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Dive into the research topics where Brett E. Johnson is active.

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Featured researches published by Brett E. Johnson.


Nature | 2010

Conserved role of intragenic DNA methylation in regulating alternative promoters.

Alika K. Maunakea; Raman P. Nagarajan; Mikhail Bilenky; Tracy Ballinger; Cletus D'souza; Shaun D. Fouse; Brett E. Johnson; Chibo Hong; Cydney Nielsen; Yongjun Zhao; Gustavo Turecki; Allen Delaney; Richard Varhol; Nina Thiessen; Ksenya Shchors; Vivi M. Heine; David H. Rowitch; Xiaoyun Xing; Chris Fiore; Maximiliaan Schillebeeckx; Steven J.M. Jones; David Haussler; Marco A. Marra; Martin Hirst; Ting Wang; Joseph F. Costello

Although it is known that the methylation of DNA in 5′ promoters suppresses gene expression, the role of DNA methylation in gene bodies is unclear. In mammals, tissue- and cell type-specific methylation is present in a small percentage of 5′ CpG island (CGI) promoters, whereas a far greater proportion occurs across gene bodies, coinciding with highly conserved sequences. Tissue-specific intragenic methylation might reduce, or, paradoxically, enhance transcription elongation efficiency. Capped analysis of gene expression (CAGE) experiments also indicate that transcription commonly initiates within and between genes. To investigate the role of intragenic methylation, we generated a map of DNA methylation from the human brain encompassing 24.7 million of the 28 million CpG sites. From the dense, high-resolution coverage of CpG islands, the majority of methylated CpG islands were shown to be in intragenic and intergenic regions, whereas less than 3% of CpG islands in 5′ promoters were methylated. The CpG islands in all three locations overlapped with RNA markers of transcription initiation, and unmethylated CpG islands also overlapped significantly with trimethylation of H3K4, a histone modification enriched at promoters. The general and CpG-island-specific patterns of methylation are conserved in mouse tissues. An in-depth investigation of the human SHANK3 locus and its mouse homologue demonstrated that this tissue-specific DNA methylation regulates intragenic promoter activity in vitro and in vivo. These methylation-regulated, alternative transcripts are expressed in a tissue- and cell type-specific manner, and are expressed differentially within a single cell type from distinct brain regions. These results support a major role for intragenic methylation in regulating cell context-specific alternative promoters in gene bodies.


Nature Biotechnology | 2010

Comparison of sequencing-based methods to profile DNA methylation and identification of monoallelic epigenetic modifications

R. Alan Harris; Ting Wang; Cristian Coarfa; Raman P. Nagarajan; Chibo Hong; Sara L. Downey; Brett E. Johnson; Shaun D. Fouse; Allen Delaney; Yongjun Zhao; Adam B. Olshen; Tracy Ballinger; Xin Zhou; Kevin J. Forsberg; Junchen Gu; Lorigail Echipare; Henriette O'Geen; Ryan Lister; Mattia Pelizzola; Yuanxin Xi; Charles B. Epstein; Bradley E. Bernstein; R. David Hawkins; Bing Ren; Wen-Yu Chung; Hongcang Gu; Christoph Bock; Andreas Gnirke; Michael Q. Zhang; David Haussler

Analysis of DNA methylation patterns relies increasingly on sequencing-based profiling methods. The four most frequently used sequencing-based technologies are the bisulfite-based methods MethylC-seq and reduced representation bisulfite sequencing (RRBS), and the enrichment-based techniques methylated DNA immunoprecipitation sequencing (MeDIP-seq) and methylated DNA binding domain sequencing (MBD-seq). We applied all four methods to biological replicates of human embryonic stem cells to assess their genome-wide CpG coverage, resolution, cost, concordance and the influence of CpG density and genomic context. The methylation levels assessed by the two bisulfite methods were concordant (their difference did not exceed a given threshold) for 82% for CpGs and 99% of the non-CpG cytosines. Using binary methylation calls, the two enrichment methods were 99% concordant and regions assessed by all four methods were 97% concordant. We combined MeDIP-seq with methylation-sensitive restriction enzyme (MRE-seq) sequencing for comprehensive methylome coverage at lower cost. This, along with RNA-seq and ChIP-seq of the ES cells enabled us to detect regions with allele-specific epigenetic states, identifying most known imprinted regions and new loci with monoallelic epigenetic marks and monoallelic expression.


Science | 2014

Mutational Analysis Reveals the Origin and Therapy-driven Evolution of Recurrent Glioma

Brett E. Johnson; Tali Mazor; Chibo Hong; Michael Barnes; Koki Aihara; Cory Y. McLean; Shaun D. Fouse; Shogo Yamamoto; Hiroki R. Ueda; Kenji Tatsuno; Saurabh Asthana; Llewellyn E. Jalbert; Sarah J. Nelson; Andrew W. Bollen; W. Clay Gustafson; Elise Charron; William A. Weiss; Ivan Smirnov; Jun S. Song; Adam B. Olshen; Soonmee Cha; Yongjun Zhao; Richard A. Moore; Andrew J. Mungall; Steven J.M. Jones; Martin Hirst; Marco A. Marra; Nobuhito Saito; Hiroyuki Aburatani; Akitake Mukasa

Back with a Vengeance After surgery, gliomas (a type of brain tumor) recur in nearly all patients and often in a more aggressive form. Johnson et al. (p. 189, published online 12 December 2013) used exome sequencing to explore whether recurrent tumors harbor different mutations than the primary tumors and whether the mutational profile in the recurrences is influenced by postsurgical treatment of patients with temozolomide (TMZ), a chemotherapeutic drug known to damage DNA. In more than 40% of cases, at least half of the mutations in the initial glioma were undetected at recurrence. The recurrent tumors in many of the TMZ-treated patients bore the signature of TMZ-induced mutagenesis and appeared to follow an evolutionary path to high-grade glioma distinct from that in untreated patients. Primary brain tumors and their recurrences can exhibit vastly different mutational profiles. Tumor recurrence is a leading cause of cancer mortality. Therapies for recurrent disease may fail, at least in part, because the genomic alterations driving the growth of recurrences are distinct from those in the initial tumor. To explore this hypothesis, we sequenced the exomes of 23 initial low-grade gliomas and recurrent tumors resected from the same patients. In 43% of cases, at least half of the mutations in the initial tumor were undetected at recurrence, including driver mutations in TP53, ATRX, SMARCA4, and BRAF; this suggests that recurrent tumors are often seeded by cells derived from the initial tumor at a very early stage of their evolution. Notably, tumors from 6 of 10 patients treated with the chemotherapeutic drug temozolomide (TMZ) followed an alternative evolutionary path to high-grade glioma. At recurrence, these tumors were hypermutated and harbored driver mutations in the RB (retinoblastoma) and Akt-mTOR (mammalian target of rapamycin) pathways that bore the signature of TMZ-induced mutagenesis.


Cancer Cell | 2015

DNA Methylation and Somatic Mutations Converge on the Cell Cycle and Define Similar Evolutionary Histories in Brain Tumors

Tali Mazor; Aleksandr Pankov; Brett E. Johnson; Chibo Hong; Emily G. Hamilton; Robert J.A. Bell; Ivan Smirnov; Gerald F. Reis; Joanna J. Phillips; Michael Barnes; Ahmed Idbaih; Agusti Alentorn; Jenneke Kloezeman; Martine Lamfers; Andrew W. Bollen; Barry S. Taylor; Annette M. Molinaro; Adam B. Olshen; Susan M. Chang; Jun S. Song; Joseph F. Costello

The evolutionary history of tumor cell populations can be reconstructed from patterns of genetic alterations. In contrast to stable genetic events, epigenetic states are reversible and sensitive to the microenvironment, prompting the question whether epigenetic information can similarly be used to discover tumor phylogeny. We examined the spatial and temporal dynamics of DNA methylation in a cohort of low-grade gliomas and their patient-matched recurrences. Genes transcriptionally upregulated through promoter hypomethylation during malignant progression to high-grade glioblastoma were enriched in cell cycle function, evolving in parallel with genetic alterations that deregulate the G1/S cell cycle checkpoint. Moreover, phyloepigenetic relationships robustly recapitulated phylogenetic patterns inferred from somatic mutations. These findings highlight widespread co-dependency of genetic and epigenetic events throughout brain tumor evolution.


Acta Neuropathologica | 2015

Evolution of DNA repair defects during malignant progression of low-grade gliomas after temozolomide treatment

Hinke F. van Thuijl; Tali Mazor; Brett E. Johnson; Shaun D. Fouse; Koki Aihara; Chibo Hong; Annika Malmström; Martin Hallbeck; Jan J. Heimans; Jenneke Kloezeman; Marie Stenmark-Askmalm; Martine Lamfers; Nobuhito Saito; Hiroyuki Aburatani; Akitake Mukasa; Mitchell S. Berger; Peter Söderkvist; Barry S. Taylor; Annette M. Molinaro; Pieter Wesseling; Jaap C. Reijneveld; Susan M. Chang; Bauke Ylstra; Joseph F. Costello

Temozolomide (TMZ) increases the overall survival of patients with glioblastoma (GBM), but its role in the clinical management of diffuse low-grade gliomas (LGG) is still being defined. DNA hypermethylation of the O6-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase (MGMT) promoter is associated with an improved response to TMZ treatment, while inactivation of the DNA mismatch repair (MMR) pathway is associated with therapeutic resistance and TMZ-induced mutagenesis. We previously demonstrated that TMZ treatment of LGG induces driver mutations in the RB and AKT–mTOR pathways, which may drive malignant progression to secondary GBM. To better understand the mechanisms underlying TMZ-induced mutagenesis and malignant progression, we explored the evolution of MGMT methylation and genetic alterations affecting MMR genes in a cohort of 34 treatment-naïve LGGs and their recurrences. Recurrences with TMZ-associated hypermutation had increased MGMT methylation compared to their untreated initial tumors and higher overall MGMT methylation compared to TMZ-treated non-hypermutated recurrences. A TMZ-associated mutation in one or more MMR genes was observed in five out of six TMZ-treated hypermutated recurrences. In two cases, pre-existing heterozygous deletions encompassing MGMT, or an MMR gene, were followed by TMZ-associated mutations in one of the genes of interest. These results suggest that tumor cells with methylated MGMT may undergo positive selection during TMZ treatment in the context of MMR deficiency.


Genome Research | 2014

Recurrent epimutations activate gene body promoters in primary glioblastoma

Raman P. Nagarajan; Bo Zhang; Robert J.A. Bell; Brett E. Johnson; Adam B. Olshen; Vasavi Sundaram; Daofeng Li; Ashley E. Graham; Aaron Diaz; Shaun D. Fouse; Ivan Smirnov; Jun S. Song; Pamela L. Paris; Ting Wang; Joseph F. Costello

Aberrant DNA hypomethylation may play an important role in the growth rate of glioblastoma (GBM), but the functional impact on transcription remains poorly understood. We assayed the GBM methylome with MeDIP-seq and MRE-seq, adjusting for copy number differences, in a small set of non-glioma CpG island methylator phenotype (non-G-CIMP) primary tumors. Recurrent hypomethylated loci were enriched within a region of chromosome 5p15 that is specified as a cancer amplicon and also encompasses TERT, encoding telomerase reverse transcriptase, which plays a critical role in tumorigenesis. Overall, 76 gene body promoters were recurrently hypomethylated, including TERT and the oncogenes GLI3 and TP73. Recurring hypomethylation also affected previously unannotated alternative promoters, and luciferase reporter assays for three of four of these promoters confirmed strong promoter activity in GBM cells. Histone H3 lysine 4 trimethylation (H3K4me3) ChIP-seq on tissue from the GBMs uncovered peaks that coincide precisely with tumor-specific decrease of DNA methylation at 200 loci, 133 of which are in gene bodies. Detailed investigation of TP73 and TERT gene body hypomethylation demonstrated increased expression of corresponding alternate transcripts, which in TP73 encodes a truncated p73 protein with oncogenic function and in TERT encodes a putative reverse transcriptase-null protein. Our findings suggest that recurring gene body promoter hypomethylation events, along with histone H3K4 trimethylation, alter the transcriptional landscape of GBM through the activation of a limited number of normally silenced promoters within gene bodies, in at least one case leading to expression of an oncogenic protein.


Nature Methods | 2006

Genome-scale mapping of DNase I sensitivity in vivo using tiling DNA microarrays

Peter J. Sabo; Michael S. Kuehn; Robert A F Thurman; Brett E. Johnson; Ericka M. Johnson; Hua Cao; Man Yu; Elizabeth Rosenzweig; Jeff Goldy; Andrew K. Haydock; M. B. Weaver; Anthony Shafer; Kristin Lee; Fidencio Neri; Richard Humbert; Michael A. Singer; Todd Richmond; Michael O. Dorschner; Michael McArthur; Michael Hawrylycz; Roland D. Green; Patrick A. Navas; William Stafford Noble; John A. Stamatoyannopoulos


Neuro-oncology | 2015

GENO-25HYPERMUTATION AND MALIGNANT PROGRESSION IN AN EXPANDED COHORT OF TEMOZOLOMIDE-TREATED LOW-GRADE GLIOMA PATIENTS

Tali Mazor; Brett E. Johnson; Matthew R. Grimmer; Chibo Hong; Emily G. Hamilton; Lindsey Jones; Ana Xavier-Magalhães; Ivan Smirnov; Henrik Bengtsson; Adam B. Olshen; Kevin Petrecca; Andrew W. Bollen; Mitchel S. Berger; Barry S. Taylor; Sarah J. Nelson; Manish K. Aghi; Jennifer Clarke; Joanna J. Phillips; Susan M. Chang; Joseph F. Costello


Neuro-oncology | 2015

MPTH-29CONNECTING MUTANT GENOTYPES TO ABERRANT TRANSCRIPTIONAL SIGNATURES ACROSS SERIAL SECTIONS OF A HUMAN TUMOR

Samuel Shelton; Brett E. Johnson; Tali Mazor; Matthew B. Potts; Michael W. McDermott; Eric J. Huang; Daniel Lim; Russell O. Pieper; Mitchel S. Berger; Joanna J. Phillips; Joseph F. Costello; Michael C. Oldham


Neuro-oncology | 2014

GE-15CLONAL EVOLUTION AND INTRATUMORAL HETEROGENEITY OF LOW-GRADE GLIOMA GENOMES

Brett E. Johnson; Tali Mazor; Chibo Hong; Michael Barnes; Shogo Yamamoto; Hiroki R. Ueda; Kenji Tatsuno; Koki Aihara; Saurabh Asthana; Manisha Dayal; Sarah J. Nelson; Joanna J. Phillips; Andrew W. Bollen; Akitake Mukasa; Nobuhito Saito; Hiroyuki Aburatani; Mitchel S. Berger; Susan M. Chang; Barry S. Taylor; Joseph F. Costello

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Chibo Hong

University of California

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Tali Mazor

University of California

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Adam B. Olshen

University of California

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Barry S. Taylor

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Susan M. Chang

University of California

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Ivan Smirnov

University of California

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