Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Jason Stein is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Jason Stein.


Immunogenetics | 2002

Distinctive KIR and HLA diversity in a panel of north Indian Hindus.

Raja Rajalingam; P. Krausa; Heather G. Shilling; Jason Stein; Arumugam Balamurugan; Malcolm D. McGinnis; Nathalie W. Cheng; N. K. Mehra; Peter Parham

HLA and KIR are diverse and rapidly evolving gene complexes that work together in human immunity mediated by cytolytic lymphocytes. Understanding their complex immunogenetic interaction requires study of both HLA and KIR diversity in the same human population. Here a panel of 72 unrelated north Indian Hindus was analyzed. HLA-A, B, C, DRB1, DQA1, and DQB1 alleles and their frequencies were determined by sequencing or high-resolution typing of genomic DNA; KIR genotypes were determined by gene-specific typing and by allele-level DNA typing for KIR2DL1, 2DL3, 2DL5, 3DL1, and 3DL2. From HLA analysis, the north Indian population is seen to have several characteristics shared either with Caucasian or East Asian populations, consistent with the demographic history of north India, as well as specific features, including several alleles at high frequency that are rare or absent in other populations. A majority of the north Indian KIR gene profiles have not been seen in Caucasian and Asian populations. Most striking is a higher frequency of the B group of KIR haplotypes, resulting in equal frequencies for A and B group haplotypes in north Indians. All 72 members of the north Indian panel have different HLA genotype and different KIR genotype.


PLOS ONE | 2011

A Genetic Signature of Spina Bifida Risk from Pathway-Informed Comprehensive Gene-Variant Analysis

Nicholas J. Marini; Thomas J. Hoffmann; Edward J. Lammer; Jill Hardin; Katherine D. Lazaruk; Jason Stein; Dennis A. Gilbert; Crystal Wright; Anna Lipzen; Len A. Pennacchio; Suzan L. Carmichael; John S. Witte; Gary M. Shaw; Jasper Rine

Despite compelling epidemiological evidence that folic acid supplements reduce the frequency of neural tube defects (NTDs) in newborns, common variant association studies with folate metabolism genes have failed to explain the majority of NTD risk. The contribution of rare alleles as well as genetic interactions within the folate pathway have not been extensively studied in the context of NTDs. Thus, we sequenced the exons in 31 folate-related genes in a 480-member NTD case-control population to identify the full spectrum of allelic variation and determine whether rare alleles or obvious genetic interactions within this pathway affect NTD risk. We constructed a pathway model, predetermined independent of the data, which grouped genes into coherent sets reflecting the distinct metabolic compartments in the folate/one-carbon pathway (purine synthesis, pyrimidine synthesis, and homocysteine recycling to methionine). By integrating multiple variants based on these groupings, we uncovered two provocative, complex genetic risk signatures. Interestingly, these signatures differed by race/ethnicity: a Hispanic risk profile pointed to alterations in purine biosynthesis, whereas that in non-Hispanic whites implicated homocysteine metabolism. In contrast, parallel analyses that focused on individual alleles, or individual genes, as the units by which to assign risk revealed no compelling associations. These results suggest that the ability to layer pathway relationships onto clinical variant data can be uniquely informative for identifying genetic risk as well as for generating mechanistic hypotheses. Furthermore, the identification of ethnic-specific risk signatures for spina bifida resonated with epidemiological data suggesting that the underlying pathogenesis may differ between Hispanic and non-Hispanic groups.


Archive | 2007

Identification of a nucleic acid molecule

D. Sayer; Damian Goodridge; Steve Hodges; Malcolm D. McGinnis; Jason Stein; P. Krausa


Human Immunology | 2002

Complete intron and exon sequence of eight HLA-B and -C variants

Jason Stein; Malcolm D. McGinnis; Jan Capper; Pete Krausa


Human Immunology | 2009

241-P: Reduced ambiguity SBT of DRB1 using intron-based 5' PCR primers

Mary Poulhazan; Hayley Hogan; Peter Krausa; Jason Stein; Damian Goodridge; D. Sayer; Malcolm D. McGinnis


Human Immunology | 2008

118-P: Real-time quantitative PCR vs. STR PCR for chimerism analysis

Jason Stein; Malcolm D. McGinnis; Ian J. McLaughlin; Pete Krausa; Steve Beckert; Kathy Lazaruk


Human Immunology | 2008

27-OR: High sensitivity chimerism detection by real-time quantitative PCR

Katherine Lazaruk; Jason Stein; Doug Bost; Ian MacLaughlin; Pete Krausa; Malcolm D. McGinnis


Human Immunology | 2007

134-P: A single direction plus HARPs sequencing strategy for unambiguous high resolution HLA typing

Jason Stein; Damian Goodridge; D. Sayer; Jan Capper; Malcolm D. McGinnis; Pete Krausa


Human Immunology | 2007

120-P: Engraftment monitoring using quantitative PCR

Douglas A. Bost; Ian J. McLaughlin; Jason Stein; Kathy Lazaruk; Joanna L. Mountain; Malcolm D. McGinnis; Pete Krausa


Human Immunology | 2007

121-P: Performance of a real-time PCR method for engraftment monitoring

Ian J. McLaughlin; Douglas A. Bost; Joanna L. Mountain; Kathy Lazaruk; Jason Stein; Malcolm D. McGinnis; Pete Krausa

Collaboration


Dive into the Jason Stein's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

D. Sayer

Royal Perth Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

P. Krausa

John Radcliffe Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge