12 results on '"Goldin, Lynn"'
Search Results
2. Identifying rheumatoid arthritis susceptibility genes using high-dimensional methods.
- Author
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Xueying Liang, Ying Gao, Lam, Tram K., Qizhai Li, Falk, Cathy, Yang, Xiaohong R., Goldstein, Alisa M., and Goldin, Lynn R.
- Subjects
RHEUMATOID arthritis ,GENES ,GENETICS ,ETIOLOGY of diseases ,HLA histocompatibility antigens ,GENOTYPE-environment interaction - Abstract
Although several genes (including a strong effect in the human leukocyte antigen (HLA) region) and some environmental factors have been implicated to cause susceptibility to rheumatoid arthritis (RA), the etiology of the disease is not completely understood. The ability to screen the entire genome for association to complex diseases has great potential for identifying gene effects. However, the efficiency of gene detection in this situation may be improved by methods specifically designed for high-dimensional data. The aim of this study was to compare how three different statistical approaches, multifactor dimensionality reduction (MDR), random forests (RF), and an omnibus approach, worked in identifying gene effects (including gene-gene interaction) associated with RA. We developed a test set of genes based on previous linkage and association findings and tested all three methods. In the presence of the HLA shared-epitope factor, other genes showed weaker effects. All three methods detected SNPs in PTPN22 and TRAF1-C5 as being important. But we did not detect any new genes in this study. We conclude that the three high-dimensional methods are useful as an initial screening for gene associations to identify promising genes for further modeling and additional replication studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Environment And Genetics in Lung cancer Etiology (EAGLE) study: an integrative population-based case-control study of lung cancer.
- Author
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Landi, Maria Teresa, Consonni, Dario, Rotunno, Melissa, Bergen, Andrew W, Goldstein, Alisa M, Lubin, Jay H, Goldin, Lynn, Alavanja, Michael, Morgan, Glen, Subar, Amy F, Linnoila, Ilona, Previdi, Fabrizio, Corno, Massimo, Rubagotti, Maurizia, Marinelli, Barbara, Albetti, Benedetta, Colombi, Antonio, Tucker, Margaret, Wacholder, Sholom, and Pesatori, Angela C
- Subjects
LUNG cancer ,CANCER risk factors ,CANCER-related mortality ,SMOKING ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,HEALTH surveys - Abstract
Background: Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer mortality worldwide. Tobacco smoking is its primary cause, and yet the precise molecular alterations induced by smoking in lung tissue that lead to lung cancer and impact survival have remained obscure. A new framework of research is needed to address the challenges offered by this complex disease. Methods/Design: We designed a large population-based case-control study that combines a traditional molecular epidemiology design with a more integrative approach to investigate the dynamic process that begins with smoking initiation, proceeds through dependency/smoking persistence, continues with lung cancer development and ends with progression to disseminated disease or response to therapy and survival. The study allows the integration of data from multiple sources in the same subjects (risk factors, germline variation, genomic alterations in tumors, and clinical endpoints) to tackle the disease etiology from different angles. Before beginning the study, we conducted a phone survey and pilot investigations to identify the best approach to ensure an acceptable participation in the study from cases and controls. Between 2002 and 2005, we enrolled 2101 incident primary lung cancer cases and 2120 population controls, with 86.6% and 72.4% participation rate, respectively, from a catchment area including 216 municipalities in the Lombardy region of Italy. Lung cancer cases were enrolled in 13 hospitals and population controls were randomly sampled from the area to match the cases by age, gender and residence. Detailed epidemiological information and biospecimens were collected from each participant, and clinical data and tissue specimens from the cases. Collection of follow-up data on treatment and survival is ongoing. Discussion: EAGLE is a new population-based case-control study that explores the full spectrum of lung cancer etiology, from smoking addiction to lung cancer outcome, through examination of epidemiological, molecular, and clinical data. We have provided a detailed description of the study design, field activities, management, and opportunities for research following this integrative approach, which allows a sharper and more comprehensive vision of the complex nature of this disease. The study is poised to accelerate the emergence of new preventive and therapeutic strategies with potentially enormous impact on public health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Genetic Analysis Workshop 14: microsatellite and single-nucleotide polymorphism marker loci for genome-wide scans.
- Author
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Bailey-Wilson, Joan E., Almasy, Laura, De Andrade, Mariza, Bailey, Julia, Bickeböller, Heike, Cordell, Heather J., Daw, E. Warwick, Goldin, Lynn, Goode, Ellen L., Gray-McGuire, Courtney, Hening, Wayne, Jarvik, Gail, Maher, Brion S., Mendell, Nancy, Paterson, Andrew D., Rice, John, Satten, Glen, Suarez, Brian, Vieland, Veronica, and Wilcox, Marsha
- Subjects
FORUMS ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,MICROSATELLITE repeats ,GENETIC polymorphisms - Abstract
The article offers information on the Genetic Analysis Workshop 14 (GAW14), held from September 7-10, 2004, in Noordwijkerhout, the Netherlands. The theme of the workshop was comparison of microsatellite and single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) markers for genome-wide scans and statistical methods that can exploit the information provided in such scans for linkage and association studies.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Identification of susceptibility loci for complex diseases in a case-control association study using the Genetic Analysis Workshop 14 dataset.
- Author
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Kerstann, Kimberly F., Jacobs, Kevin, Yang, Xiaohong (Rose), Bergen, Andrew W., Goldin, Lynn R., and Goldstein, Alisa M.
- Subjects
GENETIC polymorphisms ,INFECTIOUS disease transmission ,GENETIC epidemiology ,CHI-squared test ,MEDICAL genetics - Abstract
Although current methods in genetic epidemiology have been extremely successful in identifying genetic loci responsible for Mendelian traits, most common diseases do not follow simple Mendelian modes of inheritance. It is important to consider how our current methodologies function in the realm of complex diseases. The aim of this study was to determine the ability of conventional association methods to fine map a locus of interest. Six study populations were selected from 10 replicates (New York) from the Genetic Analysis Workshop 14 simulated dataset and analyzed for association between the disease trait and locus D2. Genotypes from 45 singlenucleotide polymorphisms in the telomeric region of chromosome 3 were analyzed by Pearson's chi-square tests for independence to test for association with the disease trait of interest. A significant association was detected within the region; however, it was found 3 cM from the documented location of the D2 disease locus. This result was most likely due to the method used for data simulation. In general, this study showed that conventional case-control association methods could detect disease loci responsible for the development of complex traits. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Genomic regions linked to alcohol consumption in the Framingham Heart Study.
- Author
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Bergen, Andrew W., Xiaohong Rose Yang, Yan Bai, Beerman, Michael B., Goldstein, Alisa M., and Goldin, Lynn R.
- Subjects
SMOKING ,ALCOHOLISM ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,GENETICS - Abstract
Background: Pedigree, demographic, square-root transformed maximum alcohol (SRMAXAPD) and maximum cigarette (MAXCPD) consumption, and genome-wide scan data from the Framingham Heart Study (FHS) were used to investigate genetic factors that may affect alcohol and cigarette consumption in this population-based sample. Results: A significant sister:sister correlation greater than spouse correlation was observed for MAXCPD only. Single-point sib-pair regression analysis provided nominal evidence for linkage of loci to both SRMAXAPD and MAXCPD consumption traits, with more significant evidence of linkage to SRMAXAPD than to MAXCPD. One genomic region, chr9q21.11, exhibits significant multi-point sib-pair regression to SRMAXAPD. Conclusion: SRMAXAPD exhibits greater evidence for genetic linkage than does MAXCPD in the FHS sample. Four regions of the genome exhibiting nominal evidence for linkage to SRMAXAPD in the FHS sample correspond to regions of the genome previously identified as linked to alcoholism or related traits in the family data set ascertained on individuals affected with alcohol dependence known as COGA. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Prevalence of pathogenic/likely pathogenic variants in the 24 cancer genes of the ACMG Secondary Findings v2.0 list in a large cancer cohort and ethnicity-matched controls.
- Author
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Kim J, Luo W, Wang M, Wegman-Ostrosky T, Frone MN, Johnston JJ, Nickerson ML, Rotunno M, Li SA, Achatz MI, Brodie SA, Dean M, de Andrade KC, Fortes FP, Gianferante M, Khincha P, McMaster ML, McReynolds LJ, Pemov A, Pinheiro M, Santiago KM, Alter BP, Caporaso NE, Gadalla SM, Goldin LR, Greene MH, Loud J, Yang XR, Freedman ND, Gapstur SM, Gaudet MM, Calista D, Ghiorzo P, Fargnoli MC, Nagore E, Peris K, Puig S, Landi MT, Hicks B, Zhu B, Liu J, Sampson JN, Chanock SJ, Mirabello LJ, Morton LM, Biesecker LG, Tucker MA, Savage SA, Goldstein AM, and Stewart DR
- Subjects
- Aged, Cohort Studies, DNA Mutational Analysis, Ethnicity, Female, Humans, Male, Genes, Neoplasm genetics, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Mutation, Neoplasms genetics, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide
- Abstract
Background: Prior research has established that the prevalence of pathogenic/likely pathogenic (P/LP) variants across all of the American College of Medical Genetics (ACMG) Secondary Findings (SF) genes is approximately 0.8-5%. We investigated the prevalence of P/LP variants in the 24 ACMG SF v2.0 cancer genes in a family-based cancer research cohort (n = 1173) and in cancer-free ethnicity-matched controls (n = 982)., Methods: We used InterVar to classify variants and subsequently conducted a manual review to further examine variants of unknown significance (VUS)., Results: In the 24 genes on the ACMG SF v2.0 list associated with a cancer phenotype, we observed 8 P/LP unique variants (8 individuals; 0.8%) in controls and 11 P/LP unique variants (14 individuals; 1.2%) in cases, a non-significant difference. We reviewed 115 VUS. The median estimated per-variant review time required was 30 min; the first variant within a gene took significantly (p = 0.0009) longer to review (median = 60 min) compared with subsequent variants (median = 30 min). The concordance rate was 83.3% for the variants examined by two reviewers., Conclusion: The 115 VUS required database and literature review, a time- and labor-intensive process hampered by the difficulty in interpreting conflicting P/LP determinations. By rigorously investigating the 24 ACMG SF v2.0 cancer genes, our work establishes a benchmark P/LP variant prevalence rate in a familial cancer cohort and controls.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Identifying rheumatoid arthritis susceptibility genes using high-dimensional methods.
- Author
-
Liang X, Gao Y, Lam TK, Li Q, Falk C, Yang XR, Goldstein AM, and Goldin LR
- Abstract
Although several genes (including a strong effect in the human leukocyte antigen (HLA) region) and some environmental factors have been implicated to cause susceptibility to rheumatoid arthritis (RA), the etiology of the disease is not completely understood. The ability to screen the entire genome for association to complex diseases has great potential for identifying gene effects. However, the efficiency of gene detection in this situation may be improved by methods specifically designed for high-dimensional data. The aim of this study was to compare how three different statistical approaches, multifactor dimensionality reduction (MDR), random forests (RF), and an omnibus approach, worked in identifying gene effects (including gene-gene interaction) associated with RA. We developed a test set of genes based on previous linkage and association findings and tested all three methods. In the presence of the HLA shared-epitope factor, other genes showed weaker effects. All three methods detected SNPs in PTPN22 and TRAF1-C5 as being important. But we did not detect any new genes in this study. We conclude that the three high-dimensional methods are useful as an initial screening for gene associations to identify promising genes for further modeling and additional replication studies.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Germline and somatic JAK2 mutations and susceptibility to chronic myeloproliferative neoplasms.
- Author
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Goldin LR, Björkholm M, Kristinsson SY, Samuelsson J, and Landgren O
- Abstract
Myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPNs) are a group of closely related stem-cell-derived clonal proliferative diseases. Most cases are sporadic but first-degree relatives of MPN patients have a five- to seven-fold increased risk for developing an MPN. The tumors of most patients carry a mutation in the Janus kinase 2 gene (JAK2(V617F)). Recently, three groups have described a strong association of JAK2 germline polymorphisms with MPN in patients positive for JAK2(V617F). The somatic mutation occurs primarily on one particular germline JAK2 haplotype, which may account for as much as 50% of the risk to first-degree relatives. This finding provides new directions for unraveling the pathogenesis of MPN.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Linkage analysis of anti-CCP levels as dichotomized and quantitative traits using GAW15 single-nucleotide polymorphism scan of NARAC families.
- Author
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Yang XR, Kerstann KF, Bergen AW, Goldstein AM, and Goldin LR
- Abstract
Rheumatoid arthritis is a clinically and genetically heterogeneous disease. Anti-cyclic citrullinated (anti-CCP) antibodies have a high specificity for rheumatoid arthritis and levels correlate with disease severity. The focus of this study was to examine whether analyzing anti-CCP levels could increase the power of linkage analysis by identifying a more homogeneous subset of rheumatoid arthritis patients. We also wanted to compare linkage signals when analyzing anti-CCP levels as dichotomized (CCP_binary), categorical (CCP_cat), and continuous traits, with and without transformation (log_CCP and CCP_cont). Illumina single-nucleotide polymorphism scans of the North American Rheumatoid Arthritis Consortium families were analyzed for four chromosomes (6, 7, 11, 22) using nonparametric linkage (NPL) (rheumatoid arthritis and CCP_binary), regress (CCP_cat and Log_CCP), and deviates (CCP_cont) analysis options as implemented in Merlin. Similar linkage results were obtained from analyses of rheumatoid arthritis, CCP_binary, and CCP_cont. The only exception was that we observed improved linkage signals and a narrower region for CCP_binary as compared to a clinical diagnosis of rheumatoid arthritis alone on chromosome 7, a region which previously showed variation in linkage results with rheumatoid arthritis according to anti-CCP levels. Analyses of CCP_cat and Log_CCP had little power to detect linkage. Our data suggested that linkage analyses of anti-CCP levels may facilitate identification of rheumatoid arthritis genes but quantitative analyses did not further improve power. Our study also highlighted that quantitative trait linkage results are highly sensitive to phenotype transformation and analytic approaches.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Linkage analysis of the GAW14 simulated dataset with microsatellite and single-nucleotide polymorphism markers in large pedigrees.
- Author
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Yang XR, Jacobs K, Kerstann KF, Bergen AW, Goldstein AM, and Goldin LR
- Subjects
- Female, Genetic Markers, Humans, Male, Reproducibility of Results, Chromosome Mapping, Computer Simulation, Congresses as Topic, Databases, Genetic, Microsatellite Repeats genetics, Pedigree, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide genetics
- Abstract
Recent studies have suggested that a high-density single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) marker set could provide equivalent or even superior information compared with currently used microsatellite (STR) marker sets for gene mapping by linkage. The focus of this study was to compare results obtained from linkage analyses involving extended pedigrees with STR and single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) marker sets. We also wanted to compare the performance of current linkage programs in the presence of high marker density and extended pedigree structures. One replicate of the Genetic Analysis Workshop 14 (GAW14) simulated extended pedigrees (n = 50) from New York City was analyzed to identify the major gene D2. Four marker sets with varying information content and density on chromosome 3 (STR [7.5 cM]; SNP [3 cM, 1 cM, 0.3 cM]) were analyzed to detect two traits, the original affection status, and a redefined trait more closely correlated with D2. Multipoint parametric and nonparametric linkage analyses (NPL) were performed using programs GENEHUNTER, MERLIN, SIMWALK2, and S.A.G.E. SIBPAL. Our results suggested that the densest SNP map (0.3 cM) had the greatest power to detect linkage for the original trait (genetic heterogeneity), with the highest LOD score/NPL score and mapping precision. However, no significant improvement in linkage signals was observed with the densest SNP map compared with STR or SNP-1 cM maps for the redefined affection status (genetic homogeneity), possibly due to the extremely high information contents for all maps. Finally, our results suggested that each linkage program had limitations in handling the large, complex pedigrees as well as a high-density SNP marker set.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. A genome-wide linkage scan for body mass index on Framingham Heart Study families.
- Author
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Moslehi R, Goldstein AM, Beerman M, Goldin L, and Bergen AW
- Subjects
- Adult, Chromosome Mapping methods, Chromosome Mapping statistics & numerical data, Chromosomes, Human, Pair 11 genetics, Chromosomes, Human, Pair 2 genetics, Chromosomes, Human, Pair 3 genetics, Cohort Studies, Female, Genetic Markers genetics, Genetic Testing methods, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Quantitative Trait, Heritable, Body Mass Index, Cardiovascular Diseases epidemiology, Cardiovascular Diseases genetics, Family, Genetic Linkage genetics, Genetic Testing statistics & numerical data, Genome, Human
- Abstract
Background: Genome-wide scan data from a community-based sample was used to identify the genetic factors that affect body mass index (BMI). BMI was defined as weight (kg) over the square of height (m), where weight and height were obtained from the first measurement available between the ages of 40 and 50 years., Results: Significant familial correlations were observed in mother:father (spouse) relative pairs and in all relative pairs examined except parent:daughter pairs. Single-point sib-pair regression analysis provided nominal evidence for linkage (p < 0.05) of loci to BMI at 23 markers. Multi-point sib-pair regression analysis provided nominal evidence for linkage to BMI at 42 loci on 12 chromosomes. Empirical p-values showed results consistent with the multi-point results; all but three of the loci identified by multi-point analysis were also significant., Conclusion: The largest regions of nominally significant linkage were found on chromosomes 2, 3, and 11. The most significant evidence for linkage was obtained with markers D2S1788, D2S1356, D2S1352, D3S1744, and D11S912 from multi-point sib-pair single-trait regression analysis. Our results are in agreement with some of the recently published reports on BMI using various data sets including the Framingham Heart Study data.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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