Patrick Onyango
Johns Hopkins University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Patrick Onyango.
Nature Genetics | 2009
Rafael A. Irizarry; Christine Ladd-Acosta; Bo Wen; Zhijin Wu; Carolina Montano; Patrick Onyango; Hengmi Cui; Kevin Gabo; Michael Rongione; Maree J. Webster; Hong-Fei Ji; James B. Potash; Sarven Sabunciyan; Andrew P. Feinberg
Alterations in DNA methylation (DNAm) in cancer have been known for 25 years, including hypomethylation of oncogenes and hypermethylation of tumor suppressor genes1. However, most studies of cancer methylation have assumed that functionally important DNAm will occur in promoters, and that most DNAm changes in cancer occur in CpG islands2,3. Here we show that most methylation alterations in colon cancer occur not in promoters, and also not in CpG islands but in sequences up to 2 kb distant which we term “CpG island shores.” CpG island shore methylation was strongly related to gene expression, and it was highly conserved in mouse, discriminating tissue types regardless of species of origin. There was a surprising overlap (45-65%) of the location of colon cancer-related methylation changes with those that distinguished normal tissues, with hypermethylation enriched closer to the associated CpG islands, and hypomethylation enriched further from the associated CpG island and resembling non-colon normal tissues. Thus, methylation changes in cancer are at sites that vary normally in tissue differentiation, and they are consistent with the epigenetic progenitor model of cancer4, that epigenetic alterations affecting tissue-specific differentiation are the predominant mechanism by which epigenetic changes cause cancer.
Nature | 2008
Wenqiang Yu; David Gius; Patrick Onyango; Kristi Muldoon-Jacobs; Judith Karp; Andrew P. Feinberg; Hengmi Cui
Tumour suppressor genes (TSGs) inhibiting normal cellular growth are frequently silenced epigenetically in cancer. DNA methylation is commonly associated with TSG silencing, yet mutations in the DNA methylation initiation and recognition machinery in carcinogenesis are unknown. An intriguing possible mechanism for gene regulation involves widespread non-coding RNAs such as microRNA, Piwi-interacting RNA and antisense RNAs. Widespread sense–antisense transcripts have been systematically identified in mammalian cells, and global transcriptome analysis shows that up to 70% of transcripts have antisense partners and that perturbation of antisense RNA can alter the expression of the sense gene. For example, it has been shown that an antisense transcript not naturally occurring but induced by genetic mutation leads to gene silencing and DNA methylation, causing thalassaemia in a patient. Here we show that many TSGs have nearby antisense RNAs, and we focus on the role of one RNA in silencing p15, a cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor implicated in leukaemia. We found an inverse relation between p15 antisense (p15AS) and p15 sense expression in leukaemia. A p15AS expression construct induced p15 silencing in cis and in trans through heterochromatin formation but not DNA methylation; the silencing persisted after p15AS was turned off, although methylation and heterochromatin inhibitors reversed this process. The p15AS-induced silencing was Dicer-independent. Expression of exogenous p15AS in mouse embryonic stem cells caused p15 silencing and increased growth, through heterochromatin formation, as well as DNA methylation after differentiation of the embryonic stem cells. Thus, natural antisense RNA may be a trigger for heterochromatin formation and DNA methylation in TSG silencing in tumorigenesis.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002
Patrick Onyango; Ivana Celic; J. Michael McCaffery; Jef D. Boeke; Andrew P. Feinberg
The SIR2 (silent information regulator 2) gene family has diverse functions in yeast including gene silencing, DNA repair, cell-cycle progression, and chromosome fidelity in meiosis and aging. Human homologues, termed sirtuins, are highly conserved but are of unknown function. We previously identified a large imprinted gene domain on 11p15.5 and investigated the 11p15.5 sirtuin SIRT3. Although this gene was not imprinted, we found that it is localized to mitochondria, with a mitochondrial targeting signal within a unique N-terminal peptide sequence. The encoded protein was found also to possess NAD+-dependent histone deacetylase activity. These results suggest a previously unrecognized organelle for sirtuin function and that the role of SIRT3 in mitochondria involves protein deacetylation.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007
Atsushi Kaneda; Chiaochun J. Wang; Raymond Cheong; Winston Timp; Patrick Onyango; Bo Wen; Christine A. Iacobuzio-Donahue; Rolf Ohlsson; Rita Andraos; Mark Pearson; Alexei A. Sharov; Dan L. Longo; Minoru S.H. Ko; Andre Levchenko; Andrew P. Feinberg
Loss of imprinting (LOI) of the insulin-like growth factor-II gene (IGF2), leading to abnormal activation of the normally silent maternal allele, is a common human epigenetic population variant associated with a 5-fold increased frequency of colorectal neoplasia. Here, we show first that LOI leads specifically to increased expression of proliferation-related genes in mouse intestinal crypts. Surprisingly, LOI(+) mice also have enhanced sensitivity to IGF-II signaling, not simply increased IGF-II levels, because in vivo blockade with NVP-AEW541, a specific inhibitor of the IGF-II signaling receptor, showed reduction of proliferation-related gene expression to levels half that seen in LOI(−) mice. Signal transduction assays in microfluidic chips confirmed this enhanced sensitivity with marked augmentation of Akt/PKB signaling in LOI(+) cells at low doses of IGF-II, which was reduced in the presence of the inhibitor to levels below those found in LOI(−) cells, and was associated with increased expression of the IGF1 and insulin receptor genes. We exploited this increased IGF-II sensitivity to develop an in vivo chemopreventive strategy using the azoxymethane (AOM) mutagenesis model. LOI(+) mice treated with AOM showed a 60% increase in premalignant aberrant crypt foci (ACF) formation over LOI(−) mice. In vivo IGF-II blockade with NVP-AEW541 abrogated this effect, reducing ACF to a level 30% lower even than found in exposed LOI(−) mice. Thus, LOI increases cancer risk in a counterintuitive way, by increasing the sensitivity of the IGF-II signaling pathway itself, providing a previously undescribed epigenetic chemoprevention strategy in which cells with LOI are “IGF-II addicted” and undergo reduced tumorigenesis in the colon upon IGF-II pathway blockade.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011
Patrick Onyango; Andrew P. Feinberg
The H19 gene, which localizes within a chromosomal region on human chromosome 11p15 that is commonly lost in Wilms tumor (WT), encodes an imprinted untranslated RNA. However, the biological significance of the H19 noncoding transcript remains unresolved because replacement of the RNA transcript with a neocassette has no obvious phenotypic effect. Here we show that the human H19 locus also encodes a maternally expressed, translated gene, antisense to the known H19 transcript, which is conserved in primates. This gene, termed HOTS for H19 opposite tumor suppressor, encodes a protein that localizes to the nucleus and nucleolus and that interacts with the human enhancer of rudimentary homolog (ERH) protein. WTs that show loss of heterozygosity of 11p15 or loss of imprinting of IGF2 also silence HOTS (7/7 and 10/10, respectively). Overexpression of HOTS inhibits Wilms, rhabdoid, rhabdomyosarcoma, and choriocarcinoma tumor cell growth, and silencing HOTS by RNAi increases in vitro colony formation and in vivo tumor growth. These results demonstrate that the human H19 locus harbors an imprinted gene encoding a tumor suppressor protein within the long-sought WT2 locus.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002
Patrick Onyango; Shan Jiang; Hiroshi Uejima; Michael J. Shamblott; John D. Gearhart; Hengmi Cui; Andrew P. Feinberg
Imprinting is an epigenetic modification leading to monoallelic expression of some genes, and disrupted imprinting is believed to be a barrier to human stem cell transplantation, based on studies that suggest that epigenetic marks are unstable in mouse embryonic germ (EG) and embryonic stem (ES) cells. However, stem cell imprinting has not previously been examined directly in humans. We found that three imprinted genes, TSSC5, H19, and SNRPN, show monoallelic expression in in vitro differentiated human EG-derived cells, and a fourth gene, IGF2, shows partially relaxed imprinting at a ratio from 4:1 to 5:1, comparable to that found in normal somatic cells. In addition, we found normal methylation of an imprinting control region (ICR) that regulates H19 and IGF2 imprinting, suggesting that imprinting may not be a significant epigenetic barrier to human EG cell transplantation. Finally, we were able to construct an in vitro mouse model of genomic imprinting, by generating EG cells from 8.5-day embryos of an interspecific cross, in which undifferentiated cells show biallelic expression and acquire preferential parental allele expression after differentiation. This model should allow experimental manipulation of epigenetic modifications of cultured EG cells that may not be possible in human stem cell studies.
Cancer Research | 2002
Hengmi Cui; Patrick Onyango; Sheri Brandenburg; Yiqian Wu; Chih-Lin Hsieh; Andrew P. Feinberg
Genome Research | 2002
Liora Strichman-almashanu; Richard S. Lee; Patrick Onyango; Elizabeth J. Perlman; Folke Flam; Matthew B. Frieman; Andrew P. Feinberg
Cancer Research | 2001
Hengmi Cui; Emily L. Niemitz; Jason D. Ravenel; Patrick Onyango; Sheri Brandenburg; Victor Lobanenkov; Andrew P. Feinberg
Genome Research | 2000
Patrick Onyango; Webb Miller; Jessica Lehoczky; Cheuk T. Leung; Bruce Birren; Sarah J. Wheelan; Ken Dewar; Andrew P. Feinberg