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Dive into the research topics where Lauren A. Peters is active.

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Featured researches published by Lauren A. Peters.


Nature Immunology | 2014

Unifying immunology with informatics and multiscale biology.

Brian A. Kidd; Lauren A. Peters; Eric E. Schadt; Joel T. Dudley

The immune system is a highly complex and dynamic system. Historically, the most common scientific and clinical practice has been to evaluate its individual components. This kind of approach cannot always expose the interconnecting pathways that control immune-system responses and does not reveal how the immune system works across multiple biological systems and scales. High-throughput technologies can be used to measure thousands of parameters of the immune system at a genome-wide scale. These system-wide surveys yield massive amounts of quantitative data that provide a means to monitor and probe immune-system function. New integrative analyses can help synthesize and transform these data into valuable biological insight. Here we review some of the computational analysis tools for high-dimensional data and how they can be applied to immunology.


Gastroenterology | 2016

Variants in TRIM22 that affect NOD2 signaling are associated with very early onset inflammatory bowel disease

Qi Li; Cheng Hiang Lee; Lauren A. Peters; Lucas A. Mastropaolo; Cornelia Thoeni; Abdul Elkadri; Tobias Schwerd; Jun Zhu; Bin Zhang; Yongzhong Zhao; Ke Hao; Antonio Dinarzo; Gabriel E. Hoffman; Brian A. Kidd; Ryan Murchie; Ziad Al Adham; Conghui Guo; Daniel Kotlarz; Ernest Cutz; Thomas D. Walters; Dror S. Shouval; Mark E. Curran; Radu Dobrin; Carrie Brodmerkel; Scott B. Snapper; Christoph Klein; John H. Brumell; Mingjing Hu; Ralph Nanan; Brigitte Snanter-Nanan

BACKGROUND & AIMS Severe forms of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) that develop in very young children can be caused by variants in a single gene. We performed whole-exome sequence (WES) analysis to identify genetic factors that might cause granulomatous colitis and severe perianal disease, with recurrent bacterial and viral infections, in an infant of consanguineous parents. METHODS We performed targeted WES analysis of DNA collected from the patient and her parents. We validated our findings by a similar analysis of DNA from 150 patients with very-early-onset IBD not associated with known genetic factors analyzed in Toronto, Oxford, and Munich. We compared gene expression signatures in inflamed vs noninflamed intestinal and rectal tissues collected from patients with treatment-resistant Crohns disease who participated in a trial of ustekinumab. We performed functional studies of identified variants in primary cells from patients and cell culture. RESULTS We identified a homozygous variant in the tripartite motif containing 22 gene (TRIM22) of the patient, as well as in 2 patients with a disease similar phenotype. Functional studies showed that the variant disrupted the ability of TRIM22 to regulate nucleotide binding oligomerization domain containing 2 (NOD2)-dependent activation of interferon-beta signaling and nuclear factor-κB. Computational studies demonstrated a correlation between the TRIM22-NOD2 network and signaling pathways and genetic factors associated very early onset and adult-onset IBD. TRIM22 is also associated with antiviral and mycobacterial effectors and markers of inflammation, such as fecal calprotectin, C-reactive protein, and Crohns disease activity index scores. CONCLUSIONS In WES and targeted exome sequence analyses of an infant with severe IBD characterized by granulomatous colitis and severe perianal disease, we identified a homozygous variant of TRIM22 that affects the ability of its product to regulate NOD2. Combined computational and functional studies showed that the TRIM22-NOD2 network regulates antiviral and antibacterial signaling pathways that contribute to inflammation. Further study of this network could lead to new disease markers and therapeutic targets for patients with very early and adult-onset IBD.


Nature Genetics | 2017

A functional genomics predictive network model identifies regulators of inflammatory bowel disease

Lauren A. Peters; Jacqueline Perrigoue; Arthur Mortha; Alina C. Iuga; Won Min Song; Eric M. Neiman; Sean R. Llewellyn; Antonio Di Narzo; Brian A. Kidd; Shannon Telesco; Yongzhong Zhao; Aleksandar Stojmirovic; Jocelyn Sendecki; Khader Shameer; Riccardo Miotto; Bojan Losic; Hardik Shah; Eunjee Lee; Minghui Wang; Jeremiah J. Faith; Andrew Kasarskis; Carrie Brodmerkel; Mark E. Curran; Anuk Das; Joshua R. Friedman; Yoshinori Fukui; Mary Beth Humphrey; Brian M. Iritani; Nicholas Sibinga; Teresa K. Tarrant

A major challenge in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is the integration of diverse IBD data sets to construct predictive models of IBD. We present a predictive model of the immune component of IBD that informs causal relationships among loci previously linked to IBD through genome-wide association studies (GWAS) using functional and regulatory annotations that relate to the cells, tissues, and pathophysiology of IBD. Our model consists of individual networks constructed using molecular data generated from intestinal samples isolated from three populations of patients with IBD at different stages of disease. We performed key driver analysis to identify genes predicted to modulate network regulatory states associated with IBD, prioritizing and prospectively validating 12 of the top key drivers experimentally. This validated key driver set not only introduces new regulators of processes central to IBD but also provides the integrated circuits of genetic, molecular, and clinical traits that can be directly queried to interrogate and refine the regulatory framework defining IBD.


PLOS Genetics | 2017

High-Throughput Characterization of Blood Serum Proteomics of IBD Patients with Respect to Aging and Genetic Factors

Antonio Di Narzo; Shannon Telesco; Carrie Brodmerkel; Carmen A. Argmann; Lauren A. Peters; Katherine Li; Brian A. Kidd; Joel T. Dudley; Judy H. Cho; Eric E. Schadt; Andrew Kasarskis; Radu Dobrin; Ke Hao

To date, no large scale, systematic description of the blood serum proteome has been performed in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) patients. By using microarray technology, a more complete description of the blood proteome of IBD patients is feasible. It may help to achieve a better understanding of the disease. We analyzed blood serum profiles of 1128 proteins in IBD patients of European descent (84 Crohn’s Disease (CD) subjects and 88 Ulcerative Colitis (UC) subjects) as well as 15 healthy control subjects, and linked protein variability to patient age (all cohorts) and genetic components (genotype data generated from CD patients). We discovered new, previously unreported aging-associated proteomic traits (such as serum Albumin level), confirmed previously reported results from different tissues (i.e., upregulation of APOE with aging), and found loss of regulation of MMP7 in CD patients. In carrying out a genome wide genotype-protein association study (proteomic Quantitative Trait Loci, pQTL) within the CD patients, we identified 41 distinct proteomic traits influenced by cis pQTLs (underlying SNPs are referred to as pSNPs). Significant overlaps between pQTLs and cis eQTLs corresponding to the same gene were observed and in some cases the QTL were related to inflammatory disease susceptibility. Importantly, we discovered that serum protein levels of MST1 (Macrophage Stimulating 1) were regulated by SNP rs3197999 (p = 5.96E-10, FDR<5%), an accepted GWAS locus for IBD. Filling the knowledge gap of molecular mechanisms between GWAS hits and disease susceptibility requires systematically dissecting the impact of the locus at the cell, mRNA expression, and protein levels. The technology and analysis tools that are now available for large-scale molecular studies can elucidate how alterations in the proteome driven by genetic polymorphisms cause or provide protection against disease. Herein, we demonstrated this directly by integrating proteomic and pQTLs with existing GWAS, mRNA expression, and eQTL datasets to provide insights into the biological processes underlying IBD and pinpoint causal genetic variants along with their downstream molecular consequences.


Clinical and translational gastroenterology | 2016

Blood and Intestine eQTLs from an Anti-TNF-Resistant Crohn's Disease Cohort Inform IBD Genetic Association Loci.

Antonio Di Narzo; Lauren A. Peters; Carmen A. Argmann; Aleksandar Stojmirovic; Jacqueline Perrigoue; Katherine Li; Shannon Telesco; Brian A. Kidd; Jennifer Walker; Joel T. Dudley; Judy H. Cho; Eric E. Schadt; Andrew Kasarskis; Mark E. Curran; Radu Dobrin; Ke Hao

OBJECTIVES:Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified loci reproducibly associated with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and other immune-mediated diseases; however, the molecular mechanisms underlying most of genetic susceptibility remain undefined. Expressional quantitative trait loci (eQTL) of disease-relevant tissue can be employed in order to elucidate the genes and pathways affected by disease-specific genetic variance.METHODS:In this study, we derived eQTLs for human whole blood and intestine tissues of anti-tumor necrosis factor-resistant Crohn’s disease (CD) patients. We interpreted these eQTLs in the context of published IBD GWAS hits to inform on the disease process.RESULTS:At 10% false discovery rate, we discovered that 5,174 genes in blood and 2,063 genes in the intestine were controlled by a nearby single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) (i.e., cis-eQTL), among which 1,360 were shared between the two tissues. A large fraction of the identified eQTLs were supported by the regulomeDB database, showing that the eQTLs reside in regulatory elements (odds ratio; OR=3.44 and 3.24 for blood and intestine eQTLs, respectively) as opposed to protein-coding regions. Published IBD GWAS hits as a whole were enriched for blood and intestine eQTLs (OR=2.88 and 2.05; and P value=2.51E-9 and 0.013, respectively), thereby linking genetic susceptibility to control of gene expression in these tissues. Through a systematic search, we used eQTL data to inform 109 out of 372 IBD GWAS SNPs documented in National Human Genome Research Institute catalog, and we categorized the genes influenced by eQTLs according to their functions. Many of these genes have experimentally validated roles in specific cell types contributing to intestinal inflammation.CONCLUSIONS:The blood and intestine eQTLs described in this study represent a powerful tool to link GWAS loci to a regulatory function and thus elucidate the mechanisms underlying the genetic loci associated with IBD and related conditions. Overall, our eQTL discovery approach empirically identifies the disease-associated variants including their impact on the direction and extent of expression changes in the context of disease-relevant cellular pathways in order to infer the functional outcome of this aspect of genetic susceptibility.


Vaccine | 2016

Intranasal delivery of a protein subunit vaccine using a Tobacco Mosaic Virus platform protects against pneumonic plague

Paul M. Arnaboldi; Mariya Sambir; Christina D’Arco; Lauren A. Peters; Jos F.M.L. Seegers; Lloyd Mayer; Alison A. McCormick; Raymond J. Dattwyler

Yersinia pestis, one of historys deadliest pathogens, has killed millions over the course of human history. It has attributes that make it an ideal choice to produce mass casualties and is a prime candidate for use as a biological weapon. When aerosolized, Y. pestis causes pneumonic plague, a pneumonia that is 100% lethal if not promptly treated with effective antibiotics. Currently, there is no FDA approved plague vaccine. The current lead vaccine candidate, a parenterally administered protein subunit vaccine comprised of the Y. pestis virulence factors, F1 and LcrV, demonstrated variable levels of protection in primate pneumonic plague models. As the most likely mode of exposure in biological attack with Y. pestis is by aerosol, this raises a question of whether this parenteral vaccine will adequately protect humans against pneumonic plague. In the present study we evaluated two distinct mucosal delivery platforms for the intranasal (IN) administration of LcrV and F1 vaccine proteins, a live bacterial vector, Lactobacillus plantarum, and a Tobacco Mosaic Virus (TMV) based delivery platform. IN administration of L. plantarum expressing LcrV, or TMV-conjugated to LcrV and F1 (TMV-LcrV+TMV-F1) resulted in the similar induction of high titers of IgG antibodies and evidence of proinflammatory cytokine secretion. However, only the TMV-conjugate delivery platform protected against subsequent lethal challenge with Y. pestis. TMV-LcrV+TMV-F1 co-vaccinated mice had no discernable morbidity and no mortality, while mice vaccinated with L. plantarum expressing LcrV or rLcrV+rF1 without TMV succumbed to infection or were only partially protected. Thus, TMV is a suitable mucosal delivery platform for an F1-LcrV subunit vaccine that induces complete protection against pneumonic infection with a lethal dose of Y. pestis in mice.


bioRxiv | 2018

Gut microbiota density influences host physiology and is shaped by host and microbial factors

Eduardo J Contijoch; Graham J Britton; Chao Yang; Ilaria Mogno; Zhihua Li; Ruby Ng; Sean R. Llewellyn; Sheela Hira; Crystal Johnson; Keren Rabinowitz; Revital Barkan; Iris Dotan; Robert Hirten; Shih-Chen Fu; Yuying Luo; Nancy Yang; Tramy Luong; Phillippe R Labrias; Sergio A. Lira; Inga Peter; Ari Grinspan; Jose C. Clemente; Roman Kosoy; Seunghee Kim-Schulze; Xiaochen Qin; Anabella Castillo; Amanda Hurley; Ashish Atreja; Jason Rogers; Farah Fasihuddin

To identify factors that regulate gut microbiota density and the impact of varied microbiota density on health, we assayed this fundamental ecosystem property in fecal samples across mammals, human disease, and therapeutic interventions. Physiologic features of the host (carrying capacity) and the fitness of the gut microbiota shape microbiota density. Therapeutic manipulation of microbiota density in mice altered host metabolic and immune homeostasis. In humans, gut microbiota density was reduced in Crohn’s disease, ulcerative colitis, and ileal pouch-anal anastomosis. The gut microbiota in recurrent Clostridium difficile infection had lower density and reduced fitness that were restored by fecal microbiota transplantation. Understanding the interplay between microbiota and disease in terms of microbiota density, host carrying capacity, and microbiota fitness provide new insights into microbiome structure and microbiome targeted therapeutics.


Nature Immunology | 2014

Corrigendum: Unifying immunology with informatics and multiscale biology

Brian A. Kidd; Lauren A. Peters; Eric E. Schadt; Joel T. Dudley


Journal of Crohns & Colitis | 2018

DOP012 Disease demarcation in ulcerative colitis is associated with different patterns of gene expression

Mayte Suárez-Fariñas; Ruiqi Huang; Roman Kosoy; A Irizar; Bojan Losic; G Wei; Lauren A. Peters; Won-Min Song; A Di Narzo; W Wang; Jacqueline Perrigoue; Anabella Castillo; Jason Rogers; Ashish Atreja; Amanda Hurley; Milind Mahajan; Bin Zhang; Aleksandar Stojmirovic; Mark E. Curran; Radu Dobrin; Marla Dubinsky; Ke Hao; Jun Zhu; Eric E. Schadt; Scott E. Plevy; Joshua R. Friedman; Carrie Brodmerkel; Bruce E. Sands; Andrew Kasarskis; Ryan Ungaro


Gastroenterology | 2018

1009 - Immunophenotyping of Peripheral Whole Blood from 743 IBD Patients Identifies Patterns of Association Between Immune Cell Populations and T-Cell Subsets with Disease Occurrence, Severity and Medication Use

Roman Kosoy; Seunghee Kim-Schulze; Adeeb Rahman; Lauren A. Peters; El-ad David Amir; Jacqueline Perrigoue; Anabella Castillo; Jason Rogers; Ashish Atreja; Amanda Hurley; Miriam Merad; Jean-Frederic Colombel; Marla Dubinsky; Joshua R. Friedman; Carrie Brodmerkel; Scott E. Plevy; Eric E. Schadt; Bruce E. Sands; Andrew Kasarskis; Carmen A. Argmann; Mayte Suárez-Fariñas

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Andrew Kasarskis

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Brian A. Kidd

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Eric E. Schadt

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Ke Hao

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Antonio Di Narzo

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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