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Dive into the research topics where Barbara A. Weir is active.

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Featured researches published by Barbara A. Weir.


Cancer Cell | 2010

Integrated Genomic Analysis Identifies Clinically Relevant Subtypes of Glioblastoma Characterized by Abnormalities in PDGFRA, IDH1, EGFR, and NF1

Roel G.W. Verhaak; Katherine A. Hoadley; Elizabeth Purdom; Victoria Wang; Yuan Qi; Matthew D. Wilkerson; C. Ryan Miller; Li Ding; Todd R. Golub; Jill P. Mesirov; Gabriele Alexe; Michael S. Lawrence; Michael O'Kelly; Pablo Tamayo; Barbara A. Weir; Stacey Gabriel; Wendy Winckler; Supriya Gupta; Lakshmi Jakkula; Heidi S. Feiler; J. Graeme Hodgson; C. David James; Jann N. Sarkaria; Cameron Brennan; Ari Kahn; Paul T. Spellman; Richard Wilson; Terence P. Speed; Joe W. Gray; Matthew Meyerson

The Cancer Genome Atlas Network recently cataloged recurrent genomic abnormalities in glioblastoma multiforme (GBM). We describe a robust gene expression-based molecular classification of GBM into Proneural, Neural, Classical, and Mesenchymal subtypes and integrate multidimensional genomic data to establish patterns of somatic mutations and DNA copy number. Aberrations and gene expression of EGFR, NF1, and PDGFRA/IDH1 each define the Classical, Mesenchymal, and Proneural subtypes, respectively. Gene signatures of normal brain cell types show a strong relationship between subtypes and different neural lineages. Additionally, response to aggressive therapy differs by subtype, with the greatest benefit in the Classical subtype and no benefit in the Proneural subtype. We provide a framework that unifies transcriptomic and genomic dimensions for GBM molecular stratification with important implications for future studies.


Nature | 2010

The landscape of somatic copy-number alteration across human cancers

Rameen Beroukhim; Craig H. Mermel; Dale Porter; Guo Wei; Soumya Raychaudhuri; Jerry Donovan; Jordi Barretina; Jesse S. Boehm; Jennifer Dobson; Mitsuyoshi Urashima; Kevin T. Mc Henry; Reid M. Pinchback; Azra H. Ligon; Yoon-Jae Cho; Leila Haery; Heidi Greulich; Michael R. Reich; Wendy Winckler; Michael S. Lawrence; Barbara A. Weir; Kumiko Tanaka; Derek Y. Chiang; Adam J. Bass; Alice Loo; Carter Hoffman; John R. Prensner; Ted Liefeld; Qing Gao; Derek Yecies; Sabina Signoretti

A powerful way to discover key genes with causal roles in oncogenesis is to identify genomic regions that undergo frequent alteration in human cancers. Here we present high-resolution analyses of somatic copy-number alterations (SCNAs) from 3,131 cancer specimens, belonging largely to 26 histological types. We identify 158 regions of focal SCNA that are altered at significant frequency across several cancer types, of which 122 cannot be explained by the presence of a known cancer target gene located within these regions. Several gene families are enriched among these regions of focal SCNA, including the BCL2 family of apoptosis regulators and the NF-κΒ pathway. We show that cancer cells containing amplifications surrounding the MCL1 and BCL2L1 anti-apoptotic genes depend on the expression of these genes for survival. Finally, we demonstrate that a large majority of SCNAs identified in individual cancer types are present in several cancer types.


Nature | 2008

Somatic mutations affect key pathways in lung adenocarcinoma

Li Ding; Gad Getz; David A. Wheeler; Elaine R. Mardis; Michael D. McLellan; Kristian Cibulskis; Carrie Sougnez; Heidi Greulich; Donna M. Muzny; Margaret Morgan; Lucinda Fulton; Robert S. Fulton; Qunyuan Zhang; Michael C. Wendl; Michael S. Lawrence; David E. Larson; Ken Chen; David J. Dooling; Aniko Sabo; Alicia Hawes; Hua Shen; Shalini N. Jhangiani; Lora Lewis; Otis Hall; Yiming Zhu; Tittu Mathew; Yanru Ren; Jiqiang Yao; Steven E. Scherer; Kerstin Clerc

Determining the genetic basis of cancer requires comprehensive analyses of large collections of histopathologically well-classified primary tumours. Here we report the results of a collaborative study to discover somatic mutations in 188 human lung adenocarcinomas. DNA sequencing of 623 genes with known or potential relationships to cancer revealed more than 1,000 somatic mutations across the samples. Our analysis identified 26 genes that are mutated at significantly high frequencies and thus are probably involved in carcinogenesis. The frequently mutated genes include tyrosine kinases, among them the EGFR homologue ERBB4; multiple ephrin receptor genes, notably EPHA3; vascular endothelial growth factor receptor KDR; and NTRK genes. These data provide evidence of somatic mutations in primary lung adenocarcinoma for several tumour suppressor genes involved in other cancers—including NF1, APC, RB1 and ATM—and for sequence changes in PTPRD as well as the frequently deleted gene LRP1B. The observed mutational profiles correlate with clinical features, smoking status and DNA repair defects. These results are reinforced by data integration including single nucleotide polymorphism array and gene expression array. Our findings shed further light on several important signalling pathways involved in lung adenocarcinoma, and suggest new molecular targets for treatment.


Nature | 2007

Characterizing the cancer genome in lung adenocarcinoma

Barbara A. Weir; Michele S. Woo; Gad Getz; Sven Perner; Li Ding; Rameen Beroukhim; William M. Lin; Michael A. Province; Aldi T. Kraja; Laura A. Johnson; Kinjal Shah; Mitsuo Sato; Roman K. Thomas; Justine A. Barletta; Ingrid B. Borecki; Stephen Broderick; Andrew C. Chang; Derek Y. Chiang; Lucian R. Chirieac; Jeonghee Cho; Yoshitaka Fujii; Adi F. Gazdar; Thomas J. Giordano; Heidi Greulich; Megan Hanna; Bruce E. Johnson; Mark G. Kris; Alex E. Lash; Ling Lin; Neal I. Lindeman

Somatic alterations in cellular DNA underlie almost all human cancers. The prospect of targeted therapies and the development of high-resolution, genome-wide approaches are now spurring systematic efforts to characterize cancer genomes. Here we report a large-scale project to characterize copy-number alterations in primary lung adenocarcinomas. By analysis of a large collection of tumours (n = 371) using dense single nucleotide polymorphism arrays, we identify a total of 57 significantly recurrent events. We find that 26 of 39 autosomal chromosome arms show consistent large-scale copy-number gain or loss, of which only a handful have been linked to a specific gene. We also identify 31 recurrent focal events, including 24 amplifications and 7 homozygous deletions. Only six of these focal events are currently associated with known mutations in lung carcinomas. The most common event, amplification of chromosome 14q13.3, is found in ∼12% of samples. On the basis of genomic and functional analyses, we identify NKX2-1 (NK2 homeobox 1, also called TITF1), which lies in the minimal 14q13.3 amplification interval and encodes a lineage-specific transcription factor, as a novel candidate proto-oncogene involved in a significant fraction of lung adenocarcinomas. More generally, our results indicate that many of the genes that are involved in lung adenocarcinoma remain to be discovered.


Nature | 2009

Systematic RNA interference reveals that oncogenic KRAS -driven cancers require TBK1

David A. Barbie; Pablo Tamayo; Jesse S. Boehm; So Young Kim; Susan E. Moody; Ian F. Dunn; Anna C. Schinzel; Peter Sandy; Etienne Meylan; Claudia Scholl; Stefan Fröhling; Edmond M. Chan; Martin L. Sos; Kathrin Michel; Craig H. Mermel; Serena J. Silver; Barbara A. Weir; Jan H. Reiling; Qing Sheng; Piyush B. Gupta; Raymond C. Wadlow; Hanh Le; Ben S. Wittner; Sridhar Ramaswamy; David M. Livingston; David M. Sabatini; Matthew Meyerson; Roman K. Thomas; Eric S. Lander; Jill P. Mesirov

The proto-oncogene KRAS is mutated in a wide array of human cancers, most of which are aggressive and respond poorly to standard therapies. Although the identification of specific oncogenes has led to the development of clinically effective, molecularly targeted therapies in some cases, KRAS has remained refractory to this approach. A complementary strategy for targeting KRAS is to identify gene products that, when inhibited, result in cell death only in the presence of an oncogenic allele. Here we have used systematic RNA interference to detect synthetic lethal partners of oncogenic KRAS and found that the non-canonical IκB kinase TBK1 was selectively essential in cells that contain mutant KRAS. Suppression of TBK1 induced apoptosis specifically in human cancer cell lines that depend on oncogenic KRAS expression. In these cells, TBK1 activated NF-κB anti-apoptotic signals involving c-Rel and BCL-XL (also known as BCL2L1) that were essential for survival, providing mechanistic insights into this synthetic lethal interaction. These observations indicate that TBK1 and NF-κB signalling are essential in KRAS mutant tumours, and establish a general approach for the rational identification of co-dependent pathways in cancer.


Nature Medicine | 2008

Gene expression-based survival prediction in lung adenocarcinoma: A multi-site, blinded validation study

Kerby Shedden; Jeremy M. G. Taylor; Steven A. Enkemann; Ming-Sound Tsao; Timothy J. Yeatman; William L. Gerald; Steven Eschrich; Igor Jurisica; Thomas J. Giordano; David E. Misek; Andrew C. Chang; Chang Qi Zhu; Daniel Strumpf; Samir M. Hanash; Frances A. Shepherd; Keyue Ding; Lesley Seymour; Katsuhiko Naoki; Nathan A. Pennell; Barbara A. Weir; Roel G.W. Verhaak; Christine Ladd-Acosta; Todd R. Golub; Michael Gruidl; Anupama Sharma; Janos Szoke; Maureen F. Zakowski; Valerie W. Rusch; Mark G. Kris; Agnes Viale

Although prognostic gene expression signatures for survival in early-stage lung cancer have been proposed, for clinical application, it is critical to establish their performance across different subject populations and in different laboratories. Here we report a large, training–testing, multi-site, blinded validation study to characterize the performance of several prognostic models based on gene expression for 442 lung adenocarcinomas. The hypotheses proposed examined whether microarray measurements of gene expression either alone or combined with basic clinical covariates (stage, age, sex) could be used to predict overall survival in lung cancer subjects. Several models examined produced risk scores that substantially correlated with actual subject outcome. Most methods performed better with clinical data, supporting the combined use of clinical and molecular information when building prognostic models for early-stage lung cancer. This study also provides the largest available set of microarray data with extensive pathological and clinical annotation for lung adenocarcinomas.


Nature Biotechnology | 2012

Absolute quantification of somatic DNA alterations in human cancer

Scott L. Carter; Kristian Cibulskis; Elena Helman; Aaron McKenna; Hui Shen; Travis I. Zack; Peter W. Laird; Robert C. Onofrio; Wendy Winckler; Barbara A. Weir; Rameen Beroukhim; David Pellman; Douglas A. Levine; Eric S. Lander; Matthew Meyerson; Gad Getz

We describe a computational method that infers tumor purity and malignant cell ploidy directly from analysis of somatic DNA alterations. The method, named ABSOLUTE, can detect subclonal heterogeneity and somatic homozygosity, and it can calculate statistical sensitivity for detection of specific aberrations. We used ABSOLUTE to analyze exome sequencing data from 214 ovarian carcinoma tumor-normal pairs. This analysis identified both pervasive subclonal somatic point-mutations and a small subset of predominantly clonal and homozygous mutations, which were overrepresented in the tumor suppressor genes TP53 and NF1 and in a candidate tumor suppressor gene CDK12. We also used ABSOLUTE to infer absolute allelic copy-number profiles from 3,155 diverse cancer specimens, revealing that genome-doubling events are common in human cancer, likely occur in cells that are already aneuploid, and influence pathways of tumor progression (for example, with recessive inactivation of NF1 being less common after genome doubling). ABSOLUTE will facilitate the design of clinical sequencing studies and studies of cancer genome evolution and intra-tumor heterogeneity.


Nature Genetics | 2009

SOX2 is an amplified lineage-survival oncogene in lung and esophageal squamous cell carcinomas

Adam J. Bass; Hideo Watanabe; Craig H. Mermel; Yu Ss; Sven Perner; Roeland Verhaak; So Young Kim; Leslie Wardwell; Pablo Tamayo; Irit Gat-Viks; Alex H. Ramos; Michele S. Woo; Barbara A. Weir; Gad Getz; Rameen Beroukhim; Michael O'Kelly; Amit Dutt; Orit Rozenblatt-Rosen; Piotr Dziunycz; Justin Komisarof; Lucian R. Chirieac; Christopher J. Lafargue; Veit Scheble; Theresia Wilbertz; Changqing Ma; Shilpa Rao; Hiroshi Nakagawa; Douglas B. Stairs; Lin Lin; Thomas J. Giordano

Lineage-survival oncogenes are activated by somatic DNA alterations in cancers arising from the cell lineages in which these genes play a role in normal development. Here we show that a peak of genomic amplification on chromosome 3q26.33 found in squamous cell carcinomas (SCCs) of the lung and esophagus contains the transcription factor gene SOX2, which is mutated in hereditary human esophageal malformations, is necessary for normal esophageal squamous development, promotes differentiation and proliferation of basal tracheal cells and cooperates in induction of pluripotent stem cells. SOX2 expression is required for proliferation and anchorage-independent growth of lung and esophageal cell lines, as shown by RNA interference experiments. Furthermore, ectopic expression of SOX2 here cooperated with FOXE1 or FGFR2 to transform immortalized tracheobronchial epithelial cells. SOX2-driven tumors show expression of markers of both squamous differentiation and pluripotency. These characteristics identify SOX2 as a lineage-survival oncogene in lung and esophageal SCC.


Nature Genetics | 2010

Subtype-specific genomic alterations define new targets for soft tissue sarcoma therapy

Jordi Barretina; Barry S. Taylor; Shantanu Banerji; Alexis Ramos; Mariana Lagos-Quintana; Penelope DeCarolis; Kinjal Shah; Nicholas D. Socci; Barbara A. Weir; Alan Ho; Derek Y. Chiang; Boris Reva; Craig H. Mermel; Gad Getz; Yevgenyi Antipin; Rameen Beroukhim; John Major; Charles Hatton; Richard Nicoletti; Megan Hanna; Ted Sharpe; Timothy Fennell; Kristian Cibulskis; Robert C. Onofrio; Tsuyoshi Saito; Neerav Shukla; Christopher Lau; Sven Nelander; Serena J. Silver; Carrie Sougnez

Soft-tissue sarcomas, which result in approximately 10,700 diagnoses and 3,800 deaths per year in the United States, show remarkable histologic diversity, with more than 50 recognized subtypes. However, knowledge of their genomic alterations is limited. We describe an integrative analysis of DNA sequence, copy number and mRNA expression in 207 samples encompassing seven major subtypes. Frequently mutated genes included TP53 (17% of pleomorphic liposarcomas), NF1 (10.5% of myxofibrosarcomas and 8% of pleomorphic liposarcomas) and PIK3CA (18% of myxoid/round-cell liposarcomas, or MRCs). PIK3CA mutations in MRCs were associated with Akt activation and poor clinical outcomes. In myxofibrosarcomas and pleomorphic liposarcomas, we found both point mutations and genomic deletions affecting the tumor suppressor NF1. Finally, we found that short hairpin RNA (shRNA)-based knockdown of several genes amplified in dedifferentiated liposarcoma, including CDK4 and YEATS4, decreased cell proliferation. Our study yields a detailed map of molecular alterations across diverse sarcoma subtypes and suggests potential subtype-specific targets for therapy.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Highly parallel identification of essential genes in cancer cells

Biao Luo; Hiu Wing Cheung; Aravind Subramanian; Tanaz Sharifnia; Michael Okamoto; Xiaoping Yang; Greg Hinkle; Jesse S. Boehm; Rameen Beroukhim; Barbara A. Weir; Craig H. Mermel; David A. Barbie; Tarif Awad; Xiaochuan Zhou; Tuyen Nguyen; Bruno Piqani; Cheng Li; Todd R. Golub; Matthew Meyerson; Nir Hacohen; William C. Hahn; Eric S. Lander; David M. Sabatini; David E. Root

More complete knowledge of the molecular mechanisms underlying cancer will improve prevention, diagnosis and treatment. Efforts such as The Cancer Genome Atlas are systematically characterizing the structural basis of cancer, by identifying the genomic mutations associated with each cancer type. A powerful complementary approach is to systematically characterize the functional basis of cancer, by identifying the genes essential for growth and related phenotypes in different cancer cells. Such information would be particularly valuable for identifying potential drug targets. Here, we report the development of an efficient, robust approach to perform genome-scale pooled shRNA screens for both positive and negative selection and its application to systematically identify cell essential genes in 12 cancer cell lines. By integrating these functional data with comprehensive genetic analyses of primary human tumors, we identified known and putative oncogenes such as EGFR, KRAS, MYC, BCR-ABL, MYB, CRKL, and CDK4 that are essential for cancer cell proliferation and also altered in human cancers. We further used this approach to identify genes involved in the response of cancer cells to tumoricidal agents and found 4 genes required for the response of CML cells to imatinib treatment: PTPN1, NF1, SMARCB1, and SMARCE1, and 5 regulators of the response to FAS activation, FAS, FADD, CASP8, ARID1A and CBX1. Broad application of this highly parallel genetic screening strategy will not only facilitate the rapid identification of genes that drive the malignant state and its response to therapeutics but will also enable the discovery of genes that participate in any biological process.

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Rameen Beroukhim

National Institutes of Health

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Todd R. Golub

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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