, F.; Zheng, H.; Zhu, H.; Alkan, C.; Dal, E.; Kahveci, F.; Garrison, E. P.; Kural, D.; Lee, W. P.; Leong, W. F.; Stromberg, M.; Ward, A. N.; Wu, J.; Zhang, M.; Daly, M. J.; DePristo, M. A.; Handsaker, R. E.; Banks, E.; Bhatia, G.; Del Angel, G.; Genovese, G.; Li, H.; Kashin, S.; McCarroll, S. A.; Nemesh, J. C.; Poplin, R. E.; Yoon, S. C.; Lihm, J.; Makarov, V.; Gottipati, S.; Keinan, A.; Rodriguez-Flores, J. L.; Rausch, T.; Fritz, M. H.; Stütz, A. M.; Beal, K.; Datta, A.; Herrero, J.; Ritchie, G. R. S.; Zerbino, D.; Sabeti, P. C.; Shlyakhter, I.; Schaffner, S. F.; Vitti, J.; Cooper, D. N.; Ball, E. V.; Stenson, P. D.; Barnes, B.; Bauer, M.; Cheetham, R. K.; Cox, A.; Eberle, M.; Kahn, S.; Murray, L.; Peden, J.; Shaw, R.; Kenny, E. E.; Batzer, M. A.; Konkel, M. K.; Walker, J. A.; MacArthur, D. G.; Lek, M.; Herwig, R.; Ding, L.; Koboldt, D. C.; Larson, D.; Ye, K.; Gravel, S.; Swaroop, A.; Chew, E.; Lappalainen, T.; Erlich, Y.; Gymrek, M.; Willems, T. F.; Simpson, J. T.; Shriver, M. D.; Rosenfeld, J. A.; Bustamante, C. D.; Montgomery, S. B.; De La Vega, F. M.; Byrnes, J. K.; Carroll, A. W.; DeGorter, M. K.; Lacroute, P.; Maples, B. K.; Martin, A. R.; Moreno-Estrada, A.; Shringarpure, S. S.; Zakharia, F.; Halperin, E.; Baran, Y.; Cerveira, E.; Hwang, J.; Malhotra, A.; Plewczynski, D.; Radew, K.; Romanovitch, M.; Zhang, C.; Hyland, F. C. L.; Craig, D. W.; Christoforides, A.; Homer, N.; Izatt, T.; Kurdoglu, A. A.; Sinari, S. A.; Squire, K.; Xiao, C.; Sebat, J.; Antaki, D.; Gujral, M.; Noor, A.; Ye, K.; Burchard, E. G.; Hernandez, R. D.; Gignoux, C. R.; Haussler, D.; Katzman, S. J.; Kent, W. J.; Howie, B.; Ruiz-Linares, A.; Dermitzakis, E. T.; Devine, S. E.; Kang, H. M.; Kidd, J. M.; Blackwell, T.; Caron, S.; Chen, W.; Emery, S.; Fritsche, L.; Fuchsberger, C.; Jun, G.; Li, B.; Lyons, R.; Scheller, C.; Sidore, C.; Song, S.; Sliwerska, E.; Taliun, D.; Tan, A.; Welch, R.; Wing, M. K.; Zhan, X.; Awadalla, P.; Hodgkinson, A.; Li, Y.; Shi, X.; Quitadamo, A.; Lunter, G.; Marchini, J. L.; Myers, S.; Churchhouse, C.; Delaneau, O.; Gupta-Hinch, A.; Kretzschmar, W.; Iqbal, Z.; Mathieson, I.; Menelaou, A.; Rimmer, A.; Xifara, D. K.; Oleksyk, T. K.; Fu, Y.; Liu, X.; Xiong, M.; Jorde, L.; Witherspoon, D.; Xing, J.; Browning, B. L.; Browning, S. R.; Hormozdiari, F.; Sudmant, P. H.; Khurana, E.; Tyler-Smith, C.; Albers, C. A.; Ayub, Q.; Chen, Y.; Colonna, V.; Jostins, L.; Walter, K.; Xue, Y.; Gerstein, M. B.; Abyzov, A.; Balasubramanian, S.; Chen, J.; Clarke, D.; Fu, Y.; Harmanci, A. O.; Jin, M.; Lee, D.; Liu, J.; Mu, X. J.; Zhang, J.; Zhang, Y.; Hartl, C.; Shakir, K.; Degenhardt, J.; Meiers, S.; Raeder, B.; Casale, F. P.; Stegle, O.; Lameijer, E. W.; Hall, I.; Bafna, V.; Michaelson, J.; Gardner, E. J.; Mills, R. E.; Dayama, G.; Chen, K.; Fan, X.; Chong, Z.; Chen, T.; Chaisson, M. J.; Huddleston, J.; Malig, M.; Nelson, B. J.; Parrish, N. F.; Blackburne, B.; Lindsay, S. J.; Ning, Z.; Zhang, Y.; Lam, H.; Sisu, C.; Challis, D.; Evani, U. S.; Lu, J.; Nagaswamy, U.; Yu, J.; Li, W.; Habegger, L.; Yu, H.; Cunningham, F.; Dunham, I.; Lage, K.; Jespersen, J. B.; Horn, H.; Kim, D.; Desalle, R.; Narechania, A.; Sayres, M. A. W.; Mendez, F. L.; Poznik, G. D.; Underhill, P. A.; Mittelman, D.; Banerjee, R.; Cerezo, M.; Fitzgerald, T. W.; Louzada, S.; Massaia, A.; Yang, F.; Kalra, D.; Hale, W.; Dan, X.; Barnes, K. C.; Beiswanger, C.; Cai, H.; Cao, H.; Henn, B.; Jones, D.; Kaye, J. S.; Kent, A.; Kerasidou, A.; Mathias, R.; Ossorio, P. N.; Parker, M.; Rotimi, C. N.; Royal, C. D.; Sandoval, K.; Su, Y.; Tian, Z.; Tishkoff, S.; Via, M.; Wang, Y.; Yang, H.; Yang, L.; Zhu, J.; Bodmer, W.; Bedoya, G.; Cai, Z.; Gao, Y.; Chu, J.; Peltonen, L.; Garcia-Montero, A.; Orfao, A.; Dutil, J.; Martinez-Cruzado, J. C.; Mathias, R. A.; Hennis, A.; Watson, H.; McKenzie, C.; Qadri, F.; LaRocque, R.; Deng, X.; Asogun, D.; Folarin, O.; Happi, C.; Omoniwa, O.; Stremlau, M.; Tariyal, R.; Jallow, M.; Joof, F. S.; Corrah, T.; Rockett, K.; Kwiatkowski, D.; Kooner, J.; Hien, T. T.; Dunstan, S. J.; ThuyHang, N.; Fonnie, R.; Garry, R.; Kanneh, L.; Moses, L.; Schieffelin, J.; Grant, D. S.; Gallo, C.; Poletti, G.; Saleheen, D.; Rasheed, A.; Brooks, L. D.; Felsenfeld, A. L.; McEwen, J. E.; Vaydylevich, Y.; Duncanson, A.; Dunn, M.; Schloss, J. A.The 1000 Genomes Project set out to provide a comprehensive description of common human genetic variation by applying whole-genome sequencing to a diverse set of individuals from multiple populations. Here we report completion of the project, having reconstructed the genomes of 2,504 individuals from 26 populations using a combination of low-coverage whole-genome sequencing, deep exome sequencing, and dense microarray genotyping. We characterized a broad spectrum of genetic variation, in total over 88 million variants (84.7 million single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), 3.6 million short insertions/deletions (indels), and 60,000 structural variants), all phased onto high-quality haplotypes. This resource includes >99% of SNP variants with a frequency of >1% for a variety of ancestries. We describe the distribution of genetic variation across the global sample, and discuss the implications for common disease studies. © 2015 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.Item Open Access Human STAT3 variants underlie autosomal dominant hyper-IgE syndrome by negative dominance(Rockefeller University Press, 2021-06-17) Asano, T.; Khourieh, J.; Zhang, P.; Rapaport, F.; Spaan, A. N.; Li, J.; Lei, W. T.; Pelham, S. J.; Hum, D.; Chrabieh, M.; Han, J. E.; Guérin, A.; Mackie, J.; Gupta, S.; Saikia, B.; Baghdadi, J. E. I.; Fadil, I.; Bousfiha, A.; Habib, T.; Marr, N.; Ganeshanandan, L.; Peake, J.; Droney, L.; Williams, A.; Celmeli, F.; Hatipoglu, N.; Özçelik, Tayfun; Picard, C.Most patients with autosomal dominant hyper-IgE syndrome (AD-HIES) carry rare heterozygous STAT3 variants. Only six of the 135 in-frame variants reported have been experimentally shown to be dominant negative (DN), and it has been recently suggested that eight out-of-frame variants operate by haploinsufficiency. We experimentally tested these 143 variants, 7 novel out-of-frame variants found in HIES patients, and other STAT3 variants from the general population. Strikingly, all 15 out-of-frame variants were DN via their encoded (1) truncated proteins, (2) neoproteins generated from a translation reinitiation codon, and (3) isoforms from alternative transcripts or a combination thereof. Moreover, 128 of the 135 in-frame variants (95%) were also DN. The patients carrying the seven non-DN STAT3 in-frame variants have not been studied for other genetic etiologies. Finally, none of the variants from the general population tested, including an out-of-frame variant, were DN. Overall, our findings show that heterozygous STAT3 variants, whether in or out of frame, underlie AD-HIES through negative dominance rather than haploinsufficiency.Item Open Access Inborn errors of type I IFN immunity in patients with life-threatening COVID-19(American Association for the Advancement of Science, 2020) Zhang, Q.; Liu, Z.; Moncada-Velez, M.; Chen, J.; Ogishi, M.; Bigio, B.; Yang, R.; Arias, A. A.; Zhou, Q.; Han, J. E.; Özçelik, Tayfun; Uğurbil, A. C.; Zhang, P.; Rapaport, F.; Li, J.; Spaan, A. N.Clinical outcomes of human severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection range from silent infection to lethal coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Epidemiological studies have identified three risk factors for severe disease: being male, being elderly, and having other medical conditions. However, interindividual clinical variability remains huge in each demographic category. Discovering the root cause and detailed molecular, cellular, and tissue- and body-levelmechanismsunderlying life-threatening COVID-19 is of the utmost biological and medical importance.Item Open Access Nitrogen incorporation and optical studies of GaAsSbN∕GaAs single quantum well heterostructures(A I P Publishing LLC, 2007) Nunna, K.; Iyer, S.; Wu, L.; Li, J.; Bharatan, S.; Wei, X.; Senger, R. T.; Bajaj, K. K.In this work, the effects of N incorporation on the optical properties of GaAsSbN/GaAs single quantum wells (SQWs) have been investigated using temperature, excitation, and magnetic dependencies of photoluminescence (PL) characteristics. These layers were grown in an elemental solid source molecular beam epitaxy system with a rf plasma N source. The N concentrations in the range of 0.5%-2.5% were investigated in this study. The SQW with N similar to 0.5% exhibits a behavior similar to that in an intermediate regime where the contributions from the localized states in the band gap are dominant. The temperature and excitation dependencies of the PL characteristics indicate that for the N concentration of 0.9% and above, the alloy behavior is analogous to that of a regular alloy and the changes in optical properties are only marginal. The conduction band effective mass (m(eff)) values computed from the magnetophotoluminescence spectra using a variational formalism and the band anticrossing model are in good agreement and indicate enhanced values of m(eff). However, there is no significant variation in m(eff) values of QWs for N >= 0.9%. Small redshift of about 30-50 meV for the temperature variations from 10 to 300 K in conjunction with unusually small blueshift observed in the excitation dependence of PL for N >= 0.9% indicate that this system holds a great promise for laser applications at 1.55 mu m and beyond.Item Open Access Oncogenic signaling pathways in the Cancer Genome Atlas(Cell Press, 2018) Sanchez-Vega, F.; Mina, M.; Armenia, J.; Chatila, W. K.; Luna, A.; La, K. C.; Dimitriadoy, S.; Liu, D. L.; Kantheti, H. S.; Saghafinia, S.; Chakravarty, D.; Daian, F.; Gao, Q.; Bailey, M. H.; Liang, W. -W.; Foltz, S. M.; Shmulevich, I.; Ding, L.; Heins, Z.; Ochoa, A.; Gross, B.; Gao, J.; Zhang, H.; Kundra, R.; Kandoth, C.; Bahceci, I.; Dervishi, L.; Doğrusöz, Uğur; Zhou, W.; Shen, H.; Laird, P. W.; Way, G. P.; Greene, C. S.; Liang, H.; Xiao, Y.; Wang, C.; Iavarone, A.; Berger, A. H.; Bivona, T. G.; Lazar, A. J.; Hammer, G. D.; Giordano, T.; Kwong, L. N.; McArthur, G.; Huang, C.; Tward, A. D.; Frederick, M. J.; McCormick, F.; Meyerson, M.; Caesar-Johnson, S. J.; Demchok, J. A.; Felau, I.; Kasapi, M.; Ferguson, M. L.; Hutter, C. M.; Sofia, H. J.; Tarnuzzer, R.; Wang, Z.; Yang, L.; Zenklusen, J. C.; Zhang, J. J.; Chudamani, S.; Liu, J.; Lolla, L.; Naresh, R.; Pihl, T.; Sun, Q.; Wan, Y.; Wu, Y.; Cho, J.; DeFreitas, T.; Frazer, S.; Gehlenborg, N.; Getz, G.; Heiman, D. I.; Kim, J.; Lawrence, M. S.; Lin, P.; Meier, S.; Noble, M. S.; Saksena, G.; Voet, D.; Zhang, H.; Bernard, B.; Chambwe, N.; Dhankani, V.; Knijnenburg, T.; Kramer, R.; Leinonen, K.; Liu, Y.; Miller, M.; Reynolds, S.; Shmulevich, I.; Thorsson, V.; Zhang, W.; Akbani, R.; Broom, B. M.; Hegde, A. M.; Ju, Z.; Kanchi, R. S.; Korkut, A.; Li, J.; Liang, H.; Ling, S.; Liu W.; Lu, Y.; Mills, G. B.; Ng, K. -S.; Rao, A.; Ryan, M.; Wang, J.; Weinstein, J. N.; Zhang, J.; Abeshouse, A.; Armenia, J.; Chakravarty, D.; Chatila, W. K.; de, Bruijn, I.; Gao, J.; Gross, B. E.; Heins, Z. J.; Kundra, R.; La, K.; Ladanyi, M.; Luna, A.; Nissan, M. G.; Ochoa, A.; Phillips, S. M.; Reznik, E.; Sanchez-Vega, F.; Sander, C.; Schultz, N.; Sheridan, R.; Sumer, S. O.; Sun, Y.; Taylor, B. S.; Wang, J.; Zhang, H.; Anur, P.; Peto, M.; Spellman, P.; Benz, C.; Stuart, J. M.; Wong, C. K.; Yau, C.; Hayes, D. N.; Parker, J. S.; Wilkerson, M. D.; Ally, A.; Balasundaram, M.; Bowlby, R.; Brooks, D.; Carlsen, R.; Chuah, E.; Dhalla, N.; Holt, R.; Jones, S. J. M.; Kasaian, K.; Lee, D.; Ma, Y.; Marra, M. A.; Mayo, M.; Moore, R. A.; Mungall, A. J.; Mungall, K.; Robertson, A. G.; Sadeghi, S.; Schein, J. E.; Sipahimalani, P.; Tam, A.; Thiessen, N.; Tse, K.; Wong, T.; Berger, A. C.; Beroukhim, R.; Cherniack, A. D.; Cibulskis, C.; Gabriel, S. B.; Gao, G. F.; Ha, G.; Meyerson, M.; Schumacher, S. E.; Shih, J.; Kucherlapati, M. H.; Kucherlapati, R. S.; Baylin, S.; Cope, L.; Danilova, L.; Bootwalla, M. S.; Lai, P. H.; Maglinte, D. T.; Van, Den, Berg, D. J.; Weisenberger, D. J.; Auman, J. T.; Balu, S.; Bodenheimer, T.; Fan, C.; Hoadley, K. A.; Hoyle, A. P.; Jefferys, S. R.; Jones, C. D.; Meng, S.; Mieczkowski, P. A.; Mose, L. E.; Perou, A. H.; Perou, C. M.; Roach, J.; Shi, Y.; Simons, J. V.; Skelly, T.; Soloway, M. G.; Tan, D.; Veluvolu, U.; Fan, H.; Hinoue, T.; Laird, P. W.; Shen, H.; Zhou, W.; Bellair, M.; Chang, K.; Covington, K.; Creighton, C. J.; Dinh, H.; Doddapaneni, H.; Donehower, L. A.; Drummond, J.; Gibbs, R. A.; Glenn, R.; Hale, W.; Han, Y.; Hu, J.; Korchina, V.; Lee, S.; Lewis, L.; Li, W.; Liu, X.; Morgan, M.; Morton, D.; Muzny, D.; Santibanez, J.; Sheth, M.; Shinbrot, E.; Wang, L.; Wang, M.; Wheeler, D. A.; Xi, L.; Zhao, F.; Hess, J.; Appelbaum, E. L.; Bailey, M.; Cordes, M. G.; Ding, L.; Fronick, C. C.; Fulton, L. A.; Fulton, R. S.; Kandoth, C.; Mardis, E. R.; McLellan, M. D.; Miller, C. A.; Schmidt, H. K.; Wilson, R. K.; Crain, D.; Curley, E.; Gardner, J.; Lau, K.; Mallery, D.; Morris, S.; Paulauskis, J.; Penny, R.; Shelton, C.; Shelton, T.; Sherman, M.; Thompson, E.; Yena, P.; Bowen, J.; Gastier-Foster, J. M.; Gerken, M.; Leraas, K. M.; Lichtenberg, T. M.; Ramirez, N. C.; Wise, L.; Zmuda, E.; Corcoran, N.; Costello, T.; Hovens, C.; Carvalho, A. L.; de, Carvalho, A. C.; Fregnani, J. H.; Longatto-Filho, A.; Reis, R. M.; Scapulatempo-Neto, C.; Silveira, H. C. S.; Vidal, D. O.; Burnette, A.; Eschbacher, J.; Hermes, B.; Noss, A.; Singh, R.; Anderson, M. L.; Castro, P. D.; Ittmann, M.; Huntsman, D.; Kohl, B.; Le, X.; Thorp, R.; Andry, C.; Duffy, E. R.; Lyadov, V.; Paklina, O.; Setdikova, G.; Shabunin, A.; Tavobilov, M.; McPherson, C.; Warnick, R.; Berkowitz, R.; Cramer, D.; Feltmate, C.; Horowitz, N.; Kibel, A.; Muto, M.; Raut, C. P.; Malykh, A.; Barnholtz-Sloan, J. S.; Barrett, W.; Devine, K.; Fulop, J.; Ostrom, Q. T.; Shimmel, K.; Wolinsky, Y.; Sloan, A. E.; De, Rose, A.; Giuliante, F.; Goodman, M.; Karlan, B. Y.; Hagedorn, C. H.; Eckman, J.; Harr, J.; Myers, J.; Tucker, K.; Zach, L. A.; Deyarmin, B.; Hu, H.; Kvecher, L.; Larson, C.; Mural, R. J.; Somiari, S.; Vicha, A.; Zelinka, T.; Bennett, J.; Iacocca, M.; Rabeno, B.; Swanson, P.; Latour, M.; Lacombe, L.; Têtu, B.; Bergeron, A.; McGraw, M.; Staugaitis, S. M.; Chabot, J.; Hibshoosh, H.; Sepulveda, A.; Su, T.; Wang, T.; Potapova, O.; Voronina, O.; Desjardins, L.; Mariani, O.; Roman-Roman, S.; Sastre, X.; Stern, M. -H.; Cheng, F.; Signoretti, S.; Berchuck, A.; Bigner, D.; Lipp, E.; Marks, J.; McCall, S.; McLendon, R.; Secord, A.; Sharp, A.; Behera, M.; Brat, D. J.; Chen, A.; Delman, K.; Force, S.; Khuri, F.; Magliocca, K.; Maithel, S.; Olson, J. J.; Owonikoko, T.; Pickens, A.; Ramalingam, S.; Shin, D. M.; Sica, G.; Van, Meir, E. G.; Zhang, H.; Eijckenboom, W.; Gillis, A.; Korpershoek, E.; Looijenga, L.; Oosterhuis, W.; Stoop, H.; van, Kessel, K. E.; Zwarthoff, E. C.; Calatozzolo, C.; Cuppini, L.; Cuzzubbo, S.; DiMeco, F.; Finocchiaro, G.; Mattei, L.; Perin, A.; Pollo, B.; Chen, C.; Houck, J.; Lohavanichbutr, P.; Hartmann, A.; Stoehr, C.; Stoehr, R.; Taubert, H.; Wach, S.; Wullich, B.; Kycler, W.; Murawa, D.; Wiznerowicz, M.; Chung, K.; Edenfield, W. J.; Martin, J.; Baudin, E.; Bubley, G.; Bueno, R.; De, Rienzo, A.; Richards, W. G.; Kalkanis, S.; Mikkelsen, T.; Noushmehr, H.; Scarpace, L.; Girard, N.; Aymerich, M.; Campo, E.; Giné, E.; Guillermo, A. L.; Van, Bang, N.; Hanh, P. T.; Phu, B. D.; Tang, Y.; Colman, H.; Evason, K.; Dottino, P. R.; Martignetti, J. A.; Gabra, H.; Juhl, H.; Akeredolu, T.; Stepa, S.; Hoon, D.; Ahn, K.; Kang, K. J.; Beuschlein, F.; Breggia, A.; Birrer, M.; Bell, D.; Borad, M.; Bryce, A. H.; Castle, E.; Chandan, V.; Cheville, J.; Copland, J. A.; Farnell, M.; Flotte, T.; Giama, N.; Ho, T.; Kendrick, M.; Kocher, J. -P.; Kopp, K.; Moser, C.; Nagorney, D.; O'Brien, D.; O'Neill, B. P.; Patel, T.; Petersen, G.; Que, F.; Rivera, M.; Roberts, L.; Smallridge, R.; Smyrk, T.; Stanton, M.; Thompson, R. H.; Torbenson, M.; Yang, J. D.; Zhang, L.; Brimo, F.; Ajani, J. A.; Gonzalez, A. M. A.; Behrens, C.; Bondaruk, J.; Broaddus, R.; Czerniak, B.; Esmaeli, B.; Fujimoto, J.; Gershenwald, J.; Guo, C.; Lazar, A. J.; Logothetis, C.; Meric-Bernstam, F.; Moran, C.; Ramondetta, L.; Rice, D.; Sood, A.; Tamboli, P.; Thompson, T.; Troncoso, P.; Tsao, A.; Wistuba, I.; Carter, C.; Haydu, L.; Hersey, P.; Jakrot, V.; Kakavand, H.; Kefford, R.; Lee, K.; Long, G.; Mann, G.; Quinn, M.; Saw, R.; Scolyer, R.; Shannon, K.; Spillane, A.; Stretch, J.; Synott, M.; Thompson, J.; Wilmott, J.; Al-Ahmadie, H.; Chan, T. A.; Ghossein, R.; Gopalan, A.; Levine, D. A.; Reuter, V.; Singer, S.; Singh, B.; Tien, N. V.; Broudy, T.; Mirsaidi, C.; Nair, P.; Drwiega, P.; Miller, J.; Smith, J.; Zaren, H.; Park, J. -W.; Hung, N. P.; Kebebew, E.; Linehan, W. M.; Metwalli, A. R.; Pacak, K.; Pinto, P. A.; Schiffman, M.; Schmidt, L. S.; Vocke, C. D.; Wentzensen, N.; Worrell, R.; Yang, H.; Moncrieff, M.; Goparaju, C.; Melamed, J.; Pass, H.; Botnariuc, N.; Caraman, I.; Cernat, M.; Chemencedji, I.; Clipca, A.; Doruc, S.; Gorincioi, G.; Mura, S.; Pirtac, M.; Stancul, I.; Tcaciuc, D.; Albert, M.; Alexopoulou, I.; Arnaout, A.; Bartlett, J.; Engel, J.; Gilbert, S.; Parfitt, J.; Sekhon, H.; Thomas, G.; Rassl, D. M.; Rintoul, R. C.; Bifulco, C.; Tamakawa, R.; Urba, W.; Hayward, N.; Timmers, H.; Antenucci, A.; Facciolo, F.; Grazi, G.; Marino, M.; Merola, R.; de, Krijger, R.; Gimenez-Roqueplo, A. -P.; Piché, A.; Chevalier, S.; McKercher, G.; Birsoy, K.; Barnett, G.; Brewer, C.; Farver, C.; Naska, T.; Pennell, N. A.; Raymond, D.; Schilero, C.; Smolenski, K.; Williams, F.; Morrison, C.; Borgia, J. A.; Liptay, M. J.; Pool, M.; Seder, C. W.; Junker, K.; Omberg, L.; Dinkin, M.; Manikhas, G.; Alvaro, D.; Bragazzi, M. C.; Cardinale, V.; Carpino, G.; Gaudio, E.; Chesla, D.; Cottingham, S.; Dubina, M.; Moiseenko, F.; Dhanasekaran, R.; Becker, K. -F.; Janssen, K. -P.; Slotta-Huspenina, J.; Abdel-Rahman, M. H.; Aziz, D.; Bell, S.; Cebulla, C. M.; Davis, A.; Duell, R.; Elder, J. B.; Hilty, J.; Kumar, B.; Lang, J.; Lehman, N. L.; Mandt, R.; Nguyen, P.; Pilarski, R.; Rai, K.; Schoenfield, L.; Senecal, K.; Wakely, P.; Hansen, P.; Lechan, R.; Powers, J.; Tischler, A.; Grizzle, W. E.; Sexton, K. C.; Kastl, A.; Henderson, J.; Porten, S.; Waldmann, J.; Fassnacht, M.; Asa, S. L.; Schadendorf, D.; Couce, M.; Graefen, M.; Huland, H.; Sauter, G.; Schlomm, T.; Simon, R.; Tennstedt, P.; Olabode, O.; Nelson, M.; Bathe, O.; Carroll, P. R.; Chan, J. M.; Disaia, P.; Glenn, P.; Kelley, R. K.; Landen, C. 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M.; Kendall, S.; Shipman, C.; Bradford, C.; Carey, T.; Haddad, A.; Moyer, J.; Peterson, L.; Prince, M.; Rozek, L.; Wolf, G.; Bowman, R.; Fong, K. M.; Yang, I.; Korst, R.; Rathmell, W. K.; Fantacone-Campbell, J. L.; Hooke, J. A.; Kovatich, A. J.; Shriver, C. D.; DiPersio, J.; Drake, B.; Govindan, R.; Heath, S.; Ley, T.; Van, Tine, B.; Westervelt, P.; Rubin, M. A.; Lee, J. I.; Aredes, N. D.; Mariamidze, A.; Van, Allen, E. M.; Cherniack, A. D.; Ciriello, G.; Sander, C.; Schultz, N.; The, Cancer, Genome, Atlas, Research, Network.tifGenetic alterations in signaling pathways that control cell-cycle progression, apoptosis, and cell growth are common hallmarks of cancer, but the extent, mechanisms, and co-occurrence of alterations in these pathways differ between individual tumors and tumor types. Using mutations, copy-number changes, mRNA expression, gene fusions and DNA methylation in 9,125 tumors profiled by The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA), we analyzed the mechanisms and patterns of somatic alterations in ten canonical pathways: cell cycle, Hippo, Myc, Notch, Nrf2, PI-3-Kinase/Akt, RTK-RAS, TGFβ signaling, p53 and β-catenin/Wnt. We charted the detailed landscape of pathway alterations in 33 cancer types, stratified into 64 subtypes, and identified patterns of co-occurrence and mutual exclusivity. Eighty-nine percent of tumors had at least one driver alteration in these pathways, and 57% percent of tumors had at least one alteration potentially targetable by currently available drugs. Thirty percent of tumors had multiple targetable alterations, indicating opportunities for combination therapy. An integrated analysis of genetic alterations in 10 signaling pathways in >9,000 tumors profiled by TCGA highlights significant representation of individual and co-occurring actionable alterations in these pathways, suggesting opportunities for targeted and combination therapies.Item Open Access A statistical framework for mapping risk genes from de novo mutations in whole-genome-sequencing studies(Cell Press, 2018) Liu, Y.; Liang, Y.; Çiçek, A. Ercüment; Li, Z.; Li, J.; Muhle, R. A.; Krenzer, M.; Mei, Y.; Wang Y.; Knoblauch, N.; Morrison, J.; Zhao, S.; Jiang, Y.; Geller, E.; Ionita-Laza, I.; Wu, J.; Xia, K.; Noonan, J. P.; Sun, Z. S.; He, X.Analysis of de novo mutations (DNMs) from sequencing data of nuclear families has identified risk genes for many complex diseases, including multiple neurodevelopmental and psychiatric disorders. Most of these efforts have focused on mutations in protein-coding sequences. Evidence from genome-wide association studies (GWASs) strongly suggests that variants important to human diseases often lie in non-coding regions. Extending DNM-based approaches to non-coding sequences is challenging, however, because the functional significance of non-coding mutations is difficult to predict. We propose a statistical framework for analyzing DNMs from whole-genome sequencing (WGS) data. This method, TADA-Annotations (TADA-A), is a major advance of the TADA method we developed earlier for DNM analysis in coding regions. TADA-A is able to incorporate many functional annotations such as conservation and enhancer marks, to learn from data which annotations are informative of pathogenic mutations, and to combine both coding and non-coding mutations at the gene level to detect risk genes. It also supports meta-analysis of multiple DNM studies, while adjusting for study-specific technical effects. We applied TADA-A to WGS data of ∼300 autism-affected family trios across five studies and discovered several autism risk genes. The software is freely available for all research uses.