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Dive into the research topics where Carol Scott is active.

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Featured researches published by Carol Scott.


Nature Methods | 2010

Target-enrichment strategies for next-generation sequencing

Lira Mamanova; Alison J. Coffey; Carol Scott; Iwanka Kozarewa; Emily H. Turner; Akash Kumar; Eleanor Howard; Jay Shendure; Daniel J. Turner

We have not yet reached a point at which routine sequencing of large numbers of whole eukaryotic genomes is feasible, and so it is often necessary to select genomic regions of interest and to enrich these regions before sequencing. There are several enrichment approaches, each with unique advantages and disadvantages. Here we describe our experiences with the leading target-enrichment technologies, the optimizations that we have performed and typical results that can be obtained using each. We also provide detailed protocols for each technology so that end users can find the best compromise between sensitivity, specificity and uniformity for their particular project.


Nature | 2002

A physical map of the mouse genome

Simon G. Gregory; Mandeep Sekhon; Jacqueline E. Schein; Shaying Zhao; Kazutoyo Osoegawa; Carol Scott; Richard S. Evans; Paul W. Burridge; Tony Cox; Christopher A. Fox; Richard D. Hutton; Ian R. Mullenger; Kimbly J. Phillips; James Smith; Jim Stalker; Glen Threadgold; Ewan Birney; Kristine M. Wylie; Asif T. Chinwalla; John W. Wallis; LaDeana W. Hillier; Jason Carter; Tony Gaige; Sara Jaeger; Colin Kremitzki; Dan Layman; Jason Maas; Rebecca McGrane; Kelly Mead; Rebecca Walker

A physical map of a genome is an essential guide for navigation, allowing the location of any gene or other landmark in the chromosomal DNA. We have constructed a physical map of the mouse genome that contains 296 contigs of overlapping bacterial clones and 16,992 unique markers. The mouse contigs were aligned to the human genome sequence on the basis of 51,486 homology matches, thus enabling use of the conserved synteny (correspondence between chromosome blocks) of the two genomes to accelerate construction of the mouse map. The map provides a framework for assembly of whole-genome shotgun sequence data, and a tile path of clones for generation of the reference sequence. Definition of the human–mouse alignment at this level of resolution enables identification of a mouse clone that corresponds to almost any position in the human genome. The human sequence may be used to facilitate construction of other mammalian genome maps using the same strategy.


Nature Genetics | 2011

CEP152 is a genome maintenance protein disrupted in Seckel syndrome

Ersan Kalay; Gökhan Yigit; Yakup Aslan; Karen E. Brown; Esther Pohl; Louise S. Bicknell; Hülya Kayserili; Yun Li; Beyhan Tüysüz; Gudrun Nürnberg; Wieland Kiess; Manfred Koegl; Ingelore Baessmann; Kurtulus Buruk; Bayram Toraman; Saadettin Kayipmaz; Sibel Kul; Mevlit Ikbal; Daniel J. Turner; Martin S. Taylor; Jan Aerts; Carol Scott; Karen Milstein; Hélène Dollfus; Dagmar Wieczorek; Han G. Brunner; Andrew P. Jackson; Anita Rauch; Peter Nürnberg; Ahmet Karagüzel

Functional impairment of DNA damage response pathways leads to increased genomic instability. Here we describe the centrosomal protein CEP152 as a new regulator of genomic integrity and cellular response to DNA damage. Using homozygosity mapping and exome sequencing, we identified CEP152 mutations in Seckel syndrome and showed that impaired CEP152 function leads to accumulation of genomic defects resulting from replicative stress through enhanced activation of ATM signaling and increased H2AX phosphorylation.


Nature Genetics | 2012

Mosaic overgrowth with fibroadipose hyperplasia is caused by somatic activating mutations in PIK3CA

Marjorie J. Lindhurst; Victoria Parker; Felicity Payne; Julie C. Sapp; Simon A. Rudge; Julie Harris; Alison M. Witkowski; Qifeng Zhang; Matthijs Groeneveld; Carol Scott; Allan Daly; Susan M. Huson; Laura L. Tosi; Michael L. Cunningham; Thomas N. Darling; Joseph Geer; Zoran Gucev; V. Reid Sutton; Christos Tziotzios; Adrian K. Dixon; Tim Helliwell; Stephen O'Rahilly; David B. Savage; Michael J. O. Wakelam; Inês Barroso; Leslie G. Biesecker; Robert K. Semple

The phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K)-AKT signaling pathway is critical for cellular growth and metabolism. Correspondingly, loss of function of PTEN, a negative regulator of PI3K, or activating mutations in AKT1, AKT2 or AKT3 have been found in distinct disorders featuring overgrowth or hypoglycemia. We performed exome sequencing of DNA from unaffected and affected cells from an individual with an unclassified syndrome of congenital progressive segmental overgrowth of fibrous and adipose tissue and bone and identified the cancer-associated mutation encoding p.His1047Leu in PIK3CA, the gene that encodes the p110α catalytic subunit of PI3K, only in affected cells. Sequencing of PIK3CA in ten additional individuals with overlapping syndromes identified either the p.His1047Leu alteration or a second cancer-associated alteration, p.His1047Arg, in nine cases. Affected dermal fibroblasts showed enhanced basal and epidermal growth factor (EGF)-stimulated phosphatidylinositol 3,4,5-trisphosphate (PIP3) generation and concomitant activation of downstream signaling relative to their unaffected counterparts. Our findings characterize a distinct overgrowth syndrome, biochemically demonstrate activation of PI3K signaling and thereby identify a rational therapeutic target.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2005

Prenatal detection of unbalanced chromosomal rearrangements by array CGH

Lisa Rickman; Heike Fiegler; Charles Shaw-Smith; Richard Nash; Vincenzo Cirigliano; Gianfranco Voglino; Bee Ling Ng; Carol Scott; Joanne Whittaker; Matteo Adinolfi; Nigel P. Carter; Martin Bobrow

Background: Karyotype analysis has been the standard method for prenatal cytogenetic diagnosis since the 1970s. Although highly reliable, the major limitation remains the requirement for cell culture, resulting in a delay of as much as 14 days to obtaining test results. Fluorescent in situ hybridisation (FISH) and quantitative fluorescent PCR (QF-PCR) rapidly detect common chromosomal abnormalities but do not provide a genome wide screen for unexpected imbalances. Array comparative genomic hybridisation (CGH) has the potential to combine the speed of DNA analysis with a large capacity to scan for genomic abnormalities. We have developed a genomic microarray of approximately 600 large insert clones designed to detect aneuploidy, known microdeletion syndromes, and large unbalanced chromosomal rearrangements. Methods: This array was tested alongside an array with an approximate resolution of 1 Mb in a blind study of 30 cultured prenatal and postnatal samples with microscopically confirmed unbalanced rearrangements. Results: At 1 Mb resolution, 22/30 rearrangements were identified, whereas 29/30 aberrations were detected using the custom designed array, owing to the inclusion of specifically chosen clones to give increased resolution at genomic loci clinically implicated in known microdeletion syndromes. Both arrays failed to identify a triploid karyotype. Thirty normal control samples produced no false positive results. Conclusions: Analysis of 30 uncultured prenatal samples showed that array CGH is capable of detecting aneuploidy in DNA isolated from as little as 1 ml of uncultured amniotic fluid; 29/30 samples were correctly diagnosed, the exception being another case of triploidy. These studies demonstrate the potential for array CGH to replace conventional cytogenetics in the great majority of prenatal diagnosis cases.


Science | 2011

An Activating Mutation of AKT2 and Human Hypoglycemia

Khalid Hussain; B. Challis; N. Rocha; Felicity Payne; M. Minic; A. Thompson; Allan Daly; Carol Scott; J. Harris; B. J. L. Smillie; David B. Savage; Uma Ramaswami; P. de Lonlay; Stephen O’Rahilly; Inês Barroso; Robert K. Semple

A key kinase in the insulin signaling pathway is constitutively activated in humans with a severe form of hypoglycemia. Pathological fasting hypoglycemia in humans is usually explained by excessive circulating insulin or insulin-like molecules or by inborn errors of metabolism impairing liver glucose production. We studied three unrelated children with unexplained, recurrent, and severe fasting hypoglycemia and asymmetrical growth. All were found to carry the same de novo mutation, p.Glu17Lys, in the serine/threonine kinase AKT2, in two cases as heterozygotes and in one case in mosaic form. In heterologous cells, the mutant AKT2 was constitutively recruited to the plasma membrane, leading to insulin-independent activation of downstream signaling. Thus, systemic metabolic disease can result from constitutive, cell-autonomous activation of signaling pathways normally controlled by insulin.


Genome Biology | 2007

A high utility integrated map of the pig genome

Sean Humphray; Carol Scott; Richard Clark; Brandy M. Marron; Clare Bender; Nick Camm; Jayne Davis; Andrew Jenks; Angela Noon; Manish Patel; Harminder Sehra; Fengtang Yang; Margarita B. Rogatcheva; Denis Milan; Patrick Chardon; G. A. Rohrer; Dan Nonneman; Pieter J. de Jong; Stacey N. Meyers; Alan Archibald; Jonathan E. Beever; Lawrence B. Schook; Jane Rogers

BackgroundThe domestic pig is being increasingly exploited as a system for modeling human disease. It also has substantial economic importance for meat-based protein production. Physical clone maps have underpinned large-scale genomic sequencing and enabled focused cloning efforts for many genomes. Comparative genetic maps indicate that there is more structural similarity between pig and human than, for example, mouse and human, and we have used this close relationship between human and pig as a way of facilitating map construction.ResultsHere we report the construction of the most highly continuous bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) map of any mammalian genome, for the pig (Sus scrofa domestica) genome. The map provides a template for the generation and assembly of high-quality anchored sequence across the genome. The physical map integrates previous landmark maps with restriction fingerprints and BAC end sequences from over 260,000 BACs derived from 4 BAC libraries and takes advantage of alignments to the human genome to improve the continuity and local ordering of the clone contigs. We estimate that over 98% of the euchromatin of the 18 pig autosomes and the X chromosome along with localized coverage on Y is represented in 172 contigs, with chromosome 13 (218 Mb) represented by a single contig. The map is accessible through pre-Ensembl, where links to marker and sequence data can be found.ConclusionThe map will enable immediate electronic positional cloning of genes, benefiting the pig research community and further facilitating use of the pig as an alternative animal model for human disease. The clone map and BAC end sequence data can also help to support the assembly of maps and genome sequences of other artiodactyls.


Nature Reviews Genetics | 2005

Facilitating genome navigation: survey sequencing and dense radiation-hybrid gene mapping

Christophe Hitte; Jennifer Madeoy; Ewen F. Kirkness; Catherine Priat; Travis D. Lorentzen; Fabrice Senger; Dan Thomas; Thomas Derrien; Christina Ramirez; Carol Scott; Gwenaelle Evanno; Barbara Pullar; Edouard Cadieu; Vinay Oza; Kristelle Lourgant; David B. Jaffe; Sandrine Tacher; Stéphane Dréano; Nadia Berkova; Catherine André; Panagiotis Deloukas; Claire M. Fraser; Kerstin Lindblad-Toh; Elaine A. Ostrander; Francis Galibert

Accurate and comprehensive sequence coverage for large genomes has been restricted to only a few species of specific interest. Lower sequence coverage (survey sequencing) of related species can yield a wealth of information about gene content and putative regulatory elements. But survey sequences lack long-range continuity and provide only a fragmented view of a genome. Here we show the usefulness of combining survey sequencing with dense radiation-hybrid (RH) maps for extracting maximum comparative genome information from model organisms. Based on results from the canine system, we propose that from now on all low-pass sequencing projects should be accompanied by a dense, gene-based RH map-construction effort to extract maximum information from the genome with a marginal extra cost.


PLOS ONE | 2012

A Comparison of the Whole Genome Approach of MeDIP-Seq to the Targeted Approach of the Infinium HumanMethylation450 BeadChip® for Methylome Profiling

Christine A. Clark; Priit Palta; Christopher J. Joyce; Carol Scott; Elin Grundberg; Panos Deloukas; Aarno Palotie; Alison J. Coffey

DNA methylation is one of the most studied epigenetic marks in the human genome, with the result that the desire to map the human methylome has driven the development of several methods to map DNA methylation on a genomic scale. Our study presents the first comparison of two of these techniques - the targeted approach of the Infinium HumanMethylation450 BeadChip® with the immunoprecipitation and sequencing-based method, MeDIP-seq. Both methods were initially validated with respect to bisulfite sequencing as the gold standard and then assessed in terms of coverage, resolution and accuracy. The regions of the methylome that can be assayed by both methods and those that can only be assayed by one method were determined and the discovery of differentially methylated regions (DMRs) by both techniques was examined. Our results show that the Infinium HumanMethylation450 BeadChip® and MeDIP-seq show a good positive correlation (Spearman correlation of 0.68) on a genome-wide scale and can both be used successfully to determine differentially methylated loci in RefSeq genes, CpG islands, shores and shelves. MeDIP-seq however, allows a wider interrogation of methylated regions of the human genome, including thousands of non-RefSeq genes and repetitive elements, all of which may be of importance in disease. In our study MeDIP-seq allowed the detection of 15,709 differentially methylated regions, nearly twice as many as the array-based method (8070), which may result in a more comprehensive study of the methylome.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2011

The GENCODE exome: sequencing the complete human exome

Alison J. Coffey; Felix Kokocinski; Maria S Calafato; Carol Scott; Priit Palta; Eleanor Drury; Christopher J. Joyce; Emily M LeProust; Jen Harrow; Sarah Hunt; Anna-Elina Lehesjoki; Daniel J. Turner; Tim Hubbard; Aarno Palotie

Sequencing the coding regions, the exome, of the human genome is one of the major current strategies to identify low frequency and rare variants associated with human disease traits. So far, the most widely used commercial exome capture reagents have mainly targeted the consensus coding sequence (CCDS) database. We report the design of an extended set of targets for capturing the complete human exome, based on annotation from the GENCODE consortium. The extended set covers an additional 5594 genes and 10.3 Mb compared with the current CCDS-based sets. The additional regions include potential disease genes previously inaccessible to exome resequencing studies, such as 43 genes linked to ion channel activity and 70 genes linked to protein kinase activity. In total, the new GENCODE exome set developed here covers 47.9 Mb and performed well in sequence capture experiments. In the sample set used in this study, we identified over 5000 SNP variants more in the GENCODE exome target (24%) than in the CCDS-based exome sequencing.

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Jane Rogers

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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Alison J. Coffey

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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Sarah Hunt

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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Cordelia Langford

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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Daniel J. Turner

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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Heike Fiegler

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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