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Featured researches published by Alexander G. Bick.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2017

Clonal Hematopoiesis and Risk of Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Disease

Siddhartha Jaiswal; Pradeep Natarajan; Alexander J. Silver; Christopher J. Gibson; Alexander G. Bick; Eugenia Shvartz; Marie McConkey; Namrata Gupta; Stacey Gabriel; Diego Ardissino; Usman Baber; Roxana Mehran; Valentin Fuster; John Danesh; Philippe Frossard; Danish Saleheen; Olle Melander; Galina K. Sukhova; Donna Neuberg; Peter Libby; Sekar Kathiresan; Benjamin L. Ebert

BACKGROUND Clonal hematopoiesis of indeterminate potential (CHIP), which is defined as the presence of an expanded somatic blood‐cell clone in persons without other hematologic abnormalities, is common among older persons and is associated with an increased risk of hematologic cancer. We previously found preliminary evidence for an association between CHIP and atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease, but the nature of this association was unclear. METHODS We used whole‐exome sequencing to detect the presence of CHIP in peripheral‐blood cells and associated such presence with coronary heart disease using samples from four case–control studies that together enrolled 4726 participants with coronary heart disease and 3529 controls. To assess causality, we perturbed the function of Tet2, the second most commonly mutated gene linked to clonal hematopoiesis, in the hematopoietic cells of atherosclerosis‐prone mice. RESULTS In nested case–control analyses from two prospective cohorts, carriers of CHIP had a risk of coronary heart disease that was 1.9 times as great as in noncarriers (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.4 to 2.7). In two retrospective case–control cohorts for the evaluation of early‐onset myocardial infarction, participants with CHIP had a risk of myocardial infarction that was 4.0 times as great as in noncarriers (95% CI, 2.4 to 6.7). Mutations in DNMT3A, TET2, ASXL1, and JAK2 were each individually associated with coronary heart disease. CHIP carriers with these mutations also had increased coronary‐artery calcification, a marker of coronary atherosclerosis burden. Hypercholesterolemia‐prone mice that were engrafted with bone marrow obtained from homozygous or heterozygous Tet2 knockout mice had larger atherosclerotic lesions in the aortic root and aorta than did mice that had received control bone marrow. Analyses of macrophages from Tet2 knockout mice showed elevated expression of several chemokine and cytokine genes that contribute to atherosclerosis. CONCLUSIONS The presence of CHIP in peripheral‐blood cells was associated with nearly a doubling in the risk of coronary heart disease in humans and with accelerated atherosclerosis in mice. (Funded by the National Institutes of Health and others.)


Tissue Engineering Part A | 2009

Mechanically robust and bioadhesive collagen and photocrosslinkable hyaluronic acid semi-interpenetrating networks.

Mark D. Brigham; Alexander G. Bick; Edward Lo; Amel Bendali; Jason A. Burdick; Ali Khademhosseini

In this work, we present a class of hydrogels that leverage the favorable properties of the photo-cross-linkable hyaluronic acid (HA) and semi-interpenetrating collagen components. The mechanical properties of the semi-interpenetrating-network (semi-IPN) hydrogels far surpass those achievable with collagen gels or collagen gel-based semi-IPNs. Furthermore, the inclusion of the semi-interpenetrating collagen chains provides a synergistic mechanical improvement over unmodified HA hydrogels. Collagen-HA semi-IPNs supported fibroblast adhesion and proliferation and were shown to be suitable for cell encapsulation at high levels of cell viability. To demonstrate the utility of the semi-IPNs as a microscale tissue engineering material, cell-laden microstructures and microchannels were fabricated using soft lithographic techniques. Given their enhanced mechanical and biomimetic properties, we anticipate that these materials will be of value in tissue engineering and three-dimensional cell culture applications.


Science Translational Medicine | 2015

Integrated allelic, transcriptional, and phenomic dissection of the cardiac effects of titin truncations in health and disease

Angharad M. Roberts; James S. Ware; Daniel S. Herman; Sebastian Schafer; John Baksi; Alexander G. Bick; Rachel Buchan; Roddy Walsh; Shibu John; Samuel Wilkinson; Francesco Mazzarotto; Leanne E. Felkin; Sungsam Gong; Jacqueline A. L. MacArthur; Fiona Cunningham; Jason Flannick; Stacey B. Gabriel; David Altshuler; P. Macdonald; Matthias Heinig; Anne Keogh; Christopher S. Hayward; Nicholas R. Banner; Dudley J. Pennell; Declan P. O’Regan; Tan Ru San; Antonio de Marvao; Timothy Dawes; Ankur Gulati; Emma J. Birks

Truncating variants of the giant protein titin cause dilated cardiomyopathy when they occur toward the protein’s carboxyl terminus and in highly expressed exons. What Happens When Titins Are Trimmed? The most common form of inherited heart failure, dilated cardiomyopathy, can be caused by mutations in a mammoth heart protein, appropriately called titin. Now, Roberts et al. sort out which titin mutations cause disease and why some people can carry certain titin mutations but remain perfectly healthy. In an exhaustive survey of more than 5200 people, with and without cardiomyopathy, the authors sequenced the titin gene and measured its corresponding RNA and protein levels. The alterations in titin were truncating mutations, which cause short nonfunctional versions of the RNA or protein. These defects produced cardiomyopathy when they occurred closer to the protein’s carboxyl terminus and in exons that were abundantly transcribed. The titin-truncating mutations that occur in the general population tended not to have these characteristics and were usually benign. This new detailed understanding of the molecular basis of dilated cardiomyopathy penetrance will promote better disease management and accelerate rational patient stratification. The recent discovery of heterozygous human mutations that truncate full-length titin (TTN, an abundant structural, sensory, and signaling filament in muscle) as a common cause of end-stage dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) promises new prospects for improving heart failure management. However, realization of this opportunity has been hindered by the burden of TTN-truncating variants (TTNtv) in the general population and uncertainty about their consequences in health or disease. To elucidate the effects of TTNtv, we coupled TTN gene sequencing with cardiac phenotyping in 5267 individuals across the spectrum of cardiac physiology and integrated these data with RNA and protein analyses of human heart tissues. We report diversity of TTN isoform expression in the heart, define the relative inclusion of TTN exons in different isoforms (using the TTN transcript annotations available at http://cardiodb.org/titin), and demonstrate that these data, coupled with the position of the TTNtv, provide a robust strategy to discriminate pathogenic from benign TTNtv. We show that TTNtv is the most common genetic cause of DCM in ambulant patients in the community, identify clinically important manifestations of TTNtv-positive DCM, and define the penetrance and outcomes of TTNtv in the general population. By integrating genetic, transcriptome, and protein analyses, we provide evidence for a length-dependent mechanism of disease. These data inform diagnostic criteria and management strategies for TTNtv-positive DCM patients and for TTNtv that are identified as incidental findings.


Circulation Research | 2014

Increased Burden of Cardiovascular Disease in Carriers of APOL1 Genetic Variants

Kaoru Ito; Alexander G. Bick; Jason Flannick; David J. Friedman; Giulio Genovese; Michael Parfenov; Steven R. DePalma; Namrata Gupta; Stacey B. Gabriel; Herman A. Taylor; Ervin R. Fox; Christopher Newton-Cheh; Sekar Kathiresan; Joel N. Hirschhorn; David Altshuler; Martin R. Pollak; James G. Wilson; Jonathan G. Seidman; Christine E. Seidman

Rationale: Two distinct alleles in the gene encoding apolipoprotein L1 (APOL1), a major component of high-density lipoprotein, confer protection against Trypanosoma brucei rhodesiense infection and also increase risk for chronic kidney disease. Approximately 14% of Americans with African ancestry carry 2 APOL1 risk alleles, accounting for the high chronic kidney disease burden in this population. Objective: We tested whether APOL1 risk alleles significantly increase risk for atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (CVD) in African Americans. Methods and Results: We sequenced APOL1 in 1959 randomly selected African American participants in the Jackson Heart Study (JHS) and evaluated associations between APOL1 genotypes and renal and cardiovascular phenotypes. Previously identified association between APOL1 genotypes and chronic kidney disease was confirmed (P=2.4×10−6). Among JHS participants with 2 APOL1 risk alleles, we observed increased risk for CVD (50/763 events among participants without versus 37/280 events among participants with 2 risk alleles; odds ratio, 2.17; P=9.4×10−4). We replicated this novel association of APOL1 genotype with CVD in Women’s Health Initiative (WHI) participants (66/292 events among participants without versus 37/101 events among participants with 2 risk alleles; odds ratio, 1.98; P=8.37×10−3; JHS and WHI combined, P=8.5×10−5; odds ratio, 2.12). The increased risk for CVD conferred by APOL1 alleles was robust to correction for both traditional CVD risk factors and chronic kidney disease. Conclusions: APOL1 variants contribute to atherosclerotic CVD risk, indicating a genetic component to cardiovascular health disparities in individuals of African ancestry. The considerable population of African Americans with 2 APOL1 risk alleles may benefit from intensive interventions to reduce CVD.


Circulation Research | 2014

Increased Frequency of De Novo Copy Number Variants in Congenital Heart Disease by Integrative Analysis of Single Nucleotide Polymorphism Array and Exome Sequence Data

Joseph T. Glessner; Alexander G. Bick; Kaoru Ito; Jason Homsy; Laura Rodriguez-Murillo; Menachem Fromer; Erica Mazaika; Badri N. Vardarajan; Jeremy Leipzig; Steven R. DePalma; Ryan Golhar; Stephan J. Sanders; Boris Yamrom; Michael Ronemus; Ivan Iossifov; A. Jeremy Willsey; Matthew W. State; Jonathan R. Kaltman; Peter S. White; Yufeng Shen; Dorothy Warburton; Martina Brueckner; Christine E. Seidman; Elizabeth Goldmuntz; Bruce D. Gelb; Richard P. Lifton; Jonathan G. Seidman; Hakon Hakonarson; Wendy K. Chung

Rationale: Congenital heart disease (CHD) is among the most common birth defects. Most cases are of unknown pathogenesis. Objective: To determine the contribution of de novo copy number variants (CNVs) in the pathogenesis of sporadic CHD. Methods and Results: We studied 538 CHD trios using genome-wide dense single nucleotide polymorphism arrays and whole exome sequencing. Results were experimentally validated using digital droplet polymerase chain reaction. We compared validated CNVs in CHD cases with CNVs in 1301 healthy control trios. The 2 complementary high-resolution technologies identified 63 validated de novo CNVs in 51 CHD cases. A significant increase in CNV burden was observed when comparing CHD trios with healthy trios, using either single nucleotide polymorphism array (P=7×10−5; odds ratio, 4.6) or whole exome sequencing data (P=6×10−4; odds ratio, 3.5) and remained after removing 16% of de novo CNV loci previously reported as pathogenic (P=0.02; odds ratio, 2.7). We observed recurrent de novo CNVs on 15q11.2 encompassing CYFIP1, NIPA1, and NIPA2 and single de novo CNVs encompassing DUSP1, JUN, JUP, MED15, MED9, PTPRE SREBF1, TOP2A, and ZEB2, genes that interact with established CHD proteins NKX2-5 and GATA4. Integrating de novo variants in whole exome sequencing and CNV data suggests that ETS1 is the pathogenic gene altered by 11q24.2-q25 deletions in Jacobsen syndrome and that CTBP2 is the pathogenic gene in 10q subtelomeric deletions. Conclusions: We demonstrate a significantly increased frequency of rare de novo CNVs in CHD patients compared with healthy controls and suggest several novel genetic loci for CHD.


Science | 2012

Evolutionary diversity of the mitochondrial calcium uniporter.

Alexander G. Bick; Sarah E. Calvo; Vamsi K. Mootha

Phylogenetic analysis of the mitochondrial calcium transporter shows that it was a feature of early eukaryotes. Calcium uptake into mitochondria occurs via a recently identified ion channel called the uniporter. Here, we characterize the phylogenomic distribution of the uniporter’s membrane-spanning pore subunit (MCU) and regulatory partner (MICU1). Homologs of both components tend to co-occur in all major branches of eukaryotic life, but both have been lost along certain protozoan and fungal lineages. Several bacterial genomes also contain putative MCU homologs that may represent prokaryotic calcium channels. The analyses indicate that the uniporter may have been an early feature of mitochondria.


Nanotechnology | 2011

Nanoscale tissue engineering: spatial control over cell-materials interactions

Ian Wheeldon; Arash Farhadi; Alexander G. Bick; Esmaiel Jabbari; Ali Khademhosseini

Cells interact with the surrounding environment by making tens to hundreds of thousands of nanoscale interactions with extracellular signals and features. The goal of nanoscale tissue engineering is to harness these interactions through nanoscale biomaterials engineering in order to study and direct cellular behavior. Here, we review two- and three-dimensional (2- and 3D) nanoscale tissue engineering technologies, and provide a holistic overview of the field. Techniques that can control the average spacing and clustering of cell adhesion ligands are well established and have been highly successful in describing cell adhesion and migration in 2D. Extension of these engineering tools to 3D biomaterials has created many new hydrogel and nanofiber scaffold technologies that are being used to design in vitro experiments with more physiologically relevant conditions. Researchers are beginning to study complex cell functions in 3D. However, there is a need for biomaterials systems that provide fine control over the nanoscale presentation of bioactive ligands in 3D. Additionally, there is a need for 2- and 3D techniques that can control the nanoscale presentation of multiple bioactive ligands and that can control the temporal changes in the cellular microenvironment.


Nature Genetics | 2013

Assessing the phenotypic effects in the general population of rare variants in genes for a dominant Mendelian form of diabetes.

Jason Flannick; Nicola L. Beer; Alexander G. Bick; Vineeta Agarwala; Janne Molnes; Namrata Gupta; Noël P. Burtt; Jose C. Florez; James B. Meigs; Herman A. Taylor; Valeriya Lyssenko; Henrik Irgens; Ervin R. Fox; Frank Burslem; Stefan Johansson; M. Julia Brosnan; Jeff Trimmer; Christopher Newton-Cheh; Tiinamaija Tuomi; James G. Wilson; Christopher J. O'Donnell; Sekar Kathiresan; Joel N. Hirschhorn; Pål R. Njølstad; Tim Rolph; Jonathan G. Seidman; Stacey B. Gabriel; D. R. Cox; Christine E. Seidman; Leif Groop

Genome sequencing can identify individuals in the general population who harbor rare coding variants in genes for Mendelian disorders and who may consequently have increased disease risk. Previous studies of rare variants in phenotypically extreme individuals display ascertainment bias and may demonstrate inflated effect-size estimates. We sequenced seven genes for maturity-onset diabetes of the young (MODY) in well-phenotyped population samples (n = 4,003). We filtered rare variants according to two prediction criteria for disease-causing mutations: reported previously in MODY or satisfying stringent de novo thresholds (rare, conserved and protein damaging). Approximately 1.5% and 0.5% of randomly selected individuals from the Framingham and Jackson Heart Studies, respectively, carry variants from these two classes. However, the vast majority of carriers remain euglycemic through middle age. Accurate estimates of variant effect sizes from population-based sequencing are needed to avoid falsely predicting a substantial fraction of individuals as being at risk for MODY or other Mendelian diseases.


Developmental Cell | 2016

Single-Cell Resolution of Temporal Gene Expression during Heart Development

Daniel M. DeLaughter; Alexander G. Bick; Hiroko Wakimoto; David M. McKean; Joshua M. Gorham; Irfan S. Kathiriya; John T. Hinson; Jason Homsy; Jesse M. Gray; William T. Pu; Benoit G. Bruneau; Jonathan G. Seidman; Christine E. Seidman

Activation of complex molecular programs in specific cell lineages governs mammalian heart development, from a primordial linear tube to a four-chamber organ. To characterize lineage-specific, spatiotemporal developmental programs, we performed single-cell RNA sequencing of >1,200 murine cells isolated at seven time points spanning embryonic day 9.5 (primordial heart tube) to postnatal day 21 (mature heart). Using unbiased transcriptional data, we classified cardiomyocytes, endothelial cells, and fibroblast-enriched cells, thus identifying markers for temporal and chamber-specific developmental programs. By harnessing these datasets, we defined developmental ages of human and mouse pluripotent stem-cell-derived cardiomyocytes and characterized lineage-specific maturation defects in hearts of mice with heterozygous mutations in Nkx2.5 that cause human heart malformations. This spatiotemporal transcriptome analysis of heart development reveals lineage-specific gene programs underlying normal cardiac development and congenital heart disease.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2012

Burden of rare sarcomere gene variants in the Framingham and Jackson Heart Study cohorts.

Alexander G. Bick; Jason Flannick; Kaoru Ito; Susan Cheng; Michael Parfenov; Daniel S. Herman; Steven R. DePalma; Namrata Gupta; Stacey B. Gabriel; Birgit Funke; Heidi L. Rehm; Emelia J. Benjamin; Jayashri Aragam; Herman A. Taylor; Ervin R. Fox; Christopher Newton-Cheh; Sekar Kathiresan; Christopher J. O’Donnell; James G. Wilson; David Altshuler; Joel N. Hirschhorn; Jonathan G. Seidman; Christine E. Seidman

Rare sarcomere protein variants cause dominant hypertrophic and dilated cardiomyopathies. To evaluate whether allelic variants in eight sarcomere genes are associated with cardiac morphology and function in the community, we sequenced 3,600 individuals from the Framingham Heart Study (FHS) and Jackson Heart Study (JHS) cohorts. Out of the total, 11.2% of individuals had one or more rare nonsynonymous sarcomere variants. The prevalence of likely pathogenic sarcomere variants was 0.6%, twice the previous estimates; however, only four of the 22 individuals had clinical manifestations of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Rare sarcomere variants were associated with an increased risk for adverse cardiovascular events (hazard ratio: 2.3) in the FHS cohort, suggesting that cardiovascular risk assessment in the general population can benefit from rare variant analysis.

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Christine E. Seidman

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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James G. Wilson

University of Mississippi Medical Center

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Amit Khera

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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