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Dive into the research topics where Anna J. Jasinska is active.

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Featured researches published by Anna J. Jasinska.


Cell | 2015

Enhancer Evolution across 20 Mammalian Species

Diego Villar; Camille Berthelot; Sarah Aldridge; Tim F. Rayner; Margus Lukk; Miguel Pignatelli; Thomas J. Park; Robert Deaville; Jonathan Thor Erichsen; Anna J. Jasinska; James M. A. Turner; Mads F. Bertelsen; Elizabeth P. Murchison; Paul Flicek; Duncan T. Odom

Summary The mammalian radiation has corresponded with rapid changes in noncoding regions of the genome, but we lack a comprehensive understanding of regulatory evolution in mammals. Here, we track the evolution of promoters and enhancers active in liver across 20 mammalian species from six diverse orders by profiling genomic enrichment of H3K27 acetylation and H3K4 trimethylation. We report that rapid evolution of enhancers is a universal feature of mammalian genomes. Most of the recently evolved enhancers arise from ancestral DNA exaptation, rather than lineage-specific expansions of repeat elements. In contrast, almost all liver promoters are partially or fully conserved across these species. Our data further reveal that recently evolved enhancers can be associated with genes under positive selection, demonstrating the power of this approach for annotating regulatory adaptations in genomic sequences. These results provide important insight into the functional genetics underpinning mammalian regulatory evolution.


Electrophoresis | 2008

New applications and developments in the use of multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification.

Piotr Kozlowski; Anna J. Jasinska; David J. Kwiatkowski

Multiplex ligation‐dependent probe amplification (MLPA) is a commonly used technique for determining relative DNA sequence dosage (or copy number) in a complex DNA sample. Originally MLPA was designed as a copy number analysis tool for detecting disease‐causing genomic mutations and has been successfully applied in the testing and identification of hundreds of genomic mutations in numerous genes including DMD, BRCA1, NF1, and TSC2. More recently, several modifications of the original technique have been implemented. Arguably the most important enhancement of MLPA has been probe generation by chemical synthesis, enabling the facile creation of novel probe sets for any desired application. Other newer applications of MLPA include methylation status determination, copy number analysis in segmentally duplicated regions, expression profiling, and transgene genotyping. MLPA has a potential major role in the analysis of common copy number variation in genome‐wide association analyses, which may be enhanced by future improvements to increase throughput and lower costs, such as array‐MLPA.


PLOS Pathogens | 2013

SIVagm Infection in Wild African Green Monkeys from South Africa: Epidemiology, Natural History, and Evolutionary Considerations

Dongzhu Ma; Anna J. Jasinska; Jan Kristoff; J. Paul Grobler; Trudy R. Turner; Yoon Jung; Christopher A. Schmitt; Kevin Raehtz; Felix Feyertag; Natalie Martinez Sosa; Viskam Wijewardana; Donald S. Burke; David Robertson; Russell P. Tracy; Ivona Pandrea; Nelson B. Freimer; Cristian Apetrei

Pathogenesis studies of SIV infection have not been performed to date in wild monkeys due to difficulty in collecting and storing samples on site and the lack of analytical reagents covering the extensive SIV diversity. We performed a large scale study of molecular epidemiology and natural history of SIVagm infection in 225 free-ranging AGMs from multiple locations in South Africa. SIV prevalence (established by sequencing pol, env, and gag) varied dramatically between infant/juvenile (7%) and adult animals (68%) (p<0.0001), and between adult females (78%) and males (57%). Phylogenetic analyses revealed an extensive genetic diversity, including frequent recombination events. Some AGMs harbored epidemiologically linked viruses. Viruses infecting AGMs in the Free State, which are separated from those on the coastal side by the Drakensberg Mountains, formed a separate cluster in the phylogenetic trees; this observation supports a long standing presence of SIV in AGMs, at least from the time of their speciation to their Plio-Pleistocene migration. Specific primers/probes were synthesized based on the pol sequence data and viral loads (VLs) were quantified. VLs were of 104–106 RNA copies/ml, in the range of those observed in experimentally-infected monkeys, validating the experimental approaches in natural hosts. VLs were significantly higher (107–108 RNA copies/ml) in 10 AGMs diagnosed as acutely infected based on SIV seronegativity (Fiebig II), which suggests a very active transmission of SIVagm in the wild. Neither cytokine levels (as biomarkers of immune activation) nor sCD14 levels (a biomarker of microbial translocation) were different between SIV-infected and SIV-uninfected monkeys. This complex algorithm combining sequencing and phylogeny, VL quantification, serology, and testing of surrogate markers of microbial translocation and immune activation permits a systematic investigation of the epidemiology, viral diversity and natural history of SIV infection in wild African natural hosts.


Ilar Journal | 2013

Systems Biology of the Vervet Monkey

Anna J. Jasinska; Christopher A. Schmitt; Rita M. Cantor; Ken Dewar; James D. Jentsch; Jay R. Kaplan; Trudy R. Turner; Wesley C. Warren; George M. Weinstock; Roger P. Woods; Nelson B. Freimer

Nonhuman primates (NHP) provide crucial biomedical model systems intermediate between rodents and humans. The vervet monkey (also called the African green monkey) is a widely used NHP model that has unique value for genetic and genomic investigations of traits relevant to human diseases. This article describes the phylogeny and population history of the vervet monkey and summarizes the use of both captive and wild vervet monkeys in biomedical research. It also discusses the effort of an international collaboration to develop the vervet monkey as the most comprehensively phenotypically and genomically characterized NHP, a process that will enable the scientific community to employ this model for systems biology investigations.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2009

Identification of brain transcriptional variation reproduced in peripheral blood: an approach for mapping brain expression traits

Anna J. Jasinska; Oi-Wa Choi; Joseph DeYoung; Olivera Grujic; Sit-yee Kong; Matthew J. Jorgensen; Julia N. Bailey; Sherry E. Breidenthal; Lynn A. Fairbanks; Roger P. Woods; J. David Jentsch; Nelson B. Freimer

Genome-wide gene expression studies may provide substantial insight into gene activities and biological pathways differing between tissues and individuals. We investigated such gene expression variation by analyzing expression profiles in brain tissues derived from eight different brain regions and from blood in 12 monkeys from a biomedically important non-human primate model, the vervet (Chlorocebus aethiops sabaeus). We characterized brain regional differences in gene expression, focusing on transcripts for which inter-individual variation of expression in brain correlates well with variation in blood from the same individuals. Using stringent criteria, we identified 29 transcripts whose expression is measurable, stable, replicable, variable between individuals, relevant to brain function and heritable. Polymorphisms identified in probe regions could, in a minority of transcripts, confound the interpretation of the observed inter-individual variation. The high heritability of levels of these transcripts in a large vervet pedigree validated our approach of focusing on transcripts that showed higher inter-individual compared with intra-individual variation. These selected transcripts are candidate expression Quantitative Trait Loci, differentially regulating transcript levels in the brain among individuals. Given the high degree of conservation of tissue expression profiles between vervets and humans, our findings may facilitate the understanding of regional and individual transcriptional variation and its genetic mechanisms in humans. The approach employed here—utilizing higher quality tissue and more precise dissection of brain regions than is usually possible in humans—may therefore provide a powerful means to investigate variation in gene expression relevant to complex brain related traits, including human neuropsychiatric diseases.


Journal of Virology | 2014

Factors Associated with Siman Immunodeficiency Virus Transmission in a Natural African Nonhuman Primate Host in the Wild

Dongzhu Ma; Anna J. Jasinska; Felix Feyertag; Viskam Wijewardana; Jan Kristoff; Tianyu He; Kevin Raehtz; Christopher A. Schmitt; Yoon Jung; Jennifer Danzy Cramer; Michel M. Dione; Martin Antonio; Russell P. Tracy; Trudy R. Turner; David Robertson; Ivona Pandrea; Nelson B. Freimer; Cristian Apetrei

ABSTRACT African green monkeys (AGMs) are naturally infected with simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) at high prevalence levels and do not progress to AIDS. Sexual transmission is the main transmission route in AGM, while mother-to-infant transmission (MTIT) is negligible. We investigated SIV transmission in wild AGMs to assess whether or not high SIV prevalence is due to differences in mucosal permissivity to SIV (i.e., whether the genetic bottleneck of viral transmission reported in humans and macaques is also observed in AGMs in the wild). We tested 121 sabaeus AGMs (Chlorocebus sabaeus) from the Gambia and found that 53 were SIV infected (44%). By combining serology and viral load quantitation, we identified 4 acutely infected AGMs, in which we assessed the diversity of the quasispecies by single-genome amplification (SGA) and documented that a single virus variant established the infections. We thus show that natural SIV transmission in the wild is associated with a genetic bottleneck similar to that described for mucosal human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) transmission in humans. Flow cytometry assessment of the immune cell populations did not identify major differences between infected and uninfected AGM. The expression of the SIV coreceptor CCR5 on CD4+ T cells dramatically increased in adults, being higher in infected than in uninfected infant and juvenile AGMs. Thus, the limited SIV MTIT in natural hosts appears to be due to low target cell availability in newborns and infants, which supports HIV MTIT prevention strategies aimed at limiting the target cells at mucosal sites. Combined, (i) the extremely high prevalence in sexually active AGMs, (ii) the very efficient SIV transmission in the wild, and (iii) the existence of a fraction of multiparous females that remain uninfected in spite of massive exposure to SIV identify wild AGMs as an acceptable model of exposed, uninfected individuals. IMPORTANCE We report an extensive analysis of the natural history of SIVagm infection in its sabaeus monkey host, the African green monkey species endemic to West Africa. Virtually no study has investigated the natural history of SIV infection in the wild. The novelty of our approach is that we report for the first time that SIV infection has no discernible impact on the major immune cell populations in natural hosts, thus confirming the nonpathogenic nature of SIV infection in the wild. We also focused on the correlates of SIV transmission, and we report, also for the first time, that SIV transmission in the wild is characterized by a major genetic bottleneck, similar to that described for HIV-1 transmission in humans. Finally, we report here that the restriction of target cell availability is a major correlate of the lack of SIV transmission to the offspring in natural hosts of SIVs.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

A quantitative trait locus for variation in dopamine metabolism mapped in a primate model using reference sequences from related species

Nelson B. Freimer; Roel A. Ophoff; Anna J. Jasinska; Kevin McKee; Amelie Villeneuve; Alexandre Belisle; Julia N. Bailey; Sherry E. Breidenthal; Matthew J. Jorgensen; J. John Mann; Rita M. Cantor; Ken Dewar; Lynn A. Fairbanks

Non-human primates (NHP) provide crucial research models. Their strong similarities to humans make them particularly valuable for understanding complex behavioral traits and brain structure and function. We report here the genetic mapping of an NHP nervous system biologic trait, the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) concentration of the dopamine metabolite homovanillic acid (HVA), in an extended inbred vervet monkey (Chlorocebus aethiops sabaeus) pedigree. CSF HVA is an index of CNS dopamine activity, which is hypothesized to contribute substantially to behavioral variations in NHP and humans. For quantitative trait locus (QTL) mapping, we carried out a two-stage procedure. We first scanned the genome using a first-generation genetic map of short tandem repeat markers. Subsequently, using >100 SNPs within the most promising region identified by the genome scan, we mapped a QTL for CSF HVA at a genome-wide level of significance (peak logarithm of odds score >4) to a narrow well delineated interval (<10 Mb). The SNP discovery exploited conserved segments between human and rhesus macaque reference genome sequences. Our findings demonstrate the potential of using existing primate reference genome sequences for designing high-resolution genetic analyses applicable across a wide range of NHP species, including the many for which full genome sequences are not yet available. Leveraging genomic information from sequenced to nonsequenced species should enable the utilization of the full range of NHP diversity in behavior and disease susceptibility to determine the genetic basis of specific biological and behavioral traits.


Mammalian Genome | 2007

A genetic linkage map of the vervet monkey (Chlorocebus aethiops sabaeus)

Anna J. Jasinska; Matthew Levinson; Erin Slaten; Oliver Lee; Eric Sobel; Lynn A. Fairbanks; Julia N. Bailey; Matthew J. Jorgensen; Sherry E. Breidenthal; Ken Dewar; Thomas J. Hudson; Roberta M. Palmour; Nelson B. Freimer; Roel A. Ophoff

The spectacular progress in genomics increasingly highlights the importance of comparative biology in biomedical research. In particular, nonhuman primates, as model systems, provide a crucial intermediate between humans and mice. The close similarities between humans and other primates are stimulating primate studies in virtually every area of biomedical research, including development, anatomy, physiology, immunology, and behavior. The vervet monkey (Chlorocebus aethiops sabaeus) is an important model for studying human diseases and complex traits, especially behavior. We have developed a vervet genetic linkage map to enable mapping complex traits in this model organism and facilitate comparative genomic analysis between vervet and other primates. Here we report construction of an initial genetic map built with about 360 human orthologous short tandem repeats (STRs) that were genotyped in 434 members of an extended vervet pedigree. The map includes 226 markers mapped in a unique order with a resolution of 9.8 Kosambi centimorgans (cM) in the vervet monkey genome, and with a total length (including all 360 markers) of 2726 cM. At least one complex and 11 simple rearrangements in marker order distinguish vervet chromosomes from human homologs. While inversions and insertions can explain a similar number of changes in marker order between vervet and rhesus homologs, mostly inversions are observed when vervet chromosome organization is compared to that in human and chimpanzee. Our results support the notion that large inversions played a less prominent role in the evolution within the group of the Old World monkeys compared to the human and chimpanzee lineages.


Genome Research | 2015

The genome of the vervet (Chlorocebus aethiops sabaeus)

Wesley C. Warren; Anna J. Jasinska; Raquel García-Pérez; Hannes Svardal; Chad Tomlinson; Mariano Rocchi; Nicoletta Archidiacono; Patrick Minx; Michael J. Montague; Kim Kyung; LaDeana W. Hillier; Milinn Kremitzki; Tina Graves; Colby Chiang; Jennifer F. Hughes; Nam Tran; Yu Huang; Vasily Ramensky; Oi Wa Choi; Yoon Jung; Christopher A. Schmitt; Nikoleta Juretic; Jessica Wasserscheid; Trudy R. Turner; Roger W. Wiseman; Jennifer J. Tuscher; Julie A. Karl; Jörn E. Schmitz; Roland Zahn; David H. O'Connor

We describe a genome reference of the African green monkey or vervet (Chlorocebus aethiops). This member of the Old World monkey (OWM) superfamily is uniquely valuable for genetic investigations of simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV), for which it is the most abundant natural host species, and of a wide range of health-related phenotypes assessed in Caribbean vervets (C. a. sabaeus), whose numbers have expanded dramatically since Europeans introduced small numbers of their ancestors from West Africa during the colonial era. We use the reference to characterize the genomic relationship between vervets and other primates, the intra-generic phylogeny of vervet subspecies, and genome-wide structural variations of a pedigreed C. a. sabaeus population. Through comparative analyses with human and rhesus macaque, we characterize at high resolution the unique chromosomal fission events that differentiate the vervets and their close relatives from most other catarrhine primates, in whom karyotype is highly conserved. We also provide a summary of transposable elements and contrast these with the rhesus macaque and human. Analysis of sequenced genomes representing each of the main vervet subspecies supports previously hypothesized relationships between these populations, which range across most of sub-Saharan Africa, while uncovering high levels of genetic diversity within each. Sequence-based analyses of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) polymorphisms reveal extremely low diversity in Caribbean C. a. sabaeus vervets, compared to vervets from putatively ancestral West African regions. In the C. a. sabaeus research population, we discover the first structural variations that are, in some cases, predicted to have a deleterious effect; future studies will determine the phenotypic impact of these variations.


American Journal of Medical Genetics | 2009

Polymorphisms in the GRIA1 gene region in psychotic bipolar disorder

Berit Kerner; Anna J. Jasinska; Joseph DeYoung; Maricel Almonte; Oi-Wa Choi; Nelson B. Freimer

We reported previously a significant linkage signal between psychotic bipolar disorder (BP) and microsatellite markers on chromosome 5q31–34 in the National Institute of Mental Health Bipolar Genetics Initiative (NIMH‐BPGI) data set, Wave 1. In an attempt to fine‐map this linkage signal we genotyped 1,134 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) under the linkage peak in 23 informative families (131 individuals) with evidence of linkage. We tested family based association in the presence of linkage with the computer software package FBAT. The most significant association in these families was with a SNP in the second intron of GRIA1 (α‐amino‐3‐hydroxy‐5‐methyl‐4‐isoxazole proprionic acid (AMPA) subunit 1 receptor gene) (rs490922, Z‐score = 3.3, P = 0.001). The analysis of 37 additional families with psychotic BP from NIMH‐BPGI data sets, Waves 2, 3, and 4 revealed a signal at a SNP in intron 5 of the GRIA1 gene (rs4385264, Z‐score = 3.2, P‐value = 0.002). A combined analysis of all 60 families continued to support evidence for association of GRIA1 with psychotic BP; however, individual SNPs could not be replicated across datasets. The AMPA1 receptor has been shown to influence cognitive function, such as working memory and reward learning. Our findings suggest that variations in this receptor may contribute to the pathophysiology of BP with psychotic features in some families.

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George M. Weinstock

Washington University in St. Louis

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Trudy R. Turner

University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee

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Wesley C. Warren

Washington University in St. Louis

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Rita M. Cantor

University of California

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