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Dive into the research topics where Xiaomu Wei is active.

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Featured researches published by Xiaomu Wei.


Nature Genetics | 2011

Exome sequencing identifies GRIN2A as frequently mutated in melanoma

Xiaomu Wei; Vijay Walia; Jimmy Lin; Jamie K. Teer; Todd D. Prickett; Jared J. Gartner; Sean Davis; Katherine Stemke-Hale; Michael A. Davies; Jeffrey E. Gershenwald; William H. Robinson; Steven E. Robinson; Steven A. Rosenberg; Yardena Samuels

The incidence of melanoma is increasing more than any other cancer, and knowledge of its genetic alterations is limited. To systematically analyze such alterations, we performed whole-exome sequencing of 14 matched normal and metastatic tumor DNAs. Using stringent criteria, we identified 68 genes that appeared to be somatically mutated at elevated frequency, many of which are not known to be genetically altered in tumors. Most importantly, we discovered that TRRAP harbored a recurrent mutation that clustered in one position (p. Ser722Phe) in 6 out of 167 affected individuals (∼4%), as well as a previously unidentified gene, GRIN2A, which was mutated in 33% of melanoma samples. The nature, pattern and functional evaluation of the TRRAP recurrent mutation suggest that TRRAP functions as an oncogene. Our study provides, to our knowledge, the most comprehensive map of genetic alterations in melanoma to date and suggests that the glutamate signaling pathway is involved in this disease.


Nature Genetics | 2009

Analysis of the tyrosine kinome in melanoma reveals recurrent mutations in ERBB4

Todd D. Prickett; Neena S Agrawal; Xiaomu Wei; Kristin E Yates; Jimmy Lin; John R. Wunderlich; Julia C. Cronin; Pedro Cruz; Nisc Comparative Sequencing Program; Steven A. Rosenberg; Yardena Samuels

Tyrosine phosphorylation is important in signaling pathways underlying tumorigenesis. We performed a mutational analysis of the protein tyrosine kinase (PTK) gene family in cutaneous metastatic melanoma. We identified 30 somatic mutations affecting the kinase domains of 19 PTKs and subsequently evaluated the entire coding regions of the genes encoding these 19 PTKs for somatic mutations in 79 melanoma samples. We found ERBB4 mutations in 19% of individuals with melanoma and found mutations in two other kinases (FLT1 and PTK2B) in 10% of individuals with melanomas. We examined seven missense mutations in the most commonly altered PTK gene, ERBB4, and found that they resulted in increased kinase activity and transformation ability. Melanoma cells expressing mutant ERBB4 had reduced cell growth after shRNA-mediated knockdown of ERBB4 or treatment with the ERBB inhibitor lapatinib. These studies could lead to personalized therapeutics specifically targeting the kinases that are mutationally altered in individual melanomas.


Nature Genetics | 2009

Analysis of the matrix metalloproteinase family reveals that MMP8 is often mutated in melanoma

Lavanya H. Palavalli; Todd D. Prickett; John R. Wunderlich; Xiaomu Wei; Allison S. Burrell; Patricia Porter-Gill; Sean Davis; Chenwei Wang; Julia C. Cronin; Neena S Agrawal; Jimmy Lin; Wendy Westbroek; Shelley Hoogstraten-Miller; Alfredo A. Molinolo; Patricia Fetsch; Armando C. Filie; Michael P. O'Connell; Carolyn E. Banister; Jason Howard; Phillip Buckhaults; Ashani T. Weeraratna; Lawrence C. Brody; Steven A. Rosenberg; Yardena Samuels

A mutational analysis of the matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) gene family in human melanoma identified somatic mutations in 23% of melanomas. Five mutations in one of the most commonly mutated genes, MMP8, reduced MMP enzyme activity. Expression of wild-type but not mutant MMP8 in human melanoma cells inhibited growth on soft agar in vitro and tumor formation in vivo, suggesting that wild-type MMP-8 has the ability to inhibit melanoma progression.


Nature Genetics | 2011

Exon capture analysis of G protein-coupled receptors identifies activating mutations in GRM3 in melanoma.

Todd D. Prickett; Xiaomu Wei; Isabel Cardenas-Navia; Jamie K. Teer; Jimmy Lin; Vijay Walia; Jared J. Gartner; Jiji Jiang; Praveen F. Cherukuri; Alfredo A. Molinolo; Michael A. Davies; Jeffrey E. Gershenwald; Katherine Stemke-Hale; Steven A. Rosenberg; Elliott H. Margulies; Yardena Samuels

G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs), the largest human gene family, are important regulators of signaling pathways. However, knowledge of their genetic alterations is limited. In this study, we used exon capture and massively parallel sequencing methods to analyze the mutational status of 734 GPCRs in melanoma. This investigation revealed that one family member, GRM3, was frequently mutated and that one of its mutations clustered within one position. Biochemical analysis of GRM3 alterations revealed that mutant GRM3 selectively regulated the phosphorylation of MEK, leading to increased anchorage-independent growth and migration. Melanoma cells expressing mutant GRM3 had reduced cell growth and cellular migration after short hairpin RNA–mediated knockdown of GRM3 or treatment with a selective MEK inhibitor, AZD-6244, which is currently being used in phase 2 clinical trials. Our study yields the most comprehensive map of genetic alterations in the GPCR gene family.


Pigment Cell & Melanoma Research | 2009

Frequent Mutations in the MITF Pathway in Melanoma

Julia C. Cronin; John R. Wunderlich; Stacie K. Loftus; Todd D. Prickett; Xiaomu Wei; Katie Ridd; Swapna Vemula; Allison S. Burrell; Neena S Agrawal; Jimmy Lin; Carolyn E. Banister; Phillip Buckhaults; Steven A. Rosenberg; Boris C. Bastian; William J. Pavan; Yardena Samuels

Microphthalmia‐associated transcription factor (MITF) is involved in melanocyte cell development, pigmentation and neoplasia. To determine whether MITF is somatically mutated in melanoma, we compared the sequence of MITF from primary and metastatic lesions to patient‐matched normal DNA. In the 50 metastatic melanoma tumor lines analysed, we discovered four samples that had genomic amplifications of MITF and four that had MITF mutations in the regions encoding the transactivation, DNA binding or basic, helix‐loop‐helix domains. Sequence analysis for SOX10, a transcription factor, which both acts upstream of MITF and synergizes with MITF, identified an additional three samples with frameshift or nonsense mutations. Microphthalmia‐associated transcription factor and SOX10 were found to be mutated in a mutually exclusive fashion, possibly suggesting disruption in a common genetic pathway. Taken together we found that over 20% of the metastatic melanoma cases had alterations in the MITF pathway. We show that the MITF pathway is also altered in primary melanomas: 2/26 demonstrated mutations in MITF and 6/55 demonstrated mutations in SOX10. Our findings suggest that altered MITF function during melanomagenesis can be achieved by MITF amplification, MITF single base substitutions or by mutation of its regulator SOX10.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Whole-genome sequencing identifies a recurrent functional synonymous mutation in melanoma

Jared J. Gartner; Stephen C. J. Parker; Todd D. Prickett; Ken Dutton-Regester; Michael L. Stitzel; Jimmy C. Lin; Sean Davis; Vijaya L. Simhadri; Sujata Jha; Nobuko Katagiri; Valer Gotea; Jamie K. Teer; Xiaomu Wei; Mario A. Morken; Umesh Bhanot; Guo Chen; Laura Elnitski; Michael A. Davies; Jeffrey E. Gershenwald; Hannah Carter; Rachel Karchin; William H. Robinson; Steven E. Robinson; Steven A. Rosenberg; Francis S. Collins; Giovanni Parmigiani; Anton A. Komar; Chava Kimchi-Sarfaty; Nicholas K. Hayward; Elliott H. Margulies

Synonymous mutations, which do not alter the protein sequence, have been shown to affect protein function [Sauna ZE, Kimchi-Sarfaty C (2011) Nat Rev Genet 12(10):683–691]. However, synonymous mutations are rarely investigated in the cancer genomics field. We used whole-genome and -exome sequencing to identify somatic mutations in 29 melanoma samples. Validation of one synonymous somatic mutation in BCL2L12 in 285 samples identified 12 cases that harbored the recurrent F17F mutation. This mutation led to increased BCL2L12 mRNA and protein levels because of differential targeting of WT and mutant BCL2L12 by hsa-miR-671–5p. Protein made from mutant BCL2L12 transcript bound p53, inhibited UV-induced apoptosis more efficiently than WT BCL2L12, and reduced endogenous p53 target gene transcription. This report shows selection of a recurrent somatic synonymous mutation in cancer. Our data indicate that silent alterations have a role to play in human cancer, emphasizing the importance of their investigation in future cancer genome studies.


Molecular Cancer Research | 2010

Mutational and Functional Analysis Reveals ADAMTS18 Metalloproteinase as a Novel Driver in Melanoma

Xiaomu Wei; Todd D. Prickett; Cristina G. Viloria; Alfredo A. Molinolo; Jimmy Lin; Isabel Cardenas-Navia; Pedro Cruz; Steven A. Rosenberg; Michael A. Davies; Jeffrey E. Gershenwald; Carlos López-Otín; Yardena Samuels

The disintegrin-metalloproteinases with thrombospondin domains (ADAMTS) genes have been suggested to function as tumor suppressors as several have been found to be epigenetically silenced in various cancers. We performed a mutational analysis of the ADAMTS gene family in human melanoma and identified a large fraction of melanomas to harbor somatic mutations. To evaluate the functional consequences of the most commonly mutated gene, ADAMTS18, six of its mutations were biologically examined. ADAMTS18 mutations had little effect on melanoma cell growth under standard conditions, but reduced cell dependence on growth factors. ADAMTS18 mutations also reduced adhesion to laminin and increased migration in vitro and metastasis in vivo. Melanoma cells expressing mutant ADAMTS18 had reduced cell migration after short hairpin RNA–mediated knockdown of ADAMTS18, suggesting that ADAMTS18 mutations promote growth, migration, and metastasis in melanoma. Mol Cancer Res; 8(11); 1513–25. ©2010 AACR.


Human Mutation | 2011

Analysis of the disintegrin‐metalloproteinases family reveals ADAM29 and ADAM7 are often mutated in melanoma

Xiaomu Wei; Angela Moncada-Pazos; Santiago Cal; Clara Soria-Valles; Jared J. Gartner; Udo Rudloff; Jimmy Lin; Steven A. Rosenberg; Carlos López-Otín; Yardena Samuels

We performed a mutational analysis of the 19 disintegrin‐metalloproteinases (ADAMs) genes in human cutaneous metastatic melanoma and identified eight to be somatically mutated in 79 samples, affecting 34% of the melanoma tumors analyzed. Functional analysis of the two frequently mutated ADAM genes, ADAM29 and ADAM7 demonstrated that the mutations affect adhesion of melanoma cells to specific extracellular matrix proteins and in some cases increase their migration ability. This suggests that mutated ADAM genes could play a role in melanoma progression.


BMC Genomics | 2012

Comparative exome sequencing of metastatic lesions provides insights into the mutational progression of melanoma

Jared J. Gartner; Sean Davis; Xiaomu Wei; Jimmy C. Lin; Niraj S. Trivedi; Jamie K. Teer; Paul S. Meltzer; Steven A. Rosenberg; Yardena Samuels

BackgroundMetastasis is characterized by spreading of neoplastic cells to an organ other than where they originated and is the predominant cause of death among cancer patients. This holds true for melanoma, whose incidence is increasing more rapidly than any other cancer and once disseminated has few therapeutic options. Here we performed whole exome sequencing of two sets of matched normal and metastatic tumor DNAs.ResultsUsing stringent criteria, we evaluated the similarities and differences between the lesions. We find that in both cases, 96% of the single nucleotide variants are shared between the two metastases indicating that clonal populations gave rise to the distant metastases. Analysis of copy number variation patterns of both metastatic sets revealed a trend similar to that seen with our single nucleotide variants. Analysis of pathway enrichment on tumor sets shows commonly mutated pathways enriched between individual sets of metastases and all metastases combined.ConclusionsThese data provide a proof-of-concept suggesting that individual metastases may have sufficient similarity for successful targeting of driver mutations.


PLOS Genetics | 2012

Mutational Signatures of De-Differentiation in Functional Non-Coding Regions of Melanoma Genomes

Stephen C. J. Parker; Jared J. Gartner; Isabel Cardenas-Navia; Xiaomu Wei; Hatice Ozel Abaan; Subramanian S. Ajay; Nancy F. Hansen; Lingyun Song; Umesh Bhanot; J. Keith Killian; Yevgeniy Gindin; Robert L. Walker; Paul S. Meltzer; James C. Mullikin; Terrence S. Furey; Gregory E. Crawford; Steven A. Rosenberg; Yardena Samuels; Elliott H. Margulies

Much emphasis has been placed on the identification, functional characterization, and therapeutic potential of somatic variants in tumor genomes. However, the majority of somatic variants lie outside coding regions and their role in cancer progression remains to be determined. In order to establish a system to test the functional importance of non-coding somatic variants in cancer, we created a low-passage cell culture of a metastatic melanoma tumor sample. As a foundation for interpreting functional assays, we performed whole-genome sequencing and analysis of this cell culture, the metastatic tumor from which it was derived, and the patient-matched normal genomes. When comparing somatic mutations identified in the cell culture and tissue genomes, we observe concordance at the majority of single nucleotide variants, whereas copy number changes are more variable. To understand the functional impact of non-coding somatic variation, we leveraged functional data generated by the ENCODE Project Consortium. We analyzed regulatory regions derived from multiple different cell types and found that melanocyte-specific regions are among the most depleted for somatic mutation accumulation. Significant depletion in other cell types suggests the metastatic melanoma cells de-differentiated to a more basal regulatory state. Experimental identification of genome-wide regulatory sites in two different melanoma samples supports this observation. Together, these results show that mutation accumulation in metastatic melanoma is nonrandom across the genome and that a de-differentiated regulatory architecture is common among different samples. Our findings enable identification of the underlying genetic components of melanoma and define the differences between a tissue-derived tumor sample and the cell culture created from it. Such information helps establish a broader mechanistic understanding of the linkage between non-coding genomic variations and the cellular evolution of cancer.

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Steven A. Rosenberg

National Institutes of Health

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Yardena Samuels

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Todd D. Prickett

National Institutes of Health

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Jimmy Lin

Johns Hopkins University

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Jared J. Gartner

National Institutes of Health

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Jamie K. Teer

University of South Florida

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Michael A. Davies

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Jeffrey E. Gershenwald

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Elliott H. Margulies

National Institutes of Health

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