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Dive into the research topics where Vincent P. Stanton is active.

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Featured researches published by Vincent P. Stanton.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

A genotyping strategy based on incorporation and cleavage of chemically modified nucleotides

Jia Liu Wolfe; Tomohiko Kawate; David A. Sarracino; Martin Zillmann; Jeffrey Olson; Vincent P. Stanton; Gregory L. Verdine

Aiming to facilitate the analysis of human genetic variations in the context of disease susceptibility and varied drug response, we have developed a genotyping method that entails incorporation of a chemically labile nucleotide by PCR followed by specific chemical cleavage of the resulting amplicon at the modified bases. The identity of the cleaved fragments determines the genotype of the DNA. This method, termed Incorporation and Complete Chemical Cleavage, utilizes modified nucleotides 7-deaza-7-nitro-dATP, 7-deaza-7-nitro-dGTP, 5-hydroxy-dCTP, and 5-hydroxy-dUTP, which have increased chemical reactivity but are able to form standard Watson–Crick base pairs. Thus one analog is substituted for the corresponding nucleotide during PCR, generating amplicons that contain nucleotide analogs at each occurrence of the selected base throughout the target DNA except for the primer sequences. Subsequent treatment with an oxidant followed by an organic base results in chemical cleavage at each site of modification, which produces fragments of different lengths and/or molecular weights that reflect the genotype of the original DNA sample at the site of interest. This incorporation and cleavage chemistry are widely applicable to many existing nucleic acid analysis platforms, including gel electrophoresis and mass spectrometry. By combining DNA amplification and analog incorporation into one step, this strategy eliminates preamplification, DNA-strand separation, primer extension, and purification procedures associated with traditional chain-termination chemistry and therefore presents significant advantages in terms of speed, cost, and simplicity of genotyping.


Acc Current Journal Review | 2004

Pharmacogenetic study of statin therapy and cholesterol reduction

Daniel I. Chasman; David Posada; L. Subrahmanyam; Nancy R. Cook; Vincent P. Stanton; Paul M. Ridker


JAMA | 2004

Pharmacogenetic study of statin therapy and cholesterol reduction.

Daniel I. Chasman; David Posada; Lakshman Subrahmanyan; Nancy R. Cook; Vincent P. Stanton; Paul M. Ridker


Archive | 2000

Gene sequence variations with utility in determining the treatment of disease, in genes relating to drug processing

Vincent P. Stanton; Martin Zillmann


Archive | 1999

Method for analyzing polynucleotides

Vincent P. Stanton; Jia Liu Wolfe; Tomohiko Kawate; Gregory L. Verdine


Genetics | 2003

Analysis and Exploration of the Use of Rule-Based Algorithms and Consensus Methods for the Inferral of Haplotypes

Steven Hecht Orzack; Dan Gusfield; Jeffrey Olson; Steven Nesbitt; Lakshman Subrahmanyan; Vincent P. Stanton


Nucleic Acids Research | 2002

Synthesis and polymerase incorporation of 5′-amino-2′,5′-dideoxy-5′-N-triphosphate nucleotides

Jia Liu Wolfe; Tomohiko Kawate; Alexei Belenky; Vincent P. Stanton


Clinical Colorectal Cancer | 2004

Dihydropyrimidine Dehydrogenase and Thymidylate Synthase Polymorphisms and Their Association with 5-Fluorouracil/Leucovorin Chemotherapy in Colorectal Cancer

Andrew X. Zhu; Thomas A. Puchalski; Vincent P. Stanton; David P. Ryan; Jeffrey W. Clark; Steven Nesbitt; Olga Charlat; Patrick Kelly; Elaine Kreconus; Bruce A. Chabner; Jeffrey G. Supko


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2003

Sequence-specific dinucleotide cleavage promoted by synergistic interactions between neighboring modified nucleotides in DNA

Jia Liu Wolfe; Bing H. Wang; Tomohiko Kawate; Vincent P. Stanton


Archive | 2002

Restriction enzyme genotyping

Jeffrey Olson; Martin Zillmann; Vincent P. Stanton

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Daniel I. Chasman

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Lakshman Subrahmanyan

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Nancy R. Cook

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Paul M. Ridker

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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