Terrye A. Delmonte
Texas A&M University
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Featured researches published by Terrye A. Delmonte.
Nature Genetics | 2001
John D. Rioux; Mark J. Daly; Mark S. Silverberg; Kerstin Lindblad; Hillary Steinhart; Zane Cohen; Terrye A. Delmonte; Kerry Kocher; Katie Miller; Sheila Guschwan; Edward J. Kulbokas; Sinéad B. O'Leary; Ellen Winchester; Ken Dewar; Todd Green; Valerie Stone; Christine Chow; Albert Cohen; Diane Langelier; Gilles Lapointe; Daniel Gaudet; Janet Faith; Nancy Branco; Shelley B. Bull; Robin S. McLeod; Anne M. Griffiths; Alain Bitton; Gordon R. Greenberg; Eric S. Lander; Katherine A. Siminovitch
Linkage disequilibrium (LD) mapping provides a powerful method for fine-structure localization of rare disease genes, but has not yet been widely applied to common disease. We sought to design a systematic approach for LD mapping and apply it to the localization of a gene (IBD5) conferring susceptibility to Crohn disease. The key issues are: (i) to detect a significant LD signal (ii) to rigorously bound the critical region and (iii) to identify the causal genetic variant within this region. We previously mapped the IBD5 locus to a large region spanning 18 cM of chromosome 5q31 (P<10−4). Using dense genetic maps of microsatellite markers and single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) across the entire region, we found strong evidence of LD. We bound the region to a common haplotype spanning 250 kb that shows strong association with the disease (P<2×10−7) and contains the cytokine gene cluster. This finding provides overwhelming evidence that a specific common haplotype of the cytokine region in 5q31 confers susceptibility to Crohn disease. However, genetic evidence alone is not sufficient to identify the causal mutation within this region, as strong LD across the region results in multiple SNPs having equivalent genetic evidence—each consistent with the expected properties of the IBD5 locus. These results have important implications for Crohn disease in particular and LD mapping in general.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003
Vamsi K. Mootha; Pierre Lepage; Kathleen Miller; Jakob Bunkenborg; Michael R. Reich; Majbrit Hjerrild; Terrye A. Delmonte; Amelie Villeneuve; Robert Sladek; Fenghao Xu; Grant A. Mitchell; Charles Morin; Matthias Mann; Thomas J. Hudson; Brian E. Robinson; John D. Rioux; Eric S. Lander
Identifying the genes responsible for human diseases requires combining information about gene position with clues about biological function. The recent availability of whole-genome data sets of RNA and protein expression provides powerful new sources of functional insight. Here we illustrate how such data sets can expedite disease-gene discovery, by using them to identify the gene causing Leigh syndrome, French-Canadian type (LSFC, Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man no. 220111), a human cytochrome c oxidase deficiency that maps to chromosome 2p16-21. Using four public RNA expression data sets, we assigned to all human genes a “score” reflecting their similarity in RNA-expression profiles to known mitochondrial genes. Using a large survey of organellar proteomics, we similarly classified human genes according to the likelihood of their protein product being associated with the mitochondrion. By intersecting this information with the relevant genomic region, we identified a single clear candidate gene, LRPPRC. Resequencing identified two mutations on two independent haplotypes, providing definitive genetic proof that LRPPRC indeed causes LSFC. LRPPRC encodes an mRNA-binding protein likely involved with mtDNA transcript processing, suggesting an additional mechanism of mitochondrial pathophysiology. Similar strategies to integrate diverse genomic information can be applied likewise to other disease pathways and will become increasingly powerful with the growing wealth of diverse, functional genomics data.
Genetics | 2004
Junkang Rong; Colette A. Abbey; John E. Bowers; Curt L. Brubaker; Charlene Chang; Peng W. Chee; Terrye A. Delmonte; Xiaoling Ding; Juan J. Garza; Barry S. Marler; Chan Hwa Park; Gary J. Pierce; Katy M. Rainey; Vipin K. Rastogi; Stefan R. Schulze; Norma L. Trolinder; Jonathan F. Wendel; Thea A. Wilkins; T. Dawn Williams-Coplin; Rod A. Wing; Robert J. Wright; Xinping Zhao; Linghua Zhu; Andrew H. Paterson
We report genetic maps for diploid (D) and tetraploid (AtDt) Gossypium genomes composed of sequence-tagged sites (STS) that foster structural, functional, and evolutionary genomic studies. The maps include, respectively, 2584 loci at 1.72-cM (∼600 kb) intervals based on 2007 probes (AtDt) and 763 loci at 1.96-cM (∼500 kb) intervals detected by 662 probes (D). Both diploid and tetraploid cottons exhibit negative crossover interference; i.e., double recombinants are unexpectedly abundant. We found no major structural changes between Dt and D chromosomes, but confirmed two reciprocal translocations between At chromosomes and several inversions. Concentrations of probes in corresponding regions of the various genomes may represent centromeres, while genome-specific concentrations may represent heterochromatin. Locus duplication patterns reveal all 13 expected homeologous chromosome sets and lend new support to the possibility that a more ancient polyploidization event may have predated the A-D divergence of 6–11 million years ago. Identification of SSRs within 312 RFLP sequences plus direct mapping of 124 SSRs and exploration for CAPS and SNPs illustrate the “portability” of these STS loci across populations and detection systems useful for marker-assisted improvement of the worlds leading fiber crop. These data provide new insights into polyploid evolution and represent a foundation for assembly of a finished sequence of the cotton genome.
Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2005
Xavier Draye; Peng Chee; Chun-Xiao Jiang; Laura Decanini; Terrye A. Delmonte; Robert Bredhauer; C. Wayne Smith; Andrew H. Paterson
A backcross-self population from a cross between Gossypium hirsutum and G. barbadense was used to dissect the molecular basis of genetic variation governing two parameters reflecting lint fiber fineness and to compare the precision of these two measurements. By applying a detailed restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) map to 3,662 BC3F2 plants from 24 independently derived BC3 families, we were able to detect 32 and nine quantitative trait loci (QTLs) for fiber fineness and micronaire (MIC), respectively. The discovery of larger numbers of QTLs in this study than previously found in other studies based on F2 populations grown in favorable environments reflects the ability of the backcross-self design to resolve smaller QTL effects. Although the two measurements differed dramatically in the number of QTLs detected, seven of the nine MIC QTLs were also associated with fiber fineness. This supports other data in suggesting that fiber fineness more accurately reflects the underlying physical properties of cotton fibers and, consequently, is a preferable trait for selection. “Negative transgression,” with the majority of BC3F2 families showing average phenotypes that were poorer than that of the inferior parent, suggests that many of the new gene combinations formed by interspecific hybridization are maladaptive and may contribute to the lack of progress in utilizing G. barbadense in conventional breeding programs to improve upland cotton.
American Journal of Human Genetics | 2001
Nana Lee; Mark J. Daly; Terrye A. Delmonte; Eric S. Lander; Fenghao Xu; Thomas J. Hudson; Grant A. Mitchell; Charles Morin; Brian H. Robinson; John D. Rioux
Leigh syndrome (LS) affects 1/40,000 newborn infants in the worldwide population and is characterized by the presence of developmental delay and lactic acidosis and by a mean life expectancy variously estimated at 3-5 years. Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean (SLSJ) cytochrome oxidase (COX) deficiency (LS French-Canadian type [LSFC] [MIM 220111]), an autosomal recessive form of congenital lactic acidosis, presents with developmental delay and hypotonia. It is an LS variant that is found in a geographically isolated region of Quebec and that occurs in 1/2,178 live births. Patients with LSFC show a phenotype similar to that of patients with LS, but the two groups differ in clinical presentation. We studied DNA samples from 14 patients with LSFC and from their parents, representing a total of 13 families. Because of founder effects in the SLSJ region, considerable linkage disequilibrium (LD) was expected to surround the LSFC mutation. We therefore performed a genomewide screen for LD, using 290 autosomal microsatellite markers. A single marker, D2S1356, located on 2p16, showed significant (P < 10(-5)) genomewide LD. Using high-resolution genetic mapping with additional markers and four additional families with LSFC, we were able to identify a common ancestral haplotype and to limit the critical region to approximately 2 cM between D2S119 and D2S2174. COX7AR, a gene encoding a COX7a-related protein, had previously been mapped to this region. We determined the genomic structure and resequenced this gene in patients with LSFC and in controls but found no functional mutations. Although the LSFC gene remains to be elucidated, the present study demonstrates the feasibility of using a genomewide LD strategy to localize the critical region for a rare genetic disease in a founder population.
European Journal of Human Genetics | 2006
Marcela K. Tello-Ruiz; Christine R. Curley; Terrye A. Delmonte; Cosmas Giallourakis; Andrew Kirby; Kathryn Miller; Gary Wild; Albert Cohen; Diane Langelier; Anna Latiano; Neils Wedemeyer; Eric S. Lander; Stefan Schreiber; Vito Annese; Mark J. Daly; John D. Rioux
Evidence from four independent linkage studies and two meta-analyses of genome-wide data support the existence of a locus conferring susceptibility to inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) in chromosomal region 19p. Identification of a susceptibility allele in this ∼28.5 Mb region with over 600 genes is a formidable task. To tackle this problem, we undertook two approaches: (1) haplotype-based candidate-gene screen, and (2) evaluation of previously reported associations. For the former, we selected genes with potential implication in IBD pathogenesis based on published functional and expression data, typed SNPs, constructed haplotypes, screened for association in 180 IBD trios, and followed up preliminary associations in 343 IBD patients and 207 control individuals. Overall, we analyzed 465 SNPs, and 260 haplotypes distributed across 56 candidate genes. We found suggestive evidence of association (nominal P<0.01) with four genes (C3, FCER2, IL12RB1, and CRLF1) in a screening stage, but were unable to confirm these preliminary observations at follow-up. In the second approach, we typed four nonsynonymous polymorphisms in genes C3 (R102G and L314P) and ICAM1 (G241R and K469E) in four independent cohorts totaling 2178 IBD cases. We evaluated these data together with previously published reports for three of these variants (C3-Gly102, ICAM1-Arg241, and ICAM1-Glu469), in a meta-analysis. Our pooled meta-analysis provides compelling evidence against association of these variants with disease. Overall, we performed the most comprehensive candidate-gene association study for IBD to date. The information hereby generated constitutes a valuable resource to investigate other common genetic immune diseases, such as celiac disease.
Nature Genetics | 1996
Andrew H. Paterson; Tien-Hung Lan; Kim P. Reischmann; Charlene Chang; Yann-Rong Lin; Sin-Chieh Liu; Mark D. Burow; Stanley P. Kowalski; Catherine S. Katsar; Terrye A. Delmonte; Kenneth A. Feldmann; K. F. Schertz; Jonathan F. Wendel
Genome Research | 2000
Tien-Hung Lan; Terrye A. Delmonte; Kim P. Reischmann; Joel Hyman; Stanley P. Kowalski; Jim McFerson; Stephen Kresovich; Andrew H. Paterson
Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2005
Peng Chee; Xavier Draye; Chun-Xiao Jiang; Laura Decanini; Terrye A. Delmonte; Robert Bredhauer; C. Wayne Smith; Andrew H. Paterson
Acta Horticulturae | 1998
Andrew H. Paterson; Lan Tien-hung; Terrye A. Delmonte; Stanley P. Kowalski