Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Leigh B. Thorne is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Leigh B. Thorne.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2010

Lung squamous cell carcinoma mRNA expression subtypes are reproducible, clinically important, and correspond to normal cell types.

Matthew D. Wilkerson; Xiaoying Yin; Katherine A. Hoadley; Yufeng Liu; Michele C. Hayward; Christopher R. Cabanski; Kenneth L. Muldrew; C. Ryan Miller; Scott H. Randell; Mark A. Socinski; Alden M. Parsons; William K. Funkhouser; Carrie B. Lee; Patrick J. Roberts; Leigh B. Thorne; Philip S. Bernard; Charles M. Perou; D. Neil Hayes

Purpose: Lung squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) is clinically and genetically heterogeneous, and current diagnostic practices do not adequately substratify this heterogeneity. A robust, biologically based SCC subclassification may describe this variability and lead to more precise patient prognosis and management. We sought to determine if SCC mRNA expression subtypes exist, are reproducible across multiple patient cohorts, and are clinically relevant. Experimental Design: Subtypes were detected by unsupervised consensus clustering in five published discovery cohorts of mRNA microarrays, totaling 382 SCC patients. An independent validation cohort of 56 SCC patients was collected and assayed by microarrays. A nearest-centroid subtype predictor was built using discovery cohorts. Validation cohort subtypes were predicted and evaluated for confirmation. Subtype survival outcome, clinical covariates, and biological processes were compared by statistical and bioinformatic methods. Results: Four lung SCC mRNA expression subtypes, named primitive, classical, secretory, and basal, were detected and independently validated (P < 0.001). The primitive subtype had the worst survival outcome (P < 0.05) and is an independent predictor of survival (P < 0.05). Tumor differentiation and patient sex were associated with subtype. The expression profiles of the subtypes contained distinct biological processes (primitive: proliferation; classical: xenobiotic metabolism; secretory: immune response; basal: cell adhesion) and suggested distinct pharmacologic interventions. Comparison with lung model systems revealed distinct subtype to cell type correspondence. Conclusions: Lung SCC consists of four mRNA expression subtypes that have different survival outcomes, patient populations, and biological processes. The subtypes stratify patients for more precise prognosis and targeted research. Clin Cancer Res; 16(19); 4864–75. ©2010 AACR.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Molecular subtypes in head and neck cancer exhibit distinct patterns of chromosomal gain and loss of canonical cancer genes.

Vonn Walter; Xiaoying Yin; Matthew D. Wilkerson; Christopher R. Cabanski; Ni Zhao; Ying Du; Mei Kim Ang; Michele C. Hayward; Ashley H. Salazar; Katherine A. Hoadley; Karen J. Fritchie; Charles Sailey; Mark C. Weissler; William W. Shockley; Adam M. Zanation; Trevor Hackman; Leigh B. Thorne; William D. Funkhouser; Kenneth L. Muldrew; Andrew F. Olshan; Scott H. Randell; Fred A. Wright; Carol G. Shores; D. Neil Hayes

Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) is a frequently fatal heterogeneous disease. Beyond the role of human papilloma virus (HPV), no validated molecular characterization of the disease has been established. Using an integrated genomic analysis and validation methodology we confirm four molecular classes of HNSCC (basal, mesenchymal, atypical, and classical) consistent with signatures established for squamous carcinoma of the lung, including deregulation of the KEAP1/NFE2L2 oxidative stress pathway, differential utilization of the lineage markers SOX2 and TP63, and preference for the oncogenes PIK3CA and EGFR. For potential clinical use the signatures are complimentary to classification by HPV infection status as well as the putative high risk marker CCND1 copy number gain. A molecular etiology for the subtypes is suggested by statistically significant chromosomal gains and losses and differential cell of origin expression patterns. Model systems representative of each of the four subtypes are also presented.


PLOS Medicine | 2010

A six-gene signature predicts survival of patients with localized pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma.

Jeran K. Stratford; David J. Bentrem; Judy M. Anderson; Cheng Fan; Keith A. Volmar; J. S. Marron; Elizabeth D. Routh; Laura S. Caskey; Jonathan C. Samuel; Channing J. Der; Leigh B. Thorne; Benjamin F. Calvo; Hong Jin Kim; Mark S. Talamonti; Christine A. Iacobuzio-Donahue; Michael A. Hollingsworth; Charles M. Perou; Jen Jen Yeh

Jen Jen Yeh and colleagues developed and validated a six-gene signature in patients with pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma that may be used to better stage the disease in these patients and assist in treatment decisions.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Differential Pathogenesis of Lung Adenocarcinoma Subtypes Involving Sequence Mutations, Copy Number, Chromosomal Instability, and Methylation

Matthew D. Wilkerson; Xiaoying Yin; Vonn Walter; Ni Zhao; Christopher R. Cabanski; Michele C. Hayward; C. Ryan Miller; Mark A. Socinski; Alden M. Parsons; Leigh B. Thorne; Benjamin E. Haithcock; Nirmal K. Veeramachaneni; William K. Funkhouser; Scott H. Randell; Philip S. Bernard; Charles M. Perou; D. Neil Hayes

Background Lung adenocarcinoma (LAD) has extreme genetic variation among patients, which is currently not well understood, limiting progress in therapy development and research. LAD intrinsic molecular subtypes are a validated stratification of naturally-occurring gene expression patterns and encompass different functional pathways and patient outcomes. Patients may have incurred different mutations and alterations that led to the different subtypes. We hypothesized that the LAD molecular subtypes co-occur with distinct mutations and alterations in patient tumors. Methodology/Principal Findings The LAD molecular subtypes (Bronchioid, Magnoid, and Squamoid) were tested for association with gene mutations and DNA copy number alterations using statistical methods and published cohorts (n = 504). A novel validation (n = 116) cohort was assayed and interrogated to confirm subtype-alteration associations. Gene mutation rates (EGFR, KRAS, STK11, TP53), chromosomal instability, regional copy number, and genomewide DNA methylation were significantly different among tumors of the molecular subtypes. Secondary analyses compared subtypes by integrated alterations and patient outcomes. Tumors having integrated alterations in the same gene associated with the subtypes, e.g. mutation, deletion and underexpression of STK11 with Magnoid, and mutation, amplification, and overexpression of EGFR with Bronchioid. The subtypes also associated with tumors having concurrent mutant genes, such as KRAS-STK11 with Magnoid. Patient overall survival, cisplatin plus vinorelbine therapy response and predicted gefitinib sensitivity were significantly different among the subtypes. Conclusions/ Significance The lung adenocarcinoma intrinsic molecular subtypes co-occur with grossly distinct genomic alterations and with patient therapy response. These results advance the understanding of lung adenocarcinoma etiology and nominate patient subgroups for future evaluation of treatment response.


Head and Neck-journal for The Sciences and Specialties of The Head and Neck | 2011

Association of p16INK4a overexpression with improved outcomes in young patients with squamous cell cancers of the oral tongue

Stephen L. Harris; Leigh B. Thorne; William T. Seaman; D. Neil Hayes; Marion E. Couch; Randall J. Kimple

The aim of this study was to examine biomolecular profiles in a cohort of young adults with squamous cell cancers (SCCs) of the oral tongue.


Journal of Lipid Research | 2013

PPARγ coactivator-1α contributes to exercise-induced regulation of intramuscular lipid droplet programming in mice and humans

Timothy R. Koves; Lauren M. Sparks; J. P. Kovalik; Merrie Mosedale; Ramamani Arumugam; Karen L. DeBalsi; Karen Everingham; Leigh B. Thorne; Esther Phielix; Ruth C. R. Meex; C. Lawrence Kien; Matthijs K. C. Hesselink; Patrick Schrauwen; Deborah M. Muoio

Intramuscular accumulation of triacylglycerol, in the form of lipid droplets (LD), has gained widespread attention as a hallmark of metabolic disease and insulin resistance. Paradoxically, LDs also amass in muscles of highly trained endurance athletes who are exquisitely insulin sensitive. Understanding the molecular mechanisms that mediate the expansion and appropriate metabolic control of LDs in the context of habitual physical activity could lead to new therapeutic opportunities. Herein, we show that acute exercise elicits robust upregulation of a broad program of genes involved in regulating LD assembly, morphology, localization, and mobilization. Prominent among these was perilipin-5, a scaffolding protein that affects the spatial and metabolic interactions between LD and their surrounding mitochondrial reticulum. Studies in transgenic mice and primary human skeletal myocytes established a key role for the exercise-responsive transcriptional coactivator PGC-1α in coordinating intramuscular LD programming with mitochondrial remodeling. Moreover, translational studies comparing physically active versus inactive humans identified a remarkably strong association between expression of intramuscular LD genes and enhanced insulin action in exercise-trained subjects. These results reveal an intimate molecular connection between intramuscular LD biology and mitochondrial metabolism that could prove relevant to the etiology and treatment of insulin resistance and other disorders of lipid imbalance.


Archives of Otolaryngology-head & Neck Surgery | 2008

Immunohistochemical Distinction of Follicular Thyroid Adenomas and Follicular Carcinomas

Paul C. Bryson; Carol G. Shores; Craig F. Hart; Leigh B. Thorne; Mihir R. Patel; Luke M. Richey; Alexander Farag; Adam M. Zanation

OBJECTIVES To use immunohistochemical (IHC) evaluation of proteins encoded by genes that were differentially expressed in follicular thyroid adenomas (FAs) vs follicular thyroid carcinomas (FTCs) to distinguish benign vs malignant follicular thyroid lesions. Multiple gene microarray studies suggest that benign and malignant follicular thyroid neoplasms have different gene expression profiles. DESIGN Immunohistochemical analysis of thyroid neoplasms, including FA (n = 62), FTC (n = 62), and follicular variant of papillary thyroid carcinoma (n = 58), using tissue microarrays. We evaluated antibodies galectin-3, autotaxin, intestinal trefoil factor 3 (TFF3), extracellular matrix metalloproteinase inducer (EMMPRIN), and growth arrest and DNA damage-inducible protein 153 (GADD153). We analyzed data for quantitative differences in IHC intensity and the percentage of positive cells between FAs and combined follicular carcinomas. Sensitivity and specificity analysis are reported, along with a dual-protein clinical algorithm. SETTING Academic tertiary care center. PATIENTS Adults with known follicular and papillary thyroid lesions that were surgically resected during the past 15 years. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Sensitivity and specificity of individual and combined antibodies for detecting benign from malignant lesions. RESULTS Quantitative analysis showed IHC validation of the gene expression differences noted in previously published microarray reports. A significantly higher percentage of FTC cells stained with galectin-3, EMMPRIN, and GADD153. Galectin-3 and EMMPRIN also showed a significantly higher intensity of staining in FTC cells. Compared with malignant lesions, TFF3 stained a greater cell percentage in FAs. Galectin-3 (sensitivity, 0.72; specificity, 0.62) and EMMPRIN (sensitivity, 0.63; specificity, 0.49) had the most promising diagnostic potential with a dual-protein sensitivity of 0.80 and specificity of 0.70. Autotaxin and GADD153 had overall higher sensitivities (0.88 and 0.82, respectively) but very poor specificities (0.02 and 0.21, respectively). CONCLUSIONS Protein expression data validate the pooled gene expression results that differentiate FTC from FA. Our results show promise for multiple-protein IHC analysis algorithms and their diagnostic ability. Future studies should focus on clinical translation of these molecular differences for the diagnosis of follicular thyroid neoplasms.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Isoform-Specific Upregulation of Palladin in Human and Murine Pancreas Tumors

Silvia M. Goicoechea; Brian K. Bednarski; Christianna Stack; David Cowan; Keith E. Volmar; Leigh B. Thorne; Edna Cukierman; Anil K. Rustgi; Teresa A. Brentnall; Rosa F. Hwang; Christopher A. McCulloch; Jen Jen Yeh; David J. Bentrem; Steven N. Hochwald; Sunil R. Hingorani; Hong Jin Kim; Carol A. Otey

Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDA) is a lethal disease with a characteristic pattern of early metastasis, which is driving a search for biomarkers that can be used to detect the cancer at an early stage. Recently, the actin-associated protein palladin was identified as a candidate biomarker when it was shown that palladin is mutated in a rare inherited form of PDA, and overexpressed in many sporadic pancreas tumors and premalignant precursors. In this study, we analyzed the expression of palladin isoforms in murine and human PDA and explored palladins potential use in diagnosing PDA. We performed immunohistochemistry and immunoblot analyses on patient samples and tumor-derived cells using an isoform-selective monoclonal antibody and a pan-palladin polyclonal antibody. Immunoblot and real-time quantitative reverse transcription-PCR were used to quantify palladin mRNA levels in human samples. We show that there are two major palladin isoforms expressed in pancreas: 65 and 85–90 kDa. The 65 kDa isoform is expressed in both normal and neoplastic ductal epithelial cells. The 85–90 kDa palladin isoform is highly overexpressed in tumor-associated fibroblasts (TAFs) in both primary and metastatic tumors compared to normal pancreas, in samples obtained from either human patients or genetically engineered mice. In tumor-derived cultured cells, expression of palladin isoforms follows cell-type specific patterns, with the 85–90 kDa isoform in TAFs, and the 65 kDa isoform predominating in normal and neoplastic epithelial cells. These results suggest that upregulation of 85–90 kDa palladin isoform may play a role in the establishment of the TAF phenotype, and thus in the formation of a desmoplastic tumor microenvironment. Thus, palladin may have a potential use in the early diagnosis of PDA and may have much broader significance in understanding metastatic behavior.


Laboratory Investigation | 2009

High Levels of Epstein-Barr Virus DNA in Latently Infected Gastric Adenocarcinoma

Julie L. Ryan; Douglas R. Morgan; Ricardo L. Dominguez; Leigh B. Thorne; Sandra Elmore; Mari Mino-Kenudson; Gregory Y. Lauwers; Jessica K. Booker; Margaret L. Gulley

Gastric adenocarcinoma is the second leading cause of cancer death worldwide. Epstein–Barr virus (EBV) is present in the malignant cells of approximately 10% of cases. It is unclear whether EBV is being missed in some gastric adenocarcinomas due to insensitive test methods or partial EBV genome loss. In this study, we screened 113 gastric adenocarcinomas from low- and high-incidence regions (United States and Central America) for the presence of EBV using a battery quantitative real-time PCR (Q-PCR) assays targeting disparate segments of the EBV genome (BamH1W, EBNA1, LMP1, LMP2, BZLF1, EBER1) and histochemical stains targeting EBV-encoded RNA (EBER), the latent proteins LMP1 and LMP2, and the lytic proteins BMRF1 and BZLF1. EBV DNA was detected by Q-PCR in 48/75 United States cancers (64%) and in 38/38 Central American cancers (100%), which was a significant differrence. EBER was localized to malignant epithelial cells in 8/48 (17%) United States and 3/38 (8%) Central American cancers. Viral loads were considerably higher for EBER-positive vs EBER-negative cancers (mean 162 986 vs 62 EBV DNA copies per 100 000 cells). A viral load of 2000 copies per 100 000 cells is recommended as the threshold distinguishing EBER-positive from EBER-negative tumors. One infected cancer selectively failed to amplify the LMP2 gene because of a point mutation, whereas another cancer had an atypical pattern of Q-PCR positivity suggesting deletion of large segments of the EBV genome. Three different viral latency profiles were observed in the cancers based on constant expression of EBER and focal or variable expression of LMP1 or LMP2, without lytic protein expression. We conclude that EBV DNA levels generally reflect EBER status, and a panel of at least two Q-PCR assays is recommended for sensitive identification of infected cancers.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2008

Native American myopathy: Congenital myopathy with cleft palate, skeletal anomalies, and susceptibility to malignant hyperthermia†

Demetra S. Stamm; Arthur S. Aylsworth; Jeffrey M. Stajich; Stephen G. Kahler; Leigh B. Thorne; Marcy C. Speer; Cynthia M. Powell

Native American myopathy (NAM) [OMIM 255995], a putative autosomal recessive disorder, was first reported in the Lumbee Indians of North Carolina. NAM features include congenital weakness and arthrogryposis, cleft palate, ptosis, short stature, kyphoscoliosis, talipes deformities, and susceptibility to malignant hyperthermia (MH) provoked by anesthesia. This report documents the phenotypic complexity and natural history of this rare congenital disorder in fourteen individuals with NAM. Findings include a previously unreported 36% mortality by age 18. Based on this study, our conservative estimate for prevalence of NAM within the Lumbee population is ∼2:10,000; however, birth incidence remains unknown.

Collaboration


Dive into the Leigh B. Thorne's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Matthew D. Wilkerson

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Michele C. Hayward

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Xiaoying Yin

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Charles M. Perou

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

D. Neil Hayes

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

William K. Funkhouser

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

C. Ryan Miller

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Margaret L. Gulley

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Andrew F. Olshan

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Adam M. Zanation

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge