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Featured researches published by Rhonda E. Ries.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2009

Recurring Mutations Found by Sequencing an Acute Myeloid Leukemia Genome

Elaine R. Mardis; Li Ding; David J. Dooling; David E. Larson; Michael D. McLellan; Ken Chen; Daniel C. Koboldt; Robert S. Fulton; Kim D. Delehaunty; Sean McGrath; Lucinda A. Fulton; Devin P. Locke; Vincent Magrini; Rachel Abbott; Tammi L. Vickery; Jerry S. Reed; Jody S. Robinson; Todd Wylie; Scott M. Smith; Lynn K. Carmichael; James M. Eldred; Christopher C. Harris; Jason Walker; Joshua B. Peck; Feiyu Du; Adam F. Dukes; Gabriel E. Sanderson; Anthony M. Brummett; Eric Clark; Joshua F. McMichael

BACKGROUND The full complement of DNA mutations that are responsible for the pathogenesis of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is not yet known. METHODS We used massively parallel DNA sequencing to obtain a very high level of coverage (approximately 98%) of a primary, cytogenetically normal, de novo genome for AML with minimal maturation (AML-M1) and a matched normal skin genome. RESULTS We identified 12 acquired (somatic) mutations within the coding sequences of genes and 52 somatic point mutations in conserved or regulatory portions of the genome. All mutations appeared to be heterozygous and present in nearly all cells in the tumor sample. Four of the 64 mutations occurred in at least 1 additional AML sample in 188 samples that were tested. Mutations in NRAS and NPM1 had been identified previously in patients with AML, but two other mutations had not been identified. One of these mutations, in the IDH1 gene, was present in 15 of 187 additional AML genomes tested and was strongly associated with normal cytogenetic status; it was present in 13 of 80 cytogenetically normal samples (16%). The other was a nongenic mutation in a genomic region with regulatory potential and conservation in higher mammals; we detected it in one additional AML tumor. The AML genome that we sequenced contains approximately 750 point mutations, of which only a small fraction are likely to be relevant to pathogenesis. CONCLUSIONS By comparing the sequences of tumor and skin genomes of a patient with AML-M1, we have identified recurring mutations that may be relevant for pathogenesis.


Nature | 2008

DNA sequencing of a cytogenetically normal acute myeloid leukaemia genome

Timothy J. Ley; Elaine R. Mardis; Li Ding; Bob Fulton; Michael D. McLellan; Ken Chen; David J. Dooling; Brian H. Dunford-Shore; Sean McGrath; Matthew Hickenbotham; Lisa Cook; Rachel Abbott; David E. Larson; Dan Koboldt; Craig S. Pohl; Scott M. Smith; Amy Hawkins; Scott Abbott; Devin P. Locke; LaDeana W. Hillier; Tracie L. Miner; Lucinda Fulton; Vincent Magrini; Todd Wylie; Jarret Glasscock; Joshua J. Conyers; Nathan Sander; Xiaoqi Shi; John R. Osborne; Patrick Minx

Acute myeloid leukaemia is a highly malignant haematopoietic tumour that affects about 13,000 adults in the United States each year. The treatment of this disease has changed little in the past two decades, because most of the genetic events that initiate the disease remain undiscovered. Whole-genome sequencing is now possible at a reasonable cost and timeframe to use this approach for the unbiased discovery of tumour-specific somatic mutations that alter the protein-coding genes. Here we present the results obtained from sequencing a typical acute myeloid leukaemia genome, and its matched normal counterpart obtained from the same patient’s skin. We discovered ten genes with acquired mutations; two were previously described mutations that are thought to contribute to tumour progression, and eight were new mutations present in virtually all tumour cells at presentation and relapse, the function of which is not yet known. Our study establishes whole-genome sequencing as an unbiased method for discovering cancer-initiating mutations in previously unidentified genes that may respond to targeted therapies.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Acquired copy number alterations in adult acute myeloid leukemia genomes

Matthew J. Walter; Jacqueline E. Payton; Rhonda E. Ries; William D. Shannon; Hrishikesh Deshmukh; Yu Zhao; Jack Baty; Sharon Heath; Peter Westervelt; Mark A. Watson; Michael H. Tomasson; Rakesh Nagarajan; Brian P. O'Gara; Clara D. Bloomfield; Krzysztof Mrózek; Rebecca R. Selzer; Todd Richmond; Jacob Kitzman; Joel Geoghegan; Peggy S. Eis; Rachel Maupin; Robert S. Fulton; Michael D. McLellan; Richard Wilson; Elaine R. Mardis; Daniel C. Link; Timothy A. Graubert; John F. DiPersio; Timothy J. Ley

Cytogenetic analysis of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) cells has accelerated the identification of genes important for AML pathogenesis. To complement cytogenetic studies and to identify genes altered in AML genomes, we performed genome-wide copy number analysis with paired normal and tumor DNA obtained from 86 adult patients with de novo AML using 1.85 million feature SNP arrays. Acquired copy number alterations (CNAs) were confirmed using an ultra-dense array comparative genomic hybridization platform. A total of 201 somatic CNAs were found in the 86 AML genomes (mean, 2.34 CNAs per genome), with French-American-British system M6 and M7 genomes containing the most changes (10–29 CNAs per genome). Twenty-four percent of AML patients with normal cytogenetics had CNA, whereas 40% of patients with an abnormal karyotype had additional CNA detected by SNP array, and several CNA regions were recurrent. The mRNA expression levels of 57 genes were significantly altered in 27 of 50 recurrent CNA regions <5 megabases in size. A total of 8 uniparental disomy (UPD) segments were identified in the 86 genomes; 6 of 8 UPD calls occurred in samples with a normal karyotype. Collectively, 34 of 86 AML genomes (40%) contained alterations not found with cytogenetics, and 98% of these regions contained genes. Of 86 genomes, 43 (50%) had no CNA or UPD at this level of resolution. In this study of 86 adult AML genomes, the use of an unbiased high-resolution genomic screen identified many genes not previously implicated in AML that may be relevant for pathogenesis, along with many known oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2011

Sequencing a mouse acute promyelocytic leukemia genome reveals genetic events relevant for disease progression

Lukas D. Wartman; David E. Larson; Zhifu Xiang; Li Ding; Ken Chen; Ling Lin; Patrick Cahan; Jeffery M. Klco; John S. Welch; Cheng Li; Jacqueline E. Payton; Geoffrey L. Uy; Nobish Varghese; Rhonda E. Ries; Mieke Hoock; Daniel C. Koboldt; Michael D. McLellan; Heather K. Schmidt; Robert S. Fulton; Rachel Abbott; Lisa Cook; Sean McGrath; Xian Fan; Adam F. Dukes; Tammi L. Vickery; Joelle Kalicki; Tamara Lamprecht; Timothy A. Graubert; Michael H. Tomasson; Elaine R. Mardis

Acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) is a subtype of acute myeloid leukemia (AML). It is characterized by the t(15;17)(q22;q11.2) chromosomal translocation that creates the promyelocytic leukemia-retinoic acid receptor α (PML-RARA) fusion oncogene. Although this fusion oncogene is known to initiate APL in mice, other cooperating mutations, as yet ill defined, are important for disease pathogenesis. To identify these, we used a mouse model of APL, whereby PML-RARA expressed in myeloid cells leads to a myeloproliferative disease that ultimately evolves into APL. Sequencing of a mouse APL genome revealed 3 somatic, nonsynonymous mutations relevant to APL pathogenesis, of which 1 (Jak1 V657F) was found to be recurrent in other affected mice. This mutation was identical to the JAK1 V658F mutation previously found in human APL and acute lymphoblastic leukemia samples. Further analysis showed that JAK1 V658F cooperated in vivo with PML-RARA, causing a rapidly fatal leukemia in mice. We also discovered a somatic 150-kb deletion involving the lysine (K)-specific demethylase 6A (Kdm6a, also known as Utx) gene, in the mouse APL genome. Similar deletions were observed in 3 out of 14 additional mouse APL samples and 1 out of 150 human AML samples. In conclusion, whole genome sequencing of mouse cancer genomes can provide an unbiased and comprehensive approach for discovering functionally relevant mutations that are also present in human leukemias.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

A pilot study of high-throughput, sequence-based mutational profiling of primary human acute myeloid leukemia cell genomes.

Timothy J. Ley; Patrick Minx; Matthew J. Walter; Rhonda E. Ries; Hui Sun; Michael D. McLellan; John F. DiPersio; Daniel C. Link; Michael H. Tomasson; Timothy A. Graubert; Howard L. McLeod; Hanna Jean Khoury; Mark A. Watson; William D. Shannon; Kathryn Trinkaus; Sharon Heath; James W. Vardiman; Michael A. Caligiuri; Clara D. Bloomfield; Jeffrey Milbrandt; Elaine R. Mardis; Richard Wilson

In this pilot study, we used primary human acute myeloid leukemia (AML) cell genomes as templates for exonic PCR amplification, followed by high-throughput resequencing, analyzing ≈7 million base pairs of DNA from 140 AML samples and 48 controls. We identified six previously described, and seven previously undescribed sequence changes that may be relevant for AML pathogenesis. Because the sequencing templates were generated from primary AML cells, the technique favors the detection of mutations from the most dominant clones within the tumor cell mixture. This strategy represents a viable approach for the detection of potentially relevant, nonrandom mutations in primary human cancer cell genomes.


Blood | 2008

Somatic mutations and germline sequence variants in the expressed tyrosine kinase genes of patients with de novo acute myeloid leukemia.

Michael H. Tomasson; Zhifu Xiang; Richard Walgren; Yu Zhao; Yumi Kasai; Tracie L. Miner; Rhonda E. Ries; Olga Y. Lubman; Daved H. Fremont; Michael D. McLellan; Jacqueline E. Payton; Peter Westervelt; John F. DiPersio; Daniel C. Link; Matthew J. Walter; Timothy A. Graubert; Mark A. Watson; Jack Baty; Sharon Heath; William D. Shannon; Rakesh Nagarajan; Clara D. Bloomfield; Elaine R. Mardis; Richard Wilson; Timothy J. Ley


Blood | 2008

Identification of somatic JAK1 mutations in patients with acute myeloid leukemia

Zhifu Xiang; Yu Zhao; Vesselin Mitaksov; Daved H. Fremont; Yumi Kasai; AnnaLynn Molitoris; Rhonda E. Ries; Tracie L. Miner; Michael D. McLellan; John F. DiPersio; Daniel C. Link; Jacqueline E. Payton; Timothy A. Graubert; Mark A. Watson; William D. Shannon; Sharon Heath; Rakesh Nagarajan; Elaine R. Mardis; Richard Wilson; Timothy J. Ley; Michael H. Tomasson


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2005

Reduced PU.1 expression causes myeloid progenitor expansion and increased leukemia penetrance in mice expressing PML-RARα

Matthew J. Walter; John S. Park; Rhonda E. Ries; Steven Lau; Michael D. McLellan; Sara Jaeger; Richard Wilson; Elaine R. Mardis; Timothy J. Ley


Blood | 2007

Distinct patterns of mutations occurring in de novo AML versus AML arising in the setting of severe congenital neutropenia

Daniel C. Link; Ghada Kunter; Yumi Kasai; Yu Zhao; Tracie L. Miner; Michael D. McLellan; Rhonda E. Ries; Deepak Kapur; Rakesh Nagarajan; David C. Dale; Audrey Anna Bolyard; Laurence A. Boxer; Karl Welte; Cornelia Zeidler; Jean Donadieu; Christine Bellanné-Chantelot; James W. Vardiman; Michael A. Caligiuri; Clara D. Bloomfield; John F. DiPersio; Michael H. Tomasson; Timothy A. Graubert; Peter Westervelt; Mark A. Watson; William D. Shannon; Jack Baty; Elaine R. Mardis; Richard Wilson; Timothy J. Ley


Blood | 2006

Expression of a bcr-1 isoform of RARα-PML does not affect the penetrance of acute promyelocytic leukemia or the acquisition of an interstitial deletion on mouse chromosome 2

Matthew J. Walter; Rhonda E. Ries; Jon R. Armstrong; John S. Park; Elaine R. Mardis; Timothy J. Ley

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Elaine R. Mardis

Nationwide Children's Hospital

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Michael D. McLellan

Washington University in St. Louis

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Timothy J. Ley

Washington University in St. Louis

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Richard Wilson

Washington University in St. Louis

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Michael H. Tomasson

Washington University in St. Louis

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Daniel C. Link

Washington University in St. Louis

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John F. DiPersio

Washington University in St. Louis

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Mark A. Watson

Washington University in St. Louis

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William D. Shannon

Washington University in St. Louis

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