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Dive into the research topics where Angela N. Brooks is active.

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Featured researches published by Angela N. Brooks.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2005

The tRNAscan-SE, snoscan and snoGPS web servers for the detection of tRNAs and snoRNAs

Peter Schattner; Angela N. Brooks; Todd M. Lowe

Transfer RNAs (tRNAs) and small nucleolar RNAs (snoRNAs) are two of the largest classes of non-protein-coding RNAs. Conventional gene finders that detect protein-coding genes do not find tRNA and snoRNA genes because they lack the codon structure and statistical signatures of protein-coding genes. Previously, we developed tRNAscan-SE, snoscan and snoGPS for the detection of tRNAs, methylation-guide snoRNAs and pseudouridylation-guide snoRNAs, respectively. tRNAscan-SE is routinely applied to completed genomes, resulting in the identification of thousands of tRNA genes. Snoscan has successfully detected methylation-guide snoRNAs in a variety of eukaryotes and archaea, and snoGPS has identified novel pseudouridylation-guide snoRNAs in yeast and mammals. Although these programs have been quite successful at RNA gene detection, their use has been limited by the need to install and configure the software packages on UNIX workstations. Here, we describe online implementations of these RNA detection tools that make these programs accessible to a wider range of research biologists. The tRNAscan-SE, snoscan and snoGPS servers are available at , and , respectively.


Cell | 2012

Mapping the Hallmarks of Lung Adenocarcinoma with Massively Parallel Sequencing

Marcin Imielinski; Alice H. Berger; Peter S. Hammerman; Bryan Hernandez; Trevor J. Pugh; Eran Hodis; Jeonghee Cho; James Suh; Marzia Capelletti; Andrey Sivachenko; Carrie Sougnez; Daniel Auclair; Michael S. Lawrence; Petar Stojanov; Kristian Cibulskis; Kyusam Choi; Luc de Waal; Tanaz Sharifnia; Angela N. Brooks; Heidi Greulich; Shantanu Banerji; Thomas Zander; Danila Seidel; Frauke Leenders; Sascha Ansén; Corinna Ludwig; Walburga Engel-Riedel; Erich Stoelben; Jürgen Wolf; Chandra Goparju

Lung adenocarcinoma, the most common subtype of non-small cell lung cancer, is responsible for more than 500,000 deaths per year worldwide. Here, we report exome and genome sequences of 183 lung adenocarcinoma tumor/normal DNA pairs. These analyses revealed a mean exonic somatic mutation rate of 12.0 events/megabase and identified the majority of genes previously reported as significantly mutated in lung adenocarcinoma. In addition, we identified statistically recurrent somatic mutations in the splicing factor gene U2AF1 and truncating mutations affecting RBM10 and ARID1A. Analysis of nucleotide context-specific mutation signatures grouped the sample set into distinct clusters that correlated with smoking history and alterations of reported lung adenocarcinoma genes. Whole-genome sequence analysis revealed frequent structural rearrangements, including in-frame exonic alterations within EGFR and SIK2 kinases. The candidate genes identified in this study are attractive targets for biological characterization and therapeutic targeting of lung adenocarcinoma.


Nature | 2011

The developmental transcriptome of Drosophila melanogaster

Brenton R. Graveley; Angela N. Brooks; Joseph W. Carlson; Michael O. Duff; Jane M. Landolin; Li Min Yang; Carlo G. Artieri; Marijke J. van Baren; Nathan Boley; Benjamin W. Booth; James B. Brown; Lucy Cherbas; Carrie A. Davis; Alexander Dobin; Renhua Li; Wei Lin; John H. Malone; Nicolas R Mattiuzzo; David S. Miller; David Sturgill; Brian B. Tuch; Chris Zaleski; Dayu Zhang; Marco Blanchette; Sandrine Dudoit; Brian D. Eads; Richard E. Green; Ann S. Hammonds; Lichun Jiang; Phil Kapranov

Drosophila melanogaster is one of the most well studied genetic model organisms, nonetheless its genome still contains unannotated coding and non-coding genes, transcripts, exons, and RNA editing sites. Full discovery and annotation are prerequisites for understanding how the regulation of transcription, splicing, and RNA editing directs development of this complex organism. We used RNA-Seq, tiling microarrays, and cDNA sequencing to explore the transcriptome in 30 distinct developmental stages. We identified 111,195 new elements, including thousands of genes, coding and non-coding transcripts, exons, splicing and editing events and inferred protein isoforms that previously eluded discovery using established experimental, prediction and conservation-based approaches. Together, these data substantially expand the number of known transcribed elements in the Drosophila genome and provide a high-resolution view of transcriptome dynamics throughout development.


Science | 2010

Identification of functional elements and regulatory circuits by Drosophila modENCODE

Sushmita Roy; Jason Ernst; Peter V. Kharchenko; Pouya Kheradpour; Nicolas Nègre; Matthew L. Eaton; Jane M. Landolin; Christopher A. Bristow; Lijia Ma; Michael F. Lin; Stefan Washietl; Bradley I. Arshinoff; Ferhat Ay; Patrick E. Meyer; Nicolas Robine; Nicole L. Washington; Luisa Di Stefano; Eugene Berezikov; Christopher D. Brown; Rogerio Candeias; Joseph W. Carlson; Adrian Carr; Irwin Jungreis; Daniel Marbach; Rachel Sealfon; Michael Y. Tolstorukov; Sebastian Will; Artyom A. Alekseyenko; Carlo G. Artieri; Benjamin W. Booth

From Genome to Regulatory Networks For biologists, having a genome in hand is only the beginning—much more investigation is still needed to characterize how the genome is used to help to produce a functional organism (see the Perspective by Blaxter). In this vein, Gerstein et al. (p. 1775) summarize for the Caenorhabditis elegans genome, and The modENCODE Consortium (p. 1787) summarize for the Drosophila melanogaster genome, full transcriptome analyses over developmental stages, genome-wide identification of transcription factor binding sites, and high-resolution maps of chromatin organization. Both studies identified regions of the nematode and fly genomes that show highly occupied targets (or HOT) regions where DNA was bound by more than 15 of the transcription factors analyzed and the expression of related genes were characterized. Overall, the studies provide insights into the organization, structure, and function of the two genomes and provide basic information needed to guide and correlate both focused and genome-wide studies. The Drosophila modENCODE project demonstrates the functional regulatory network of flies. To gain insight into how genomic information is translated into cellular and developmental programs, the Drosophila model organism Encyclopedia of DNA Elements (modENCODE) project is comprehensively mapping transcripts, histone modifications, chromosomal proteins, transcription factors, replication proteins and intermediates, and nucleosome properties across a developmental time course and in multiple cell lines. We have generated more than 700 data sets and discovered protein-coding, noncoding, RNA regulatory, replication, and chromatin elements, more than tripling the annotated portion of the Drosophila genome. Correlated activity patterns of these elements reveal a functional regulatory network, which predicts putative new functions for genes, reveals stage- and tissue-specific regulators, and enables gene-expression prediction. Our results provide a foundation for directed experimental and computational studies in Drosophila and related species and also a model for systematic data integration toward comprehensive genomic and functional annotation.


Nature Genetics | 2016

Distinct patterns of somatic genome alterations in lung adenocarcinomas and squamous cell carcinomas

Joshua D. Campbell; Anton Alexandrov; Jaegil Kim; Jeremiah Wala; Alice H. Berger; Chandra Sekhar Pedamallu; Sachet A. Shukla; Guangwu Guo; Angela N. Brooks; Bradley A. Murray; Marcin Imielinski; Xin Hu; Shiyun Ling; Rehan Akbani; Mara Rosenberg; Carrie Cibulskis; Eric A. Collisson; David J. Kwiatkowski; Michael S. Lawrence; John N. Weinstein; Roel G.W. Verhaak; Catherine J. Wu; Peter S. Hammerman; Andrew D. Cherniack; Gad Getz; Maxim N. Artyomov; Robert D. Schreiber; Ramaswamy Govindan; Matthew Meyerson

To compare lung adenocarcinoma (ADC) and lung squamous cell carcinoma (SqCC) and to identify new drivers of lung carcinogenesis, we examined the exome sequences and copy number profiles of 660 lung ADC and 484 lung SqCC tumor–normal pairs. Recurrent alterations in lung SqCCs were more similar to those of other squamous carcinomas than to alterations in lung ADCs. New significantly mutated genes included PPP3CA, DOT1L, and FTSJD1 in lung ADC, RASA1 in lung SqCC, and KLF5, EP300, and CREBBP in both tumor types. New amplification peaks encompassed MIR21 in lung ADC, MIR205 in lung SqCC, and MAPK1 in both. Lung ADCs lacking receptor tyrosine kinase–Ras–Raf pathway alterations had mutations in SOS1, VAV1, RASA1, and ARHGAP35. Regarding neoantigens, 47% of the lung ADC and 53% of the lung SqCC tumors had at least five predicted neoepitopes. Although targeted therapies for lung ADC and SqCC are largely distinct, immunotherapies may aid in treatment for both subtypes.


Genome Research | 2011

Conservation of an RNA regulatory map between Drosophila and mammals

Angela N. Brooks; Li Yang; Michael O. Duff; Kasper D. Hansen; Jung W. Park; Sandrine Dudoit; Steven E. Brenner; Brenton R. Graveley

Alternative splicing is generally controlled by proteins that bind directly to regulatory sequence elements and either activate or repress splicing of adjacent splice sites in a target pre-mRNA. Here, we have combined RNAi and mRNA-seq to identify exons that are regulated by Pasilla (PS), the Drosophila melanogaster ortholog of mammalian NOVA1 and NOVA2. We identified 405 splicing events in 323 genes that are significantly affected upon depletion of ps, many of which were annotated as being constitutively spliced. The sequence regions upstream and within PS-repressed exons and downstream from PS-activated exons are enriched for YCAY repeats, and these are consistent with the location of these motifs near NOVA-regulated exons in mammals. Thus, the RNA regulatory map of PS and NOVA1/2 is highly conserved between insects and mammals despite the fact that the target gene orthologs regulated by PS and NOVA1/2 are almost entirely nonoverlapping. This observation suggests that the regulatory codes of individual RNA binding proteins may be nearly immutable, yet the regulatory modules controlled by these proteins are highly evolvable.


PLOS ONE | 2014

A Pan-Cancer Analysis of Transcriptome Changes Associated with Somatic Mutations in U2AF1 Reveals Commonly Altered Splicing Events

Angela N. Brooks; Peter S. Choi; Luc de Waal; Tanaz Sharifnia; Marcin Imielinski; Gordon Saksena; Chandra Sekhar Pedamallu; Andrey Sivachenko; Mara Rosenberg; Juliann Chmielecki; Michael S. Lawrence; David S. DeLuca; Gad Getz; Matthew Meyerson

Although recurrent somatic mutations in the splicing factor U2AF1 (also known as U2AF35) have been identified in multiple cancer types, the effects of these mutations on the cancer transcriptome have yet to be fully elucidated. Here, we identified splicing alterations associated with U2AF1 mutations across distinct cancers using DNA and RNA sequencing data from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA). Using RNA-Seq data from 182 lung adenocarcinomas and 167 acute myeloid leukemias (AML), in which U2AF1 is somatically mutated in 3–4% of cases, we identified 131 and 369 splicing alterations, respectively, that were significantly associated with U2AF1 mutation. Of these, 30 splicing alterations were statistically significant in both lung adenocarcinoma and AML, including three genes in the Cancer Gene Census, CTNNB1, CHCHD7, and PICALM. Cell line experiments expressing U2AF1 S34F in HeLa cells and in 293T cells provide further support that these altered splicing events are caused by U2AF1 mutation. Consistent with the function of U2AF1 in 3′ splice site recognition, we found that S34F/Y mutations cause preferences for CAG over UAG 3′ splice site sequences. This report demonstrates consistent effects of U2AF1 mutation on splicing in distinct cancer cell types.


Molecular Cell | 2009

Genome-wide Analysis of Alternative Pre-mRNA Splicing and RNA-Binding Specificities of the Drosophila hnRNP A/B Family Members

Marco Blanchette; Richard E. Green; Stewart MacArthur; Angela N. Brooks; Steven E. Brenner; Michael B. Eisen; Donald C. Rio

Heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoproteins (hnRNPs) have been traditionally seen as proteins packaging RNA nonspecifically into ribonucleoprotein particles (RNPs), but evidence suggests specific cellular functions on discrete target pre-mRNAs. Here we report genome-wide analysis of alternative splicing patterns regulated by four Drosophila homologs of the mammalian hnRNP A/B family (hrp36, hrp38, hrp40, and hrp48). Analysis of the global RNA-binding distributions of each protein revealed both small and extensively bound regions on target transcripts. A significant subset of RNAs were bound and regulated by more than one hnRNP protein, revealing a combinatorial network of interactions. In vitro RNA-binding site selection experiments (SELEX) identified distinct binding motif specificities for each protein, which were overrepresented in their respective regulated and bound transcripts. These results indicate that individual heterogeneous ribonucleoproteins have specific affinities for overlapping, but distinct, populations of target pre-mRNAs controlling their patterns of RNA processing.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2014

SOX2 and p63 colocalize at genetic loci in squamous cell carcinomas

Hideo Watanabe; Qiuping Ma; Shouyong Peng; Guillaume Adelmant; Danielle Swain; Wenyu Song; Cameron Fox; Joshua M. Francis; Chandra Sekhar Pedamallu; David S. DeLuca; Angela N. Brooks; Su Wang; Jianwen Que; Anil K. Rustgi; Kwok-Kin Wong; Keith L. Ligon; X. Shirley Liu; Jarrod A. Marto; Matthew Meyerson; Adam J. Bass

The transcription factor SOX2 is an essential regulator of pluripotent stem cells and promotes development and maintenance of squamous epithelia. We previously reported that SOX2 is an oncogene and subject to highly recurrent genomic amplification in squamous cell carcinomas (SCCs). Here, we have further characterized the function of SOX2 in SCC. Using ChIP-seq analysis, we compared SOX2-regulated gene profiles in multiple SCC cell lines to ES cell profiles and determined that SOX2 binds to distinct genomic loci in SCCs. In SCCs, SOX2 preferentially interacts with the transcription factor p63, as opposed to the transcription factor OCT4, which is the preferred SOX2 binding partner in ES cells. SOX2 and p63 exhibited overlapping genomic occupancy at a large number of loci in SCCs; however, coordinate binding of SOX2 and p63 was absent in ES cells. We further demonstrated that SOX2 and p63 jointly regulate gene expression, including the oncogene ETV4, which was essential for SOX2-amplified SCC cell survival. Together, these findings demonstrate that the action of SOX2 in SCC differs substantially from its role in pluripotency. The identification of the SCC-associated interaction between SOX2 and p63 will enable deeper characterization the downstream targets of this interaction in SCC and normal squamous epithelial physiology.


Cancer Cell | 2016

High-throughput Phenotyping of Lung Cancer Somatic Mutations

Alice H. Berger; Angela N. Brooks; Xiaoyun Wu; Yashaswi Shrestha; Candace R. Chouinard; Federica Piccioni; Mukta Bagul; Atanas Kamburov; Marcin Imielinski; Larson Hogstrom; Cong Zhu; Xiaoping Yang; Sasha Pantel; Ryo Sakai; Jacqueline Watson; Nathan Kaplan; Joshua D. Campbell; Shantanu Singh; David E. Root; Rajiv Narayan; Ted Natoli; David L. Lahr; Itay Tirosh; Pablo Tamayo; Gad Getz; Bang Wong; John G. Doench; Aravind Subramanian; Todd R. Golub; Matthew Meyerson

Recent genome sequencing efforts have identified millions of somatic mutations in cancer. However, the functional impact of most variants is poorly understood. Here we characterize 194 somatic mutations identified in primary lung adenocarcinomas. We present an expression-based variant-impact phenotyping (eVIP) method that uses gene expression changes to distinguish impactful from neutral somatic mutations. eVIP identified 69% of mutations analyzed as impactful and 31% as functionally neutral. A subset of the impactful mutations induces xenograft tumor formation in mice and/or confers resistance to cellular EGFR inhibition. Among these impactful variants are rare somatic, clinically actionable variants including EGFR S645C, ARAF S214C and S214F, ERBB2 S418T, and multiple BRAF variants, demonstrating that rare mutations can be functionally important in cancer.

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Jing Sun

University of Pennsylvania

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Benjamin L. Ebert

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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