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Dive into the research topics where Vincent L. Cannataro is active.

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Featured researches published by Vincent L. Cannataro.


Evolutionary Applications | 2016

The implications of small stem cell niche sizes and the distribution of fitness effects of new mutations in aging and tumorigenesis.

Vincent L. Cannataro; Scott A. McKinley; Colette M. St. Mary

Somatic tissue evolves over a vertebrates lifetime due to the accumulation of mutations in stem cell populations. Mutations may alter cellular fitness and contribute to tumorigenesis or aging. The distribution of mutational effects within somatic cells is not known. Given the unique regulatory regime of somatic cell division, we hypothesize that mutational effects in somatic tissue fall into a different framework than whole organisms; one in which there are more mutations of large effect. Through simulation analysis, we investigate the fit of tumor incidence curves generated using exponential and power‐law distributions of fitness effects (DFE) to known tumorigenesis incidence. Modeling considerations include the architecture of stem cell populations, that is, a large number of very small populations, and mutations that do and do not fix neutrally in the stem cell niche. We find that the typically quantified DFE in whole organisms is sufficient to explain tumorigenesis incidence. Further, deleterious mutations are predicted to accumulate via genetic drift, resulting in reduced tissue maintenance. Thus, despite there being a large number of stem cells throughout the intestine, its compartmental architecture leads to the accumulation of deleterious mutations and significant aging, making the intestinal stem cell niche a prime example of Mullers Ratchet.


PLOS Computational Biology | 2014

Optimal sampling strategies for detecting zoonotic disease epidemics.

Jake M. Ferguson; Jessica B. Langebrake; Vincent L. Cannataro; Andres J. Garcia; Elizabeth A. Hamman; Maia Martcheva; Craig W. Osenberg

The early detection of disease epidemics reduces the chance of successful introductions into new locales, minimizes the number of infections, and reduces the financial impact. We develop a framework to determine the optimal sampling strategy for disease detection in zoonotic host-vector epidemiological systems when a disease goes from below detectable levels to an epidemic. We find that if the time of disease introduction is known then the optimal sampling strategy can switch abruptly between sampling only from the vector population to sampling only from the host population. We also construct time-independent optimal sampling strategies when conducting periodic sampling that can involve sampling both the host and the vector populations simultaneously. Both time-dependent and -independent solutions can be useful for sampling design, depending on whether the time of introduction of the disease is known or not. We illustrate the approach with West Nile virus, a globally-spreading zoonotic arbovirus. Though our analytical results are based on a linearization of the dynamical systems, the sampling rules appear robust over a wide range of parameter space when compared to nonlinear simulation models. Our results suggest some simple rules that can be used by practitioners when developing surveillance programs. These rules require knowledge of transition rates between epidemiological compartments, which population was initially infected, and of the cost per sample for serological tests.


Bulletin of Mathematical Biology | 2017

Vector-Borne Pathogen and Host Evolution in a Structured Immuno-Epidemiological System.

Hayriye Gulbudak; Vincent L. Cannataro; Necibe Tuncer; Maia Martcheva

Vector-borne disease transmission is a common dissemination mode used by many pathogens to spread in a host population. Similar to directly transmitted diseases, the within-host interaction of a vector-borne pathogen and a host’s immune system influences the pathogen’s transmission potential between hosts via vectors. Yet there are few theoretical studies on virulence–transmission trade-offs and evolution in vector-borne pathogen–host systems. Here, we consider an immuno-epidemiological model that links the within-host dynamics to between-host circulation of a vector-borne disease. On the immunological scale, the model mimics antibody-pathogen dynamics for arbovirus diseases, such as Rift Valley fever and West Nile virus. The within-host dynamics govern transmission and host mortality and recovery in an age-since-infection structured host-vector-borne pathogen epidemic model. By considering multiple pathogen strains and multiple competing host populations differing in their within-host replication rate and immune response parameters, respectively, we derive evolutionary optimization principles for both pathogen and host. Invasion analysis shows that the


Oncogene | 2018

Heterogeneity and mutation in KRAS and associated oncogenes: evaluating the potential for the evolution of resistance to targeting of KRAS G12C

Vincent L. Cannataro; Stephen G. Gaffney; Carly Stender; Zi-Ming Zhao; Mark R. Philips; Andrew Greenstein; Jeffrey P. Townsend


Journal of the National Cancer Institute | 2018

Effect Sizes of Somatic Mutations in Cancer

Vincent L. Cannataro; Stephen G. Gaffney; Jeffrey P. Townsend

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Evolutionary Applications | 2017

The evolutionary trade‐off between stem cell niche size, aging, and tumorigenesis

Vincent L. Cannataro; Scott A. McKinley; Colette M. St. Mary


Developmental Dynamics | 2014

The Minus-End Actin Capping Protein, UNC-94/Tropomodulin, Regulates Development of the Caenorhabditis elegans Intestine

Elisabeth Cox‐Paulson; Vincent L. Cannataro; Thomas Gallagher; Corey Hoffman; Gary Mantione; Matthew Mcintosh; Malan Silva; Nicole Vissichelli; Rachel Walker; Jeffrey S. Simske; Shoichiro Ono; Harold Hoops

R0 maximization principle holds for the vector-borne pathogen. For the host, we prove that evolution favors minimizing case fatality ratio (CFR). These results are utilized to compute host and pathogen evolutionary trajectories and to determine how model parameters affect evolution outcomes. We find that increasing the vector inoculum size increases the pathogen


Oncotarget | 2018

Analysis of mutation, selection, and epistasis: an informed approach to cancer clinical trials

Jon F. Wilkins; Vincent L. Cannataro; Brian Shuch; Jeffrey P. Townsend


Molecular Biology and Evolution | 2018

Neutral Theory and the Somatic Evolution of Cancer

Vincent L. Cannataro; Jeffrey P. Townsend

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bioRxiv | 2017

The likelihood of heterogeneity or additional mutation in KRAS or associated oncogenes to compromise targeting of oncogenic KRAS G12C

Vincent L. Cannataro; Stephen G. Gaffney; Carly Stender; Zi-Ming Zhao; Mark R. Philips; Andrew Greenstein; Jeffrey P. Townsend

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Hayriye Gulbudak

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Necibe Tuncer

Florida Atlantic University

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