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Dive into the research topics where Mahvash Sigaroudinia is active.

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Featured researches published by Mahvash Sigaroudinia.


Nature | 2012

The clonal and mutational evolution spectrum of primary triple-negative breast cancers.

Sohrab P. Shah; Andrew Roth; Rodrigo Goya; Arusha Oloumi; Gavin Ha; Yongjun Zhao; Gulisa Turashvili; Jiarui Ding; Kane Tse; Gholamreza Haffari; Ali Bashashati; Leah M Prentice; Jaswinder Khattra; Angela Burleigh; Damian Yap; Virginie Bernard; Andrew McPherson; Karey Shumansky; Anamaria Crisan; Ryan Giuliany; Alireza Heravi-Moussavi; Jamie Rosner; Daniel Lai; Inanc Birol; Richard Varhol; Angela Tam; Noreen Dhalla; Thomas Zeng; Kevin Ma; Simon K. Chan

Primary triple-negative breast cancers (TNBCs), a tumour type defined by lack of oestrogen receptor, progesterone receptor and ERBB2 gene amplification, represent approximately 16% of all breast cancers. Here we show in 104 TNBC cases that at the time of diagnosis these cancers exhibit a wide and continuous spectrum of genomic evolution, with some having only a handful of coding somatic aberrations in a few pathways, whereas others contain hundreds of coding somatic mutations. High-throughput RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) revealed that only approximately 36% of mutations are expressed. Using deep re-sequencing measurements of allelic abundance for 2,414 somatic mutations, we determine for the first time—to our knowledge—in an epithelial tumour subtype, the relative abundance of clonal frequencies among cases representative of the population. We show that TNBCs vary widely in their clonal frequencies at the time of diagnosis, with the basal subtype of TNBC showing more variation than non-basal TNBC. Although p53 (also known as TP53), PIK3CA and PTEN somatic mutations seem to be clonally dominant compared to other genes, in some tumours their clonal frequencies are incompatible with founder status. Mutations in cytoskeletal, cell shape and motility proteins occurred at lower clonal frequencies, suggesting that they occurred later during tumour progression. Taken together, our results show that understanding the biology and therapeutic responses of patients with TNBC will require the determination of individual tumour clonal genotypes.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Sustained induction of epithelial to mesenchymal transition activates DNA methylation of genes silenced in basal-like breast cancers

Nancy Dumont; Matthew B. Wilson; Yongping Crawford; Paul A. Reynolds; Mahvash Sigaroudinia; Thea D. Tlsty

The active acquisition of epigenetic changes is a poorly understood but important process in development, differentiation, and disease. Our work has shown that repression of the p16/pRb pathway in human epithelial cells, a condition common to stem cells and many tumor cells, induces dynamic epigenetic remodeling resulting in the targeted methylation of a selected group of CpG islands. We hypothesized that cells in this epigenetically plastic state could be programmed by the microenvironment to acquire epigenetic changes associated with tumorigenesis. Here, we describe an in vitro model system where epigenetically plastic cells were placed in an environment that induced epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT) and led to a program of acquired de novo DNA methylation at targeted sites. In this model, we found that repression of E-cadherin transcription preceded the subsequent acquisition of methylated CpG sites. Furthermore, the induction of EMT was accompanied by de novo methylation of several other gene promoters, including those of the estrogen receptor and Twist. These data demonstrate that signals from the microenvironment can induce phenotypic and gene expression changes associated with targeted de novo epigenetic alterations important in tumor progression, and that these alterations occur through a deterministic, rather than stochastic, mechanism. Given the dynamic epigenetic reprogramming that occurs in these cells, DNA methylation profiles observed in human tumors may reflect the history of environmental exposures during the genesis of a tumor.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Tumor Suppressor p16INK4A Regulates Polycomb-mediated DNA Hypermethylation in Human Mammary Epithelial Cells

Paul A. Reynolds; Mahvash Sigaroudinia; Giuseppe Zardo; Matthew B. Wilson; Geoffrey M. Benton; Caroline J. Miller; Chibo Hong; Jane Fridlyand; Joseph F. Costello; Thea D. Tlsty

Alterations in DNA methylation are important in cancer, but the acquisition of these alterations is poorly understood. Using an unbiased global screen for CpG island methylation events, we have identified a non-random pattern of DNA hypermethylation acquired in p16-repressed cells. Interestingly, this pattern included loci located upstream of a number of homeobox genes. Upon removal of p16INK4A activity in primary human mammary epithelial cells, polycomb repressors, EZH2 and SUZ12, are up-regulated and recruited to HOXA9, a locus expressed during normal breast development and epigenetically silenced in breast cancer. We demonstrate that at this targeted locus, the up-regulation of polycomb repressors is accompanied by the recruitment of DNA methyltransferases and the hypermethylation of DNA, an endpoint, which we show to be dependent on SUZ12 expression. These results demonstrate a causal role of p16INK4A disruption in modulating DNA hypermethylation, and identify a dynamic and active process whereby epigenetic modulation of gene expression is activated as an early event in breast tumor progression.


Nature Genetics | 2013

DNA hypomethylation within specific transposable element families associates with tissue-specific enhancer landscape

Mingchao Xie; Chibo Hong; Bo Zhang; Rebecca F. Lowdon; Xiaoyun Xing; Daofeng Li; Xin Zhou; Hyung Joo Lee; Cecile L. Maire; Keith L. Ligon; Philippe Gascard; Mahvash Sigaroudinia; Thea D. Tlsty; Theresa A. Kadlecek; Arthur Weiss; Henriette O'Geen; Peggy J. Farnham; Pamela A. F. Madden; Andrew J. Mungall; Angela Tam; Baljit Kamoh; Stephanie Cho; Richard A. Moore; Martin Hirst; Marco A. Marra; Joseph F. Costello; Ting Wang

Transposable element (TE)-derived sequences comprise half of the human genome and DNA methylome and are presumed to be densely methylated and inactive. Examination of genome-wide DNA methylation status within 928 TE subfamilies in human embryonic and adult tissues identified unexpected tissue-specific and subfamily-specific hypomethylation signatures. Genes proximal to tissue-specific hypomethylated TE sequences were enriched for functions important for the relevant tissue type, and their expression correlated strongly with hypomethylation within the TEs. When hypomethylated, these TE sequences gained tissue-specific enhancer marks, including monomethylation of histone H3 at lysine 4 (H3K4me1) and occupancy by p300, and a majority exhibited enhancer activity in reporter gene assays. Many such TEs also harbored binding sites for transcription factors that are important for tissue-specific functions and showed evidence of evolutionary selection. These data suggest that sequences derived from TEs may be responsible for wiring tissue type–specific regulatory networks and may have acquired tissue-specific epigenetic regulation.


Genome Research | 2013

Functional DNA methylation differences between tissues, cell types, and across individuals discovered using the M&M algorithm

Bo Zhang; Zhou Y; Nan Lin; Rebecca F. Lowdon; Chibo Hong; Raman P. Nagarajan; Jeffrey B. Cheng; Daofeng Li; Michael Stevens; Hyung Joo Lee; Xiaoyun Xing; Jia Zhou; Sundaram; Glendoria Elliott; Junchen Gu; Shi T; Philippe Gascard; Mahvash Sigaroudinia; Thea D. Tlsty; Theresa A. Kadlecek; Arthur Weiss; Henriette O'Geen; Peggy J. Farnham; Cecile L. Maire; Keith L. Ligon; Pamela A. F. Madden; Angela Tam; Richard A. Moore; Martin Hirst; Marco A. Marra

DNA methylation plays key roles in diverse biological processes such as X chromosome inactivation, transposable element repression, genomic imprinting, and tissue-specific gene expression. Sequencing-based DNA methylation profiling provides an unprecedented opportunity to map and compare complete DNA methylomes. This includes one of the most widely applied technologies for measuring DNA methylation: methylated DNA immunoprecipitation followed by sequencing (MeDIP-seq), coupled with a complementary method, methylation-sensitive restriction enzyme sequencing (MRE-seq). A computational approach that integrates data from these two different but complementary assays and predicts methylation differences between samples has been unavailable. Here, we present a novel integrative statistical framework M&M (for integration of MeDIP-seq and MRE-seq) that dynamically scales, normalizes, and combines MeDIP-seq and MRE-seq data to detect differentially methylated regions. Using sample-matched whole-genome bisulfite sequencing (WGBS) as a gold standard, we demonstrate superior accuracy and reproducibility of M&M compared to existing analytical methods for MeDIP-seq data alone. M&M leverages the complementary nature of MeDIP-seq and MRE-seq data to allow rapid comparative analysis between whole methylomes at a fraction of the cost of WGBS. Comprehensive analysis of nineteen human DNA methylomes with M&M reveals distinct DNA methylation patterns among different tissue types, cell types, and individuals, potentially underscoring divergent epigenetic regulation at different scales of phenotypic diversity. We find that differential DNA methylation at enhancer elements, with concurrent changes in histone modifications and transcription factor binding, is common at the cell, tissue, and individual levels, whereas promoter methylation is more prominent in reinforcing fundamental tissue identities.


Pediatric Research | 1996

Interleukin-12 induces interferon-γ expression and natural killer cytotoxicity in cord blood mononuclear cells

Allan S Lau; Mahvash Sigaroudinia; Michael C. Yeung; Steve Kohl

Severe viral infection in newborns has been attributed to immaturity of the immune system including a defect in natural killer cytotoxicity (NKC) and decreased production of cytokines that are important for natural killer (NK) function. We investigated the induction of interferon (IFN)-γ and activation of NK activity in adult and cord blood mononuclear cells (BMC) after IL-12 treatment. The levels of mRNA in these BMC were measured by Northern blot and reverse transcription-polymerase chain reactions using primers specific for IFN-γ. The levels of IFN-γ protein were measured by ELISA. In the absence of IL-12, only adult BMC spontaneously produced low levels of IFN-γ. After IL-12 treatment, induction of IFN-γ expression was detected as early as 4 h in both cord and adult BMC. Both cord and adult cells showed similar levels of IFN-γ mRNA and protein expression in response to IL-12 at a concentration as low as 10 U/mL. In contrast, upon phorbol ester and ionomycin treatment, adult BMC produced more IFN-γ mRNA than cord BMC. In a 51Cr release assay with human immunodeficiency-infected H9 cells as indicators, both cord and adult cells responded to IL-12 induction of NKC. Our findings demonstrate that cord BMC are capable of responding to IL-12 stimulation, competent in synthesizing IFN-γ, and able to mount NKC. Thus, it appears that the deficiency in IFN-γ production or NKC in cord cells is not due to an inherent defect in IL-12 response of the cord cells.


Nature Communications | 2015

Intermediate DNA methylation is a conserved signature of genome regulation

Ginell Elliott; Chibo Hong; Xiaoyun Xing; Xin Zhou; Daofeng Li; Cristian Coarfa; Robert J.A. Bell; Cecile L. Maire; Keith L. Ligon; Mahvash Sigaroudinia; Philippe Gascard; Thea D. Tlsty; R. Alan Harris; Leonard C. Schalkwyk; Misha Bilenky; Jonathan Mill; Peggy J. Farnham; Manolis Kellis; Marco A. Marra; Aleksandar Milosavljevic; Martin Hirst; Gary D. Stormo; Ting Wang; Joseph F. Costello

The role of intermediate methylation states in DNA is unclear. Here, to comprehensively identify regions of intermediate methylation and their quantitative relationship with gene activity, we apply integrative and comparative epigenomics to 25 human primary cell and tissue samples. We report 18,452 intermediate methylation regions located near 36% of genes and enriched at enhancers, exons and DNase I hypersensitivity sites. Intermediate methylation regions average 57% methylation, are predominantly allele-independent and are conserved across individuals and between mouse and human, suggesting a conserved function. These regions have an intermediate level of active chromatin marks and their associated genes have intermediate transcriptional activity. Exonic intermediate methylation correlates with exon inclusion at a level between that of fully methylated and unmethylated exons, highlighting gene context-dependent functions. We conclude that intermediate DNA methylation is a conserved signature of gene regulation and exon usage.


Breast Cancer Research | 2009

Human mammary cancer progression model recapitulates methylation events associated with breast premalignancy

Nancy Dumont; Yongping Crawford; Mahvash Sigaroudinia; Shefali S Nagrani; Matthew B. Wilson; Gertrude C. Buehring; Gulisa Turashvili; Samuel Aparicio; Mona L. Gauthier; Colleen A. Fordyce; Kimberly M. McDermott; Thea D. Tlsty

IntroductionWe have previously identified a rare subpopulation of variant human mammary epithelial cells (vHMEC) with repressed p16INK4A that exist in disease-free women yet display premalignant properties, suggesting that they have engaged the process of malignant transformation. In order to gain insight into the molecular alterations required for vHMEC to progress to malignancy, and to characterize the epigenetic events associated with early progression, we examined the effect of oncogenic stress on the behavior of these cells.MethodsHMEC that express p16INK4A and vHMEC that do not, were transduced with constitutively active Ha-rasV12 and subsequently exposed to serum to determine whether signals from the cellular microenvironment could cooperate with ras to promote the malignant transformation of vHMEC. Epigenetic alterations were assessed using methylation-specific polymerase chain reaction (PCR).ResultsvHMEC expressing Ha-rasV12 (vHMEC-ras) bypassed the classic proliferative arrest that has been previously documented in normal fibroblasts following oncogenic stress, and that we also observe here in normal HMEC. Moreover, vHMEC-ras cells exhibited many additional alterations that are observed during progression to malignancy such as the generation of chromosomal abnormalities, upregulation of telomerase activity, immortalization following exposure to serum, and anchorage-independent growth, but they did not form tumors following orthotopic injection in vivo. Associated with their early progression to malignancy was an increase in the number of genes methylated, two of which (RASSF1A and SFRP1) were also methylated in other immortalized mammary cell lines as well as in breast cancer cells and tissues.ConclusionsWe have characterized a mammary progression model that recapitulates molecular and methylation alterations observed in many breast cancers. Our data suggest that concomitant methylation of RASSF1A and SFRP1 marks an early event in mammary transformation and may thus have prognostic potential.


Pediatric Research | 1996

Characterization of natural killer and antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity of preterm infants against human immunodeficiency virus-infected cells.

Jeffrey D. Merrill; Mahvash Sigaroudinia; Steve Kohl

The odds risk of vertical transmission of human immunodeficiency virus(HIV) to preterm infants is almost four times that of term infants and may relate to maternal and neonatal factors. We characterized the competence of early nonspecific cellular immunity, namely natural killer cytotoxicity (NKC) and antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC), of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from preterm (n = 20) and term neonates(n = 28) versus adult controls against a T cell line infected with the human T cell lymphotrophic virus-IIIB using a chromium-51 release assay. PBMC from term neonates exhibited levels of NKC activity equal to adults against HIV-infected targets, yet the NKC capacity of preterm neonatal PBMC was significantly diminished. The ADCC activity of both term and preterm neonatal PBMC against HIV-infected targets was significantly less than that of adult PBMC. Overnight stimulation of a subset of samples with IL-12 augmented the NKC activity of both infant groups and adults, whereas the ADCC activity remained unchanged. These findings demonstrate that term neonates are deficient in ADCC against HIV-infected targets, whereas preterm infants are deficient in both NKC and ADCC, which may relate, in part, to the increased risk of transmission of HIV with preterm delivery. In addition, IL-12 has the potential to augment both term and preterm neonatal antiviral defense.


Nature Communications | 2015

Epigenetic and transcriptional determinants of the human breast

Philippe Gascard; Misha Bilenky; Mahvash Sigaroudinia; Jianxin Zhao; Luolan Li; Annaick Carles; Allen Delaney; Angela Tam; Baljit Kamoh; Stephanie Cho; Malachi Griffith; Andy Chu; Gordon Robertson; Dorothy Cheung; Irene Li; Alireza Heravi-Moussavi; Michelle Moksa; Matthew Mingay; Angela Hussainkhel; Brad H. Davis; Raman P. Nagarajan; Chibo Hong; Lorigail Echipare; Henriette O'Geen; Matthew J. Hangauer; Jeffrey B. Cheng; Dana S. Neel; Donglei Hu; Michael T. McManus; Richard A. Moore

While significant effort has been dedicated to the characterization of epigenetic changes associated with prenatal differentiation, relatively little is known about the epigenetic changes that accompany post-natal differentiation where fully functional differentiated cell types with limited lifespans arise. Here we sought to address this gap by generating epigenomic and transcriptional profiles from primary human breast cell types isolated from disease-free human subjects. From these data we define a comprehensive human breast transcriptional network, including a set of myoepithelial- and luminal epithelial-specific intronic retention events. Intersection of epigenetic states with RNA expression from distinct breast epithelium lineages demonstrates that mCpG provides a stable record of exonic and intronic usage, whereas H3K36me3 is dynamic. We find a striking asymmetry in epigenomic reprogramming between luminal and myoepithelial cell types, with the genomes of luminal cells harbouring more than twice the number of hypomethylated enhancer elements compared with myoepithelial cells.

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Thea D. Tlsty

University of California

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Chibo Hong

University of California

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Daofeng Li

Washington University in St. Louis

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Peggy J. Farnham

University of Southern California

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Angela Tam

University of British Columbia

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Marco A. Marra

University of British Columbia

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Martin Hirst

University of British Columbia

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