87 results on '"Boeva V"'
Search Results
2. Relationship of micro-and minisatellites in the human genome
- Author
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Boeva, V. A., Fridman, M. V., and Makeev, V. Yu.
- Published
- 2006
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3. Deep and wide digging for binding motifs in ChIP-Seq data
- Author
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Kulakovskiy, I. V., Boeva, V. A., Favorov, A. V., and Makeev, V. J.
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- 2010
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4. EP07.02-003 Characterization of the Extracellular Vesicle-Derived Transcriptome in Malignant Pleural Mesothelioma
- Author
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Kraft, A., Meerang, M., Kirschner, M.B., Boeva, V., and Opitz, I.
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- 2022
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5. Human echinococcosis in Bulgaria: a comparative epidemiological analysis(*)
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Todorov, T. and Boeva, V.
- Subjects
Bulgaria -- Health aspects ,Statistics ,Health aspects ,Echinococcosis -- Statistics -- Health aspects - Abstract
Voir page 116 le resume en francais. En la pagina 117 figura un resumen en espanol. Background Bulgaria occupies some 110 000 [km.sup.2] of the eastern portion of the Balkan [...], The present article describes the importance of human echinococcosis as a public health problem in Bulgaria, outlines the control measures carried out and evaluates comparatively the situation over three periods spanning 46 years (1950-1995). During the first period (1950-62), a total of 6469 new surgically confirmed cases of hydatid disease were recorded in Bulgaria, with an annual incidence of 6.5 per 100 000 population, and the infestation rate in domestic animals and dogs was high. Echinococcosis was endemic throughout the country. The organization of a control campaign, initiated in 1960, led to a considerable improvement in the situation during the second period (1971-82). Morbidity among humans gradually decreased, with an average incidence of 2.0 per 100 000, and the proportion of infected animals also fell. The distribution of echinococcosis was characterized as sporadic or of low endemicity. During the third period (1983-95), owing to administrative irregularities and economic changes, funds for supporting the campaign were reduced and control structures were dismantled. As a result, the incidence rose to 3.3 per 100 000. Echinococcosis again became endemic, in some regions hyperendemic. The findings provide convincing evidence that cessation of control measures or reduction of campaign activity can lead to intensification in the transmission of Echinococcus granulosus and to a resurgence in echinococcosis to previous levels.
- Published
- 1999
6. 575 Detection of Genes and Pathways Involved in the Development of Aggressive Neuroblastoma Using Genome Copy Number Data
- Author
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Boeva, V., Hocking, T.D., Schleiermacher, G., Janoueix-Lerosey, I., Delattre, O., and Barillot, E.
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- 2012
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7. Echinococcosis in children and adolescents in Bulgaria: a comparative study.
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Todorov, T. and Boeva, V.
- Subjects
- *
ECHINOCOCCOSIS , *SURGERY , *CYSTS (Pathology) - Abstract
Between 1971 and 1995, 5874 patients underwent surgery in Bulgaria because of cystic echinococcosis caused by Echinococcus granulosus. Of these 5874, 10.6% were children aged < 15 years and 5.25% adolescents aged 15-19 years, giving annual incidences of 1.25 and 2.03/100000 inhabitants, respectively. Although the annual incidence of surgery for echinococcosis among adults (3.12/100000) was higher than the combined value for children and adolescents (1.48/100000), the data indicate that most human infections with E. granulosus occur during childhood and adolescence. In evaluating the epidemiology of echinococcosis or the effectiveness of a control programme, therefore, reductions or increases in the incidence of clinical disease among children and adolescents indicate an improving or worsening situation, respectively. The incidence of surgical treatment for echinococcosis was higher in males than females in all but the youngest subjects (< 5 years) and adults (> 19 years). It was also higher in rural populations than in urban populations, particularly among children and adolescents. Whereas cysts were found more frequently in the lungs of children and adolescents than their livers (51.8% v. 38.3% of the patients), most cysts found in the adults were hepatic (73.5% of patients) and relatively few were in the lungs (14.4% of patients). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
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8. 828 Ewing sarcoma network model through EWS-FLI1 signaling
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Stoll, G., Surdez, D., Tirode, F., Laud-Duval, K., Guillon, N., Boeva, V., Delattre, O., Barillot, E., and Zinovyev, A.
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- 2010
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9. Exact p-value calculation for heterotypic clusters of regulatory motifs and its application in computational annotation of cis-regulatory modules
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Roytberg Mikhail A, Régnier Mireille, Clément Julien, Boeva Valentina, and Makeev Vsevolod J
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Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 ,Genetics ,QH426-470 - Abstract
Abstract Background cis-Regulatory modules (CRMs) of eukaryotic genes often contain multiple binding sites for transcription factors. The phenomenon that binding sites form clusters in CRMs is exploited in many algorithms to locate CRMs in a genome. This gives rise to the problem of calculating the statistical significance of the event that multiple sites, recognized by different factors, would be found simultaneously in a text of a fixed length. The main difficulty comes from overlapping occurrences of motifs. So far, no tools have been developed allowing the computation of p-values for simultaneous occurrences of different motifs which can overlap. Results We developed and implemented an algorithm computing the p-value that s different motifs occur respectively k1, ..., ks or more times, possibly overlapping, in a random text. Motifs can be represented with a majority of popular motif models, but in all cases, without indels. Zero or first order Markov chains can be adopted as a model for the random text. The computational tool was tested on the set of cis-regulatory modules involved in D. melanogaster early development, for which there exists an annotation of binding sites for transcription factors. Our test allowed us to correctly identify transcription factors cooperatively/competitively binding to DNA. Method The algorithm that precisely computes the probability of simultaneous motif occurrences is inspired by the Aho-Corasick automaton and employs a prefix tree together with a transition function. The algorithm runs with the O(n|Σ|(m|ℋ MathType@MTEF@5@5@+=feaafiart1ev1aaatCvAUfKttLearuWrP9MDH5MBPbIqV92AaeXatLxBI9gBaebbnrfifHhDYfgasaacH8akY=wiFfYdH8Gipec8Eeeu0xXdbba9frFj0=OqFfea0dXdd9vqai=hGuQ8kuc9pgc9s8qqaq=dirpe0xb9q8qiLsFr0=vr0=vr0dc8meaabaqaciaacaGaaeqabaqabeGadaaakeaat0uy0HwzTfgDPnwy1egaryqtHrhAL1wy0L2yHvdaiqaacqWFlecsaaa@3762@| + K|σ|K) ∏i ki) time complexity, where n is the length of the text, |Σ| is the alphabet size, m is the maximal motif length, |ℋ MathType@MTEF@5@5@+=feaafiart1ev1aaatCvAUfKttLearuWrP9MDH5MBPbIqV92AaeXatLxBI9gBaebbnrfifHhDYfgasaacH8akY=wiFfYdH8Gipec8Eeeu0xXdbba9frFj0=OqFfea0dXdd9vqai=hGuQ8kuc9pgc9s8qqaq=dirpe0xb9q8qiLsFr0=vr0=vr0dc8meaabaqaciaacaGaaeqabaqabeGadaaakeaat0uy0HwzTfgDPnwy1egaryqtHrhAL1wy0L2yHvdaiqaacqWFlecsaaa@3762@| is the total number of words in motifs, K is the order of Markov model, and ki is the number of occurrences of the ith motif. Conclusion The primary objective of the program is to assess the likelihood that a given DNA segment is CRM regulated with a known set of regulatory factors. In addition, the program can also be used to select the appropriate threshold for PWM scanning. Another application is assessing similarity of different motifs. Availability Project web page, stand-alone version and documentation can be found at http://bioinform.genetika.ru/AhoPro/
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- 2007
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10. Electrokinetic supply of nutrients in soil bioremediation
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Boeva, V. and Elektorowicz, M.
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SOIL pollution ,ELECTROKINETICS ,POLLUTION - Published
- 1996
11. Epidemiological characteristics of trichinellosis in Bulgaria
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Todorov, T. and Boeva, V.
- Published
- 1998
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12. SEPARATION OF NITROGEN ISOTOPES BY ION EXCHANGE.
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Boeva, V
- Published
- 1968
13. Exploring RNA cargo in extracellular vesicles for pleural mesothelioma detection.
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Kraft A, Kirschner MB, Orlowski V, Ronner M, Bodmer C, Boeva V, Opitz I, and Meerang M
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- Humans, Female, Male, Mesothelioma, Malignant genetics, Mesothelioma, Malignant metabolism, Mesothelioma, Malignant pathology, Mesothelioma, Malignant diagnosis, Transcriptome, Gene Expression Profiling, RNA, Long Noncoding genetics, RNA, Long Noncoding metabolism, Aged, Middle Aged, Extracellular Vesicles metabolism, Extracellular Vesicles genetics, Biomarkers, Tumor genetics, Biomarkers, Tumor metabolism, Pleural Neoplasms genetics, Pleural Neoplasms metabolism, Pleural Neoplasms diagnosis, Pleural Neoplasms pathology, Mesothelioma genetics, Mesothelioma metabolism, Mesothelioma diagnosis, Mesothelioma pathology
- Abstract
Background: Pleural Mesothelioma (PM) is a highly aggressive cancer, for which effective early detection remains a challenge due to limited screening options and low sensitivity of biomarkers discovered so far. While extracellular vesicles (EVs) have emerged as promising candidates for blood-based biomarkers, their role in PM has not been studied yet. In this study, we characterized the transcriptomic profile of EVs secreted by PM primary cells and explored their potential as a biomarker source for PM detection., Methods: We collected cell culture supernatant from early-passage PM cell cultures derived from the pleural effusion of 4 PM patients. EVs were isolated from the supernatant using Qiagen exoEasy Maxi kit. RNA isolation from EVs was done using the mirVana PARIS kit. Finally, single-end RNA sequencing was done with Illumina Novaseq 6000., Results: We identified a range of RNA species expressed in EVs secreted by PM cells, including protein-coding RNA (80%), long non-coding RNA (13%), pseudogenes (4.5%), and short non-coding RNA (1.6%). We detected a subset of genes associated with the previously identified epithelioid (32 genes) and sarcomatoid molecular components (36 genes) in PM-EVs. To investigate whether these markers could serve as biomarkers for PM detection in blood, we compared the RNA content of PM-EVs with the cargo of EVs isolated from the plasma of healthy donors (publicly available data). Majority of upregulated genes in PM-EVs were protein-coding and long non-coding RNAs. Interestingly, 25 of them were the sarcomatoid and epithelioid marker genes. Finally, functional analysis revealed that the PM-EV RNA cargo was associated with Epithelial-Mesenchymal transition, glycolysis, and hypoxia., Conclusions: This is the first study to characterize the transcriptomic profile of EVs secreted by PM primary cell cultures, demonstrating their potential as biomarker source for early detection. Further investigation of the functional role of PM-EVs will provide new insights into disease biology and therapeutic avenues., Competing Interests: Declarations. Code availability: R code used to analyze the data have been provided in the Supplementary Files. Ethics approval and consent to participate: All procedures involving pleural mesothelioma primary cultures were approved by the Ethics Committee of the canton Zurich on 09/02/2021 with the approval number BASEC-Nr. 2020–02566. Consent for publication: Not applicable. Competing interests: IO has received institutional grants from Roche and Medtronic, consulting fees from Intuitive, and lecture honoraria from Roche and AstraZeneca. IO has also participated in advisory boards for AstraZeneca, MSD, BMS and Medtronic. The remaining authors declare no competing interests., (© 2025. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2025
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14. sparsesurv: a Python package for fitting sparse survival models via knowledge distillation.
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Wissel D, Janakarajan N, Schulte J, Rowson D, Yuan X, and Boeva V
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- Proportional Hazards Models, Algorithms, Software, Machine Learning
- Abstract
Motivation: Sparse survival models are statistical models that select a subset of predictor variables while modeling the time until an event occurs, which can subsequently help interpretability and transportability. The subset of important features is often obtained with regularized models, such as the Cox Proportional Hazards model with Lasso regularization, which limit the number of non-zero coefficients. However, such models can be sensitive to the choice of regularization hyperparameter., Results: In this work, we develop a software package and demonstrate how knowledge distillation, a powerful technique in machine learning that aims to transfer knowledge from a complex teacher model to a simpler student model, can be leveraged to learn sparse survival models while mitigating this challenge. For this purpose, we present sparsesurv, a Python package that contains a set of teacher-student model pairs, including the semi-parametric accelerated failure time and the extended hazards models as teachers, which currently do not have Python implementations. It also contains in-house survival function estimators, removing the need for external packages. Sparsesurv is validated against R-based Elastic Net regularized linear Cox proportional hazards models as implemented in the commonly used glmnet package. Our results reveal that knowledge distillation-based approaches achieve competitive discriminative performance relative to glmnet across the regularization path while making the choice of the regularization hyperparameter significantly easier. All of these features, combined with a sklearn-like API, make sparsesurv an easy-to-use Python package that enables survival analysis for high-dimensional datasets through fitting sparse survival models via knowledge distillation., Availability and Implementation: sparsesurv is freely available under a BSD 3 license on GitHub (https://github.com/BoevaLab/sparsesurv) and The Python Package Index (PyPi) (https://pypi.org/project/sparsesurv/)., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press.)
- Published
- 2024
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15. A Database Tool Integrating Genomic and Pharmacologic Data from Adrenocortical Carcinoma Cell Lines, PDX, and Patient Samples.
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Arakawa Y, Elloumi F, Varma S, Khandagale P, Jo U, Kumar S, Roper N, Reinhold WC, Robey RW, Takebe N, Gottesman MM, Thomas CJ, Boeva V, Berruti A, Abate A, Tamburello M, Sigala S, Hantel C, Weigand I, Wierman ME, Kiseljak-Vassiliades K, Del Rivero J, and Pommier Y
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- Humans, Animals, Cell Line, Tumor, Mice, Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays, Antineoplastic Agents pharmacology, Antineoplastic Agents therapeutic use, Databases, Genetic, Precision Medicine methods, Adrenocortical Carcinoma genetics, Adrenocortical Carcinoma drug therapy, Adrenocortical Carcinoma pathology, Adrenal Cortex Neoplasms genetics, Adrenal Cortex Neoplasms drug therapy, Adrenal Cortex Neoplasms pathology, Genomics methods
- Abstract
Adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC) is a rare and highly heterogeneous disease with a notably poor prognosis due to significant challenges in diagnosis and treatment. Emphasizing on the importance of precision medicine, there is an increasing need for comprehensive genomic resources alongside well-developed experimental models to devise personalized therapeutic strategies. We present ACC_CellMinerCDB, a substantive genomic and drug sensitivity database (available at https://discover.nci.nih.gov/acc_cellminercdb) comprising ACC cell lines, patient-derived xenografts, surgical samples, and responses to more than 2,400 drugs examined by the NCI and National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences. This database exposes shared genomic pathways among ACC cell lines and surgical samples, thus authenticating the cell lines as research models. It also allows exploration of pertinent treatment markers such as MDR-1, SOAT1, MGMT, MMR, and SLFN11 and introduces the potential to repurpose agents like temozolomide for ACC therapy. ACC_CellMinerCDB provides the foundation for exploring larger preclinical ACC models., Significance: ACC_CellMinerCDB, a comprehensive database of cell lines, patient-derived xenografts, surgical samples, and drug responses, reveals shared genomic pathways and treatment-relevant markers in ACC. This resource offers insights into potential therapeutic targets and the opportunity to repurpose existing drugs for ACC therapy., (©2024 The Authors; Published by the American Association for Cancer Research.)
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- 2024
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16. Cell states and neighborhoods in distinct clinical stages of primary and metastatic esophageal adenocarcinoma.
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Yates J, Mathey-Andrews C, Park J, Garza A, Gagné A, Hoffman S, Bi K, Titchen B, Hennessey C, Remland J, Shannon E, Camp S, Balamurali S, Cavale SK, Li Z, Raghawan AK, Kraft A, Boland G, Aguirre AJ, Sethi NS, Boeva V, and Van Allen E
- Abstract
Esophageal adenocarcinoma (EAC) is a highly lethal cancer of the upper gastrointestinal tract with rising incidence in western populations. To decipher EAC disease progression and therapeutic response, we performed multiomic analyses of a cohort of primary and metastatic EAC tumors, incorporating single-nuclei transcriptomic and chromatin accessibility sequencing, along with spatial profiling. We identified tumor microenvironmental features previously described to associate with therapy response. We identified five malignant cell programs, including undifferentiated, intermediate, differentiated, epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition, and cycling programs, which were associated with differential epigenetic plasticity and clinical outcomes, and for which we inferred candidate transcription factor regulons. Furthermore, we revealed diverse spatial localizations of malignant cells expressing their associated transcriptional programs and predicted their significant interactions with microenvironmental cell types. We validated our findings in three external single-cell RNA-seq and three bulk RNA-seq studies. Altogether, our findings advance the understanding of EAC heterogeneity, disease progression, and therapeutic response., Competing Interests: E.M.V.: Advisory/Consulting: Enara Bio, Manifold Bio, Monte Rosa, Novartis Institute for Biomedical Research, Serinus Bio, TracerDx Research support: Novartis, BMS, Sanofi, NextPoint Equity: Tango Therapeutics, Genome Medical, Genomic Life, Enara Bio, Manifold Bio, Microsoft, Monte Rosa, Riva Therapeutics, Serinus Bio, Syapse, TracerDx Travel reimbursement: None Patents: Institutional patents filed on chromatin mutations and immunotherapy response, and methods for clinical interpretation; intermittent legal consulting on patents for Foaley & Hoag Editorial Boards: Science Advances A.J.A. has consulted for Anji Pharmaceuticals, Affini-T Therapeutics, Arrakis Therapeutics, AstraZeneca, Boehringer Ingelheim, Kestrel Therapeutics, Merck & Co., Inc., Mirati Therapeutics, Nimbus Therapeutics, Oncorus, Inc., Plexium, Quanta Therapeutics, Revolution Medicines, Reactive Biosciences, Riva Therapeutics, Servier Pharmaceuticals, Syros Pharmaceuticals, T-knife Therapeutics, Third Rock Ventures, and Ventus Therapeutics. A.J.A. holds equity in Riva Therapeutics and Kestrel Therapeutics. A.J.A. has research funding from Amgen, AstraZeneca, Boehringer Ingelheim, Bristol Myers Squibb, Deerfield, Inc., Eli Lilly, Mirati Therapeutics, Nimbus Therapeutics, Novartis, Novo Ventures, Revolution Medicines, and Syros Pharmaceuticals.
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- 2024
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17. DNA-methylation variability in normal mucosa: a field cancerization marker in patients with adenomatous polyps.
- Author
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Yates J, Schaufelberger H, Steinacher R, Schär P, Truninger K, and Boeva V
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- Humans, Female, Male, Middle Aged, Aged, Biomarkers, Tumor genetics, Intestinal Mucosa pathology, Intestinal Mucosa metabolism, Colorectal Neoplasms genetics, Colorectal Neoplasms pathology, Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic, Cell Transformation, Neoplastic genetics, CpG Islands genetics, Epigenesis, Genetic, DNA Methylation, Adenomatous Polyps genetics, Adenomatous Polyps pathology
- Abstract
Background: The phenomenon of field cancerization reflects the transition of normal cells into those predisposed to cancer. Assessing the scope and intensity of this process in the colon may support risk prediction and colorectal cancer prevention., Methods: The Swiss Epigenetic Colorectal Cancer Study (SWEPIC) study, encompassing 1111 participants for DNA methylation analysis and a subset of 84 for RNA sequencing, was employed to detect field cancerization in individuals with adenomatous polyps (AP). Methylation variations were evaluated for their discriminative capability, including in external cohorts, genomic localization, clinical correlations, and associated RNA expression patterns., Results: Normal cecal tissue of individuals harboring an AP in the proximal colon manifested dysregulated DNA methylation compared to tissue from healthy individuals at 558 unique loci. Leveraging these adenoma-related differentially variable and methylated CpGs (aDVMCs), our classifier discerned between healthy and AP-adjacent tissues across SWEPIC datasets (cross-validated area under the receiver operating characteristic curve [ROC AUC] = 0.63-0.81), including within age-stratified cohorts. This discriminative capacity was validated in 3 external sets, differentiating healthy from cancer-adjacent tissue (ROC AUC = 0.82-0.88). Notably, aDVMC dysregulation correlated with polyp multiplicity. More than 50% of aDVMCs were significantly associated with age. These aDVMCs were enriched in active regions of the genome (P < .001), and associated genes exhibited altered expression in AP-adjacent tissues., Conclusions: Our findings underscore the early onset of field cancerization in the right colon during the neoplastic transformation process. A more extensive validation of aDVMC dysregulation as a stratification tool could pave the way for enhanced surveillance approaches, especially given its linkage to adenoma emergence., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press.)
- Published
- 2024
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18. DNA hypermethylation driven by DNMT1 and DNMT3A favors tumor immune escape contributing to the aggressiveness of adrenocortical carcinoma.
- Author
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Kerdivel G, Amrouche F, Calmejane MA, Carallis F, Hamroune J, Hantel C, Bertherat J, Assié G, and Boeva V
- Subjects
- Humans, DNA Methylation, Tumor Escape genetics, Prognosis, DNA, CpG Islands, Phenotype, Adrenocortical Carcinoma genetics, Adrenal Cortex Neoplasms genetics, Colorectal Neoplasms genetics
- Abstract
Background: Adrenocortical carcinoma is rare and aggressive endocrine cancer of the adrenal gland. Within adrenocortical carcinoma, a recently described subtype characterized by a CpG island methylator phenotype (CIMP) has been associated with an especially poor prognosis. However, the drivers of CIMP remain unknown. Furthermore, the functional relation between CIMP and poor clinical outcomes of patients with adrenocortical carcinoma stays elusive., Results: Here, we show that CIMP in adrenocortical carcinoma is linked to the increased expression of DNA methyltransferases DNMT1 and DNMT3A driven by a gain of gene copy number and cell hyperproliferation. Importantly, we demonstrate that CIMP contributes to tumor aggressiveness by favoring tumor immune escape. This effect could be at least partially reversed by treatment with the demethylating agent 5-azacytidine., Conclusions: In sum, our findings suggest that co-treatment with demethylating agents might enhance the efficacy of immunotherapy and could represent a novel therapeutic approach for patients with high CIMP adrenocortical carcinoma., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2023
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19. scROSHI: robust supervised hierarchical identification of single cells.
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Prummer M, Bertolini A, Bosshard L, Barkmann F, Yates J, Boeva V, Stekhoven D, and Singer F
- Abstract
Identifying cell types based on expression profiles is a pillar of single cell analysis. Existing machine-learning methods identify predictive features from annotated training data, which are often not available in early-stage studies. This can lead to overfitting and inferior performance when applied to new data. To address these challenges we present scROSHI, which utilizes previously obtained cell type-specific gene lists and does not require training or the existence of annotated data. By respecting the hierarchical nature of cell type relationships and assigning cells consecutively to more specialized identities, excellent prediction performance is achieved. In a benchmark based on publicly available PBMC data sets, scROSHI outperforms competing methods when training data are limited or the diversity between experiments is large., (© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of NAR Genomics and Bioinformatics.)
- Published
- 2023
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20. Reversible transitions between noradrenergic and mesenchymal tumor identities define cell plasticity in neuroblastoma.
- Author
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Thirant C, Peltier A, Durand S, Kramdi A, Louis-Brennetot C, Pierre-Eugène C, Gautier M, Costa A, Grelier A, Zaïdi S, Gruel N, Jimenez I, Lapouble E, Pierron G, Sitbon D, Brisse HJ, Gauthier A, Fréneaux P, Grossetête S, Baudrin LG, Raynal V, Baulande S, Bellini A, Bhalshankar J, Carcaboso AM, Geoerger B, Rohrer H, Surdez D, Boeva V, Schleiermacher G, Delattre O, and Janoueix-Lerosey I
- Subjects
- Humans, Cell Line, Tumor, Tumor Microenvironment genetics, Cell Plasticity, Neuroblastoma metabolism
- Abstract
Noradrenergic and mesenchymal identities have been characterized in neuroblastoma cell lines according to their epigenetic landscapes and core regulatory circuitries. However, their relationship and relative contribution in patient tumors remain poorly defined. We now document spontaneous and reversible plasticity between the two identities, associated with epigenetic reprogramming, in several neuroblastoma models. Interestingly, xenografts with cells from each identity eventually harbor a noradrenergic phenotype suggesting that the microenvironment provides a powerful pressure towards this phenotype. Accordingly, such a noradrenergic cell identity is systematically observed in single-cell RNA-seq of 18 tumor biopsies and 15 PDX models. Yet, a subpopulation of these noradrenergic tumor cells presents with mesenchymal features that are shared with plasticity models, indicating that the plasticity described in these models has relevance in neuroblastoma patients. This work therefore emphasizes that intrinsic plasticity properties of neuroblastoma cells are dependent upon external cues of the environment to drive cell identity., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2023
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21. Systematic comparison of multi-omics survival models reveals a widespread lack of noise resistance.
- Author
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Wissel D, Rowson D, and Boeva V
- Subjects
- Calibration, Multiomics
- Abstract
As observed in several previous studies, integrating more molecular modalities in multi-omics cancer survival models may not always improve model accuracy. In this study, we compared eight deep learning and four statistical integration techniques for survival prediction on 17 multi-omics datasets, examining model performance in terms of overall accuracy and noise resistance. We found that one deep learning method, mean late fusion, and two statistical methods, PriorityLasso and BlockForest , performed best in terms of both noise resistance and overall discriminative and calibration performance. Nevertheless, all methods struggled to adequately handle noise when too many modalities were added. In summary, we confirmed that current multi-omics survival methods are not sufficiently noise resistant. We recommend relying on only modalities for which there is known predictive value for a particular cancer type until models that have stronger noise-resistance properties are developed., Competing Interests: The authors declare no competing interests., (© 2023 The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2023
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22. HDAC1 and PRC2 mediate combinatorial control in SPI1/PU.1-dependent gene repression in murine erythroleukaemia.
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Gregoricchio S, Polit L, Esposito M, Berthelet J, Delestré L, Evanno E, Diop M, Gallais I, Aleth H, Poplineau M, Zwart W, Rosenbauer F, Rodrigues-Lima F, Duprez E, Boeva V, and Guillouf C
- Subjects
- Acetylation, Animals, Chromatin genetics, Mice, Promoter Regions, Genetic, Histone Deacetylase 1 genetics, Leukemia, Erythroblastic, Acute genetics, Polycomb Repressive Complex 2 genetics, Polycomb Repressive Complex 2 metabolism, Proto-Oncogene Proteins genetics, Trans-Activators genetics
- Abstract
Although originally described as transcriptional activator, SPI1/PU.1, a major player in haematopoiesis whose alterations are associated with haematological malignancies, has the ability to repress transcription. Here, we investigated the mechanisms underlying gene repression in the erythroid lineage, in which SPI1 exerts an oncogenic function by blocking differentiation. We show that SPI1 represses genes by binding active enhancers that are located in intergenic or gene body regions. HDAC1 acts as a cooperative mediator of SPI1-induced transcriptional repression by deacetylating SPI1-bound enhancers in a subset of genes, including those involved in erythroid differentiation. Enhancer deacetylation impacts on promoter acetylation, chromatin accessibility and RNA pol II occupancy. In addition to the activities of HDAC1, polycomb repressive complex 2 (PRC2) reinforces gene repression by depositing H3K27me3 at promoter sequences when SPI1 is located at enhancer sequences. Moreover, our study identified a synergistic relationship between PRC2 and HDAC1 complexes in mediating the transcriptional repression activity of SPI1, ultimately inducing synergistic adverse effects on leukaemic cell survival. Our results highlight the importance of the mechanism underlying transcriptional repression in leukemic cells, involving complex functional connections between SPI1 and the epigenetic regulators PRC2 and HDAC1., (© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Nucleic Acids Research.)
- Published
- 2022
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23. Context-Aware Edge-Based AI Models for Wireless Sensor Networks-An Overview.
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Al-Saedi AA, Boeva V, Casalicchio E, and Exner P
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- Artificial Intelligence, Humans, Computer Communication Networks, Wireless Technology
- Abstract
Recent advances in sensor technology are expected to lead to a greater use of wireless sensor networks (WSNs) in industry, logistics, healthcare, etc. On the other hand, advances in artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning (ML), and deep learning (DL) are becoming dominant solutions for processing large amounts of data from edge-synthesized heterogeneous sensors and drawing accurate conclusions with better understanding of the situation. Integration of the two areas WSN and AI has resulted in more accurate measurements, context-aware analysis and prediction useful for smart sensing applications. In this paper, a comprehensive overview of the latest developments in context-aware intelligent systems using sensor technology is provided. In addition, it also discusses the areas in which they are used, related challenges, motivations for adopting AI solutions, focusing on edge computing, i.e., sensor and AI techniques, along with analysis of existing research gaps. Another contribution of this study is the use of a semantic-aware approach to extract survey-relevant subjects. The latter specifically identifies eleven main research topics supported by the articles included in the work. These are analyzed from various angles to answer five main research questions. Finally, potential future research directions are also discussed.
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- 2022
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24. Deciphering the etiology and role in oncogenic transformation of the CpG island methylator phenotype: a pan-cancer analysis.
- Author
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Yates J and Boeva V
- Subjects
- CpG Islands, DNA Methylation, Humans, Microsatellite Instability, Mutation, Phenotype, Tumor Microenvironment, Colorectal Neoplasms genetics
- Abstract
Numerous cancer types have shown to present hypermethylation of CpG islands, also known as a CpG island methylator phenotype (CIMP), often associated with survival variation. Despite extensive research on CIMP, the etiology of this variability remains elusive, possibly due to lack of consistency in defining CIMP. In this work, we utilize a pan-cancer approach to further explore CIMP, focusing on 26 cancer types profiled in the Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA). We defined CIMP systematically and agnostically, discarding any effects associated with age, gender or tumor purity. We then clustered samples based on their most variable DNA methylation values and analyzed resulting patient groups. Our results confirmed the existence of CIMP in 19 cancers, including gliomas and colorectal cancer. We further showed that CIMP was associated with survival differences in eight cancer types and, in five, represented a prognostic biomarker independent of clinical factors. By analyzing genetic and transcriptomic data, we further uncovered potential drivers of CIMP and classified them in four categories: mutations in genes directly involved in DNA demethylation; mutations in histone methyltransferases; mutations in genes not involved in methylation turnover, such as KRAS and BRAF; and microsatellite instability. Among the 19 CIMP-positive cancers, very few shared potential driver events, and those drivers were only IDH1 and SETD2 mutations. Finally, we found that CIMP was strongly correlated with tumor microenvironment characteristics, such as lymphocyte infiltration. Overall, our results indicate that CIMP does not exhibit a pan-cancer manifestation; rather, general dysregulation of CpG DNA methylation is caused by heterogeneous mechanisms., (© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press.)
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- 2022
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25. [Cytokine profile of chronic rhinosinusitis without polyps].
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Kokorina OV, Boeva VI, Apalko SV, Vologzhanin DA, Dvoryanchikov VV, and Shcherbak SG
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- Cytokines, Humans, Interleukin 1 Receptor Antagonist Protein, Interleukin-10, Interleukin-12 Subunit p40, Interleukin-13, Interleukin-15, Interleukin-17, Interleukin-2, Interleukin-3, Interleukin-4, Interleukin-5, Interleukin-6, Interleukin-7, Interleukin-8, Interleukin-9, Granulocyte-Macrophage Colony-Stimulating Factor, Nasal Polyps complications, Nasal Polyps diagnosis, Nasal Polyps surgery
- Abstract
Introduction: Chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS) is the most common immunological ENT disease, which has several phenotypes. The heterogeneity of CRS is due to the peculiarities of their pathogenetic mechanisms - the system of cytokines plays the crucial significance. They are biologically active substances and present regulatory peptides that demonstrate an immunomodulatory and regulatory effects not only in the local level but the system level as well., Objective: To determine specific features of the cytokine profile in blood serum among patients with CRS without polyps (CRSwP)., Material and Methods: Serum cytokines (IL-1α, IL-1RA, IL-1β, IL-2, IL-3, IL-4, IL-5, IL-6, IL-7, IL-8, IL-9, IL-10, IL-12p40, IL-12p70, IL-13, IL-15, IL-17, IFN-α2, IFN-γ, GM-CSF) were defined in 75 patients: 32 patients with CRSwP were operated (main group) - 17 with cyst of maxillary sinus, 15 with edema of the maxillary sinuses. The control group - 43 patients were under surgery for a deviated nasal septum (septoplasty). The groups were comparable to gender and age., Results: The cytokines detection rate was different in all groups. IL-4 (detection rate 93.3-95.3%) and IFN-γ (79.1-86.7%) were measured nearly the all groups. IL-8 (73.3-76.5%) and IL-17 (76.5-80.0%) were often measured in the group with CRSwP; in contrast to the control group - these indicators were lower: 60.5% and 65.5%, respectively. IL-1α (82.4%) and IFN-α2 (76.5%) were often detected in CRS with cystic formations. IL-1β, IL-5, IL-7, IL-9, IL-15 were measured in all groups in less than 30% of patients; IL-2 and IL-6 - in the group of CRS with cystic formation; IL-10, IL-12p40, IL-13 in the group with edema of maxillary sinuses. In a quantitative comparison of the concentration of cytokines. Significant differences in concentration of cytokines between the groups were not obtained ( p> 0.05) in terms of quantity., Conclusion: CRSwP with cystic formation is characterized by the development of T2 type immune response and a higher inflammation-related tissue damage.
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- 2022
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26. Exploring Pathway-Based Group Lasso for Cancer Survival Analysis: A Special Case of Multi-Task Learning.
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Malenová G, Rowson D, and Boeva V
- Abstract
Motivation: The Cox proportional hazard models are widely used in the study of cancer survival. However, these models often meet challenges such as the large number of features and small sample sizes of cancer data sets. While this issue can be partially solved by applying regularization techniques such as lasso, the models still suffer from unsatisfactory predictive power and low stability. Methods: Here, we investigated two methods to improve survival models. Firstly, we leveraged the biological knowledge that groups of genes act together in pathways and regularized both at the group and gene level using latent group lasso penalty term. Secondly, we designed and applied a multi-task learning penalty that allowed us leveraging the relationship between survival models for different cancers. Results: We observed modest improvements over the simple lasso model with the inclusion of latent group lasso penalty for six of the 16 cancer types tested. The addition of a multi-task penalty, which penalized coefficients in pairs of cancers from diverging too greatly, significantly improved accuracy for a single cancer, lung squamous cell carcinoma, while having minimal effect on other cancer types. Conclusion: While the use of pathway information and multi-tasking shows some promise, these methods do not provide a substantial improvement when compared with standard methods., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2021 Malenová, Rowson and Boeva.)
- Published
- 2021
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27. Multi-View Data Analysis Techniques for Monitoring Smart Building Systems.
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Devagiri VM, Boeva V, Abghari S, Basiri F, and Lavesson N
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- Algorithms, Cluster Analysis, Monitoring, Physiologic, Data Analysis, Electrocardiography
- Abstract
In smart buildings, many different systems work in coordination to accomplish their tasks. In this process, the sensors associated with these systems collect large amounts of data generated in a streaming fashion, which is prone to concept drift. Such data are heterogeneous due to the wide range of sensors collecting information about different characteristics of the monitored systems. All these make the monitoring task very challenging. Traditional clustering algorithms are not well equipped to address the mentioned challenges. In this work, we study the use of MV Multi-Instance Clustering algorithm for multi-view analysis and mining of smart building systems' sensor data. It is demonstrated how this algorithm can be used to perform contextual as well as integrated analysis of the systems. Various scenarios in which the algorithm can be used to analyze the data generated by the systems of a smart building are examined and discussed in this study. In addition, it is also shown how the extracted knowledge can be visualized to detect trends in the systems' behavior and how it can aid domain experts in the systems' maintenance. In the experiments conducted, the proposed approach was able to successfully detect the deviating behaviors known to have previously occurred and was also able to identify some new deviations during the monitored period. Based on the results obtained from the experiments, it can be concluded that the proposed algorithm has the ability to be used for monitoring, analysis, and detecting deviating behaviors of the systems in a smart building domain.
- Published
- 2021
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28. CHIPIN: ChIP-seq inter-sample normalization based on signal invariance across transcriptionally constant genes.
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Polit L, Kerdivel G, Gregoricchio S, Esposito M, Guillouf C, and Boeva V
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- Chromatin Immunoprecipitation, Protein Binding, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Chromatin, Chromatin Immunoprecipitation Sequencing
- Abstract
Background: Multiple studies rely on ChIP-seq experiments to assess the effect of gene modulation and drug treatments on protein binding and chromatin structure. However, most methods commonly used for the normalization of ChIP-seq binding intensity signals across conditions, e.g., the normalization to the same number of reads, either assume a constant signal-to-noise ratio across conditions or base the estimates of correction factors on genomic regions with intrinsically different signals between conditions. Inaccurate normalization of ChIP-seq signal may, in turn, lead to erroneous biological conclusions., Results: We developed a new R package, CHIPIN, that allows normalizing ChIP-seq signals across different conditions/samples when spike-in information is not available, but gene expression data are at hand. Our normalization technique is based on the assumption that, on average, no differences in ChIP-seq signals should be observed in the regulatory regions of genes whose expression levels are constant across samples/conditions. In addition to normalizing ChIP-seq signals, CHIPIN provides as output a number of graphs and calculates statistics allowing the user to assess the efficiency of the normalization and qualify the specificity of the antibody used. In addition to ChIP-seq, CHIPIN can be used without restriction on open chromatin ATAC-seq or DNase hypersensitivity data. We validated the CHIPIN method on several ChIP-seq data sets and documented its superior performance in comparison to several commonly used normalization techniques., Conclusions: The CHIPIN method provides a new way for ChIP-seq signal normalization across conditions when spike-in experiments are not available. The method is implemented in a user-friendly R package available on GitHub: https://github.com/BoevaLab/CHIPIN., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
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- 2021
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29. Targeted Therapy of TERT -Rearranged Neuroblastoma with BET Bromodomain Inhibitor and Proteasome Inhibitor Combination Therapy.
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Chen J, Nelson C, Wong M, Tee AE, Liu PY, La T, Fletcher JI, Kamili A, Mayoh C, Bartenhagen C, Trahair TN, Xu N, Jayatilleke N, Wong M, Peng H, Atmadibrata B, Cheung BB, Lan Q, Bryan TM, Mestdagh P, Vandesompele J, Combaret V, Boeva V, Wang JY, Janoueix-Lerosey I, Cowley MJ, MacKenzie KL, Dolnikov A, Li J, Polly P, Marshall GM, Reddel RR, Norris MD, Haber M, Fischer M, Zhang XD, Pickett HA, and Liu T
- Subjects
- Animals, Apoptosis, Cell Proliferation, Drug Therapy, Combination, Female, Humans, Mice, Mice, Inbred BALB C, Mice, Nude, Neuroblastoma metabolism, Neuroblastoma pathology, Proteasome Inhibitors pharmacology, Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays, Acetanilides pharmacology, Cell Cycle Proteins antagonists & inhibitors, Gene Rearrangement, Heterocyclic Compounds, 3-Ring pharmacology, Molecular Targeted Therapy methods, Neuroblastoma drug therapy, Oligopeptides pharmacology, Telomerase genetics, Transcription Factors antagonists & inhibitors
- Abstract
Purpose: TERT gene rearrangement with transcriptional superenhancers leads to TERT overexpression and neuroblastoma. No targeted therapy is available for clinical trials in patients with TERT -rearranged neuroblastoma., Experimental Design: Anticancer agents exerting the best synergistic anticancer effects with BET bromodomain inhibitors were identified by screening an FDA-approved oncology drug library. The synergistic effects of the BET bromodomain inhibitor OTX015 and the proteasome inhibitor carfilzomib were examined by immunoblot and flow cytometry analysis. The anticancer efficacy of OTX015 and carfilzomib combination therapy was investigated in mice xenografted with TERT -rearranged neuroblastoma cell lines or patient-derived xenograft (PDX) tumor cells, and the role of TERT reduction in the anticancer efficacy was examined through rescue experiments in mice., Results: The BET bromodomain protein BRD4 promoted TERT -rearranged neuroblastoma cell proliferation through upregulating TERT expression. Screening of an approved oncology drug library identified the proteasome inhibitor carfilzomib as the agent exerting the best synergistic anticancer effects with BET bromodomain inhibitors including OTX015. OTX015 and carfilzomib synergistically reduced TERT protein expression, induced endoplasmic reticulum stress, and induced TERT -rearranged neuroblastoma cell apoptosis which was blocked by TERT overexpression and endoplasmic reticulum stress antagonists. In mice xenografted with TERT -rearranged neuroblastoma cell lines or PDX tumor cells, OTX015 and carfilzomib synergistically blocked TERT expression, induced tumor cell apoptosis, suppressed tumor progression, and improved mouse survival, which was largely reversed by forced TERT overexpression., Conclusions: OTX015 and carfilzomib combination therapy is likely to be translated into the first clinical trial of a targeted therapy in patients with TERT -rearranged neuroblastoma., (©2020 American Association for Cancer Research.)
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- 2021
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30. Chromatin Immunoprecipitation Followed by Next-Generation Sequencing (ChIP-Seq) Analysis in Ewing Sarcoma.
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Kerdivel G and Boeva V
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- Binding Sites, Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic, Histones metabolism, Humans, Nucleotide Motifs, Protein Binding, Quality Control, Sarcoma, Ewing metabolism, Software, Transcription Factors metabolism, Bone Neoplasms genetics, Chromatin Immunoprecipitation Sequencing methods, Chromatin Immunoprecipitation Sequencing standards, Computational Biology methods, Computational Biology standards, Sarcoma, Ewing genetics
- Abstract
ChIP-seq is the method of choice for profiling protein-DNA interactions, and notably for characterizing the landscape of transcription factor binding and histone modifications. This technique has been widely used to study numerous aspects of tumor biology and led to the development of several promising cancer therapies. In Ewing sarcoma research, ChIP-seq provided important insights into the mechanism of action of the major oncogenic fusion protein EWSR1-FLI1 and related epigenetic and transcriptional changes. In this chapter, we provide a detailed pipeline to analyze ChIP-seq experiments from the preprocessing of raw data to tertiary analysis of detected binding sites. We also advise on best practice to prepare tumor samples prior to sequencing.
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- 2021
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31. Transcriptional Programs Define Intratumoral Heterogeneity of Ewing Sarcoma at Single-Cell Resolution.
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Aynaud MM, Mirabeau O, Gruel N, Grossetête S, Boeva V, Durand S, Surdez D, Saulnier O, Zaïdi S, Gribkova S, Fouché A, Kairov U, Raynal V, Tirode F, Grünewald TGP, Bohec M, Baulande S, Janoueix-Lerosey I, Vert JP, Barillot E, Delattre O, and Zinovyev A
- Subjects
- Cell Line, Tumor, Humans, Signal Transduction, Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic genetics, RNA-Binding Protein EWS metabolism, Sarcoma, Ewing genetics, Transcription, Genetic genetics
- Abstract
EWSR1-FLI1, the chimeric oncogene specific for Ewing sarcoma (EwS), induces a cascade of signaling events leading to cell transformation. However, it remains elusive how genetically homogeneous EwS cells can drive the heterogeneity of transcriptional programs. Here, we combine independent component analysis of single-cell RNA sequencing data from diverse cell types and model systems with time-resolved mapping of EWSR1-FLI1 binding sites and of open chromatin regions to characterize dynamic cellular processes associated with EWSR1-FLI1 activity. We thus define an exquisitely specific and direct enhancer-driven EWSR1-FLI1 program. In EwS tumors, cell proliferation and strong oxidative phosphorylation metabolism are associated with a well-defined range of EWSR1-FLI1 activity. In contrast, a subpopulation of cells from below and above the intermediary EWSR1-FLI1 activity is characterized by increased hypoxia. Overall, our study reveals sources of intratumoral heterogeneity within EwS tumors., Competing Interests: Declaration of Interests The authors declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2020 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
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32. CHROMATIX: computing the functional landscape of many-body chromatin interactions in transcriptionally active loci from deconvolved single cells.
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Perez-Rathke A, Sun Q, Wang B, Boeva V, Shao Z, and Liang J
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- Computational Biology methods, Enhancer Elements, Genetic, Genome, Machine Learning, Promoter Regions, Genetic, Single-Cell Analysis, Chromatin chemistry, Models, Genetic, Transcription, Genetic
- Abstract
Chromatin interactions are important for gene regulation and cellular specialization. Emerging evidence suggests many-body spatial interactions play important roles in condensing super-enhancer regions into a cohesive transcriptional apparatus. Chromosome conformation studies using Hi-C are limited to pairwise, population-averaged interactions; therefore unsuitable for direct assessment of many-body interactions. We describe a computational model, CHROMATIX, which reconstructs ensembles of single-cell chromatin structures by deconvolving Hi-C data and identifies significant many-body interactions. For a diverse set of highly active transcriptional loci with at least 2 super-enhancers, we detail the many-body functional landscape and show DNase accessibility, POLR2A binding, and decreased H3K27me3 are predictive of interaction-enriched regions.
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- 2020
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33. Steroidogenic differentiation and PKA signaling are programmed by histone methyltransferase EZH2 in the adrenal cortex.
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Mathieu M, Drelon C, Rodriguez S, Tabbal H, Septier A, Damon-Soubeyrand C, Dumontet T, Berthon A, Sahut-Barnola I, Djari C, Batisse-Lignier M, Pointud JC, Richard D, Kerdivel G, Calméjane MA, Boeva V, Tauveron I, Lefrançois-Martinez AM, Martinez A, and Val P
- Subjects
- Adrenal Cortex metabolism, Animals, Cell Differentiation, Cyclic AMP-Dependent Protein Kinase RIbeta Subunit genetics, Cyclic Nucleotide Phosphodiesterases, Type 1 genetics, Cyclic Nucleotide Phosphodiesterases, Type 1 metabolism, Cyclic Nucleotide Phosphodiesterases, Type 3 genetics, Cyclic Nucleotide Phosphodiesterases, Type 3 metabolism, Cyclic Nucleotide Phosphodiesterases, Type 7 genetics, Cyclic Nucleotide Phosphodiesterases, Type 7 metabolism, Enhancer of Zeste Homolog 2 Protein genetics, Female, Male, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Mice, Knockout, Steroids metabolism, Zona Fasciculata cytology, Zona Fasciculata enzymology, Zona Fasciculata metabolism, Zona Glomerulosa cytology, Zona Glomerulosa enzymology, Zona Glomerulosa metabolism, Adrenal Cortex enzymology, Cyclic AMP-Dependent Protein Kinase RIbeta Subunit metabolism, Enhancer of Zeste Homolog 2 Protein metabolism, Signal Transduction
- Abstract
Adrenal cortex steroids are essential for body homeostasis, and adrenal insufficiency is a life-threatening condition. Adrenal endocrine activity is maintained through recruitment of subcapsular progenitor cells that follow a unidirectional differentiation path from zona glomerulosa to zona fasciculata (zF). Here, we show that this unidirectionality is ensured by the histone methyltransferase EZH2. Indeed, we demonstrate that EZH2 maintains adrenal steroidogenic cell differentiation by preventing expression of GATA4 and WT1 that cause abnormal dedifferentiation to a progenitor-like state in Ezh2 KO adrenals. EZH2 further ensures normal cortical differentiation by programming cells for optimal response to adrenocorticotrophic hormone (ACTH)/PKA signaling. This is achieved by repression of phosphodiesterases PDE1B, 3A, and 7A and of PRKAR1B. Consequently, EZH2 ablation results in blunted zF differentiation and primary glucocorticoid insufficiency. These data demonstrate an all-encompassing role for EZH2 in programming steroidogenic cells for optimal response to differentiation signals and in maintaining their differentiated state., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest.
- Published
- 2018
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34. TBX2 is a neuroblastoma core regulatory circuitry component enhancing MYCN/FOXM1 reactivation of DREAM targets.
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Decaesteker B, Denecker G, Van Neste C, Dolman EM, Van Loocke W, Gartlgruber M, Nunes C, De Vloed F, Depuydt P, Verboom K, Rombaut D, Loontiens S, De Wyn J, Kholosy WM, Koopmans B, Essing AHW, Herrmann C, Dreidax D, Durinck K, Deforce D, Van Nieuwerburgh F, Henssen A, Versteeg R, Boeva V, Schleiermacher G, van Nes J, Mestdagh P, Vanhauwaert S, Schulte JH, Westermann F, Molenaar JJ, De Preter K, and Speleman F
- Subjects
- Antineoplastic Agents pharmacology, Azepines pharmacology, Brain Neoplasms drug therapy, Brain Neoplasms metabolism, Brain Neoplasms pathology, Cell Line, Tumor, Cell Survival drug effects, Cyclin-Dependent Kinases genetics, Cyclin-Dependent Kinases metabolism, DNA Copy Number Variations, Epigenesis, Genetic, Forkhead Box Protein M1 metabolism, HEK293 Cells, Histones genetics, Histones metabolism, Humans, Kv Channel-Interacting Proteins metabolism, N-Myc Proto-Oncogene Protein metabolism, Neuroblastoma drug therapy, Neuroblastoma metabolism, Neuroblastoma pathology, Organoids drug effects, Organoids metabolism, Organoids pathology, Panobinostat pharmacology, Phenylenediamines pharmacology, Pyrimidines pharmacology, Repressor Proteins metabolism, Signal Transduction, T-Box Domain Proteins metabolism, Triazoles pharmacology, Tumor Suppressor Protein p53 genetics, Tumor Suppressor Protein p53 metabolism, Cyclin-Dependent Kinase-Activating Kinase, Brain Neoplasms genetics, Forkhead Box Protein M1 genetics, Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic, Kv Channel-Interacting Proteins genetics, N-Myc Proto-Oncogene Protein genetics, Neuroblastoma genetics, Repressor Proteins genetics, T-Box Domain Proteins genetics
- Abstract
Chromosome 17q gains are almost invariably present in high-risk neuroblastoma cases. Here, we perform an integrative epigenomics search for dosage-sensitive transcription factors on 17q marked by H3K27ac defined super-enhancers and identify TBX2 as top candidate gene. We show that TBX2 is a constituent of the recently established core regulatory circuitry in neuroblastoma with features of a cell identity transcription factor, driving proliferation through activation of p21-DREAM repressed FOXM1 target genes. Combined MYCN/TBX2 knockdown enforces cell growth arrest suggesting that TBX2 enhances MYCN sustained activation of FOXM1 targets. Targeting transcriptional addiction by combined CDK7 and BET bromodomain inhibition shows synergistic effects on cell viability with strong repressive effects on CRC gene expression and p53 pathway response as well as several genes implicated in transcriptional regulation. In conclusion, we provide insight into the role of the TBX2 CRC gene in transcriptional dependency of neuroblastoma cells warranting clinical trials using BET and CDK7 inhibitors.
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- 2018
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35. Meta-mining of copy number profiles of high-risk neuroblastoma tumors.
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Depuydt P, Koster J, Boeva V, Hocking TD, Speleman F, Schleiermacher G, and De Preter K
- Subjects
- Biomarkers, Tumor genetics, Child, Child, Preschool, DNA, Neoplasm genetics, Humans, DNA Copy Number Variations, Nervous System Neoplasms genetics, Neuroblastoma genetics
- Abstract
Neuroblastoma, a pediatric tumor of the sympathetic nervous system, is predominantly driven by copy number aberrations, which predict survival outcome in global neuroblastoma cohorts and in low-risk cases. For high-risk patients there is still a need for better prognostic biomarkers. Via an international collaboration, we collected copy number profiles of 556 high-risk neuroblastomas generated on different array platforms. This manuscript describes the composition of the dataset, the methods used to process the data, including segmentation and aberration calling, and data validation. t-SNE analysis shows that samples cluster according to MYCN status, and shows a difference between array platforms. 97.3% of samples are characterized by the presence of segmental aberrations, in regions frequently affected in neuroblastoma. Focal aberrations affect genes known to be involved in neuroblastoma, such as ALK and LIN28B. To conclude, we compiled a unique large copy number dataset of high-risk neuroblastoma tumors, available via R2 and a Shiny web application. The availability of patient survival data allows to further investigate the prognostic value of copy number aberrations.
- Published
- 2018
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36. Genomic Amplifications and Distal 6q Loss: Novel Markers for Poor Survival in High-risk Neuroblastoma Patients.
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Depuydt P, Boeva V, Hocking TD, Cannoodt R, Ambros IM, Ambros PF, Asgharzadeh S, Attiyeh EF, Combaret V, Defferrari R, Fischer M, Hero B, Hogarty MD, Irwin MS, Koster J, Kreissman S, Ladenstein R, Lapouble E, Laureys G, London WB, Mazzocco K, Nakagawara A, Noguera R, Ohira M, Park JR, Pötschger U, Theissen J, Tonini GP, Valteau-Couanet D, Varesio L, Versteeg R, Speleman F, Maris JM, Schleiermacher G, and De Preter K
- Subjects
- Biomarkers, Tumor, Child, Preschool, DNA Copy Number Variations, Genetic Association Studies, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Humans, Infant, N-Myc Proto-Oncogene Protein genetics, Neoplasm Staging, Neuroblastoma pathology, Neuroblastoma therapy, Prognosis, Chromosome Deletion, Chromosomes, Human, Pair 6, Gene Amplification, Genomics methods, Neuroblastoma genetics, Neuroblastoma mortality
- Abstract
Background: Neuroblastoma is characterized by substantial clinical heterogeneity. Despite intensive treatment, the survival rates of high-risk neuroblastoma patients are still disappointingly low. Somatic chromosomal copy number aberrations have been shown to be associated with patient outcome, particularly in low- and intermediate-risk neuroblastoma patients. To improve outcome prediction in high-risk neuroblastoma, we aimed to design a prognostic classification method based on copy number aberrations., Methods: In an international collaboration, normalized high-resolution DNA copy number data (arrayCGH and SNP arrays) from 556 high-risk neuroblastomas obtained at diagnosis were collected from nine collaborative groups and segmented using the same method. We applied logistic and Cox proportional hazard regression to identify genomic aberrations associated with poor outcome., Results: In this study, we identified two types of copy number aberrations that are associated with extremely poor outcome. Distal 6q losses were detected in 5.9% of patients and were associated with a 10-year survival probability of only 3.4% (95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.5% to 23.3%, two-sided P = .002). Amplifications of regions not encompassing the MYCN locus were detected in 18.1% of patients and were associated with a 10-year survival probability of only 5.8% (95% CI = 1.5% to 22.2%, two-sided P < .001)., Conclusions: Using a unique large copy number data set of high-risk neuroblastoma cases, we identified a small subset of high-risk neuroblastoma patients with extremely low survival probability that might be eligible for inclusion in clinical trials of new therapeutics. The amplicons may also nominate alternative treatments that target the amplified genes.
- Published
- 2018
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37. QuantumClone: clonal assessment of functional mutations in cancer based on a genotype-aware method for clonal reconstruction.
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Deveau P, Colmet Daage L, Oldridge D, Bernard V, Bellini A, Chicard M, Clement N, Lapouble E, Combaret V, Boland A, Meyer V, Deleuze JF, Janoueix-Lerosey I, Barillot E, Delattre O, Maris JM, Schleiermacher G, and Boeva V
- Subjects
- Cluster Analysis, DNA Mutational Analysis methods, Gene Frequency, High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing methods, Humans, Mutation, Neoplasms diagnosis, Clonal Evolution, DNA Copy Number Variations, Molecular Typing methods, Neoplasms genetics, Software, Whole Genome Sequencing methods
- Abstract
Motivation: In cancer, clonal evolution is assessed based on information coming from single nucleotide variants and copy number alterations. Nonetheless, existing methods often fail to accurately combine information from both sources to truthfully reconstruct clonal populations in a given tumor sample or in a set of tumor samples coming from the same patient. Moreover, previously published methods detect clones from a single set of variants. As a result, compromises have to be done between stringent variant filtering [reducing dispersion in variant allele frequency estimates (VAFs)] and using all biologically relevant variants., Results: We present a framework for defining cancer clones using most reliable variants of high depth of coverage and assigning functional mutations to the detected clones. The key element of our framework is QuantumClone, a method for variant clustering into clones based on VAFs, genotypes of corresponding regions and information about tumor purity. We validated QuantumClone and our framework on simulated data. We then applied our framework to whole genome sequencing data for 19 neuroblastoma trios each including constitutional, diagnosis and relapse samples. We confirmed an enrichment of damaging variants within such pathways as MAPK (mitogen-activated protein kinases), neuritogenesis, epithelial-mesenchymal transition, cell survival and DNA repair. Most pathways had more damaging variants in the expanding clones compared to shrinking ones, which can be explained by the increased total number of variants between these two populations. Functional mutational rate varied for ancestral clones and clones shrinking or expanding upon treatment, suggesting changes in clone selection mechanisms at different time points of tumor evolution., Availability and Implementation: Source code and binaries of the QuantumClone R package are freely available for download at https://CRAN.R-project.org/package=QuantumClone., Contact: gudrun.schleiermacher@curie.fr or valentina.boeva@inserm.fr., Supplementary Information: Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.
- Published
- 2018
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38. FUN-LDA: A Latent Dirichlet Allocation Model for Predicting Tissue-Specific Functional Effects of Noncoding Variation: Methods and Applications.
- Author
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Backenroth D, He Z, Kiryluk K, Boeva V, Pethukova L, Khurana E, Christiano A, Buxbaum JD, and Ionita-Laza I
- Subjects
- Genome-Wide Association Study, Humans, Linkage Disequilibrium genetics, Molecular Sequence Annotation, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide genetics, Probability, Quantitative Trait Loci genetics, Reproducibility of Results, Twins genetics, Algorithms, DNA, Intergenic genetics, Genetic Variation, Models, Genetic, Organ Specificity genetics
- Abstract
We describe a method based on a latent Dirichlet allocation model for predicting functional effects of noncoding genetic variants in a cell-type- and/or tissue-specific way (FUN-LDA). Using this unsupervised approach, we predict tissue-specific functional effects for every position in the human genome in 127 different tissues and cell types. We demonstrate the usefulness of our predictions by using several validation experiments. Using eQTL data from several sources, including the GTEx project, Geuvadis project, and TwinsUK cohort, we show that eQTLs in specific tissues tend to be most enriched among the predicted functional variants in relevant tissues in Roadmap. We further show how these integrated functional scores can be used for (1) deriving the most likely cell or tissue type causally implicated for a complex trait by using summary statistics from genome-wide association studies and (2) estimating a tissue-based correlation matrix of various complex traits. We found large enrichment of heritability in functional components of relevant tissues for various complex traits, and FUN-LDA yielded higher enrichment estimates than existing methods. Finally, using experimentally validated functional variants from the literature and variants possibly implicated in disease by previous studies, we rigorously compare FUN-LDA with state-of-the-art functional annotation methods and show that FUN-LDA has better prediction accuracy and higher resolution than these methods. In particular, our results suggest that tissue- and cell-type-specific functional prediction methods tend to have substantially better prediction accuracy than organism-level prediction methods. Scores for each position in the human genome and for each ENCODE and Roadmap tissue are available online (see Web Resources)., (Copyright © 2018 American Society of Human Genetics. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
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39. Activated ALK signals through the ERK-ETV5-RET pathway to drive neuroblastoma oncogenesis.
- Author
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Lopez-Delisle L, Pierre-Eugène C, Louis-Brennetot C, Surdez D, Raynal V, Baulande S, Boeva V, Grossetête-Lalami S, Combaret V, Peuchmaur M, Delattre O, and Janoueix-Lerosey I
- Subjects
- Anaplastic Lymphoma Kinase metabolism, Animals, Carcinogenesis pathology, Cells, Cultured, DNA-Binding Proteins physiology, Female, HEK293 Cells, Humans, MAP Kinase Signaling System physiology, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Mice, Nude, Mice, Transgenic, Neuroblastoma pathology, Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-ret physiology, Signal Transduction genetics, Transcription Factors physiology, Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays, Anaplastic Lymphoma Kinase genetics, Carcinogenesis genetics, Gain of Function Mutation physiology, Neuroblastoma genetics
- Abstract
Activating mutations of the ALK receptor occur in a subset of neuroblastoma tumors. We previously demonstrated that Alk mutations cooperate with MYCN overexpression to induce neuroblastoma in mice and identified Ret as being strongly upregulated in MYCN/Alk
mut tumors. By a genetic approach in vivo, we now document an oncogenic cooperation between activated Ret and MYCN overexpression in neuroblastoma formation. We show that MYCN/RetM919T tumors exhibit histological features and expression profiles close to MYCN/Alkmut tumors. We show that RET transcript levels decrease precedes RET protein levels decrease upon ALK inhibition in neuroblastoma cell lines. Etv5 was identified as a candidate transcription factor regulating Ret expression from murine MYCN/Alkmut tumor transcriptomic data. We demonstrate that ETV5 is regulated both at the protein and mRNA levels upon ALK activation or inhibition in neuroblastoma cell lines and that this regulation precedes RET modulation. We document that ALK activation induces ETV5 protein upregulation through stabilization in a MEK/ERK-dependent manner. We show that RNAi-mediated inhibition of ETV5 decreases RET expression. Reporter assays indicate that ETV5 is able to drive RET gene transcription. ChIP-seq analysis confirmed ETV5 binding on the RET promoter and identified an enhancer upstream of the promoter. Finally, we demonstrate that combining RET and ALK inhibitors reduces tumor growth more efficiently than each single agent in MYCN and AlkF1178L -driven murine neuroblastoma. Altogether, these results define the ERK-ETV5-RET pathway as a critical axis driving neuroblastoma oncogenesis downstream of activated ALK.- Published
- 2018
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40. Lenalidomide-mediated erythroid improvement in non-del(5q) myelodysplastic syndromes is associated with bone marrow immuno-remodeling.
- Author
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Kerdivel G, Chesnais V, Becht E, Toma A, Cagnard N, Dumont F, Rousseau A, Fenaux P, Chevret S, Chapuis N, Boeva V, Fridman WH, Fontenay M, and Kosmider O
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Chromosome Deletion, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Treatment Outcome, Bone Marrow drug effects, Chromosomes, Human, Pair 5 drug effects, Chromosomes, Human, Pair 5 genetics, Lenalidomide therapeutic use, Myelodysplastic Syndromes drug therapy, Myelodysplastic Syndromes genetics
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. [The influence of the vitamin D3 level in the blood serum of lactase gene polymorphism on the development of chronic polypous rhinosinusitis].
- Author
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Boeva VI, Kokorina OV, Archba RR, Dvoryanchikov VV, and Kolhyubaeva SN
- Subjects
- Genotype, Humans, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Serum, Cholecalciferol pharmacology, Lactase biosynthesis, Lactase drug effects, Lactase genetics, Lactose Intolerance, Nasal Polyps drug therapy, Nasal Polyps genetics, Rhinitis drug therapy, Rhinitis genetics, Sinusitis drug therapy, Sinusitis genetics
- Abstract
The objective of the present study was to elucidate the possible correlations between the vitamin D
3 level in the blood serum and lactase gene polymorphism (LCT-13910 T>C) in the patients presenting with chronic polypous rhinosinusitis (CPRS). The study included 50 patients with this condition and 14 subjects comprising the control group. The variants of lactase gene polymorphism (LCT-13910 T>C) were identified with the use of polymerase chain reaction (PCR) in real time. The total level of serum vitamin D3 (VD3 ) was determined by means of the immunochemical analysis (the electrochemiluminescence technique). In the group of patients presenting with chronic polypous rhinosinusitis, the level of VD3 in the blood serum ranged from 48 nm/l to 85 nm/l (mean 60 nm/l) compared with that in the patients of the control group (from 78 nm/l to 112 nm/l; mean 97 nm/l) . The level of vitamin D3 'below the normal values' was documented in 71% of the patients with CPRS in comparison with 7% in the control subjects. Lactase gene polymorphism (LCT-13910 CC, CT) suggesting pronounced and latent hypolactasia was identified in 94% of the patients with CPRS compared with 78.6% in the control group. The occurrence of the CC genotype in the patients of both study groups was virtually identical: 52% in the patients presenting with chronic polypous rhinosinusitis and 57% in the control group. CT polymorphism was identified in 42% of the patients with CPRS and in 21% of the control subjects. The significant difference between the patients of the two groups was documented for the occurrence of TT polymorphism: 6% among the patients with CPRS and 21% in the controls (i.e. much higher in the healthy subjects). There was no significant difference between the serum levels of vitamin D3 either among the patients with CPRS having LCT-13910 gene polymorphisms (CC, CT, TT) or among the control subjects. It is concluded that the study revealed the higher levels of vitamin D3 in the blood sera from the control subjects in comparison with that in the patients with chronic polypous rhinosinusitis. Moreover, the patients of the latter group more frequently exhibited the variant of the LCT CT-13910 gene polymorphism suggesting latent hypolactasia whereas the subjects comprising the control group more frequently had the variant of the LCT CT-13910 gene polymorphism indicative of the normal tolerance of lactose.- Published
- 2018
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- View/download PDF
42. Heterogeneity of neuroblastoma cell identity defined by transcriptional circuitries.
- Author
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Boeva V, Louis-Brennetot C, Peltier A, Durand S, Pierre-Eugène C, Raynal V, Etchevers HC, Thomas S, Lermine A, Daudigeos-Dubus E, Geoerger B, Orth MF, Grünewald TGP, Diaz E, Ducos B, Surdez D, Carcaboso AM, Medvedeva I, Deller T, Combaret V, Lapouble E, Pierron G, Grossetête-Lalami S, Baulande S, Schleiermacher G, Barillot E, Rohrer H, Delattre O, and Janoueix-Lerosey I
- Subjects
- Animals, Blotting, Western, Cell Line, Tumor classification, Cell Lineage drug effects, Doxycycline pharmacology, Gene Expression Profiling methods, Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic drug effects, Genetic Heterogeneity, HEK293 Cells, Homeodomain Proteins genetics, Homeodomain Proteins metabolism, Humans, Mice, Inbred NOD, Mice, Knockout, Mice, SCID, Neuroblastoma drug therapy, Neuroblastoma metabolism, RNA Interference, RNAi Therapeutics, Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction, Single-Cell Analysis, Transcription Factors metabolism, Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays methods, Cell Lineage genetics, Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic genetics, Neuroblastoma genetics, Transcription Factors genetics
- Abstract
Neuroblastoma is a tumor of the peripheral sympathetic nervous system, derived from multipotent neural crest cells (NCCs). To define core regulatory circuitries (CRCs) controlling the gene expression program of neuroblastoma, we established and analyzed the neuroblastoma super-enhancer landscape. We discovered three types of identity in neuroblastoma cell lines: a sympathetic noradrenergic identity, defined by a CRC module including the PHOX2B, HAND2 and GATA3 transcription factors (TFs); an NCC-like identity, driven by a CRC module containing AP-1 TFs; and a mixed type, further deconvoluted at the single-cell level. Treatment of the mixed type with chemotherapeutic agents resulted in enrichment of NCC-like cells. The noradrenergic module was validated by ChIP-seq. Functional studies demonstrated dependency of neuroblastoma with noradrenergic identity on PHOX2B, evocative of lineage addiction. Most neuroblastoma primary tumors express TFs from the noradrenergic and NCC-like modules. Our data demonstrate a previously unknown aspect of tumor heterogeneity relevant for neuroblastoma treatment strategies.
- Published
- 2017
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43. Calling Chromosome Alterations, DNA Methylation Statuses, and Mutations in Tumors by Simple Targeted Next-Generation Sequencing: A Solution for Transferring Integrated Pangenomic Studies into Routine Practice?
- Author
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Garinet S, Néou M, de La Villéon B, Faillot S, Sakat J, Da Fonseca JP, Jouinot A, Le Tourneau C, Kamal M, Luscap-Rondof W, Boeva V, Gaujoux S, Vidaud M, Pasmant E, Letourneur F, Bertherat J, and Assié G
- Subjects
- Alleles, Computational Biology methods, CpG Islands, DNA Copy Number Variations, Diagnostic Tests, Routine methods, Gene Frequency, Genomics methods, Genotype, Humans, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Biomarkers, Tumor, Chromosome Aberrations, DNA Methylation, High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing methods, Mutation, Neoplasms diagnosis, Neoplasms genetics
- Abstract
Pangenomic studies identified distinct molecular classes for many cancers, with major clinical applications. However, routine use requires cost-effective assays. We assessed whether targeted next-generation sequencing (NGS) could call chromosomal alterations and DNA methylation status. A training set of 77 tumors and a validation set of 449 (43 tumor types) were analyzed by targeted NGS and single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) arrays. Thirty-two tumors were analyzed by NGS after bisulfite conversion, and compared to methylation array or methylation-specific multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification. Considering allelic ratios, correlation was strong between targeted NGS and SNP arrays (r = 0.88). In contrast, considering DNA copy number, for variations of one DNA copy, correlation was weaker between read counts and SNP array (r = 0.49). Thus, we generated TARGOMICs, optimized for detecting chromosome alterations by combining allelic ratios and read counts generated by targeted NGS. Sensitivity for calling normal, lost, and gained chromosomes was 89%, 72%, and 31%, respectively. Specificity was 81%, 93%, and 98%, respectively. These results were confirmed in the validation set. Finally, TARGOMICs could efficiently align and compute proportions of methylated cytosines from bisulfite-converted DNA from targeted NGS. In conclusion, beyond calling mutations, targeted NGS efficiently calls chromosome alterations and methylation status in tumors. A single run and minor design/protocol adaptations are sufficient. Optimizing targeted NGS should expand translation of genomics to clinical routine., (Copyright © 2017 American Society for Investigative Pathology and the Association for Molecular Pathology. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
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- View/download PDF
44. HMCan-diff: a method to detect changes in histone modifications in cells with different genetic characteristics.
- Author
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Ashoor H, Louis-Brennetot C, Janoueix-Lerosey I, Bajic VB, and Boeva V
- Subjects
- Algorithms, Chromatin Immunoprecipitation, Datasets as Topic, Disease Progression, Gene Dosage, Histones metabolism, Humans, Markov Chains, Neoplasms metabolism, Neoplasms pathology, Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic, Histone Code, Histones genetics, Neoplasms genetics, Software
- Abstract
Comparing histone modification profiles between cancer and normal states, or across different tumor samples, can provide insights into understanding cancer initiation, progression and response to therapy. ChIP-seq histone modification data of cancer samples are distorted by copy number variation innate to any cancer cell. We present HMCan-diff, the first method designed to analyze ChIP-seq data to detect changes in histone modifications between two cancer samples of different genetic backgrounds, or between a cancer sample and a normal control. HMCan-diff explicitly corrects for copy number bias, and for other biases in the ChIP-seq data, which significantly improves prediction accuracy compared to methods that do not consider such corrections. On in silico simulated ChIP-seq data generated using genomes with differences in copy number profiles, HMCan-diff shows a much better performance compared to other methods that have no correction for copy number bias. Additionally, we benchmarked HMCan-diff on four experimental datasets, characterizing two histone marks in two different scenarios. We correlated changes in histone modifications between a cancer and a normal control sample with changes in gene expression. On all experimental datasets, HMCan-diff demonstrated better performance compared to the other methods., (© The Author(s) 2017. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Nucleic Acids Research.)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Comparative analyses of super-enhancers reveal conserved elements in vertebrate genomes.
- Author
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Pérez-Rico YA, Boeva V, Mallory AC, Bitetti A, Majello S, Barillot E, and Shkumatava A
- Subjects
- Acetylation, Animals, Embryonic Development genetics, Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental, Genomics, Histones genetics, Humans, Mice, Transcription Factors genetics, Chromatin genetics, Conserved Sequence genetics, Enhancer Elements, Genetic, Zebrafish genetics
- Abstract
Super-enhancers (SEs) are key transcriptional drivers of cellular, developmental, and disease states in mammals, yet the conservational and regulatory features of these enhancer elements in nonmammalian vertebrates are unknown. To define SEs in zebrafish and enable sequence and functional comparisons to mouse and human SEs, we used genome-wide histone H3 lysine 27 acetylation (H3K27ac) occupancy as a primary SE delineator. Our study determined the set of SEs in pluripotent state cells and adult zebrafish tissues and revealed both similarities and differences between zebrafish and mammalian SEs. Although the total number of SEs was proportional to the genome size, the genomic distribution of zebrafish SEs differed from that of the mammalian SEs. Despite the evolutionary distance separating zebrafish and mammals and the low overall SE sequence conservation, ∼42% of zebrafish SEs were located in close proximity to orthologs that also were associated with SEs in mouse and human. Compared to their nonassociated counterparts, higher sequence conservation was revealed for those SEs that have maintained orthologous gene associations. Functional dissection of two of these SEs identified conserved sequence elements and tissue-specific expression patterns, while chromatin accessibility analyses predicted transcription factors governing the function of pluripotent state zebrafish SEs. Our zebrafish annotations and comparative studies show the extent of SE usage and their conservation across vertebrates, permitting future gene regulatory studies in several tissues., (© 2017 Pérez-Rico et al.; Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press.)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Erratum: Crowdsourced assessment of common genetic contribution to predicting anti-TNF treatment response in rheumatoid arthritis.
- Author
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Sieberts SK, Zhu F, García-García J, Stahl E, Pratap A, Pandey G, Pappas D, Aguilar D, Anton B, Bonet J, Eksi R, Fornés O, Guney E, Li H, Marín MA, Panwar B, Planas-Iglesias J, Poglayen D, Cui J, Falcao AO, Suver C, Hoff B, Balagurusamy VSK, Dillenberger D, Neto EC, Norman T, Aittokallio T, Ammad-Ud-Din M, Azencott CA, Bellón V, Boeva V, Bunte K, Chheda H, Cheng L, Corander J, Dumontier M, Goldenberg A, Gopalacharyulu P, Hajiloo M, Hidru D, Jaiswal A, Kaski S, Khalfaoui B, Khan SA, Kramer ER, Marttinen P, Mezlini AM, Molparia B, Pirinen M, Saarela J, Samwald M, Stoven V, Tang H, Tang J, Torkamani A, Vert JP, Wang B, Wang T, Wennerberg K, Wineinger NE, Xiao G, Xie Y, Yeung R, Zhan X, Zhao C, Greenberg J, Kremer J, Michaud K, Barton A, Coenen M, Mariette X, Miceli C, Shadick N, Weinblatt M, de Vries N, Tak PP, Gerlag D, Huizinga TWJ, Kurreeman F, Allaart CF, Bridges SL Jr, Criswell L, Moreland L, Klareskog L, Saevarsdottir S, Padyukov L, Gregersen PK, Friend S, Plenge R, Stolovitzky G, Oliva B, Guan Y, and Mangravite LM
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Crowdsourced assessment of common genetic contribution to predicting anti-TNF treatment response in rheumatoid arthritis.
- Author
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Sieberts SK, Zhu F, García-García J, Stahl E, Pratap A, Pandey G, Pappas D, Aguilar D, Anton B, Bonet J, Eksi R, Fornés O, Guney E, Li H, Marín MA, Panwar B, Planas-Iglesias J, Poglayen D, Cui J, Falcao AO, Suver C, Hoff B, Balagurusamy VSK, Dillenberger D, Neto EC, Norman T, Aittokallio T, Ammad-Ud-Din M, Azencott CA, Bellón V, Boeva V, Bunte K, Chheda H, Cheng L, Corander J, Dumontier M, Goldenberg A, Gopalacharyulu P, Hajiloo M, Hidru D, Jaiswal A, Kaski S, Khalfaoui B, Khan SA, Kramer ER, Marttinen P, Mezlini AM, Molparia B, Pirinen M, Saarela J, Samwald M, Stoven V, Tang H, Tang J, Torkamani A, Vert JP, Wang B, Wang T, Wennerberg K, Wineinger NE, Xiao G, Xie Y, Yeung R, Zhan X, Zhao C, Greenberg J, Kremer J, Michaud K, Barton A, Coenen M, Mariette X, Miceli C, Shadick N, Weinblatt M, de Vries N, Tak PP, Gerlag D, Huizinga TWJ, Kurreeman F, Allaart CF, Louis Bridges S Jr, Criswell L, Moreland L, Klareskog L, Saevarsdottir S, Padyukov L, Gregersen PK, Friend S, Plenge R, Stolovitzky G, Oliva B, Guan Y, and Mangravite LM
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Antibodies, Monoclonal therapeutic use, Antirheumatic Agents therapeutic use, Arthritis, Rheumatoid genetics, Arthritis, Rheumatoid pathology, Certolizumab Pegol therapeutic use, Cohort Studies, Crowdsourcing, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prognosis, Treatment Outcome, Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha immunology, Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized therapeutic use, Arthritis, Rheumatoid drug therapy, Genetic Predisposition to Disease genetics, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha antagonists & inhibitors
- Abstract
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) affects millions world-wide. While anti-TNF treatment is widely used to reduce disease progression, treatment fails in ∼one-third of patients. No biomarker currently exists that identifies non-responders before treatment. A rigorous community-based assessment of the utility of SNP data for predicting anti-TNF treatment efficacy in RA patients was performed in the context of a DREAM Challenge (http://www.synapse.org/RA_Challenge). An open challenge framework enabled the comparative evaluation of predictions developed by 73 research groups using the most comprehensive available data and covering a wide range of state-of-the-art modelling methodologies. Despite a significant genetic heritability estimate of treatment non-response trait (h(2)=0.18, P value=0.02), no significant genetic contribution to prediction accuracy is observed. Results formally confirm the expectations of the rheumatology community that SNP information does not significantly improve predictive performance relative to standard clinical traits, thereby justifying a refocusing of future efforts on collection of other data.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. SV-Bay: structural variant detection in cancer genomes using a Bayesian approach with correction for GC-content and read mappability.
- Author
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Iakovishina D, Janoueix-Lerosey I, Barillot E, Regnier M, and Boeva V
- Subjects
- Base Composition, Genome, High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing, Humans, Metagenomics, Bayes Theorem, Genome-Wide Association Study, Genomic Structural Variation, Neoplasms genetics
- Abstract
Motivation: Whole genome sequencing of paired-end reads can be applied to characterize the landscape of large somatic rearrangements of cancer genomes. Several methods for detecting structural variants with whole genome sequencing data have been developed. So far, none of these methods has combined information about abnormally mapped read pairs connecting rearranged regions and associated global copy number changes automatically inferred from the same sequencing data file. Our aim was to create a computational method that could use both types of information, i.e. normal and abnormal reads, and demonstrate that by doing so we can highly improve both sensitivity and specificity rates of structural variant prediction., Results: We developed a computational method, SV-Bay, to detect structural variants from whole genome sequencing mate-pair or paired-end data using a probabilistic Bayesian approach. This approach takes into account depth of coverage by normal reads and abnormalities in read pair mappings. To estimate the model likelihood, SV-Bay considers GC-content and read mappability of the genome, thus making important corrections to the expected read count. For the detection of somatic variants, SV-Bay makes use of a matched normal sample when it is available. We validated SV-Bay on simulated datasets and an experimental mate-pair dataset for the CLB-GA neuroblastoma cell line. The comparison of SV-Bay with several other methods for structural variant detection demonstrated that SV-Bay has better prediction accuracy both in terms of sensitivity and false-positive detection rate., Availability and Implementation: https://github.com/InstitutCurie/SV-Bay, Contact: valentina.boeva@inserm.fr, Supplementary Information: Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online., (© The Author 2016. Published by Oxford University Press.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Ovarian Cancers Harboring Inactivating Mutations in CDK12 Display a Distinct Genomic Instability Pattern Characterized by Large Tandem Duplications.
- Author
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Popova T, Manié E, Boeva V, Battistella A, Goundiam O, Smith NK, Mueller CR, Raynal V, Mariani O, Sastre-Garau X, and Stern MH
- Subjects
- Cyclin-Dependent Kinases metabolism, Female, Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic, Genomic Instability, Humans, Mutation, Ovarian Neoplasms pathology, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Cyclin-Dependent Kinases genetics, Ovarian Neoplasms genetics, Tandem Repeat Sequences genetics
- Abstract
CDK12 is a recurrently mutated gene in serous ovarian carcinoma, whose downregulation is associated with impaired expression of DNA damage repair genes and subsequent hypersensitivity to DNA-damaging agents and PARP1/2 inhibitors. In this study, we investigated the genomic landscape associated with CDK12 inactivation in patients with serous ovarian carcinoma. We show that CDK12 loss was consistently associated with a particular genomic instability pattern characterized by hundreds of tandem duplications of up to 10 megabases (Mb) in size. Tandem duplications were characterized by a bimodal (∼0.3 and ∼3 Mb) size distribution and overlapping microhomology at the breakpoints. This genomic instability, denoted as the CDK12 TD-plus phenotype, is remarkably distinct from other alteration patterns described in breast and ovarian cancers. The CDK12 TD-plus phenotype was associated with a greater than 10% gain in genomic content and occurred at a 3% to 4% rate in The Cancer Genome Atlas-derived and in-house cohorts of patients with serous ovarian carcinoma. Moreover, CDK12-inactivating mutations together with the TD-plus phenotype were also observed in prostate cancers. Our finding provides new insight toward deciphering the function of CDK12 in genome maintenance and oncogenesis. Cancer Res; 76(7); 1882-91. ©2016 AACR., (©2016 American Association for Cancer Research.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Analysis of Genomic Sequence Motifs for Deciphering Transcription Factor Binding and Transcriptional Regulation in Eukaryotic Cells.
- Author
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Boeva V
- Abstract
Eukaryotic genomes contain a variety of structured patterns: repetitive elements, binding sites of DNA and RNA associated proteins, splice sites, and so on. Often, these structured patterns can be formalized as motifs and described using a proper mathematical model such as position weight matrix and IUPAC consensus. Two key tasks are typically carried out for motifs in the context of the analysis of genomic sequences. These are: identification in a set of DNA regions of over-represented motifs from a particular motif database, and de novo discovery of over-represented motifs. Here we describe existing methodology to perform these two tasks for motifs characterizing transcription factor binding. When applied to the output of ChIP-seq and ChIP-exo experiments, or to promoter regions of co-modulated genes, motif analysis techniques allow for the prediction of transcription factor binding events and enable identification of transcriptional regulators and co-regulators. The usefulness of motif analysis is further exemplified in this review by how motif discovery improves peak calling in ChIP-seq and ChIP-exo experiments and, when coupled with information on gene expression, allows insights into physical mechanisms of transcriptional modulation.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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