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Dive into the research topics where Swagata Roy is active.

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Featured researches published by Swagata Roy.


Leukemia | 2016

Cryptic splicing events in the iron transporter ABCB7 and other key target genes in SF3B1 -mutant myelodysplastic syndromes

Hamid Dolatshad; Andrea Pellagatti; Fabio Liberante; Miriam Llorian; Emmanouela Repapi; Violetta Steeples; Swagata Roy; L Scifo; Richard N. Armstrong; J Shaw; Bon Ham Yip; Sally Killick; Rajko Kusec; Stephen Taylor; Ken I. Mills; Kienan Savage; Christopher W. J. Smith; Jacqueline Boultwood

The splicing factor SF3B1 is the most frequently mutated gene in myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), and is strongly associated with the presence of ring sideroblasts (RS). We have performed a systematic analysis of cryptic splicing abnormalities from RNA sequencing data on hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) of SF3B1-mutant MDS cases with RS. Aberrant splicing events in many downstream target genes were identified and cryptic 3′ splice site usage was a frequent event in SF3B1-mutant MDS. The iron transporter ABCB7 is a well-recognized candidate gene showing marked downregulation in MDS with RS. Our analysis unveiled aberrant ABCB7 splicing, due to usage of an alternative 3′ splice site in MDS patient samples, giving rise to a premature termination codon in the ABCB7 mRNA. Treatment of cultured SF3B1-mutant MDS erythroblasts and a CRISPR/Cas9-generated SF3B1-mutant cell line with the nonsense-mediated decay (NMD) inhibitor cycloheximide showed that the aberrantly spliced ABCB7 transcript is targeted by NMD. We describe cryptic splicing events in the HSCs of SF3B1-mutant MDS, and our data support a model in which NMD-induced downregulation of the iron exporter ABCB7 mRNA transcript resulting from aberrant splicing caused by mutant SF3B1 underlies the increased mitochondrial iron accumulation found in MDS patients with RS.


Leukemia | 2016

Targeted resequencing analysis of 31 genes commonly mutated in myeloid disorders in serial samples from myelodysplastic syndrome patients showing disease progression

Andrea Pellagatti; Swagata Roy; C Di Genua; Adam Burns; Kathy L. McGraw; Simona Valletta; María José Larrayoz; Marta Fernandez-Mercado; Joanne Mason; Sally Killick; Cristina Mecucci; María José Calasanz; Alan F. List; Anna Schuh; Jacqueline Boultwood

Targeted resequencing analysis of 31 genes commonly mutated in myeloid disorders in serial samples from myelodysplastic syndrome patients showing disease progression


Oncotarget | 2015

ASXL1 mutation correction by CRISPR/Cas9 restores gene function in leukemia cells and increases survival in mouse xenografts

Simona Valletta; Hamid Dolatshad; Matthias Bartenstein; Bon Ham Yip; Erica Bello; Shanisha Gordon; Yiting Yu; J Shaw; Swagata Roy; L Scifo; Anna Schuh; Andrea Pellagatti; Tudor A. Fulga; Amit Verma; Jacqueline Boultwood

Recurrent somatic mutations of the epigenetic modifier and tumor suppressor ASXL1 are common in myeloid malignancies, including chronic myeloid leukemia (CML), and are associated with poor clinical outcome. CRISPR/Cas9 has recently emerged as a powerful and versatile genome editing tool for genome engineering in various species. We have used the CRISPR/Cas9 system to correct the ASXL1 homozygous nonsense mutation present in the CML cell line KBM5, which lacks ASXL1 protein expression. CRISPR/Cas9-mediated ASXL1 homozygous correction resulted in protein re-expression with restored normal function, including down-regulation of Polycomb repressive complex 2 target genes. Significantly reduced cell growth and increased myeloid differentiation were observed in ASXL1 mutation-corrected cells, providing new insights into the role of ASXL1 in human myeloid cell differentiation. Mice xenografted with mutation-corrected KBM5 cells showed significantly longer survival than uncorrected xenografts. These results show that the sole correction of a driver mutation in leukemia cells increases survival in vivo in mice. This study provides proof-of-concept for driver gene mutation correction via CRISPR/Cas9 technology in human leukemia cells and presents a strategy to illuminate the impact of oncogenic mutations on cellular function and survival.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2017

The U2AF1S34F mutation induces lineage-specific splicing alterations in myelodysplastic syndromes

Bon Ham Yip; Violetta Steeples; Emmanouela Repapi; Richard N. Armstrong; Miriam Llorian; Swagata Roy; J Shaw; Hamid Dolatshad; Stephen Taylor; Amit Verma; Matthias Bartenstein; Paresh Vyas; Nicholas C.P. Cross; Luca Malcovati; Mario Cazzola; Eva Hellström-Lindberg; Seishi Ogawa; Christopher W. J. Smith; Andrea Pellagatti; Jacqueline Boultwood

Mutations of the splicing factor–encoding gene U2AF1 are frequent in the myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), a myeloid malignancy, and other cancers. Patients with MDS suffer from peripheral blood cytopenias, including anemia, and an increasing percentage of bone marrow myeloblasts. We studied the impact of the common U2AF1S34F mutation on cellular function and mRNA splicing in the main cell lineages affected in MDS. We demonstrated that U2AF1S34F expression in human hematopoietic progenitors impairs erythroid differentiation and skews granulomonocytic differentiation toward granulocytes. RNA sequencing of erythroid and granulomonocytic colonies revealed that U2AF1S34F induced a higher number of cassette exon splicing events in granulomonocytic cells than in erythroid cells. U2AF1S34F altered mRNA splicing of many transcripts that were expressed in both cell types in a lineage-specific manner. In hematopoietic progenitors, the introduction of isoform changes identified in the U2AF1S34F target genes H2AFY, encoding an H2A histone variant, and STRAP, encoding serine/threonine kinase receptor–associated protein, recapitulated phenotypes associated with U2AF1S34F expression in erythroid and granulomonocytic cells, suggesting a causal link. Furthermore, we showed that isoform modulation of H2AFY and STRAP rescues the erythroid differentiation defect in U2AF1S34F MDS cells, suggesting that splicing modulators could be used therapeutically. These data have critical implications for understanding MDS phenotypic heterogeneity and support the development of therapies targeting splicing abnormalities.


Current Pharmaceutical Design | 2016

Impact of Splicing Factor Mutations on Pre-mRNA Splicing in the Myelodysplastic Syndromes

Bon Ham Yip; Hamid Dolatshad; Swagata Roy; Andrea Pellagatti; Jacqueline Boultwood

Splicing is an essential cellular process which is carried out by the spliceosome in order to remove the introns and join the exons present in pre-mRNA transcripts. A variety of spliceosomal mutations have been recently identified in the myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), a heterogeneous group of hematopoietic stem cell malignancies, revealing a new leukemogenic pathway involving spliceosomal dysfunction. Splicing factor genes are the most frequently mutated genes found in MDS, with mutations occurring in more than half of all patients. The high mutation frequency in different components of the spliceosome in MDS indicates that aberrant splicing may be a common consequence of these mutations in this disorder. RNA sequencing studies using MDS patient bone marrow cells and different mouse models have identified several downstream targets of the splicing factor mutations. Aberrant splicing of these target genes may contribute to MDS pathogenesis, however functional studies are required in order to fully determine the effects of the aberrant isoforms on disease phenotype. Splicing inhibitors are currently being developed and may be used as therapeutic agents to target aberrant pre-mRNA splicing in MDS and other cancers with splicing factor mutations. The mouse models expressing splicing factor mutations may prove particularly valuable for pre-clinical testing of these drugs.


Blood | 2018

Impact of spliceosome mutations on RNA splicing in myelodysplasia: dysregulated genes/pathways and clinical associations.

Andrea Pellagatti; Richard N. Armstrong; Violetta Steeples; Eshita Sharma; Emmanouela Repapi; Shalini Singh; Andrea Sanchi; Aleksandar Radujkovic; Patrick Horn; Hamid Dolatshad; Swagata Roy; John Broxholme; Helen Lockstone; Stephen Taylor; Aristoteles Giagounidis; Paresh Vyas; Anna Schuh; Angela Hamblin; Elli Papaemmanuil; Sally Killick; Luca Malcovati; Marco L. Hennrich; Anne-Claude Gavin; Anthony D. Ho; Thomas Luft; Eva Hellström-Lindberg; Mario Cazzola; Christopher W. J. Smith; Stephen Smith; Jacqueline Boultwood

SF3B1, SRSF2, and U2AF1 are the most frequently mutated splicing factor genes in the myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS). We have performed a comprehensive and systematic analysis to determine the effect of these commonly mutated splicing factors on pre-mRNA splicing in the bone marrow stem/progenitor cells and in the erythroid and myeloid precursors in splicing factor mutant MDS. Using RNA-seq, we determined the aberrantly spliced genes and dysregulated pathways in CD34+ cells of 84 patients with MDS. Splicing factor mutations result in different alterations in splicing and largely affect different genes, but these converge in common dysregulated pathways and cellular processes, focused on RNA splicing, protein synthesis, and mitochondrial dysfunction, suggesting common mechanisms of action in MDS. Many of these dysregulated pathways and cellular processes can be linked to the known disease pathophysiology associated with splicing factor mutations in MDS, whereas several others have not been previously associated with MDS, such as sirtuin signaling. We identified aberrantly spliced events associated with clinical variables, and isoforms that independently predict survival in MDS and implicate dysregulation of focal adhesion and extracellular exosomes as drivers of poor survival. Aberrantly spliced genes and dysregulated pathways were identified in the MDS-affected lineages in splicing factor mutant MDS. Functional studies demonstrated that knockdown of the mitosis regulators SEPT2 and AKAP8, aberrantly spliced target genes of SF3B1 and SRSF2 mutations, respectively, led to impaired erythroid cell growth and differentiation. This study illuminates the effect of the common spliceosome mutations on the MDS phenotype and provides novel insights into disease pathophysiology.


Haematologica | 2017

IDENTIFICATION OF ABERRANTLY SPLICED GENES AND DEREGULATED PATHWAYS/GENE ONTOLOGY THEMES IN MYELODYSPLASTIC SYNDROME PATIENTS WITH SPLICING FACTOR GENE MUTATIONS

Andrea Pellagatti; Violetta Steeples; Eshita Sharma; Emmanouela Repapi; Aleksandar Radujkovic; Patrick Horn; Richard N. Armstrong; Hamid Dolatshad; Swagata Roy; Helen Lockstone; Stephen Taylor; Aristoteles Giagounidis; Paresh Vyas; Anna Schuh; Angela Hamblin; Elli Papaemmanuil; Sally Killick; Luca Malcovati; Gavin A-C.; Anthony D. Ho; Thomas Luft; Eva Hellström-Lindberg; Mario Cazzola; Smith Cwj.; Jacqueline Boultwood


Archive | 2015

Climate Change Resilient Island Horticulture

Dig Vijay Singh; Shrawan Singh; Swagata Roy


Blood | 2015

Lineage-Specific Aberrant mRNA Splicing By U2AF1 Mutation Alters Erythroid and Granulomonocytic Differentiation

Bon Ham Yip; Swagata Roy; Hamid Dolatshad; J Shaw; Seishi Ogawa; Andrea Pellagatti; Jacqueline Boultwood


Journal of Pharmacognosy and Phytochemistry | 2017

Molecular based indexing of viral disease complex of king chilli (Capsicum Chinense J.) in North Eastern Region of India

Ng Taibangnganbi Chanu; Y Herojit Singh; Ph Sumitra; Surjit Singh; S Rakesh Singh; Swagata Roy; Nisha Prakash; Swarkar Sharma

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Sally Killick

Royal Bournemouth Hospital

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J Shaw

University of Oxford

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