Publications by authors named "Robine N"

The role of the immune system in regulating tissue stem cells remains poorly understood, as does the relationship between immune-mediated tissue damage and regeneration. Graft vs. host disease (GVHD) occurring after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (allo-BMT) involves immune-mediated damage to the intestinal epithelium and its stem cell compartment.

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  • Advanced urothelial cancer displays significant genetic diversity and involves complex interactions between internal and external mutagens, which contributes to its deadly nature.
  • The study revealed that APOBEC3-induced mutations occur early during tumor development, while chemotherapy leads to a surge of later mutations, with both processes affecting the structure of extrachromosomal DNA.
  • Findings emphasized the role of circular ecDNA in the development of treatment resistance, specifically through CCND1 amplifications, highlighting key mechanisms that can inform future cancer therapies.
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Somatic variant detection is an integral part of cancer genomics analysis. While most methods have focused on short-read sequencing, long-read technologies now offer potential advantages in terms of repeat mapping and variant phasing. We present DeepSomatic, a deep learning method for detecting somatic SNVs and insertions and deletions (indels) from both short-read and long-read data, with modes for whole-genome and exome sequencing, and able to run on tumor-normal, tumor-only, and with FFPE-prepared samples.

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In solid tumor oncology, circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) is poised to transform care through accurate assessment of minimal residual disease (MRD) and therapeutic response monitoring. To overcome the sparsity of ctDNA fragments in low tumor fraction (TF) settings and increase MRD sensitivity, we previously leveraged genome-wide mutational integration through plasma whole-genome sequencing (WGS). Here we now introduce MRD-EDGE, a machine-learning-guided WGS ctDNA single-nucleotide variant (SNV) and copy-number variant (CNV) detection platform designed to increase signal enrichment.

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Most current studies rely on short-read sequencing to detect somatic structural variation (SV) in cancer genomes. Long-read sequencing offers the advantage of better mappability and long-range phasing, which results in substantial improvements in germline SV detection. However, current long-read SV detection methods do not generalize well to the analysis of somatic SVs in tumor genomes with complex rearrangements, heterogeneity, and aneuploidy.

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Genomic rearrangements are a hallmark of most childhood tumors, including medulloblastoma, one of the most common brain tumors in children, but their causes remain largely unknown. Here, we show that PiggyBac transposable element derived 5 (Pgbd5) promotes tumor development in multiple developmentally accurate mouse models of Sonic Hedgehog (SHH) medulloblastoma. Most Pgbd5-deficient mice do not develop tumors, while maintaining normal cerebellar development.

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  • Several reports have documented a rare primary liver tumor that exhibits features similar to follicular thyroid neoplasms, but it has unique characteristics, including specific genetic fusions and immunoreactivity for inhibin.
  • This study presents a comprehensive analysis of 11 cases of these tumors, highlighting the typical patient profile (adult women with no prior liver disease), tumor characteristics, and the methods used for investigation, such as whole-genome sequencing (WGS).
  • The findings indicate that these tumors, which show distinct growth patterns and genetic fusions, should be classified as "NIPBL:NACC1 fusion hepatic carcinoma," due to their unique histological and molecular features.
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Intracranial metastases in prostate cancer are uncommon but clinically aggressive. A detailed molecular characterization of prostate cancer intracranial metastases would improve our understanding of their pathogenesis and the search for new treatment strategies. We evaluated the clinical and molecular characteristics of 36 patients with metastatic prostate cancer to either the dura or brain parenchyma.

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Unlabelled: Women of sub-Saharan African descent have disproportionately higher incidence of triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) and TNBC-specific mortality across all populations. Population studies show racial differences in TNBC biology, including higher prevalence of basal-like and quadruple-negative subtypes in African Americans (AA). However, previous investigations relied on self-reported race (SRR) of primarily U.

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Heterogeneity is a hallmark of cancer. The advent of single-cell technologies has helped uncover heterogeneity in a high-throughput manner in different cancers across varied contexts. Here we apply single-cell sequencing technologies to reveal inherent heterogeneity in assumptively monoclonal pancreatic cancer (PDAC) cell lines and patient-derived organoids (PDOs).

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Retromer is a heteropentameric complex that plays a specialized role in endosomal protein sorting and trafficking. Here, we report a reduction in the retromer proteins-vacuolar protein sorting 35 (VPS35), VPS26A, and VPS29-in patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and in the ALS model provided by transgenic (Tg) mice expressing the mutant superoxide dismutase-1 G93A. These changes are accompanied by a reduction of levels of the α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid receptor subunit GluA1, a proxy of retromer function, in spinal cords from Tg SOD1 mice.

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  • Ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) is a non-invasive condition that can lead to breast cancer, but many women with DCIS may never develop invasive disease.
  • Researchers analyzed gene expression from over 2,000 ductal lesions from 145 patients to better understand the transition from DCIS to invasive ductal carcinoma (IDC).
  • The study found a gradual loss of basal layer integrity and identified key biomarkers related to this progression, helping to shed light on early changes before IDC develops.
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While the genomes of normal tissues undergo dynamic changes over time, little is understood about the temporal-spatial dynamics of genomes in premalignant tissues that progress to cancer compared to those that remain cancer-free. Here we use whole genome sequencing to contrast genomic alterations in 427 longitudinal samples from 40 patients with stable Barrett's esophagus compared to 40 Barrett's patients who progressed to esophageal adenocarcinoma (ESAD). We show the same somatic mutational processes are active in Barrett's tissue regardless of outcome, with high levels of mutation, ESAD gene and focal chromosomal alterations, and similar mutational signatures.

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Human papillomavirus (HPV) causes 5% of all cancers and frequently integrates into host chromosomes. The HPV oncoproteins E6 and E7 are necessary but insufficient for cancer formation, indicating that additional secondary genetic events are required. Here, we investigate potential oncogenic impacts of virus integration.

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Research consortia can help to repair deficiencies in knowledge about the influence of inherited genetic diversity on disease. The New York Genome Center (NYGC) recently established Polyethnic-1000 (P-1000), a multi-institutional collaboration to study hereditary factors affecting several types of cancer. Here, we describe its rationale, organization, development, current activities, and prospects.

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Evolving in sync with the computation revolution over the past 30 years, computational biology has emerged as a mature scientific field. While the field has made major contributions toward improving scientific knowledge and human health, individual computational biology practitioners at various institutions often languish in career development. As optimistic biologists passionate about the future of our field, we propose solutions for both eager and reluctant individual scientists, institutions, publishers, funding agencies, and educators to fully embrace computational biology.

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RTK/RAS/RAF pathway alterations (RPAs) are a hallmark of lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD). In this study, we use whole-genome sequencing (WGS) of 85 cases found to be RPA(-) by previous studies from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) to characterize the minority of LUADs lacking apparent alterations in this pathway. We show that WGS analysis uncovers RPA(+) in 28 (33%) of the 85 samples.

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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.

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In many areas of oncology, we lack sensitive tools to track low-burden disease. Although cell-free DNA (cfDNA) shows promise in detecting cancer mutations, we found that the combination of low tumor fraction (TF) and limited number of DNA fragments restricts low-disease-burden monitoring through the prevailing deep targeted sequencing paradigm. We reasoned that breadth may supplant depth of sequencing to overcome the barrier of cfDNA abundance.

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To test the performance of a new sequencing platform, develop an updated somatic calling pipeline and establish a reference for future benchmarking experiments, we performed whole-genome sequencing of 3 common cancer cell lines (COLO-829, HCC-1143 and HCC-1187) along with their matched normal cell lines to great sequencing depths (up to 278x coverage) on both Illumina HiSeqX and NovaSeq sequencing instruments. Somatic calling was generally consistent between the two platforms despite minor differences at the read level. We designed and implemented a novel pipeline for the analysis of tumor-normal samples, using multiple variant callers.

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  • The publication contained an error regarding the name of the fourteenth author.
  • The incorrect name was initially printed in the article.
  • The correct name has now been provided to clarify the mistake.
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Motivation: The association of splicing signatures with disease is a leading area of study for prognosis, diagnosis and therapy. We present a novel fast-performing annotation-dependent tool called SCANVIS for scoring and annotating splice junctions (SJs), with an efficient visualization tool that highlights SJ details such as frame-shifts and annotation support for individual samples or a sample cohort.

Results: Using publicly available samples, we show that the tissue specificity inherent in splicing signatures is maintained with the Relative Read Support scoring method in SCANVIS, and we showcase some visualizations to demonstrate the usefulness of incorporating annotation details into sashimi plots.

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  • A clinical study was conducted in New York City with 30 glioblastoma patients to compare the effectiveness of whole genome sequencing (WGS) and RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) against targeted panel sequencing in identifying treatment options.
  • WGS/RNA-seq uncovered significantly more actionable clinical results—90% of the time—with an average of 16 times more unique variants identified, leading to 84 calls for actionable treatments that targeted panels missed.
  • The study found good agreement between manual and automated variant identification, showing that clinicians modified treatment plans based on this data in 10% of cases, marking a significant advancement in cancer treatment analysis.
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