Project description:We sequenced and characterised inter-chromosomal and intra-chromosomal telomere fusions amplified from crisis-stage MCR5HPVE6E7 fibroblasts and DNA repair-compromised HCT116 cell lines nucleofected with plasmids encoding TALEN pairs to induce targeted cleavage at the 17p telomere.
Project description:Critically short telomeres activate p53-mediated apoptosis, resulting in organ failure and causing malignant transformation. Mutations in genes responsible for telomere maintenance are linked to a number of specific human diseases. We derived induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) from patients with mutations in the TERT and TERC telomerase genes. Telomerase-mutant iPSCs elongated telomeres, but at a lower rate than healthy iPSCs, and the magnitude of the elongation deficit correlated with the specific mutation’s impact on telomerase activity. However, elongation significantly varied among iPSC clones harboring the same mutation, and was affected by genetic and environmental factors. iPSCs cultured in hypoxia showed increased telomere length. Potential influence of residual expression of reprogramming factors on telomerase regulation and telomere length was ruled out by excising the transgenes after successful reprogramming. Evidence for telomerase-independent telomere elongation was not observed in these cells. We demonstrate that telomerase is required for telomere elongation in iPSCs and uncover heterogeneity in telomere maintenance even between clones derived from individual patients or siblings with the same mutation, indicating that telomere phenotype may be influenced by acquired and environmental agents. Our data underscore the necessity of studying multiple clones when using iPSCs to model disease. The exon array were done to validate the pluripotent phenotype of the derived normal and telomerase mutant iPSC and to potentially identify differentially expressed genes in mutant iPSC. Objective: confirming pluripotency by comparing telomerase mutated-, control-iPSC to human ESC and to their parental somatic cells (fibroblast used for iPSC derivation) 20 samples total, 5 different fibroblast cells, 13 iPSC lines, 1 ES line (H1) from different passages
Project description:Objectives: to characterize and to better understand changes at the cellular and molecular levels, in embryogenic lines in Douglas-fir obtained after repetitive somatic embryogenesis, that could explain improvement of their embryogenic potential : to primary lines, secondary ones showed an increase of their embryogenic potential; then tertiary lines showed again an improved embryogenic potential compared to second lines. Interestingly, the proteomic analysis further revealed different sets of significant proteins suggesting that each cycle of repetitive somatic embryogenesis is promoting substantial genome-wide rearrangement of the gene expression pattern.
Project description:We used RNA-seq to interrogate prostate cancer specific gene fusions, alternative splicings, somatic mutations and novel transcripts. We sequenced the transcriptome (polyA+) of 20 prostate cancer tumors and 10 matched normal tissues using Illumina GAII platform. Then we used bioinformatic approaches to identify prostate cancer specific aberrations which include gene fusion, alternative splicing, somatic mutation, etc.
Project description:Somatic hotspot mutations and structural amplifications and fusions affecting fibroblast growth factor receptor 2 (FGFR2) occur in multiple cancer types. However, clinical responses to FGFR inhibitors (FGFRi) have remained variable, emphasizing a need to better understand which FGFR2 alterations are oncogenic and targetable. Here we applied transposon-based screening and tumor modelling in mice to uncover truncation of exon (E) 18 of Fgfr2 as a potent driver mutation. Human oncogenomic datasets revealed a diverse set of FGFR2 alterations, including rearrangements (REs), E1-E17 partial amplifications, and E18 nonsense and frameshift mutations, each causing transcription of E18-truncated FGFR2 (FGFR2deltaE18). Somatic modelling in mice and human tumor cell lines using a compendium of FGFR2deltaE18 and full-length variants identified FGFR2deltaE18-truncation as potent single-driver alteration in cancer. Here we show the phosphoproteomic landscape of FGFR2 variants in murine epithelial cell (MEC) lines and mouse tumors. Global (STY) phosphoproteomics using IMAC and phosphotyrosine phosphoproteomics using pTyr IP’s are combined with DIA protein expression data to uncover oncogenic signaling of clinically-relevant FGFR2 variants.
Project description:Critically short telomeres activate p53-mediated apoptosis, resulting in organ failure and causing malignant transformation. Mutations in genes responsible for telomere maintenance are linked to a number of specific human diseases. We derived induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) from patients with mutations in the TERT and TERC telomerase genes. Telomerase-mutant iPSCs elongated telomeres, but at a lower rate than healthy iPSCs, and the magnitude of the elongation deficit correlated with the specific mutation’s impact on telomerase activity. However, elongation significantly varied among iPSC clones harboring the same mutation, and was affected by genetic and environmental factors. iPSCs cultured in hypoxia showed increased telomere length. Potential influence of residual expression of reprogramming factors on telomerase regulation and telomere length was ruled out by excising the transgenes after successful reprogramming. Evidence for telomerase-independent telomere elongation was not observed in these cells. We demonstrate that telomerase is required for telomere elongation in iPSCs and uncover heterogeneity in telomere maintenance even between clones derived from individual patients or siblings with the same mutation, indicating that telomere phenotype may be influenced by acquired and environmental agents. Our data underscore the necessity of studying multiple clones when using iPSCs to model disease. The exon array were done to validate the pluripotent phenotype of the derived normal and telomerase mutant iPSC and to potentially identify differentially expressed genes in mutant iPSC. Objective: confirming pluripotency by comparing telomerase mutated-, control-iPSC to human ESC and to their parental somatic cells (fibroblast used for iPSC derivation)
Project description:Interventions: We perform fenetic analysis of tumor, non-tumor, plasma, buffy coat of patients of colorectal cancer.
Primary outcome(s): Somatic and germline mutation of cororeactal cancer.
Study Design: Single arm Non-randomized
Project description:<p>RNA-seq data from two cases of ameloblastoma was analyzed for candidate gene fusions and point mutations. Recurrent point mutations identified in the RNA-seq data, as well as mutations identified with limited panel targeted deep sequencing, were validated as somatic. Expanding to a larger cohort of 28, one of two activating mutations was found in 80% of cases. No recurrent gene fusions events were identified.</p>