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Dive into the research topics where Raymond D. Miller is active.

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Featured researches published by Raymond D. Miller.


Nature Genetics | 2001

Single-nucleotide polymorphisms in the public domain: how useful are they?

Gabor T. Marth; Raymond T. Yeh; Matthew Minton; Rachel Donaldson; Qun Li; Shenghui Duan; Ruth Davenport; Raymond D. Miller; Pui-Yan Kwok

There is a concerted effort by a number of public and private groups to identify a large set of human single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). As of March 2001, 2.84 million SNPs have been deposited in the public database, dbSNP, at the National Center for Biotechnology Information (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/SNP/). The 2.84 million SNPs can be grouped into 1.65 million non-redundant SNPs. As part of the International SNP Map Working Group, we recently published a high-density SNP map of the human genome consisting of 1.42 million SNPs (ref. 3). In addition, numerous SNPs are maintained in proprietary databases. Our survey of more than 1,200 SNPs indicates that more than 80% of TSC and Washington University candidate SNPs are polymorphic and that approximately 50% of the candidate SNPs from these two sources are common SNPs (with minor allele frequency of ≥20%) in any given population.


Cell | 1983

Transposable element IS50 improves growth rate of E. coli cells without transposition

Daniel L. Hartl; Daniel E. Dykhuizen; Raymond D. Miller; Louis S. Green; Jean de Framond

Insertion sequence IS50R, which encodes the transposase and an inhibitor of transposition of the kanamycin-resistance transposon Tn5, increases the growth rate of E. coli K12 cells relative to that of their otherwise isogenic counterparts during competition in continuous culture. Most clones isolated from chemostats in which selection had occurred retain their original number of copies of IS50R at their original genomic locations, implying that the increased growth rate is not mediated by transposition. The selective advantage due to a single IS50R element averages about 5% per hour. When the number of copies of IS50R is small, the growth-rate advantage is approximately proportional to the number of copies of IS50R. These results imply that IS50R has effects on cells that are independent of both position and transposition and may be important in the initial selection leading to the appearance of such elements in bacterial populations.


PLOS Genetics | 2011

Caenorhabditis briggsae Recombinant Inbred Line Genotypes Reveal Inter-Strain Incompatibility and the Evolution of Recombination

Joseph A. Ross; Daniel C. Koboldt; Julia E. Staisch; Helen M. Chamberlin; Bhagwati P. Gupta; Raymond D. Miller; Scott Everet Baird; Eric S. Haag

The nematode Caenorhabditis briggsae is an emerging model organism that allows evolutionary comparisons with C. elegans and exploration of its own unique biological attributes. To produce a high-resolution C. briggsae recombination map, recombinant inbred lines were generated from reciprocal crosses between two strains and genotyped at over 1,000 loci. A second set of recombinant inbred lines involving a third strain was also genotyped at lower resolution. The resulting recombination maps exhibit discrete domains of high and low recombination, as in C. elegans, indicating these are a general feature of Caenorhabditis species. The proportion of a chromosomes physical size occupied by the central, low-recombination domain is highly correlated between species. However, the C. briggsae intra-species comparison reveals striking variation in the distribution of recombination between domains. Hybrid lines made with the more divergent pair of strains also exhibit pervasive marker transmission ratio distortion, evidence of selection acting on hybrid genotypes. The strongest effect, on chromosome III, is explained by a developmental delay phenotype exhibited by some hybrid F2 animals. In addition, on chromosomes IV and V, cross direction-specific biases towards one parental genotype suggest the existence of cytonuclear epistatic interactions. These interactions are discussed in relation to surprising mitochondrial genome polymorphism in C. briggsae, evidence that the two strains diverged in allopatry, the potential for local adaptation, and the evolution of Dobzhansky-Muller incompatibilities. The genetic and genomic resources resulting from this work will support future efforts to understand inter-strain divergence as well as facilitate studies of gene function, natural variation, and the evolution of recombination in Caenorhabditis nematodes.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2007

The Immunogenetics of Smallpox Vaccination

Samuel L. Stanley; Sharon E. Frey; Patricia Taillon-Miller; Jianhua Guo; Raymond D. Miller; Daniel C. Koboldt; Michael Elashoff; Ryan Christensen; Nancy L. Saccone; Robert B. Belshe

We hypothesized that individuals who develop fever after smallpox vaccination have genetically determined differences in their immune responses to vaccinia virus. We looked for an association between the development of fever and single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 19 candidate genes in 346 individuals previously assessed for clinical responses to smallpox vaccination. Fever after smallpox vaccination is associated with specific haplotypes in the interleukin (IL)-1 gene complex and in the IL18 gene. A haplotype in the IL4 gene was highly significant for reduced susceptibility to the development of fever after vaccination among vaccinia-naive individuals. Our results indicate that certain haplotypes in the IL-1 gene complex and in IL18 and IL4 predict an altered likelihood of the development of fever after smallpox vaccination. Our findings also raise the possibility that these same haplotypes may identify individuals at risk for the development of fever after receipt of other live virus vaccines, providing information that could be useful in anticipating and preventing more-serious adverse events.


Human Heredity | 2004

Analysis of Candidate Genes for Prostate Cancer

James K. Burmester; Brian K. Suarez; Jennifer H. Lin; Carol H. Jin; Raymond D. Miller; Kai Qi Zhang; Sherry A. Salzman; Douglas J. Reding; William J. Catalona

Considerable evidence demonstrates that genetic factors are important in the development and aggressiveness of prostate cancer. To identify genetic variants that predispose to prostate cancer we tested candidate SNPs from genomic regions that show linkage to prostate cancer susceptibility and/or aggressiveness, as well as genes that show a significant difference in mRNA expression level between tumor and normal tissue. Cases had histologically verified prostate cancer. Controls were at least 65 years old, never registered a PSA above 2.5 ng/ml, always had digital rectal examinations that were not suspicious for cancer, and have no known family history of prostate cancer. Thirty-nine coding SNPs and nine non-coding SNPs were tested in up to 590 cases and 556 controls resulting in over 40,000 SNP genotypes. Significant differences in allele frequencies between cases and controls were observed for ID3 (inhibitor of DNA binding), p = 0.05, HPN (hepsin), p = 0.009, BCAS1 (breast carcinoma amplified sequence 1), p = 0.007, CAV2 (caveolin 2), p = 0.007, EMP3 (epithelial membrane protein 3), p < 0.0001, and MLH1 (mutL homolog 1), p < 0.0001. SNPs in three of these genes (BCAS1, EMP3 and MLH1) remained significant in an age-matched subsample.


Evolution | 1986

BIOTYPING CONFIRMS A NEARLY CLONAL POPULATION STRUCTURE IN ESCHERICHIA COLI

Raymond D. Miller; Daniel L. Hartl

A. reference collection of 72 natural isolates of Escherichia coli (the ECOR collection) has been examined with respect to eight metabolic capabilities (biotype characters) plus motility and resistance or sensitivity to five common antibiotics. Data from biotype characters were analyzed by means of unweighted pair‐group cluster analysis, and the genetic variation among the strains defines three major clusters of strains with substantial variation within each cluster but greater genetic similarity of strains within a cluster than between clusters. These clusters define an infraspecific population structure in E. coli, which reflects the predominantly clonal mode of reproduction in this organism. The clusters identified by the biotype characters are in good agreement with those resulting from an analysis of 11 enzyme polymorphisms (allozymes) among the strains, and these are in good agreement with the infraspecific structure detected by factor analysis of allozyme data. The clusters of strains also differ in several genetic characteristics that are independent of those used in making the classification.


BMC Genomics | 2010

A toolkit for rapid gene mapping in the nematode Caenorhabditis briggsae

Daniel C. Koboldt; Julia E. Staisch; Bavithra Thillainathan; Karen Haines; Scott Everet Baird; Helen M. Chamberlin; Eric S. Haag; Raymond D. Miller; Bhagwati P. Gupta

BackgroundThe nematode C. briggsae serves as a useful model organism for comparative analysis of developmental and behavioral processes. The amenability of C. briggsae to genetic manipulations and the availability of its genome sequence have prompted researchers to study evolutionary changes in gene function and signaling pathways. These studies rely on the availability of forward genetic tools such as mutants and mapping markers.ResultsWe have computationally identified more than 30,000 polymorphisms (SNPs and indels) in C. briggsae strains AF16 and HK104. These include 1,363 SNPs that change restriction enzyme recognition sites (snip-SNPs) and 638 indels that range between 7 bp and 2 kb. We established bulk segregant and single animal-based PCR assay conditions and used these to test 107 polymorphisms. A total of 75 polymorphisms, consisting of 14 snip-SNPs and 61 indels, were experimentally confirmed with an overall success rate of 83%. The utility of polymorphisms in genetic studies was demonstrated by successful mapping of 12 mutations, including 5 that were localized to sub-chromosomal regions. Our mapping experiments have also revealed one case of a misassembled contig on chromosome 3.ConclusionsWe report a comprehensive set of polymorphisms in C. briggsae wild-type strains and demonstrate their use in mapping mutations. We also show that molecular markers can be useful tools to improve the C. briggsae genome sequence assembly. Our polymorphism resource promises to accelerate genetic and functional studies of C. briggsae genes.


BioTechniques | 2001

Universal SNP Genotyping Assay with Fluorescence Polarization Detection

Tony M. Hsu; Xiangning Chen; Shenghui Duan; Raymond D. Miller; Pui-Yan Kwok


PLOS Biology | 2007

Comparison of C. elegans and C. briggsae genome sequences reveals extensive conservation of chromosome organization and synteny.

LaDeana W. Hillier; Raymond D. Miller; Scott Everet Baird; Asif T. Chinwalla; Lucinda A. Fulton; Daniel C. Koboldt; Robert H. Waterston


Urology | 2005

Highly specific urine-based marker of bladder cancer.

Thu-Suong Van Le; Raymond D. Miller; Timothy Barder; Marko Babjuk; Douglas M. Potter; Robert H. Getzenberg

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Daniel C. Koboldt

Washington University in St. Louis

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Pui-Yan Kwok

University of California

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Louis S. Green

University of Colorado Boulder

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Brian K. Suarez

Washington University in St. Louis

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Carol H. Jin

Washington University in St. Louis

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Patricia Taillon-Miller

Washington University in St. Louis

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