Publications by authors named "Jonathan S Brammeld"

Article Synopsis
  • Most lung cancer patients, especially those with EGFR mutations, develop resistance to treatment drugs like osimertinib and gefitinib, often leading to relapse.* -
  • Genome-wide CRISPR screenings pinpointed key resistance pathways, revealing that regulation of the Hippo pathway is a significant factor in this drug resistance among cancer cells.* -
  • Targeting both the Hippo pathway and EGFR together shows promise as a new treatment approach for EGFR mutant lung cancer, potentially improving outcomes for patients.*
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Multiple signatures of somatic mutations have been identified in cancer genomes. Exome sequences of 1,001 human cancer cell lines and 577 xenografts revealed most common mutational signatures, indicating past activity of the underlying processes, usually in appropriate cancer types. To investigate ongoing patterns of mutational-signature generation, cell lines were cultured for extended periods and subsequently DNA sequenced.

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Cancer hallmarks are evolutionary traits required by a tumour to develop. While extensively characterised, the way these traits are achieved through the accumulation of somatic mutations in key biological pathways is not fully understood. To shed light on this subject, we characterised the landscape of pathway alterations associated with somatic mutations observed in 4,415 patients across ten cancer types, using 374 orthogonal pathway gene-sets mapped onto canonical cancer hallmarks.

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Drug resistance is an almost inevitable consequence of cancer therapy and ultimately proves fatal for the majority of patients. In many cases, this is the consequence of specific gene mutations that have the potential to be targeted to resensitize the tumor. The ability to uniformly saturate the genome with point mutations without chromosome or nucleotide sequence context bias would open the door to identify all putative drug resistance mutations in cancer models.

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