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Featured researches published by Damian Labuda.


Nucleic Acids Research | 1995

Ubiquitous mammalian-wide interspersed repeats (MIRs) are molecular fossils from the mesozoic era

Jerzy Jurka; Ewa Ziętkiewicz; Damian Labuda

Short interspersed elements (SINEs) are ubiquitous in mammalian genomes. Remarkable variety of these repeats among placental orders indicates that most of them amplified in each lineage independently, following mammalian radiation. Here, we present an ancient family of repeats, whose sequence divergence and common occurrence among placental mammals, marsupials and monotremes indicate their amplification during the Mesozoic era. They are called MIRs for abundant Mammalian-wide Interspersed Repeats. With approximately 120,000 copies still detectable in the human genome (0.2-0.3% DNA), MIRs represent a fossilized record of a major genetic event preceding the radiation of placental orders.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2003

Haplotypes in the Dystrophin DNA Segment Point to a Mosaic Origin of Modern Human Diversity

Ewa Ziętkiewicz; Vania Yotova; Dominik Gehl; Tina Wambach; Isabel Arrieta; Mark A. Batzer; David E. C. Cole; Peter Hechtman; Feige Kaplan; David Modiano; Jean-Paul Moisan; Roman Michalski; Damian Labuda

Although Africa has played a central role in human evolutionary history, certain studies have suggested that not all contemporary human genetic diversity is of recent African origin. We investigated 35 simple polymorphic sites and one T(n) microsatellite in an 8-kb segment of the dystrophin gene. We found 86 haplotypes in 1,343 chromosomes from around the world. Although a classical out-of-Africa topology was observed in trees based on the variant frequencies, the tree of haplotype sequences reveals three lineages accounting for present-day diversity. The proportion of new recombinants and the diversity of the T(n) microsatellite were used to estimate the age of haplotype lineages and the time of colonization events. The lineage that underwent the great expansion originated in Africa prior to the Upper Paleolithic (27,000-56,000 years ago). A second group, of structurally distinct haplotypes that occupy a central position on the tree, has never left Africa. The third lineage is represented by the haplotype that lies closest to the root, is virtually absent in Africa, and appears older than the recent out-of-Africa expansion. We propose that this lineage could have left Africa before the expansion (as early as 160,000 years ago) and admixed, outside of Africa, with the expanding lineage. Contemporary human diversity, although dominated by the recently expanded African lineage, thus represents a mosaic of different contributions.


British Journal of Cancer | 1999

Frequent loss of heterozygosity at the DNA mismatch-repair loci hMLH1 and hMSH3 in sporadic breast cancer

Nadia Benachenhou; S Guiral; Izabella Gorska-Flipot; Damian Labuda; Daniel Sinnett

SummaryTo study the involvement of DNA mismatch-repair genes in sporadic breast cancer, matched normal and tumoral DNA samples of 22 patients were analysed for genetic instability and loss of heterozygosity (LOH) with 42 microsatellites at or linked to hMLH1 (3p21), hMSH2 (2p16), hMSH3 (5q11–q13), hMSH6 (2p16), hPMS1 (2q32) and hPMS2 (7p22) loci. Chromosomal regions 3p21 and 5q11–q13 were found hemizygously deleted in 46% and 23% of patients respectively. Half of the patients deleted at hMLH1 were also deleted at hMSH3. The shortest regions of overlapping (SRO) deletions were delimited by markers D3S1298 and D3S1266 at 3p21 and by D5S647 and D5S418 at 5q11–q13. Currently, the genes hMLH1 (3p21) and hMSH3 (5q11–q13) are the only known candidates located within these regions. The consequence of these allelic losses is still unclear because none of the breast cancers examined displayed microsatellite instability, a hallmark of mismatch-repair defect during replication error correction. We suggest that hMLH1 and hMSH3 could be involved in breast tumorigenesis through cellular functions other than replication error correction.


British Journal of Cancer | 1998

Genomic loci susceptible to replication errors in cancer cells

Maja Krajinovic; Chantal Richer; Izabella Gorska-Flipot; Louis Gaboury; I Novakovic; Damian Labuda; Daniel Sinnett

Microsatellite instability due to a deficiency in DNA mismatch repair is characteristic of a replication error (RER) phenotype. This widespread genomic instability is well documented in hereditary non-polyposis colon cancer (HNPCC) as well as subsets of sporadic carcinomas. Features of the RER phenotype such as the early appearance in tumour development and better prognosis of RER+ colorectal tumours render its examination important for cancer patients. Recently, we identified four loci that were shown to be highly susceptible to RER in cancer cells. Here, we used these loci to detect the RER phenotype in sporadic carcinomas of colon, breast, lung, endometrium and ovary. Replication errors revealed by these four markers followed the same tumour specificity as observed in HNPCC patients. In particular, 24% (6/25) of colorectal, 33% (4/12) of endometrial and 17% (2/12) of ovarian cancers displayed the RER phenotype characterized by an increased allelic mobility, whereas none of the breast (n = 22) and the lung (n = 27) carcinomas were found to be unstable. Assaying RERs sensitive loci provides us with a useful diagnostic tool for HNPCC-like sporadic tumours.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2005

A “Fille du Roy” Introduced the T14484C Leber Hereditary Optic Neuropathy Mutation in French Canadians

Anne-Marie Laberge; Michèle Jomphe; Louis Houde; Hélène Vézina; Marc Tremblay; Bertrand Desjardins; Damian Labuda; Marc St-Hilaire; Carol Macmillan; Eric A. Shoubridge; Bernard Brais

The predominance of the T14484C mutation in French Canadians with Leber hereditary optic neuropathy is due to a founder effect. By use of genealogical reconstructions of maternal lineages, a woman married in Quebec City in 1669 is identified as the shared female ancestor for 11 of 13 affected individuals, who were previously not known to be related. These individuals carry identical mitochondrial haplogroups. The current geographic distribution of French Canadian cases overlaps with that of the founders female descendants in 1800. This is the first example of genealogical reconstruction to identify the introduction of a mitochondrial mutation by a woman in a founder population.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 1996

Linkage disequilibrium analysis in young populations: pseudo-vitamin D-deficiency rickets and the founder effect in French Canadians.

M Labuda; Damian Labuda; Maria Korab-Laskowska; D. E. C. Cole; Ewa Ziętkiewicz; J. Weissenbach; E. Popowska; E. Pronicka; A. W. Root; Francis H. Glorieux


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1992

Linkage mapping by simultaneous screening of multiple polymorphic loci using Alu oligonucleotide-directed PCR.

Ewa Ziętkiewicz; M Labuda; Daniel Sinnett; Francis H. Glorieux; Damian Labuda


Molecular Biology and Evolution | 1999

Is selection responsible for the low level of variation in the last intron of the ZFY locus

Jadwiga Jaruzelska; Ewa Ziętkiewicz; Damian Labuda


Nucleic Acids Research | 1994

A young Alu subfamily amplified independently in human and African great apes lineages

Ewa Ziętkiewicz; Chantal Richer; Wojciech Makalowski; Jerzy Jurka; Damian Labuda


Archive | 1998

Detection of CYP1A1, CYP3A4, CYP2D6 and NAT2 variants by PCR-allele-specific oligonucleotide (ASO) assay

Daniel Sinnett; Damian Labuda

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Daniel Sinnett

Université de Montréal

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Ewa Ziętkiewicz

Polish Academy of Sciences

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Chantal Richer

Université de Montréal

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Francis H. Glorieux

Shriners Hospitals for Children

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Jerzy Jurka

Genetic Information Research Institute

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