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Dive into the research topics where Tiffany Morris is active.

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Featured researches published by Tiffany Morris.


Bioinformatics | 2014

ChAMP: 450k Chip Analysis Methylation Pipeline

Tiffany Morris; Lee M. Butcher; Andrew Feber; Andrew E. Teschendorff; Ankur Chakravarthy; Tomasz K. Wojdacz; Stephan Beck

UNLABELLED The Illumina Infinium HumanMethylation450 BeadChip is a new platform for high-throughput DNA methylation analysis. Several methods for normalization and processing of these data have been published recently. Here we present an integrated analysis pipeline offering a choice of the most popular normalization methods while also introducing new methods for calling differentially methylated regions and detecting copy number aberrations. AVAILABILITY AND IMPLEMENTATION ChAMP is implemented as a Bioconductor package in R. The package and the vignette can be downloaded at bioconductor.org


Nature Protocols | 2012

Methylome analysis using MeDIP-seq with low DNA concentrations

Oluwatosin Taiwo; Gareth A. Wilson; Tiffany Morris; Stefanie Seisenberger; Wolf Reik; Daniel J. Pearce; Stephan Beck; Lee M. Butcher

DNA methylation is an epigenetic mark that has a crucial role in many biological processes. To understand the functional consequences of DNA methylation on phenotypic plasticity, a genome-wide analysis should be embraced. This in turn requires a technique that balances accuracy, genome coverage, resolution and cost, yet is low in DNA input in order to minimize the drain on precious samples. Methylated DNA immunoprecipitation-sequencing (MeDIP-seq) fulfils these criteria, combining MeDIP with massively parallel DNA sequencing. Here we report an improved protocol using 100-fold less genomic DNA than that commonly used. We show comparable results for specificity (>97%) and enrichment (>100-fold) over a wide range of DNA concentrations (5,000–50 ng) and demonstrate the utility of the protocol for the generation of methylomes from rare bone marrow cells using 160–300 ng of starting DNA. The protocol described here, i.e., DNA extraction to generation of MeDIP-seq library, can be completed within 3–5 d.


Methods | 2015

oxBS-450K: A method for analysing hydroxymethylation using 450K BeadChips

Sabrina K. Stewart; Tiffany Morris; Paul Guilhamon; Harry Bulstrode; Martin Bachman; Shankar Balasubramanian; Stephan Beck

Highlights • A method is presented for 5hmC detection and analysis using Infinium 450K BeadChips.• The oxBS-450K method can discriminate between 5mC and 5hmC in human gDNA• 5hmC levels were quantified genome-wide in 3 distinct biological samples.• The reported 5hmC signal was validated using mass spectrometry and pyrosequencing.• The effects of differing amounts of input DNA on final 5hmC call rate are discussed.


Methods | 2015

Analysis pipelines and packages for Infinium HumanMethylation450 BeadChip (450k) data.

Tiffany Morris; Stephan Beck

The Illumina HumanMethylation450 BeadChip has become a popular platform for interrogating DNA methylation in epigenome-wide association studies (EWAS) and related projects as well as resource efforts such as the International Cancer Genome Consortium (ICGC) and the International Human Epigenome Consortium (IHEC). This has resulted in an exponential increase of 450k data in recent years and triggered the development of numerous integrated analysis pipelines and stand-alone packages. This review will introduce and discuss the currently most popular pipelines and packages and is particularly aimed at new 450k users.


Genome Biology | 2014

Using high-density DNA methylation arrays to profile copy number alterations

Andrew Feber; Paul Guilhamon; Matthias Lechner; Tim Fenton; Gareth A. Wilson; Christina Thirlwell; Tiffany Morris; Adrienne M. Flanagan; Andrew E. Teschendorff; John D. Kelly; Stephan Beck

The integration of genomic and epigenomic data is an increasingly popular approach for studying the complex mechanisms driving cancer development. We have developed a method for evaluating both methylation and copy number from high-density DNA methylation arrays. Comparing copy number data from Infinium HumanMethylation450 BeadChips and SNP arrays, we demonstrate that Infinium arrays detect copy number alterations with the sensitivity of SNP platforms. These results show that high-density methylation arrays provide a robust and economic platform for detecting copy number and methylation changes in a single experiment. Our method is available in the ChAMP Bioconductor package: http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/2.13/bioc/html/ChAMP.html.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2016

Prognostic Impact of Novel Molecular Subtypes of Small Intestinal Neuroendocrine Tumor

Anna Karpathakis; Harpreet Dibra; Christodoulos P Pipinikas; Andrew Feber; Tiffany Morris; Joshua M. Francis; Dahmane Oukrif; Dalvinder Mandair; Marinos Pericleous; Mullan Mohmaduvesh; Stefano Serra; Olagunju Ogunbiyi; Marco Novelli; Tu Vinh Luong; Sylvia L Asa; Matthew H. Kulke; Christos Toumpanakis; Tim Meyer; Martyn Caplin; Matthew Meyerson; Stephan Beck; Christina Thirlwell

Purpose: Small intestinal neuroendocrine tumors (SINET) are the commonest malignancy of the small intestine; however, underlying pathogenic mechanisms remain poorly characterized. Whole-genome and -exome sequencing has demonstrated that SINETs are mutationally quiet, with the most frequent known mutation in the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor 1B gene (CDKN1B) occurring in only ∼8% of tumors, suggesting that alternative mechanisms may drive tumorigenesis. The aim of this study is to perform genome-wide molecular profiling of SINETs in order to identify pathogenic drivers based on molecular profiling. This study represents the largest unbiased integrated genomic, epigenomic, and transcriptomic analysis undertaken in this tumor type. Experimental Design: Here, we present data from integrated molecular analysis of SINETs (n = 97), including whole-exome or targeted CDKN1B sequencing (n = 29), HumanMethylation450 BeadChip (Illumina) array profiling (n = 69), methylated DNA immunoprecipitation sequencing (n = 16), copy-number variance analysis (n = 47), and Whole-Genome DASL (Illumina) expression array profiling (n = 43). Results: Based on molecular profiling, SINETs can be classified into three groups, which demonstrate significantly different progression-free survival after resection of primary tumor (not reached at 10 years vs. 56 months vs. 21 months, P = 0.04). Epimutations were found at a recurrence rate of up to 85%, and 21 epigenetically dysregulated genes were identified, including CDX1 (86%), CELSR3 (84%), FBP1 (84%), and GIPR (74%). Conclusions: This is the first comprehensive integrated molecular analysis of SINETs. We have demonstrated that these tumors are highly epigenetically dysregulated. Furthermore, we have identified novel molecular subtypes with significant impact on progression-free survival. Clin Cancer Res; 22(1); 250–8. ©2015 AACR.


Epigenetics | 2013

DNA methylation analysis of murine hematopoietic side population cells during aging

Oluwatosin Taiwo; Gareth A. Wilson; Warren Emmett; Tiffany Morris; Dominique Bonnet; Eugene Schuster; Tomas Adejumo; Stephan Beck; Daniel J. Pearce

Stem cells have been found in most tissues/organs. These somatic stem cells produce replacements for lost and damaged cells, and it is not completely understood how this regenerative capacity becomes diminished during aging. To study the possible involvement of epigenetic changes in somatic stem cell aging, we used murine hematopoiesis as a model system. Hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) were enriched for via Hoechst exclusion activity (SP-HSC) from young, medium-aged and old mice and subjected to comprehensive, global methylome (MeDIP-seq) analysis. With age, we observed a global loss of DNA methylation of approximately 5%, but an increase in methylation at some CpG islands. Just over 100 significant (FDR < 0.2) aging-specific differentially methylated regions (aDMRs) were identified, which are surprisingly few considering the profound age-based changes that occur in HSC biology. Interestingly, the polycomb repressive complex -2 (PCRC2) target genes Kiss1r, Nav2 and Hsf4 were hypermethylated with age. The promoter for the Sdpr gene was determined to be progressively hypomethylated with age. This occurred concurrently with an increase in gene expression with age. To explore this relationship further, we cultured isolated SP-HSC in the presence of 5-aza-deoxycytdine and demonstrated a negative correlation between Sdpr promoter methylation and gene expression. We report that DNA methylation patterns are well preserved during hematopoietic stem cell aging, confirm that PCRC2 targets are increasingly methylated with age, and suggest that SDPR expression changes with age in HSCs may be regulated via age-based alterations in DNA methylation.


Nature Communications | 2016

Non-CG DNA methylation is a biomarker for assessing endodermal differentiation capacity in pluripotent stem cells

Lee M. Butcher; Mitsuteru Ito; Minodora Brimpari; Tiffany Morris; Filipa Soares; Lars Ährlund-Richter; Nessa Carey; Ludovic Vallier; Anne C. Ferguson-Smith; Stephan Beck

Non-CG methylation is an unexplored epigenetic hallmark of pluripotent stem cells. Here we report that a reduction in non-CG methylation is associated with impaired differentiation capacity into endodermal lineages. Genome-wide analysis of 2,670 non-CG sites in a discovery cohort of 25 phenotyped human induced pluripotent stem cell (hiPSC) lines revealed unidirectional loss (Δβ=13%, P<7.4 × 10−4) of non-CG methylation that correctly identifies endodermal differentiation capacity in 23 out of 25 (92%) hiPSC lines. Translation into a simplified assay of only nine non-CG sites maintains predictive power in the discovery cohort (Δβ=23%, P<9.1 × 10−6) and correctly identifies endodermal differentiation capacity in nine out of ten pluripotent stem cell lines in an independent replication cohort consisting of hiPSCs reprogrammed from different cell types and different delivery systems, as well as human embryonic stem cell (hESC) lines. This finding infers non-CG methylation at these sites as a biomarker when assessing endodermal differentiation capacity as a readout.


Endocrine-related Cancer | 2015

Epigenetic dysregulation and poorer prognosis in DAXX-deficient pancreatic neuroendocrine tumours

Christodoulos P Pipinikas; Harpreet Dibra; Anna Karpathakis; Andrew Feber; Marco Novelli; Dahmane Oukrif; Guiseppe Fusai; Roberto Valente; Martyn Caplin; Tim Meyer; Andrew E. Teschendorff; Christopher G. Bell; Tiffany Morris; Paolo Salomoni; Tu Vinh Luong; Brian R. Davidson; Stephan Beck; Christina Thirlwell

Exome sequencing of sporadic pancreatic neuroendocrine tumours (PNETs) has identified mutually exclusive mutations in the chromatin regulators α- thalassaemia/mental retardation X-linked (ATRX) and death associated protein 6 (DAXX) genes in 43% of cases (18% and 23% of cases respectively in 68 cases studied) (Elsasser et al. 2011; Jiao et al. 2011). ATRX and DAXX are chromatin remodelers; their loss leads to alternative lengthening of telomeres (ALT) and chromosomal instability (CIN) (Heaphy et al. 2011). ALT is a telomerase independent mechanism for maintenance of telomere stabilisation. Although it was initially reported that ATRX/DAXX mutant tumours had superior 10-year survival and outcome (Jiao et al. 2011), a recent larger study on 243 tumours has demonstrated that ATRX and DAXX loss and associated ALT in PNETs correlates with CIN, advanced tumour stage, development of metastases and poorer progression free (PFS) and overall survival (OS) (Marinoni et al. 2014) ...


Genome Medicine | 2015

Comparative methylome analysis identifies new tumour subtypes and biomarkers for transformation of nephrogenic rests into Wilms tumour

Jocelyn Charlton; Richard D. Williams; Nj Sebire; Sergey Popov; Gordan Vujanic; Tasnim Chagtai; Marisa Alcaide-German; Tiffany Morris; Lee M. Butcher; Paul Guilhamon; Stephan Beck; Kathy Pritchard-Jones

BackgroundWilms tumours (WTs) are characterised by several hallmarks that suggest epimutations such as aberrant DNA methylation are involved in tumour progression: loss of imprinting at 11p15, lack of recurrent mutations and formation of nephrogenic rests (NRs), which are lesions of retained undifferentiated embryonic tissue that can give rise to WTs.MethodsTo identify such epimutations, we performed a comprehensive methylome analysis on 20 matched trios of micro-dissected WTs, NRs and surrounding normal kidneys (NKs) using Illumina Infinium HumanMethylation450 Bead Chips and functionally validated findings using RNA sequencing.ResultsComparison of NRs with NK revealed prominent tissue biomarkers: 629 differentially methylated regions, of which 55% were hypermethylated and enriched for domains that are bivalent in embryonic stem cells and for genes expressed during development (P = 2.49 × 10-5). Comparison of WTs with NRs revealed two WT subgroups; group-2 WTs and NRs were epigenetically indistinguishable whereas group-1 WTs showed an increase in methylation variability, hypomethylation of renal development genes, hypermethylation and relative loss of expression of cell adhesion genes and known and potential new WT tumour suppressor genes (CASP8, H19, MIR195, RB1 and TSPAN32) and was strongly associated with bilateral disease (P = 0.032). Comparison of WTs and NRs to embryonic kidney highlighted the significance of polycomb target methylation in Wilms tumourigenesis.ConclusionsMethylation levels vary during cancer evolution. We have described biomarkers related to WT evolution from its precursor NRs which may be useful to differentiate between these tissues for patients with bilateral disease.

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Stephan Beck

University College London

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Andrew Feber

University College London

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Harpreet Dibra

University College London

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