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Dive into the research topics where Aparna Bhaduri is active.

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Featured researches published by Aparna Bhaduri.


Nature Genetics | 2015

Genomic analysis of mycosis fungoides and Sézary syndrome identifies recurrent alterations in TNFR2

Alexander Ungewickell; Aparna Bhaduri; Eon J. Rios; Jason A. Reuter; Carolyn S. Lee; Angela Mah; Ashley Zehnder; Robert S. Ohgami; Shashikant Kulkarni; Randall Armstrong; Wen-Kai Weng; Dita Gratzinger; Mahkam Tavallaee; Alain H. Rook; Michael Snyder; Youn H. Kim; Paul A. Khavari

Mycosis fungoides and Sézary syndrome comprise the majority of cutaneous T cell lymphomas (CTCLs), disorders notable for their clinical heterogeneity that can present in skin or peripheral blood. Effective treatment options for CTCL are limited, and the genetic basis of these T cell lymphomas remains incompletely characterized. Here we report recurrent point mutations and genomic gains of TNFRSF1B, encoding the tumor necrosis factor receptor TNFR2, in 18% of patients with mycosis fungoides and Sézary syndrome. Expression of the recurrent TNFR2 Thr377Ile mutant in T cells leads to enhanced non-canonical NF-κB signaling that is sensitive to the proteasome inhibitor bortezomib. Using an integrative genomic approach, we additionally discovered a recurrent CTLA4-CD28 fusion, as well as mutations in downstream signaling mediators of these receptors.


Nature Genetics | 2014

Recurrent point mutations in the kinetochore gene KNSTRN in cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma

Carolyn S. Lee; Aparna Bhaduri; Angela Mah; Whitney L Johnson; Alexander Ungewickell; Cody J. Aros; Christie B Nguyen; Eon J. Rios; Zurab Siprashvili; Aaron F. Straight; Jinah Kim; Sumaira Z. Aasi; Paul A. Khavari

Here we report the discovery of recurrent mutations concentrated at an ultraviolet signature hotspot in KNSTRN, which encodes a kinetochore protein, in 19% of cutaneous squamous cell carcinomas (SCCs). Cancer-associated KNSTRN mutations, most notably those encoding p.Ser24Phe, disrupt chromatid cohesion in normal cells, occur in SCC precursors, correlate with increased aneuploidy in primary tumors and enhance tumorigenesis in vivo. These findings suggest a role for KNSTRN mutagenesis in SCC development.


Bioinformatics | 2012

Rapid identification of non-human sequences in high-throughput sequencing datasets

Aparna Bhaduri; Kun Qu; Carolyn S. Lee; Alexander Ungewickell; Paul A. Khavari

UNLABELLED Rapid identification of non-human sequences (RINS) is an intersection-based pathogen detection workflow that utilizes a user-provided custom reference genome set for identification of non-human sequences in deep sequencing datasets. In <2 h, RINS correctly identified the known virus in the dataset SRR73726 and is compatible with any computer capable of running the prerequisite alignment and assembly programs. RINS accurately identifies sequencing reads from intact or mutated non-human genomes in a dataset and robustly generates contigs with these non-human sequences (Supplementary Material). AVAILABILITY RINS is available for free download at http://khavarilab.stanford.edu/resources.html.


Molecular Systems Biology | 2014

Quantitative analysis of mammalian translation initiation sites by FACS-seq.

William L Noderer; Ross J. Flockhart; Aparna Bhaduri; Alexander J Diaz de Arce; Jiajing Zhang; Paul A. Khavari; Clifford L. Wang

An approach combining fluorescence‐activated cell sorting and high‐throughput DNA sequencing (FACS‐seq) was employed to determine the efficiency of start codon recognition for all possible translation initiation sites (TIS) utilizing AUG start codons. Using FACS‐seq, we measured translation from a genetic reporter library representing all 65,536 possible TIS sequences spanning the −6 to +5 positions. We found that the motif RYMRMVAUGGC enhanced start codon recognition and translation efficiency. However, dinucleotide interactions, which cannot be conveyed by a single motif, were also important for modeling TIS efficiency. Our dataset combined with modeling allowed us to predict genome‐wide translation initiation efficiency for all mRNA transcripts. Additionally, we screened somatic TIS mutations associated with tumorigenesis to identify candidate driver mutations consistent with known tumor expression patterns. Finally, we implemented a quantitative leaky scanning model to predict alternative initiation sites that produce truncated protein isoforms and compared predictions with ribosome footprint profiling data. The comprehensive analysis of the TIS sequence space enables quantitative predictions of translation initiation based on genome sequence.


Nature Genetics | 2016

The noncoding RNAs SNORD50A and SNORD50B bind K-Ras and are recurrently deleted in human cancer

Zurab Siprashvili; Dan E. Webster; Danielle Johnston; Rajani M. Shenoy; Alexander Ungewickell; Aparna Bhaduri; Ross J. Flockhart; Brian J. Zarnegar; Yonglu Che; Francesca Meschi; Joseph D. Puglisi; Paul A. Khavari

Small nucleolar RNAs (snoRNAs) are conserved noncoding RNAs best studied as ribonucleoprotein (RNP) guides in RNA modification. To explore their role in cancer, we compared 5,473 tumor-normal genome pairs to identify snoRNAs with frequent copy number loss. The SNORD50A-SNORD50B snoRNA locus was deleted in 10–40% of 12 common cancers, where its loss was associated with reduced survival. A human protein microarray screen identified direct SNORD50A and SNORD50B RNA binding to K-Ras. Loss of SNORD50A and SNORD50B increased the amount of GTP-bound, active K-Ras and hyperactivated Ras-ERK1/ERK2 signaling. Loss of these snoRNAs also increased binding by farnesyltransferase to K-Ras and increased K-Ras prenylation, suggesting that KRAS mutation might synergize with SNORD50A and SNORD50B loss in cancer. In agreement with this hypothesis, CRISPR-mediated deletion of SNORD50A and SNORD50B in KRAS-mutant tumor cells enhanced tumorigenesis, and SNORD50A and SNORD50B deletion and oncogenic KRAS mutation co-occurred significantly in multiple human tumor types. SNORD50A and SNORD50B snoRNAs thus directly bind and inhibit K-Ras and are recurrently deleted in human cancer.


Science | 2017

Spatiotemporal gene expression trajectories reveal developmental hierarchies of the human cortex

Tomasz J. Nowakowski; Aparna Bhaduri; Alex A. Pollen; Beatriz Alvarado; Mohammed A. Mostajo-Radji; Elizabeth Di Lullo; Maximilian Haeussler; Carmen Sandoval-Espinosa; Siyuan John Liu; Dmitry Velmeshev; Johain Ryad Ounadjela; Joe Shuga; Xiaohui Wang; Daniel A. Lim; Jay A. West; Anne A. Leyrat; W. James Kent; Arnold R. Kriegstein

Building a brain The human brain is built in an inside-out manner as a series of layers. Although progenitor cells spin off new neurons in a seemingly organized fashion, the devil is in the details. Nowakowski et al. analyzed the transcriptomes of single cells from the developing brain to elucidate the hidden complexity of brain construction. For each cell, its position within the brain matters, as well as what type of neuron is being made at what point during overall development. These individual expression patterns result in organized diversity in the brains cortex. Science, this issue p. 1318 Location, type, and time all cooperate to diversify individual progenitors and neurons of the developing human brain. Systematic analyses of spatiotemporal gene expression trajectories during organogenesis have been challenging because diverse cell types at different stages of maturation and differentiation coexist in the emerging tissues. We identified discrete cell types as well as temporally and spatially restricted trajectories of radial glia maturation and neurogenesis in developing human telencephalon. These lineage-specific trajectories reveal the expression of neurogenic transcription factors in early radial glia and enriched activation of mammalian target of rapamycin signaling in outer radial glia. Across cortical areas, modest transcriptional differences among radial glia cascade into robust typological distinctions among maturing neurons. Together, our results support a mixed model of topographical, typological, and temporal hierarchies governing cell-type diversity in the developing human telencephalon, including distinct excitatory lineages emerging in rostral and caudal cerebral cortex.


Genome Biology | 2017

Single-cell profiling of human gliomas reveals macrophage ontogeny as a basis for regional differences in macrophage activation in the tumor microenvironment

Sören Müller; Gary Kohanbash; S. John Liu; Beatriz Alvarado; Diego Carrera; Aparna Bhaduri; Payal Watchmaker; Garima Yagnik; Elizabeth Di Lullo; Martina Malatesta; Nduka Amankulor; Arnold R. Kriegstein; Daniel A. Lim; Manish K. Aghi; Hideho Okada; Aaron Diaz

BackgroundTumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) are abundant in gliomas and immunosuppressive TAMs are a barrier to emerging immunotherapies. It is unknown to what extent macrophages derived from peripheral blood adopt the phenotype of brain-resident microglia in pre-treatment gliomas. The relative proportions of blood-derived macrophages and microglia have been poorly quantified in clinical samples due to a paucity of markers that distinguish these cell types in malignant tissue.ResultsWe perform single-cell RNA-sequencing of human gliomas and identify phenotypic differences in TAMs of distinct lineages. We isolate TAMs from patient biopsies and compare them with macrophages from non-malignant human tissue, glioma atlases, and murine glioma models. We present a novel signature that distinguishes TAMs by ontogeny in human gliomas. Blood-derived TAMs upregulate immunosuppressive cytokines and show an altered metabolism compared to microglial TAMs. They are also enriched in perivascular and necrotic regions. The gene signature of blood-derived TAMs, but not microglial TAMs, correlates with significantly inferior survival in low-grade glioma. Surprisingly, TAMs frequently co-express canonical pro-inflammatory (M1) and alternatively activated (M2) genes in individual cells.ConclusionsWe conclude that blood-derived TAMs significantly infiltrate pre-treatment gliomas, to a degree that varies by glioma subtype and tumor compartment. Blood-derived TAMs do not universally conform to the phenotype of microglia, but preferentially express immunosuppressive cytokines and show an altered metabolism. Our results argue against status quo therapeutic strategies that target TAMs indiscriminately and in favor of strategies that specifically target immunosuppressive blood-derived TAMs.


Cell | 2018

Human-Specific NOTCH2NL Genes Affect Notch Signaling and Cortical Neurogenesis

Ian T Fiddes; Gerrald A. Lodewijk; Meghan Mooring; Colleen M. Bosworth; Adam D. Ewing; Gary L. Mantalas; Adam M. Novak; Anouk van den Bout; Alex Bishara; Jimi L. Rosenkrantz; Ryan Lorig-Roach; Andrew R. Field; Maximilian Haeussler; Lotte Russo; Aparna Bhaduri; Tomasz J. Nowakowski; Alex A. Pollen; Max Dougherty; Xander Nuttle; Marie-Claude Addor; Simon Zwolinski; Sol Katzman; Arnold R. Kriegstein; Evan E. Eichler; Sofie R. Salama; Frank M. J. Jacobs; David Haussler

Genetic changes causing brain size expansion in human evolution have remained elusive. Notch signaling is essential for radial glia stem cell proliferation and is a determinant of neuronal number in the mammalian cortex. We find that three paralogs of human-specific NOTCH2NL are highly expressed in radial glia. Functional analysis reveals that different alleles of NOTCH2NL have varying potencies to enhance Notch signaling by interacting directly with NOTCH receptors. Consistent with a role in Notch signaling, NOTCH2NL ectopic expression delays differentiation of neuronal progenitors, while deletion accelerates differentiation into cortical neurons. Furthermore, NOTCH2NL genes provide the breakpoints in 1q21.1 distal deletion/duplication syndrome, where duplications are associated with macrocephaly and autism and deletions with microcephaly and schizophrenia. Thus, the emergence of human-specific NOTCH2NL genes may have contributed to the rapid evolution of the larger human neocortex, accompanied by loss of genomic stability at the 1q21.1 locus and resulting recurrent neurodevelopmental disorders.


Modern Pathology | 2016

A study of the mutational landscape of pediatric-type follicular lymphoma and pediatric nodal marginal zone lymphoma

Michael Ozawa; Aparna Bhaduri; Karen M. Chisholm; Steven A Baker; Lisa Ma; James L. Zehnder; Sandra Luna-Fineman; Michael P. Link; Jason D. Merker; Daniel A. Arber; Robert S. Ohgami

Pediatric-type follicular lymphoma and pediatric marginal zone lymphoma are two of the rarest B-cell lymphomas. These lymphomas occur predominantly in the pediatric population and show features distinct from their more common counterparts in adults: adult-type follicular lymphoma and adult-type nodal marginal zone lymphoma. Here we report a detailed whole-exome deep sequencing analysis of a cohort of pediatric-type follicular lymphomas and pediatric marginal zone lymphomas. This analysis revealed a recurrent somatic variant encoding p.Lys66Arg in the transcription factor interferon regulatory factor 8 (IRF8) in 3 of 6 cases (50%) of pediatric-type follicular lymphoma. This specific point mutation was not detected in pediatric marginal zone lymphoma or in adult-type follicular lymphoma. Additional somatic point mutations in pediatric-type follicular lymphoma were observed in genes involved in transcription, intracellular signaling, and cell proliferation. In pediatric marginal zone lymphoma, no recurrent mutation was identified; however, somatic point mutations were observed in genes involved in cellular adhesion, cytokine regulatory elements, and cellular proliferation. A somatic variant in AMOTL1, a recurrently mutated gene in splenic marginal zone lymphoma, was also identified in a case of pediatric marginal zone lymphoma. The overall non-synonymous mutational burden was low in both pediatric-type follicular lymphoma and pediatric marginal zone lymphoma (4.6 mutations per exome). Altogether, these findings support a distinctive genetic basis for pediatric-type follicular lymphoma and pediatric marginal zone lymphoma when compared with adult subtypes and to one another. Moreover, identification of a recurrent point mutation in IRF8 provides insight into a potential driver mutation in the pathogenesis of pediatric-type follicular lymphoma with implications for novel diagnostic or therapeutic strategies.


bioRxiv | 2017

Human-specific NOTCH-like genes in a region linked to neurodevelopmental disorders affect cortical neurogenesis

Ian T Fiddes; Gerrald A. Lodewijk; Meghan Mooring; Colleen M. Bosworth; Adam D. Ewing; Gary L. Mantalas; Adam M. Novak; Anouk van den Bout; Alex Bishara; Jimi L. Rosenkrantz; Ryan Lorig-Roach; Andrew R. Field; Maximillian Haeussler; Lotte Russo; Aparna Bhaduri; Tomasz J. Nowakowski; Alex A. Pollen; Max L Dougherth; Xander Nuttle; Marie-Claude Addor; Simon Zwolinski; Sol Katzman; Arnold Kreigstein; Evan E. Eichler; Sofie R. Salama; Frank M. J. Jacobs; David Haussler

Genetic changes causing dramatic brain size expansion in human evolution have remained elusive. Notch signaling is essential for radial glia stem cell proliferation and a determinant of neuronal number in the mammalian cortex. We find three paralogs of human-specific NOTCH2NL are highly expressed in radial glia cells. Functional analysis reveals different alleles of NOTCH2NL have varying potencies to enhance Notch signaling by interacting directly with NOTCH receptors. Consistent with a role in Notch signaling, NOTCH2NL ectopic expression delays differentiation of neuronal progenitors, while deletion accelerates differentiation. NOTCH2NL genes provide the breakpoints in typical cases of 1q21.1 distal deletion/duplication syndrome, where duplications are associated with macrocephaly and autism, and deletions with microcephaly and schizophrenia. Thus, the emergence of hominin-specific NOTCH2NL genes may have contributed to the rapid evolution of the larger hominin neocortex accompanied by loss of genomic stability at the 1q21. 1 locus and a resulting recurrent neurodevelopmental disorder.

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Alex A. Pollen

University of California

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Cody J. Aros

University of California

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Aaron Diaz

University of California

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