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Dive into the research topics where Robert H. Lyons is active.

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Featured researches published by Robert H. Lyons.


Science | 1996

Signal transduction by DR3, a death domain-containing receptor related to TNFR-1 and CD95

Arul M. Chinnaiyan; Karen O'Rourke; Guo Liang Yu; Robert H. Lyons; Manish Garg; D. Roxanne Duan; Lily Xing; Reiner L. Gentz; Jian Ni; Vishva M. Dixit

Tumor necrosis factor receptor-1 (TNFR-1) and CD95 (also called Fas or APO-1) are cytokine receptors that engage the apoptosis pathway through a region of intracellular homology, designated the “death domain.” Another death domain-containing member of the TNFR family, death receptor 3 (DR3), was identified and was shown to induce both apoptosis and activation of nuclear factor κB. Expression of DR3 appears to be restricted to tissues enriched in lymphocytes. DR3 signal transduction is mediated by a complex of intracellular signaling molecules including TRADD, TRAF2, FADD, and FLICE. Thus, DR3 likely plays a role in regulating lymphocyte homeostasis.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

A variant of mitochondrial protein LOC387715/ARMS2, not HTRA1, is strongly associated with age-related macular degeneration

Atsuhiro Kanda; Wei Chen; Mohammad Othman; Kari Branham; Matthew Brooks; Ritu Khanna; Shirley He; Robert H. Lyons; Gonçalo R. Abecasis; Anand Swaroop

Genetic variants at chromosomes 1q31-32 and 10q26 are strongly associated with susceptibility to age-related macular degeneration (AMD), a common blinding disease of the elderly. We demonstrate, by evaluating 45 tag SNPs spanning HTRA1, PLEKHA1, and predicted gene LOC387715/ARMS2, that rs10490924 SNP alone, or a variant in strong linkage disequilibrium, can explain the bulk of association between the 10q26 chromosomal region and AMD. A previously suggested causal SNP, rs11200638, and other examined SNPs in the region are only indirectly associated with the disease. Contrary to previous reports, we show that rs11200638 SNP has no significant impact on HTRA1 promoter activity in three different cell lines, and HTRA1 mRNA expression exhibits no significant change between control and AMD retinas. However, SNP rs10490924 shows the strongest association with AMD (P = 5.3 × 10−30), revealing an estimated relative risk of 2.66 for GT heterozygotes and 7.05 for TT homozygotes. The rs10490924 SNP results in nonsynonymous A69S alteration in the predicted protein LOC387715/ARMS2, which has a highly conserved ortholog in chimpanzee, but not in other vertebrate sequences. We demonstrate that LOC387715/ARMS2 mRNA is detected in the human retina and various cell lines and encodes a 12-kDa protein, which localizes to the mitochondrial outer membrane when expressed in mammalian cells. We propose that rs10490924 represents a major susceptibility variant for AMD at 10q26. A likely biological mechanism is that the A69S change in the LOC387715/ARMS2 protein affects its presumptive function in mitochondria.


Head and Neck-journal for The Sciences and Specialties of The Head and Neck | 2009

Genotyping of 73 UM‐SCC head and neck squamous cell carcinoma cell lines

J. Chad Brenner; Martin P. Graham; Bhavna Kumar; Lindsay Saunders; Robbi A. Kupfer; Robert H. Lyons; Carol R. Bradford; Thomas E. Carey

We established multiple University of Michigan Squamous Cell Carcinoma (UM‐SCC) cell lines. With time, these have been distributed to other labs all over the world. Recent scientific discussions have noted the need to confirm the origin and identity of cell lines in grant proposals and journal articles. We genotyped the UM‐SCC cell lines in our collection to confirm their unique identity.


PLOS Genetics | 2009

A Systematic Approach to Mapping Recessive Disease Genes in Individuals from Outbred Populations

Friedhelm Hildebrandt; Saskia F. Heeringa; Franz Rüschendorf; Massimo Attanasio; Gudrun Nürnberg; Christian Becker; Dominik Seelow; Norbert Huebner; Gil Chernin; Christopher N. Vlangos; Weibin Zhou; John F. O'Toole; Bethan E. Hoskins; Matthias Wolf; Bernward Hinkes; Hassan Chaib; Shazia Ashraf; Dominik S. Schoeb; Bugsu Ovunc; Susan J. Allen; Virginia Vega-Warner; Eric Wise; Heather M. Harville; Robert H. Lyons; Joseph Washburn; James W. MacDonald; Peter Nürnberg; Edgar A. Otto

The identification of recessive disease-causing genes by homozygosity mapping is often restricted by lack of suitable consanguineous families. To overcome these limitations, we apply homozygosity mapping to single affected individuals from outbred populations. In 72 individuals of 54 kindred ascertained worldwide with known homozygous mutations in 13 different recessive disease genes, we performed total genome homozygosity mapping using 250,000 SNP arrays. Likelihood ratio Z-scores (ZLR) were plotted across the genome to detect ZLR peaks that reflect segments of homozygosity by descent, which may harbor the mutated gene. In 93% of cases, the causative gene was positioned within a consistent ZLR peak of homozygosity. The number of peaks reflected the degree of inbreeding. We demonstrate that disease-causing homozygous mutations can be detected in single cases from outbred populations within a single ZLR peak of homozygosity as short as 2 Mb, containing an average of only 16 candidate genes. As many specialty clinics have access to cohorts of individuals from outbred populations, and as our approach will result in smaller genetic candidate regions, the new strategy of homozygosity mapping in single outbred individuals will strongly accelerate the discovery of novel recessive disease genes.


Molecular and Cellular Endocrinology | 2010

Molecular mechanisms of pituitary organogenesis: In search of novel regulatory genes

Shannon W. Davis; Frederic Castinetti; L.R. Carvalho; Buffy S. Ellsworth; Mary Anne Potok; Robert H. Lyons; Michelle L. Brinkmeier; Lori T. Raetzman; Piero Carninci; Amanda H. Mortensen; Hayashizaki Y; I.J.P. Arnhold; Berenice B. Mendonca; T. Brue; Sally A. Camper

Defects in pituitary gland organogenesis are sometimes associated with congenital anomalies that affect head development. Lesions in transcription factors and signaling pathways explain some of these developmental syndromes. Basic research studies, including the characterization of genetically engineered mice, provide a mechanistic framework for understanding how mutations create the clinical characteristics observed in patients. Defects in BMP, WNT, Notch, and FGF signaling pathways affect induction and growth of the pituitary primordium and other organ systems partly by altering the balance between signaling pathways. The PITX and LHX transcription factor families influence pituitary and head development and are clinically relevant. A few later-acting transcription factors have pituitary-specific effects, including PROP1, POU1F1 (PIT1), and TPIT (TBX19), while others, such as NeuroD1 and NR5A1 (SF1), are syndromic, influencing development of other endocrine organs. We conducted a survey of genes transcribed in developing mouse pituitary to find candidates for cases of pituitary hormone deficiency of unknown etiology. We identified numerous transcription factors that are members of gene families with roles in syndromic or non-syndromic pituitary hormone deficiency. This collection is a rich source for future basic and clinical studies.


Science | 2013

Low-Pass DNA Sequencing of 1200 Sardinians Reconstructs European Y-Chromosome Phylogeny

Paolo Francalacci; Laura Cornelia Clotilde Morelli; Andrea Angius; Riccardo Berutti; Frederic Reinier; Rossano Atzeni; Rosella Pilu; Fabio Busonero; Andrea Maschio; Ilenia Zara; Daria Sanna; Antonella Useli; Maria Francesca Urru; Marco Marcelli; Roberto Cusano; Manuela Oppo; Magdalena Zoledziewska; Maristella Pitzalis; Francesca Deidda; Eleonora Porcu; Fausto Pier'Angelo Poddie; Hyun Min Kang; Robert H. Lyons; Brendan Tarrier; Jennifer Bragg Gresham; Bingshan Li; Sergio Tofanelli; Santos Alonso; Mariano Dei; Sandra Lai

Examining Y The evolution of human populations has long been studied with unique sequences from the nonrecombining, male-specific Y chromosome (see the Perspective by Cann). Poznik et al. (p. 562) examined 9.9 Mb of the Y chromosome from 69 men from nine globally divergent populations—identifying population and individual specific sequence variants that elucidate the evolution of the Y chromosome. Sequencing of maternally inherited mitochondrial DNA allowed comparison between the relative rates of evolution, which suggested that the coalescence, or origin, of the human Y chromosome and mitochondria both occurred approximately 120 thousand years ago. Francalacci et al. (p. 565) investigated the sequence divergence of 1204 Y chromosomes that were sampled within the isolated and genetically informative Sardinian population. The sequence analyses, along with archaeological records, were used to calibrate and increase the resolution of the human phylogenetic tree. Local human demographic history is inferred from in-depth DNA sequence analysis of Sardinian mens Y chromosomes. [Also see Perspective by Cann] Genetic variation within the male-specific portion of the Y chromosome (MSY) can clarify the origins of contemporary populations, but previous studies were hampered by partial genetic information. Population sequencing of 1204 Sardinian males identified 11,763 MSY single-nucleotide polymorphisms, 6751 of which have not previously been observed. We constructed a MSY phylogenetic tree containing all main haplogroups found in Europe, along with many Sardinian-specific lineage clusters within each haplogroup. The tree was calibrated with archaeological data from the initial expansion of the Sardinian population ~7700 years ago. The ages of nodes highlight different genetic strata in Sardinia and reveal the presumptive timing of coalescence with other human populations. We calculate a putative age for coalescence of ~180,000 to 200,000 years ago, which is consistent with previous mitochondrial DNA–based estimates.


Journal of biomolecular techniques | 2013

Comparison of Commercially Available Target Enrichment Methods for Next-Generation Sequencing

Kip Bodi; Anoja Perera; P.S. Adams; D. Bintzler; Ken Dewar; Deborah S. Grove; J. Kieleczawa; Robert H. Lyons; Thomas A. Neubert; A.C. Noll; S. Singh; Robert Steen; Michael Zianni

Isolating high-priority segments of genomes greatly enhances the efficiency of next-generation sequencing (NGS) by allowing researchers to focus on their regions of interest. For the 2010-11 DNA Sequencing Research Group (DSRG) study, we compared outcomes from two leading companies, Agilent Technologies (Santa Clara, CA, USA) and Roche NimbleGen (Madison, WI, USA), which offer custom-targeted genomic enrichment methods. Both companies were provided with the same genomic sample and challenged to capture identical genomic locations for DNA NGS. The target region totaled 3.5 Mb and included 31 individual genes and a 2-Mb contiguous interval. Each company was asked to design its best assay, perform the capture in replicates, and return the captured material to the DSRG-participating laboratories. Sequencing was performed in two different laboratories on Genome Analyzer IIx systems (Illumina, San Diego, CA, USA). Sequencing data were analyzed for sensitivity, specificity, and coverage of the desired regions. The success of the enrichment was highly dependent on the design of the capture probes. Overall, coverage variability was higher for the Agilent samples. As variant discovery is the ultimate goal for a typical targeted sequencing project, we compared samples for their ability to sequence single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) as a test of the ability to capture both chromosomes from the sample. In the targeted regions, we detected 2546 SNPs with the NimbleGen samples and 2071 with Agilents. When limited to the regions that both companies included as baits, the number of SNPs was ∼1000 for each, with Agilent and NimbleGen finding a small number of unique SNPs not found by the other.


Nature Genetics | 2015

Genome sequencing elucidates Sardinian genetic architecture and augments association analyses for lipid and blood inflammatory markers

Carlo Sidore; Fabio Busonero; Andrea Maschio; Eleonora Porcu; Silvia Naitza; Magdalena Zoledziewska; Antonella Mulas; Giorgio Pistis; Maristella Steri; Fabrice Danjou; Alan Kwong; Vicente Diego Ortega del Vecchyo; Charleston W. K. Chiang; Jennifer L. Bragg-Gresham; Maristella Pitzalis; Ramaiah Nagaraja; Brendan Tarrier; Christine Brennan; Sergio Uzzau; Christian Fuchsberger; Rossano Atzeni; Frederic Reinier; Riccardo Berutti; Jie Huang; Nicholas J. Timpson; Daniela Toniolo; Paolo Gasparini; Giovanni Malerba; George V. Dedoussis; Eleftheria Zeggini

We report ∼17.6 million genetic variants from whole-genome sequencing of 2,120 Sardinians; 22% are absent from previous sequencing-based compilations and are enriched for predicted functional consequences. Furthermore, ∼76,000 variants common in our sample (frequency >5%) are rare elsewhere (<0.5% in the 1000 Genomes Project). We assessed the impact of these variants on circulating lipid levels and five inflammatory biomarkers. We observe 14 signals, including 2 major new loci, for lipid levels and 19 signals, including 2 new loci, for inflammatory markers. The new associations would have been missed in analyses based on 1000 Genomes Project data, underlining the advantages of large-scale sequencing in this founder population.


Mammalian Genome | 2001

Identification of members of the Wnt signaling pathway in the embryonic pituitary gland.

Kristin R. Douglas; Michelle L. Brinkmeier; Jennifer A. Kennell; Pallavi Eswara; Tabitha A. Harrison; Athena I. Patrianakos; Bradley S. Sprecher; Mary Anne Potok; Robert H. Lyons; Ormond A. MacDougald; Sally A. Camper

Abstract.Prop1 is one of several transcription factors important for the development of the pituitary gland. Downstream targets of PROP1 and other critical pituitary transcription factors remain largely unknown. We have generated a partial expression profile of the developing pituitary gland containing over 350 transcripts, using cDNA subtractive hybridization between Prop1df/df and wild-type embryonic pituitary gland primordia. Numerous classes of genes including transcription factors, membrane associated molecules, and cell cycle regulators were identified in this study. Of the transcripts, 34% do not have sequence similarity to known genes, but are similar to ESTs, and 4% represent novel sequences. Pituitary gland expression of a number of clones was verified using in situ hybridization.Several members of the Wnt signaling pathway were identified in the developing pituitary gland. The frizzled2 receptor, Apc,β-catenin, groucho, and a novel isoform of TCF4 (officially named Tcf7l2) were identified in developing pituitary libraries. Three N-terminal alternatively spliced Tcf7l2 isoforms are reported here, each of which lacks a DNA-binding domain. Functional studies indicate that these isoforms can act as endogenous inhibitors of Wnt signaling in some contexts.This is the first report of Tcf7l2 and Fzd2 expression in the developing pituitary. These molecules may be important in mediating Wnt signaling during pituitary ontogeny. We expect other transcripts from these libraries to be involved in pituitary gland development.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2011

Exome sequencing reveals cubilin mutation as a single-gene cause of proteinuria.

Bugsu Ovunc; Edgar A. Otto; Virginia Vega-Warner; Pawaree Saisawat; Shazia Ashraf; Gokul Ramaswami; Hanan M. Fathy; Dominik S. Schoeb; Gil Chernin; Robert H. Lyons; Engin Yilmaz; Friedhelm Hildebrandt

In two siblings of consanguineous parents with intermittent nephrotic-range proteinuria, we identified a homozygous deleterious frameshift mutation in the gene CUBN, which encodes cubulin, using exome capture and massively parallel re-sequencing. The mutation segregated with affected members of this family and was absent from 92 healthy individuals, thereby identifying a recessive mutation in CUBN as the single-gene cause of proteinuria in this sibship. Cubulin mutations cause a hereditary form of megaloblastic anemia secondary to vitamin B(12) deficiency, and proteinuria occurs in 50% of cases since cubilin is coreceptor for both the intestinal vitamin B(12)-intrinsic factor complex and the tubular reabsorption of protein in the proximal tubule. In summary, we report successful use of exome capture and massively parallel re-sequencing to identify a rare, single-gene cause of nephropathy.

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Anoja Perera

Stowers Institute for Medical Research

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Deborah S. Grove

Pennsylvania State University

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D. Bintzler

University of Cincinnati

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