Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Jeffrey M. Trent is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Jeffrey M. Trent.


Cell | 1993

WAF1, a potential mediator of p53 tumor suppression

Wafik S. El-Deiry; Takashi Tokino; Victor E. Velculescu; Daniel B. Levy; Ramon Parsons; Jeffrey M. Trent; David Lin; W.Edward Mercer; Kenneth W. Kinzler; Bert Vogelstein

The ability of p53 to activate transcription from specific sequences suggests that genes induced by p53 may mediate its biological role as a tumor suppressor. Using a subtractive hybridization approach, we identified a gene, named WAF1, whose induction was associated with wild-type but not mutant p53 gene expression in a human brain tumor cell line. The WAF1 gene was localized to chromosome 6p21.2, and its sequence, structure, and activation by p53 was conserved in rodents. Introduction of WAF1 cDNA suppressed the growth of human brain, lung, and colon tumor cells in culture. Using a yeast enhancer trap, a p53-binding site was identified 2.4 kb upstream of WAF1 coding sequences. The WAF1 promoter, including this p53-binding site, conferred p53-dependent inducibility upon a heterologous reporter gene. These studies define a gene whose expression is directly induced by p53 and that could be an important mediator of p53-dependent tumor growth suppression.


Cell | 1993

Mutations of a mutS homolog in hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer

Fredrick S. Leach; Nicholas C. Nicolaides; Nickolas Papadopoulos; Bo Liu; Jin Jen; Ramon Parsons; Päivi Peltomäki; Pertti Sistonen; Lauri A. Aaltonen; Minna Nyström-Lahti; Xin Yuan Guan; Ji Zhang; Paul S. Meltzer; Jing Wei Yu; Fa Ten Kao; David J. Chen; Karen M. Cerosaletti; R. E. Keith Fournier; Sean Todd; Tracey Lewis; Robin J. Leach; Susan L. Naylor; Jean Weissenbach; Jukka Pekka Mecklin; Heikki Järvinen; Gloria M. Petersen; Stanley R. Hamilton; Jane Green; Jeremy R. Jass; Patrice Watson

Recent studies have shown that a locus responsible for hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC) is on chromosome 2p and that tumors developing in these patients contain alterations in microsatellite sequences (RER+ phenotype). We have used chromosome microdissection to obtain highly polymorphic markers from chromosome 2p16. These and other markers were ordered in a panel of somatic cell hybrids and used to define a 0.8 Mb interval containing the HNPCC locus. Candidate genes were then mapped, and one was found to lie within the 0.8 Mb interval. We identified this candidate by virtue of its homology to mutS mismatch repair genes. cDNA clones were obtained and the sequence used to detect germline mutations, including those producing termination codons, in HNPCC kindreds. Somatic as well as germline mutations of the gene were identified in RER+ tumor cells. This mutS homolog is therefore likely to be responsible for HNPCC.


Nature | 2000

Molecular classification of cutaneous malignant melanoma by gene expression profiling

M. Bittner; Paul S. Meltzer; Yidong Chen; Yuan Jiang; E. Seftor; Mary J.C. Hendrix; M. Radmacher; Richard Simon; Zohar Yakhini; Amir Ben-Dor; Nick Sampas; Edward R. Dougherty; Ena Wang; Francesco M. Marincola; C. Gooden; J. Lueders; A. Glatfelter; P.C.A. Pollock; John D. Carpten; Elizabeth M. Gillanders; D. Leja; K. Dietrich; C. Beaudry; M. Berens; David S. Alberts; V. Sondak; Nicholas K. Hayward; Jeffrey M. Trent

The most common human cancers are malignant neoplasms of the skin. Incidence of cutaneous melanoma is rising especially steeply, with minimal progress in non-surgical treatment of advanced disease. Despite significant effort to identify independent predictors of melanoma outcome, no accepted histopathological, molecular or immunohistochemical marker defines subsets of this neoplasm. Accordingly, though melanoma is thought to present with different ‘taxonomic’ forms, these are considered part of a continuous spectrum rather than discrete entities. Here we report the discovery of a subset of melanomas identified by mathematical analysis of gene expression in a series of samples. Remarkably, many genes underlying the classification of this subset are differentially regulated in invasive melanomas that form primitive tubular networks in vitro, a feature of some highly aggressive metastatic melanomas. Global transcript analysis can identify unrecognized subtypes of cutaneous melanoma and predict experimentally verifiable phenotypic characteristics that may be of importance to disease progression.


Nature Genetics | 1999

Expression profiling using cDNA microarrays

David J. Duggan; Michael L. Bittner; Yidong Chen; Paul S. Meltzer; Jeffrey M. Trent

cDNA microarrays are capable of profiling gene expression patterns of tens of thousands of genes in a single experiment. DNA targets, in the form of 3´ expressed sequence tags (ESTs), are arrayed onto glass slides (or membranes) and probed with fluorescent– or radioactively–labelled cDNAs. Here, we review technical aspects of cDNA microarrays, including the general principles, fabrication of the arrays, target labelling, image analysis and data extraction, management and mining.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2001

Gene-expression profiles in hereditary breast cancer.

Ingrid Hedenfalk; David J. Duggan; Yidong Chen; Michael Radmacher; Michael L. Bittner; Richard Simon; Paul S. Meltzer; Barry A. Gusterson; Manel Esteller; Mark Raffeld; Zohar Yakhini; Amir Ben-Dor; Edward R. Dougherty; Juha Kononen; Lukas Bubendorf; Wilfrid Fehrle; Stefania Pittaluga; Sofia Gruvberger; Niklas Loman; Oskar Johannsson; Håkan Olsson; Benjamin S. Wilfond; Guido Sauter; Olli Kallioniemi; Åke Borg; Jeffrey M. Trent

BACKGROUND Many cases of hereditary breast cancer are due to mutations in either the BRCA1 or the BRCA2 gene. The histopathological changes in these cancers are often characteristic of the mutant gene. We hypothesized that the genes expressed by these two types of tumors are also distinctive, perhaps allowing us to identify cases of hereditary breast cancer on the basis of gene-expression profiles. METHODS RNA from samples of primary tumor from seven carriers of the BRCA1 mutation, seven carriers of the BRCA2 mutation, and seven patients with sporadic cases of breast cancer was compared with a microarray of 6512 complementary DNA clones of 5361 genes. Statistical analyses were used to identify a set of genes that could distinguish the BRCA1 genotype from the BRCA2 genotype. RESULTS Permutation analysis of multivariate classification functions established that the gene-expression profiles of tumors with BRCA1 mutations, tumors with BRCA2 mutations, and sporadic tumors differed significantly from each other. An analysis of variance between the levels of gene expression and the genotype of the samples identified 176 genes that were differentially expressed in tumors with BRCA1 mutations and tumors with BRCA2 mutations. Given the known properties of some of the genes in this panel, our findings indicate that there are functional differences between breast tumors with BRCA1 mutations and those with BRCA2 mutations. CONCLUSIONS Significantly different groups of genes are expressed by breast cancers with BRCA1 mutations and breast cancers with BRCA2 mutations. Our results suggest that a heritable mutation influences the gene-expression profile of the cancer.


Nature Genetics | 2003

High frequency of BRAF mutations in nevi.

Pamela M. Pollock; Ursula Harper; Katherine S. Hansen; Laura M. Yudt; Mitchell S. Stark; Christiane M. Robbins; Tracy Moses; Galen Hostetter; Urs Wagner; John W. Kakareka; Ghadi Salem; Tom Pohida; Peter J. Heenan; Paul H. Duray; Olli Kallioniemi; Nicholas K. Hayward; Jeffrey M. Trent; Paul S. Meltzer

To evaluate the timing of mutations in BRAF (v-raf murine sarcoma viral oncogene homolog B1) during melanocytic neoplasia, we carried out mutation analysis on microdissected melanoma and nevi samples. We observed mutations resulting in the V599E amino-acid substitution in 41 of 60 (68%) melanoma metastases, 4 of 5 (80%) primary melanomas and, unexpectedly, in 63 of 77 (82%) nevi. These data suggest that mutational activation of the RAS/RAF/MAPK pathway in nevi is a critical step in the initiation of melanocytic neoplasia but alone is insufficient for melanoma tumorigenesis.


American Journal of Pathology | 1999

Vascular channel formation by human melanoma cells in vivo and in vitro: vasculogenic mimicry.

Andrew J. Maniotis; Robert Folberg; Angela R. Hess; Elisabeth A. Seftor; Lynn M.G. Gardner; Jacob Pe'er; Jeffrey M. Trent; Paul S. Meltzer; Mary J.C. Hendrix

Tissue sections from aggressive human intraocular (uveal) and metastatic cutaneous melanomas generally lack evidence of significant necrosis and contain patterned networks of interconnected loops of extracellular matrix. The matrix that forms these loops or networks may be solid or hollow. Red blood cells have been detected within the hollow channel components of this patterned matrix histologically, and these vascular channel networks have been detected in human tumors angiographically. Endothelial cells were not identified within these matrix-embedded channels by light microscopy, by transmission electron microscopy, or by using an immunohistochemical panel of endothelial cell markers (Factor VIII-related antigen, Ulex, CD31, CD34, and KDR[Flk-1]). Highly invasive primary and metastatic human melanoma cells formed patterned solid and hollow matrix channels (seen in tissue sections of aggressive primary and metastatic human melanomas) in three-dimensional cultures containing Matrigel or dilute Type I collagen, without endothelial cells or fibroblasts. These tumor cell-generated patterned channels conducted dye, highlighting looping patterns visualized angiographically in human tumors. Neither normal melanocytes nor poorly invasive melanoma cells generated these patterned channels in vitro under identical culture conditions, even after the addition of conditioned medium from metastatic pattern-forming melanoma cells, soluble growth factors, or regimes of hypoxia. Highly invasive and metastatic human melanoma cells, but not poorly invasive melanoma cells, contracted and remodeled floating hydrated gels, providing a biomechanical explanation for the generation of microvessels in vitro. cDNA microarray analysis of highly invasive versus poorly invasive melanoma tumor cells confirmed a genetic reversion to a pluripotent embryonic-like genotype in the highly aggressive melanoma cells. These observations strongly suggest that aggressive melanoma cells may generate vascular channels that facilitate tumor perfusion independent of tumor angiogenesis.


Cancer Cell | 2002

Wnt5a signaling directly affects cell motility and invasion of metastatic melanoma.

Ashani T. Weeraratna; Yuan Jiang; Galen Hostetter; Kevin Rosenblatt; Paul H. Duray; Michael L. Bittner; Jeffrey M. Trent

Gene expression profiling identified human melanoma cells demonstrating increased cell motility and invasiveness. The gene WNT5A best determined in vitro invasive behavior. Melanoma cells were transfected with vectors constitutively overexpressing Wnt5a. Consistent changes included actin reorganization and increased cell adhesion. No increase in beta-catenin expression or nuclear translocation was observed. There was, however, a dramatic increase in activated PKC. In direct correlation with Wnt5a expression and PKC activation, there was an increase in melanoma cell invasion. Blocking this pathway using antibodies to Frizzled-5, the receptor for Wnt5a, inhibited PKC activity and cellular invasion. Furthermore, Wnt5a expression in human melanoma biopsies directly correlated to increasing tumor grade. These observations support a role for Wnt5a in human melanoma progression.


Science | 1996

Major susceptibility locus for prostate cancer on chromosome 1 suggested by a genome-wide search.

Jeffrey R. Smith; Diha Freije; John D. Carpten; Henrik Grönberg; Jianfeng Xu; Sarah D. Isaacs; Michael J. Brownstein; G. Steven Bova; Hong Guo; Piroska Bujnovszky; Deborah Nusskern; Jan-Erik Damber; Anders Bergh; Monika Emanuelsson; Olli Kallioniemi; Jennifer Walker-Daniels; Joan E. Bailey-Wilson; Terri H. Beaty; Deborah A. Meyers; Patrick C. Walsh; Francis S. Collins; Jeffrey M. Trent; William B. Isaacs

Despite its high prevalence, very little is known regarding genetic predisposition to prostate cancer. A genome-wide scan performed in 66 high-risk prostate cancer families has provided evidence of linkage to the long arm of chromosome 1 (1q24-25). Analysis of an additional set of 25 North American and Swedish families with markers in this region resulted in significant evidence of linkage in the combined set of 91 families. The data provide strong evidence of a major prostate cancer susceptibility locus on chromosome 1.


Nature Genetics | 1998

Evidence for a prostate cancer susceptibility locus on the X chromosome.

Jianfeng Xu; Deborah A. Meyers; Diha Freije; Sarah D. Isaacs; Kathy E. Wiley; Deborah Nusskern; Charles M. Ewing; Eric Wilkens; Piroska Bujnovszky; G. Steven Bova; Patrick C. Walsh; William B. Isaacs; Johanna Schleutker; Mika P. Matikainen; Teuvo L.J. Tammela; Tapio Visakorpi; Olli Kallioniemi; Rebecca Berry; Daniel J. Schaid; Amy J. French; Shannon K. McDonnell; Jennifer J. Schroeder; Michael L. Blute; Stephen N. Thibodeau; Henrik Grönberg; Monika Emanuelsson; Jan-Erik Damber; Anders Bergh; Björn Anders Jonsson; Jeffrey R. Smith

Over 200,000 new prostate cancer cases are diagnosed in the United States each year, accounting for more than 35% of all cancer cases affecting men, and resulting in 40,000 deaths annually1. Attempts to characterize genes predisposing to prostate cancer have been hampered by a high phenocopy rate, the late age of onset of the disease and, in the absence of distinguishing clinical features, the inability to stratify patients into subgroups relative to suspected genetic locus heterogeneity. We previously performed a genome-wide search for hereditary prostate cancer (HPC) genes, finding evidence of a prostate cancer susceptibility locus on chromosome 1 (termed HPC1; ref. 2). Here we present evidence for the location of a second prostate cancer susceptibility gene, which by heterogeneity estimates accounts for approximately 16% of HPC cases. This HPC locus resides on the X chromosome (Xq27-28), a finding consistent with results of previous population-based studies suggesting an X-linked mode of HPC inheritance. Linkage to Xq27-28 was observed in a combined study population of 360 prostate cancer families collected at four independent sites in North America, Finland and Sweden. A maximum two-point lod score of 4.60 was observed at DXS1113, θ=0.26, in the combined data set. Parametric multipoint and non-parametric analyses provided results consistent with the two-point analysis. evidence for genetic locus heterogeneity was observed, with similar estimates of the proportion of linked families in each separate family collection. Genetic mapping of the locus represents an important initial step in the identification of an X-linked gene implicated in the aetiology of HPC.

Collaboration


Dive into the Jeffrey M. Trent's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Paul S. Meltzer

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Michael L. Bittner

Translational Genomics Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

John D. Carpten

University of Southern California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yidong Chen

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

William B. Isaacs

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Joan E. Bailey-Wilson

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge