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Dive into the research topics where Hamish S. Scott is active.

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Featured researches published by Hamish S. Scott.


Bioinformatics | 2005

Use of within-array replicate spots for assessing differential expression in microarray experiments

Gordon K. Smyth; Joëlle Michaud; Hamish S. Scott

MOTIVATION Spotted arrays are often printed with probes in duplicate or triplicate, but current methods for assessing differential expression are not able to make full use of the resulting information. The usual practice is to average the duplicate or triplicate results for each probe before assessing differential expression. This results in the loss of valuable information about genewise variability. RESULTS A method is proposed for extracting more information from within-array replicate spots in microarray experiments by estimating the strength of the correlation between them. The method involves fitting separate linear models to the expression data for each gene but with a common value for the between-replicate correlation. The method greatly improves the precision with which the genewise variances are estimated and thereby improves inference methods designed to identify differentially expressed genes. The method may be combined with empirical Bayes methods for moderating the genewise variances between genes. The method is validated using data from a microarray experiment involving calibration and ratio control spots in conjunction with spiked-in RNA. Comparing results for calibration and ratio control spots shows that the common correlation method results in substantially better discrimination of differentially expressed genes from those which are not. The spike-in experiment also confirms that the results may be further improved by empirical Bayes smoothing of the variances when the sample size is small. AVAILABILITY The methodology is implemented in the limma software package for R, available from the CRAN repository http://www.r-project.org


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1997

TWEAK, a New Secreted Ligand in the Tumor Necrosis Factor Family That Weakly Induces Apoptosis

Yves Chicheportiche; Paul R. Bourdon; Haoda Xu; Yen-Ming Hsu; Hamish S. Scott; Catherine Hession; Irene Garcia; Jeffrey L. Browning

The members of the tumor necrosis factor (TNF) family play pivotal roles in the regulation of the immune system. Here we describe a new ligand in this family, designated TWEAK. The mouse and human versions of this protein are unusually conserved with 93% amino acid identity in the receptor binding domain. The protein was efficiently secreted from cells indicating that, like TNF, TWEAK may have the long range effects of a secreted cytokine. TWEAK transcripts were abundant and found in many tissues, suggesting that TWEAK and TRAIL belong to a new group of widely expressed ligands. Like many members of the TNF family, TWEAK was able to induce interleukin-8 synthesis in a number of cell lines. The human adenocarcinoma cell line, HT29, underwent apoptosis in the presence of both TWEAK and interferon-γ. Thus, TWEAK resembles many other TNF ligands in the capacity to induce cell death; however, the fact that TWEAK-sensitive cells are relatively rare suggests that TWEAK along with lymphotoxins α/β and possibly CD30L trigger death via a weaker, nondeath domain-dependent mechanism.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2007

RANK signals from CD4+3− inducer cells regulate development of Aire-expressing epithelial cells in the thymic medulla

Simona W. Rossi; Mi-Yeon Kim; Sonia M. Parnell; William E. Jenkinson; Stephanie H. Glanville; Fiona M. McConnell; Hamish S. Scott; Josef M. Penninger; Eric J. Jenkinson; Peter J. L. Lane; Graham Anderson

Aire-expressing medullary thymic epithelial cells (mTECs) play a key role in preventing autoimmunity by expressing tissue-restricted antigens to help purge the emerging T cell receptor repertoire of self-reactive specificities. Here we demonstrate a novel role for a CD4+3− inducer cell population, previously linked to development of organized secondary lymphoid structures and maintenance of T cell memory in the functional regulation of Aire-mediated promiscuous gene expression in the thymus. CD4+3− cells are closely associated with mTECs in adult thymus, and in fetal thymus their appearance is temporally linked with the appearance of Aire+ mTECs. We show that RANKL signals from this cell promote the maturation of RANK-expressing CD80−Aire− mTEC progenitors into CD80+Aire+ mTECs, and that transplantation of RANK-deficient thymic stroma into immunodeficient hosts induces autoimmunity. Collectively, our data reveal cellular and molecular mechanisms leading to the generation of Aire+ mTECs and highlight a previously unrecognized role for CD4+3−RANKL+ inducer cells in intrathymic self-tolerance.


Nature Genetics | 2011

Heritable GATA2 mutations associated with familial myelodysplastic syndrome and acute myeloid leukemia

Christopher N. Hahn; Chan Eng Chong; Catherine L. Carmichael; Ella J. Wilkins; Peter J. Brautigan; Xiaochun Li; Milena Babic; Ming Lin; Amandine Carmagnac; Young Koung Lee; Chung H. Kok; Lucia Gagliardi; Kathryn Friend; Paul G. Ekert; Carolyn M. Butcher; Anna L. Brown; Ian D. Lewis; L. Bik To; Andrew E. Timms; Jan Storek; Sarah Moore; Meryl Altree; Robert Escher; Peter Bardy; Graeme Suthers; Richard J. D'Andrea; Marshall S. Horwitz; Hamish S. Scott

We report the discovery of GATA2 as a new myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS)-acute myeloid leukemia (AML) predisposition gene. We found the same, previously unidentified heterozygous c.1061C>T (p.Thr354Met) missense mutation in the GATA2 transcription factor gene segregating with the multigenerational transmission of MDS-AML in three families and a GATA2 c.1063_1065delACA (p.Thr355del) mutation at an adjacent codon in a fourth MDS family. The resulting alterations reside within the second zinc finger of GATA2, which mediates DNA-binding and protein-protein interactions. We show differential effects of the mutations on the transactivation of target genes, cellular differentiation, apoptosis and global gene expression. Identification of such predisposing genes to familial forms of MDS and AML is critical for more effective diagnosis and prognosis, counseling, selection of related bone marrow transplant donors and development of therapies.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2004

Gene Dosage–limiting Role of Aire in Thymic Expression, Clonal Deletion, and Organ-specific Autoimmunity

Adrian Liston; Daniel Gray; Sylvie Lesage; Anne L. Fletcher; Judith Wilson; Kylie E. Webster; Hamish S. Scott; Richard L. Boyd; Leena Peltonen; Christopher C. Goodnow

Inactivation of the autoimmune regulator (Aire) gene causes a rare recessive disorder, autoimmune polyendocrine syndrome 1 (APS1), but it is not known if Aire-dependent tolerance mechanisms are susceptible to the quantitative genetic changes thought to underlie more common autoimmune diseases. In mice with a targeted mutation, complete loss of Aire abolished expression of an insulin promoter transgene in thymic epithelium, but had no effect in pancreatic islets or the testes. Loss of one copy of Aire diminished thymic expression of the endogenous insulin gene and the transgene, resulting in a 300% increase in islet-reactive CD4 T cells escaping thymic deletion in T cell receptor transgenic mice, and dramatically increased progression to diabetes. Thymic deletion induced by antigen under control of the thyroglobulin promoter was abolished in Aire homozygotes and less efficient in heterozygotes, providing an explanation for thyroid autoimmunity in APS1. In contrast, Aire deficiency had no effect on thymic deletion to antigen controlled by a systemic H-2K promoter. The sensitivity of Aire-dependent thymic deletion to small reductions in function makes this pathway a prime candidate for more subtle autoimmune quantitative trait loci, and suggests that methods to increase Aire activity would be a potent strategy to lower the incidence of organ-specific autoimmunity.


Human Genetics | 1998

A common mutation in Sardinian autoimmune polyendocrinopathy-candidiasis-ectodermal dystrophy patients

Maria Cristina Rosatelli; Alessandra Meloni; Antonella Meloni; Marcella Devoto; Antonio Cao; Hamish S. Scott; Pärt Peterson; Maarit Heino; Kai Krohn; Kentaro Nagamine; Jun Kudoh; Nobuyoshi Shimizu

Autoimmune polyendocrinopathy-candidiasis-ectodermal dystrophy (APECED; also called APS-1,) is a rare autosomal recessive disorder that is more frequent in certain isolated populations. It is characterized by two of the three major clinical symptoms that may be present: Addison’s disease, and/or hypoparathyroidism and/or chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis. We have recently identified the gene for APECED, which we termed AIRE (for autoimmune regulator). AIRE is expressed in thymus, lymph nodes and fetal liver, and encodes a protein with two putative zinc fingers and other motifs suggestive of a transcriptional regulator. Seven mutations have been described to date, including R257X, the predominant Finnish and northern Italian APECED allele, which has also been observed in other patients of diverse origin on different haplotypes. A 13-bp deletion (1094–1106del) has also been observed in several patients of different geo-ethnic origin. The other described mutations appear to be rare. We present mutational analyses of the AIRE gene in ten Sardinian APECED families and show that there is a mutation, R139X, associated with one predominant haplotype unique to the Sardinian patients (18/20 independent alleles). The carrier frequency of R139X in Sardinia is 1.7%, giving an estimated population frequency of APECED of 1/14,400. Using linkage disequilibrium data, the estimated age of the R139X mutation is between 20 and 25 generations. A previously described 13-bp deletion was also observed on an allele of one patient. The identification of a single common Sardinian APECED mutation will facilitate its genetic diagnosis. Given the carrier frequency of R139X in the Sardinian population, AIRE may be implicated in the pathogenesis of other autoimmune diseases in the Sardinian population, particularly those affecting the endocrine system.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2008

Autoimmune Polyendocrine Syndrome Type 1 and NALP5, a Parathyroid Autoantigen

Mohammad Alimohammadi; Peyman Björklund; Åsa Hallgren; Nora Pöntynen; Gabor Szinnai; Noriko Shikama; Marcel P. Keller; Olov Ekwall; Sarah Kinkel; Eystein S. Husebye; Jan Gustafsson; Fredrik Rorsman; Leena Peltonen; Corrado Betterle; Jaakko Perheentupa; Göran Åkerström; Gunnar Westin; Hamish S. Scott; Georg A. Holländer; Olle Kämpe

BACKGROUND Autoimmune polyendocrine syndrome type 1 (APS-1) is a multiorgan autoimmune disorder caused by mutations in AIRE, the autoimmune regulator gene. Though recent studies concerning AIRE deficiency have begun to elucidate the molecular pathogenesis of organ-specific autoimmunity in patients with APS-1, the autoantigen responsible for hypoparathyroidism, a hallmark of APS-1 and its most common autoimmune endocrinopathy, has not yet been identified. METHODS We performed immunoscreening of a human parathyroid complementary DNA library, using serum samples from patients with APS-1 and hypoparathyroidism, to identify patients with reactivity to the NACHT leucine-rich-repeat protein 5 (NALP5). Subsequently, serum samples from 87 patients with APS-1 and 293 controls, including patients with other autoimmune disorders, were used to determine the frequency and specificity of autoantibodies against NALP5. In addition, the expression of NALP5 was investigated in various tissues. RESULTS NALP5-specific autoantibodies were detected in 49% of the patients with APS-1 and hypoparathyroidism but were absent in all patients with APS-1 but without hypoparathyroidism, in all patients with other autoimmune endocrine disorders, and in all healthy controls. NALP5 was predominantly expressed in the cytoplasm of parathyroid chief cells. CONCLUSIONS NALP5 appears to be a tissue-specific autoantigen involved in hypoparathyroidism in patients with APS-1. Autoantibodies against NALP5 appear to be highly specific and may be diagnostic for this prominent component of APS-1.


European Journal of Immunology | 2000

RNA and protein expression of the murine autoimmune regulator gene (Aire) in normal, RelB-deficient and in NOD mouse.

Maarit Heino; Pärt Peterson; Niko Sillanpää; Sandrine Guérin; Li Wu; Graham Anderson; Hamish S. Scott; Jun Kudoh; Nobuyoshi Shimizu; Eric J. Jenkinson; Philippe Naquet; Kai Krohn

Mutations in the putative transcription factor autoimmune regulator (AIRE) gene are responsible for autoimmune polyendocrinopathy‐candidiosis‐ectodermal dystrophy (APECED; OMIM#240300), a monogenic recessively inherited disease characterized by destructive autoimmune diseases of the endocrine organs, chronic candidiosis of mucous membranes and ectodermal dystrophies. In this study the expression of murine homolog for AIRE protein, Aire, was detected in a fraction of thymic medullary epithelial cells. Subcellularly, in thymus the protein appears as concentrated into nuclear dot‐like structures, whereas in transfected cells the protein is also bound along a cytosolic fibrillar network. By RT‐PCR Aire mRNA was detected in thymus, lymph node, spleen and testis although the second round PCR amplified Aire specific band from most mouse tissues analyzed. Furthermore, the Aire mRNA was detected in dendritic cell (DC) populations isolated from thymus and spleen, representing both myeloid‐ and lymphoid‐related lineages of DC. We also demonstrate that the Aire protein is absent in the thymus of RelB‐deficient mouse and in NOD thymus most of the Aire positive cells showed an abnormal morphology. These results suggest that the Aire protein is associated with the normal development and / or action of a subset of thymic medullary stromal cells involved in tolerance induction.


Nature Genetics | 2001

Insertion of β-satellite repeats identifies a transmembrane protease causing both congenital and childhood onset autosomal recessive deafness

Hamish S. Scott; Jun Kudoh; Marie Wattenhofer; Kazunori Shibuya; Asher Berry; Roman Chrast; Michel Guipponi; Jun Wang; Kazuhiko Kawasaki; Shuichi Asakawa; Shinsei Minoshima; Farah Younus; S. Qasim Mehdi; Uppala Radhakrishna; Marie Pierre Papasavvas; Corinne Gehrig; Colette Rossier; Michael Korostishevsky; Andreas Gal; Nobuyoshi Shimizu; Batsheva Bonne-Tamir

Approximately 50% of childhood deafness is caused by mutations in specific genes. Autosomal recessive loci account for approximately 80% of nonsyndromic genetic deafness. Here we report the identification of a new transmembrane serine protease (TMPRSS3; also known as ECHOS1) expressed in many tissues, including fetal cochlea, which is mutated in the families used to describe both the DFNB10 and DFNB8 loci. An 8-bp deletion and insertion of 18 monomeric (∼68-bp) β-satellite repeat units, normally present in tandem arrays of up to several hundred kilobases on the short arms of acrocentric chromosomes, causes congenital deafness (DFNB10). A mutation in a splice-acceptor site, resulting in a 4-bp insertion in the mRNA and a frameshift, was detected in childhood onset deafness (DFNB8). This is the first description of β-satellite insertion into an active gene resulting in a pathogenic state, and the first description of a protease involved in hearing loss.


Immunity | 2008

Autoantigen-specific interactions with CD4+ thymocytes control mature medullary thymic epithelial cell cellularity.

Magali Irla; Stéphanie Hugues; Jason Gill; Takeshi Nitta; Yu Hikosaka; Ifor R. Williams; François-Xavier Hubert; Hamish S. Scott; Yousuke Takahama; Georg A. Holländer; Walter Reith

Medullary thymic epithelial cells (mTECs) are specialized for inducing central immunological tolerance to self-antigens. To accomplish this, mTECs must adopt a mature phenotype characterized by expression of the autoimmune regulator Aire, which activates the transcription of numerous genes encoding tissue-restricted self-antigens. The mechanisms that control mature Aire(+) mTEC development in the postnatal thymus remain poorly understood. We demonstrate here that, although either CD4(+) or CD8(+) thymocytes are sufficient to sustain formation of a well-defined medulla, expansion of the mature mTEC population requires autoantigen-specific interactions between positively selected CD4(+) thymocytes bearing autoreactive T cell receptor (TCR) and mTECs displaying cognate self-peptide-MHC class II complexes. These interactions also involve the engagement of CD40 on mTECs by CD40L induced on the positively selected CD4(+) thymocytes. This antigen-specific TCR-MHC class II-mediated crosstalk between CD4(+) thymocytes and mTECs defines a unique checkpoint in thymic stromal development that is pivotal for generating a mature mTEC population competent for ensuring central T cell tolerance.

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Susan Branford

Institute of Medical and Veterinary Science

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Kai Krohn

University of Tampere

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Wendy T. Parker

Institute of Medical and Veterinary Science

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J. J. Hopwood

Boston Children's Hospital

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