Publications by authors named "S L Head"

Integrating genome-wide association study (GWAS) and transcriptomic datasets can help identify potential mediators for germline genetic risk of cancer. However, traditional methods have been largely unsuccessful because of an overreliance on total gene expression. These approaches overlook alternative splicing, which can produce multiple isoforms from the same gene, each with potentially different effects on cancer risk.

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Alternative splicing is crucial for cancer progression and can be targeted pharmacologically, yet identifying driver exons genome-wide remains challenging. We propose identifying such exons by associating statistically gene-level cancer dependencies from knockdown viability screens with splicing profiles and gene expression. Our models predict the effects of splicing perturbations on cell proliferation from transcriptomic data, enabling in silico RNA screening and prioritizing targets for splicing-based therapies.

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Immune checkpoint inhibitors block the interaction between a receptor on one cell and its ligand on another cell, thus preventing the transduction of an immunosuppressive signal. While inhibition of the receptor-ligand interaction is key to the pharmacological activity of these drugs, it can be technically challenging to measure these intercellular interactions directly. Instead, target engagement (or receptor occupancy) is commonly measured, but may not always be an accurate predictor of receptor-ligand inhibition, and can be misleading when used to inform clinical dose projections for this class of drugs.

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Transcriptome-wide association studies (TWASs) have investigated the role of genetically regulated transcriptional activity in the etiologies of breast and ovarian cancer. However, methods performed to date have focused on the regulatory effects of risk-associated SNPs thought to act in cis on a nearby target gene. With growing evidence for distal (trans) regulatory effects of variants on gene expression, we performed TWASs of breast and ovarian cancer using a Bayesian genome-wide TWAS method (BGW-TWAS) that considers effects of both cis- and trans-expression quantitative trait loci (eQTLs).

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Introduction: Intraoperative blood loss and postoperative hemorrhage affect outcomes after liver resection. GATT-Patch is a new flexible, pliable hemostatic sealant patch comprising fibrous gelatin carrier impregnated with N-hydroxy-succinimide polyoxazoline. We evaluated safety and performance of the GATT-Patch for hemostasis at the liver resection plane.

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