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Dive into the research topics where David Mittelman is active.

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Featured researches published by David Mittelman.


Nature | 2012

The Drosophila melanogaster Genetic Reference Panel

Trudy F. C. Mackay; Stephen Richards; Eric A. Stone; Antonio Barbadilla; Julien F. Ayroles; Dianhui Zhu; Sònia Casillas; Yi Han; Michael M. Magwire; Julie M. Cridland; Mark F. Richardson; Robert R. H. Anholt; Maite Barrón; Crystal Bess; Kerstin P. Blankenburg; Mary Anna Carbone; David Castellano; Lesley S. Chaboub; Laura H. Duncan; Zeke Harris; Mehwish Javaid; Joy Jayaseelan; Shalini N. Jhangiani; Katherine W. Jordan; Fremiet Lara; Faye Lawrence; Sandra L. Lee; Pablo Librado; Raquel S. Linheiro; Richard F. Lyman

A major challenge of biology is understanding the relationship between molecular genetic variation and variation in quantitative traits, including fitness. This relationship determines our ability to predict phenotypes from genotypes and to understand how evolutionary forces shape variation within and between species. Previous efforts to dissect the genotype–phenotype map were based on incomplete genotypic information. Here, we describe the Drosophila melanogaster Genetic Reference Panel (DGRP), a community resource for analysis of population genomics and quantitative traits. The DGRP consists of fully sequenced inbred lines derived from a natural population. Population genomic analyses reveal reduced polymorphism in centromeric autosomal regions and the X chromosome, evidence for positive and negative selection, and rapid evolution of the X chromosome. Many variants in novel genes, most at low frequency, are associated with quantitative traits and explain a large fraction of the phenotypic variance. The DGRP facilitates genotype–phenotype mapping using the power of Drosophila genetics.


Genome Research | 2014

Natural variation in genome architecture among 205 Drosophila melanogaster Genetic Reference Panel lines

Wen Huang; Andreas Massouras; Yutaka Inoue; Jason A. Peiffer; Miquel Ràmia; Aaron M. Tarone; Lavanya Turlapati; Thomas Zichner; Dianhui Zhu; Richard F. Lyman; Michael M. Magwire; Kerstin P. Blankenburg; Mary Anna Carbone; Kyle Chang; Lisa L. Ellis; Sonia Fernandez; Yi Han; Gareth Highnam; Carl E. Hjelmen; John Jack; Mehwish Javaid; Joy Jayaseelan; Divya Kalra; Sandy Lee; Lora Lewis; Mala Munidasa; Fiona Ongeri; Shohba Patel; Lora Perales; Agapito Perez

The Drosophila melanogaster Genetic Reference Panel (DGRP) is a community resource of 205 sequenced inbred lines, derived to improve our understanding of the effects of naturally occurring genetic variation on molecular and organismal phenotypes. We used an integrated genotyping strategy to identify 4,853,802 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and 1,296,080 non-SNP variants. Our molecular population genomic analyses show higher deletion than insertion mutation rates and stronger purifying selection on deletions. Weaker selection on insertions than deletions is consistent with our observed distribution of genome size determined by flow cytometry, which is skewed toward larger genomes. Insertion/deletion and single nucleotide polymorphisms are positively correlated with each other and with local recombination, suggesting that their nonrandom distributions are due to hitchhiking and background selection. Our cytogenetic analysis identified 16 polymorphic inversions in the DGRP. Common inverted and standard karyotypes are genetically divergent and account for most of the variation in relatedness among the DGRP lines. Intriguingly, variation in genome size and many quantitative traits are significantly associated with inversions. Approximately 50% of the DGRP lines are infected with Wolbachia, and four lines have germline insertions of Wolbachia sequences, but effects of Wolbachia infection on quantitative traits are rarely significant. The DGRP complements ongoing efforts to functionally annotate the Drosophila genome. Indeed, 15% of all D. melanogaster genes segregate for potentially damaged proteins in the DGRP, and genome-wide analyses of quantitative traits identify novel candidate genes. The DGRP lines, sequence data, genotypes, quality scores, phenotypes, and analysis and visualization tools are publicly available.


Nature Genetics | 2016

Punctuated bursts in human male demography inferred from 1,244 worldwide Y-chromosome sequences

G. David Poznik; Yali Xue; Fernando L. Mendez; Thomas Willems; Andrea Massaia; Melissa A. Wilson Sayres; Qasim Ayub; Shane McCarthy; Apurva Narechania; Seva Kashin; Yuan Chen; Ruby Banerjee; Juan L. Rodriguez-Flores; Maria Cerezo; Haojing Shao; Melissa Gymrek; Ankit Malhotra; Sandra Louzada; Rob DeSalle; Graham R. S. Ritchie; Eliza Cerveira; Tomas Fitzgerald; Erik Garrison; Anthony Marcketta; David Mittelman; Mallory Romanovitch; Chengsheng Zhang; Xiangqun Zheng-Bradley; Gonçalo R. Abecasis; Steven A. McCarroll

We report the sequences of 1,244 human Y chromosomes randomly ascertained from 26 worldwide populations by the 1000 Genomes Project. We discovered more than 65,000 variants, including single-nucleotide variants, multiple-nucleotide variants, insertions and deletions, short tandem repeats, and copy number variants. Of these, copy number variants contribute the greatest predicted functional impact. We constructed a calibrated phylogenetic tree on the basis of binary single-nucleotide variants and projected the more complex variants onto it, estimating the number of mutations for each class. Our phylogeny shows bursts of extreme expansion in male numbers that have occurred independently among each of the five continental superpopulations examined, at times of known migrations and technological innovations.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2013

Accurate human microsatellite genotypes from high-throughput resequencing data using informed error profiles

Gareth Highnam; Christopher T. Franck; Andy Martin; Calvin Stephens; Ashwin Puthige; David Mittelman

Repetitive sequences are biologically and clinically important because they can influence traits and disease, but repeats are challenging to analyse using short-read sequencing technology. We present a tool for genotyping microsatellite repeats called RepeatSeq, which uses Bayesian model selection guided by an empirically derived error model that incorporates sequence and read properties. Next, we apply RepeatSeq to high-coverage genomes from the 1000 Genomes Project to evaluate performance and accuracy. The software uses common formats, such as VCF, for compatibility with existing genome analysis pipelines. Source code and binaries are available at http://github.com/adaptivegenome/repeatseq.


Genome Research | 2014

The landscape of human STR variation

Thomas Willems; Melissa Gymrek; Gareth Highnam; David Mittelman; Yaniv Erlich

Short tandem repeats are among the most polymorphic loci in the human genome. These loci play a role in the etiology of a range of genetic diseases and have been frequently utilized in forensics, population genetics, and genetic genealogy. Despite this plethora of applications, little is known about the variation of most STRs in the human population. Here, we report the largest-scale analysis of human STR variation to date. We collected information for nearly 700,000 STR loci across more than 1000 individuals in Phase 1 of the 1000 Genomes Project. Extensive quality controls show that reliable allelic spectra can be obtained for close to 90% of the STR loci in the genome. We utilize this call set to analyze determinants of STR variation, assess the human reference genomes representation of STR alleles, find STR loci with common loss-of-function alleles, and obtain initial estimates of the linkage disequilibrium between STRs and common SNPs. Overall, these analyses further elucidate the scale of genetic variation beyond classical point mutations.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Zinc-finger directed double-strand breaks within CAG repeat tracts promote repeat instability in human cells

David Mittelman; Christopher Moye; Jason Morton; Kristen Sykoudis; Yunfu Lin; Dana Carroll; John H. Wilson

Expanded triplet repeats have been identified as the genetic basis for a growing number of neurological and skeletal disorders. To examine the contribution of double-strand break repair to CAG·CTG repeat instability in mammalian systems, we developed zinc finger nucleases (ZFNs) that recognize and cleave CAG repeat sequences. Engineered ZFNs use a tandem array of zinc fingers, fused to the FokI DNA cleavage domain, to direct double-strand breaks (DSBs) in a site-specific manner. We first determined that the ZFNs cleave CAG repeats in vitro. Then, using our previously described tissue culture assay for identifying modifiers of CAG repeat instability, we found that transfection of ZFN-expression vectors induced up to a 15-fold increase in changes to the CAG repeat in human and rodent cell lines, and that longer repeats were much more sensitive to cleavage than shorter ones. Analysis of individual colonies arising after treatment revealed a spectrum of events consistent with ZFN-induced DSBs and dominated by repeat contractions. We also found that expressing a dominant-negative form of RAD51 in combination with a ZFN, dramatically reduced the effect of the nuclease, suggesting that DSB-induced repeat instability is mediated, in part, through homology directed repair. These studies identify a ZFN as a useful reagent for characterizing the effects of DSBs on CAG repeats in cells.


Cell Stress & Chaperones | 2010

Hsp90 modulates CAG repeat instability in human cells

David Mittelman; Kristen Sykoudis; Megan N. Hersh; Yunfu Lin; John H. Wilson

The Hsp90 molecular chaperone has been implicated as a contributor to evolution in several organisms by revealing cryptic variation that can yield dramatic phenotypes when the chaperone is diverted from its normal functions by environmental stress. In addition, as a cancer drug target, Hsp90 inhibition has been documented to sensitize cells to DNA-damaging agents, suggesting a function for Hsp90 in DNA repair. Here we explore the potential role of Hsp90 in modulating the stability of nucleotide repeats, which in a number of species, including humans, exert subtle and quantitative consequences for protein function, morphological and behavioral traits, and disease. We report that impairment of Hsp90 in human cells induces contractions of CAG repeat tracks by tenfold. Inhibition of the recombinase Rad51, a downstream target of Hsp90, induces a comparable increase in repeat instability, suggesting that Hsp90-enabled homologous recombination normally functions to stabilize CAG repeat tracts. By contrast, Hsp90 inhibition does not increase the rate of gene-inactivating point mutations. The capacity of Hsp90 to modulate repeat-tract lengths suggests that the chaperone, in addition to exposing cryptic variation, might facilitate the expression of new phenotypes through induction of novel genetic variation.


Genome Biology | 2014

Lentiviral and targeted cellular barcoding reveals ongoing clonal dynamics of cell lines in vitro and in vivo

Shaina Porter; Lee C Baker; David Mittelman; Matthew H. Porteus

BackgroundCell lines are often regarded as clonal, even though this simplifies what is known about mutagenesis, transformation and other processes that destabilize them over time. Monitoring these clonal dynamics is important for multiple areas of biomedical research, including stem cell and cancer biology. Tracking the contributions of individual cells to large populations, however, has been constrained by limitations in sensitivity and complexity.ResultsWe utilize cellular barcoding methods to simultaneously track the clonal contributions of tens of thousands of cells. We demonstrate that even with optimal culturing conditions, common cell lines including HeLa, K562 and HEK-293 T exhibit ongoing clonal dynamics. Starting a population with a single clone diminishes but does not eradicate this phenomenon. Next, we compare lentiviral and zinc-finger nuclease barcode insertion approaches, finding that the zinc-finger nuclease protocol surprisingly results in reduced clonal diversity. We also document the expected reduction in clonal complexity when cells are challenged with genotoxic stress. Finally, we demonstrate that xenografts maintain clonal diversity to a greater extent than in vitro culturing of the human non-small-cell lung cancer cell line HCC827.ConclusionsWe demonstrate the feasibility of tracking and quantifying the clonal dynamics of entire cell populations within multiple cultured cell lines. Our results suggest that cell heterogeneity should be considered in the design and interpretation of in vitro culture experiments. Aside from clonal cell lines, we propose that cellular barcoding could prove valuable in modeling the clonal behavior of heterogeneous cell populations over time, including tumor populations treated with chemotherapeutic agents.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2015

TAF1 Variants Are Associated with Dysmorphic Features, Intellectual Disability, and Neurological Manifestations.

Jason A. O’Rawe; Yiyang Wu; Max J. Dörfel; Alan F. Rope; P.Y. Billie Au; Jillian S. Parboosingh; Sungjin Moon; Maria Kousi; Konstantina Kosma; Christopher Smith; Maria Tzetis; Jane L. Schuette; Robert B. Hufnagel; Carlos E. Prada; Francisco Venegas Martínez; Carmen Orellana; Jonathan Crain; Alfonso Caro-Llopis; Silvestre Oltra; Sandra Monfort; Laura T. Jiménez-Barrón; Jeffrey Swensen; Sara Ellingwood; Rosemarie Smith; Han Fang; Sandra Ospina; Sander Stegmann; Nicolette S. den Hollander; David Mittelman; Gareth Highnam

We describe an X-linked genetic syndrome associated with mutations in TAF1 and manifesting with global developmental delay, intellectual disability (ID), characteristic facial dysmorphology, generalized hypotonia, and variable neurologic features, all in male individuals. Simultaneous studies using diverse strategies led to the identification of nine families with overlapping clinical presentations and affected by de novo or maternally inherited single-nucleotide changes. Two additional families harboring large duplications involving TAF1 were also found to share phenotypic overlap with the probands harboring single-nucleotide changes, but they also demonstrated a severe neurodegeneration phenotype. Functional analysis with RNA-seq for one of the families suggested that the phenotype is associated with downregulation of a set of genes notably enriched with genes regulated by E-box proteins. In addition, knockdown and mutant studies of this gene in zebrafish have shown a quantifiable, albeit small, effect on a neuronal phenotype. Our results suggest that mutations in TAF1 play a critical role in the development of this X-linked ID syndrome.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Analysis of Microsatellite Variation in Drosophila melanogaster with Population-Scale Genome Sequencing

John W. Fondon; Andy Martin; Stephen Richards; Richard A. Gibbs; David Mittelman

Genome sequencing technologies promise to revolutionize our understanding of genetics, evolution, and disease by making it feasible to survey a broad spectrum of sequence variation on a population scale. However, this potential can only be realized to the extent that methods for extracting and interpreting distinct forms of variation can be established. The error profiles and read length limitations of early versions of next-generation sequencing technologies rendered them ineffective for some sequence variant types, particularly microsatellites and other tandem repeats, and fostered the general misconception that such variants are inherently inaccessible to these platforms. At the same time, tandem repeats have emerged as important sources of functional variation. Tandem repeats are often located in and around genes, and frequent mutations in their lengths exert quantitative effects on gene function and phenotype, rapidly degrading linkage disequilibrium between markers and traits. Sensitive identification of these variants in large-scale next-gen sequencing efforts will enable more comprehensive association studies capable of revealing previously invisible associations. We present a population-scale analysis of microsatellite repeats using whole-genome data from 158 inbred isolates from the Drosophila Genetics Reference Panel, a collection of over 200 extensively phenotypically characterized isolates from a single natural population, to uncover processes underlying repeat mutation and to enable associations with behavioral, morphological, and life-history traits. Analysis of repeat variation from next-generation sequence data will also enhance studies of genome stability and neurodegenerative diseases.

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Gareth Highnam

Virginia Bioinformatics Institute

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John H. Wilson

Baylor College of Medicine

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Han Fang

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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Yiyang Wu

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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Gholson J. Lyon

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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Andrew J. Sharp

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Christopher Moye

Baylor College of Medicine

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Jason O'Rawe

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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Melissa Gymrek

University of California

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