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result(s) for
"Fronick, C"
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Rapid and Extraction-Free Detection of SARS-CoV-2 from Saliva by Colorimetric Reverse-Transcription Loop-Mediated Isothermal Amplification
by
Wilkinson, Michael N
,
Burcea, Lauren C
,
Buchser, William J
in
Analysis
,
Assaying
,
Colorimetric analysis
2021
Abstract
Background
Rapid, reliable, and widespread testing is required to curtail the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. Current gold-standard nucleic acid tests are hampered by supply shortages in critical reagents including nasal swabs, RNA extraction kits, personal protective equipment, instrumentation, and labor.
Methods
To overcome these challenges, we developed a rapid colorimetric assay using reverse-transcription loop-mediated isothermal amplification (RT-LAMP) optimized on human saliva samples without an RNA purification step. We describe the optimization of saliva pretreatment protocols to enable analytically sensitive viral detection by RT-LAMP. We optimized the RT-LAMP reaction conditions and implemented high-throughput unbiased methods for assay interpretation. We tested whether saliva pretreatment could also enable viral detection by conventional reverse-transcription quantitative polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR). Finally, we validated these assays on clinical samples.
Results
The optimized saliva pretreatment protocol enabled analytically sensitive extraction-free detection of SARS-CoV-2 from saliva by colorimetric RT-LAMP or RT-qPCR. In simulated samples, the optimized RT-LAMP assay had a limit of detection of 59 (95% confidence interval: 44–104) particle copies per reaction. We highlighted the flexibility of LAMP assay implementation using 3 readouts: naked-eye colorimetry, spectrophotometry, and real-time fluorescence. In a set of 30 clinical saliva samples, colorimetric RT-LAMP and RT-qPCR assays performed directly on pretreated saliva samples without RNA extraction had accuracies greater than 90%.
Conclusions
Rapid and extraction-free detection of SARS-CoV-2 from saliva by colorimetric RT-LAMP is a simple, sensitive, and cost-effective approach with broad potential to expand diagnostic testing for the virus causing COVID-19.
Journal Article
Immune Escape of Relapsed AML Cells after Allogeneic Transplantation
by
Wilson, Richard K
,
Baty, Jack D
,
Klco, Jeffery M
in
Acute myeloid leukemia
,
Antigen presentation
,
Chemotherapy
2018
In patients who had a relapse of acute myeloid leukemia after allogeneic hematopoietic stem-cell transplantation, no characteristic genetic lesions were detected, but alterations in expression of genes related to immune function were noted, particularly down-regulation of major histocompatibility complex class II genes.
Journal Article
Dynamic changes in the clonal structure of MDS and AML in response to epigenetic therapy
2017
Traditional response criteria in myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) and acute myeloid leukemia (AML) are based on bone marrow morphology and may not accurately reflect clonal tumor burden in patients treated with non-cytotoxic chemotherapy. We used next-generation sequencing of serial bone marrow samples to monitor MDS and AML tumor burden during treatment with epigenetic therapy (decitabine and panobinostat). Serial bone marrow samples (and skin as a source of normal DNA) from 25 MDS and AML patients were sequenced (exome or 285 gene panel). We observed that responders, including those in complete remission (CR), can have persistent measurable tumor burden (that is, mutations) for at least 1 year without disease progression. Using an ultrasensitive sequencing approach, we detected extremely rare mutations (equivalent to 1 heterozygous mutant cell in 2000 non-mutant cells) months to years before their expansion at disease relapse. While patients can live with persistent clonal hematopoiesis in a CR or stable disease, ultimately we find evidence that expansion of a rare subclone occurs at relapse or progression. Here we demonstrate that sequencing of serial samples provides an alternative measure of tumor burden in MDS or AML patients and augments traditional response criteria that rely on bone marrow blast percentage.
Journal Article
A general approach for detecting expressed mutations in AML cells using single cell RNA-sequencing
2019
Virtually all tumors are genetically heterogeneous, containing mutationally-defined subclonal cell populations that often have distinct phenotypes. Single-cell RNA-sequencing has revealed that a variety of tumors are also transcriptionally heterogeneous, but the relationship between expression heterogeneity and subclonal architecture is unclear. Here, we address this question in the context of Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML) by integrating whole genome sequencing with single-cell RNA-sequencing (using the 10x Genomics Chromium Single Cell 5’ Gene Expression workflow). Applying this approach to five cryopreserved AML samples, we identify hundreds to thousands of cells containing tumor-specific mutations in each case, and use the results to distinguish AML cells (including normal-karyotype AML cells) from normal cells, identify expression signatures associated with subclonal mutations, and find cell surface markers that could be used to purify subclones for further study. This integrative approach for connecting genotype to phenotype is broadly applicable to any sample that is phenotypically and genetically heterogeneous.
The advent of single-cell RNA sequencing has revealed significant transcriptional heterogeneity in cancer, but its relationship to genomic heterogeneity remains unclear. Focusing on acute myeloid leukemia samples, the authors describe a general approach for linking mutation-containing cells to their transcriptional phenotypes using single-cell RNA sequencing data.
Journal Article
Epigenomic analysis of the HOX gene loci reveals mechanisms that may control canonical expression patterns in AML and normal hematopoietic cells
2015
HOX genes are highly expressed in many acute myeloid leukemia (AML) samples, but the patterns of expression and associated regulatory mechanisms are not clearly understood. We analyzed RNA sequencing data from 179 primary AML samples and normal hematopoietic cells to understand the range of expression patterns in normal versus leukemic cells. HOX expression in AML was restricted to specific genes in the HOXA or HOXB loci, and was highly correlated with recurrent cytogenetic abnormalities. However, the majority of samples expressed a canonical set of HOXA and HOXB genes that was nearly identical to the expression signature of normal hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells. Transcriptional profiles at the HOX loci were similar between normal cells and AML samples, and involved bidirectional transcription at the center of each gene cluster. Epigenetic analysis of a subset of AML samples also identified common regions of chromatin accessibility in AML samples and normal CD34
+
cells that displayed differences in methylation depending on HOX expression patterns. These data provide an integrated epigenetic view of the HOX gene loci in primary AML samples, and suggest that HOX expression in most AML samples represents a normal stem cell program that is controlled by epigenetic mechanisms at specific regulatory elements.
Journal Article
TP53 and Decitabine in Acute Myeloid Leukemia and Myelodysplastic Syndromes
by
Wilson, Richard K
,
Tomasson, Michael H
,
Pusic, Iskra
in
5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine
,
5-Methylcytosine - analysis
,
Acute myeloid leukemia
2016
Decitabine produced responses in patients with acute myeloid leukemia or myelodysplastic syndromes who had cytogenetic abnormalities associated with a poor prognosis, including 21 of 21 patients with tumors that contained
TP53
mutations.
Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) are clonal disorders of myeloid hematopoiesis.
1
Adult patients with AML who have karyotypes that are associated with unfavorable risk and older patients with AML (≥60 years of age) have poor outcomes, with a median survival of approximately 1 year.
2
,
3
Patients with AML and
TP53
mutations tend to be older (median age, 61 to 67 years), and almost all have karyotypes that are associated with unfavorable risk; if they receive standard cytotoxic chemotherapy, these patients have especially poor outcomes (median survival, 4 to 6 months).
3
–
6
Decitabine (5-aza-2′-deoxycytidine) is commonly used as . . .
Journal Article
Co-evolution of tumor and immune cells during progression of multiple myeloma
2021
Multiple myeloma (MM) is characterized by the uncontrolled proliferation of plasma cells. Despite recent treatment advances, it is still incurable as disease progression is not fully understood. To investigate MM and its immune environment, we apply single cell RNA and linked-read whole genome sequencing to profile 29 longitudinal samples at different disease stages from 14 patients. Here, we collect 17,267 plasma cells and 57,719 immune cells, discovering patient-specific plasma cell profiles and immune cell expression changes. Patients with the same genetic alterations tend to have both plasma cells and immune cells clustered together. By integrating bulk genomics and single cell mapping, we track plasma cell subpopulations across disease stages and find three patterns: stability (from precancer to diagnosis), and gain or loss (from diagnosis to relapse). In multiple patients, we detect “B cell-featured” plasma cell subpopulations that cluster closely with B cells, implicating their cell of origin. We validate AP-1 complex differential expression (JUN and FOS) in plasma cell subpopulations using CyTOF-based protein assays, and integrated analysis of single-cell RNA and CyTOF data reveals AP-1 downstream targets (IL6 and IL1B) potentially leading to inflammation regulation. Our work represents a longitudinal investigation for tumor and microenvironment during MM progression and paves the way for expanding treatment options.
Clonal evolution in multiple myeloma (MM) needs to be understood in both the tumor and its microenvironment. Here the authors perform single-cell multi-omics profiling of samples from MM patients at different stages, finding transitions in the immune cell composition throughout progression.
Journal Article
Mutation Clearance after Transplantation for Myelodysplastic Syndrome
2018
The risk of disease progression among patients with myelodysplastic syndrome was higher among those in whom point mutations persisted in bone marrow at day 30 after allogeneic hematopoietic stem-cell transplantation than among those without these mutations.
Journal Article
An “off-the-shelf” fratricide-resistant CAR-T for the treatment of T cell hematologic malignancies
by
Staser, Karl
,
Ritchey, Julie K
,
Julie O’Neal
in
Acute lymphoblastic leukemia
,
Antigens
,
Blood cancer
2018
T cell malignancies represent a group of hematologic cancers with high rates of relapse and mortality in patients for whom no effective targeted therapies exist. The shared expression of target antigens between chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells and malignant T cells has limited the development of CAR-T because of unintended CAR-T fratricide and an inability to harvest sufficient autologous T cells. Here, we describe a fratricide-resistant “off-the-shelf” CAR-T (or UCART7) that targets CD7+ T cell malignancies and, through CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing, lacks both CD7 and T cell receptor alpha chain (TRAC) expression. UCART7 demonstrates efficacy against human T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) cell lines and primary T-ALL in vitro and in vivo without the induction of xenogeneic GvHD. Fratricide-resistant, allo-tolerant “off-the-shelf” CAR-T represents a strategy for treatment of relapsed and refractory T-ALL and non-Hodgkin’s T cell lymphoma without a requirement for autologous T cells.
Journal Article