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Dive into the research topics where Kyle M. Walsh is active.

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Featured researches published by Kyle M. Walsh.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2015

Glioma Groups Based on 1p/19q, IDH, and TERT Promoter Mutations in Tumors

Jeanette E. Eckel-Passow; Daniel H. Lachance; Annette M. Molinaro; Kyle M. Walsh; Paul A. Decker; Hugues Sicotte; Melike Pekmezci; Terri Rice; Matt L. Kosel; Ivan Smirnov; Gobinda Sarkar; Alissa Caron; Thomas M. Kollmeyer; Corinne Praska; Anisha R. Chada; Chandralekha Halder; Helen M. Hansen; Lucie McCoy; Paige M. Bracci; Roxanne Marshall; Shichun Zheng; Gerald F. Reis; Alexander R. Pico; Brian Patrick O’Neill; Jan C. Buckner; Caterina Giannini; Jason T. Huse; Arie Perry; Tarik Tihan; Mitchell S. Berger

BACKGROUND The prediction of clinical behavior, response to therapy, and outcome of infiltrative glioma is challenging. On the basis of previous studies of tumor biology, we defined five glioma molecular groups with the use of three alterations: mutations in the TERT promoter, mutations in IDH, and codeletion of chromosome arms 1p and 19q (1p/19q codeletion). We tested the hypothesis that within groups based on these features, tumors would have similar clinical variables, acquired somatic alterations, and germline variants. METHODS We scored tumors as negative or positive for each of these markers in 1087 gliomas and compared acquired alterations and patient characteristics among the five primary molecular groups. Using 11,590 controls, we assessed associations between these groups and known glioma germline variants. RESULTS Among 615 grade II or III gliomas, 29% had all three alterations (i.e., were triple-positive), 5% had TERT and IDH mutations, 45% had only IDH mutations, 7% were triple-negative, and 10% had only TERT mutations; 5% had other combinations. Among 472 grade IV gliomas, less than 1% were triple-positive, 2% had TERT and IDH mutations, 7% had only IDH mutations, 17% were triple-negative, and 74% had only TERT mutations. The mean age at diagnosis was lowest (37 years) among patients who had gliomas with only IDH mutations and was highest (59 years) among patients who had gliomas with only TERT mutations. The molecular groups were independently associated with overall survival among patients with grade II or III gliomas but not among patients with grade IV gliomas. The molecular groups were associated with specific germline variants. CONCLUSIONS Gliomas were classified into five principal groups on the basis of three tumor markers. The groups had different ages at onset, overall survival, and associations with germline variants, which implies that they are characterized by distinct mechanisms of pathogenesis. (Funded by the National Institutes of Health and others.).


PLOS ONE | 2012

Genetic Signatures of Exceptional Longevity in Humans

Paola Sebastiani; Nadia Solovieff; Andrew T. DeWan; Kyle M. Walsh; Annibale Alessandro Puca; Stephen W. Hartley; Efthymia Melista; Stacy L. Andersen; Daniel A. Dworkis; Jemma B. Wilk; Richard H. Myers; Martin H. Steinberg; Monty Montano; Clinton T. Baldwin; Josephine Hoh; Thomas T. Perls

Like most complex phenotypes, exceptional longevity is thought to reflect a combined influence of environmental (e.g., lifestyle choices, where we live) and genetic factors. To explore the genetic contribution, we undertook a genome-wide association study of exceptional longevity in 801 centenarians (median age at death 104 years) and 914 genetically matched healthy controls. Using these data, we built a genetic model that includes 281 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and discriminated between cases and controls of the discovery set with 89% sensitivity and specificity, and with 58% specificity and 60% sensitivity in an independent cohort of 341 controls and 253 genetically matched nonagenarians and centenarians (median age 100 years). Consistent with the hypothesis that the genetic contribution is largest with the oldest ages, the sensitivity of the model increased in the independent cohort with older and older ages (71% to classify subjects with an age at death>102 and 85% to classify subjects with an age at death>105). For further validation, we applied the model to an additional, unmatched 60 centenarians (median age 107 years) resulting in 78% sensitivity, and 2863 unmatched controls with 61% specificity. The 281 SNPs include the SNP rs2075650 in TOMM40/APOE that reached irrefutable genome wide significance (posterior probability of association = 1) and replicated in the independent cohort. Removal of this SNP from the model reduced the accuracy by only 1%. Further in-silico analysis suggests that 90% of centenarians can be grouped into clusters characterized by different “genetic signatures” of varying predictive values for exceptional longevity. The correlation between 3 signatures and 3 different life spans was replicated in the combined replication sets. The different signatures may help dissect this complex phenotype into sub-phenotypes of exceptional longevity.


Science | 2015

The transcription factor GABP selectively binds and activates the mutant TERT promoter in cancer

Robert J.A. Bell; H. Tomas Rube; Alex Kreig; Andrew Mancini; Shaun D. Fouse; Raman P. Nagarajan; Serah Choi; Chibo Hong; Daniel He; Melike Pekmezci; John K. Wiencke; Margaret Wrensch; Susan M. Chang; Kyle M. Walsh; Sua Myong; Jun S. Song; Joseph F. Costello

A mutant promoters partner in crime Telomerase is an enzyme that maintains the ends of chromosomes. TERT, the gene coding for the enzymes catalytic subunit, is not expressed in healthy somatic cells, but its expression is reactivated in the majority of human cancers. The resultant high levels of telomerase help cancer cells survive and multiply. Recurrent mutations in the promoter region of TERT are associated with high telomerase levels in multiple cancer types. Bell et al. show that a specific transcription factor called GABP is selectively recruited to the mutant form of the TERT promoter, which activates TERT gene expression Science, this issue p. 1036 Cancer-associated mutations in the promoter of the telomerase gene allow increased activation by transcription factor binding. Reactivation of telomerase reverse transcriptase (TERT) expression enables cells to overcome replicative senescence and escape apoptosis, which are fundamental steps in the initiation of human cancer. Multiple cancer types, including up to 83% of glioblastomas (GBMs), harbor highly recurrent TERT promoter mutations of unknown function but specific to two nucleotide positions. We identified the functional consequence of these mutations in GBMs to be recruitment of the multimeric GA-binding protein (GABP) transcription factor specifically to the mutant promoter. Allelic recruitment of GABP is consistently observed across four cancer types, highlighting a shared mechanism underlying TERT reactivation. Tandem flanking native E26 transformation-specific motifs critically cooperate with these mutations to activate TERT, probably by facilitating GABP heterotetramer binding. GABP thus directly links TERT promoter mutations to aberrant expression in multiple cancers.


Nature Genetics | 2012

A low-frequency variant at 8q24.21 is strongly associated with risk of oligodendroglial tumors and astrocytomas with IDH1 or IDH2 mutation

Robert B. Jenkins; Yuanyuan Xiao; Hugues Sicotte; Paul A. Decker; Thomas M. Kollmeyer; Helen M. Hansen; Matthew L. Kosel; Shichun Zheng; Kyle M. Walsh; Terri Rice; Paige M. Bracci; Lucie McCoy; Ivan Smirnov; Joseph S. Patoka; George Hsuang; Joseph L. Wiemels; Tarik Tihan; Alexander R. Pico; Michael D. Prados; Susan M. Chang; Mitchel S. Berger; Alissa Caron; Stephanie R. Fink; Chandralekha Halder; Amanda L. Rynearson; Brooke L. Fridley; Jan C. Buckner; Brian Patrick O'Neill; Caterina Giannini; Daniel H. Lachance

Variants at 8q24.21 have been shown to be associated with glioma development. By means of tag SNP genotyping and imputation, pooled next-generation sequencing using long-range PCR and subsequent validation SNP genotyping, we identified seven low-frequency SNPs at 8q24.21 that were strongly associated with glioma risk (P = 1 × 10−25 to 1 × 10−14). The most strongly associated SNP, rs55705857, remained highly significant after individual adjustment for the other top six SNPs and two previously published SNPs. After stratifying by histological and tumor genetic subtype, the most significant associations of rs55705857 were with oligodendroglial tumors and gliomas with mutant IDH1 or IDH2 (odds ratio (OR) = 5.1, P = 1.1 × 10−31 and OR = 4.8, P = 6.6 × 10−22, respectively). Strong associations were observed for astrocytomas with mutated IDH1 or IDH2 (grades 2–4) (OR = 5.16–6.66, P = 4.7 × 10−12 to 2.2 × 10−8) but not for astrocytomas with wild-type IDH1 and IDH2 (smallest P = 0.26). The conserved sequence block that includes rs55705857 is consistently modeled as a microRNA.


Journal of the National Cancer Institute | 2015

Germline mutations in shelterin complex genes are associated with familial glioma

Matthew N. Bainbridge; Georgina Armstrong; M. Monica Gramatges; Alison A. Bertuch; Shalini N. Jhangiani; Harsha Doddapaneni; Lora Lewis; Joseph Tombrello; Spyros Tsavachidis; Yanhong Liu; Ali Jalali; Sharon E. Plon; Ching C. Lau; Donald W. Parsons; Elizabeth B. Claus; Jill S. Barnholtz-Sloan; Dora Il'yasova; Joellen M. Schildkraut; Francis Ali-Osman; Siegal Sadetzki; Christoffer Johansen; Richard S. Houlston; Robert B. Jenkins; Daniel H. Lachance; Sara H. Olson; Jonine L. Bernstein; Ryan Merrell; Margaret Wrensch; Kyle M. Walsh; Faith G. Davis

Gliomas are the most common brain tumor, with several histological subtypes of various malignancy grade. The genetic contribution to familial glioma is not well understood. Using whole exome sequencing of 90 individuals from 55 families, we identified two families with mutations in POT1 (p.G95C, p.E450X), a member of the telomere shelterin complex, shared by both affected individuals in each family and predicted to impact DNA binding and TPP1 binding, respectively. Validation in a separate cohort of 264 individuals from 246 families identified an additional mutation in POT1 (p.D617Efs), also predicted to disrupt TPP1 binding. All families with POT1 mutations had affected members with oligodendroglioma, a specific subtype of glioma more sensitive to irradiation. These findings are important for understanding the origin of glioma and could have importance for the future diagnostics and treatment of glioma.


Neurosurgical Focus | 2015

Survival and low-grade glioma: the emergence of genetic information.

Elizabeth B. Claus; Kyle M. Walsh; John K. Wiencke; Annette M. Molinaro; Joseph L. Wiemels; Joellen M. Schildkraut; Melissa L. Bondy; Mitchel S. Berger; Robert B. Jenkins; Margaret Wrensch

Significant gaps exist in our understanding of the causes and clinical management of glioma. One of the biggest gaps is how best to manage low-grade (World Health Organization [WHO] Grade II) glioma. Low-grade glioma (LGG) is a uniformly fatal disease of young adults (mean age 41 years), with survival averaging approximately 7 years. Although LGG patients have better survival than patients with high-grade (WHO Grade III or IV) glioma, all LGGs eventually progress to high-grade glioma and death. Data from the Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) program of the National Cancer Institute suggest that for the majority of LGG patients, overall survival has not significantly improved over the past 3 decades, highlighting the need for intensified study of this tumor. Recently published research suggests that historically used clinical variables are not sufficient (and are likely inferior) prognostic and predictive indicators relative to information provided by recently discovered tumor markers (e.g., 1p/19q deletion and IDH1 or IDH2 mutation status), tumor expression profiles (e.g., the proneural profile) and/or constitutive genotype (e.g., rs55705857 on 8q24.21). Discovery of such tumor and constitutive variation may identify variables needed to improve randomization in clinical trials as well as identify patients more sensitive to current treatments and targets for improved treatment in the future. This article reports on survival trends for patients diagnosed with LGG within the United States from 1973 through 2011 and reviews the emerging role of tumor and constitutive genetics in refining risk stratification, defining targeted therapy, and improving survival for this group of relatively young patients.


BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth | 2012

Genome-wide association study identifies a maternal copy-number deletion in PSG11 enriched among preeclampsia patients

Linlu Zhao; Elizabeth W. Triche; Kyle M. Walsh; Michael B. Bracken; Audrey F. Saftlas; Josephine Hoh; Andrew T. DeWan

BackgroundSpecific genetic contributions for preeclampsia (PE) are currently unknown. This genome-wide association study (GWAS) aims to identify maternal single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and copy-number variants (CNVs) involved in the etiology of PE.MethodsA genome-wide scan was performed on 177 PE cases (diagnosed according to National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute guidelines) and 116 normotensive controls. White female study subjects from Iowa were genotyped on Affymetrix SNP 6.0 microarrays. CNV calls made using a combination of four detection algorithms (Birdseye, Canary, PennCNV, and QuantiSNP) were merged using CNVision and screened with stringent prioritization criteria. Due to limited DNA quantities and the deleterious nature of copy-number deletions, it was decided a priori that only deletions would be selected for assay on the entire case-control dataset using quantitative real-time PCR.ResultsThe top four SNP candidates had an allelic or genotypic p-value between 10-5 and 10-6, however, none surpassed the Bonferroni-corrected significance threshold. Three recurrent rare deletions meeting prioritization criteria detected in multiple cases were selected for targeted genotyping. A locus of particular interest was found showing an enrichment of case deletions in 19q13.31 (5/169 cases and 1/114 controls), which encompasses the PSG11 gene contiguous to a highly plastic genomic region. All algorithm calls for these regions were assay confirmed.ConclusionsCNVs may confer risk for PE and represent interesting regions that warrant further investigation. Top SNP candidates identified from the GWAS, although not genome-wide significant, may be useful to inform future studies in PE genetics.


Leukemia | 2013

Associations between genome-wide Native American ancestry, known risk alleles and B-cell ALL risk in Hispanic children

Kyle M. Walsh; Anand P. Chokkalingam; L-I Hsu; Catherine Metayer; A J de Smith; Daniel I. Jacobs; Gary V. Dahl; Mignon L. Loh; Ivan V. Smirnov; Karen Bartley; Xuejun Ma; John K. Wiencke; Lisa F. Barcellos; Joseph L. Wiemels; Patricia A. Buffler

Associations between genome-wide Native American ancestry, known risk alleles and B-cell ALL risk in Hispanic children


Genetic Epidemiology | 2013

Analysis of 60 Reported Glioma Risk SNPs Replicates Published GWAS Findings but Fails to Replicate Associations From Published Candidate‐Gene Studies

Kyle M. Walsh; Erik Anderson; Helen M. Hansen; Paul A. Decker; Matt L. Kosel; Thomas M. Kollmeyer; Terri Rice; Shichun Zheng; Yuanyuan Xiao; Jeffrey S. Chang; Lucie McCoy; Paige M. Bracci; Joseph L. Wiemels; Alexander R. Pico; Ivan Smirnov; Daniel H. Lachance; Hugues Sicotte; Jeanette E. Eckel-Passow; John K. Wiencke; Robert B. Jenkins; Margaret Wrensch

Genomewide association studies (GWAS) and candidate‐gene studies have implicated single‐nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in at least 45 different genes as putative glioma risk factors. Attempts to validate these associations have yielded variable results and few genetic risk factors have been consistently replicated. We conducted a case‐control study of Caucasian glioma cases and controls from the University of California San Francisco (810 cases, 512 controls) and the Mayo Clinic (852 cases, 789 controls) in an attempt to replicate previously reported genetic risk factors for glioma. Sixty SNPs selected from the literature (eight from GWAS and 52 from candidate‐gene studies) were successfully genotyped on an Illumina custom genotyping panel. Eight SNPs in/near seven different genes (TERT, EGFR, CCDC26, CDKN2A, PHLDB1, RTEL1, TP53) were significantly associated with glioma risk in the combined dataset (P < 0.05), with all associations in the same direction as in previous reports. Several SNP associations showed considerable differences across histologic subtype. All eight successfully replicated associations were first identified by GWAS, although none of the putative risk SNPs from candidate‐gene studies was associated in the full case‐control sample (all P values > 0.05). Although several confirmed associations are located near genes long known to be involved in gliomagenesis (e.g., EGFR, CDKN2A, TP53), these associations were first discovered by the GWAS approach and are in noncoding regions. These results highlight that the deficiencies of the candidate‐gene approach lay in selecting both appropriate genes and relevant SNPs within these genes.


Human Heredity | 2011

Attempted Replication of 50 Reported Asthma Risk Genes Identifies a SNP in RAD50 as Associated with Childhood Atopic Asthma

William Murk; Kyle M. Walsh; Ling-I Hsu; Linlu Zhao; Michael B. Bracken; Andrew T. DeWan

Objectives: Asthma is a childhood disease that is strongly influenced by genetic factors. We sought to replicate an association between single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) of the top-ranked candidate genes and childhood atopic asthma in Perinatal Risk of Asthma in Infants of Asthmatic Mothers (PRAM) study subjects. Methods: Using data from a systematic literature search and an exploratory genome-wide association study conducted in a subset of the PRAM cohort, we followed a strict procedure to generate a ranked list of candidate genes. SNPs in the top 50 genes were genotyped in the full PRAM cohort (n = 103 cases with doc- tor-diagnosed atopic asthma at age 6, and n = 499 controls). Results: The literature search identified 251 prior risk genes from 469 publications. RAD50 (rs2706347) and PTPRE (rs10830196) revealed crude associations with asthma at a Bonferroni-corrected level of significance (p < 0.0011). IL4R (rs1801275), CCL5 (rs2280788), and TBXA2R (rs4523) revealed nominal significance (p < 0.05). When adjusted for race and gender, only rs2706347 in RAD50 remained significantly associated with asthma. SNPs in frequently replicated asthma risk genes, including TNF, IL13, ADAM33, TGFB1, and MS4A2, revealed no association. Conclusion:RAD50 may be a promising candidate asthma risk gene. Lack of evidence of highly reported polymorphisms in the present study highlights the genetic heterogeneity of asthma and emphasizes the need for robust replication of candidate genes.

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Ivan Smirnov

University of California

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Terri Rice

University of California

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Lucie McCoy

University of California

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