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Featured researches published by Matthew T. Wheeler.


Nature Immunology | 2004

The ubiquitin-modifying enzyme A20 is required for termination of Toll-like receptor responses

David L. Boone; Emre E. Turer; Eric G. Lee; Regina Celeste Ahmad; Matthew T. Wheeler; Colleen Tsui; Paula J. Hurley; Marcia Chien; Sophia Chai; Osamu Hitotsumatsu; Elizabeth M. McNally; Cecile M. Pickart; Averil Ma

A20 is a cytoplasmic protein required for the termination of tumor necrosis factor (TNF)–induced signals. We show here that mice doubly deficient in either A20 and TNF or A20 and TNF receptor 1 developed spontaneous inflammation, indicating that A20 is also critical for the regulation of TNF-independent signals in vivo. A20 was required for the termination of Toll-like receptor–induced activity of the transcription factor NF-κB and proinflammatory gene expression in macrophages, and this function protected mice from endotoxic shock. A20 accomplished this biochemically by directly removing ubiquitin moieties from the signaling molecule TRAF6. The critical function of this deubiquitinating enzyme in the restriction of TLR signals emphasizes the importance of the regulation of ubiquitin conjugation in innate immune cells.


The Lancet | 2010

Clinical assessment incorporating a personal genome

Euan A. Ashley; Atul J. Butte; Matthew T. Wheeler; Rong Chen; Teri E. Klein; Frederick E. Dewey; Joel T. Dudley; Kelly E. Ormond; Aleksandra Pavlovic; Alexander A. Morgan; Dmitry Pushkarev; Norma F. Neff; Louanne Hudgins; Li Gong; Laura M. Hodges; Dorit S. Berlin; Caroline F. Thorn; Joan M. Hebert; Mark Woon; Hersh Sagreiya; Ryan Whaley; Joshua W. Knowles; Michael F. Chou; Joseph V. Thakuria; Abraham M. Rosenbaum; Alexander Wait Zaranek; George M. Church; Henry T. Greely; Stephen R. Quake; Russ B. Altman

BACKGROUND The cost of genomic information has fallen steeply, but the clinical translation of genetic risk estimates remains unclear. We aimed to undertake an integrated analysis of a complete human genome in a clinical context. METHODS We assessed a patient with a family history of vascular disease and early sudden death. Clinical assessment included analysis of this patients full genome sequence, risk prediction for coronary artery disease, screening for causes of sudden cardiac death, and genetic counselling. Genetic analysis included the development of novel methods for the integration of whole genome and clinical risk. Disease and risk analysis focused on prediction of genetic risk of variants associated with mendelian disease, recognised drug responses, and pathogenicity for novel variants. We queried disease-specific mutation databases and pharmacogenomics databases to identify genes and mutations with known associations with disease and drug response. We estimated post-test probabilities of disease by applying likelihood ratios derived from integration of multiple common variants to age-appropriate and sex-appropriate pre-test probabilities. We also accounted for gene-environment interactions and conditionally dependent risks. FINDINGS Analysis of 2.6 million single nucleotide polymorphisms and 752 copy number variations showed increased genetic risk for myocardial infarction, type 2 diabetes, and some cancers. We discovered rare variants in three genes that are clinically associated with sudden cardiac death-TMEM43, DSP, and MYBPC3. A variant in LPA was consistent with a family history of coronary artery disease. The patient had a heterozygous null mutation in CYP2C19 suggesting probable clopidogrel resistance, several variants associated with a positive response to lipid-lowering therapy, and variants in CYP4F2 and VKORC1 that suggest he might have a low initial dosing requirement for warfarin. Many variants of uncertain importance were reported. INTERPRETATION Although challenges remain, our results suggest that whole-genome sequencing can yield useful and clinically relevant information for individual patients. FUNDING National Institute of General Medical Sciences; National Heart, Lung And Blood Institute; National Human Genome Research Institute; Howard Hughes Medical Institute; National Library of Medicine, Lucile Packard Foundation for Childrens Health; Hewlett Packard Foundation; Breetwor Family Foundation.


JAMA | 2014

Clinical Interpretation and Implications of Whole-Genome Sequencing

Frederick E. Dewey; Megan E. Grove; Cuiping Pan; Benjamin A. Goldstein; Jonathan A. Bernstein; Hassan Chaib; Jason D. Merker; Rachel L. Goldfeder; Gregory M. Enns; Sean P. David; Neda Pakdaman; Kelly E. Ormond; Colleen Caleshu; Kerry Kingham; Teri E. Klein; Michelle Whirl-Carrillo; Kenneth Sakamoto; Matthew T. Wheeler; Atul J. Butte; James M. Ford; Linda M. Boxer; John P. A. Ioannidis; Alan C. Yeung; Russ B. Altman; Themistocles L. Assimes; Michael Snyder; Euan A. Ashley; Thomas Quertermous

IMPORTANCE Whole-genome sequencing (WGS) is increasingly applied in clinical medicine and is expected to uncover clinically significant findings regardless of sequencing indication. OBJECTIVES To examine coverage and concordance of clinically relevant genetic variation provided by WGS technologies; to quantitate inherited disease risk and pharmacogenomic findings in WGS data and resources required for their discovery and interpretation; and to evaluate clinical action prompted by WGS findings. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS An exploratory study of 12 adult participants recruited at Stanford University Medical Center who underwent WGS between November 2011 and March 2012. A multidisciplinary team reviewed all potentially reportable genetic findings. Five physicians proposed initial clinical follow-up based on the genetic findings. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Genome coverage and sequencing platform concordance in different categories of genetic disease risk, person-hours spent curating candidate disease-risk variants, interpretation agreement between trained curators and disease genetics databases, burden of inherited disease risk and pharmacogenomic findings, and burden and interrater agreement of proposed clinical follow-up. RESULTS Depending on sequencing platform, 10% to 19% of inherited disease genes were not covered to accepted standards for single nucleotide variant discovery. Genotype concordance was high for previously described single nucleotide genetic variants (99%-100%) but low for small insertion/deletion variants (53%-59%). Curation of 90 to 127 genetic variants in each participant required a median of 54 minutes (range, 5-223 minutes) per genetic variant, resulted in moderate classification agreement between professionals (Gross κ, 0.52; 95% CI, 0.40-0.64), and reclassified 69% of genetic variants cataloged as disease causing in mutation databases to variants of uncertain or lesser significance. Two to 6 personal disease-risk findings were discovered in each participant, including 1 frameshift deletion in the BRCA1 gene implicated in hereditary breast and ovarian cancer. Physician review of sequencing findings prompted consideration of a median of 1 to 3 initial diagnostic tests and referrals per participant, with fair interrater agreement about the suitability of WGS findings for clinical follow-up (Fleiss κ, 0.24; P < 001). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE In this exploratory study of 12 volunteer adults, the use of WGS was associated with incomplete coverage of inherited disease genes, low reproducibility of detection of genetic variation with the highest potential clinical effects, and uncertainty about clinically reportable findings. In certain cases, WGS will identify clinically actionable genetic variants warranting early medical intervention. These issues should be considered when determining the role of WGS in clinical medicine.


Annals of Internal Medicine | 2010

Cost-Effectiveness of Preparticipation Screening for Prevention of Sudden Cardiac Death in Young Athletes

Matthew T. Wheeler; Paul A. Heidenreich; Victor F. Froelicher; Mark A. Hlatky; Euan A. Ashley

BACKGROUND Inclusion of 12-lead electrocardiography (ECG) in preparticipation screening of young athletes is controversial because of concerns about cost-effectiveness. OBJECTIVE To evaluate the cost-effectiveness of ECG plus cardiovascular-focused history and physical examination compared with cardiovascular-focused history and physical examination alone for preparticipation screening. DESIGN Decision-analysis, cost-effectiveness model. DATA SOURCES Published epidemiologic and preparticipation screening data, vital statistics, and other publicly available data. TARGET POPULATION Competitive athletes in high school and college aged 14 to 22 years. TIME HORIZON Lifetime. PERSPECTIVE Societal. INTERVENTION Nonparticipation in competitive athletic activity and disease-specific treatment for identified athletes with heart disease. OUTCOME MEASURE Incremental health care cost per life-year gained. RESULTS OF BASE-CASE ANALYSIS Addition of ECG to preparticipation screening saves 2.06 life-years per 1000 athletes at an incremental total cost of


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2002

Episodic coronary artery vasospasm and hypertension develop in the absence of Sur2 KATP channels

William A. Chutkow; Jielin Pu; Matthew T. Wheeler; Tomoyuki Wada; Jonathan C. Makielski; Charles F. Burant; Elizabeth M. McNally

89 per athlete and yields a cost-effectiveness ratio of


The Lancet | 2010

Challenges in the clinical application of whole-genome sequencing

Kelly E. Ormond; Matthew T. Wheeler; Louanne Hudgins; Teri E. Klein; Atul J. Butte; Russ B. Altman; Euan A. Ashley; Henry T. Greely

42 900 per life-year saved (95% CI,


Circulation | 2011

Interpretation of the Electrocardiogram of Young Athletes

Abhimanyu Uberoi; Ricardo Stein; Marco V Perez; James V. Freeman; Matthew T. Wheeler; Frederick E. Dewey; Roberto Peidro; David Hadley; Jonathan A. Drezner; Sanjay Sharma; Antonio Pelliccia; Domenico Corrado; Josef Niebauer; N.A. Mark Estes; Euan A. Ashley; Victor F. Froelicher

21 200 to


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

A public resource facilitating clinical use of genomes

Madeleine Ball; Joseph V. Thakuria; Alexander Wait Zaranek; Tom Clegg; Abraham M. Rosenbaum; Xiaodi Wu; Misha Angrist; Jong Bhak; Jason Bobe; Matthew J. Callow; Carlos Cano; Michael F. Chou; Wendy K. Chung; Shawn M. Douglas; Preston W. Estep; Athurva Gore; Peter J. Hulick; Alberto Labarga; Je-Hyuk Lee; Jeantine E. Lunshof; Byung Chul Kim; Jong-Il Kim; Zhe Li; Michael F. Murray; Geoffrey B. Nilsen; Brock A. Peters; Anugraha M. Raman; Hugh Y. Rienhoff; Kimberly Robasky; Matthew T. Wheeler

71 300 per life-year saved) compared with cardiovascular-focused history and physical examination alone. Compared with no screening, ECG plus cardiovascular-focused history and physical examination saves 2.6 life-years per 1000 athletes screened and costs


PLOS Genetics | 2011

Phased Whole-Genome Genetic Risk in a Family Quartet Using a Major Allele Reference Sequence

Frederick E. Dewey; Rong Chen; Sergio Cordero; Kelly E. Ormond; Colleen Caleshu; Konrad J. Karczewski; Michelle Whirl-Carrillo; Matthew T. Wheeler; Joel T. Dudley; Jake K. Byrnes; Omar E. Cornejo; Joshua W. Knowles; Mark Woon; Li Gong; Caroline F. Thorn; Joan M. Hebert; Emidio Capriotti; Sean P. David; Aleksandra Pavlovic; Anne West; Joseph V. Thakuria; Madeleine Ball; Alexander Wait Zaranek; Heidi L. Rehm; George M. Church; John West; Carlos Bustamante; Michael Snyder; Russ B. Altman; Teri E. Klein

199 per athlete, yielding a cost-effectiveness ratio of


American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 1999

An E-box within the MHC IIB gene is bound by MyoD and is required for gene expression in fast muscle

Matthew T. Wheeler; Emily C. Snyder; Melissa N. Patterson; Steven J. Swoap

76 100 per life-year saved (

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