Publications by authors named "Magnus Haughey"

Article Synopsis
  • Oncogene amplification on extrachromosomal DNA (ecDNA) is linked to treatment resistance and poorer survival in cancer patients, particularly those with glioblastoma, contributing to genetic diversity in tumors.* ! -
  • The study used a new computational model called 'SPECIES' to analyze tumor samples from 94 glioblastoma patients, providing insights into how ecDNA evolves in time and space within tumors.* ! -
  • Findings reveal significant patterns in ecDNA copy number variation, indicating strong positive selection on certain oncogenes and suggesting that ecDNA accumulation occurs before major cell growth phases.* !
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Background & Aims: While normal human liver is thought to be generally quiescent, clonal hepatocyte expansions have been observed, though neither their cellular source nor their expansion dynamics have been determined. Knowing the hepatocyte cell of origin, and their subsequent dynamics and trajectory within the human liver will provide an important basis to understand disease-associated dysregulation.

Methods: Herein, we use in vivo lineage tracing and methylation sequence analysis to demonstrate normal human hepatocyte ancestry.

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The signature of early cancer dynamics on the spatial arrangement of tumour cells is poorly understood, and yet could encode information about how sub-clones grew within the expanding tumour. Novel methods of quantifying spatial tumour data at the cellular scale are required to link evolutionary dynamics to the resulting spatial architecture of the tumour. Here, we propose a framework using first passage times of random walks to quantify the complex spatial patterns of tumour cell population mixing.

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Background & Aims: Barrett's esophagus (BE) is a risk factor for esophageal adenocarcinoma but our understanding of how it evolves is poorly understood. We investigated BE gland phenotype distribution, the clonal nature of phenotypic change, and how phenotypic diversity plays a role in progression.

Methods: Using immunohistochemistry and histology, we analyzed the distribution and the diversity of gland phenotype between and within biopsy specimens from patients with nondysplastic BE and those who had progressed to dysplasia or had developed postesophagectomy BE.

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Colloidal particles with strong, short-ranged attractions can form a gel. We simulate this process without and with hydrodynamic interactions (HI), using the lattice-Boltzmann method to account for presence of a thermalized solvent. We show that HI speed up and slow down gelation at low and high volume fractions, respectively.

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