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Dive into the research topics where Richard T. Williams is active.

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Featured researches published by Richard T. Williams.


Journal of Fluid Mechanics | 1993

The hydraulics of a stratified fluid flowing through a contraction

Laurence Armi; Richard T. Williams

The steady hydraulics of a continuously stratified fluid flowing from a stagnant reservoir through a horizontal contraction was studied experimentally and theoretically. As the channel narrows, the flow accelerates through a succession of virtual controls, at each of which the flow passes from subcritical to supercritical with respect to a particular wave mode. When the narrowest section acts as a control, the flow is asymmetric about the narrowest section, supercritical in the divergent section and selfsimilar throughout the channel. With increased flow rate a new enclosed self-similar solution was found with level isopycnals and velocity uniform with depth


Cancer Research | 2014

High expression of CAI2, a 9p21-embedded long noncoding RNA, contributes to advanced-stage neuroblastoma.

Lisa M. Barnhill; Richard T. Williams; Olga Cohen; Young Jin Kim; Ayse Batova; Jenna Mielke; Karen Messer; Minya Pu; Lei Bao; Alice L. Yu; Mitchell B. Diccianni

Neuroblastoma is a pediatric cancer with significant genomic and biologic heterogeneity. p16 and ARF, two important tumor-suppressor genes on chromosome 9p21, are inactivated commonly in most cancers, but paradoxically overexpressed in neuroblastoma. Here, we report that exon γ in p16 is also part of an undescribed long noncoding RNA (lncRNA) that we have termed CAI2 (CDKN2A/ARF Intron 2 lncRNA). CAI2 is a single-exon gene with a poly A signal located in but independent of the p16/ARF exon 3. CAI2 is expressed at very low levels in normal tissue, but is highly expressed in most tumor cell lines with an intact 9p21 locus. Concordant expression of CAI2 with p16 and ARF in normal tissue along with the ability of CAI2 to induce p16 expression suggested that CAI2 may regulate p16 and/or ARF. In neuroblastoma cells transformed by serial passage in vitro, leading to more rapid proliferation, CAI2, p16, and ARF expression all increased dramatically. A similar relationship was also observed in primary neuroblastomas where CAI2 expression was significantly higher in advanced-stage neuroblastoma, independently of MYCN amplification. Consistent with its association with high-risk disease, CAI2 expression was also significantly associated with poor clinical outcomes, although this effect was reduced when adjusted for MYCN amplification. Taken together, our findings suggested that CAI2 contributes to the paradoxical overexpression of p16 in neuroblastoma, where CAI2 may offer a useful biomarker of high-risk disease.


Journal of Experimental & Clinical Cancer Research | 2014

Renal cancer-selective Englerin A induces multiple mechanisms of cell death and autophagy

Richard T. Williams; Alice L. Yu; Mitchell B. Diccianni; Emmanuel A. Theodorakis; Ayse Batova

Renal cell carcinoma (RCC), the most common malignancy of the kidney, is refractory to standard therapy and has an incidence that continues to rise. Screening of plant extracts in search of new agents to treat RCC resulted in the discovery of englerin A (EA), a natural product exhibiting potent selective cytotoxicity against renal cancer cells. Despite the establishment of synthetic routes to the synthesis of EA, very little is known about its mechanism of action. The results of the current study demonstrate for the first time that EA induces apoptosis in A498 renal cancer cells in addition to necrosis. The induction of apoptosis by EA required at least 24 h and was caspase independent. In addition, EA induced increased levels of autophagic vesicles in A498 cells which could be inhibited by nonessential amino acids (NEAA), known inhibitors of autophagy. Interestingly, inhibition of autophagy by NEAA did not diminish cell death suggesting that autophagy is not a cell death mechanism and likely represents a cell survival mechanism which ultimately fails. Apart from cell death, our results demonstrated that cells treated with EA accumulated in the G2 phase of the cell cycle indicating a block in G2/M transition. Moreover, our results determined that EA inhibited the activation of both AKT and ERK, kinases which are activated in cancer and implicated in unrestricted cell proliferation and induction of autophagy. The phosphorylation status of the cellular energy sensor, AMPK, appeared unaffected by EA. The high renal cancer selectivity of EA combined with its ability to induce multiple mechanisms of cell death while inhibiting pathways driving cell proliferation, suggest that EA is a highly unique agent with great potential as a therapeutic lead for the treatment of RCC.


Deep Sea Research Part A. Oceanographic Research Papers | 1991

The deep western boundary undercurrent off the Newfoundland ridge

Laurence Armi; Richard T. Williams

Abstract Overflow water from the Denmark Straits first encounters water of its own density at the tip of the Grand Banks of Newfoundland at the northeastern end of the Sohm Abyssal Plain. Here the θ-S anomally of the overflow water acts as a dye enabling description of its mixing into the North Atlantic Deep Water. This mixing includes streaks at least 10 km long but less than 1 km in width as well as hemogenous structures as large as 100 km. A strong deep western boundary undercurrent meandering along isobaths to the west at 15–20 cm s−1 was observed at three current meter/thermistor string arrays. These arrays were deployed for 13 months and along with CTD and hydrographic sections form the data set.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Chimeras of p14ARF and p16: Functional Hybrids with the Ability to Arrest Growth

Richard T. Williams; Lisa M. Barnhill; Huan-Hsien Kuo; Wen-Der Lin; Ayse Batova; Alice L. Yu; Mitchell B. Diccianni

The INK4A locus codes for two independent tumor suppressors, p14ARF and p16/CDKN2A, and is frequently mutated in many cancers. Here we report a novel deletion/substitution from CC to T in the shared exon 2 of p14ARF/p16 in a melanoma cell line. This mutation aligns the reading frames of p14ARF and p16 mid-transcript, producing one protein which is half p14ARF and half p16, chimera ARF (chARF), and another which is half p16 and half non-p14ARF/non-p16 amino acids, p16-Alternate Carboxyl Terminal (p16-ACT). In an effort to understand the cellular impact of this novel mutation and others like it, we expressed the two protein products in a tumor cell line and analyzed common p14ARF and p16 pathways, including the p53/p21 and CDK4/cyclin D1 pathways, as well as the influence of the two proteins on growth and the cell cycle. We report that chARF mimicked wild-type p14ARF by inducing the p53/p21 pathway, inhibiting cell growth through G2/M arrest and maintaining a certain percentage of cells in G1 during nocodazole-induced G2 arrest. chARF also demonstrated p16 activity by binding CDK4. However, rather than preventing cyclin D1 from binding CDK4, chARF stabilized this interaction through p21 which bound CDK4. p16-ACT had no p16-related function as it was unable to inhibit cyclin D1/CDK4 complex formation and was unable to arrest the cell cycle, though it did inhibit colony formation. We conclude that these novel chimeric proteins, which are very similar to predicted p16/p14ARF chimeric proteins found in other primary cancers, result in maintained p14ARF-p53-p21 signaling while p16-dependent CDK4 inhibition is lost.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Englerin A induces an acute inflammatory response and reveals lipid metabolism and ER stress as targetable vulnerabilities in renal cell carcinoma

Ayse Batova; Diego Altomare; Kim E. Creek; Robert K. Naviaux; Lin Wang; Kefeng Li; Erica Green; Richard T. Williams; Jane C. Naviaux; Mitchell B. Diccianni; Alice L. Yu

Renal cell carcinoma (RCC) is among the top ten most common forms of cancer and is the most common malignancy of the kidney. Clear cell renal carcinoma (cc-RCC), the most common type of RCC, is one of the most refractory cancers with an incidence that is on the rise. Screening of plant extracts in search of new anti-cancer agents resulted in the discovery of englerin A, a guaiane sesquiterpene with potent cytotoxicity against renal cancer cells and a small subset of other cancer cells. Though a few cellular targets have been identified for englerin A, it is still not clear what mechanisms account for the cytotoxicity of englerin A in RCC, which occurs at concentrations well below those used to engage the targets previously identified. Unlike any prior study, the current study used a systems biology approach to explore the mechanism(s) of action of englerin A. Metabolomics analyses indicated that englerin A profoundly altered lipid metabolism by 24 h in cc-RCC cell lines and generated significant levels of ceramides that were highly toxic to these cells. Microarray analyses determined that englerin A induced ER stress signaling and an acute inflammatory response, which was confirmed by quantitative PCR and Western Blot analyses. Additionally, fluorescence confocal microscopy revealed that englerin A at 25 nM disrupted the morphology of the ER confirming the deleterious effect of englerin A on the ER. Collectively, our findings suggest that cc-RCC is highly sensitive to disruptions in lipid metabolism and ER stress and that these vulnerabilities can be targeted for the treatment of cc-RCC and possibly other lipid storing cancers. Furthermore, our results suggest that ceramides may be a mediator of some of the actions of englerin A. Lastly, the acute inflammatory response induced by englerin A may mediate anti-tumor immunity.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Antileukemic Efficacy of Continuous vs Discontinuous Dexamethasone in Murine Models of Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia

Laura B. Ramsey; Laura J. Janke; Monique A. Payton; Xiangjun Cai; Steven W. Paugh; Seth E. Karol; Landry K. Kamdem; Cheng Cheng; Richard T. Williams; Sima Jeha; Ching-Hon Pui; William E. Evans; Mary V. Relling

Osteonecrosis is one of the most common, serious, toxicities resulting from the treatment of acute lymphoblastic leukemia. In recent years, pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia clinical trials have used discontinuous rather than continuous dosing of dexamethasone in an effort to reduce the incidence of osteonecrosis. However, it is not known whether discontinuous dosing would compromise antileukemic efficacy of glucocorticoids. Therefore, we tested the efficacy of discontinuous dexamethasone against continuous dexamethasone in murine models bearing human acute lymphoblastic leukemia xenografts (n = 8 patient samples) or murine BCR-ABL+ acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Plasma dexamethasone concentrations (7.9 to 212 nM) were similar to those achieved in children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia using conventional dosages. The median leukemia-free survival ranged from 16 to 59 days; dexamethasone prolonged survival from a median of 4 to 129 days in all seven dexamethasone-sensitive acute lymphoblastic leukemias. In the majority of cases (7 of 8 xenografts and the murine BCR-ABL model) we demonstrated equal efficacy of the two dexamethasone dosing regimens; whereas for one acute lymphoblastic leukemia sample, the discontinuous regimen yielded inferior antileukemic efficacy (log-rank p = 0.002). Our results support the clinical practice of using discontinuous rather than continuous dexamethasone dosing in patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia.


Pharmacogenetics and Genomics | 2014

Host thiopurine methyltransferase status affects mercaptopurine antileukemic effectiveness in a murine model

Laura B. Ramsey; Laura J. Janke; Mathew J. Edick; Cheng Cheng; Richard T. Williams; Charles J. Sherr; William E. Evans; Mary V. Relling

Background Thiopurines are used for many cancers, including acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). Patients with an inherited host defect in thiopurine methyltransferase (TPMT) are at high risk for life-threatening toxicity if treated with conventional dosages, but the impact on antileukemic efficacy is less clear. Materials and methods We treated thiopurine-sensitive BCR-ABL+Arf-null Tpmt+/+ ALL in Tpmt+/+, +/−, or −/− recipient mice to test the impact of the host polymorphism on antileukemic efficacy. Results Median survival was similar in untreated mice of different Tpmt genotypes (16–18 days). However, in mice treated with low-dose mercaptopurine (such as tolerated by TPMT−/− patients), the difference in 30-day leukemia-free survival by Tpmt genotype was profound: 5% (±9%) for Tpmt+/+ mice, 47% (±26%) for Tpmt+/− mice, and 85% (±14%) for Tpmt−/− mice (P=5×10−8), indicating a substantial impact of host Tpmt status on thiopurine effectiveness. Among Tpmt+/+ recipient mice, leukemia-free survival improved with higher doses of mercaptopurine (similar to doses tolerated by wild-type patients) compared with lower doses, and at higher doses was comparable (P=0.6) to the survival of Tpmt−/− mice treated with the lower dose. Conclusions These findings support the notion that germline polymorphisms in Tpmt affect not only host tissue toxicity but also antitumor effectiveness.


Journal of Fluid Mechanics | 1991

Two-layer hydraulics with comparable internal wave speeds

Richard T. Williams; Laurence Armi

Two-layer hydraulics is developed for problems in which the moving layers can have stagnant layers above and below, the two internal wave modes can have comparable speeds and the total depth of the moving layers may vary. The general development allows both Boussinesq and non-Boussinesq problems to be studied. Solutions are presented in the Froude-number plane and the effect of different layer densities on the form of the solution space is shown. The theory is applied to two-layer plunging flows and a variety of controlled solutions are found. Solutions for the 2½-layer theory and the plunging flow theory are demonstrated experimentally. Shear instability is often observed in the divergent section of the channel.


Deep Sea Research Part A. Oceanographic Research Papers | 1991

The planetary boundary layer of the deep western boundary undercurrent

Richard T. Williams; Laurence Armi

Abstract Current meter observations of the deep western boundary undercurrent of the North Atlantic at 4800 m show a near-bottom turning and speed defect characteristic of a planetary boundary layer.

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Alice L. Yu

University of California

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Ayse Batova

University of California

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Laurence Armi

Scripps Institution of Oceanography

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Charles J. Sherr

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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Laura J. Janke

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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Mary V. Relling

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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Cheng Cheng

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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Diego Altomare

University of South Carolina

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