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Dive into the research topics where Jennifer J. Hu is active.

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Featured researches published by Jennifer J. Hu.


Nature Genetics | 2002

Germline mutations and sequence variants of the macrophage scavenger receptor 1 gene are associated with prostate cancer risk

Jianfeng Xu; S. Lilly Zheng; Akira Komiya; Josyf C. Mychaleckyj; Sarah D. Isaacs; Jennifer J. Hu; David A. Sterling; Ethan M. Lange; Gregory A. Hawkins; Aubrey R. Turner; Charles M. Ewing; Dennis A. Faith; Jill R. Johnson; Hiroyoshi Suzuki; Piroska Bujnovszky; Kathleen E. Wiley; Angelo M. DeMarzo; G. Steven Bova; Bao-Li Chang; M. Craig Hall; David L. McCullough; Alan W. Partin; Vahan S. Kassabian; John D. Carpten; Joan E. Bailey-Wilson; Jeffrey M. Trent; Jill A. Ohar; Eugene R. Bleecker; Patrick C. Walsh; William B. Isaacs

Deletions on human chromosome 8p22–23 in prostate cancer cells and linkage studies in families affected with hereditary prostate cancer (HPC) have implicated this region in the development of prostate cancer. The macrophage scavenger receptor 1 gene (MSR1, also known as SR-A) is located at 8p22 and functions in several processes proposed to be relevant to prostate carcinogenesis. Here we report the results of genetic analyses that indicate that mutations in MSR1 may be associated with risk of prostate cancer. Among families affected with HPC, we identified six rare missense mutations and one nonsense mutation in MSR1. A family-based linkage and association test indicated that these mutations co-segregate with prostate cancer (P = 0.0007). In addition, among men of European descent, MSR1 mutations were detected in 4.4% of individuals affected with non-HPC as compared with 0.8% of unaffected men (P = 0.009). Among African American men, these values were 12.5% and 1.8%, respectively (P = 0.01). These results show that MSR1 may be important in susceptibility to prostate cancer in men of both African American and European descent.


Nature | 2011

The landscape of recombination in African Americans

Anjali G. Hinch; Arti Tandon; Nick Patterson; Yunli Song; Nadin Rohland; C. Palmer; Gary K. Chen; Kai Wang; Sarah G. Buxbaum; Ermeg L. Akylbekova; Melinda C. Aldrich; Christine B. Ambrosone; Christopher I. Amos; Elisa V. Bandera; Sonja I. Berndt; Leslie Bernstein; William J. Blot; Cathryn H. Bock; Eric Boerwinkle; Qiuyin Cai; Neil E. Caporaso; Graham Casey; L. Adrienne Cupples; Sandra L. Deming; W. Ryan Diver; Jasmin Divers; Myriam Fornage; Elizabeth M. Gillanders; Joseph T. Glessner; Curtis C. Harris

Recombination, together with mutation, gives rise to genetic variation in populations. Here we leverage the recent mixture of people of African and European ancestry in the Americas to build a genetic map measuring the probability of crossing over at each position in the genome, based on about 2.1 million crossovers in 30,000 unrelated African Americans. At intervals of more than three megabases it is nearly identical to a map built in Europeans. At finer scales it differs significantly, and we identify about 2,500 recombination hotspots that are active in people of West African ancestry but nearly inactive in Europeans. The probability of a crossover at these hotspots is almost fully controlled by the alleles an individual carries at PRDM9 (P value < 10−245). We identify a 17-base-pair DNA sequence motif that is enriched in these hotspots, and is an excellent match to the predicted binding target of PRDM9 alleles common in West Africans and rare in Europeans. Sites of this motif are predicted to be risk loci for disease-causing genomic rearrangements in individuals carrying these alleles. More generally, this map provides a resource for research in human genetic variation and evolution.


Cancer Letters | 2003

Polymorphisms of XRCC1 and XRCC3 genes and susceptibility to breast cancer

Tasha R. Smith; Mark Steven Miller; Kurt Lohman; Ethan M. Lange; L. Douglas Case; Harvey W. Mohrenweiser; Jennifer J. Hu

Mammalian cells are constantly exposed to a wide variety of genotoxic agents from both endogenous and exogenous sources. Genetic variability in DNA repair may contribute to human cancer risk. We used a case-control study design (162 cases and 302 controls) to test the association between three amino acid substitution variants of DNA repair genes (XRCC1 Arg194Trp, XRCC1 Arg399Gln, and XRCC3 Thr241Met) and breast cancer susceptibility. We found a weak association between the XRCC1 194Trp allele and breast cancer risk (adjusted odds ratio (OR)=1.98; 95% confidence interval (CI)=0.85-4.63). We also found a potential gene-gene interaction between the XRCC1 194Trp allele and XRCC3 241Met allele and breast cancer risk (adjusted OR=8.74; 95% CI=1.13-67.53). Although larger studies are needed to validate the study results, our data suggest that amino acid substitution variants of XRCC1 and XRCC3 genes may contribute to breast cancer susceptibility.


Cancer Research | 2004

The ADPRT V762A Genetic Variant Contributes to Prostate Cancer Susceptibility and Deficient Enzyme Function

Kristin L. Lockett; M. Craig Hall; Jianfeng Xu; S. Lilly Zheng; Marianne Berwick; Shu-Chun Chuang; Peter E. Clark; Scott D. Cramer; Kurt Lohman; Jennifer J. Hu

The ADP-ribosyltransferase (ADPRT) gene encodes a zinc-finger DNA-binding protein, poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase-1 (PARP-1), that modifies various nuclear proteins by poly(ADP-ribosyl)ation and functions as a key enzyme in the base excision repair pathway. We have conducted two studies to test whether an amino acid substitution variant, ADPRT V762A (T2444C), is associated with prostate cancer (CaP) risk and decreased enzyme function. The first study used genomic DNA samples from an ongoing, clinic-based case-control study (488 cases and 524 controls) to show that a higher percentage of the CaP cases carried the ADPRT 762 AA genotype than controls (4% versus 2%). In Caucasians, the AA genotype was significantly associated with increased CaP risk [odds ratio (OR), 2.65; 95% confidence interval (CI), 1.08–6.49], and the VA genotype was associated with a slight but not significantly increased CaP risk (OR, 1.18; 95% CI, 0.85–1.64) using VV as the referent group after adjustment for age, benign prostatic hyperplasia, and family history. Furthermore, this association was stronger in younger (<65) men (OR, 4.77; 95% CI, 1.01–22.44) than older (≥65) men (OR, 1.78; 95% CI, 0.55–5.82). The second study used freshly isolated peripheral lymphocytes from 354 cancer-free subjects to demonstrate that the ADPRT 762 A allele contributed to significantly lower adenosine diphosphate ribosyl transferase (ADPRT)/PARP-1 activities in response to H2O2 in a gene dosage-dependent manner (P < 0.0001, test for linear trend). The PARP-1 activities (mean ± SD dpm/106 cells) were 18,554 ± 9,070 (n = 257), 14,847 ± 7,082 (n = 86), and 12,155 ± 6,334 (n = 11) for VV, VA, and AA genotypes, respectively. This study is the first to provide evidence that the ADPRT V762A-genetic variant contributes to CaP susceptibility and altered ADPRT/PARP-1 enzyme function in response to oxidative damage.


Nature Genetics | 2011

Genome-wide association study of prostate cancer in men of African ancestry identifies a susceptibility locus at 17q21

Christopher A. Haiman; Gary K. Chen; William J. Blot; Sara S. Strom; Sonja I. Berndt; Rick A. Kittles; Benjamin A. Rybicki; William B. Isaacs; Sue A. Ingles; Janet L. Stanford; W. Ryan Diver; John S. Witte; Ann W. Hsing; Barbara Nemesure; Timothy R. Rebbeck; Kathleen A. Cooney; Jianfeng Xu; Adam S. Kibel; Jennifer J. Hu; Esther M. John; Serigne M. Gueye; Stephen Watya; Lisa B. Signorello; Richard B. Hayes; Zhaoming Wang; Edward D. Yeboah; Yao Tettey; Qiuyin Cai; Suzanne Kolb; Elaine A. Ostrander

In search of common risk alleles for prostate cancer that could contribute to high rates of the disease in men of African ancestry, we conducted a genome-wide association study, with 1,047,986 SNP markers examined in 3,425 African-Americans with prostate cancer (cases) and 3,290 African-American male controls. We followed up the most significant 17 new associations from stage 1 in 1,844 cases and 3,269 controls of African ancestry. We identified a new risk variant on chromosome 17q21 (rs7210100, odds ratio per allele = 1.51, P = 3.4 × 10−13). The frequency of the risk allele is ∼5% in men of African descent, whereas it is rare in other populations (<1%). Further studies are needed to investigate the biological contribution of this allele to prostate cancer risk. These findings emphasize the importance of conducting genome-wide association studies in diverse populations.


Carcinogenesis | 2008

Polygenic model of DNA repair genetic polymorphisms in human breast cancer risk

Tasha R. Smith; Edward A. Levine; Rita I. Freimanis; Steven A. Akman; Glenn O. Allen; Kimberly N. Hoang; Wen Liu-Mares; Jennifer J. Hu

Genetic variations in DNA repair may impact repair functions, DNA damage and breast cancer risk. Using data/samples collected from the first 752 Caucasians and 141 African-Americans in an ongoing case-control study, we examined the association between breast cancer risk and 18 non-synonymous single-nucleotide polymorphisms (nsSNPs) in four DNA repair pathways-(i) base excision repair: ADPRT V762A, APE1 D148E, XRCC1 R194W/R280H/R399Q and POLD1 R119H; (ii) nucleotide excision repair: ERCC2 D312N/K751Q, ERCC4 R415Q, ERCC5 D1104H and XPC A499V/K939Q; (iii) mismatch repair: MLH1 I219V, MSH3 R940Q/T1036A and MSH6 G39E and (iv) double-strand break repair: NBS1 E185Q and XRCC3 T241M. In Caucasians, breast cancer risk was significantly associated with ADPRT 762VV [odds ratio (OR) = 1.45; 95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.03, 2.03], APE1 148DD (OR = 1.44; 95% CI = 1.03, 2.00), MLH1 219II/IV (OR = 1.87; 95% CI = 1.11, 3.16) and ERCC4 415QQ (OR = 8.64; 95% CI = 1.04, 72.02) genotypes. With a limited sample size, we did not observe any significant association in African-Americans. However, there were significant trends in breast cancer risk with increasing numbers of risk genotypes for ADPRT 762VV, APE1 148DD, ERCC4 415RQ/QQ and MLH1 219II/IV (P(trend) < 0.001) in Caucasians and ADPRT 762VA, ERCC2 751KQ/QQ and NBS1 185EQ/QQ in African-Americans (P(trend) = 0.006), respectively. Our results suggest that combined nsSNPs in multiple DNA repair pathways may contribute to breast cancer risk and larger studies are warranted to further evaluate polygenic models of DNA repair in breast cancer risk.


PLOS Genetics | 2011

Enhanced Statistical Tests for GWAS in Admixed Populations: Assessment using African Americans from CARe and a Breast Cancer Consortium

Bogdan Pasaniuc; Noah Zaitlen; Guillaume Lettre; Gary K. Chen; Arti Tandon; W.H. Linda Kao; Ingo Ruczinski; Myriam Fornage; David S. Siscovick; Xiaofeng Zhu; Emma K. Larkin; Leslie A. Lange; L. Adrienne Cupples; Qiong Yang; Ermeg L. Akylbekova; Solomon K. Musani; Jasmin Divers; Joe Mychaleckyj; Mingyao Li; George J. Papanicolaou; Robert C. Millikan; Christine B. Ambrosone; Esther M. John; Leslie Bernstein; Wei Zheng; Jennifer J. Hu; Regina G. Ziegler; Sarah J. Nyante; Elisa V. Bandera; Sue A. Ingles

While genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have primarily examined populations of European ancestry, more recent studies often involve additional populations, including admixed populations such as African Americans and Latinos. In admixed populations, linkage disequilibrium (LD) exists both at a fine scale in ancestral populations and at a coarse scale (admixture-LD) due to chromosomal segments of distinct ancestry. Disease association statistics in admixed populations have previously considered SNP association (LD mapping) or admixture association (mapping by admixture-LD), but not both. Here, we introduce a new statistical framework for combining SNP and admixture association in case-control studies, as well as methods for local ancestry-aware imputation. We illustrate the gain in statistical power achieved by these methods by analyzing data of 6,209 unrelated African Americans from the CARe project genotyped on the Affymetrix 6.0 chip, in conjunction with both simulated and real phenotypes, as well as by analyzing the FGFR2 locus using breast cancer GWAS data from 5,761 African-American women. We show that, at typed SNPs, our method yields an 8% increase in statistical power for finding disease risk loci compared to the power achieved by standard methods in case-control studies. At imputed SNPs, we observe an 11% increase in statistical power for mapping disease loci when our local ancestry-aware imputation framework and the new scoring statistic are jointly employed. Finally, we show that our method increases statistical power in regions harboring the causal SNP in the case when the causal SNP is untyped and cannot be imputed. Our methods and our publicly available software are broadly applicable to GWAS in admixed populations.


Translational Psychiatry | 2012

Genome-wide meta-analyses of smoking behaviors in African Americans

Sean P. David; Ajna Hamidovic; Gary K. Chen; Andrew W. Bergen; J. Wessel; Jay Kasberger; Wm Brown; S. Petruzella; Evan L. Thacker; Young Jin Kim; Michael A. Nalls; Greg Tranah; Yun Ju Sung; Christine B. Ambrosone; Donna K. Arnett; Elisa V. Bandera; Diane M. Becker; Lewis C. Becker; Sonja I. Berndt; Leslie Bernstein; William J. Blot; Ulrich Broeckel; Sarah G. Buxbaum; Neil E. Caporaso; Graham Casey; Stephen J. Chanock; Sandra L. Deming; W. R. Diver; Charles B. Eaton; Daniel S. Evans

The identification and exploration of genetic loci that influence smoking behaviors have been conducted primarily in populations of the European ancestry. Here we report results of the first genome-wide association study meta-analysis of smoking behavior in African Americans in the Study of Tobacco in Minority Populations Genetics Consortium (n=32 389). We identified one non-coding single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP; rs2036527[A]) on chromosome 15q25.1 associated with smoking quantity (cigarettes per day), which exceeded genome-wide significance (β=0.040, s.e.=0.007, P=1.84 × 10−8). This variant is present in the 5′-distal enhancer region of the CHRNA5 gene and defines the primary index signal reported in studies of the European ancestry. No other SNP reached genome-wide significance for smoking initiation (SI, ever vs never smoking), age of SI, or smoking cessation (SC, former vs current smoking). Informative associations that approached genome-wide significance included three modestly correlated variants, at 15q25.1 within PSMA4, CHRNA5 and CHRNA3 for smoking quantity, which are associated with a second signal previously reported in studies in European ancestry populations, and a signal represented by three SNPs in the SPOCK2 gene on chr10q22.1. The association at 15q25.1 confirms this region as an important susceptibility locus for smoking quantity in men and women of African ancestry. Larger studies will be needed to validate the suggestive loci that did not reach genome-wide significance and further elucidate the contribution of genetic variation to disparities in cigarette consumption, SC and smoking-attributable disease between African Americans and European Americans.


Head and Neck-journal for The Sciences and Specialties of The Head and Neck | 2008

Unequal burden of head and neck cancer in the United States

W. Jarrard Goodwin; Giovana R. Thomas; Dorothy F. Parker; Debbie Joseph; Silvina Levis; Elizabeth J. Franzmann; Charles Anello; Jennifer J. Hu

Black Americans are adversely affected by many types of malignancies.


Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention | 2011

Validation of Genome-Wide Prostate Cancer Associations in Men of African Descent

Bao-Li Chang; Elaine Spangler; Stephen Gallagher; Christopher A. Haiman; Brian E. Henderson; William B. Isaacs; Marnita L Benford; LaCreis R. Kidd; Kathleen A. Cooney; Sara S. Strom; Sue A. Ingles; Mariana C. Stern; Roman Corral; Amit Joshi; Jianfeng Xu; Veda N. Giri; Benjamin A. Rybicki; Christine Neslund-Dudas; Adam S. Kibel; Ian M. Thompson; Robin J. Leach; Elaine A. Ostrander; Janet L. Stanford; John S. Witte; Graham Casey; Ros Eeles; Ann W. Hsing; Stephen J. Chanock; Jennifer J. Hu; Esther M. John

Background: Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified numerous prostate cancer susceptibility alleles, but these loci have been identified primarily in men of European descent. There is limited information about the role of these loci in men of African descent. Methods: We identified 7,788 prostate cancer cases and controls with genotype data for 47 GWAS-identified loci. Results: We identified significant associations for SNP rs10486567 at JAZF1, rs10993994 at MSMB, rs12418451 and rs7931342 at 11q13, and rs5945572 and rs5945619 at NUDT10/11. These associations were in the same direction and of similar magnitude as those reported in men of European descent. Significance was attained at all reported prostate cancer susceptibility regions at chromosome 8q24, including associations reaching genome-wide significance in region 2. Conclusion: We have validated in men of African descent the associations at some, but not all, prostate cancer susceptibility loci originally identified in European descent populations. This may be due to the heterogeneity in genetic etiology or in the pattern of genetic variation across populations. Impact: The genetic etiology of prostate cancer in men of African descent differs from that of men of European descent. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev; 20(1); 23–32. ©2011 AACR.

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Leslie Bernstein

Beckman Research Institute

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Sue A. Ingles

University of Southern California

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