Yashar S. Niknafs
University of Michigan
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Publication
Featured researches published by Yashar S. Niknafs.
Nature Genetics | 2015
Matthew K. Iyer; Yashar S. Niknafs; Rohit Malik; Udit Singhal; Anirban Sahu; Yasuyuki Hosono; Terrence R. Barrette; John R. Prensner; Joseph R. Evans; Shuang Zhao; Anton Poliakov; Xuhong Cao; Saravana M. Dhanasekaran; Yi Mi Wu; Dan R. Robinson; David G. Beer; Felix Y. Feng; Hariharan K. Iyer; Arul M. Chinnaiyan
Long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) are emerging as important regulators of tissue physiology and disease processes including cancer. To delineate genome-wide lncRNA expression, we curated 7,256 RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) libraries from tumors, normal tissues and cell lines comprising over 43 Tb of sequence from 25 independent studies. We applied ab initio assembly methodology to this data set, yielding a consensus human transcriptome of 91,013 expressed genes. Over 68% (58,648) of genes were classified as lncRNAs, of which 79% were previously unannotated. About 1% (597) of the lncRNAs harbored ultraconserved elements, and 7% (3,900) overlapped disease-associated SNPs. To prioritize lineage-specific, disease-associated lncRNA expression, we employed non-parametric differential expression testing and nominated 7,942 lineage- or cancer-associated lncRNA genes. The lncRNA landscape characterized here may shed light on normal biology and cancer pathogenesis and may be valuable for future biomarker development.
Nature Medicine | 2015
Rohit Malik; Amjad P. Khan; Irfan A. Asangani; Marcin Cieślik; John R. Prensner; Xiaoju Wang; Matthew K. Iyer; Xia Jiang; Dmitry Borkin; June Escara-Wilke; Rachell Stender; Yi-Mi Wu; Yashar S. Niknafs; Xiaojun Jing; Yuanyuan Qiao; Nallasivam Palanisamy; Lakshmi P. Kunju; Pranathi Meda Krishnamurthy; Anastasia K. Yocum; Dattatreya Mellacheruvu; Alexey I. Nesvizhskii; Xuhong Cao; Saravana M. Dhanasekaran; Felix Y. Feng; Jolanta Grembecka; Tomasz Cierpicki; Arul M. Chinnaiyan
Resistance to androgen deprivation therapies and increased androgen receptor (AR) activity are major drivers of castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC). Although prior work has focused on targeting AR directly, co-activators of AR signaling, which may represent new therapeutic targets, are relatively underexplored. Here we demonstrate that the mixed-lineage leukemia protein (MLL) complex, a well-known driver of MLL fusion–positive leukemia, acts as a co-activator of AR signaling. AR directly interacts with the MLL complex via the menin–MLL subunit. Menin expression is higher in CRPC than in both hormone-naive prostate cancer and benign prostate tissue, and high menin expression correlates with poor overall survival of individuals diagnosed with prostate cancer. Treatment with a small-molecule inhibitor of menin–MLL interaction blocks AR signaling and inhibits the growth of castration-resistant tumors in vivo in mice. Taken together, this work identifies the MLL complex as a crucial co-activator of AR and a potential therapeutic target in advanced prostate cancer.
Molecular Cancer Research | 2014
Rohit Malik; Lalit Patel; John R. Prensner; Yang Shi; Matthew K. Iyer; Shruthi Subramaniyan; Alexander Carley; Yashar S. Niknafs; Anirban Sahu; Sumin Han; Teng Ma; Meilan Liu; Irfan A. Asangani; Xiaojun Jing; Xuhong Cao; Saravana M. Dhanasekaran; Dan R. Robinson; Felix Y. Feng; Arul M. Chinnaiyan
Long noncoding RNAs (lncRNA) have recently been associated with the development and progression of a variety of human cancers. However, to date, the interplay between known oncogenic or tumor-suppressive events and lncRNAs has not been well described. Here, the novel lncRNA, prostate cancer–associated transcript 29 (PCAT29), is characterized along with its relationship to the androgen receptor. PCAT29 is suppressed by DHT and upregulated upon castration therapy in a prostate cancer xenograft model. PCAT29 knockdown significantly increased proliferation and migration of prostate cancer cells, whereas PCAT29 overexpression conferred the opposite effect and suppressed growth and metastases of prostate tumors in chick chorioallantoic membrane assays. Finally, in prostate cancer patient specimens, low PCAT29 expression correlated with poor prognostic outcomes. Taken together, these data expose PCAT29 as an androgen-regulated tumor suppressor in prostate cancer. Implications: This study identifies PCAT29 as the first androgen receptor–repressed lncRNA that functions as a tumor suppressor and that its loss may identify a subset of patients at higher risk for disease recurrence. Visual Overview: http://mcr.aacrjournals.org/content/early/2014/07/31/1541-7786.MCR-14-0257/F1.large.jpg. Mol Cancer Res; 12(8); 1081–7. ©2014 AACR. Visual Overview
Nature Biomedical Engineering | 2017
Daniel A. Orringer; Balaji Pandian; Yashar S. Niknafs; Todd Hollon; Julianne Boyle; Spencer Lewis; Mia Garrard; Shawn L. Hervey-Jumper; Hugh J. L. Garton; Cormac O. Maher; Jason A. Heth; Oren Sagher; D. Andrew Wilkinson; Matija Snuderl; Sriram Venneti; Shakti Ramkissoon; Kathryn McFadden; Amanda Fisher-Hubbard; Andrew P. Lieberman; Timothy D. Johnson; X. Sunney Xie; Jay Kenneth Trautman; Christian W. Freudiger; Sandra Camelo-Piragua
Conventional methods for intraoperative histopathologic diagnosis are labour- and time-intensive, and may delay decision-making during brain-tumour surgery. Stimulated Raman scattering (SRS) microscopy, a label-free optical process, has been shown to rapidly detect brain-tumour infiltration in fresh, unprocessed human tissues. Here, we demonstrate the first application of SRS microscopy in the operating room by using a portable fibre-laser-based microscope and unprocessed specimens from 101 neurosurgical patients. We also introduce an image-processing method – stimulated Raman histology (SRH) – which leverages SRS images to create virtual haematoxylin-and-eosin-stained slides, revealing essential diagnostic features. In a simulation of intraoperative pathologic consultation in 30 patients, we found a remarkable concordance of SRH and conventional histology for predicting diagnosis (Cohens kappa, κ > 0.89), with accuracy exceeding 92%. We also built and validated a multilayer perceptron based on quantified SRH image attributes that predicts brain-tumour subtype with 90% accuracy. Our findings provide insight into how SRH can now be used to improve the surgical care of brain tumour patients.
Nature Communications | 2016
Yashar S. Niknafs; Sumin Han; Teng Ma; Chao Zhang; Kari Wilder-Romans; Matthew K. Iyer; Sethuramasundaram Pitchiaya; Rohit Malik; Yasuyuki Hosono; John R. Prensner; Anton Poliakov; Udit Singhal; Lanbo Xiao; Steven Kregel; Ronald F. Siebenaler; Shuang G. Zhao; Michael Uhl; Alexander Gawronski; Daniel F. Hayes; Lori J. Pierce; Xuhong Cao; Colin Collins; Rolf Backofen; Cenk Sahinalp; James M. Rae; Arul M. Chinnaiyan; Felix Y. Feng
Molecular classification of cancers into subtypes has resulted in an advance in our understanding of tumour biology and treatment response across multiple tumour types. However, to date, cancer profiling has largely focused on protein-coding genes, which comprise <1% of the genome. Here we leverage a compendium of 58,648 long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) to subtype 947 breast cancer samples. We show that lncRNA-based profiling categorizes breast tumours by their known molecular subtypes in breast cancer. We identify a cohort of breast cancer-associated and oestrogen-regulated lncRNAs, and investigate the role of the top prioritized oestrogen receptor (ER)-regulated lncRNA, DSCAM-AS1. We demonstrate that DSCAM-AS1 mediates tumour progression and tamoxifen resistance and identify hnRNPL as an interacting protein involved in the mechanism of DSCAM-AS1 action. By highlighting the role of DSCAM-AS1 in breast cancer biology and treatment resistance, this study provides insight into the potential clinical implications of lncRNAs in breast cancer.
Neoplasia | 2016
Sudhanshu Shukla; Xiang Zhang; Yashar S. Niknafs; Lanbo Xiao; Rohit Mehra; Marcin Cieślik; Ashley E. Ross; Edward M. Schaeffer; Bhavna Malik; Shuling Guo; Susan M. Freier; Huynh Hoa Bui; Javed Siddiqui; Xiaojun Jing; Xuhong Cao; Saravana M. Dhanasekaran; Felix Y. Feng; Arul M. Chinnaiyan; Rohit Malik
Rapid advances in the discovery of long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) have identified lineage- and cancer-specific biomarkers that may be relevant in the clinical management of prostate cancer (PCa). Here we assembled and analyzed a large RNA-seq dataset, from 585 patient samples, including benign prostate tissue and both localized and metastatic PCa to discover and validate differentially expressed genes associated with disease aggressiveness. We performed Sample Set Enrichment Analysis (SSEA) and identified genes associated with low versus high Gleason score in the RNA-seq database. Comparing Gleason 6 versus 9+ PCa samples, we identified 99 differentially expressed genes with variable association to Gleason grade as well as robust expression in prostate cancer. The top-ranked novel lncRNA PCAT14, exhibits both cancer and lineage specificity. On multivariate analysis, low PCAT14 expression independently predicts for BPFS (P = .00126), PSS (P = .0385), and MFS (P = .000609), with trends for OS as well (P = .056). An RNA in-situ hybridization (ISH) assay for PCAT14 distinguished benign vs malignant cases, as well as high vs low Gleason disease. PCAT14 is transcriptionally regulated by AR, and endogenous PCAT14 overexpression suppresses cell invasion. Thus, Using RNA-sequencing data we identify PCAT14, a novel prostate cancer and lineage-specific lncRNA. PCAT14 is highly expressed in low grade disease and loss of PCAT14 predicts for disease aggressiveness and recurrence.
Nature Methods | 2017
Yashar S. Niknafs; Balaji Pandian; Hariharan K. Iyer; Arul M. Chinnaiyan; Matthew K. Iyer
Accurate transcript structure and abundance inference from RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) data is foundational for molecular discovery. Here we present TACO, a computational method to reconstruct a consensus transcriptome from multiple RNA-seq data sets. TACO employs novel change-point detection to demarcate transcript start and end sites, leading to improved reconstruction accuracy compared with other tools in its class. The tool is available at http://tacorna.github.io and can be readily incorporated into RNA-seq analysis workflows.
Cancer Research | 2016
Shoumei Bai; Patrick Ingram; Yu-Chih Chen; Ning Deng; Alex Pearson; Yashar S. Niknafs; Patrick O'Hayer; Yun Wang; Zhong Yin Zhang; Elisa Boscolo; Joyce Bischoff; Euisik Yoon; Ronald J. Buckanovich
Little is known about the factors that regulate the asymmetric division of cancer stem-like cells (CSC). Here, we demonstrate that EGFL6, a stem cell regulatory factor expressed in ovarian tumor cells and vasculature, regulates ALDH+ ovarian CSC. EGFL6 signaled at least in part via the oncoprotein SHP2 with concomitant activation of ERK. EGFL6 signaling promoted the migration and asymmetric division of ALDH+ ovarian CSC. As such, EGFL6 increased not only tumor growth but also metastasis. Silencing of EGFL6 or SHP2 limited numbers of ALDH+ cells and reduced tumor growth, supporting a critical role for EGFL6/SHP2 in ALDH+ cell maintenance. Notably, systemic administration of an EGFL6-neutralizing antibody we generated restricted tumor growth and metastasis, specifically blocking ovarian cancer cell recruitment to the ovary. Together, our results offer a preclinical proof of concept for EGFL6 as a novel therapeutic target for the treatment of ovarian cancer. Cancer Res; 76(21); 6396-409. ©2016 AACR.
World Neurosurgery | 2014
Yashar S. Niknafs; Anthony C. Wang; Khoi D. Than; Arnold B. Etame; B. Gregory Thompson; Stephen E. Sullivan
BACKGROUND Clinically significant intratumoral hemorrhage historically has been reported in only a small fraction of vestibular schwannomas (VS). Patients with hemorrhagic VS are more likely to present with neurologic deficits and have worse outcomes than patients with nonhemorrhagic VS. The purpose of this study is to analyze characteristics that may predispose VS to hemorrhage and that may prove helpful in the management and treatment of VS. METHODS A literature search was conducted using National Library of Medicine and National Institutes of Health databases to identify articles pertaining to intratumoral hemorrhage in VS. The authors selected 39 cases, described in 18 published articles, to review. RESULTS Average patient age and tumor size in hemorrhagic cases of VS did not differ significantly from nonhemorrhagic cases of VS. Facial nerve dysfunction at presentation occurred with greater frequency in cases of hemorrhagic VS (33.3%) than in nonhemorrhagic VS (6.0%). Death occurred much more frequently in cases of hemorrhagic VS (10.0%) than in nonhemorrhagic VS (0.2%). Abnormality of tumor-associated vasculature was noted histologically in many cases, and a large number of the cases reported prior treatment by stereotactic radiosurgery. CONCLUSIONS Understanding the origins and clinical implications of intratumoral hemorrhage in VS could potentially assist in clinical decision making and patient counseling.
Nature Genetics | 2018
Yajia Zhang; Sethuramasundaram Pitchiaya; Marcin Cieślik; Yashar S. Niknafs; Jean C.-Y. Tien; Yasuyuki Hosono; Matthew K. Iyer; Sahr Yazdani; Shruthi Subramaniam; Sudhanshu Shukla; Xia Jiang; Lisha Wang; Tzu-Ying Liu; Michael Uhl; Alexander Gawronski; Yuanyuan Qiao; Lanbo Xiao; Saravana M. Dhanasekaran; Kristin M. Juckette; Lakshmi P. Kunju; Xuhong Cao; Utsav Patel; Mona Batish; Girish C. Shukla; Michelle T. Paulsen; Mats Ljungman; Hui Jiang; Rohit Mehra; Rolf Backofen; Cenk Sahinalp
The androgen receptor (AR) plays a critical role in the development of the normal prostate as well as prostate cancer. Using an integrative transcriptomic analysis of prostate cancer cell lines and tissues, we identified ARLNC1 (AR-regulated long noncoding RNA 1) as an important long noncoding RNA that is strongly associated with AR signaling in prostate cancer progression. Not only was ARLNC1 induced by the AR protein, but ARLNC1 stabilized the AR transcript via RNA–RNA interaction. ARLNC1 knockdown suppressed AR expression, global AR signaling and prostate cancer growth in vitro and in vivo. Taken together, these data support a role for ARLNC1 in maintaining a positive feedback loop that potentiates AR signaling during prostate cancer progression and identify ARLNC1 as a novel therapeutic target.ARLNC1 is a newly discovered lncRNA that is induced by androgen receptor (AR) and maintains AR signaling by stabilizing the AR transcript. Knockdown of ARLNC1 suppresses AR expression, AR signaling and prostate cancer growth in vitro and in vivo.