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Trends in Collection and Utilization of Autologous Hematopoietic Stem Cells (APBHC) Intended for Transplant in Patients with Multiple Myeloma [Meeting Abstract]

Samuel, Nina; Laufer, Lauren; Tanaguchi, Rodrigo; Rosiene, Joel; Palesi, Carlo; Elkind, Richard; Mantzaris, Ioannis; Shastri, Aditi; Kornblum, Noah; Sica, R. Alejandro; Shah, Urvi A.; Cooper, Dennis; Verma, Amit; Shah, Nishi
ISI:000893230300430
ISSN: 0006-4971
CID: 5459452

Structural variant evolution after telomere crisis

Dewhurst, Sally M; Yao, Xiaotong; Rosiene, Joel; Tian, Huasong; Behr, Julie; Bosco, Nazario; Takai, Kaori K; de Lange, Titia; Imieliński, Marcin
Telomere crisis contributes to cancer genome evolution, yet only a subset of cancers display breakage-fusion-bridge (BFB) cycles and chromothripsis, hallmarks of experimental telomere crisis identified in previous studies. We examine the spectrum of structural variants (SVs) instigated by natural telomere crisis. Eight spontaneous post-crisis clones did not show prominent patterns of BFB cycles or chromothripsis. Their crisis-induced genome rearrangements varied from infrequent simple SVs to more frequent and complex SVs. In contrast, BFB cycles and chromothripsis occurred in MRC5 fibroblast clones that escaped telomere crisis after CRISPR-controlled telomerase activation. This system revealed convergent evolutionary lineages altering one allele of chromosome 12p, where a short telomere likely predisposed to fusion. Remarkably, the 12p chromothripsis and BFB events were stabilized by independent fusions to chromosome 21. The data establish that telomere crisis can generate a wide spectrum of SVs implying that a lack of BFB patterns and chromothripsis in cancer genomes does not indicate absence of past telomere crisis.
PMCID:8027843
PMID: 33828097
ISSN: 2041-1723
CID: 4862442

Shotgun transcriptome, spatial omics, and isothermal profiling of SARS-CoV-2 infection reveals unique host responses, viral diversification, and drug interactions

Butler, Daniel; Mozsary, Christopher; Meydan, Cem; Foox, Jonathan; Rosiene, Joel; Shaiber, Alon; Danko, David; Afshinnekoo, Ebrahim; MacKay, Matthew; Sedlazeck, Fritz J; Ivanov, Nikolay A; Sierra, Maria; Pohle, Diana; Zietz, Michael; Gisladottir, Undina; Ramlall, Vijendra; Sholle, Evan T; Schenck, Edward J; Westover, Craig D; Hassan, Ciaran; Ryon, Krista; Young, Benjamin; Bhattacharya, Chandrima; Ng, Dianna L; Granados, Andrea C; Santos, Yale A; Servellita, Venice; Federman, Scot; Ruggiero, Phyllis; Fungtammasan, Arkarachai; Chin, Chen-Shan; Pearson, Nathaniel M; Langhorst, Bradley W; Tanner, Nathan A; Kim, Youngmi; Reeves, Jason W; Hether, Tyler D; Warren, Sarah E; Bailey, Michael; Gawrys, Justyna; Meleshko, Dmitry; Xu, Dong; Couto-Rodriguez, Mara; Nagy-Szakal, Dorottya; Barrows, Joseph; Wells, Heather; O'Hara, Niamh B; Rosenfeld, Jeffrey A; Chen, Ying; Steel, Peter A D; Shemesh, Amos J; Xiang, Jenny; Thierry-Mieg, Jean; Thierry-Mieg, Danielle; Iftner, Angelika; Bezdan, Daniela; Sanchez, Elizabeth; Campion, Thomas R; Sipley, John; Cong, Lin; Craney, Arryn; Velu, Priya; Melnick, Ari M; Shapira, Sagi; Hajirasouliha, Iman; Borczuk, Alain; Iftner, Thomas; Salvatore, Mirella; Loda, Massimo; Westblade, Lars F; Cushing, Melissa; Wu, Shixiu; Levy, Shawn; Chiu, Charles; Schwartz, Robert E; Tatonetti, Nicholas; Rennert, Hanna; Imielinski, Marcin; Mason, Christopher E
In less than nine months, the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) killed over a million people, including >25,000 in New York City (NYC) alone. The COVID-19 pandemic caused by SARS-CoV-2 highlights clinical needs to detect infection, track strain evolution, and identify biomarkers of disease course. To address these challenges, we designed a fast (30-minute) colorimetric test (LAMP) for SARS-CoV-2 infection from naso/oropharyngeal swabs and a large-scale shotgun metatranscriptomics platform (total-RNA-seq) for host, viral, and microbial profiling. We applied these methods to clinical specimens gathered from 669 patients in New York City during the first two months of the outbreak, yielding a broad molecular portrait of the emerging COVID-19 disease. We find significant enrichment of a NYC-distinctive clade of the virus (20C), as well as host responses in interferon, ACE, hematological, and olfaction pathways. In addition, we use 50,821 patient records to find that renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system inhibitors have a protective effect for severe COVID-19 outcomes, unlike similar drugs. Finally, spatial transcriptomic data from COVID-19 patient autopsy tissues reveal distinct ACE2 expression loci, with macrophage and neutrophil infiltration in the lungs. These findings can inform public health and may help develop and drive SARS-CoV-2 diagnostic, prevention, and treatment strategies.
PMID: 33712587
ISSN: 2041-1723
CID: 5270322

Systemic Tissue and Cellular Disruption from SARS-CoV-2 Infection revealed in COVID-19 Autopsies and Spatial Omics Tissue Maps [PrePrint]

Park, Jiwoon; Foox, Jonathan; Hether, Tyler; Danko, David; Warren, Sarah; Kim, Youngmi; Reeves, Jason; Butler, Daniel J; Mozsary, Christopher; Rosiene, Joel; Shaiber, Alon; Afshinnekoo, Ebrahim; MacKay, Matthew; Bram, Yaron; Chandar, Vasuretha; Geiger, Heather; Craney, Arryn; Velu, Priya; Melnick, Ari M; Hajirasouliha, Iman; Beheshti, Afshin; Taylor, Deanne; Saravia-Butler, Amanda; Singh, Urminder; Wurtele, Eve Syrkin; Schisler, Jonathan; Fennessey, Samantha; Corvelo, André; Zody, Michael C; Germer, Soren; Salvatore, Steven; Levy, Shawn; Wu, Shixiu; Tatonetti, Nicholas; Shapira, Sagi; Salvatore, Mirella; Loda, Massimo; Westblade, Lars F; Cushing, Melissa; Rennert, Hanna; Kriegel, Alison J; Elemento, Olivier; Imielinski, Marcin; Borczuk, Alain C; Meydan, Cem; Schwartz, Robert E; Mason, Christopher E
The Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) virus has infected over 115 million people and caused over 2.5 million deaths worldwide. Yet, the molecular mechanisms underlying the clinical manifestations of COVID-19, as well as what distinguishes them from common seasonal influenza virus and other lung injury states such as Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS), remains poorly understood. To address these challenges, we combined transcriptional profiling of 646 clinical nasopharyngeal swabs and 39 patient autopsy tissues, matched with spatial protein and expression profiling (GeoMx) across 357 tissue sections. These results define both body-wide and tissue-specific (heart, liver, lung, kidney, and lymph nodes) damage wrought by the SARS-CoV-2 infection, evident as a function of varying viral load (high vs. low) during the course of infection and specific, transcriptional dysregulation in splicing isoforms, T cell receptor expression, and cellular expression states. In particular, cardiac and lung tissues revealed the largest degree of splicing isoform switching and cell expression state loss. Overall, these findings reveal a systemic disruption of cellular and transcriptional pathways from COVID-19 across all tissues, which can inform subsequent studies to combat the mortality of COVID-19, as well to better understand the molecular dynamics of lethal SARS-CoV-2 infection and other viruses.
PMCID:7987017
PMID: 33758858
ISSN: 2692-8205
CID: 5270342

Distinct Classes of Complex Structural Variation Uncovered across Thousands of Cancer Genome Graphs

Hadi, Kevin; Yao, Xiaotong; Behr, Julie M; Deshpande, Aditya; Xanthopoulakis, Charalampos; Tian, Huasong; Kudman, Sarah; Rosiene, Joel; Darmofal, Madison; DeRose, Joseph; Mortensen, Rick; Adney, Emily M; Shaiber, Alon; Gajic, Zoran; Sigouros, Michael; Eng, Kenneth; Wala, Jeremiah A; Wrzeszczyński, Kazimierz O; Arora, Kanika; Shah, Minita; Emde, Anne-Katrin; Felice, Vanessa; Frank, Mayu O; Darnell, Robert B; Ghandi, Mahmoud; Huang, Franklin; Dewhurst, Sally; Maciejowski, John; de Lange, Titia; Setton, Jeremy; Riaz, Nadeem; Reis-Filho, Jorge S; Powell, Simon; Knowles, David A; Reznik, Ed; Mishra, Bud; Beroukhim, Rameen; Zody, Michael C; Robine, Nicolas; Oman, Kenji M; Sanchez, Carissa A; Kuhner, Mary K; Smith, Lucian P; Galipeau, Patricia C; Paulson, Thomas G; Reid, Brian J; Li, Xiaohong; Wilkes, David; Sboner, Andrea; Mosquera, Juan Miguel; Elemento, Olivier; Imielinski, Marcin
Cancer genomes often harbor hundreds of somatic DNA rearrangement junctions, many of which cannot be easily classified into simple (e.g., deletion) or complex (e.g., chromothripsis) structural variant classes. Applying a novel genome graph computational paradigm to analyze the topology of junction copy number (JCN) across 2,778 tumor whole-genome sequences, we uncovered three novel complex rearrangement phenomena: pyrgo, rigma, and tyfonas. Pyrgo are "towers" of low-JCN duplications associated with early-replicating regions, superenhancers, and breast or ovarian cancers. Rigma comprise "chasms" of low-JCN deletions enriched in late-replicating fragile sites and gastrointestinal carcinomas. Tyfonas are "typhoons" of high-JCN junctions and fold-back inversions associated with expressed protein-coding fusions, breakend hypermutation, and acral, but not cutaneous, melanomas. Clustering of tumors according to genome graph-derived features identified subgroups associated with DNA repair defects and poor prognosis.
PMID: 33007263
ISSN: 1097-4172
CID: 4632912

Shotgun Transcriptome and Isothermal Profiling of SARS-CoV-2 Infection Reveals Unique Host Responses, Viral Diversification, and Drug Interactions [PrePrint]

Butler, Daniel J; Mozsary, Christopher; Meydan, Cem; Danko, David; Foox, Jonathan; Rosiene, Joel; Shaiber, Alon; Afshinnekoo, Ebrahim; MacKay, Matthew; Sedlazeck, Fritz J; Ivanov, Nikolay A; Sierra, Maria; Pohle, Diana; Zietz, Michael; Gisladottir, Undina; Ramlall, Vijendra; Westover, Craig D; Ryon, Krista; Young, Benjamin; Bhattacharya, Chandrima; Ruggiero, Phyllis; Langhorst, Bradley W; Tanner, Nathan; Gawrys, Justyna; Meleshko, Dmitry; Xu, Dong; Steel, Peter A D; Shemesh, Amos J; Xiang, Jenny; Thierry-Mieg, Jean; Thierry-Mieg, Danielle; Schwartz, Robert E; Iftner, Angelika; Bezdan, Daniela; Sipley, John; Cong, Lin; Craney, Arryn; Velu, Priya; Melnick, Ari M; Hajirasouliha, Iman; Horner, Stacy M; Iftner, Thomas; Salvatore, Mirella; Loda, Massimo; Westblade, Lars F; Cushing, Melissa; Levy, Shawn; Wu, Shixiu; Tatonetti, Nicholas; Imielinski, Marcin; Rennert, Hanna; Mason, Christopher E
The Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) has caused thousands of deaths worldwide, including >18,000 in New York City (NYC) alone. The sudden emergence of this pandemic has highlighted a pressing clinical need for rapid, scalable diagnostics that can detect infection, interrogate strain evolution, and identify novel patient biomarkers. To address these challenges, we designed a fast (30-minute) colorimetric test (LAMP) for SARS-CoV-2 infection from naso/oropharyngeal swabs, plus a large-scale shotgun metatranscriptomics platform (total-RNA-seq) for host, bacterial, and viral profiling. We applied both technologies across 857 SARS-CoV-2 clinical specimens and 86 NYC subway samples, providing a broad molecular portrait of the COVID-19 NYC outbreak. Our results define new features of SARS-CoV-2 evolution, nominate a novel, NYC-enriched viral subclade, reveal specific host responses in interferon, ACE, hematological, and olfaction pathways, and examine risks associated with use of ACE inhibitors and angiotensin receptor blockers. Together, these findings have immediate applications to SARS-CoV-2 diagnostics, public health, and new therapeutic targets.
PMID: 32511352
ISSN: 2692-8205
CID: 5270272

Single-cell transcriptomic profiling of non-small cell lung cancer uncovers inter- and intracell population structure across TCGA lung adenocarcinoma and lung squamous cancer subtypes [Meeting Abstract]

Gyan, Kofi E.; Deshpande, Aditya; Beg, Shaham; Tian, Huasong; Rosiene, Joel; Stoeckius, Marlon; Smibert, Peter; Risso, Davide; Mosquera, Juan Miguel; Imielinski, Marcin
ISI:000488129903009
ISSN: 0008-5472
CID: 5459392

Tracking and transforming neocortical progenitors by CRISPR/Cas9 gene targeting and piggyBac transposase lineage labeling

Chen, Fuyi; Rosiene, Joel; Che, Alicia; Becker, Albert; LoTurco, Joseph
The ability to induce targeted mutations in somatic cells in developing organisms and then track the fates of those cells is a powerful approach both for studying neural development and for modeling human disease. The CRISPR/Cas9 system allows for such targeted mutagenesis, and we therefore tested it in combination with a piggyBac transposase lineage labeling system to track the development of neocortical neural progenitors with targeted mutations in genes linked to neurodevelopmental disruptions and tumor formation. We show that sgRNAs designed to target PTEN successfully decreased PTEN expression, and led to neuronal hypertrophy and altered neuronal excitability. Targeting NF1, by contrast, caused increased astrocytogenesis at the expense of neurogenesis, and combined targeting of three tumor suppressors (PTEN, NF1 and P53) resulted in formation of glioblastoma tumors. Our results demonstrate that CRISPR/Cas9 combined with piggyBac transposase lineage labeling can produce unique models of neurodevelopmental disruption and tumors caused by somatic mutation in neural progenitors.
PMCID:4631763
PMID: 26400094
ISSN: 1477-9129
CID: 5459282

Toward objective quantification of perfusion-weighted computed tomography in subarachnoid hemorrhage: quantification of symmetry and automated delineation of vascular territories

Imielinska, Celina; Liu, Xin; Rosiene, Joel; Sughrue, Michael E; Komotar, Ricardo J; Mocco, J; Ransom, Evan R; Lignelli, Angela; Zacharia, Brad E; Connolly, E Sander; D'Ambrosio, Anthony L
RATIONALE AND OBJECTIVES/OBJECTIVE:Perfusion-weighted computed tomography (CTP) is a relatively recent innovation that estimates a value for cerebral blood flow (CBF) using a series of axial head CT images tracking the time course of a signal from an intravenous contrast bolus. MATERIALS AND METHODS/METHODS:CTP images were obtained using a standard imaging protocol and were analyzed using commercially available software. A novel computer-based method was used for objective quantification of side-to-side asymmetries of CBF values calculated from CTP images. RESULTS:Our method corrects for the inherent variability of the CTP methodology seen in the subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) patient population to potentially aid in the diagnosis of cerebral vasospasm (CVS). This method analyzes and quantifies side-to-side asymmetry of CBF and presents relative differences in a construct termed a Relative Difference Map (RDM). To further automate this process, we have developed a unique methodology that enables a computer to delineate vascular territories within a brain image, regardless of the size and shape of the brain. CONCLUSIONS:While both the quantification of image symmetry using RDMs and the automated assignment of vascular territories were initially designed for the analysis of CTP images, it is likely that they will be useful in a variety of applications.
PMID: 16039541
ISSN: 1076-6332
CID: 4620942

Evaluation of ischemic stroke hybrid segmentation in a rat model of temporary middle cerebral artery occlusion using ground truth from histologic and MR data [Meeting Abstract]

Imielinska, C; Jin, YP; Liu, X; Rosiene, J; Zacharia, BE; Komotar, RJ; Mocco, J; Sughrue, ME; Grobelny, B; Sisti, A; Silverberg, J; Khandji, J; Cohen, H; Connolly, S; D\Ambrosio, AL
ISI:000230109602031
ISSN: 0277-786x
CID: 3988792