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Dive into the research topics where Richard Cowper-Sal·lari is active.

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Featured researches published by Richard Cowper-Sal·lari.


Nature Genetics | 2012

Breast cancer risk-associated SNPs modulate the affinity of chromatin for FOXA1 and alter gene expression

Richard Cowper-Sal·lari; Xiaoyang Zhang; Jason B. Wright; Swneke D. Bailey; Michael D. Cole; Jérôme Eeckhoute; Jason H. Moore; Mathieu Lupien

Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified thousands of SNPs that are associated with human traits and diseases. But, because the vast majority of these SNPs are located in non-coding regions of the genome, the mechanisms by which they promote disease risk have remained elusive. Employing a new methodology that combines cistromics, epigenomics and genotype imputation, we annotate the non-coding regions of the genome in breast cancer cells and systematically identify the functional nature of SNPs associated with breast cancer risk. Our results show that breast cancer risk–associated SNPs are enriched in the cistromes of FOXA1 and ESR1 and the epigenome of histone H3 lysine 4 monomethylation (H3K4me1) in a cancer- and cell type–specific manner. Furthermore, the majority of the risk-associated SNPs modulate the affinity of chromatin for FOXA1 at distal regulatory elements, thereby resulting in allele-specific gene expression, which is exemplified by the effect of the rs4784227 SNP on the TOX3 gene within the 16q12.1 risk locus.


Science | 2012

Epigenomic Enhancer Profiling Defines a Signature of Colon Cancer

Batool Akhtar-Zaidi; Richard Cowper-Sal·lari; Olivia Corradin; Alina Saiakhova; Cynthia F. Bartels; Dheepa Balasubramanian; Lois Myeroff; James Lutterbaugh; Awad Jarrar; Matthew F. Kalady; Joseph Willis; Jason H. Moore; Paul J. Tesar; Thomas LaFramboise; Sanford D. Markowitz; Mathieu Lupien; Peter C. Scacheri

Colorectal Cancer Signature The mutations and genome aberrations that characterize cancer result in often dramatically altered gene and protein expression patterns. It is these altered expression patterns that directly and indirectly drive progression of the disease. In human primary colorectal cancer cells, Akhtar-Zaidi et al. (p. 736, published online 12 April) analyzed the pattern of epigenetically modified chromatin at “enhancer” sequences that are known to be critical in the control of gene expression. An epigenetic enhancer signature was defined that was specifically associated with colorectal cancer cells. Methylation tags at long-distance gene regulatory elements provide a signature specific to cancer cells. Cancer is characterized by gene expression aberrations. Studies have largely focused on coding sequences and promoters, even though distal regulatory elements play a central role in controlling transcription patterns. We used the histone mark H3K4me1 to analyze gain and loss of enhancer activity genome-wide in primary colon cancer lines relative to normal colon crypts. We identified thousands of variant enhancer loci (VELs) that comprise a signature that is robustly predictive of the in vivo colon cancer transcriptome. Furthermore, VELs are enriched in haplotype blocks containing colon cancer genetic risk variants, implicating these genomic regions in colon cancer pathogenesis. We propose that reproducible changes in the epigenome at enhancer elements drive a specific transcriptional program to promote colon carcinogenesis.


Genome Research | 2012

Integrative functional genomics identifies an enhancer looping to the SOX9 gene disrupted by the 17q24.3 prostate cancer risk locus

Xiaoyang Zhang; Richard Cowper-Sal·lari; Swneke D. Bailey; Jason H. Moore; Mathieu Lupien

Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) are identifying genetic predisposition to various diseases. The 17q24.3 locus harbors the single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) rs1859962 that is statistically associated with prostate cancer (PCa). It defines a 130-kb linkage disequilibrium (LD) block that lies in an ∼2-Mb gene desert area. The functional biology driving the risk associated with this LD block is unknown. Here, we integrate genome-wide chromatin landscape data sets, namely, epigenomes and chromatin openness from diverse cell types. This identifies a PCa-specific enhancer within the rs1859962 risk LD block that establishes a 1-Mb chromatin loop with the SOX9 gene. The rs8072254 and rs1859961 SNPs mapping to this enhancer impose allele-specific gene expression. The variant allele of rs8072254 facilitates androgen receptor (AR) binding driving increased enhancer activity. The variant allele of rs1859961 decreases FOXA1 binding while increasing AP-1 binding. The latter is key to imposing allele-specific gene expression. The rs8072254 variant in strong LD with the rs1859962 risk SNP can account for the risk associated with this locus, while rs1859961 is a rare variant less likely to contribute to the risk associated with this LD block. Together, our results demonstrate that multiple genetic variants mapping to a unique enhancer looping to the SOX9 oncogene can account for the risk associated with the PCa 17q24.3 locus. Allele-specific recruitment of the transcription factors androgen receptor (AR) and activating protein-1 (AP-1) account for the increased enhancer activity ascribed to this PCa-risk LD block. This further supports the notion that an integrative genomics approach can identify the functional biology disrupted by genetic risk variants.


Nature Communications | 2011

ZNF143 provides sequence specificity to secure chromatin interactions at gene promoters

Swneke D. Bailey; Xiaoyang Zhang; Kinjal Desai; Malika Aid; Olivia Corradin; Richard Cowper-Sal·lari; Batool Akhtar-Zaidi; Peter C. Scacheri; Benjamin Haibe-Kains; Mathieu Lupien

Chromatin interactions connect distal regulatory elements to target gene promoters guiding stimulus- and lineage-specific transcription. Few factors securing chromatin interactions have so far been identified. Here, by integrating chromatin interaction maps with the large collection of transcription factor-binding profiles provided by the ENCODE project, we demonstrate that the zinc-finger protein ZNF143 preferentially occupies anchors of chromatin interactions connecting promoters with distal regulatory elements. It binds directly to promoters and associates with lineage-specific chromatin interactions and gene expression. Silencing ZNF143 or modulating its DNA-binding affinity using single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) as a surrogate of site-directed mutagenesis reveals the sequence dependency of chromatin interactions at gene promoters. We also find that chromatin interactions alone do not regulate gene expression. Together, our results identify ZNF143 as a novel chromatin-looping factor that contributes to the architectural foundation of the genome by providing sequence specificity at promoters connected with distal regulatory elements. Chromatin interactions can connect distal regulatory elements to promoters via protein factors, but few such factors have been identified. Here, the authors show that zinc-finger protein ZNF143 is a sequence-specific chromatin-looping factor that connects promoters with distal regulatory elements.


Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Systems Biology and Medicine | 2011

Layers of epistasis: genome-wide regulatory networks and network approaches to genome-wide association studies

Richard Cowper-Sal·lari; Michael D. Cole; Margaret R. Karagas; Mathieu Lupien; Jason H. Moore

The conceptual foundation of the genome‐wide association study (GWAS) has advanced unchecked since its conception. A revision might seem premature as the potential of GWAS has not been fully realized. Multiple technical and practical limitations need to be overcome before GWAS can be fairly criticized. But with the completion of hundreds of studies and a deeper understanding of the genetic architecture of disease, warnings are being raised. The results compiled to date indicate that risk‐associated variants lie predominantly in noncoding regions of the genome. Additionally, alternative methodologies are uncovering large and heterogeneous sets of rare variants underlying disease. The fear is that, even in its fulfillment, the current GWAS paradigm might be incapable of dissecting all kinds of phenotypes. In the following text, we review several initiatives that aim to overcome these limitations. The overarching theme of these studies is the inclusion of biological knowledge to both the analysis and interpretation of genotyping data. GWAS is uninformed of biology by design and although there is some virtue in its simplicity, it is also its most conspicuous deficiency. We propose a framework in which to integrate these novel approaches, both empirical and theoretical, in the form of a genome‐wide regulatory network (GWRN). By processing experimental data into networks, emerging data types based on chromatin immunoprecipitation are made computationally tractable. This will give GWAS re‐analysis efforts the most current and relevant substrates, and root them firmly on our knowledge of human disease. WIREs Syst Biol Med 2011 3 513–526 DOI: 10.1002/wsbm.132


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2014

Chromatin Profiling Reveals Regulatory Network Shifts and a Protective Role for Hepatocyte Nuclear Factor 4α during Colitis

Sanjay Chahar; Vishal Gandhi; Shiyan Yu; Kinjal Desai; Richard Cowper-Sal·lari; Yona Kim; Ansu O. Perekatt; Namit Kumar; Joshua K. Thackray; Anthony Musolf; Nikhil Kumar; Andrew Hoffman; Douglas Londono; Berta N. Vazquez; Lourdes Serrano; Hyunjin Shin; Mathieu Lupien; Nan Gao; Michael P. Verzi

ABSTRACT Transcriptional regulatory mechanisms likely contribute to the etiology of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), as genetic variants associated with the disease are disproportionately found at regulatory elements. However, the transcription factors regulating colonic inflammation are unclear. To identify these transcription factors, we mapped epigenomic changes in the colonic epithelium upon inflammation. Epigenetic marks at transcriptional regulatory elements responded dynamically to inflammation and indicated a shift in epithelial transcriptional factor networks. Active enhancer chromatin structure at regulatory regions bound by the transcription factor hepatocyte nuclear factor 4α (HNF4A) was reduced during colitis. In agreement, upon an inflammatory stimulus, HNF4A was downregulated and showed a reduced ability to bind chromatin. Genetic variants that confer a predisposition to IBD map to HNF4A binding sites in the human colon cell line CaCo2, suggesting impaired HNF4A binding could underlie genetic susceptibility to IBD. Despite reduced HNF4A binding during inflammation, a temporal knockout model revealed HNF4A still actively protects against inflammatory phenotypes and promotes immune regulatory gene expression in the inflamed colonic epithelium. These findings highlight the potential for HNF4A agonists as IBD therapeutics.


Nature Communications | 2018

Publisher Correction: ZNF143 provides sequence specificity to secure chromatin interactions at gene promoters

Swneke D. Bailey; Xiaoyang Zhang; Kinjal Desai; Malika Aid; Olivia Corradin; Richard Cowper-Sal·lari; Batool Akhtar-Zaidi; Peter C. Scacheri; Benjamin Haibe-Kains; Mathieu Lupien

This corrects the article DOI: 10.1038/ncomms7186.


Genome Research | 2014

Combinatorial effects of multiple enhancer variants in linkage disequilibrium dictate levels of gene expression to confer susceptibility to common traits

Olivia Corradin; Alina Saiakhova; Batool Akhtar-Zaidi; Lois Myeroff; Joseph Willis; Richard Cowper-Sal·lari; Mathieu Lupien; Sanford D. Markowitz; Peter C. Scacheri


Cell Reports | 2014

Intratumor DNA Methylation Heterogeneity Reflects Clonal Evolution in Aggressive Prostate Cancer

David Brocks; Yassen Assenov; Sarah Minner; Olga Bogatyrova; Ronald Simon; Christina Koop; Christopher C. Oakes; Manuela Zucknick; Daniel B. Lipka; Joachim Weischenfeldt; Lars Feuerbach; Richard Cowper-Sal·lari; Mathieu Lupien; Benedikt Brors; Jan O. Korbel; Thorsten Schlomm; Amos Tanay; Guido Sauter; Clarissa Gerhäuser; Christoph Plass


evolutionary computation machine learning and data mining in bioinformatics | 2013

Inferring human phenotype networks from genome-wide genetic associations

Christian Darabos; Kinjal Desai; Richard Cowper-Sal·lari; Mario Giacobini; Britney E. Graham; Mathieu Lupien; Jason H. Moore

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Mathieu Lupien

Princess Margaret Cancer Centre

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Jason H. Moore

University of Pennsylvania

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Batool Akhtar-Zaidi

Case Western Reserve University

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Olivia Corradin

Case Western Reserve University

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Peter C. Scacheri

Case Western Reserve University

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Swneke D. Bailey

Princess Margaret Cancer Centre

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Alina Saiakhova

Case Western Reserve University

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Joseph Willis

Case Western Reserve University

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