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A genome wide association study (GWAS) of treatment outcomes for citalopram and escitalopram, two frontline SSRI treatments for Major Depressive Disorder, was conducted with 529 subjects on an imputed dataset. While no variants of genome-wide significance were identified, various potentially interesting variants were identified that warrant further exploration. These findings

A genome wide association study (GWAS) of treatment outcomes for citalopram and escitalopram, two frontline SSRI treatments for Major Depressive Disorder, was conducted with 529 subjects on an imputed dataset. While no variants of genome-wide significance were identified, various potentially interesting variants were identified that warrant further exploration. These findings have the potential to elucidate novel mechanisms underlying drug response for SSRIs. This work will be continued further, with machine learning and deep learning analyses to perform non-linear analyses and employing a biologist or geneticist to provide more specialized knowledge for interpretation of results.
ContributorsLeiter-Weintraub, Ethan (Author) / Dinu, Valentin (Thesis director) / Scotch, Matthew (Committee member) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor) / Dean, W.P. Carey School of Business (Contributor) / College of Health Solutions (Contributor) / School of Life Sciences (Contributor)
Created2024-05
Description
Circular RNAs (circRNAs) are a class of endogenous, non-coding RNAs that are formed when exons back-splice to each other and represent a new area of transcriptomics research. Numerous RNA sequencing (RNAseq) studies since 2012 have revealed that circRNAs are pervasively expressed in eukaryotes, especially in the mammalian brain. While their

Circular RNAs (circRNAs) are a class of endogenous, non-coding RNAs that are formed when exons back-splice to each other and represent a new area of transcriptomics research. Numerous RNA sequencing (RNAseq) studies since 2012 have revealed that circRNAs are pervasively expressed in eukaryotes, especially in the mammalian brain. While their functional role and impact remains to be clarified, circRNAs have been found to regulate micro-RNAs (miRNAs) as well as parental gene transcription and may thus have key roles in transcriptional regulation. Although circRNAs have continued to gain attention, our understanding of their expression in a cell-, tissue- , and brain region-specific context remains limited. Further, computational algorithms produce varied results in terms of what circRNAs are detected. This thesis aims to advance current knowledge of circRNA expression in a region specific context focusing on the human brain, as well as address computational challenges.

The overarching goal of my research unfolds over three aims: (i) evaluating circRNAs and their predicted impact on transcriptional regulatory networks in cell-specific RNAseq data; (ii) developing a novel solution for de novo detection of full length circRNAs as well as in silico validation of selected circRNA junctions using assembly; and (iii) application of these assembly based detection and validation workflows, and integrating existing tools, to systematically identify and characterize circRNAs in functionally distinct human brain regions. To this end, I have developed novel bioinformatics workflows that are applicable to non-polyA selected RNAseq datasets and can be used to characterize circRNA expression across various sample types and diseases. Further, I establish a reference dataset of circRNA expression profiles and regulatory networks in a brain region-specific manner. This resource along with existing databases such as circBase will be invaluable in advancing circRNA research as well as improving our understanding of their role in transcriptional regulation and various neurological conditions.
ContributorsSekar, Shobana (Author) / Liang, Winnie S (Thesis advisor) / Dinu, Valentin (Thesis advisor) / Craig, David (Committee member) / Liu, Li (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2018
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Description
Study of canine cancer’s molecular underpinnings holds great potential for informing veterinary and human oncology. Sporadic canine cancers are highly abundant (~4 million diagnoses/year in the United States) and the dog’s unique genomic architecture due to selective inbreeding, alongside the high similarity between dog and human genomes both confer power

Study of canine cancer’s molecular underpinnings holds great potential for informing veterinary and human oncology. Sporadic canine cancers are highly abundant (~4 million diagnoses/year in the United States) and the dog’s unique genomic architecture due to selective inbreeding, alongside the high similarity between dog and human genomes both confer power for improving understanding of cancer genes. However, characterization of canine cancer genome landscapes has been limited. It is hindered by lack of canine-specific tools and resources. To enable robust and reproducible comparative genomic analysis of canine cancers, I have developed a workflow for somatic and germline variant calling in canine cancer genomic data. I have first adapted a human cancer genomics pipeline to create a semi-automated canine pipeline used to map genomic landscapes of canine melanoma, lung adenocarcinoma, osteosarcoma and lymphoma. This pipeline also forms the backbone of my novel comparative genomics workflow.

Practical impediments to comparative genomic analysis of dog and human include challenges identifying similarities in mutation type and function across species. For example, canine genes could have evolved different functions and their human orthologs may perform different functions. Hence, I undertook a systematic statistical evaluation of dog and human cancer genes and assessed functional similarities and differences between orthologs to improve understanding of the roles of these genes in cancer across species. I tested this pipeline canine and human Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma (DLBCL), given that canine DLBCL is the most comprehensively genomically characterized canine cancer. Logistic regression with genes bearing somatic coding mutations in each cancer was used to determine if conservation metrics (sequence identity, network placement, etc.) could explain co-mutation of genes in both species. Using this model, I identified 25 co-mutated and evolutionarily similar genes that may be compelling cross-species cancer genes. For example, PCLO was identified as a co-mutated conserved gene with PCLO having been previously identified as recurrently mutated in human DLBCL, but with an unclear role in oncogenesis. Further investigation of these genes might shed new light on the biology of lymphoma in dogs and human and this approach may more broadly serve to prioritize new genes for comparative cancer biology studies.
ContributorsSivaprakasam, Karthigayini (Author) / Dinu, Valentin (Thesis advisor) / Trent, Jeffrey (Thesis advisor) / Hendricks, William (Committee member) / Runger, George C. (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2018
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Description
No two cancers are alike. Cancer is a dynamic and heterogeneous disease, such heterogeneity arise among patients with the same cancer type, among cancer cells within the same individual’s tumor and even among cells within the same sub-clone over time. The recent application of next-generation sequencing and precision medicine techniques

No two cancers are alike. Cancer is a dynamic and heterogeneous disease, such heterogeneity arise among patients with the same cancer type, among cancer cells within the same individual’s tumor and even among cells within the same sub-clone over time. The recent application of next-generation sequencing and precision medicine techniques is the driving force to uncover the complexity of cancer and the best clinical practice. The core concept of precision medicine is to move away from crowd-based, best-for-most treatment and take individual variability into account when optimizing the prevention and treatment strategies. Next-generation sequencing is the method to sift through the entire 3 billion letters of each patient’s DNA genetic code in a massively parallel fashion.

The deluge of next-generation sequencing data nowadays has shifted the bottleneck of cancer research from multiple “-omics” data collection to integrative analysis and data interpretation. In this dissertation, I attempt to address two distinct, but dependent, challenges. The first is to design specific computational algorithms and tools that can process and extract useful information from the raw data in an efficient, robust, and reproducible manner. The second challenge is to develop high-level computational methods and data frameworks for integrating and interpreting these data. Specifically, Chapter 2 presents a tool called Snipea (SNv Integration, Prioritization, Ensemble, and Annotation) to further identify, prioritize and annotate somatic SNVs (Single Nucleotide Variant) called from multiple variant callers. Chapter 3 describes a novel alignment-based algorithm to accurately and losslessly classify sequencing reads from xenograft models. Chapter 4 describes a direct and biologically motivated framework and associated methods for identification of putative aberrations causing survival difference in GBM patients by integrating whole-genome sequencing, exome sequencing, RNA-Sequencing, methylation array and clinical data. Lastly, chapter 5 explores longitudinal and intratumor heterogeneity studies to reveal the temporal and spatial context of tumor evolution. The long-term goal is to help patients with cancer, particularly those who are in front of us today. Genome-based analysis of the patient tumor can identify genomic alterations unique to each patient’s tumor that are candidate therapeutic targets to decrease therapy resistance and improve clinical outcome.
ContributorsPeng, Sen (Author) / Dinu, Valentin (Thesis advisor) / Scotch, Matthew (Committee member) / Wallstrom, Garrick (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2015
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Description
Rapid advancements in genomic technologies have increased our understanding of rare human disease. Generation of multiple types of biological data including genetic variation from genome or exome, expression from transcriptome, methylation patterns from epigenome, protein complexity from proteome and metabolite information from metabolome is feasible. "Omics" tools provide comprehensive view

Rapid advancements in genomic technologies have increased our understanding of rare human disease. Generation of multiple types of biological data including genetic variation from genome or exome, expression from transcriptome, methylation patterns from epigenome, protein complexity from proteome and metabolite information from metabolome is feasible. "Omics" tools provide comprehensive view into biological mechanisms that impact disease trait and risk. In spite of available data types and ability to collect them simultaneously from patients, researchers still rely on their independent analysis. Combining information from multiple biological data can reduce missing information, increase confidence in single data findings, and provide a more complete view of genotype-phenotype correlations. Although rare disease genetics has been greatly improved by exome sequencing, a substantial portion of clinical patients remain undiagnosed. Multiple frameworks for integrative analysis of genomic and transcriptomic data are presented with focus on identifying functional genetic variations in patients with undiagnosed, rare childhood conditions. Direct quantitation of X inactivation ratio was developed from genomic and transcriptomic data using allele specific expression and segregation analysis to determine magnitude and inheritance mode of X inactivation. This approach was applied in two families revealing non-random X inactivation in female patients. Expression based analysis of X inactivation showed high correlation with standard clinical assay. These findings improved understanding of molecular mechanisms underlying X-linked disorders. In addition multivariate outlier analysis of gene and exon level data from RNA-seq using Mahalanobis distance, and its integration of distance scores with genomic data found genotype-phenotype correlations in variant prioritization process in 25 families. Mahalanobis distance scores revealed variants with large transcriptional impact in patients. In this dataset, frameshift variants were more likely result in outlier expression signatures than other types of functional variants. Integration of outlier estimates with genetic variants corroborated previously identified, presumed causal variants and highlighted new candidate in previously un-diagnosed case. Integrative genomic approaches in easily attainable tissue will facilitate the search for biomarkers that impact disease trait, uncover pharmacogenomics targets, provide novel insight into molecular underpinnings of un-characterized conditions, and help improve analytical approaches that use large datasets.
ContributorsSzelinger, Szabolcs (Author) / Craig, David W. (Thesis advisor) / Kusumi, Kenro (Thesis advisor) / Narayan, Vinodh (Committee member) / Rosenberg, Michael S. (Committee member) / Huentelman, Matthew J (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2015
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Description
The processes of a human somatic cell are very complex with various genetic mechanisms governing its fate. Such cells undergo various genetic mutations, which translate to the genetic aberrations that we see in cancer. There are more than 100 types of cancer, each having many more subtypes with aberrations being

The processes of a human somatic cell are very complex with various genetic mechanisms governing its fate. Such cells undergo various genetic mutations, which translate to the genetic aberrations that we see in cancer. There are more than 100 types of cancer, each having many more subtypes with aberrations being unique to each. In the past two decades, the widespread application of high-throughput genomic technologies, such as micro-arrays and next-generation sequencing, has led to the revelation of many such aberrations. Known types and subtypes can be readily identified using gene-expression profiling and more importantly, high-throughput genomic datasets have helped identify novel sub-types with distinct signatures. Recent studies showing usage of gene-expression profiling in clinical decision making in breast cancer patients underscore the utility of high-throughput datasets. Beyond prognosis, understanding the underlying cellular processes is essential for effective cancer treatment. Various high-throughput techniques are now available to look at a particular aspect of a genetic mechanism in cancer tissue. To look at these mechanisms individually is akin to looking at a broken watch; taking apart each of its parts, looking at them individually and finally making a list of all the faulty ones. Integrative approaches are needed to transform one-dimensional cancer signatures into multi-dimensional interaction and regulatory networks, consequently bettering our understanding of cellular processes in cancer. Here, I attempt to (i) address ways to effectively identify high quality variants when multiple assays on the same sample samples are available through two novel tools, snpSniffer and NGSPE; (ii) glean new biological insight into multiple myeloma through two novel integrative analysis approaches making use of disparate high-throughput datasets. While these methods focus on multiple myeloma datasets, the informatics approaches are applicable to all cancer datasets and will thus help advance cancer genomics.
ContributorsYellapantula, Venkata (Author) / Dinu, Valentin (Thesis advisor) / Scotch, Matthew (Committee member) / Wallstrom, Garrick (Committee member) / Keats, Jonathan (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2014
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Description
Telomerase enzyme is a truly remarkable enzyme specialized for the addition of short, highly repetitive DNA sequences onto linear eukaryotic chromosome ends. The telomerase enzyme functions as a ribonucleoprotein, minimally composed of the highly conserved catalytic telomerase reverse transcriptase and essential telomerase RNA component containing an internalized short template

Telomerase enzyme is a truly remarkable enzyme specialized for the addition of short, highly repetitive DNA sequences onto linear eukaryotic chromosome ends. The telomerase enzyme functions as a ribonucleoprotein, minimally composed of the highly conserved catalytic telomerase reverse transcriptase and essential telomerase RNA component containing an internalized short template region within the vastly larger non-coding RNA. Even among closely related groups of species, telomerase RNA is astonishingly divergent in sequence, length, and secondary structure. This massive disparity is highly prohibitive for telomerase RNA identification from previously unexplored groups of species, which is fundamental for secondary structure determination. Combined biochemical enrichment and computational screening methods were employed for the discovery of numerous telomerase RNAs from the poorly characterized echinoderm lineage. This resulted in the revelation that--while closely related to the vertebrate lineage and grossly resembling vertebrate telomerase RNA--the echinoderm telomerase RNA central domain varies extensively in structure and sequence, diverging even within echinoderms amongst sea urchins and brittle stars. Furthermore, the origins of telomerase RNA within the eukaryotic lineage have remained a persistent mystery. The ancient Trypanosoma telomerase RNA was previously identified, however, a functionally verified secondary structure remained elusive. Synthetic Trypanosoma telomerase was generated for molecular dissection of Trypanosoma telomerase RNA revealing two RNA domains functionally equivalent to those found in known telomerase RNAs, yet structurally distinct. This work demonstrates that telomerase RNA is uncommonly divergent in gross architecture, while retaining critical universal elements.
ContributorsPodlevsky, Joshua (Author) / Chen, Julian (Thesis advisor) / Mangone, Marco (Committee member) / Kusumi, Kenro (Committee member) / Wilson-Rawls, Norma (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2015
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Description
Genomic structural variation (SV) is defined as gross alterations in the genome broadly classified as insertions/duplications, deletions inversions and translocations. DNA sequencing ushered structural variant discovery beyond laboratory detection techniques to high resolution informatics approaches. Bioinformatics tools for computational discovery of SVs however are still missing variants in the complex

Genomic structural variation (SV) is defined as gross alterations in the genome broadly classified as insertions/duplications, deletions inversions and translocations. DNA sequencing ushered structural variant discovery beyond laboratory detection techniques to high resolution informatics approaches. Bioinformatics tools for computational discovery of SVs however are still missing variants in the complex cancer genome. This study aimed to define genomic context leading to tool failure and design novel algorithm addressing this context. Methods: The study tested the widely held but unproven hypothesis that tools fail to detect variants which lie in repeat regions. Publicly available 1000-Genomes dataset with experimentally validated variants was tested with SVDetect-tool for presence of true positives (TP) SVs versus false negative (FN) SVs, expecting that FNs would be overrepresented in repeat regions. Further, the novel algorithm designed to informatically capture the biological etiology of translocations (non-allelic homologous recombination and 3&ndashD; placement of chromosomes in cells –context) was tested using simulated dataset. Translocations were created in known translocation hotspots and the novel&ndashalgorithm; tool compared with SVDetect and BreakDancer. Results: 53% of false negative (FN) deletions were within repeat structure compared to 81% true positive (TP) deletions. Similarly, 33% FN insertions versus 42% TP, 26% FN duplication versus 57% TP and 54% FN novel sequences versus 62% TP were within repeats. Repeat structure was not driving the tool's inability to detect variants and could not be used as context. The novel algorithm with a redefined context, when tested against SVDetect and BreakDancer was able to detect 10/10 simulated translocations with 30X coverage dataset and 100% allele frequency, while SVDetect captured 4/10 and BreakDancer detected 6/10. For 15X coverage dataset with 100% allele frequency, novel algorithm was able to detect all ten translocations albeit with fewer reads supporting the same. BreakDancer detected 4/10 and SVDetect detected 2/10 Conclusion: This study showed that presence of repetitive elements in general within a structural variant did not influence the tool's ability to capture it. This context-based algorithm proved better than current tools even with half the genome coverage than accepted protocol and provides an important first step for novel translocation discovery in cancer genome.
ContributorsShetty, Sheetal (Author) / Dinu, Valentin (Thesis advisor) / Bussey, Kimberly (Committee member) / Scotch, Matthew (Committee member) / Wallstrom, Garrick (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2014
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Description
Damage to the central nervous system due to spinal cord or traumatic brain injury, as well as degenerative musculoskeletal disorders such as arthritis, drastically impact the quality of life. Regeneration of complex structures is quite limited in mammals, though other vertebrates possess this ability. Lizards are the most closely related

Damage to the central nervous system due to spinal cord or traumatic brain injury, as well as degenerative musculoskeletal disorders such as arthritis, drastically impact the quality of life. Regeneration of complex structures is quite limited in mammals, though other vertebrates possess this ability. Lizards are the most closely related organism to humans that can regenerate de novo skeletal muscle, hyaline cartilage, spinal cord, vasculature, and skin. Progress in studying the cellular and molecular mechanisms of lizard regeneration has previously been limited by a lack of genomic resources. Building on the release of the genome of the green anole, Anolis carolinensis, we developed a second generation, robust RNA-Seq-based genome annotation, and performed the first transcriptomic analysis of tail regeneration in this species. In order to investigate gene expression in regenerating tissue, we performed whole transcriptome and microRNA transcriptome analysis of regenerating tail tip and base and associated tissues, identifying key genetic targets in the regenerative process. These studies have identified components of a genetic program for regeneration in the lizard that includes both developmental and adult repair mechanisms shared with mammals, indicating value in the translation of these findings to future regenerative therapies.
ContributorsHutchins, Elizabeth (Author) / Kusumi, Kenro (Thesis advisor) / Rawls, Jeffrey A. (Committee member) / Denardo, Dale F. (Committee member) / Huentelman, Matthew J. (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2015
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Description
In species with highly heteromorphic sex chromosomes, the degradation of one of the sex chromosomes can result in unequal gene expression between the sexes (e.g., between XX females and XY males) and between the sex chromosomes and the autosomes. Dosage compensation is a process whereby genes on the sex chromosomes

In species with highly heteromorphic sex chromosomes, the degradation of one of the sex chromosomes can result in unequal gene expression between the sexes (e.g., between XX females and XY males) and between the sex chromosomes and the autosomes. Dosage compensation is a process whereby genes on the sex chromosomes achieve equal gene expression which prevents deleterious side effects from having too much or too little expression of genes on sex chromsomes. The green anole is part of a group of species that recently underwent an adaptive radiation. The green anole has XX/XY sex determination, but the content of the X chromosome and its evolution have not been described. Given its status as a model species, better understanding the green anole genome could reveal insights into other species. Genomic analyses are crucial for a comprehensive picture of sex chromosome differentiation and dosage compensation, in addition to understanding speciation.

In order to address this, multiple comparative genomics and bioinformatics analyses were conducted to elucidate patterns of evolution in the green anole and across multiple anole species. Comparative genomics analyses were used to infer additional X-linked loci in the green anole, RNAseq data from male and female samples were anayzed to quantify patterns of sex-biased gene expression across the genome, and the extent of dosage compensation on the anole X chromosome was characterized, providing evidence that the sex chromosomes in the green anole are dosage compensated.

In addition, X-linked genes have a lower ratio of nonsynonymous to synonymous substitution rates than the autosomes when compared to other Anolis species, and pairwise rates of evolution in genes across the anole genome were analyzed. To conduct this analysis a new pipeline was created for filtering alignments and performing batch calculations for whole genome coding sequences. This pipeline has been made publicly available.
ContributorsRupp, Shawn Michael (Author) / Wilson Sayres, Melissa A (Thesis advisor) / Kusumi, Kenro (Committee member) / DeNardo, Dale (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2016