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Featured researches published by John E. Chandler.


Scientific Reports | 2017

The global relationship between chromatin physical topology, fractal structure, and gene expression

Luay M. Almassalha; Ashish K. Tiwari; Peder Thusgaard Ruhoff; Yolanda Stypula-Cyrus; Lusik Cherkezyan; Hiroaki Matsuda; M A Dela Cruz; John E. Chandler; Charles C White; Charles D. Maneval; Hariharan Subramanian; Igal Szleifer; Hemant K. Roy; Vadim Backman

Most of what we know about gene transcription comes from the view of cells as molecular machines: focusing on the role of molecular modifications to the proteins carrying out transcriptional reactions at a loci-by-loci basis. This view ignores a critical reality: biological reactions do not happen in an empty space, but in a highly complex, interrelated, and dense nanoenvironment that profoundly influences chemical interactions. We explored the relationship between the physical nanoenvironment of chromatin and gene transcription in vitro. We analytically show that changes in the fractal dimension, D, of chromatin correspond to simultaneous increases in chromatin accessibility and compaction heterogeneity. Using these predictions, we demonstrate experimentally that nanoscopic changes to chromatin D within thirty minutes correlate with concomitant enhancement and suppression of transcription. Further, we show that the increased heterogeneity of physical structure of chromatin due to increase in fractal dimension correlates with increased heterogeneity of gene networks. These findings indicate that the higher order folding of chromatin topology may act as a molecular-pathway independent code regulating global patterns of gene expression. Since physical organization of chromatin is frequently altered in oncogenesis, this work provides evidence pairing molecular function to physical structure for processes frequently altered during tumorigenesis.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Nanocytological field carcinogenesis detection to mitigate overdiagnosis of prostate cancer: a proof of concept study.

Hemant K. Roy; Charles B. Brendler; Hariharan Subramanian; Di Zhang; Charles D. Maneval; John E. Chandler; Leah Bowen; Karen L. Kaul; Brian T. Helfand; Chi Hsiung Wang; Margo Quinn; Jacqueline Petkewicz; Michael Paterakos; Vadim Backman

Purpose To determine whether nano-architectural interrogation of prostate field carcinogenesis can be used to predict prognosis in patients with early stage (Gleason 6) prostate cancer (PCa), which is mostly indolent but frequently unnecessarily treated. Materials and Methods We previously developed partial wave spectroscopic microscopy (PWS) that enables quantification of the nanoscale intracellular architecture (20–200nm length scale) with remarkable accuracy. We adapted this technique to assess prostate needle core biopsies in a case control study from men with Gleason 6 disease who either progressed (n = 20) or remained indolent (n = 18) over a ~3 year follow up. We measured the parameter disorder strength (Ld) characterizing the spatial heterogeneity of the nanoscale cellular structure and nuclear morphology from the microscopically normal mucosa ~150 histologically normal epithelial cells. Results There was a profound increase in nano-architectural disorder between progressors and non-progressors. Indeed, the Ld from future progressors was dramatically increased when compared to future non-progressors (1±0.065 versus 1.30±0.0614, respectively p = 0.002). The area under the receiver operator characteristic curve (AUC) was 0.79, yielding a sensitivity of 88% and specificity of 72% for discriminating between progressors and non-progressors. This was not confounded by demographic factors (age, smoking status, race, obesity), thus supporting the robustness of the approach. Conclusions We demonstrate, for the first time, that nano-architectural alterations occur in prostate cancer field carcinogenesis and can be exploited to predict prognosis of early stage PCa. This approach has promise in addressing the clinically vexing dilemma of management of Gleason 6 PCa and may provide a paradigm for dealing with the larger issue of cancer overdiagnosis.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Superresolution intrinsic fluorescence imaging of chromatin utilizing native, unmodified nucleic acids for contrast

Biqin Dong; Luay M. Almassalha; Yolanda Stypula-Cyrus; Ben E. Urban; John E. Chandler; The-Quyen Nguyen; Cheng Sun; Hao F. Zhang; Vadim Backman

Significance Fluorescence photoswitching of native, unmodified deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) using visible light facilitates the label-free nanoscale imaging of chromatin structures based on the principle of single-molecule photon localization microscopy (PLM). With a demonstrated sub–20-nm resolution, DNA-PLM provides an ideal technique to visualize the spatial organization of single or groups of nucleosomes and quantitatively estimate the nucleosome occupancy level of DNA in unstained chromosomes and nuclei. This study paves a way for revealing nanoscopic features of chromatin without the need for exogenous labels and could substantially expand our understanding of the structure–function relationship of chromatin. Visualizing the nanoscale intracellular structures formed by nucleic acids, such as chromatin, in nonperturbed, structurally and dynamically complex cellular systems, will help expand our understanding of biological processes and open the next frontier for biological discovery. Traditional superresolution techniques to visualize subdiffractional macromolecular structures formed by nucleic acids require exogenous labels that may perturb cell function and change the very molecular processes they intend to study, especially at the extremely high label densities required for superresolution. However, despite tremendous interest and demonstrated need, label-free optical superresolution imaging of nucleotide topology under native nonperturbing conditions has never been possible. Here we investigate a photoswitching process of native nucleotides and present the demonstration of subdiffraction-resolution imaging of cellular structures using intrinsic contrast from unmodified DNA based on the principle of single-molecule photon localization microscopy (PLM). Using DNA-PLM, we achieved nanoscopic imaging of interphase nuclei and mitotic chromosomes, allowing a quantitative analysis of the DNA occupancy level and a subdiffractional analysis of the chromosomal organization. This study may pave a new way for label-free superresolution nanoscopic imaging of macromolecular structures with nucleotide topologies and could contribute to the development of new DNA-based contrast agents for superresolution imaging.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Label-free imaging of the native, living cellular nanoarchitecture using partial-wave spectroscopic microscopy

Luay M. Almassalha; Greta M. Bauer; John E. Chandler; Scott Gladstein; Lusik Cherkezyan; Yolanda Stypula-Cyrus; Samuel E. Weinberg; Di Zhang; Peder Thusgaard Ruhoff; Hemant K. Roy; Hariharan Subramanian; Navdeep S. Chandel; Igal Szleifer; Vadim Backman

Significance Chromatin is one of the most critical structures within the cell because it houses most genetic information. Its structure is well understood at the nucleosomal (<20-nm) and chromosomal (>200-nm) levels; however, due to the lack of quantitative imaging modalities to study this organization, little is known about the higher-order structure between these length scales in live cells. We present a label-free technique, live-cell partial-wave spectroscopic (PWS) microscopy, with sensitivity to structures between 20 and 200 nm that can quantify the nanoarchitecture in live cells. With this technique, we can detect DNA fragmentation and expand on the link between metabolic function and higher-order chromatin structure. Live-cell PWS allows high-throughput study of the relationship between nanoscale organization and molecular function. The organization of chromatin is a regulator of molecular processes including transcription, replication, and DNA repair. The structures within chromatin that regulate these processes span from the nucleosomal (10-nm) to the chromosomal (>200-nm) levels, with little known about the dynamics of chromatin structure between these scales due to a lack of quantitative imaging technique in live cells. Previous work using partial-wave spectroscopic (PWS) microscopy, a quantitative imaging technique with sensitivity to macromolecular organization between 20 and 200 nm, has shown that transformation of chromatin at these length scales is a fundamental event during carcinogenesis. As the dynamics of chromatin likely play a critical regulatory role in cellular function, it is critical to develop live-cell imaging techniques that can probe the real-time temporal behavior of the chromatin nanoarchitecture. Therefore, we developed a live-cell PWS technique that allows high-throughput, label-free study of the causal relationship between nanoscale organization and molecular function in real time. In this work, we use live-cell PWS to study the change in chromatin structure due to DNA damage and expand on the link between metabolic function and the structure of higher-order chromatin. In particular, we studied the temporal changes to chromatin during UV light exposure, show that live-cell DNA-binding dyes induce damage to chromatin within seconds, and demonstrate a direct link between higher-order chromatin structure and mitochondrial membrane potential. Because biological function is tightly paired with structure, live-cell PWS is a powerful tool to study the nanoscale structure–function relationship in live cells.


Journal of Biomedical Optics | 2013

High-speed spectral nanocytology for early cancer screening

John E. Chandler; Hariharan Subramanian; Charles D. Maneval; Craig White; Richard M. Levenson; Vadim Backman

Abstract. High-throughput partial wave spectroscopy (HTPWS) is introduced as a high-speed spectral nanocytology technique that utilizes the field effect of carcinogenesis to perform minimally invasive cancer screening on at-risk populations. HTPWS uses fully automated hardware and an acousto-optic tunable filter to scan slides at low magnification, to select cells, and to rapidly acquire spectra at each spatial pixel in a cell between 450 and 700 nm, completing measurements of 30 cells in 40 min. Statistical quantitative analysis on the size and density of intracellular nanostructures extracted from the spectra at each pixel in a cell yields the diagnostic biomarker, disorder strength (Ld). Linear correlation between Ld and the length scale of nanostructures was measured in phantoms with R2=0.93. Diagnostic sensitivity was demonstrated by measuring significantly higher Ld from a human colon cancer cell line (HT29 control vector) than a less aggressive variant (epidermal growth factor receptor knockdown). Clinical diagnostic performance for lung cancer screening was tested on 23 patients, yielding a significant difference in Ld between smokers and cancer patients, p=0.02 and effect size=1.00. The high-throughput performance, nanoscale sensitivity, and diagnostic sensitivity make HTPWS a potentially clinically relevant modality for risk stratification of the large populations at risk of developing cancer.


Cancer Research | 2016

The Greater Genomic Landscape: The Heterogeneous Evolution of Cancer

Luay M. Almassalha; Greta M. Bauer; John E. Chandler; Scott Gladstein; Igal Szleifer; Hemant K. Roy; Vadim Backman

Results have historically shown a broad plasticity in the origin of tumors and their functions, with significant heterogeneity observed in both morphologies and functional capabilities. Largely unknown, however, are the mechanisms by which these variations occur and how these events influence tumor formation and behavior. Contemporary views on the origin of tumors focus mainly on the role of particular sets of driver transformations, mutational or epigenetic, with the occurrence of the observed heterogeneity as an accidental byproduct of oncogenesis. As such, we present a hypothesis that tumors form due to heterogeneous adaptive selection in response to environmental stress through intrinsic genomic sampling mechanisms. Specifically, we propose that eukaryotic cells intrinsically explore their available genomic information, the greater genomic landscape (GGL), in response to stress under normal conditions, long before the formation of a cancerous lesion. Finally, considering the influence of chromatin heterogeneity on the GGL, we propose a new class of compounds, chromatin-protective therapies (CPT), which target the physical variations in chromatin topology. In this approach, CPTs reduce the overall information space available to limit the formation of tumors or the development of drug-resistant phenotypes. Cancer Res; 76(19); 5605-9. ©2016 AACR.


Nature Biomedical Engineering | 2017

Macrogenomic engineering via modulation of the scaling of chromatin packing density

Luay M. Almassalha; Greta M. Bauer; Wenli Wu; Lusik Cherkezyan; Di Zhang; Alexis M. Kendra; Scott Gladstein; John E. Chandler; David Vanderway; Brandon Luke L. Seagle; Andrey Ugolkov; Daniel D. Billadeau; Thomas V. O'Halloran; Andrew P. Mazar; Hemant K. Roy; Igal Szleifer; Shohreh Shahabi; Vadim Backman

Many human diseases result from the dysregulation of the complex interactions between tens to thousands of genes. However, approaches for the transcriptional modulation of many genes simultaneously in a predictive manner are lacking. Here, through the combination of simulations, systems modelling and in vitro experiments, we provide a physical regulatory framework based on chromatin packing-density heterogeneity for modulating the genomic information space. Because transcriptional interactions are essentially chemical reactions, they depend largely on the local physical nanoenvironment. We show that the regulation of the chromatin nanoenvironment allows for the predictable modulation of global patterns in gene expression. In particular, we show that the rational modulation of chromatin density fluctuations can lead to a decrease in global transcriptional activity and intercellular transcriptional heterogeneity in cancer cells during chemotherapeutic responses to achieve near-complete cancer cell killing in vitro. Our findings represent a ‘macrogenomic engineering’ approach to modulating the physical structure of chromatin for whole-scale transcriptional modulation.A model accounting for the properties of the local chromatin environment predicts the modulation of patterns in gene expression and helps screen for chemotherapeutic adjuvants that lead to an enhanced therapeutic response in cancer cells.


Functional Ecology | 2017

Consensus thermotolerance ranking for 110 Symbiodinium phylotypes: an exemplar utilization of a novel iterative partial‐rank aggregation tool with broad application potential

Timothy D. Swain; John E. Chandler; Vadim Backman; Luisa A. Marcelino

Summary 1.Corals may reduce the effects of heat-induced bleaching through associations with thermotolerant algal symbionts (Symbiodinium). Although hundreds of Symbiodinium genetic types (phylotypes) are known, thermotolerance has been systematically evaluated for small subsamples within individual reports, making consensus a challenging task. 2.Data on 110 phylotypes were aggregated from 35 reports, each assessing 2–24 phylotypes (median 4). One-third of reports include ties (phylotypes with indistinguishable thermotolerance). Between reports, most phylotypes are unique (74% assessed once), most pairwise comparisons are unknown (relative thermotolerance for 15% of the possible 5,995 phylotype pairs are evaluated), and many rankings are inconsistent (52% of 58 phylotype pairs assessed in more than one report are discordantly ranked). 3.Ranking of Symbiodinium phylotypes resulted in 64 thermotolerance cohorts (47 are single phylotypes, 17 contain 2–10 phylotypes with a median of 3 phylotypes) and indicate diverse thermotolerance capabilities within clades and among closely-related phylotypes. 4.The iterative partial-rank aggregation method (with error estimation) introduced here is broadly applicable to any quantitative consensus rank building problem where qualitative input ranks are not fully comprehensive nor resolved. 5.Reconstructions based on simulated data (mirroring an empirical dataset) indicate robust predictive capabilities for resolving rankings (1.28 approximation of the true solution) and inferring unknown pairwise comparisons (83% correctly predicted pair rankings from only 16% known a priori). 6.Application to Symbiodinium phylotypes represents an additional tool to generate testable hypotheses on the role of symbiont thermotolerance in an ecosystem that is collapsing in the face of climate change and provides the first quantitative index of Symbiodinium thermotolerance and its associated uncertainty. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.


Biomedical Optics Express | 2016

Nanoscale refractive index fluctuations detected via sparse spectral microscopy

John E. Chandler; Lusik Cherkezyan; Hariharan Subramanian; Vadim Backman

Partial Wave Spectroscopic (PWS) Microscopy has proven effective at detecting nanoscale hallmarks of carcinogenesis in histologically normal-appearing cells. The current method of data analysis requires acquisition of a three-dimensional data cube, consisting of multiple images taken at different illumination wavelengths, limiting the technique to data acquisition on ~30 individual cells per slide. To enable high throughput data acquisition and whole-slide imaging, new analysis procedures were developed that require fewer wavelengths in the same 500-700nm range for spectral analysis. The nanoscale sensitivity of the new analysis techniques was validated (i) theoretically, using finite-difference time-domain solutions of Maxwells equations, as well as (ii) experimentally, by measuring nanostructural alterations associated with carcinogenesis in biological cells.


Journal of Biophotonics | 2017

Colocalization of cellular nanostructure using confocal fluorescence and partial wave spectroscopy

John E. Chandler; Yolanda Stypula-Cyrus; Luay M. Almassalha; Greta M. Bauer; Leah Bowen; Hariharan Subramanian; Igal Szleifer; Vadim Backman

A new multimodal confocal microscope has been developed, which includes a parallel Partial Wave Spectroscopic (PWS) microscopy path. This combination of modalities allows molecular-specific sensing of nanoscale intracellular structure using fluorescent labels. Combining molecular specificity and sensitivity to nanoscale structure allows localization of nanostructural intracellular changes, which is critical for understanding the mechanisms of diseases such as cancer. To demonstrate the capabilities of this multimodal instrument, we imaged HeLa cells treated with valinomycin, a potassium ionophore that uncouples oxidative phosphorylation. Colocalization of fluorescence images of the nuclei (Hoechst 33342) and mitochondria (anti-mitochondria conjugated to Alexa Fluor 488) with PWS measurements allowed us to detect a significant decrease in nuclear nanoscale heterogeneity (Σ), while no significant change in Σ was observed at mitochondrial sites. In addition, application of the new multimodal imaging approach was demonstrated on human buccal samples prepared using a cancer screening protocol. These images demonstrate that nanoscale intracellular structure can be studied in healthy and diseased cells at molecular-specific sites.

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Di Zhang

Northwestern University

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