Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Jiqiu Cheng is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Jiqiu Cheng.


Human Reproduction | 2013

Microarray analysis reveals abnormal chromosomal complements in over 70% of 14 normally developing human embryos

Afroditi Mertzanidou; L Wilton; Jiqiu Cheng; Claudia Spits; Evelyne Vanneste; Yves Moreau; Joris Vermeesch; Karen Sermon

STUDY QUESTION What are the aneuploidy rates and incidence of mosaicism in good-quality human preimplantation embryos. SUMMARY ANSWER High-level mosaicism and structural aberrations are not restricted to arrested or poorly developing embryos but are also common in good-quality IVF embryos. WHAT IS KNOWN ALREADY Humans, compared with other mammals, have a poor fertility rate, and even IVF treatments have a relatively low success rate. It is known that human gametes and early preimplantation embryos carry chromosomal abnormalities that are thought to lower their developmental potential. STUDY DESIGN, SIZE AND DURATION The embryos studied came from nine young (age <35 years old) IVF patients and were part of a cohort of embryos that all resulted in healthy births. These 14 embryos inseminated by ICSI and cryopreserved on Day 2 of development were thawed, cultured overnight and allowed to succumb by being left at room temperature for 24 h. Following removal of the zona pellucida, blastomeres were disaggregated and collected. PARTICIPANTS/MATERIALS, SETTING AND METHODS There were 91 single blastomeres collected and amplified by multiple displacement amplification. Array-comparative genomic hybridization was performed on the amplified DNA. Array-data were normalized and aneuploidy was detected by the circular binary segmentation method. MAIN RESULTS AND THE ROLE OF CHANCE The good-quality embryos exhibited high rates of aneuploidy, 10 of 14 (71.4%) of the embryos being mosaic. While none of the embryos had the same aneuploidy pattern in all cells, 4 of 14 (28.6%) were uniformly diploid. Of the 70 analysed blastomeres, 55.7% were diploid and 44.3% had chromosomal abnormalities, while 29% of the abnormal cells carried structural aberrations. WIDER IMPLICATIONS OF THE FINDINGS Finding such a high rate of aneuploidy and mosaicism in excellent quality embryos from cycles with a high implantation rate warrants further research on the origin and significance of chromosomal abnormalities in human preimplantation embryos. STUDY FUNDING/COMPETING INTEREST(S) This research was supported by the Instituut voor de aanmoediging van innovatie door Wetenschap en Technologie in Vlaanderen (IWT-Vlaanderen). A.M. is a PhD student at the IWT-Vlaanderen. C.S. is a postdoctoral fellow at the FWO Vlaanderen. There are no competing interests.


Nature | 2014

Constitutional and somatic rearrangement of chromosome 21 in acute lymphoblastic leukaemia

Yilong Li; Claire Schwab; Sarra L. Ryan; Elli Papaemmanuil; Hazel M. Robinson; Patricia A. Jacobs; Anthony V. Moorman; Sara Dyer; Julian Borrow; Mike Griffiths; Nyla A. Heerema; Andrew J. Carroll; Polly Talley; Nick Bown; Nick Telford; Fiona M. Ross; Lorraine Gaunt; Richard J.Q. McNally; Bryan D. Young; Paul Sinclair; Vikki Rand; Manuel R. Teixeira; Olivia Joseph; Ben Robinson; Mark Maddison; Nicole Dastugue; Peter Vandenberghe; Claudia Haferlach; Philip Stephens; Jiqiu Cheng

Changes in gene dosage are a major driver of cancer, known to be caused by a finite, but increasingly well annotated, repertoire of mutational mechanisms. This can potentially generate correlated copy-number alterations across hundreds of linked genes, as exemplified by the 2% of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) with recurrent amplification of megabase regions of chromosome 21 (iAMP21). We used genomic, cytogenetic and transcriptional analysis, coupled with novel bioinformatic approaches, to reconstruct the evolution of iAMP21 ALL. Here we show that individuals born with the rare constitutional Robertsonian translocation between chromosomes 15 and 21, rob(15;21)(q10;q10)c, have approximately 2,700-fold increased risk of developing iAMP21 ALL compared to the general population. In such cases, amplification is initiated by a chromothripsis event involving both sister chromatids of the Robertsonian chromosome, a novel mechanism for cancer predisposition. In sporadic iAMP21, breakage-fusion-bridge cycles are typically the initiating event, often followed by chromothripsis. In both sporadic and rob(15;21)c-associated iAMP21, the final stages frequently involve duplications of the entire abnormal chromosome. The end-product is a derivative of chromosome 21 or the rob(15;21)c chromosome with gene dosage optimized for leukaemic potential, showing constrained copy-number levels over multiple linked genes. Thus, dicentric chromosomes may be an important precipitant of chromothripsis, as we show rob(15;21)c to be constitutionally dicentric and breakage-fusion-bridge cycles generate dicentric chromosomes somatically. Furthermore, our data illustrate that several cancer-specific mutational processes, applied sequentially, can coordinate to fashion copy-number profiles over large genomic scales, incrementally refining the fitness benefits of aggregated gene dosage changes.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2013

Genome-wide copy number profiling of single cells in S-phase reveals DNA-replication domains

Niels Van der Aa; Jiqiu Cheng; Ligia Mateiu; Masoud Zamani Esteki; Parveen Kumar; Eftychia Dimitriadou; Evelyne Vanneste; Yves Moreau; Joris Vermeesch; Thierry Voet

Single-cell genomics is revolutionizing basic genome research and clinical genetic diagnosis. However, none of the current research or clinical methods for single-cell analysis distinguishes between the analysis of a cell in G1-, S- or G2/M-phase of the cell cycle. Here, we demonstrate by means of array comparative genomic hybridization that charting the DNA copy number landscape of a cell in S-phase requires conceptually different approaches to that of a cell in G1- or G2/M-phase. Remarkably, despite single-cell whole-genome amplification artifacts, the log2 intensity ratios of single S-phase cells oscillate according to early and late replication domains, which in turn leads to the detection of significantly more DNA imbalances when compared with a cell in G1- or G2/M-phase. Although these DNA imbalances may, on the one hand, be falsely interpreted as genuine structural aberrations in the S-phase cell’s copy number profile and hence lead to misdiagnosis, on the other hand, the ability to detect replication domains genome wide in one cell has important applications in DNA-replication research. Genome-wide cell-type-specific early and late replicating domains have been identified by analyses of DNA from populations of cells, but cell-to-cell differences in DNA replication may be important in genome stability, disease aetiology and various other cellular processes.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2015

Concurrent Whole-Genome Haplotyping and Copy-Number Profiling of Single Cells

Masoud Zamani Esteki; Eftychia Dimitriadou; Ligia Mateiu; Cindy Melotte; Niels Van der Aa; Parveen Kumar; Rakhi Das; Koen Theunis; Jiqiu Cheng; Eric Legius; Yves Moreau; Sophie Debrock; Thomas D’Hooghe; Pieter Verdyck; Martine De Rycke; Karen Sermon; Joris Vermeesch; Thierry Voet

Methods for haplotyping and DNA copy-number typing of single cells are paramount for studying genomic heterogeneity and enabling genetic diagnosis. Before analyzing the DNA of a single cell by microarray or next-generation sequencing, a whole-genome amplification (WGA) process is required, but it substantially distorts the frequency and composition of the cells alleles. As a consequence, haplotyping methods suffer from error-prone discrete SNP genotypes (AA, AB, BB) and DNA copy-number profiling remains difficult because true DNA copy-number aberrations have to be discriminated from WGA artifacts. Here, we developed a single-cell genome analysis method that reconstructs genome-wide haplotype architectures as well as the copy-number and segregational origin of those haplotypes by employing phased parental genotypes and deciphering WGA-distorted SNP B-allele fractions via a process we coin haplarithmisis. We demonstrate that the method can be applied as a generic method for preimplantation genetic diagnosis on single cells biopsied from human embryos, enabling diagnosis of disease alleles genome wide as well as numerical and structural chromosomal anomalies. Moreover, meiotic segregation errors can be distinguished from mitotic ones.


Genome Biology | 2013

The genetic heterogeneity and mutational burden of engineered melanomas in zebrafish models

Jennifer Yen; Richard M. White; David C. Wedge; Peter Van Loo; Jeroen de Ridder; Amy Capper; Jennifer Richardson; David Jones; Keiran Raine; Ian R. Watson; Chang-Jiun Wu; Jiqiu Cheng; Inigo Martincorena; Serena Nik-Zainal; Laura Mudie; Yves Moreau; John Marshall; Manasa Ramakrishna; Patrick Tarpey; Adam Shlien; Ian Whitmore; Steve Gamble; Calli Latimer; Erin M. Langdon; Charles K. Kaufman; Mike Dovey; Alison M. Taylor; Andy Menzies; Stuart McLaren; Sarah O’Meara

BackgroundMelanoma is the most deadly form of skin cancer. Expression of oncogenic BRAF or NRAS, which are frequently mutated in human melanomas, promote the formation of nevi but are not sufficient for tumorigenesis. Even with germline mutated p53, these engineered melanomas present with variable onset and pathology, implicating additional somatic mutations in a multi-hit tumorigenic process.ResultsTo decipher the genetics of these melanomas, we sequence the protein coding exons of 53 primary melanomas generated from several BRAFV600E or NRASQ61K driven transgenic zebrafish lines. We find that engineered zebrafish melanomas show an overall low mutation burden, which has a strong, inverse association with the number of initiating germline drivers. Although tumors reveal distinct mutation spectrums, they show mostly C > T transitions without UV light exposure, and enrichment of mutations in melanogenesis, p53 and MAPK signaling. Importantly, a recurrent amplification occurring with pre-configured drivers BRAFV600E and p53-/- suggests a novel path of BRAF cooperativity through the protein kinase A pathway.ConclusionThis is the first analysis of a melanoma mutational landscape in the absence of UV light, where tumors manifest with remarkably low mutation burden and high heterogeneity. Genotype specific amplification of protein kinase A in cooperation with BRAF and p53 mutation suggests the involvement of melanogenesis in these tumors. This work is important for defining the spectrum of events in BRAF or NRAS driven melanoma in the absence of UV light, and for informed exploitation of models such as transgenic zebrafish to better understand mechanisms leading to human melanoma formation.


Genome Biology | 2011

Single-cell copy number variation detection

Jiqiu Cheng; Evelyne Vanneste; Peter Konings; Thierry Voet; Joris Vermeesch; Yves Moreau

Detection of chromosomal aberrations from a single cell by array comparative genomic hybridization (single-cell array CGH), instead of from a population of cells, is an emerging technique. However, such detection is challenging because of the genome artifacts and the DNA amplification process inherent to the single cell approach. Current normalization algorithms result in inaccurate aberration detection for single-cell data. We propose a normalization method based on channel, genome composition and recurrent genome artifact corrections. We demonstrate that the proposed channel clone normalization significantly improves the copy number variation detection in both simulated and real single-cell array CGH data.


Nature Communications | 2017

Pan-cancer analysis of homozygous deletions in primary tumours uncovers rare tumour suppressors

Jiqiu Cheng; Jonas Demeulemeester; David C. Wedge; Hans Kristian Moen Vollan; Jason J. Pitt; Hege G. Russnes; Bina P. Pandey; Gro Nilsen; Silje Nord; Graham R. Bignell; Kevin P. White; Anne Lise Børresen-Dale; Peter J. Campbell; Vessela N. Kristensen; Michael R. Stratton; Ole Christian Lingjærde; Yves Moreau; Peter Van Loo


Archive | 2015

cgpBattenberg: v1.3.1

David C. Wedge; Stefan Dentro; Gro Nilsen; Keiran Raine; Peter Van Loo; Kevin J. Dawson; Jiqiu Cheng; David Jones


Abstract book | 2015

Concurrent whole-genome haplotyping and copy number profiling of single cells

Masoud Zamani Esteki; Eftychia Dimitriadou; Ligia Mateiu; Cindy Melotte; Niels Van der Aa; Parveen Kumar; Rakhi Das; Koen Theunis; Jiqiu Cheng; Eric Legius; Yves Moreau; Sophie Debrock; Thomas D'Hooghe; Verdyck; M. De Rycke; Karen Sermon; Joris Vermeesch; Thierry Voet


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2014

Whole-genome single-cell haplotyping, a generic method for preimplantation genetic diagnosis

Masoud Zamani Esteki; Eftychia Dimitriadou; Ligia Mateiu; Cindy Melotte; Niels Van der Aa; Parveen Kumar; Rakhi Das; Jiqiu Cheng; Eric Legius E; Yves Moreau; Sophie Debrock; Thomas D'Hooghe; Pieter Verdyck; M. De Rycke; Karen Sermon; Joris Vermeesch; Thierry Voet

Collaboration


Dive into the Jiqiu Cheng's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Joris Vermeesch

Catholic University of Leuven

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yves Moreau

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Eftychia Dimitriadou

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Niels Van der Aa

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Masoud Zamani Esteki

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Parveen Kumar

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Evelyne Vanneste

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Karen Sermon

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ligia Mateiu

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge