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Dive into the research topics where Matthew Rodesch is active.

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Featured researches published by Matthew Rodesch.


Nature Genetics | 2007

Genome-wide in situ exon capture for selective resequencing

Emily Hodges; Zhenyu Xuan; Vivekanand Balija; Melissa Kramer; Michael Molla; Steven Smith; Christina Middle; Matthew Rodesch; Thomas J. Albert; Gregory J. Hannon; W. Richard McCombie

Increasingly powerful sequencing technologies are ushering in an era of personal genome sequences and raising the possibility of using such information to guide medical decisions. Genome resequencing also promises to accelerate the identification of disease-associated mutations. Roughly 98% of the human genome is composed of repeats and intergenic or non–protein-coding sequences. Thus, it is crucial to focus resequencing on high-value genomic regions. Protein-coding exons represent one such type of high-value target. We have developed a method of using flexible, high-density microarrays to capture any desired fraction of the human genome, in this case corresponding to more than 200,000 protein-coding exons. Depending on the precise protocol, up to 55–85% of the captured fragments are associated with targeted regions and up to 98% of intended exons can be recovered. This methodology provides an adaptable route toward rapid and efficient resequencing of any sizeable, non-repeat portion of the human genome.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2010

Genome-wide analysis of allelic expression imbalance in human primary cells by high-throughput transcriptome resequencing

Graham A. Heap; Jennie H. M. Yang; Kate Downes; Barry Healy; Karen A. Hunt; Nicholas A. Bockett; Lude Franke; P Dubois; Charles A. Mein; Richard Dobson; Thomas J. Albert; Matthew Rodesch; David G. Clayton; John A. Todd; David A. van Heel; Vincent Plagnol

Many disease-associated variants identified by genome-wide association (GWA) studies are expected to regulate gene expression. Allele-specific expression (ASE) quantifies transcription from both haplotypes using individuals heterozygous at tested SNPs. We performed deep human transcriptome-wide resequencing (RNA-seq) for ASE analysis and expression quantitative trait locus discovery. We resequenced double poly(A)-selected RNA from primary CD4+ T cells (n = 4 individuals, both activated and untreated conditions) and developed tools for paired-end RNA-seq alignment and ASE analysis. We generated an average of 20 million uniquely mapping 45 base reads per sample. We obtained sufficient read depth to test 1371 unique transcripts for ASE. Multiple biases inflate the false discovery rate which we estimate to be ∼50% for random SNPs. However, after controlling for these biases and considering the subset of SNPs that pass HapMap QC, 4.6% of heterozygous SNP-sample pairs show evidence of imbalance (P < 0.001). We validated four findings by both bacterial cloning and Sanger sequencing assays. We also found convincing evidence for allelic imbalance at multiple reporter exonic SNPs in CD6 for two samples heterozygous at the multiple sclerosis-associated variant rs17824933, linking GWA findings with variation in gene expression. Finally, we show in CD4+ T cells from a further individual that high-throughput sequencing of genomic DNA and RNA-seq following enrichment for targeted gene sequences by sequence capture methods offers an unbiased means to increase the read depth for transcripts of interest, and therefore a method to investigate the regulatory role of many disease-associated genetic variants.


Genome Biology | 2010

Whole exome capture in solution with 3 Gbp of data.

Matthew N. Bainbridge; Min Wang; Daniel Burgess; Christie Kovar; Matthew Rodesch; Mark D'Ascenzo; Jacob Kitzman; Yuan Qing Wu; Irene Newsham; Todd Richmond; Jeffrey A. Jeddeloh; Donna M. Muzny; Thomas J. Albert; Richard A. Gibbs

We have developed a solution-based method for targeted DNA capture-sequencing that is directed to the complete human exome. Using this approach allows the discovery of greater than 95% of all expected heterozygous singe base variants, requires as little as 3 Gbp of raw sequence data and constitutes an effective tool for identifying rare coding alleles in large scale genomic studies.


Nature Methods | 2007

Direct selection of human genomic loci by microarray hybridization

Thomas J. Albert; Michael Molla; Donna M. Muzny; Lynne V. Nazareth; David A. Wheeler; Xingzhi Song; Todd Richmond; Chris M Middle; Matthew Rodesch; Charles J Packard; George M. Weinstock; Richard A. Gibbs


Chromosome Research | 2011

Fluorescence in situ hybridization with high-complexity repeat-free oligonucleotide probes generated by massively parallel synthesis

Shelagh Boyle; Matthew Rodesch; Heather Halvensleben; Jeffrey A. Jeddeloh; Wendy A. Bickmore


Human Genetics | 2010

A comprehensive resequence analysis of the KLK15–KLK3–KLK2 locus on chromosome 19q13.33

Hemang Parikh; Zuoming Deng; Meredith Yeager; Joseph Boland; Casey Matthews; Jinping Jia; Irene Collins; Ariel White; Laura Burdett; Amy Hutchinson; Liqun Qi; Jennifer Bacior; Victor Lonsberry; Matthew Rodesch; Jeffrey A. Jeddeloh; Thomas J. Albert; Heather Halvensleben; Timothy T. Harkins; Jiyoung Ahn; Sonja I. Berndt; Nilanjan Chatterjee; Robert N. Hoover; Gilles Thomas; David J. Hunter; Richard B. Hayes; Stephen J. Chanock; Laufey Amundadottir


Cell Reports | 2013

Higher-Order Looping and Nuclear Organization of Tcra Facilitate Targeted RAG Cleavage and Regulated Rearrangement in Recombination Centers

Julie Chaumeil; Mariann Micsinai; Panagiotis Ntziachristos; Ludovic Deriano; Joy M.-H. Wang; Yanhong Ji; Elphège P. Nora; Matthew Rodesch; Jeffrey A. Jeddeloh; Iannis Aifantis; Yuval Kluger; David G. Schatz; Jane A. Skok


Archive | 2008

Enrichment and sequence analysis of genomic regions

Thomas J. Albert; Roland Green; Todd Richmond; Michael Molla; Jeffrey A. Jeddeloh; Jason Affourtit; Mathreyan Srinivasan; Brian C. Godwin; Matthew Rodesch


Archive | 2009

Methods and systems for uniform enrichment of genomic regions

Jacob Kitzman; Todd Richmond; Mark D'Ascenzo; Thomas J. Albert; Matthew Rodesch; Jeffrey A. Jeddeloh; Christina Middle


Archive | 2008

Methods and systems for solution based sequence enrichment and analysis of genomic regions

Thomas J. Albert; Matthew Rodesch

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Michael Molla

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Richard A. Gibbs

Baylor College of Medicine

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Amy Hutchinson

National Institutes of Health

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