17 results on '"Neil Bahroos"'
Search Results
2. 324 An umbrella protocol that establishes an enterprise-wide framework for the operation of a Clinical Data Warehouse
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Daniella Garofalo, Allison Orechwa, and Neil Bahroos
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Medicine - Abstract
OBJECTIVES/GOALS: To streamline the standards and procedures for operating a research-specific, clinical data warehouse, acheived by defining roles, introducing a common language, and categorizing dataset types to provide transparency regarding data security risks inherent in the use of patient data. METHODS/STUDY POPULATION: We established a Bioethics committee responsible for ensuring clinical data is securely procured, maintained, and extracted in a manner that adheres to all federal, state, and local laws. We created an operational framework in the form of an umbrella IRB protocol and shared it with the bioethics committee for feedback and approval. The protocol was approved first by the bioethics committee and subsequently by the IRB. It was then disseminated across the institution and published online for continuous reference and use by committee members, researchers, and the data warehouse service team. RESULTS/ANTICIPATED RESULTS: The resulting framework defined the roles of researchers, data warehouse service team members, and honest brokers; explains the procedures for accessing and securely delivering data; and lists six categories of datasets according to type and implicit risks: datasets that are preparatory for research/aggregate counts, anonymized datasets, coded datasets, limited datasets, identified datasets for recruitment purposes, and defined identified cohort datasets. The protocol is approved and in use enterprise-wide, has reduced the number of questions from stakeholders, and has given researchers, IRB members, and informatics staff confidence in the use of the clinical research data warehouse. DISCUSSION/SIGNIFICANCE: We offer our framework to CTSAs interested in streamlining their data warehouse operations. We believe the adoption of this framework will establish strong procedures for ensuring compliance with IRB requirements, data privacy, and data security while reducing barriers to clinical research.
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- 2024
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3. Development of a social and environmental determinants of health informatics maturity model
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Juan C. Espinoza, Shruti Sehgal, Jimmy Phuong, Neil Bahroos, Justin Starren, Adam Wilcox, and Daniella Meeker
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Social determinants of health ,informatics ,maturity models ,health equity ,clinical and translational research ,Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Introduction: Integrating social and environmental determinants of health (SEDoH) into enterprise-wide clinical workflows and decision-making is one of the most important and challenging aspects of improving health equity. We engaged domain experts to develop a SEDoH informatics maturity model (SIMM) to help guide organizations to address technical, operational, and policy gaps. Methods: We established a core expert group consisting of developers, informaticists, and subject matter experts to identify different SIMM domains and define maturity levels. The candidate model (v0.9) was evaluated by 15 informaticists at a Center for Data to Health community meeting. After incorporating feedback, a second evaluation round for v1.0 collected feedback and self-assessments from 35 respondents from the National COVID Cohort Collaborative, the Center for Leading Innovation and Collaboration’s Informatics Enterprise Committee, and a publicly available online self-assessment tool. Results: We developed a SIMM comprising seven maturity levels across five domains: data collection policies, data collection methods and technologies, technology platforms for analysis and visualization, analytics capacity, and operational and strategic impact. The evaluation demonstrated relatively high maturity in analytics and technological capacity, but more moderate maturity in operational and strategic impact among academic medical centers. Changes made to the tool in between rounds improved its ability to discriminate between intermediate maturity levels. Conclusion: The SIMM can help organizations identify current gaps and next steps in improving SEDoH informatics. Improving the collection and use of SEDoH data is one important component of addressing health inequities.
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- 2023
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4. Human Lacrimal Gland Gene Expression.
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Vinay Kumar Aakalu, Sowmya Parameswaran, Mark Maienschein-Cline, Neil Bahroos, Dhara Shah, Marwan Ali, and Subramanian Krishnakumar
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
The study of human lacrimal gland biology and development is limited. Lacrimal gland tissue is damaged or poorly functional in a number of disease states including dry eye disease. Development of cell based therapies for lacrimal gland diseases requires a better understanding of the gene expression and signaling pathways in lacrimal gland. Differential gene expression analysis between lacrimal gland and other embryologically similar tissues may be helpful in furthering our understanding of lacrimal gland development.We performed global gene expression analysis of human lacrimal gland tissue using Affymetrix ® gene expression arrays. Primary data from our laboratory was compared with datasets available in the NLM GEO database for other surface ectodermal tissues including salivary gland, skin, conjunctiva and corneal epithelium.The analysis revealed statistically significant difference in the gene expression of lacrimal gland tissue compared to other ectodermal tissues. The lacrimal gland specific, cell surface secretory protein encoding genes and critical signaling pathways which distinguish lacrimal gland from other ectodermal tissues are described.Differential gene expression in human lacrimal gland compared with other ectodermal tissue types revealed interesting patterns which may serve as the basis for future studies in directed differentiation among other areas.
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- 2017
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5. 2545
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Neil Bahroos, Subhash Kumar Kolar Rajanna, Stephen B. Brown, Padma Thangaraj, David Melnick, and Angela Freeman
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Medicine - Abstract
OBJECTIVES/SPECIFIC AIMS: This research project envisions the integration of Homeless Management Information System (HMIS) and UI Health Cerner electronic medical record (EMR) system with the following goals: (1) enable sharing of data about the status of the housing insecure and homeless. (2) Identify and match patient record accurately. (3) Record housing insecurity or homelessness information with structured data elements in the EMR. METHODS/STUDY POPULATION: We created a Master Person Index (MPI) of the homeless individuals from HMSI using OpenEMPI software package, which is an open source implementation of an Enterprise Master Patient Index (EMPI). An entity model was generated based on the selective data elements from HMIS database, which were relevant for the patient identity management and healthcare service management. An automated script was implemented to extract data from HMIS and load it into OpenEMPI to build the MPI. Once the MPI is setup, the Emergency Department users were able to perform patient identity matching and confirm housing insecure or homeless status of their patients by querying the index using the web-based tool. We developed structured data elements to record homelessness information, which will allow us to measure the prevalence of this risk among patients. We are also exploring the possibility to integrate the systems the using the IHE PIX/PDQ profile, which provides ways for healthcare applications to query a patient information server for a patient based on user-defined search criteria, and retrieve a patient’s information directly into the application. RESULTS/ANTICIPATED RESULTS: We implemented a MPI of homeless individuals, which would allow the emergency department users to perform patient identity matching of housing insecure or homeless patients, without undue privacy intrusions. We are confident that IHE PIX/PDQ profile is able to support the integration of healthcare and housing and homeless services systems and enable the data sharing in an efficient way. DISCUSSION/SIGNIFICANCE OF IMPACT: The project addressed the gap in the sharing of data about housing insecure or homeless persons between healthcare and housing and social services that will result in improvements in coordination of care, reduce the cycle time from recognition of risk to the referral to housing and services and improve health outcomes and residential stability. Successful completion of this integration project will give us a model that we can scale to many other communities.
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- 2017
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6. Association of circulating transcriptomic profiles with mortality in sickle cell disease
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Santosh L. Saraf, Yves A. Lussier, Seyed Mehdi Nouraie, Xu Zhang, Ankit A. Desai, Binal N. Shah, Neil Bahroos, Amit R. Patel, Roberto F. Machado, Roberto M. Lang, Taimur Abbasi, Zhengdeng Lei, Mark Maienschein-Cline, Victor R. Gordeuk, and Joe G.N. Garcia
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Adult ,Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Immunology ,Anemia, Sickle Cell ,Kaplan-Meier Estimate ,Bioinformatics ,Biochemistry ,Cohort Studies ,Hemoglobins ,Leukocyte Count ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,Red Cells, Iron, and Erythropoiesis ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,Acute Chest Syndrome ,Risk of mortality ,Humans ,Medicine ,Prospective Studies ,Child ,Prospective cohort study ,Framingham Risk Score ,business.industry ,Hazard ratio ,Genomics ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,Tricuspid Valve Insufficiency ,Sickle cell anemia ,Acute chest syndrome ,030104 developmental biology ,Cohort ,Female ,Transcriptome ,business ,Biomarkers ,Cohort study - Abstract
Sickle cell disease (SCD) complications are associated with increased morbidity and risk of mortality. We sought to identify a circulating transcriptomic profile predictive of these poor outcomes in SCD. Training and testing cohorts consisting of adult patients with SCD were recruited and prospectively followed. A pathway-based signature derived from grouping peripheral blood mononuclear cell transcriptomes distinguished 2 patient clusters with differences in survival in the training cohort. These findings were validated in a testing cohort in which the association between cluster 1 molecular profiling and mortality remained significant in a fully adjusted model. In a third cohort of West African children with SCD, cluster 1 differentiated SCD severity using a published scoring index. Finally, a risk score composed of assigning weights to cluster 1 profiling, along with established clinical risk factors using tricuspid regurgitation velocity, white blood cell count, history of acute chest syndrome, and hemoglobin levels, demonstrated a higher hazard ratio for mortality in both the training and testing cohorts compared with clinical risk factors or cluster 1 data alone. Circulating transcriptomic profiles are a powerful method to risk-stratify severity of disease and poor outcomes in both children and adults, respectively, with SCD and highlight potential associated molecular pathways.
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- 2017
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7. ‘N-of-1-pathways’ unveils personal deregulated mechanisms from a single pair of RNA-Seq samples: towards precision medicine
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Lorenzo L. Pesce, Robert A. Winn, Ikbel Achour, Vincent Gardeux, Haiquan Li, Neil Bahroos, Yves A. Lussier, Mark Maienschein-Cline, Jianrong Li, Joe G.N. Garcia, Gurunadh Parinandi, and Ian Foster
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Adult ,Genetic Markers ,Male ,Lung Neoplasms ,Adenocarcinoma of Lung ,Health Informatics ,RNA-Seq ,Computational biology ,Adenocarcinoma ,Research and Applications ,Bioinformatics ,Disease-Free Survival ,DNA sequencing ,Transcriptome ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Patient-Centered Care ,Molecular marker ,Biomarkers, Tumor ,Humans ,Medicine ,RNA, Neoplasm ,Epigenetics ,Precision Medicine ,Aged ,Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis ,Aged, 80 and over ,Personal Transcriptome ,Sequence Analysis, RNA ,business.industry ,Gene Expression Profiling ,Personalized Medicine ,Geneset ,Computational Biology ,Middle Aged ,Precision medicine ,3. Good health ,Gene expression profiling ,chemistry ,Mutation ,Single Subject Design ,RNA ,Female ,Personalized medicine ,N-of-1 ,business - Abstract
Background The emergence of precision medicine allowed the incorporation of individual molecular data into patient care. Indeed, DNA sequencing predicts somatic mutations in individual patients. However, these genetic features overlook dynamic epigenetic and phenotypic response to therapy. Meanwhile, accurate personal transcriptome interpretation remains an unmet challenge. Further, N-of-1 (single-subject) efficacy trials are increasingly pursued, but are underpowered for molecular marker discovery. Method ‘N-of-1-pathways’ is a global framework relying on three principles: (i) the statistical universe is a single patient; (ii) significance is derived from geneset/biomodules powered by paired samples from the same patient; and (iii) similarity between genesets/biomodules assesses commonality and differences, within-study and cross-studies. Thus, patient gene-level profiles are transformed into deregulated pathways. From RNA-Seq of 55 lung adenocarcinoma patients, N-of-1-pathways predicts the deregulated pathways of each patient. Results Cross-patient N-of-1-pathways obtains comparable results with conventional genesets enrichment analysis (GSEA) and differentially expressed gene (DEG) enrichment, validated in three external evaluations. Moreover, heatmap and star plots highlight both individual and shared mechanisms ranging from molecular to organ-systems levels (eg, DNA repair, signaling, immune response). Patients were ranked based on the similarity of their deregulated mechanisms to those of an independent gold standard, generating unsupervised clusters of diametric extreme survival phenotypes (p=0.03). Conclusions The N-of-1-pathways framework provides a robust statistical and relevant biological interpretation of individual disease-free survival that is often overlooked in conventional cross-patient studies. It enables mechanism-level classifiers with smaller cohorts as well as N-of-1 studies. Software http://lussierlab.org/publications/N-of-1-pathways
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- 2014
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8. CAPriCORN: Chicago Area Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Network
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John M Collins, John B. Wong, Ron Price, Denise M. Hynes, Elizabeth Tarlov, Sameer Badlani, Francisco Angulo, Samuel L. Volchenboum, Jerry A. Krishnan, Bala Hota, David M. Levine, Andrew D. Hamilton, William E. Trick, Fred Rachman, Richard H. Kennedy, Jonathan C. Silverstein, David O. Meltzer, Shannon Sims, Abel N. Kho, Michael A Schwartz, Jonathan N. Tobin, Anthony Solomonides, Neil Bahroos, Satyender Goel, Erin O. Kaleba, and Terry Mazany
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Comparative effectiveness research ,Information Dissemination ,Health Informatics ,Outcomes Research ,Computer Communication Networks ,Nursing ,Patient-Centered Care ,Health care ,Outcome Assessment, Health Care ,medicine ,Electronic Health Records ,Humans ,Computer Security ,Clinical Data Network ,Chicago ,business.industry ,Patient-centered outcomes ,Public relations ,Health equity ,3. Good health ,Focus on Building a Network for Patient-Centered Outcomes Research ,Patient recruitment ,Aggregate data ,Medical Record Linkage ,Outcomes research ,business ,Confidentiality ,Patient Centered ,Information Systems - Abstract
The Chicago Area Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Network (CAPriCORN) represents an unprecedented collaboration across diverse healthcare institutions including private, county, and state hospitals and health systems, a consortium of Federally Qualified Health Centers, and two Department of Veterans Affairs hospitals. CAPriCORN builds on the strengths of our institutions to develop a cross-cutting infrastructure for sustainable and patient-centered comparative effectiveness research in Chicago. Unique aspects include collaboration with the University HealthSystem Consortium to aggregate data across sites, a centralized communication center to integrate patient recruitment with the data infrastructure, and a centralized institutional review board to ensure a strong and efficient human subject protection program. With coordination by the Chicago Community Trust and the Illinois Medical District Commission, CAPriCORN will model how healthcare institutions can overcome barriers of data integration, marketplace competition, and care fragmentation to develop, test, and implement strategies to improve care for diverse populations and reduce health disparities.
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- 2014
9. Gata5 Deficiency Causes Airway Constrictor Hyperresponsiveness in Mice
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Alex Rodriguez, Peter J. Gruber, Zhenping Li, Jorge Andrade, Julian Solway, Edward E. Morrisey, Anne I. Sperling, Bohao Chen, Tamson V. Moore, Chunling Zhang, Yong Huang, and Neil Bahroos
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Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Apolipoprotein E ,Genotype ,GATA5 Transcription Factor ,Ovalbumin ,Bronchoconstriction ,Myocytes, Smooth Muscle ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Inflammation ,Biology ,Mice ,Apolipoproteins E ,Metaplasia ,medicine ,Animals ,Lung ,Molecular Biology ,Original Research ,Mice, Knockout ,Goblet cell ,Interleukin-13 ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Pneumonia ,Cell Biology ,respiratory system ,Asthma ,respiratory tract diseases ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Disease Models, Animal ,Phenotype ,Bronchoalveolar lavage ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Gene Expression Regulation ,embryonic structures ,Immunology ,Interleukin 13 ,biology.protein ,Cholinergic ,Goblet Cells ,Bronchial Hyperreactivity ,medicine.symptom - Abstract
Gata5 is a transcription factor expressed in the lung, but its physiological role is unknown. To test whether and how Gata5 regulates airway constrictor responsiveness, we studied Gata5(-/-), Gata5(+/-), and wild-type mice on the C57BL/6J background. Cholinergic airway constrictor responsiveness was assessed invasively in mice without and with induction of allergic airway inflammation through ovalbumin sensitization and aerosol exposure. Gata5-deficient mice displayed native airway constrictor hyperresponsiveness (AHR) in the absence of allergen-induced inflammation. Gata5-deficient mice retained their relatively greater constrictor responsiveness even in ovalbumin-induced experimental asthma. Gata5 deficiency did not alter the distribution of cell types in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid, but bronchial epithelial mucus metaplasia was more prominent in Gata5(-/-) mice after allergen challenge. Gene expression profiles revealed that apolipoprotein E (apoE) was the fifth most down-regulated transcript in Gata5-deficient lungs, and quantitative RT-PCR and immunostaining confirmed reduced apoE expression in Gata5(-/-) mice. Quantitative RT-PCR also revealed increased IL-13 mRNA in the lungs of Gata5-deficient mice. These findings for the first time show that Gata5 regulates apoE and IL-13 expression in vivo and that its deletion causes AHR. Gata5-deficient mice exhibit an airway phenotype that closely resembles that previously reported for apoE(-/-) mice: both exhibit cholinergic AHR in native and experimental asthma states, and there is excessive goblet cell metaplasia after allergen sensitization and challenge. The Gata5-deficient phenotype also shares features that were previously reported for IL-13-treated mice. Together, these results indicate that Gata5 deficiency induces AHR, at least in part, by blunting apoE and increasing IL-13 expression.
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- 2014
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10. The discriminatory cost of ICD-10-CM transition between clinical specialties: metrics, case study, and mitigating tools
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Roger Q. Luo, Jianrong ‘John’ J Jianrong ‘John’ Li, Michael D. Burton, Andrew D. Boyd, Stephen Brown, Neil Bahroos, Yves A. Lussier, Ilir Zenku, Terry L. Vanden Hoek, Michael Jonen, Vincent Gardeux, and Ikbel Achour
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motifs ,Specialty ,Health Informatics ,ICD-9-CM ,Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, U.S ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Nursing ,International Classification of Diseases ,Humans ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Medical diagnosis ,Equivalence (measure theory) ,Focus on Human Factors and System Utilization ,030304 developmental biology ,billing complexity ,0303 health sciences ,business.industry ,Clinical Coding ,ICD-10 ,Emergency department ,ICD-10-CM ,medicine.disease ,United States ,Patient Care Management ,3. Good health ,Clinical Practice ,networks ,transition to ICD-10-CM ,Medical emergency ,business ,Medicaid ,Qualitative research - Abstract
Objective Applying the science of networks to quantify the discriminatory impact of the ICD-9-CM to ICD-10-CM transition between clinical specialties. Materials and Methods Datasets were the Center for Medicaid and Medicare Services ICD-9-CM to ICD-10-CM mapping files, general equivalence mappings, and statewide Medicaid emergency department billing. Diagnoses were represented as nodes and their mappings as directional relationships. The complex network was synthesized as an aggregate of simpler motifs and tabulation per clinical specialty. Results We identified five mapping motif categories: identity, class-to-subclass, subclass-to-class, convoluted, and no mapping. Convoluted mappings indicate that multiple ICD-9-CM and ICD-10-CM codes share complex, entangled, and non-reciprocal mappings. The proportions of convoluted diagnoses mappings (36% overall) range from 5% (hematology) to 60% (obstetrics and injuries). In a case study of 24 008 patient visits in 217 emergency departments, 27% of the costs are associated with convoluted diagnoses, with ‘abdominal pain’ and ‘gastroenteritis’ accounting for approximately 3.5%. Discussion Previous qualitative studies report that administrators and clinicians are likely to be challenged in understanding and managing their practice because of the ICD-10-CM transition. We substantiate the complexity of this transition with a thorough quantitative summary per clinical specialty, a case study, and the tools to apply this methodology easily to any clinical practice in the form of a web portal and analytic tables. Conclusions Post-transition, successful management of frequent diseases with convoluted mapping network patterns is critical. The http://lussierlab.org/transition-to-ICD10CM web portal provides insight in linking onerous diseases to the ICD-10 transition.
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- 2013
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11. From silos to an innovative health care delivery and patient engagement model for children in Medicaid
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Sheila R. Castillo, Benjamin W. Van Voorhees, Theodore J. Crawford, Nicole Kazee, Scott Kennedy, Jennifer May, William A. Frese, Monika Marko-Holguin, Neil Bahroos, and Amparo Castillo
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Quality management ,business.industry ,Medicaid ,Health Policy ,Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act ,MEDLINE ,Patient engagement ,United States ,Health care delivery ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Nursing ,030225 pediatrics ,Family medicine ,Health care ,medicine ,Community health workers ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Patient Participation ,business ,Delivery of Health Care - Published
- 2016
12. Nitric oxide regulates gene expression in cancers by controlling histone posttranslational modifications
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Divya Vasudevan, Benjamin A. Garcia, Lin L. Mantell, Vy Pham, Neil Bahroos, Pinal Kanabar, Xing Jun Cao, Jason R. Hickok, Mark Maienschein-Cline, Douglas D. Thomas, and Rhea C. Bovee
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Cancer Research ,Epigenetic code ,medicine.disease_cause ,Nitric Oxide ,Article ,Mass Spectrometry ,Epigenesis, Genetic ,Histones ,Cell Line, Tumor ,Neoplasms ,Histone H2A ,medicine ,Humans ,Epigenetics ,Cancer epigenetics ,Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis ,biology ,Molecular biology ,Cell biology ,Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic ,Histone ,Oncology ,Histone methyltransferase ,biology.protein ,Histone Demethylases ,Carcinogenesis ,Protein Processing, Post-Translational - Abstract
Altered nitric oxide (•NO) metabolism underlies cancer pathology, but mechanisms explaining many •NO-associated phenotypes remain unclear. We have found that cellular exposure to •NO changes histone posttranslational modifications (PTM) by directly inhibiting the catalytic activity of JmjC-domain containing histone demethylases. Herein, we describe how •NO exposure links modulation of histone PTMs to gene expression changes that promote oncogenesis. Through high-resolution mass spectrometry, we generated an extensive map of •NO-mediated histone PTM changes at 15 critical lysine residues on the core histones H3 and H4. Concomitant microarray analysis demonstrated that exposure to physiologic •NO resulted in the differential expression of over 6,500 genes in breast cancer cells. Measurements of the association of H3K9me2 and H3K9ac across genomic loci revealed that differential distribution of these particular PTMs correlated with changes in the level of expression of numerous oncogenes, consistent with epigenetic code. Our results establish that •NO functions as an epigenetic regulator of gene expression mediated by changes in histone PTMs. Cancer Res; 75(24); 5299–308. ©2015 AACR.
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- 2015
13. The IRF4 Gene Regulatory Module Functions as a Read-Write Integrator to Dynamically Coordinate T Helper Cell Fate
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Neil Bahroos, Jianjun Chen, Evelyn Sievert, Sarah L. Cook, Sunil Kannanganat, Mark Maienschein-Cline, Roger Sciammas, Anita S. Chong, Emily Corse, and Veena Krishnamoorthy
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Cellular differentiation ,Immunology ,Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell ,Cell fate determination ,Biology ,Article ,Cell Line ,Cell fate commitment ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,PRDM1 ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Immunology and Allergy ,Gene Regulatory Networks ,Antigens ,Nucleotide Motifs ,Transcription factor ,Mice, Knockout ,Genetics ,Regulation of gene expression ,Binding Sites ,Gene Expression Profiling ,T-cell receptor ,Cell Differentiation ,T-Lymphocytes, Helper-Inducer ,T helper cell ,Cell biology ,030104 developmental biology ,Infectious Diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Interferon Regulatory Factors ,Interleukin-2 ,Female ,Immunization ,Protein Binding ,Signal Transduction ,030215 immunology - Abstract
Transcriptional regulation during CD4+ T cell fate decisions enables their differentiation into distinct states, guiding immune responses toward antibody production via Tfh cells or inflammation by Teff cells. Tfh-Teff cell fate commitment is regulated by mutual antagonism between the transcription factors Bcl6 and Blimp-1. Here we examined how T cell receptor (TCR) signals establish and arbitrate Bcl6-Blimp-1 counter-antagonism. We found that the TCR-signal-induced transcription factor Irf4 is essential for the differentiation of Bcl6-expressing Tfh and Blimp-1-expressing Teff cells. Increased TCR signaling raised Irf4 amounts and promoted Teff cell fates at the expense of Tfh ones. Importantly, orthogonal induction of Irf4 expression redirected Tfh cell fate trajectories toward those of Teff. Mechanistically, we linked greater Irf4 abundance with its recruitment toward low-affinity binding sites within Teff cell cis-regulatory elements, including those of Prdm1. We propose that the Irf4 locus functions as the "reader" of TCR signal strength, and in turn, concentration-dependent activity of Irf4 "writes" T helper fate choice.
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- 2017
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14. The general mode of translation inhibition by macrolide antibiotics
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David Schryer, Tanel Tenson, Pinal Kanabar, Alexander S. Mankin, Neil Bahroos, Tanja Florin, Jonathan S. Weissman, Krishna Kannan, and Eugene Oh
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Peptidyl transferase ,medicine.drug_class ,translation ,Peptide ,Biology ,Ribosome ,antibiotics ,Macrolide Antibiotics ,medicine ,Protein biosynthesis ,Escherichia coli ,Genetics ,Peptide bond ,Ribosome profiling ,Codon ,Gene ,Institut für Biochemie und Biologie ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Multidisciplinary ,macrolides ,Escherichia coli Proteins ,Biological Sciences ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Infectious Diseases ,Biochemistry ,chemistry ,peptidyl transferase ,ribosome ,Protein Biosynthesis ,biology.protein ,Macrolides ,Infection ,Ribosomes ,Genome-Wide Association Study - Abstract
Macrolides are clinically important antibiotics thought to inhibit bacterial growth by impeding the passage of newly synthesized polypeptides through the nascent peptide exit tunnel of the bacterial ribosome. Recent data challenged this view by showing that macrolide antibiotics can differentially affect synthesis of individual proteins. To understand the general mechanism of macrolide action, we used genome-wide ribosome profiling and analyzed the redistribution of ribosomes translating highly expressed genes in bacterial cells treated with high concentrations of macrolide antibiotics. The metagene analysis indicated that inhibition of early rounds of translation, which would be characteristic of the conventional view of macrolide action, occurs only at a limited number of genes. Translation of most genes proceeds past the 5'-proximal codons and can be arrested at more distal codons when the ribosome encounters specific short sequence motifs. The problematic sequence motifs are confined to the nascent peptide residues in the peptidyl transferase center but not to the peptide segment that contacts the antibiotic molecule in the exit tunnel. Therefore, it appears that the general mode of macrolide action involves selective inhibition of peptide bond formation between specific combinations of donor and acceptor substrates. Additional factors operating in the living cell but not functioning during in vitro protein synthesis may modulate site-specific action of macrolide antibiotics.
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- 2014
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15. Utilisation of a thoracic oncology database to capture radiological and pathological images for evaluation of response to chemotherapy in patients with malignant pleural mesothelioma
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George B. Carey, Wickii T. Vigneswaran, Samuel G. Armato, Archana Kanteti, Ravi Madduri, Brigitte Raumann, Paul Dave, Mosmi Surati, Aliya N. Husain, Ahad Ali Sadiq, Everett E. Vokes, Ravi Salgia, Cleo E. Rolle, Thomas A. Hensing, Hedy L. Kindler, Stephanie M. Kazantsev, Neil Bahroos, and Adam Starkey
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Electronic data capture ,Translational research ,computer.software_genre ,Health informatics ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Thoracic Oncology ,Medicine ,Database ,Pleural mesothelioma ,business.industry ,Basic Sciences ,Research ,General Medicine ,3. Good health ,Data model ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Radiological weapon ,Informatics ,business ,computer - Abstract
Objective An area of need in cancer informatics is the ability to store images in a comprehensive database as part of translational cancer research. To meet this need, we have implemented a novel tandem database infrastructure that facilitates image storage and utilisation. Background We had previously implemented the Thoracic Oncology Program Database Project (TOPDP) database for our translational cancer research needs. While useful for many research endeavours, it is unable to store images, hence our need to implement an imaging database which could communicate easily with the TOPDP database. Methods The Thoracic Oncology Research Program (TORP) imaging database was designed using the Research Electronic Data Capture (REDCap) platform, which was developed by Vanderbilt University. To demonstrate proof of principle and evaluate utility, we performed a retrospective investigation into tumour response for malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) patients treated at the University of Chicago Medical Center with either of two analogous chemotherapy regimens and consented to at least one of two UCMC IRB protocols, 9571 and 13473A. Results A cohort of 22 MPM patients was identified using clinical data in the TOPDP database. After measurements were acquired, two representative CT images and 0–35 histological images per patient were successfully stored in the TORP database, along with clinical and demographic data. Discussion We implemented the TORP imaging database to be used in conjunction with our comprehensive TOPDP database. While it requires an additional effort to use two databases, our database infrastructure facilitates more comprehensive translational research. Conclusions The investigation described herein demonstrates the successful implementation of this novel tandem imaging database infrastructure, as well as the potential utility of investigations enabled by it. The data model presented here can be utilised as the basis for further development of other larger, more streamlined databases in the future.
- Published
- 2012
16. The Gene Expression Profile Of Lung Tissues In GATA5 Deficient Mice
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Yong Huang, Edward E. Morrisey, Neil Bahroos, Bohao Chen, Julian Solway, Alex Rodriguez, and Peter J. Gruber
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Lung ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Gene expression ,Deficient mouse ,medicine ,Biology ,Molecular biology - Published
- 2011
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17. My Interventional Drug-Eluting Stent Educational App (MyIDEA): Patient-Centered Design Methodology
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Matthew Baumann, Eugene Sadhu, Vicki L. Groo, Adhir Shroff, Vicki Shah, Betty Welland, Gerry Gutowski, Diana J. Wilkie, Neil Bahroos, Zhongsheng Zhao, Kaitlin Moores, Jerry Field, Carolyn Dickens, Jose D. Flores, Denise M. Hynes, and Andrew D. Boyd
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Kolb's learning theory ,Population ,Health Informatics ,Information technology ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,patient-centered design ,Health informatics ,patient education ,Session (web analytics) ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Nursing ,Medicine ,Medical physics ,Mobile technology ,030212 general & internal medicine ,education ,mHealth ,Original Paper ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,drug-eluting stents ,Usability ,T58.5-58.64 ,3. Good health ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 ,business ,Educational program ,Patient education - Abstract
BackgroundPatient adherence to medication regimens is critical in most chronic disease treatment plans. This study uses a patient-centered tablet app, “My Interventional Drug-Eluting Stent Educational App (MyIDEA).” This is an educational program designed to improve patient medication adherence. ObjectiveOur goal is to describe the design, methodology, limitations, and results of the MyIDEA tablet app. We created a mobile technology-based patient education app to improve dual antiplatelet therapy adherence in patients who underwent a percutaneous coronary intervention and received a drug-eluting stent. MethodsPatient advisers were involved in the development process of MyIDEA from the initial wireframe to the final launch of the product. The program was restructured and redesigned based on the patient advisers’ suggestions as well as those from multidisciplinary team members. To accommodate those with low health literacy, we modified the language and employed attractive color schemes to improve ease of use. We assumed that the target patient population may have little to no experience with electronic tablets, and therefore, we designed the interface to be as intuitive as possible. ResultsThe MyIDEA app has been successfully deployed to a low-health-literate elderly patient population in the hospital setting. A total of 6 patients have interacted with MyIDEA for an average of 17.6 minutes/session. ConclusionsIncluding patient advisers in the early phases of a mobile patient education development process is critical. A number of changes in text order, language, and color schemes occurred to improve ease of use. The MyIDEA program has been successfully deployed to a low-health-literate elderly patient population. Leveraging patient advisers throughout the development process helps to ensure implementation success.
- Published
- 2015
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