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Dive into the research topics where James A. Lautenberger is active.

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Featured researches published by James A. Lautenberger.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Genome-wide association study provides evidence for a breast cancer risk locus at 6q22.33

Bert Gold; Tomas Kirchhoff; Stefan Stefanov; James A. Lautenberger; Agnes Viale; Judy Garber; Eitan Friedman; Steven A. Narod; Adam B. Olshen; Peter K. Gregersen; Kristi Kosarin; Adam Olsh; Julie Bergeron; Nathan A. Ellis; Robert J. Klein; Andrew G. Clark; Larry Norton; Michael Dean; Jeffrey E. Boyd; Kenneth Offit

We performed a three-phase genome-wide association study (GWAS) using cases and controls from a genetically isolated population, Ashkenazi Jews (AJ), to identify loci associated with breast cancer risk. In the first phase, we compared allele frequencies of 150,080 SNPs in 249 high-risk, BRCA1/2 mutation-negative AJ familial cases and 299 cancer-free AJ controls using χ2 and the Cochran–Armitage trend tests. In the second phase, we genotyped 343 SNPs from 123 regions most significantly associated from stage 1, including 4 SNPs from the FGFR2 region, in 950 consecutive AJ breast cancer cases and 979 age-matched AJ controls. We replicated major associations in a third independent set of 243 AJ cases and 187 controls. We obtained a significant allele P value of association with AJ breast cancer in the FGFR2 region (P = 1.5 × 10−5, odds ratio (OR) 1.26, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.13–1.40 at rs1078806 for all phases combined). In addition, we found a risk locus in a region of chromosome 6q22.33 (P = 2.9 × 10−8, OR 1.41, 95% CI 1.25–1.59 at rs2180341). Using several SNPs at each implicated locus, we were able to verify associations and impute haplotypes. The major haplotype at the 6q22.33 locus conferred protection from disease, whereas the minor haplotype conferred risk. Candidate genes in the 6q22.33 region include ECHDC1, which encodes a protein involved in mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation, and also RNF146, which encodes a ubiquitin protein ligase, both known pathways in breast cancer pathogenesis.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2001

Markers for Mapping by Admixture Linkage Disequilibrium in African American and Hispanic Populations

Michael W. Smith; James A. Lautenberger; Hyoung Doo Shin; Jean-Paul Chretien; Sadeep Shrestha; Dennis A. Gilbert; Stephen J. O’Brien

Population linkage disequilibrium occurs as a consequence of mutation, selection, genetic drift, and population substructure produced by admixture of genetically distinct ethnic populations. African American and Hispanic ethnic groups have a history of significant gene flow among parent groups, which can be of value in affecting genome scans for disease-gene discovery in the case-control and transmission/disequilibrium test designs. Disease-gene discovery using mapping by admixture linkage disequilibrium (MALD) requires a map of polymorphic markers that differentiate between the founding populations, along with differences in disease-gene allele frequencies. We describe markers appropriate for MALD mapping by assessing allele frequencies of 744 short tandem repeats (STRs) in African Americans, Hispanics, European Americans, and Asians, by choosing STR markers that have large differences in composite delta, log-likelihood ratios, and/or I*(2) for MALD. Additional markers can be added to this MALD map by utilization of the rapidly growing single-nucleotide-polymorphism databases and the literature, to achieve a 3-10-cM scanning scale. The map will be useful for studies of diseases, including prostate and breast cancer, diabetes, hypertension, and end-stage renal disease, that have large differences in incidence between the founding populations of either Hispanics or African Americans.


BMC Genomics | 2010

Accounting for multiple comparisons in a genome-wide association study (GWAS)

Randall C. Johnson; George W. Nelson; Jennifer L. Troyer; James A. Lautenberger; Bailey Kessing; Cheryl A. Winkler; Stephen J. O'Brien

BackgroundAs we enter an era when testing millions of SNPs in a single gene association study will become the standard, consideration of multiple comparisons is an essential part of determining statistical significance. Bonferroni adjustments can be made but are conservative due to the preponderance of linkage disequilibrium (LD) between genetic markers, and permutation testing is not always a viable option. Three major classes of corrections have been proposed to correct the dependent nature of genetic data in Bonferroni adjustments: permutation testing and related alternatives, principal components analysis (PCA), and analysis of blocks of LD across the genome. We consider seven implementations of these commonly used methods using data from 1514 European American participants genotyped for 700,078 SNPs in a GWAS for AIDS.ResultsA Bonferroni correction using the number of LD blocks found by the three algorithms implemented by Haploview resulted in an insufficiently conservative threshold, corresponding to a genome-wide significance level of α = 0.15 - 0.20. We observed a moderate increase in power when using PRESTO, SLIDE, and simpleℳ when compared with traditional Bonferroni methods for population data genotyped on the Affymetrix 6.0 platform in European Americans (α = 0.05 thresholds between 1 × 10-7 and 7 × 10-8).ConclusionsCorrecting for the number of LD blocks resulted in an anti-conservative Bonferroni adjustment. SLIDE and simpleℳ are particularly useful when using a statistical test not handled in optimized permutation testing packages, and genome-wide corrected p-values using SLIDE, are much easier to interpret for consumers of GWAS studies.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2000

Significant Admixture Linkage Disequilibrium across 30 cM around the FY Locus in African Americans

James A. Lautenberger; J. Claiborne Stephens; Stephen J. O'Brien; Michael W. Smith

Scientists, to understand the importance of allelic polymorphisms on phenotypes that are quantitative and environmentally interacting, are now turning to population-association screens, especially in instances in which pedigree analysis is difficult. Because association screens require linkage disequilibrium between markers and disease loci, maximizing the degree of linkage disequilibrium increases the chances of discovering functional gene-marker associations. One theoretically valid approach-mapping by admixture linkage disequilibrium (MALD), using recently admixed African Americans-is empirically evaluated here by measurement of marker associations with 15 short tandem repeats (STRs) and an insertion/deletion polymorphism of the AT3 locus in a 70-cM segment at 1q22-23, around the FY (Duffy) locus. The FY polymorphism (-46T-->C) disrupts the GATA promoter motif, specifically blocking FY erythroid expression and has a nearly fixed allele-frequency difference between European Americans and native Africans that is likely a consequence of a selective advantage of FY-/- in malaria infections. Analysis of linkage disequilibrium around the FY gene has indicated that there is strong and consistent linkage disequilibrium between FY and three flanking loci (D1S303, SPTA1, and D1S484) spanning 8 cM. We observed significant linkage-disequilibrium signals over a 30-cM region from -4.4 to 16.3 cM (from D1S2777 to D1S196) for STRs and at 26.4 cM (AT3), which provided quantitative estimates of centimorgan limits, by MALD assessment in African American population-association analyses, of 5-10 cM.


AIDS | 2008

Mitochondrial DNA Haplogroups Influence AIDS Progression

Sher L. Hendrickson; Holli Hutcheson; Eduardo Ruiz-Pesini; Jason C. Poole; James A. Lautenberger; Efe Sezgin; Lawrence A. Kingsley; James J. Goedert; David Vlahov; Sharyne Donfield; Douglas C. Wallace; Stephen J. O'Brien

Objective:Mitochondrial function plays a role in both AIDS progression and HAART toxicity; therefore, we sought to determine whether mitochondrial DNA variation revealed novel AIDS restriction genes, particularly as mitochondrial DNA single-nucleotide polymorphisms are known to influence regulation of oxidative phosphorylation, reactive oxygen species production, and apoptosis. Design:This is a retrospective cohort study. Methods:We performed an association study of mitochondrial DNA haplogroups among 1833 European American HIV-1 patients from five US cohorts: the Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study, the San Francisco City Clinic Study, Hemophilia Growth and Development Study, the Multicenter Hemophilia Cohort Study, and the AIDS Linked to Intravenous Experiences cohort to determine whether the mitochondrial DNA haplogroup correlated with AIDS progression rate. Results:Mitochondrial DNA haplogroups J and U5a were elevated among HIV-1 infected people who display accelerated progression to AIDS and death. Haplogroups Uk, H3, and IWX appeared to be highly protective against AIDS progression. Conclusion:The associations found in our study appear to support a functional explanation by which mitochondrial DNA variation among haplogroups, influencing ATP production, reactive oxygen species generation, and apoptosis, is correlated to AIDS disease progression; however, repeating these results in cohorts with different ethnic backgrounds would be informative. These data suggest that mitochondrial genes are important indicators of AIDS disease progression in HIV-1 infected persons.


PLOS Genetics | 2012

The Principal Genetic Determinants for Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma in China Involve the HLA Class I Antigen Recognition Groove

Minzhong Tang; James A. Lautenberger; Xiaojiang Gao; Efe Sezgin; Sher L. Hendrickson; Jennifer L. Troyer; Victor A. David; Li Guan; Carl McIntosh; Xiuchan Guo; Yuming Zheng; Jian Liao; Hong Deng; Michael Malasky; Bailey Kessing; Cheryl A. Winkler; Mary Carrington; Yi Zeng; Stephen J. O'Brien

Nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) is an epithelial malignancy facilitated by Epstein-Barr Virus infection. Here we resolve the major genetic influences for NPC incidence using a genome-wide association study (GWAS), independent cohort replication, and high-resolution molecular HLA class I gene typing including 4,055 study participants from the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region and Guangdong province of southern China. We detect and replicate strong association signals involving SNPs, HLA alleles, and amino acid (aa) variants across the major histocompatibility complex-HLA-A, HLA –B, and HLA -C class I genes (PHLA-A-aa-site-62 = 7.4×10−29; P HLA-B-aa-site-116 = 6.5×10−19; P HLA-C-aa-site-156 = 6.8×10−8 respectively). Over 250 NPC-HLA associated variants within HLA were analyzed in concert to resolve separate and largely independent HLA-A, -B, and -C gene influences. Multivariate logistical regression analysis collapsed significant associations in adjacent genes spanning 500 kb (OR2H1, GABBR1, HLA-F, and HCG9) as proxies for peptide binding motifs carried by HLA- A*11:01. A similar analysis resolved an independent association signal driven by HLA-B*13:01, B*38:02, and B*55:02 alleles together. NPC resistance alleles carrying the strongly associated amino acid variants implicate specific class I peptide recognition motifs in HLA-A and -B peptide binding groove as conferring strong genetic influence on the development of NPC in China.


Gene | 1983

High-level expression in Escherichia coli of the carboxy-terminal sequences of the avian myelocytomatosis virus (MC29) v-myc protein

James A. Lautenberger; Donald L. Court; Takis S. Papas

A plasmid, pJL6, was constructed that contains a unique ClaI site twelve codons beyond the bacteriophage lambda cII gene initiation codon. This site allowed us to fuse the carboxy-terminal sequences of the avian myelocytomatosis virus (MC29) v-myc gene to the amino-terminal portion of the cII gene. Transcription of the hybrid gene is controlled from the phage lambda pL promoter. When this promoter is derepressed, Escherichia coli cells harboring the chimeric plasmid produce a level of cII-myc fusion protein greater than 5% of total cellular protein. Antibodies raised by this protein immunoprecipitate the MC29 gag-myc gene product, P110gag-myc.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2011

Genome-Wide Association Study Implicates PARD3B-Based AIDS Restriction

Jennifer L. Troyer; George W. Nelson; James A. Lautenberger; Leslie W. Chinn; Carl McIntosh; Randall C. Johnson; Efe Sezgin; Bailey Kessing; Michael Malasky; Sher L. Hendrickson; Guan Li; Joan Pontius; Minzhong Tang; Ping An; Cheryl A. Winkler; Sophie Limou; Sigrid Le Clerc; Olivier Delaneau; Jean F. Zagury; Hanneke Schuitemaker; Daniëlle van Manen; Jay H. Bream; Edward D. Gomperts; Susan Buchbinder; James J. Goedert; Gregory D. Kirk; Stephen J. O'Brien

BACKGROUND Host genetic variation influences human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection and progression to AIDS. Here we used clinically well-characterized subjects from 5 pretreatment HIV/AIDS cohorts for a genome-wide association study to identify gene associations with rate of AIDS progression. METHODS European American HIV seroconverters (n = 755) were interrogated for single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) (n = 700,022) associated with progression to AIDS 1987 (Cox proportional hazards regression analysis, co-dominant model). RESULTS Association with slower progression was observed for SNPs in the gene PARD3B. One of these, rs11884476, reached genome-wide significance (relative hazard = 0.3; P =3. 370 × 10(-9)) after statistical correction for 700,022 SNPs and contributes 4.52% of the overall variance in AIDS progression in this study. Nine of the top-ranked SNPs define a PARD3B haplotype that also displays significant association with progression to AIDS (hazard ratio, 0.3; P = 3.220 × 10(-8)). One of these SNPs, rs10185378, is a predicted exonic splicing enhancer; significant alteration in the expression profile of PARD3B splicing transcripts was observed in B cell lines with alternate rs10185378 genotypes. This SNP was typed in European cohorts of rapid progressors and was found to be protective for AIDS 1993 definition (odds ratio, 0.43, P = .025). CONCLUSIONS These observations suggest a potential unsuspected pathway of host genetic influence on the dynamics of AIDS progression.


Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes | 2008

Host genetic influences on highly active antiretroviral therapy efficacy and AIDS-free survival.

Sher L. Hendrickson; Lisa P. Jacobson; George W. Nelson; John P. Phair; James A. Lautenberger; Randall C. Johnson; Lawrence A. Kingsley; Joseph B. Margolick; Roger Detels; James J. Goedert; Stephen J. O'Brien

We studied the influence of AIDS restriction genes (ARGs) CCR5-Δ32, CCR2-64I, SDF1-3′A, IL10-5′A, CX3CR1-V249I, CX3CR1-T280M, and MDR1-C3435T and haplotypes of the CCR5 P1 promoter and RANTES variants −403A, In1.1C, 3′222C, and −28G among HIV-1 infected patients on highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) in the Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study (MACS) and the Multicenter Hemophilia Cohort Study (MHCS). Our results indicate that several ARGs also influence therapy efficacy (ie, the success in viral suppression) and subsequent progression to AIDS while on HAART. CCR5-Δ32 decreased time to viral suppression (<200 HIV RNA copies/mL, relative hazard [RH] = 1.40; P = 0.008) and was protective against AIDS (RH = 0.11; P = <0.0001), whereas the CCR5 P1 haplotype was associated with delayed viral suppression (RNA <50 copies/mL, odds ratio [OR] = 0.65; P = 0.03) and accelerated time to AIDS (RH = 2.68; P = 0.02). SDF1-3′A reduced viral suppression (OR = 0.61; P = 0.02) and accelerated AIDS (RH = 3.18; P = 0.009). Accelerated AIDS progression was also observed with the RANTES haplotype carrying RANTES-IN1.1C and RANTES-3′222C (P = 0.005 to 0.007). In contrast, the RANTES haplotype H1, which lacks suspected deleterious single-nucleotide polymorphisms, was protective against AIDS. CX3CR1-V249I seemed to accelerate viral suppression (RNA <50 copies/mL, OR = 1.27; P = 0.01). ARG influence after HAART suggests residual HIV-1 replication, and spread continues even in patients successfully suppressing detectable viral RNA.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Genetic Variants in Nuclear-Encoded Mitochondrial Genes Influence AIDS Progression

Sher L. Hendrickson; James A. Lautenberger; Leslie W. Chinn; Michael Malasky; Efe Sezgin; Lawrence A. Kingsley; James J. Goedert; Gregory D. Kirk; Edward D. Gomperts; Susan Buchbinder; Jennifer L. Troyer; Stephen J. O'Brien

Background The human mitochondrial genome includes only 13 coding genes while nuclear-encoded genes account for 99% of proteins responsible for mitochondrial morphology, redox regulation, and energetics. Mitochondrial pathogenesis occurs in HIV patients and genetically, mitochondrial DNA haplogroups with presumed functional differences have been associated with differential AIDS progression. Methodology/Principal Findings Here we explore whether single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) within 904 of the estimated 1,500 genes that specify nuclear-encoded mitochondrial proteins (NEMPs) influence AIDS progression among HIV-1 infected patients. We examined NEMPs for association with the rate of AIDS progression using genotypes generated by an Affymetrix 6.0 genotyping array of 1,455 European American patients from five US AIDS cohorts. Successfully genotyped SNPs gave 50% or better haplotype coverage for 679 of known NEMP genes. With a Bonferroni adjustment for the number of genes and tests examined, multiple SNPs within two NEMP genes showed significant association with AIDS progression: acyl-CoA synthetase medium-chain family member 4 (ACSM4) on chromosome 12 and peroxisomal D3,D2-enoyl-CoA isomerase (PECI) on chromosome 6. Conclusions Our previous studies on mitochondrial DNA showed that European haplogroups with presumed functional differences were associated with AIDS progression and HAART mediated adverse events. The modest influences of nuclear-encoded mitochondrial genes found in the current study add support to the idea that mitochondrial function plays a role in AIDS pathogenesis.

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Takis S. Papas

National Institutes of Health

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Stephen J. O'Brien

Saint Petersburg State University

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Bailey Kessing

Science Applications International Corporation

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James J. Goedert

National Institutes of Health

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Cheryl A. Winkler

National Institutes of Health

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Jennifer L. Troyer

Science Applications International Corporation

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Michael Malasky

Science Applications International Corporation

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Sher L. Hendrickson

National Institutes of Health

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Efe Sezgin

Johns Hopkins University

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